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Juvenal's and Satires
* Juvenal's 16 " Satires " in Latin, at The Latin Library
* Juvenal's Satires in English verse, through Google Books
* Juvenal's 16 " Satires " in Latin, at The Latin Library
* Juvenal's first 3 " Satires " in English

Juvenal's and 3
* Juvenal's Satire 3 in Latin and English, at Vroma

Juvenal's and Latin
Other references in classical literature include the belief that upon death the otherwise silent Mute Swan would sing beautifully-hence the phrase swan song ; as well as Juvenal's sarcastic reference to a good woman being a " rare bird, as rare on earth as a black swan ", from which we get the Latin phrase rara avis, rare bird.
At c. 695 lines of Latin hexameter, this satire is nearly twice the length of the next largest of the author's sixteen known satires ; Satire VI alone composes Book II of Juvenal's five books of satire.

Juvenal's and translation
One translation of Juvenal's poetry by Barten Holyday in 1661 makes note that the Roman trainees learned to fight with the wooden wasters before moving on to the use of sharpened steel.
One translation of Juvenal's poetry by Barten Holyday in 1661 makes note that the Roman trainees learned to fight with the wooden wasters before moving on to the use of sharpened steel, much in the way modern reconstruction groups progress.

Juvenal's and .
In Juvenal's account, he seems to have relished the scandalous self-display, applause and the disgrace he inflicted on his more sturdy opponent by repeatedly skipping away from the confrontation.
A notable example is the Roman poet Juvenal's satires.
She is mentioned in one of Juvenal's satires and identified with the Roman goddess Fortuna, and Martianus Capella lists her along with other goddesses of fate and chance such as Sors, Nemesis, and Tyche.
* Sejanus's rise and fall is described in Juvenal's Satire X, named either " Wrong Desire is the Source of Suffering " or " The Vanity of Human Wishes.
His life and work are idiosyncratically and somewhat unsympathetically described in Juvenal's Mayor: The Professor Who Lived on 2d.
iii. 110 ); he shows, however, none of Juvenal's undue stress on unsavoury detail or Horace's easy-going acceptance of human weaknesses.
In 1687, Shadwell attempted to answer these attacks in a version of Juvenal's 10th Satire.
Homer's Batrachomyomachia, Hymns and Epigrams, Hesiod's Works and Days, Musæus ' Hero and Leander, Juvenal's Fifth Satire.
In later years that tradition came under critical review in Juvenal's day.
The xenophobic speaker of Juvenal's first Satire, composed in the late 1st or early 2nd century, complains of passing the Forum's triumphal statues, " where some Egyptian Arabarch's had the nerve to set up his titles.
*** Messalina's participation in prostitution, as criticised in Juvenal's Satire VI.
" Certain effeminate men mentioned by Seneca the Younger in his Quaestiones naturales were trained as gladiators and may correspond to Juvenal's tunic-wearing retiarii.
Juvenal's second satire, wherein he deplores the immorality he perceived in Roman society, introduces a member of the Gracchus family who is described as a homosexual married ( in female persona ) to a horn player.
Gracchus later appears in the arena: Greater still the portent when Gracchus, clad in a tunic, played the gladiator, and fled, trident in hand, across the arena — Gracchus, a man of nobler birth than the Capitolini, or the Marcelli, or the descendants of Catulus or Paulus, or the Fabii: nobler than all the spectators in the podium ; not excepting him who gave the show at which that net was flung. Gracchus appears once again in Juvenal's eighth satire as the worst example of the noble Romans who have disgraced themselves by appearing in public spectacles and popular entertainments:
However in Juvenal's Satire VI ( famously renamed ' Against Women ') he references her as one of many lascivious women.
Juvenal's Satire VI referred to the " debauchery " that prevailed there.
He edited Juvenal's and Persius's satires ( Lond.

Satires and 1
In classical poetry the Tagus was famous for its gold-bearing sands ( Catullus 29. 19, Ovid, Amores, 1. 15. 34, Juvenal, Satires, 3. 55, etc.
* Juvenal, Satires 1. 129-131
The Roman poet Juvenal, a near-contemporary of Tacitus, mentions this island twice in his Satires: first as a place of exile for particularly vile criminals ( 1. 73 ), and second as a symbol of claustrophobic imprisonment ( 10. 170 ).

Satires and 2
# Des Satires personelles, traité historique et critique de celles qui portent le litre d ’ Anti ( 2 vols.

Satires and 3
Horace places a different version of the story towards the end of a long conversation on the demented behaviour of mankind ( Satires II. 3, lines 314ff ) where Damasippus accuses the poet of trying to keep up with his rich patron Maecenas.

Satires and Latin
Early Latin literature ended with Gaius Lucilius, who created a new kind of poetry in his 30 books of Satires ( 100s BC ).
* Juvenal Satires, 10th Satire Latin text
He also edited the Ars poetica and Satires of Horace, the Agricola of Tacitus, the romance of Xenophon of Ephesus, and was the author of a history of the Latin poets of the Netherlands ( De vita, doctrina, et facultate Nederlandorum qui carmina latina composuerunt, 1838 ).
The epigraph found on the title page of the 1700 edition of The Way of the World contains two Latin quotations from Horace's Satires.

Satires and English
* The Satires of Juvenal, Persius, Sulpicia, and Lucilius in English prose, through Google Books
** June 4-Bishops ' Ban of 1599: Thomas Middleton's Microcynicon: Six Snarling Satires and John Marston's Scourge of Villainy are publicly burned as the English ecclesiastical authorities clamp down on published satire.
* June 4-The Bishops ' Ban of 1599: Middleton's Microcynicon: Six Snarling Satires and Marston's Scourge of Villainy are publicly burned as the English ecclesiastical authorities crack down on the craze for satire of the past year.
Among his other editions are Aeschylus, Agamemmon ( 1848 ), Choëphori ( 1857 ); English verse translations of Horace, Odes and Carmen Saeculare ( 1863 ), Satires, Epistles and Ars Poëtica ( 1869 ).
* Charles Anthon, The Satires of Juvenal and Persius with English Notes Critical and Explanatory, from the Best Commentators, Harper and Brothers, ( 1857 ).
* Notes on English Verse Satires ( 1929 )
He also published, in 1801, a translation into English verse of the Satires of Juvenal.
The Brink of All We Hate: English Satires on Women 1660-1750.

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