Satirae XiiiRivingtons, 1867 |
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Page vii
... one Junius , who was consul A.D. 84 ; another , who was consul A.D. 119 ; and an hypothetical Juncus , who may not impossibly have been consul suffect A.D. 127 . The first date is objected to , because Paris was INTRODUCTION . vii.
... one Junius , who was consul A.D. 84 ; another , who was consul A.D. 119 ; and an hypothetical Juncus , who may not impossibly have been consul suffect A.D. 127 . The first date is objected to , because Paris was INTRODUCTION . vii.
Page viii
Juvenal. The first date is objected to , because Paris was dead , and because a Juvenal was resident in Rome , and intimate with Martial , when the latter published his Seventh Book ( circa A.D. 93 ) . The first objection is answered ...
Juvenal. The first date is objected to , because Paris was dead , and because a Juvenal was resident in Rome , and intimate with Martial , when the latter published his Seventh Book ( circa A.D. 93 ) . The first objection is answered ...
Page ix
... First and Eighth Satires that we find plausible grounds for suspecting allusions to the reign of Nero , which have furnished such a plentiful harvest of conjectures to annotators from the Scholiast downwards . Madvig ( in his Opuscula ...
... First and Eighth Satires that we find plausible grounds for suspecting allusions to the reign of Nero , which have furnished such a plentiful harvest of conjectures to annotators from the Scholiast downwards . Madvig ( in his Opuscula ...
Page xi
... first place , that Trajan had a favourite who had power to persecute ; and impossible to prove , in the second place , that any danger of the kind , which may have existed , could be avoided by only admitting names whose owners had ...
... first place , that Trajan had a favourite who had power to persecute ; and impossible to prove , in the second place , that any danger of the kind , which may have existed , could be avoided by only admitting names whose owners had ...
Page xii
... first place , we may observe that the general and shameless relaxation of manners suits better with the age of Nero , than with that of Domitian , the reviver of the censorship ; in the second place , Lateranus must obviously be a ...
... first place , we may observe that the general and shameless relaxation of manners suits better with the age of Nero , than with that of Domitian , the reviver of the censorship ; in the second place , Lateranus must obviously be a ...
Common terms and phrases
according Archdeacon Arnold's T. K. Atlanta better Bishop Book Cambridge Canon Catilina Church circus common consul containing course Crown 8vo Dean death Domitian Edited England English Notes Exercises family father favourite Fifth Edition First found Fourth Edition give good Greek GREEK LANGUAGE gula have Heinrich hence History Holy Horace ille Jahn Juvenal Juvenal's last Latin Lectures life likely looks made make makes Martial Massa Mayor mean Messalina mons Nero never New Edition Parish people perhaps Persius place Plain possible Practical Prayer probably public quis quum read reading revised Roman Rome same Satire Scholiast Schools Second Edition seems sense Sermons Seventh slave Small 8vo T. K. Arnold tamen their Thersites they thing think Third Edition thought three tibi tion Trajan tunc Tunes used Verres vols Vulcan whole Wordsworth's work written wrote Year years Young καὶ
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