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JUVENAL 2.39: PUDOR MISREAD?
Commentators since the fifteenth century who have glossed habeat iam Roma pudorem all take it to mean its time Rome stopped behaving disgracefully. As Laronia turns out to be no crusader for moral reform, Ascensius (Lyon, 1498) and Britannicus (Brescia, 1501) were right to say that it must then cont...
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Published in: | Classical quarterly 2011-05, Vol.61 (1), p.319-320 |
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container_title | Classical quarterly |
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creator | REEVE, MICHAEL D. |
description | Commentators since the fifteenth century who have glossed habeat iam Roma pudorem all take it to mean its time Rome stopped behaving disgracefully. As Laronia turns out to be no crusader for moral reform, Ascensius (Lyon, 1498) and Britannicus (Brescia, 1501) were right to say that it must then continue the sarcasm of felicia tempora. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1017/S0009838810000601 |
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source | EBSCOhost MLA International Bibliography With Full Text; JSTOR Archival Journals and Primary Sources Collection【Remote access available】; Cambridge University Press; ProQuest One Literature; Humanities Index; Art, Design & Architecture Collection |
subjects | Classical studies Eels Epic literature Juvenal (Decimus Junius Juvenalis) Literary criticism SHORTER NOTES |
title | JUVENAL 2.39: PUDOR MISREAD? |
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