The Satires of Decimus Junius Juvenalis,editor, 1836 - 208 pages |
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Page xiii
... raise every tender emotion of the heart . The honest Umbritius stops in the wood of Ægeria , ( a sacred monument of the primitive Romans , but then inhabited by wretched Jews , ) to complain to Numa of the luxury of foreign manners ...
... raise every tender emotion of the heart . The honest Umbritius stops in the wood of Ægeria , ( a sacred monument of the primitive Romans , but then inhabited by wretched Jews , ) to complain to Numa of the luxury of foreign manners ...
Page xxvii
... raised a murmur , which my godfather found himself either unable or unwilling to withstand ; he therefore determined to recall me ; which he could easily do , as I wanted some months of 14 , and consequently was not yet bound ...
... raised a murmur , which my godfather found himself either unable or unwilling to withstand ; he therefore determined to recall me ; which he could easily do , as I wanted some months of 14 , and consequently was not yet bound ...
Page 2
... raised himself to a Knight's estate by his vicious courses . 27. Crispinus , a tool of the tyrant Domitian . See Satire iv . 35 , 36. Massa and Carus were two common informers . And let him triumph ! ' tis the price of 2 JUVENAL . SATIRE I.
... raised himself to a Knight's estate by his vicious courses . 27. Crispinus , a tool of the tyrant Domitian . See Satire iv . 35 , 36. Massa and Carus were two common informers . And let him triumph ! ' tis the price of 2 JUVENAL . SATIRE I.
Page 4
... raise , For Virtue starves - on universal praise ; While Vice controls the penury of Fate , Bestows the figured vase , the antique plate , The lordly mansion , and the fair estate ! O ! who can see the step - father impure , The greedy ...
... raise , For Virtue starves - on universal praise ; While Vice controls the penury of Fate , Bestows the figured vase , the antique plate , The lordly mansion , and the fair estate ! O ! who can see the step - father impure , The greedy ...
Page 15
... Raise to Jove thy prayer- But Rome no longer knows thy guardian care ; Quit then the charge to some more watchful Power , Of strength to punish in the obnoxious hour . " To - morrow , with the sun , I must attend In yonder valley ...
... Raise to Jove thy prayer- But Rome no longer knows thy guardian care ; Quit then the charge to some more watchful Power , Of strength to punish in the obnoxious hour . " To - morrow , with the sun , I must attend In yonder valley ...
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alludes altar ancient appears Aquinum arms Ashburton avarice beneath blood boast Bona Dea bosom breast Cæsar Catullus celebrated Claudius Codrus cries crimes crowd dare death dire Domitian dreadful e'en e'er eyes fame fate father favourite fear fire fortune Gabii genius Gifford gold grace Greek guilty hate hear heart heaven honour hour husband indignation Jove Julian law Julius Cæsar Juvenal Juvenal's labours Latian live lust luxury Messalina mind Nero never night Nurscia o'er Paccius pains poet poor pour'd Prætor praise punishment quæ Quintilian race rage rich rise Romans Rome round sacred Saleius Bassus Satire says scarce Sejanus shame sire slave smile soul Suetonius sweet Tacitus temple thee thou thought toil town translation trembling Vascons Vespasian vice Virro virtue Volsci wealth wife WILLIAM GIFFORD wine worth wretched youth
Popular passages
Page xxvii - The women of Brixham, who travelled to Ashburton twice a week with fish, and who had known my parents, did not see me, without kind concern, running about the beach in a ragged jacket and trowsers.
Page xxvii - They mentioned this to the people of Ashburton, and never without commiserating my change of condition. This tale, often repeated, awakened at length the pity of their auditors, and, as the next step, their resentment against the man who had reduced me to such a state of wretchedness. In a large town...
Page 109 - For youth, too transient flower ! of life's short day The shortest part, but blossoms — to decay. Lo ! while we give the unregarded hour To revelry and joy, in Pleasure's bower, While now for rosy wreaths our brows to twine, 180 And now for nymphs we call, and now for wine, The noiseless foot of Time steals swiftly by, And ere we dream of manhood, age is nigh ! Juv.
Page 61 - Lewd, petulant, and reeling ripe with wine! Wealth first, the ready pander to all sin, Brought foreign manners, foreign vices in...
Page 155 - And wrings the dreadful secret from his breast. These, these are they, who tremble and turn pale At the first mutterings of the hollow gale ; Who sink with terror at the transient glare Of meteors glancing through the turbid air. Oh, 'tis not chance...
Page 120 - A faltering voice, a weak and trembling pace, An ever-dropping nose, a forehead bare, And toothless gums to mumble o'er its fare. Poor wretch! behold him, tottering to his fall, So loathsome to himself, wife, children, all, That those who hoped the legacy to share, And flattered long, — disgusted, disappear.
Page 67 - Virgil charming, and attempts to prove Poor Dido right, in venturing all for love. From Maro, and Maeonides, she quotes The striking passages, and, while she notes Their beauties and defects, adjusts her scales, And accurately weighs which bard prevails. The astonished guests sit mute: grammarians yield, Loud rhetoricians, baffled, quit the field; Even auctioneers and lawyers stand aghast, And not a woman speaks ! — So thick, and fast, The wordy shower descends, that you would swear A thousand...
Page 160 - And she shall bless you, if the youth become, By your o'er-ruling care, or soon or late, A useful member of the parent state : For all depends on you ; the stamp he'll take From the strong impress which at first you make, And prove, as vice or virtue was your aim, His country's glory, or his country's shame.
Page 27 - Around your lawn their facile streams shall shower, And cheer the springing plant and opening flower. There live, delighted with the rustic's lot, And till, with your own hands, the little spot ; The little spot shall yield you large amends, And glad, with many a feast, your Samian friends. And, sure, — in any corner we can get, To call one lizard ours, is something yet!
Page 111 - In every clime, from Ganges' distant stream To Gades, gilded by the western beam, Few, from the clouds of mental error free, In its true light or good or evil see. For what, with reason, do we seek or shun? What plan, how happily soe'er begun, But, finished, we our own success lament, And rue the pains, so fatally misspent?