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         Juvenal:     more books (100)
  1. The Satires (Oxford World's Classics) by Juvenal, 2008-08-01
  2. Sixteen Satires (Penguin Classics) by Juvenal, 1999-02-01
  3. Juvenal and Persius (Loeb Classical Library) by Juvenal, Persius, 2004-10-25
  4. Post-Augustan Poetry From Seneca to Juvenal by Harold Edgeworth Butler, 2009-10-04
  5. Juvenal: Satires I, III, X (Bk. 1, 3, 10) by Juvenal, 2010-02-25
  6. Tests and Drills in Spanish Grammar: Book 1 (Bk.1) by Juvenal L. Angel, Robert J. Dixson, 1987-05-11
  7. The Satires of Decimus Junius Juvenalis, Tr. Into Engl. Verse, by Mr. Dryden and Several Other Eminent Hands. Together with the Satires of Aulus Persius ... the Original and Progress of Satire. by Juvenal, 2010-03-15
  8. Juvenal: Satires Book I (Cambridge Greek and Latin Classics) (Bk. 1) by Juvenal, 1996-03-29
  9. Juvenal by Samuel Johnson, Juvenal Juvenal, et all 2010-04-20
  10. Juvenal and Persius (Loeb Classical Library) by G. G. (translation) Ramsay, 1979
  11. Post-Augustan Poetry: From Seneca to Juvenal by H.E. Butler, 2007-02-23
  12. Satires of Rome: Threatening Poses from Lucilius to Juvenal by Kirk Freudenburg, 2001-11-26
  13. Figuring Out Roman Nobility: Juvenal's Eighth 'Satire' (University of Exeter Press - Exeter Studies in History) by John Henderson, 1997-01-01
  14. The Satires of Juvenal by Decimus Junis Juvenalis, Rolfe Humphries, 1960-01-01

1. Ancient History Sourcebook: Juvenal:  Satire 1 English
English 1918 translation for the Loeb Classical Library by G. G. Ramsay of several satires of juvenal
http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/ancient/juv-sat1eng.html
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Ancient History Sourcebook:
Juvenal: Satire 1 (English)
Introduction
Juvenal Satire 1 Latin Satire 1 English Satire 1 English/Latin
Juvenal Satire 2 Latin Satire 2 English Satire 2 English/Latin
Juvenal Satire 3 Latin Satire 3 English Satire 3 English/Latin THE SATIRES OF JUVENAL SATIRE I DIFFICILE EST SATURAM NON SCRIBERE not 51 Must I not deem these things worthy of the Venusian's[16] lamp? Must I not have my fling at them? Should I do better to tell tales about Hercules, or Diomede, or the bellowing in the Labyrinth, or about the flying carpenter[17] and the lad[18] who splashed into the sea; and that in an age when the compliant husband, if his wife may not lawfully inherits,[19] takes money from her paramour, being well trained to keep his eyes upon the ceiling, or to snore with wakeful nose over his cups; an age when one who has squandered all his family fortunes upon horse-flesh thinks it right and proper to look for the command of a cohort? See the youngster dashing at break-neck speed, like a very Automedon,[20] along the Flaminian way, holding the reins himself, while he shows himself off to his great-coated mistress! 63 Would you not like to fill up a whole note-book at the street crossings when you see a forger borne along upon the necks of six porters, and exposed to view on this side and on that in his almost naked litter, and reminding you of the lounging Maecenas one who by help of a scrap of paper and a moistened seal has converted himself into a fine and wealthy gentleman?

2. Juvenal
juvenal may have been the last great Roman satirist, but we know very little about this poet of personal, invectiveladen satire. juvenal.
http://ancienthistory.about.com/library/weekly/aa062700a.htm
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Subscribe to the About Ancient / Classical History newsletter. Search Ancient / Classical History Juvenal Roman Satirist of Silver Age Latin Related Resources Review: Roman Verse Satire
Satire's Origins

Juvenal Net Links

Roman verse satire, a literary genre created by the Romans, is personal and subjective, providing insight into the poet and a look (albeit, warped) at social mores. Invective and obscenities, dining habits, corruption, and personal flaws all have a place in it. While we must always be leery of assuming the persona speaks for the poet, in the case of the last and greatest of the Roman satirists, Juvenal, we don't have much choice. He wasn't mentioned by most contemporary poets and is not included in Quintilian 's history of satire. It wasn't until Servius, in the late fourth century, that Juvenal received recognition.

3. JUVENAL

http://www.vroma.org/~araia/satire3.html
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4. Juvenal Quotes - The Quotations Page
all to prone to imitate whatever is base and depraved. juvenal. Think it the greatest impiety to prefer life to lose the reason for living. juvenal. But who is to
http://www.quotationspage.com/quotes.php3?author=Juvenal

5. Juvenal
IUNI IVVENALIS SATVRAE. Satura I. Satura II. Satura III. Satura IV. Satura V. Satura VI. Satura VII. Satura VIII. Satura IX. Satura X. Satura XI. Satura XII. Satura XIII. Satura XIV. Satura XV. Satura XVI. The Latin Library. The Classics Page
http://www.thelatinlibrary.com/juvenal.html
D. IUNI IVVENALIS SATVRAE Satura I Satura II Satura III Satura IV ... The Classics Page

6. Index To Juvenal, Edited By Michael Hendry
SUBSIDIA Prefaces Editing juvenal. Technical Notes
http://www.curculio.org/Juvenal
D. I VNII I VVENALIS S ATVRAE
Edidit breuique apparatu critico instruxit
Michael Hendry
SATURAE: Liber I: Satura 1
Satura 2

Satura 3

Satura 4
...
Satura 5
Liber II: Satura 6 Liber III: Satura 7
Satura 8

Satura 9
Liber IV: Satura 10
Satura 11
Satura 12 Liber V: Satura 13 Satura 14 Satura 15 Satura 16 SUBSIDIA: Prefaces: Editing Juvenal Technical Notes Links: Editor's Home Page E-mail the Editor Last updated: August 13, 2001.

7. JUVENAL FERREIRA DA SILVA, S.A.
Produces natural cork bottlestoppers, approved by the Portuguese Institute of Quality.
http://www.jfs.pt/

8. Chateau Juvenal - Provence - Vaucluse - Chambres Et Suites D'hôtes
Chambres et suite d'h´tes dans une bastide proven§ale du XIX¨ si¨cle.
http://www.chateau-en-provence.com

Bienvenue
Chambres et ambiance Le Domaine Les loisirs ... Situation
Anne-Marie et Bernard Forestier
Chemin du Long Serre - 84330 Saint Hippolyte le Graveyron
chateau.juvenal@wanadoo.fr

Atek

9. Juvenal. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001
Columbia Encyclopedia. See also juvenal Quotations. PREVIOUS. NEXT The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001. juvenal. ( Decimus Junius juvenalis) (j
http://www.bartleby.com/65/ju/Juvenal.html
Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia Cultural Literacy World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations Respectfully Quoted English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference Columbia Encyclopedia See also: Juvenal Quotations PREVIOUS NEXT CONTENTS ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Juvenal (Decimus Junius Juvenalis) (j n l) ( KEY ) , fl. 1st to 2d cent.

10. Juvenal --  Encyclopædia Britannica
MLA style " juvenal." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2004. Encyclopædia Britannica Premium Service. APA style juvenal. Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved May 6, 2004, from
http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?eu=45253

11. Juvenal - Silver Age Roman Poet And Satirist
Resources on the ancient Silver Age satirist juvenal. We know virtually nothing about juvenal except that he probably wrote between AD 100 and 120.
http://ancienthistory.about.com/cs/juvenal/
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Latin Poetry - Juvenal Roman Satirist
Resources on the ancient Silver Age satirist Juvenal. We know virtually nothing about Juvenal except that he probably wrote between A.D. 100 and 120.
Alphabetical
Recent Up a category Juvenal What you'll find in each of the sixteen satires by Juvenal. Satire's Origins A look at the antecedents to this totally Roman genre. Review: Roman Verse Satire A look at a small 1999 anthology of the works of Horace, Lucilius, Persius, and Juvenal, in English and Latin. Classics : Authors From a guide to library resources, sources for bibliography, concordances, indexes on Juvenal. Index to Juvenal's Satires Michael Hendry's index page to his texts of Juvenal's Satires with apparatus criticus.

12. Ancient History Sourcebook: Juvenal: Satire VI
Edited text of the Loeb English translation by G.G. Ramsay, with notes, provided by the Ancient History Sourcebook.
http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/ancient/juvenal-satvi.html
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Ancient History Sourcebook:
Juvenal: Satire VI
THE WAYS OF WOMEN I N the days of Saturn, I believe, Chastity still lingered on the earth, and was to be seen for a timedays when men were poorly housed in chilly caves, which under one common shelter enclosed hearth and household gods, herds and their owners; when the hill-bred wife spread her silvan bed with leaves and straw and the skins of her neighbours the wild beasts i.e. in the golden days of innocence. a wife not like thee, O Cynthia nor to thee, Lesbia, whose bright eyes were clouded by a sparrow's death, but one whose breasts gave suck to lusty babes, often more unkempt herself than her acorn-belching husband. For in those days, when the world was young and the skies were new, men born of the riven oak, or formed of dust, lived differently from now, and had no parents of their own. Under Jupiter, perchance, some few traces of ancient modesty may have survived; but that was before he had grown his beard, before the Greeks had learned to swear by someone else's head, when men feared not thieves for their cabbages or fruits, and lived with unwalled gardens. After that Astraea withdrew by degrees to heaven, with Chastity as her comrade, the two sisters taking flight together.

13. Poem Title Index For Representative Poetry On-line
Excerpts at the University of Toronto.
http://www.library.utoronto.ca/utel/rp/poems/johnson1.html
Poet Index Poem Index Random Search ... Concordance document.writeln(divStyle)
Poem Title Index
  • 1914 I. Peace
  • 1914 II. Safety
  • 1914 III. The Dead
  • 1914 IV. The Dead ...
  • Absalom and Achitophel: The Second Part (excerpt)
  • Absence, Hear thou my Protestation
  • Abt Vogler
  • Account of a Visit from St. Nicholas
  • An Account of the Greatest English Poets (excerpt)
  • Acon and Rhodope; or, Inconstancy
  • Adam and Eve
  • Adam Lay Ibounden
  • Address to the Devil ...
  • Ae Fond Kiss
  • (excerpt)
  • The Aeneid (excerpt)
  • Afar in the Desert
  • The Affliction (I)
  • The Affliction of Richard
  • After Apple Picking ...
  • An After-Poem
  • After-Thought see Sonnets from The River Duddon: After-Thought
  • Afton Water
  • Again at Christmas did we Weave see In Memoriam A. H. H.:
  • Against Evil Company
  • Against Idleness and Mischief
  • The Age Demanded ...
  • Alas! so all Things now do Hold their Peace
  • Alas, 'tis True I have Gone here and there see Sonnet CX: Alas, 'tis True I have Gone here and there
  • Alastor; or, The Spirit of Solitude
  • Albion's England (excerpt)
  • Alexander's Feast
  • All the Hills and Vales Along
  • All Things Bright and Beautiful see Maker of Heaven and Earth
  • Almond Blossom
  • "Alone"
  • Along the field as we came by see A Shropshire Lad XXVI: Along the field as we came by
  • Along with Youth
  • An Alphabet of Famous Goops ...
  • Alysoun
  • Amazing Grace see Faith's Review and Expectation
  • America
  • America
  • America: A Prophecy (excerpt)
  • America the Beautiful
  • American Poets: Longfellow
  • Among the Rocks
  • Amoretti III: The Sovereign Beauty ...
  • Anacreontics (excerpt)
  • An Anatomy of the World (excerpt)
  • Ancient Music
  • The Ancient World
  • And If I Did, What Then?
  • 14. Juvenal 3 Introduction
    Introduction to the online juvenal Third Satire. Intent. An texts. Brief Essay on juvenal. coming soon! life, work, style and times.
    http://www.vroma.org/~araia/intro.html
    Introduction to the on-line Juvenal Third Satire
    Intent An electronic Juvenal seems an appropriate way to capture Juvenal's satiric style, which teleports the reader from one vividly described scene to another, presenting snap shots of the life around him accompanied by searing observations delivered in sound bites. Method Brief Essay on Juvenal coming soon! life, work, style and times Select Bibliography of texts, translations, commentaries, essays
    • Braund, Susanna Morton (1996) Juvenal: Satires Book I . An edition with commentary. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
    • Braund, Susanna Morton (1996) The Roman Satirists and Their Masks . London: Bristol Classical Press.
    • Courtney, E. (1980) A Commentary on the Satires of Juvenal . London.
    • Ferguson, John (1979) Juvenal: The Satires . An edition with commentary. New York: St. Martin's Press.
    • Rudd, Niall (1992) Juvenal: The Satires . A translation. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    Outline of Satire 3 Lines 1-20: Prologue : The satirist sets the stage for Umbricius' monologue, addressing his listeners/readers in the first person. He details the occasion of his friend's departure from Rome for a better life in the country. He weighs and gives his approval of that decision, sketching in the time, circumstances, and place of their final meeting at the edge of the city, a decidedly liminal place. They move to a once-sacred grove outside the walls, a location which elicits and illustrates their shared dissatisfactions with Rome, foreshadowing Umbricius' themes which translate easily into slogans: less is more, Rome for the Romans, the good old days, natural is best, keep it simple, gods before money.

    15. Juvenal Quotes - The Quotations Page
    Quotations by Author. juvenal (55 AD 127 AD) Roman poet satirist more author details. juvenal - More quotations on Body. Be gentle with the young.
    http://www.quotationspage.com/quotes/Juvenal/

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    Juvenal (55 AD - 127 AD)

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    Showing quotations 1 to 10 of 13 total
    A healthy mind in a healthy body.
    Juvenal
    - More quotations on: Body
    Be gentle with the young.
    Juvenal
    - More quotations on: Children
    Be rich to yourself and poor to your friends.
    Juvenal
    - More quotations on: Money
    Fortune can, for her pleasure, fools advance,
    And toss them on the wheels of Chance.
    Juvenal - More quotations on: Chance
    One path alone leads to a life of peace: The path of virtue.
    Juvenal
    Peace visits not the guilty mind. (Nemo Malus Felix)
    Juvenal
    Refrain from doing ill; for one all powerful reason, lest our children should copy our misdeeds; we are all to prone to imitate whatever is base and depraved.
    Juvenal
    Think it the greatest impiety to prefer life to disgrace, and for the sake of life to lose the reason for living.
    Juvenal
    But who is to guard the guards themselves?
    Juvenal, Satires
    Count it the greatest sin to prefer life to honor, and for the sake of living to love what makes life worth having.

    16. Latin Texts
    A collection of latin texts Apuleius, Caesar, Catullus, Cicero, juvenal, Lucan, Lucretius, Livy, Plautus, Pliny Major, Pliny Minor, Quintilian, Sallust, and Tacitus.
    http://www.freewebs.com/omniamundamundis/
    "Omnia munda mundis"
    A collection of latin texts
    Apuleius Caesar Catullus Cicero ... dmoz

    17. Das Patronat Im Alten Rom
    Die Seminararbeit beschreibt ausf¼hrlich die Sozialbindung zwischen Patron und Klient im antiken Rom. Dabei werden auch l¤ngere Originaltexte (u. a. PlinusBriefe, eine juvenal-Satire) zitiert.
    http://members.surfeu.at/patrick.horvath/patrone.htm
    Das Patronat
    im alten Rom
    Patrick Horvath
    Charakterisierung des Patronats
    Richard Saller nennt drei Aspekte, die das Verhältnis von Patron und Klient kennzeichnen (in: Wallace-Hadrill 1989, S.49): Es handelt sich um eine persönliche , zwischenmenschliche Beziehung. Es erfolgt ein gegenseitiger Austausch von Leistungen und Gütern. Die am Verhältnis teilhabenden Personen sind von unterschiedlichem Rang Diese Charakteristika stecken den breiten Rahmen dieses komplexen Verhältnisses ab.
    Der "do ut des"-Gedanke
    Das Patronat beruht auf einem in der römischen Kultur seit jeher verankerten Gedanken: dem "do ut des". Nach römischer Auffassung zog eine Wohltat, die man empfing, die ethische und mitunter auch rechtliche Pflicht nach sich, diese zu erwidern. Es ist die rechtsphilosophische Grundlage des Verhältnisses von Patron und Klient. Auch die römische Religion beruhte auf dieser Idee: Der Mensch folgt den Geboten des Gottes, opfert ihm, baut ihm Tempel. Dafür muß der Gott aber den Menschen und seinen Angehörigen auch beschützen, für gute Ernte und Gesundheit sorgen. Der Mensch wiederum wird durch die empfangenen Wohltaten erneut zu Gehorsam verpflichtet etc. Der "do ut des"-Gedanke ist, nebenbei gemerkt, dem Christentum nicht unbedingt wesentlich; das Buch Hiob, in dem Gott zuläßt, daß der Gerechte und Fromme gequält und geschunden wird, und sich dieser nicht einmal darüber beklagen darf, wäre dem echten Römer nicht verständlich und vielleicht sogar als orientalischer Despotismus verächtlich.

    18. Juvenal - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
    juvenal. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. juvenal (Decimus Iunius Iuvenalis) was a Roman satiric poet of the 1st century AD.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juvenal
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    Juvenal
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Juvenal Decimus Iunius Iuvenalis ) was a Roman satiric poet of the 1st century AD. Very little is known about his life, the ancient biographies being generally fictitious. He is best known for coining the phrase "panem et circenses" ("bread and circuses") to describe the primary pursuits of the Roman populace. Also the rhetorical question "Who shall guard the guardians?" is attributed to him. He was known to be from Aquinum , and described himself as middle-aged at the time of publication of his first satire, which was sometime in the AD. The latest known date for his activity is . For a time he was very poor and was dependent on the rich people in Rome, and never became well known; the only known contemporary mention is in Martial His surviving work consists of 16 satires in hexameter
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    19. Ancient History Sourcebook: Juvenal: Satire 3 (English)
    juvenal Satire 1 Latin Satire 1 English Satire 1 English/Latin. juvenal Satire 2 Latin Satire 2 English
    http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/ancient/juv-sat3eng.html
    Back to Ancient History Sourcebook
    Ancient History Sourcebook:
    Juvenal: Satire 3 (English)
    Introduction
    Juvenal Satire 1 Latin Satire 1 English Satire 1 English/Latin
    Juvenal Satire 2 Latin Satire 2 English Satire 2 English/Latin
    Juvenal Satire 3 Latin Satire 3 English Satire 3 English/Latin SATIRE III QUID ROMAE FACIAM? THOUGH put out by the departure of my old friend, I commend his purpose to fix his home at Cumae, and to present one citizen to the Sibyl. That is the gate of Baiae, a sweet retreat upon a pleasant shore; I myself would prefer even Prochyta[1] to the Subura![2] For where has one ever seen a place so dismal and so lonely that one would not deem it worse to live in perpetual dread of fires and falling houses, and the thousand perils of this terrible city, and poets spouting in the month of August! 10 But while all his goods and chattels were being packed upon a single wagon, my friend halted at the dripping archway of the old Porta Capena.[3] Here Numa held his nightly assignations with his mistress; but now the holy fount and grove and shrine are let out to Jews, who possess a basket and a truss of hay for all their furnishings. For as every tree nowadays has to pay toll to the people, the Muses have been ejected, and the wood has to go a-begging. We go down to the Valley of Egeria, and into the caves so unlike to nature: how much more near to us would be the spirit of the fountain if its waters were fringed by a green border of grass, and there were no marble to outrage the native tufa!

    20. Juvénal Habyarimana - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
    More results from en.wikipedia.org Lessons from juvenal by Roger KimballLessons from juvenal by Roger Kimball. It is difficult not to write satire. juvenal’s loathing is visceral, breathtaking, unforgettable.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juvenal_Habyarimana
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    Juvénal Habyarimana
    (Redirected from Juvenal Habyarimana March 8 April 6 ) was president of Rwanda from 1973 until his death in 1994. While serving as defense minister, he overthrew his cousin Grégoire Kayibanda on July 5, 1973. During his 20-year dictatorship he favored his own ethnic group, the Hutus , and supported the Hutu majority in neighboring Burundi against the Tutsi government. In the early 1990s a rebellion against the Rwandan government began when rebels from the Rwandan Patriotic Front , a mostly Tutsi group, crossed the border from Uganda. Habyarimana was killed in a plane crash along with the president of Burundi on April 6, 1994. The plane was most likely shot down. Hutus who believed that Habyarimana's government had been too moderate took over the government and began a genocide against Tutsis. Within four months, 800,000 Rwandans were massacred, mostly Tutsis and moderate Hutus. The international community failed to act, since Rwanda was not on their interest sheet. Lieutenant-General Roméo Dallaire warned the United Nations and the international community that a genocide was inevitable and asked for permission to act, but his demands were refused. He still maintains that if he had 3,000 more men on the ground, he would have stopped the catastrophe.

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