PA6446.A6I 1996 871'.01-dc20 95♱ l014 CIP ISBNo 521 35566 4 hardback ISBNo 52 1 35667 9 paperback CE CONTENTS Preface page Introduction Vil I 1 Juvenal and satire I 2 The genreefRoman versesatire I 3 The originsof Roman satire 3 4 Juvenal's satiricpredecessors (a) Lucilius 7 8 (b) Horace 10 (c) Persius 13 5 Juvenal's life 15 6 The characteristics efJuvenal's satire: indignation, rhetoricand epic 17 (a) Indignation (b) Rhetoric 17 18 (c) Epic 21 7 Juvenal's style 24 8 Juvenal's metre 29 9 An overviewefBook I 30 (a) Rome 31 (b) Patronsand clients 32 (c) A day in the life? 34 (d) Corruptionat the core 34 (e) Running awayfrom the city 35 (j) Immigrantstake over (g) The power effood 35 36 (h) Satire 1 as programmepoem of Book I 36 V CONTENTS VI 1o Juvenal and his influence from antiquityto thepresent 36 11 Text and manuscripts 38 D. Includes bibliographical references and index. (Cambridge Greek and Latin classics) Text in Latin with pref., introd., and commentary in English. EASTERLING Regius Professorof Greek, Universityof Cambridge JUVENAL SATIRES BOOK I EDITED SUSANNA BY MORTON BRAUND ProfessorefLatin, Royal Holloway, UniversityefLondon CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS Published by the Press Syndicate of the University of Cambridge The Pitt Building, Trumpington Street, Cambridge CB2 1RP 40 West 20th Street, New York, NY 10011-4211, USA 10 Stamford Road, Oakleigh, Melbourne 3166, Australia © Cambridge University Press 1996 First published 1996 Printed in Great Britain at the University Press, Cambridge A cataloguerecordfor this bookis availablefrom the British Library Libraryof Congresscataloguingin publicationdata Juvenal. AND LATIN CLASSICS EDITORS KENNEY EmeritusKennedyProfessorof Latin, Universityof Cambridge AND P.
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