Critical Essays on Roman Literature, Volume 2John Patrick Sullivan Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1962 - Latin literature |
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Page 134
John Patrick Sullivan. points ; by removing the topicality of particular reference , he achieves the ' concrete ... references to the countryside are concrete ! The want of help from our own poets is felt the more acutely since the whole ...
John Patrick Sullivan. points ; by removing the topicality of particular reference , he achieves the ' concrete ... references to the countryside are concrete ! The want of help from our own poets is felt the more acutely since the whole ...
Page 139
... reference to the mime . Juvenal says in effect : ' Nothing is impossible if Ursidius submits to monogamy ; if he who used to be notorious for his adventures with married women like a fool puts his face between the shafts when he had so ...
... reference to the mime . Juvenal says in effect : ' Nothing is impossible if Ursidius submits to monogamy ; if he who used to be notorious for his adventures with married women like a fool puts his face between the shafts when he had so ...
Page
... reference to Hylas in both poems , the sar- castic treatment of Icarus : with Juvenal's exutusue puer pinnis labentibus et mare percussum puero fabrumque uolantem which , if we attend to the alliteration and the ablative , might be ...
... reference to Hylas in both poems , the sar- castic treatment of Icarus : with Juvenal's exutusue puer pinnis labentibus et mare percussum puero fabrumque uolantem which , if we attend to the alliteration and the ablative , might be ...
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appear attempt become begins Book castrate character claim Classical close comes contention contrast criticism described direct discussion effect Encolpius epic epigrams fact feel friends give Greek hand Horace Horace's Horatian important instance interest Juvenal Juvenal's Latin less lines literary living look Lucilian Lucilius manner Martial matter means merely mind moral Naevolus nature never once opening passage perhaps Persius Persius's Petronius phrase play pleasure poem poet poetic poetry political poor present quid quis reader reason reference remarks rhetorical Roman Rome satire satirist Satyricon scene seems sense serious sexual shows social Socratic speak spirit style suggests suppose surely taken theme thing thought tone topics true truth turn verse whole writing