A New and Literal Translation of Juvenal and Persius: With Copious Explanatory Notes, by which These Difficult Satirists are Rendered Easy and Familiar to the ReaderEditor, and sold at T. Becket's, 1789 - 443 Seiten |
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Seite 5
... houfe is better known to him , than to me The grove of Mars , and the den of Vulcan near The Eolian rocks : what the winds can do : what ghofts 5 wounded by the fpear of Achilles , but afterwards healed by the ruft of the fame fpear ...
... houfe is better known to him , than to me The grove of Mars , and the den of Vulcan near The Eolian rocks : what the winds can do : what ghofts 5 wounded by the fpear of Achilles , but afterwards healed by the ruft of the fame fpear ...
Seite 6
... houfe the poets recited their works , be- fore they were red , or performed in public . His houfe was planted round with plane trees , for the lake of their shade . 13. The convulfed marbles . ] This may refer to the marble ftatues ...
... houfe the poets recited their works , be- fore they were red , or performed in public . His houfe was planted round with plane trees , for the lake of their shade . 13. The convulfed marbles . ] This may refer to the marble ftatues ...
Seite 29
... houfe ? A thick crowd of litters 120 nefts . What the poet fays , alludes to the chattering noife made by these birds , particularly when the old ones revifited their nefts , after having been out to feek food for their young . See ...
... houfe ? A thick crowd of litters 120 nefts . What the poet fays , alludes to the chattering noife made by these birds , particularly when the old ones revifited their nefts , after having been out to feek food for their young . See ...
Seite 60
... houfe of the high prieft . - Plut . in vita Ciceronis & Cæfaris . If we fay - redimicula domi - literally - fillets of the house- we may understand it to mean thofe fillets which , in imitation of the women , they wore around their ...
... houfe of the high prieft . - Plut . in vita Ciceronis & Cæfaris . If we fay - redimicula domi - literally - fillets of the house- we may understand it to mean thofe fillets which , in imitation of the women , they wore around their ...
Seite 83
... to appre- hend . 7. Fires . ] Houfe - burnings - to which populous cities , from many various caufes , are continually liable . G 2 8. Falling 1 Tectorum affiduos , ac mille pericula fævæ Urbis , ( 83 ) SATIRE III. ...
... to appre- hend . 7. Fires . ] Houfe - burnings - to which populous cities , from many various caufes , are continually liable . G 2 8. Falling 1 Tectorum affiduos , ac mille pericula fævæ Urbis , ( 83 ) SATIRE III. ...
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againſt AINSW alfo alludes alſo antient atque becauſe Bona Dea Boötes Cæfar called Campania caufe cauſe Comp Crifpinus cùm Cybele defcribed defire denotes Domitian drefs effeminacy emperor expence fafe faid fame fatire fays fecret feems feftertia fenators fenfe fervants feven fhall fhew fhould fignifies firft fituation flaves fleep fmall fome fomething fometimes ftand fubject fuch fuppofed Gabii Hæc Hence herſelf himſelf honour houfe houſe huſband itſelf Juvenal laft lefs mafter means moft moſt muft muſt Nævolus Nero noble obferved occafion Ovid paffage pafs perfon pleaſe poet poor Prætor prefent purpoſe quæ quàm quid Quintilian quis quod reafon reprefents Retiarius rich Romans Rome Satire ſeems ſhe ſmall ſtand ſuch tamen thefe themſelves theſe things thofe thoſe thou tibi tunc ufed ufual Umbritius underſtand uſed vice Virg Virro whofe wife women wretches yourſelf
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 372 - Catinensi pumice lumbum squalentes traducit avos emptorque veneni frangenda miseram funestat imagine gentem? tota licet veteres exornent undique cerae atria, nobilitas sola est atque unica virtus.
Seite 417 - I'll tell you, friend; a wife man and a fool. 200 You'll find, if once the monarch acts the monk, Or, cobler-like, the parfon will be drunk, Worth makes the man, and want of it, the fellow; The reft is all but leather or prunella.
Seite 176 - Maecenas, upon whom at first he confetrefl the new honour. He was to precede all other city magistrates, having power to receive appeals from the inferior courts, and to decide almost all causes within the limits of Rome, or one hundred miles round. Before this, there was sometimes a pimfectus urbis created, when the kings, or the greater officers, were absent from the city, to administer justice in their room.
Seite viii - The books that we learn at schools are generally laid aside, with this prejudice, that they were the labours as well as the sorrows of our childhood and education ; but they are among the best of books : the Greek and Roman authors have a spirit in them, a force both of thought and expression, that later ages have not been able to imitate...