The satires of Persius, tr. by W. Drummond |
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Page iv
... passions ; so the satirist remarks and censures those private and individual devia- tions from good sense or good conduct , which it does not fall within the province of the moralist to observe . The moralist displays the variety of the ...
... passions ; so the satirist remarks and censures those private and individual devia- tions from good sense or good conduct , which it does not fall within the province of the moralist to observe . The moralist displays the variety of the ...
Page xi
... passions , with the energy of a thousand tongues . The Romans soon caught the art , which they admired . In the year 514 of Rome , Livius Andro- nicus performed several pieces of his own , and added the interest of dialogue to the ...
... passions , with the energy of a thousand tongues . The Romans soon caught the art , which they admired . In the year 514 of Rome , Livius Andro- nicus performed several pieces of his own , and added the interest of dialogue to the ...
Page xv
... passions , the perpetrators of detest- able vices , the dupes or the agents of villainy . The pictures drawn by the vigorous and masterly hand of Juvenal may justly claim our admiration ; but surely little delight can be felt in ...
... passions , the perpetrators of detest- able vices , the dupes or the agents of villainy . The pictures drawn by the vigorous and masterly hand of Juvenal may justly claim our admiration ; but surely little delight can be felt in ...
Page xviii
... passions , is deserving of serious reflection perhaps in every stage of life . There is a knowledge of human nature , and of the constitution of the human ... passion ; and that even what are called the worst passions appear xviii PREFACE .
... passions , is deserving of serious reflection perhaps in every stage of life . There is a knowledge of human nature , and of the constitution of the human ... passion ; and that even what are called the worst passions appear xviii PREFACE .
Page xix
... passions , against which we have to guard , and which we ought to consider as noxious to our mental constitution . It seems to me , that the human passions may properly be classed under two heads ; the first com- prehending those which ...
... passions , against which we have to guard , and which we ought to consider as noxious to our mental constitution . It seems to me , that the human passions may properly be classed under two heads ; the first com- prehending those which ...
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Common terms and phrases
admired aliquid atque censure centum Chrysippus Cleanthes Cornutus dare delight Dicere dost thou Dryden Egyptians feasts Fescennine verses fidelia fools glow gods hæc hath Haud Heic Hinc honours Horace Horus hour hunc illi Inque ipse Jews Jove joys Juvenal laurel lictor lyre mane mihi mind Muse nempe nihilum nisi nunc o'er obscure observations oculos pale palles passions Pingue pleasure poet poetry populi prætor's praise pueris purple Quæ quam quantum quibus quicquid quid Quintilian quis quò quod rage reader rerum Roman Rome Sæpe sage SATIRE III SATIRE IV SATIRE VI SATIRES OF PERSIUS satirist shame sibi sistrum soul Stoics strigiles sung tacitus tamen taste thee thine thought tibi tion toil tongue Tunc umbo unity of subject Unmark'd venit verba verses vice virtue vivere water-clock wealth words wretch youth
Popular passages
Page 46 - Summosque pedes attinge, manusque : " Non frigent." Visa est si forte pecunia; sive Candida vicini subrisit molle puella ; 110 Cor tibi rite salit ? positum est algente catino Durum olus; et populi cribro decussa farina : Tentemus fauces.
Page 14 - et qui caeruleum dirimebat Nerea delphin; ,,sic costam longo subduximus Apennino. 95 ,,Arma virum, nonne hoc spumosum et cortice pingui, „ut ramale vetus, praegrandi subere coctum?" Quidnam igitur tenerum , et laxa cervice legendum? Torva Mimalloneis implerunt cornua bombis, et raptum vitulo caput ablatura superbo Bassaris, et lyncem Maenas flexura corymbis 100 Euion ingeminat: reparabilis assonat Echo.
Page 70 - Vertigo facit! Hic Dama est non tressis agaso, Vappa et lippus, et in tenui farragine mendax: Verterit hunc dominus, momento turbinis exit Marcus Dama. Papae! Marco spondente, recusas Credere tu nummos? Marco sub judice palles? 80 Marcus dixit: ita est. Assigna, Marce, tabellas.
Page 28 - Ecce avia, aut metuens divum matertera, cunis Exemit puerum, frontemque atque uda labella Infami digito et lustralibus ante salivis Expiat, urentes oculos inhibere perita.
Page 14 - ... ait Pedio. Pedius quid? crimina rasis 85 librat in antithetis, doctas posuisse figuras laudatur: 'bellum hoc.' hoc bellum? an, Romule, ceves? men moveat?
Page xi - Et sermone opus est modo tristi, saepe iocoso, Defendente vicem modo rhetoris atque poetae, Interdum urbani parcentis viribus atque Extenuantis eas consulto. Ridiculum acri Fortius et melius magnas plerumque secat res.
Page 72 - Sambucam citius caloni aptaveris alto. Stat contra ratio et secretam gannit in aurem, Ne liceat facere id, quod quis vitiabit agendo.
Page 48 - Cor tibi rite salit? Positum est algente catino Durum olus, et populi cribro decussa farina : Tentemus fauces ; tenero latet ulcus in ore Putre, quod haud deceat plebeia radere beta.
Page 10 - Quisquis es, O, modo quem ex adverso dicere feci, Non ego cum scribo, si forte quid aptius exit, 45 Quando haec rara avis est, si quid tamen aptius exit, Laudari metuam, neque enim mihi cornea fibra est ; Sed recti finemque extremumque esse recuso EUGE tuum et BELLE.
Page 78 - Indulge Genio, carpamus dulcia, nostrum est Quod vivis : cinis et Manes et fabula fies ; [Vive memor leti, fugit hora, hoc quod loquor inde est.] " En quid agis ? duplici in diversum scinderis hamo, Hunccine an hunc sequeris.