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    <title>The Satires of A. Persius Flaccus | Cyber Library</title>
    <link>https://www.cyberlibrary.org/la/books/the-satires-of-a-persius-flaccus-22119/</link>
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      <title>3. Part 3</title>
      <link>https://www.cyberlibrary.org/la/books/the-satires-of-a-persius-flaccus-22119/chapters/3/</link>
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      <description>Among his early friends was Caesius Bassus, to whom the Sixth Satire is addressed: an older contemporary, who had studied with the same master, next to Horace, by a long remove,...</description>
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      <title>21. Part 21</title>
      <link>https://www.cyberlibrary.org/la/books/the-satires-of-a-persius-flaccus-22119/chapters/21/</link>
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      <description>caballino fonte, Prol., 1. cachinno, 1, 12. cachinnos ingeminare, 3, 87. caeco occipiti, 1, 62. caecum vulnus, 4, 44. caedimus, 4, 42. caelestium inanes, 2, 61. caerulea tabula,...</description>
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      <title>4. Part 4</title>
      <link>https://www.cyberlibrary.org/la/books/the-satires-of-a-persius-flaccus-22119/chapters/4/</link>
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      <description>Horace had long been a classic when Persius dodged his school-tasks and was a dab at marbles. Indeed, nothing is more remarkable about Roman literature than the rapidity with wh...</description>
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      <title>18. Part 18</title>
      <link>https://www.cyberlibrary.org/la/books/the-satires-of-a-persius-flaccus-22119/chapters/18/</link>
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      <description>175. #festuca#: is generally explained as a synonyme for _vindicta_. Others refer it to the practice of throwing stubble on the manumitted slave, Plut., De Sera Num. Vind., p. 5...</description>
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      <title>15. Part 15</title>
      <link>https://www.cyberlibrary.org/la/books/the-satires-of-a-persius-flaccus-22119/chapters/15/</link>
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      <description>'Do what you please!' cries Persius, who identifies himself with the Stoic philosopher. 'Stop just there and learn of me; but first cease to be scornful, and let me get these ol...</description>
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      <title>17. Part 17</title>
      <link>https://www.cyberlibrary.org/la/books/the-satires-of-a-persius-flaccus-22119/chapters/17/</link>
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      <description>116-118. The drift of the passage is plain enough. 'A change of fortune does not bring with it a change of character. If you possess all that you say you possess, then you are f...</description>
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      <title>19. Part 19</title>
      <link>https://www.cyberlibrary.org/la/books/the-satires-of-a-persius-flaccus-22119/chapters/19/</link>
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      <description>(3.) Heinrich's _iocis_ gives us, 'Rarely skilled to rally the young with jibe and jest and have a fling at old sinners, but all in high-bred style.' _Pollice honesto_ is the _i...</description>
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      <title>13. Part 13</title>
      <link>https://www.cyberlibrary.org/la/books/the-satires-of-a-persius-flaccus-22119/chapters/13/</link>
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      <description>104. #conpositus#: 'laid out.' 'By foreign hands thy decent limbs _composed_,' Pope. --#crassis lutatus amomis#: Every word is contemptuous: 'bedaubed with lots of coarse ointme...</description>
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      <title>11. Part 11</title>
      <link>https://www.cyberlibrary.org/la/books/the-satires-of-a-persius-flaccus-22119/chapters/11/</link>
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      <description>Such men as the centurion are hopelessly lost, have already 'imbodied and imbruted.' Like Natta, they are unconscious of their moral ruin. But there are those who, half-consciou...</description>
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      <title>9. Part 9</title>
      <link>https://www.cyberlibrary.org/la/books/the-satires-of-a-persius-flaccus-22119/chapters/9/</link>
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      <description>Hunc, Macrine, diem numera meliore lapillo qui tibi labentis apponit candidus annos. funde merum genio. non tu prece poscis emaci, quae nisi seductis nequeas committere divis; a...</description>
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      <title>6. Part 6</title>
      <link>https://www.cyberlibrary.org/la/books/the-satires-of-a-persius-flaccus-22119/chapters/6/</link>
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      <description>Whether we write laborious verse or laborious prose-- so the attack begins-- it is all one; display and applause are the aim and object of both. The style is fustian; the delive...</description>
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      <title>12. Part 12</title>
      <link>https://www.cyberlibrary.org/la/books/the-satires-of-a-persius-flaccus-22119/chapters/12/</link>
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      <description>52. You have had a better training. You have reached years of discretion. You know Right from Wrong. --#curvos# = _pravos_. Comp. _scilicet ut possem #curvo# dinoscere rectum_,...</description>
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      <title>16. Part 16</title>
      <link>https://www.cyberlibrary.org/la/books/the-satires-of-a-persius-flaccus-22119/chapters/16/</link>
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      <description>52-61. Our aims, our lives are one. But 'many men, many minds.' Each has his passion-- the merchant, the man of ease, the lover of sport, the gamester, the rake-- but they have...</description>
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      <title>10. Part 10</title>
      <link>https://www.cyberlibrary.org/la/books/the-satires-of-a-persius-flaccus-22119/chapters/10/</link>
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      <description>39. #ast# = _at_ + _set_. G., 490; R. --#nutrici#: _Quid voveat dulci #nutricula# maius alumno_, Hor., Ep., 1, 4, 8. With the sentiment of the passage Casaubon comp. Sen., Ep.,...</description>
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      <title>7. Part 7</title>
      <link>https://www.cyberlibrary.org/la/books/the-satires-of-a-persius-flaccus-22119/chapters/7/</link>
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      <description>41. #an#: when used alone is more or less rhetorical, and is intended to force a conclusion involved in the foregoing; 'What?' 'So then?' G., 459; A., 71, 2, _b_. Persius's use...</description>
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      <title>14. Part 14</title>
      <link>https://www.cyberlibrary.org/la/books/the-satires-of-a-persius-flaccus-22119/chapters/14/</link>
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      <description>28. #quandoque# = _quandocumque_, as Hor., Od., 4, 1, 17, 2, 34. --#pertusa# = _pervia_, according to Jahn; 'roads and thoroughfares' (Conington); = _calcata_, _trita_, Heinr.,...</description>
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      <title>20. Part 20</title>
      <link>https://www.cyberlibrary.org/la/books/the-satires-of-a-persius-flaccus-22119/chapters/20/</link>
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      <description>(3.) 'Non adeo,' inquis, 'exossatus ager iuxta est,' Jahn (1868), which may be rendered, 'I am sure that your land here is not in such very good order' (that you can afford such...</description>
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      <title>2. Part 2</title>
      <link>https://www.cyberlibrary.org/la/books/the-satires-of-a-persius-flaccus-22119/chapters/2/</link>
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      <description>Vatibus hic mos est, centum sibi poscere voces, centum ora et linguas optare in carmina centum, fabula seu maesto ponatur hianda tragoedo, vulnera seu Parthi ducentis ab inguine...</description>
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      <title>5. Part 5</title>
      <link>https://www.cyberlibrary.org/la/books/the-satires-of-a-persius-flaccus-22119/chapters/5/</link>
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      <description>Persius, then, was a preacher of Stoicism-- Stoicism, at once the philosophy and the religion of a time when serious and noble natures had no city of refuge except in their inmo...</description>
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    <item>
      <title>1. Part 1</title>
      <link>https://www.cyberlibrary.org/la/books/the-satires-of-a-persius-flaccus-22119/chapters/1/</link>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.cyberlibrary.org/la/books/the-satires-of-a-persius-flaccus-22119/chapters/1/</guid>
      <description>This text is intended for users whose text readers cannot use the &quot;real&quot; (unicode/utf-8) version of the file. Greek has been transliterated and shown between +marks+. Other char...</description>
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      <title>8. Part 8</title>
      <link>https://www.cyberlibrary.org/la/books/the-satires-of-a-persius-flaccus-22119/chapters/8/</link>
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      <description>96. #Arma virum!# 'Compare with these elegant verses _Arma virum_; what a rough affair!' Not only were the opening words of a poem used to indicate the poem itself-- +Mênin aeid...</description>
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      <title>22. Part 22</title>
      <link>https://www.cyberlibrary.org/la/books/the-satires-of-a-persius-flaccus-22119/chapters/22/</link>
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      <description>pacto, 4, 43. Pacuvius, 1, 77. pagina, 5, 20. palaestritae, 4, 39. palato, 1, 35. Palilia, 1, 72. pallentis cumini, 5, 55. mores, 5, 15. palles, 1, 124; 3, 94. 96; 4, 47; 5, 80....</description>
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