Decimi Junii Juvenalis Satirae XIII.: Thirteen satires of JuvenalRivingtons, 1873 - 172 Seiten |
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Seite xviii
... Roman gentleman passed his life at the capital , and the lazy leisure of the country holidays , which is indicated by Horace's Epistles , and the Eleventh Satire of Juvenal , and to conclude that the main business of Juvenal's life was ...
... Roman gentleman passed his life at the capital , and the lazy leisure of the country holidays , which is indicated by Horace's Epistles , and the Eleventh Satire of Juvenal , and to conclude that the main business of Juvenal's life was ...
Seite xix
... Roman and Byzantine society , that when an emperor had once become a mark for conspiracies , one con- spiracy or other was sure to succeed at last . The first Cæsar certainly gave unnecessary offence to the prejudices of the nobility ...
... Roman and Byzantine society , that when an emperor had once become a mark for conspiracies , one con- spiracy or other was sure to succeed at last . The first Cæsar certainly gave unnecessary offence to the prejudices of the nobility ...
Seite xx
... Roman bourgeoisie had discovered that la carrière ouverte aux talents , so far as it was not a scramble in the mire , practically resolved itself into a lottery with many blanks and few prizes . Under the republic it was impossible for ...
... Roman bourgeoisie had discovered that la carrière ouverte aux talents , so far as it was not a scramble in the mire , practically resolved itself into a lottery with many blanks and few prizes . Under the republic it was impossible for ...
Seite xxi
... Roman middle class had experienced a loss in Juvenal's day which was almost heavier than the deterioration of careers which had never led the tenuiores civium to indepen- dence as a body . The nobles had discovered that they had no use ...
... Roman middle class had experienced a loss in Juvenal's day which was almost heavier than the deterioration of careers which had never led the tenuiores civium to indepen- dence as a body . The nobles had discovered that they had no use ...
Seite xxii
... Roman , who was not rich , expected to be kept from want and even from discomfort by the liberality of one who was , simply in exchange for his services as gentleman in waiting and for keeping his vote and interest for what little they ...
... Roman , who was not rich , expected to be kept from want and even from discomfort by the liberality of one who was , simply in exchange for his services as gentleman in waiting and for keeping his vote and interest for what little they ...
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Beliebte Passagen
Seite 17 - ... quae nunc divitibus gens acceptissima nostris et quos praecipue fugiam, properabo fateri, nec pudor obstabit. non possum ferre, Quirites, 60 Graecam urbem. quamvis quota portio faecis Achaei? iam pridem Syrus in Tiberim defluxit Orontes et linguam et mores et cum tibicine chordas obliquas nec non gentilia tympana secum vexit et ad circum iussas prostare puellas.
Seite 105 - ... notum qui pueri qualisque futura sit uxor. ut tamen et poscas aliquid voveasque sacellis exta et candiduli divina tomacula porci, 355 orandum est ut sit mens sana in corpore sano. fortem posce animum mortis terrore carentem, qui spatium vitae extremum inter munera ponat naturae, qui ferre queat quoscumque labores, nesciat irasci, cupiat nihil et potiores 360 Herculis aerumnas credat saevosque labores et venere et cenis et pluma Sardanapalli.