Thirteen Satires of Juvenal, Volumes 1-2 |
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... God . It is the strength of moral passion , at once reticent and intense , saying little because it feels much , that imposes conciseness upon the satirist , that drew Juvenal away from the declaimer's tribune . This theory of course ...
... God . It is the strength of moral passion , at once reticent and intense , saying little because it feels much , that imposes conciseness upon the satirist , that drew Juvenal away from the declaimer's tribune . This theory of course ...
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... gods above the clouds . ' Strange that M. Nisard should not have recalled that wonderful mediaeval literature of miracle plays in which the saints , the devil , and even God himself were freely employed as the vehicles of the coarsest ...
... gods above the clouds . ' Strange that M. Nisard should not have recalled that wonderful mediaeval literature of miracle plays in which the saints , the devil , and even God himself were freely employed as the vehicles of the coarsest ...
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... gods whose special protection you invoke , and that Fortune is a divinity of our own making . Our lives are decreed before- hand , but the merciful gods have ordered them as was really best , and all we need is health and a stout heart ...
... gods whose special protection you invoke , and that Fortune is a divinity of our own making . Our lives are decreed before- hand , but the merciful gods have ordered them as was really best , and all we need is health and a stout heart ...
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... gods nor Providence ; but there are gods , and they take thought for the affairs of men ; and they have put it within everyone's power not to fall into real trouble ' ( M. Aur . Ant . lib . II . c . xi ) . Marcus Aurelius goes on to ...
... gods nor Providence ; but there are gods , and they take thought for the affairs of men ; and they have put it within everyone's power not to fall into real trouble ' ( M. Aur . Ant . lib . II . c . xi ) . Marcus Aurelius goes on to ...
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... gods . Neither is he quite a Christian . He does not desire the reformation of the sinner or believe it possible , but he rejoices in the idea that a bad man will be tortured by con- science , and that , as character is bound to run its ...
... gods . Neither is he quite a Christian . He does not desire the reformation of the sinner or believe it possible , but he rejoices in the idea that a bad man will be tortured by con- science , and that , as character is bound to run its ...
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aliquid Aquinum atque Augustus Bithyni Caesar called Catullus Cicero Claudius clients consul Crispinus Crown 8vo cuius death Domitian Emperor enim ergo erit Gallus genitive Greek haec Homer Horace igitur illa illis Introduction and Notes ipse iuvenes Juvenal Juvenal's Latin licet Livy Lucilius M.A. Extra fcap M.A. Second Edition magna maior Mart Martial Mayor means mihi nemo neque Nero nunc omnes omni omnia Ovid passage patron Persius Plautus Plin Pliny poem poet Porta praetor probably quae quam quid Quintilian quis quod quoque quotes reading refer rich Roman Rome Satire SATIRE III SATIRE IV Satura says seems Seneca sesterces slaves speaks Statius Subura Suet Suetonius sunt Tacitus tamen tamquam tantum tells thought tibi Trajan Translated tunc Verg Vergil verse viii vita W. W. Skeat wealth Weidner word