The satires of Decimus Junius Juvenalis translated into English verse by Mr. Dryden, and several other eminent hands. together with the satires of Aulus Persius Flaccus. [ESTC R12345]
- DMI number:
- 1674
- Confidence:
- Absolute (100%)
- Evidence:
- Publication Date:
- 1693
- Volume Number:
- 1 of 1
- ESTC number:
- R12345
- EEBO/ECCO link:
- http://gateway.proquest.com/openurl?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2003&res_id=xri:eebo&rft_id=xri:eebo:citation:12538247
- Shelfmark:
- EEBO - BL
- Full Title:
- THE | SATIRES | OF | Decimus Junius Juvenalis. | Translated into | ENGLISH VERSE | [rule] | BY | Mr. [i] DRYDEN [/i], | AND | Several other Eminent Hands. | [rule] | Together with the | SATIRES | OF | Aulus Persius Flaccus. | [rule] | Made English by Mr. [i] Dryden [/i]. | [rule] | With Explanatory Notes at the end of each SATIRE. | [rule] |To which is Prefix'd a Discourse concerning the Original and Progress | of SATIRE. Dedicated to the Right Honourable [i] Charles [/i] Earl of | [i] Dorset [/i], &c. By Mr. [i] DRYDEN [/i]. | [rule] | [epigraph] | [rule] | [i] LONDON [/i], | Printed for [i] Jacob Tonson [/i] at the [i] Judge's-Head [/i] in [i] Chancery-Lane [/i], near | [i] Fleetstreet [/i] M DC XCIII. | [rule] | Where you may have Compleat Sets of Mr. [i] Dryden's [/i] Works, in Four Volumes | in Quarto, the Plays being put in the order they were Written.
- Epigraph:
- [i] Quicquid agunt homines, votum, timor, Ira, voluptas, | Gaudia, discursus, nostri est farrago libelli. [/i]
- Place of Publication:
- London
- Genres:
- Collection of literary verse, Collection of satirical verse, and Collection of translations/imitations
- Format:
- Folio
- Bibliographic details:
- Second title-page: THE | SATIRES | OF | Aulus Persius | Flaccus. | [rule] | Made [i] ENGLISH [/i] | BY | Mr. [i] DRYDEN [/i]. | [rule] | [i] Saepius in Libro memoratur Persius uno | Quam levis in tota Marsus Amazonide [/i]. | Mart. | [rule] | [i] LONDON [/i], | Printed for [i] Jacob Tonson [/i] at the [i] Judges Head [/i] in [i] Chancery- | Lane [/i], near [i] Fleet-Street [/i]. 1693.
- Other matter:
- Prefatory matter: (1) Dedication 'To the Right Honourable Charles, Earl of Dorset and Middlesex' (2) 'A Table to Juvenal'
- References:
- NCBEL 338 (1693)
- Title:
- The satires of Decimus Junius Juvenalis. Translated into English verse [T123245]
- Publication Date:
- 1754
- ESTC No:
- T123245
- Volume:
- 1 of 13
- Relationship:
- Another Edition of
- Comments:
- Title:
- The satires of Decimus Junius Juvenalis. Translated into English verse [T123248]
- Publication Date:
- 1713
- ESTC No:
- T123248
- Volume:
- 1 of 1
- Relationship:
- Another Edition of
- Comments:
- Title:
- The satires of Decimus Junius Juvenalis. Translated into English verse [T123505]
- Publication Date:
- 1711
- ESTC No:
- T123505
- Volume:
- 1 of 1
- Relationship:
- Another Edition of
- Comments:
- Title:
- The satires of Decimus Junius Juvenalis. Translated into English verse [T123512]
- Publication Date:
- 1735
- ESTC No:
- T123512
- Volume:
- 1 of 1
- Relationship:
- Another Edition of
- Comments:
- Title:
- The satires of Decimus Junius Juvenalis. Translated into English verse [T123528]
- Publication Date:
- 1726
- ESTC No:
- T123528
- Volume:
- 1 of 1
- Relationship:
- Another Edition of
- Comments:
- Title:
- The satires of Decimus Junius Juvenalis. Translated into English verse [T123534]
- Publication Date:
- 1702
- ESTC No:
- T123534
- Volume:
- 1 of 1
- Relationship:
- Another Edition of
- Comments:
- Title:
- The satires of Decimus Junius Juvenalis. Translated into English verse [T47106]
- Publication Date:
- 1732
- ESTC No:
- T47106
- Volume:
- 1 of 1
- Relationship:
- Another Edition of
- Comments:
- Title:
- The satires of Decimus Junius Juvenalis translated into English verse by Mr. Dryden, and several other eminent hands. Together with the satires of Aulus Persius Flaccus. [ESTC R227253]
- Publication Date:
- 1697
- ESTC No:
- R227253
- Volume:
- 1 of 1
- Relationship:
- Another Edition of
- Comments:
- Dedicatee:
- Charles Sackville
- Confidence:
- Absolute (100%)
- Comments:
- Dedication to 'To Charles, Earl of Dorset and Middlesex'.
- Editor:
- John Dryden
- Confidence:
- Absolute (100%)
- Comments:
- Dedication signed by 'John Dryden'.
- Publisher:
- Jacob Tonson
- Confidence:
- Absolute (100%)
- Comments:
- 'Printed for Jacob Tonson'
- Translated from:
- Juvenal
- Confidence:
- Absolute (100%)
- Comments:
- Translated from:
- Persius
- Confidence:
- Absolute (100%)
- Comments:
- First Line:
- Still shall I hear and never quit the score
- Page No:
- pp.3-13
- Poem Title:
- The First Satyr
- Attribution:
- Mr. Dryden
- Attributed To:
- John Dryden
- First Line:
- I'm sick of Rome and wish my self conveyed
- Page No:
- pp.19-28
- Poem Title:
- The Second Satyr
- Attribution:
- Mr. Tate
- Attributed To:
- Nahum Tate
- First Line:
- Grieved though I am an ancient friend to lose
- Page No:
- pp.33-52
- Poem Title:
- The Third Satyr
- Attribution:
- Mr. Dryden
- Attributed To:
- John Dryden
- First Line:
- Once more Crispinus called upon the stage
- Page No:
- pp.57-67
- Poem Title:
- The Fourth Satyr
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- If hardened by affronts and still the same
- Page No:
- pp.73-82
- Poem Title:
- The Fifth Satyr
- Attribution:
- Mr. W. Bowles
- Attributed To:
- William Bowles
- First Line:
- In Saturn's reign at nature's early birth
- Page No:
- pp.89-122
- Poem Title:
- The Sixth Satyr
- Attribution:
- Mr. Dryden
- Attributed To:
- John Dryden
- First Line:
- On Caesar all our studies must depend
- Page No:
- pp.129-41
- Poem Title:
- The Seventh Satyr
- Attribution:
- Mr. Charles Dryden
- Attributed To:
- Charles Dryden
- First Line:
- What's the advantage or the real good
- Page No:
- pp.147-66
- Poem Title:
- The Eighth Satyr
- Attribution:
- Mr. G. Stepny, Fellow of Trinity College in Cambridge
- Attributed To:
- George Stepney
- First Line:
- Tell me why sauntering thus from place to place
- Page No:
- pp.177-86
- Poem Title:
- The Ninth Satyr
- Attribution:
- Stephen Hervey, Esq
- Attributed To:
- Stephen Hervey
- First Line:
- Look round the habitable world how few
- Page No:
- pp.191-213
- Poem Title:
- The Tenth Satyr
- Attribution:
- Mr. Dryden
- Attributed To:
- John Dryden
- First Line:
- If noble Atticus make plenteous feasts
- Page No:
- pp.219-33
- Poem Title:
- The Eleventh Satyr
- Attribution:
- Mr. William Congreve
- Attributed To:
- William Congreve
- First Line:
- This day's this joyful day's solemnity
- Page No:
- pp.241-7
- Poem Title:
- The Twelfth Satyr
- Attribution:
- Mr. Thomas Power, Fellow of Trinity College in Cambridge
- Attributed To:
- Thomas Power
- First Line:
- He that commits a sin shall quickly find
- Page No:
- pp.257-70
- Poem Title:
- The Thirteenth Satyr
- Attribution:
- Mr. Thomas Creech, Fellow of All-Souls College in Oxford
- Attributed To:
- Thomas Creech
- First Line:
- Fuscinus those ill deeds that sully fame
- Page No:
- pp.276-91
- Poem Title:
- The Fourteenth Satyr
- Attribution:
- Mr. John Dryden, Junior
- Attributed To:
- Dryden||John||Junior
- First Line:
- How Egypt mad with superstition grown
- Page No:
- pp.297-305
- Poem Title:
- The Fifteenth Satyr
- Attribution:
- Mr. Tate
- Attributed To:
- Nahum Tate
- First Line:
- What vast prerogatives my Gallus are
- Page No:
- pp.311-4
- Poem Title:
- The Sixteenth Satyr
- Attribution:
- Mr. Dryden
- Attributed To:
- John Dryden
- First Line:
- As when of Old Heroique Story tells
- Page No:
- p.319-20
- Poem Title:
- To Mr. Dryden, on his Translation of Persius.
- Attribution:
- Will. Congreve
- Attributed To:
- William Congreve
- First Line:
- I never did on cleft Parnassus dream
- Page No:
- p.3
- Poem Title:
- Prologue to the First Satyr
- Attribution:
- Mr. Dryden
- Attributed To:
- John Dryden
- First Line:
- How anxious are our cares and yet how vain
- Page No:
- pp.5-16
- Poem Title:
- The First Satyr. In Dialogue betwixt the Poet and his Friend, or Monitor
- Attribution:
- Mr. Dryden
- Attributed To:
- John Dryden
- First Line:
- Let this auspicious morning be expressed
- Page No:
- pp.21-6
- Poem Title:
- The Second Satyr. Dedicated to his Friend Plotius Macrinus on his Birth-day
- Attribution:
- Mr. Dryden
- Attributed To:
- John Dryden
- First Line:
- Is this thy daily course the glaring sun
- Page No:
- pp.32-42
- Poem Title:
- The Third Satyr
- Attribution:
- Mr. Dryden
- Attributed To:
- John Dryden
- First Line:
- Whoever thou art whose forward years are bent
- Page No:
- pp.48-53
- Poem Title:
- The Fourth Satyr
- Attribution:
- Mr. Dryden
- Attributed To:
- John Dryden
- First Line:
- Of ancient use to poets it belongs
- Page No:
- pp.60-71
- Poem Title:
- The Fifth Satyr. Inscrib'd to The Reverend Dr. Busby
- Attribution:
- Mr. Dryden
- Attributed To:
- John Dryden
- First Line:
- Has winter caused thee friend to change thy seat
- Page No:
- pp.77-84
- Poem Title:
- The Sixth Satyr. To Caesius Bassus, a Lyrick Poet
- Attribution:
- Mr. Dryden
- Attributed To:
- John Dryden
Aliases
Satires of Juvenal.
Related Miscellanies
Related People
Content/Publication