[633] _Cum voce
trementia
membra.
Satires
,
Fast. , vi. , 651, "Quinquatrus jubeor narrare minores," called also
Quinquatrus Minusculæ.
[602] _Rostra. _ Popilius Lenas, who cut off Cicero's head and hands,
carried them to Antony, who rewarded him with a civic crown and a large
sum of money, and ordered the head to be fixed between the hands to the
Rostra. (For the _name_, vid. Liv. , viii. , 14. )
[603] _Antonî gladios. _ Quoting Cicero's own words, "Contempsi Catilinæ
gladios, non pertimescam tuos. " Phil. , ii. , 46.
"For me, the sorriest rhymes I'd rather claim,
Than bear the brunt of that Philippic's fame,
The second! the divine! " Badham.
[604] _Torrentem. _ So i. , 9, "Torrens dicendi copia;" iii. , 74, "Isæo
torrentior. " At the approach of Antipater, Demosthenes fled from
Athens, and took refuge in the temple of Poseidon at Calaureia, near
Argolis; and fearing to fall into the hands of Archias, took poison,
which he carried about with him in a reed, or, as Pliny says, in a
ring, xxxiii. , 1.
[605] _Forcipibus. _ Cf. Virg. , Æn. , viii. , 453, "Versantque tenaci
forcipe massam. " Juvenal seems to have had the whole passage in his eye.
[606] _Vulcano. _ Demosthenes' father was a μαχαιροποιός: in which
capacity he employed a large number of slaves, ἐργαστήριον ἔχων μέγα
καὶ δούλους τεχνίτας. But as he could not afford to place his son under
the costly Isocrates, he sent him to Isæus.
[607] _Truncis. _ Virg. , Æn. , xi. , 5.
Ingentem quercum decisis undique ramis
Constituit tumulo, fulgentiaque induit arma,
Mezenti ducis _exuvias_, tibi magne _tropæum_
Bellipotens: aptat rorantes sanguine cristas
Telaque _trunca_ viri.
[608] _Aplustre_, the ἄφλαστον of the Greeks was the high peak of the
galley, from which rose the ensign.
[609] _Arcu. _ Cf. Suet. , Domit. , 13, "Janos arcusque cum quadrigis et
insignibus triumphorum per regiones urbis tantos et tot exstruxit, ut
cuidam Græcè inscriptum sit, ἀρκεῖ—. " Some think there is an allusion
here to the column of Trajan, erected in honor of his Dacian victories.
This would bring down the date of this Satire to after A. D. 113.
[610] _Amplectitur. _
"That none confess fair Virtue's genuine power,
Or woo her to their breast without a dower. " Gifford.
[611] _Sepulchris_; from Propertius, III. , ii. , 19, _seq. _ So Ausonius,
"Mors etiam saxis, nominibusque venit. "
"For fate hath foreordain'd its day of doom,
Not to the tenant only, but the tomb. " Badham.
[612] _Expende. _
"How are the mighty changed to dust! how small
The urn that holds what once was Hannibal! " Hodgson.
[613] _Altos_; others read _alios_; referring to the elephants of
_Africa_ as well as _Asia_. "Elephantos fert Africa, ferunt Æthiopes et
Troglodytæ: sed maximos India. " Plin. , viii. , 11.
[614] _Aceto. _ Vid. Liv. , xxi. , 37. Polybius omits the story as
fabulous. There appears, now, no reason to doubt the fact.
[615] Actum. "Nil actum referens si quid superesset agendum. "
"Peace courts his hand, but spreads her charms in vain;
'Think nothing gain'd,' he cries, 'till naught remain;
On Moscow's walls till Gothic standards fly,
And all be mine beneath the Polar sky. '" Johnson.
[616] _Facies. _
"Oh! for some master-hand, the lines to trace! " Gifford.
[617] _Luscum. _ Hannibal lost one eye, while crossing the marshes, in
making his way to Etruria: "quia medendi nec locus nec tempus erat
altero oculo capitur;" he rode, Livy tells us, on his sole surviving
elephant, xxii. , 2.
[618] _Bithyno. _ When accused by the Romans at Carthage, Hannibal
fled to Antiochus, king of Syria, and thence to the court of Prusias,
king of Bithynia, for whom he carried on successfully the war against
Eumenes. But when Flaminius was sent to demand his surrender, he
destroyed himself with poison, which he always carried in a ring.
[619] _Sanguinis. _ Forty-five thousand dead were left on the field of
Cannæ, with the Consul Æmilius Paulus, eighty senators, and very many
others of high rank.
[620] _Declamatio. _ Cf. vii. , 167, "Sexta quâque die miserum dirus
caput Hannibal implet. " So I. 150, and i. , 15.
"Go, climb the rugged Alps, ambitious fool!
To please the boys, and be a theme at school. " Dryden.
[621] _Unus. _ "Heu me miserum! quod ne uno quidem adhuc potitus sum! "
is the exclamation put into Alexander's mouth by Val. Max. , viii. , 14.
[622] _Gyaris. _ Cf. i. , 73; vi. , 563.
[623] _Figulis. _ Cf. Herod. , i. , 78. Ov. , Met. , iv. , 27, "Ubi dicitur
altam Coctilibus muris cinxisse Semiramis urbem. "
[624] _Sarcophago. _ A stone was found at Assos, near Troy, which was
said to possess the property of consuming the flesh of bodies inclosed
in it within the space of forty days, hence called σαρκοφάγος. Plin. ,
ii. , 96; xxxvi. , 17. Cf. Henry's speech to Hotspur's body:
"Ill-weaved ambition, how much art thou shrunk!
When that this body did contain a spirit,
A kingdom for it was too small a bound:
But now, two paces of the vilest earth
Is room enough. "
So Hall:
"Fond fool! six feet shall serve for all thy store,
And he that cares for most shall find no more. "
And Shirley:
"How little room do we take up in death,
That, living, knew no bounds! "
And Webster's Duchess of Malfy:
"Much you had of land and rent;
Your length in clays's now competent. "
So K. Henry VI. :
"And of all my lands
Is nothing left me but my body's length. "
And Dryden's Antony:
"The place thou pressest on thy mother Earth
Is all thy empire now. "
Cf. Æsch. , S. Theb. , 731. Soph. , Œd. Col. , 789. Shakspeare's Richard
II. , Act iii. , sc. 2.
[625] _Epota. _ Herodotus mentions the Scamander, Onochnous, Apidanus,
and Echedorus.
"Rivers, whose depth no sharp beholder sees,
Drunk at an army's dinner to the lees! " Dryden.
[626] _Sostratus. _ Of this poet nothing is known. --_Madidis_, probably
in the same sense as in Sat. xv. , 47, "Facilis victoria de madidis. "
Sil. , xii. , 18, "Madefacta mero. "
[627] _Ennosigæum. _ ἀπὸ τοῦ ἐνόθειν τὴν γαῖαν. Cf. Hom. , Il. , vii. ,
455. _Æolis_ is an allusion to Virgil, Æn. , i. , 51, "Vinclis ac carcere
frænat," etc.
[628] _Stigmate. _ Herod. , vii. , 35.
"That shackles o'er th' earth-shaking Neptune threw,
And thought it lenient not to brand him too. " Gifford.
[629] _Servire Deorum. _ As Apollo served Admetus; Neptune, Laomedon,
etc.
"Ye gods! obeyed ye such a fool as this? " Hodgson.
[630] _Tardâ. _ Perhaps alluding to Her. , viii. , 118.
"A single skiff to speed his flight remains,
Th' encumbered oar scarce leaves the dreaded coast
Through purple billows and a floating host! " Johnson.
[631] _Tabraca_, on the coast of Tunis, now Tabarca.
[632] _Simia. _ So Ennius, in Cic. , Nat. De. , i. , 35, "Simia, quam
similis turpissima bestia nobis! "
"A stick-fallen cheek! that hangs below the jaw,
Such wrinkles as a skillful hand would draw
For an old grandam ape, when, with a grace,
She sits at squat, and scrubs her leathern face. " Dryden.
[633] _Cum voce trementia membra. _ Compare Hamlet's speech to Polonius,
and As you like it, Act ii. , 7:
"His big manly voice,
Turning again toward childish treble, pipes
And whistles in its sound. "
"The self-same palsy both in limbs and tongue. " Dryden.
[634] _Palato. _ Compare Barzillai's speech to David, 2 Sam. , xix. , 35,
"I am this day fourscore years old; and can I discern between good or
evil? can thy servant taste what I eat and what I drink? can I hear any
more the voice of singing men and singing women? "
[635] _Vini. _
"Now pall the tasteless meats, and joyless wines,
And Luxury with sighs her slave resigns. " Johnson.
[636] _Viribus. _ Shakspeare, King Henry IV. , Part ii. , Act ii. ,
sc. 4, "Is it not strange that desire should so many years outlive
performance? "
[637] _Auratâ. _ Cic. ad Heren. , iv. , 47, "Uti citharædus cum prodierit
optimè vestitus, pallâ _inauratâ_ indutus, cum chlamyde purpureâ
coloribus variis intextâ, cum coronâ aureâ, magnis _fulgentibus_
gemmis illuminatâ. " Horace, A. P. , 215, "Luxuriem addidi arti Tibicen,
traxitque vagus per pulpita vestem. "
[638] _Nuntiet horas. _ Slaves were employed to watch the dials in the
houses of those who had them, and report the hour: those who had no
dial sent to the Forum. Cf. Mart. , viii. , 67. Suet. , Domit. , xvi. ,
"Sexta nuntiata est. "
[639] _Gelido. _ Virg. , Æn. , v. , 395, "Sed enim _gelidus_ tardante
senectâ _Sanguis_ hebet, _frigentque_ effœtæ in corpora vires. "
[640] _Themison_ of Laodicea in Syria, pupil of Asclepiades, was an
eminent physician of the time of Pompey the Great, and is said to have
been the founder of the "Methodic" school, as opposed to the "Empiric. "
Vid. Cels. , Præf. Plin. , N. H. , xxix. , 15. Others say he lived in
Augustus' time, and Hodgson thinks he may have lived even to Juvenal's
days. Cicero (de Orat. , i. , 14) mentions an Asclepiades; and the names
of at least _three_ others are mentioned in later times.
[641] _Quo tondente. _ Cf. i. , 35.
[642] _Hiat. _ Cf. Lucian, Tim. , ἐμὲ περιμένουσι κεχηνότες ὥσπερ τὴν
χελιδόνα προσπετομένην τετριγότες οἰ νεοσσοί. P. 72, E. , ed. Bened.
[643] _Jejuna_, from Hom. , Il. , ix. , 323, ὡς δ' ὄρνις ἀπτῆσι νεοσσοῖσι
προφέρῃσι μάστακ', ἐπεί κε λάβῃσι, κακῶς δέ τέ οἱ πέλει αὐτῇ.
[644] _Phialen. _
"Forgets the children he begot and bred,
And makes a strumpet heiress in their stead. " Gifford.
[645] _Nigrâ. _ "And liveries of black for length of years. " Dryden.
[646] _Pylius. _ Hom. , Il. , i. , 250, μετὰ δὲ τριτάτοισιν ἄνασσεν. So
Odyss. , iii. , 245, τρὶς γὰρ δή μίν φασιν ἀνάξασθαι γένε' ἀνδρῶν.
[647] _Cornice. _
"Next to the raven's age, the Pylian king
Was longest-lived of any two-legged thing. " Dryden.
[648] _Dextra. _ This the Greeks express by ἀναπεμπάζεσθαι. They counted
on the left hand as far as a hundred, then on the right up to two
hundred, and then again on the left for the third hundred. Holyday has
a most elaborate explanation of the method.
[649] _Antilochi. _ Cf. Hor. , II. , Od. ix. , 14.
[650] _Natantem. _ Cf. Hom. , Od. , v. , 388, 399.
"So Peleus sigh'd to join his hero lost--
Laertes his on boundless billows toss'd. " Hodgson.
[651] _Polyxena_, from Eurip. , Hec. , 556, λαβοῦσα πέπλους ἐξ ἄκρας
ἐπωμίδος ἔῤῥηξε.
[652] _Miles tremulus. _ Virg. , Æn. , ii. , 509, "Arma diu senior desueta
trementibus ævo circumdat," etc.
"A soldier half, and half a sacrifice. " Dryden.
[653] _Bos. _ Virg. , Æn. , v. , 481, "Sternitur, exanimisque tremens
procumbit humi bos. "
[654] _Fastiditus. _
"Disdain'd its labors, and forgotten now
All its old service at the thankless plow. " Hodgson.
[655] _Canino. _ See the close of Eurip. , Hecuba. The Greeks fabled that
Hecuba was metamorphosed into a bitch, from her constant railing at
them. Hence κυνὸς σῆμα. Cf. Plaut. , Menœchm. , v. i.
[656] _Crœsus. _ Cf. Herod. , i. , 32.
[657] _Spatia_, a metaphor from the "course. " So Virgil has metæ ævi,
metæ mortis.
[658] _Minturnarum_, a town of the Aurunci near the mouth of the Liris,
now Garigliano. In the marshes in the neighborhood Marius concealed
himself from the cavalry of Sylla.
[659] _Animam. _
"Had he exhaled amid the pomp of war,
A warrior's soul in that Teutonic car. " Badham.
[660] _Teutonico_, i. e. , after his triumph over the Cimbri and
Teutones. Cf. viii. , 251.
[661] _Campania. _ Cf. Cic. , Tus. Qu. , i. , 35, "Pompeius noster
familiaris, cum graviter ægrotaret Neapoli, utrum si tum esset
extinctus, à bonis rebus, an à malis discessisset? certè a miseriis,
si mortem tum obiisset, in amplissimis fortunis occidisset. " Achillas
and L. Septimius murdered Pompey and cut off his head; which ἐφύλασσον
Καίσαρι, ὡς ἐπὶ μεγίσταις ἀμοιβαῖς. Appian, B. C. , ii. , 86
[662] _P. Corn. Lentulus Sura_, was strangled in prison with Cethegus.
Catiline fell in battle, near Pistoria in Etruria.
[663] _Murmure. _ Venus was worshiped under the name of ἀφροδίτη
Ψίθυρος, because all prayers were to be offered in whispers.
[664] _Delicias. _ This is Heinrich's view. Grangæus explains it,
"Ut pro ipsis vota deliciarum plena concipiat. " Britannicus, "quasi
diceret, optat ut tam formosa sit, ut eam juvenes in suos amplexus
optent. "
[665] _Latona. _ Hom. , Od. vi. , 106, γέγηθε δέ τε φρένα Λήτω. Virg. ,
Æn. , i. , 502, Latonæ tacitum pertentant gaudia pectus.
[666] _Lucretia. _
"Yet Vane could tell what ills from beauty spring,
And Sedley cursed the form that pleased a king! " Johnson.
[667] _Concordia. _ Ov. , Heroid, xvi. , 288, "Lis est cum _forma_ magna
_pudicitiæ_. "
"Chaste--is no epithet to suit with fair. " Dryden.
[668] _Tradiderit. _
"Though through the rugged house, from sire to son,
A Sabine sanctity of manners run. " Gifford.
[669] _Pœnas metuet. _ The punishment of adulterers seems to have been
left to the discretion of the injured husband rather than to have been
defined by law.
[670] _Laqueos.
Fast. , vi. , 651, "Quinquatrus jubeor narrare minores," called also
Quinquatrus Minusculæ.
[602] _Rostra. _ Popilius Lenas, who cut off Cicero's head and hands,
carried them to Antony, who rewarded him with a civic crown and a large
sum of money, and ordered the head to be fixed between the hands to the
Rostra. (For the _name_, vid. Liv. , viii. , 14. )
[603] _Antonî gladios. _ Quoting Cicero's own words, "Contempsi Catilinæ
gladios, non pertimescam tuos. " Phil. , ii. , 46.
"For me, the sorriest rhymes I'd rather claim,
Than bear the brunt of that Philippic's fame,
The second! the divine! " Badham.
[604] _Torrentem. _ So i. , 9, "Torrens dicendi copia;" iii. , 74, "Isæo
torrentior. " At the approach of Antipater, Demosthenes fled from
Athens, and took refuge in the temple of Poseidon at Calaureia, near
Argolis; and fearing to fall into the hands of Archias, took poison,
which he carried about with him in a reed, or, as Pliny says, in a
ring, xxxiii. , 1.
[605] _Forcipibus. _ Cf. Virg. , Æn. , viii. , 453, "Versantque tenaci
forcipe massam. " Juvenal seems to have had the whole passage in his eye.
[606] _Vulcano. _ Demosthenes' father was a μαχαιροποιός: in which
capacity he employed a large number of slaves, ἐργαστήριον ἔχων μέγα
καὶ δούλους τεχνίτας. But as he could not afford to place his son under
the costly Isocrates, he sent him to Isæus.
[607] _Truncis. _ Virg. , Æn. , xi. , 5.
Ingentem quercum decisis undique ramis
Constituit tumulo, fulgentiaque induit arma,
Mezenti ducis _exuvias_, tibi magne _tropæum_
Bellipotens: aptat rorantes sanguine cristas
Telaque _trunca_ viri.
[608] _Aplustre_, the ἄφλαστον of the Greeks was the high peak of the
galley, from which rose the ensign.
[609] _Arcu. _ Cf. Suet. , Domit. , 13, "Janos arcusque cum quadrigis et
insignibus triumphorum per regiones urbis tantos et tot exstruxit, ut
cuidam Græcè inscriptum sit, ἀρκεῖ—. " Some think there is an allusion
here to the column of Trajan, erected in honor of his Dacian victories.
This would bring down the date of this Satire to after A. D. 113.
[610] _Amplectitur. _
"That none confess fair Virtue's genuine power,
Or woo her to their breast without a dower. " Gifford.
[611] _Sepulchris_; from Propertius, III. , ii. , 19, _seq. _ So Ausonius,
"Mors etiam saxis, nominibusque venit. "
"For fate hath foreordain'd its day of doom,
Not to the tenant only, but the tomb. " Badham.
[612] _Expende. _
"How are the mighty changed to dust! how small
The urn that holds what once was Hannibal! " Hodgson.
[613] _Altos_; others read _alios_; referring to the elephants of
_Africa_ as well as _Asia_. "Elephantos fert Africa, ferunt Æthiopes et
Troglodytæ: sed maximos India. " Plin. , viii. , 11.
[614] _Aceto. _ Vid. Liv. , xxi. , 37. Polybius omits the story as
fabulous. There appears, now, no reason to doubt the fact.
[615] Actum. "Nil actum referens si quid superesset agendum. "
"Peace courts his hand, but spreads her charms in vain;
'Think nothing gain'd,' he cries, 'till naught remain;
On Moscow's walls till Gothic standards fly,
And all be mine beneath the Polar sky. '" Johnson.
[616] _Facies. _
"Oh! for some master-hand, the lines to trace! " Gifford.
[617] _Luscum. _ Hannibal lost one eye, while crossing the marshes, in
making his way to Etruria: "quia medendi nec locus nec tempus erat
altero oculo capitur;" he rode, Livy tells us, on his sole surviving
elephant, xxii. , 2.
[618] _Bithyno. _ When accused by the Romans at Carthage, Hannibal
fled to Antiochus, king of Syria, and thence to the court of Prusias,
king of Bithynia, for whom he carried on successfully the war against
Eumenes. But when Flaminius was sent to demand his surrender, he
destroyed himself with poison, which he always carried in a ring.
[619] _Sanguinis. _ Forty-five thousand dead were left on the field of
Cannæ, with the Consul Æmilius Paulus, eighty senators, and very many
others of high rank.
[620] _Declamatio. _ Cf. vii. , 167, "Sexta quâque die miserum dirus
caput Hannibal implet. " So I. 150, and i. , 15.
"Go, climb the rugged Alps, ambitious fool!
To please the boys, and be a theme at school. " Dryden.
[621] _Unus. _ "Heu me miserum! quod ne uno quidem adhuc potitus sum! "
is the exclamation put into Alexander's mouth by Val. Max. , viii. , 14.
[622] _Gyaris. _ Cf. i. , 73; vi. , 563.
[623] _Figulis. _ Cf. Herod. , i. , 78. Ov. , Met. , iv. , 27, "Ubi dicitur
altam Coctilibus muris cinxisse Semiramis urbem. "
[624] _Sarcophago. _ A stone was found at Assos, near Troy, which was
said to possess the property of consuming the flesh of bodies inclosed
in it within the space of forty days, hence called σαρκοφάγος. Plin. ,
ii. , 96; xxxvi. , 17. Cf. Henry's speech to Hotspur's body:
"Ill-weaved ambition, how much art thou shrunk!
When that this body did contain a spirit,
A kingdom for it was too small a bound:
But now, two paces of the vilest earth
Is room enough. "
So Hall:
"Fond fool! six feet shall serve for all thy store,
And he that cares for most shall find no more. "
And Shirley:
"How little room do we take up in death,
That, living, knew no bounds! "
And Webster's Duchess of Malfy:
"Much you had of land and rent;
Your length in clays's now competent. "
So K. Henry VI. :
"And of all my lands
Is nothing left me but my body's length. "
And Dryden's Antony:
"The place thou pressest on thy mother Earth
Is all thy empire now. "
Cf. Æsch. , S. Theb. , 731. Soph. , Œd. Col. , 789. Shakspeare's Richard
II. , Act iii. , sc. 2.
[625] _Epota. _ Herodotus mentions the Scamander, Onochnous, Apidanus,
and Echedorus.
"Rivers, whose depth no sharp beholder sees,
Drunk at an army's dinner to the lees! " Dryden.
[626] _Sostratus. _ Of this poet nothing is known. --_Madidis_, probably
in the same sense as in Sat. xv. , 47, "Facilis victoria de madidis. "
Sil. , xii. , 18, "Madefacta mero. "
[627] _Ennosigæum. _ ἀπὸ τοῦ ἐνόθειν τὴν γαῖαν. Cf. Hom. , Il. , vii. ,
455. _Æolis_ is an allusion to Virgil, Æn. , i. , 51, "Vinclis ac carcere
frænat," etc.
[628] _Stigmate. _ Herod. , vii. , 35.
"That shackles o'er th' earth-shaking Neptune threw,
And thought it lenient not to brand him too. " Gifford.
[629] _Servire Deorum. _ As Apollo served Admetus; Neptune, Laomedon,
etc.
"Ye gods! obeyed ye such a fool as this? " Hodgson.
[630] _Tardâ. _ Perhaps alluding to Her. , viii. , 118.
"A single skiff to speed his flight remains,
Th' encumbered oar scarce leaves the dreaded coast
Through purple billows and a floating host! " Johnson.
[631] _Tabraca_, on the coast of Tunis, now Tabarca.
[632] _Simia. _ So Ennius, in Cic. , Nat. De. , i. , 35, "Simia, quam
similis turpissima bestia nobis! "
"A stick-fallen cheek! that hangs below the jaw,
Such wrinkles as a skillful hand would draw
For an old grandam ape, when, with a grace,
She sits at squat, and scrubs her leathern face. " Dryden.
[633] _Cum voce trementia membra. _ Compare Hamlet's speech to Polonius,
and As you like it, Act ii. , 7:
"His big manly voice,
Turning again toward childish treble, pipes
And whistles in its sound. "
"The self-same palsy both in limbs and tongue. " Dryden.
[634] _Palato. _ Compare Barzillai's speech to David, 2 Sam. , xix. , 35,
"I am this day fourscore years old; and can I discern between good or
evil? can thy servant taste what I eat and what I drink? can I hear any
more the voice of singing men and singing women? "
[635] _Vini. _
"Now pall the tasteless meats, and joyless wines,
And Luxury with sighs her slave resigns. " Johnson.
[636] _Viribus. _ Shakspeare, King Henry IV. , Part ii. , Act ii. ,
sc. 4, "Is it not strange that desire should so many years outlive
performance? "
[637] _Auratâ. _ Cic. ad Heren. , iv. , 47, "Uti citharædus cum prodierit
optimè vestitus, pallâ _inauratâ_ indutus, cum chlamyde purpureâ
coloribus variis intextâ, cum coronâ aureâ, magnis _fulgentibus_
gemmis illuminatâ. " Horace, A. P. , 215, "Luxuriem addidi arti Tibicen,
traxitque vagus per pulpita vestem. "
[638] _Nuntiet horas. _ Slaves were employed to watch the dials in the
houses of those who had them, and report the hour: those who had no
dial sent to the Forum. Cf. Mart. , viii. , 67. Suet. , Domit. , xvi. ,
"Sexta nuntiata est. "
[639] _Gelido. _ Virg. , Æn. , v. , 395, "Sed enim _gelidus_ tardante
senectâ _Sanguis_ hebet, _frigentque_ effœtæ in corpora vires. "
[640] _Themison_ of Laodicea in Syria, pupil of Asclepiades, was an
eminent physician of the time of Pompey the Great, and is said to have
been the founder of the "Methodic" school, as opposed to the "Empiric. "
Vid. Cels. , Præf. Plin. , N. H. , xxix. , 15. Others say he lived in
Augustus' time, and Hodgson thinks he may have lived even to Juvenal's
days. Cicero (de Orat. , i. , 14) mentions an Asclepiades; and the names
of at least _three_ others are mentioned in later times.
[641] _Quo tondente. _ Cf. i. , 35.
[642] _Hiat. _ Cf. Lucian, Tim. , ἐμὲ περιμένουσι κεχηνότες ὥσπερ τὴν
χελιδόνα προσπετομένην τετριγότες οἰ νεοσσοί. P. 72, E. , ed. Bened.
[643] _Jejuna_, from Hom. , Il. , ix. , 323, ὡς δ' ὄρνις ἀπτῆσι νεοσσοῖσι
προφέρῃσι μάστακ', ἐπεί κε λάβῃσι, κακῶς δέ τέ οἱ πέλει αὐτῇ.
[644] _Phialen. _
"Forgets the children he begot and bred,
And makes a strumpet heiress in their stead. " Gifford.
[645] _Nigrâ. _ "And liveries of black for length of years. " Dryden.
[646] _Pylius. _ Hom. , Il. , i. , 250, μετὰ δὲ τριτάτοισιν ἄνασσεν. So
Odyss. , iii. , 245, τρὶς γὰρ δή μίν φασιν ἀνάξασθαι γένε' ἀνδρῶν.
[647] _Cornice. _
"Next to the raven's age, the Pylian king
Was longest-lived of any two-legged thing. " Dryden.
[648] _Dextra. _ This the Greeks express by ἀναπεμπάζεσθαι. They counted
on the left hand as far as a hundred, then on the right up to two
hundred, and then again on the left for the third hundred. Holyday has
a most elaborate explanation of the method.
[649] _Antilochi. _ Cf. Hor. , II. , Od. ix. , 14.
[650] _Natantem. _ Cf. Hom. , Od. , v. , 388, 399.
"So Peleus sigh'd to join his hero lost--
Laertes his on boundless billows toss'd. " Hodgson.
[651] _Polyxena_, from Eurip. , Hec. , 556, λαβοῦσα πέπλους ἐξ ἄκρας
ἐπωμίδος ἔῤῥηξε.
[652] _Miles tremulus. _ Virg. , Æn. , ii. , 509, "Arma diu senior desueta
trementibus ævo circumdat," etc.
"A soldier half, and half a sacrifice. " Dryden.
[653] _Bos. _ Virg. , Æn. , v. , 481, "Sternitur, exanimisque tremens
procumbit humi bos. "
[654] _Fastiditus. _
"Disdain'd its labors, and forgotten now
All its old service at the thankless plow. " Hodgson.
[655] _Canino. _ See the close of Eurip. , Hecuba. The Greeks fabled that
Hecuba was metamorphosed into a bitch, from her constant railing at
them. Hence κυνὸς σῆμα. Cf. Plaut. , Menœchm. , v. i.
[656] _Crœsus. _ Cf. Herod. , i. , 32.
[657] _Spatia_, a metaphor from the "course. " So Virgil has metæ ævi,
metæ mortis.
[658] _Minturnarum_, a town of the Aurunci near the mouth of the Liris,
now Garigliano. In the marshes in the neighborhood Marius concealed
himself from the cavalry of Sylla.
[659] _Animam. _
"Had he exhaled amid the pomp of war,
A warrior's soul in that Teutonic car. " Badham.
[660] _Teutonico_, i. e. , after his triumph over the Cimbri and
Teutones. Cf. viii. , 251.
[661] _Campania. _ Cf. Cic. , Tus. Qu. , i. , 35, "Pompeius noster
familiaris, cum graviter ægrotaret Neapoli, utrum si tum esset
extinctus, à bonis rebus, an à malis discessisset? certè a miseriis,
si mortem tum obiisset, in amplissimis fortunis occidisset. " Achillas
and L. Septimius murdered Pompey and cut off his head; which ἐφύλασσον
Καίσαρι, ὡς ἐπὶ μεγίσταις ἀμοιβαῖς. Appian, B. C. , ii. , 86
[662] _P. Corn. Lentulus Sura_, was strangled in prison with Cethegus.
Catiline fell in battle, near Pistoria in Etruria.
[663] _Murmure. _ Venus was worshiped under the name of ἀφροδίτη
Ψίθυρος, because all prayers were to be offered in whispers.
[664] _Delicias. _ This is Heinrich's view. Grangæus explains it,
"Ut pro ipsis vota deliciarum plena concipiat. " Britannicus, "quasi
diceret, optat ut tam formosa sit, ut eam juvenes in suos amplexus
optent. "
[665] _Latona. _ Hom. , Od. vi. , 106, γέγηθε δέ τε φρένα Λήτω. Virg. ,
Æn. , i. , 502, Latonæ tacitum pertentant gaudia pectus.
[666] _Lucretia. _
"Yet Vane could tell what ills from beauty spring,
And Sedley cursed the form that pleased a king! " Johnson.
[667] _Concordia. _ Ov. , Heroid, xvi. , 288, "Lis est cum _forma_ magna
_pudicitiæ_. "
"Chaste--is no epithet to suit with fair. " Dryden.
[668] _Tradiderit. _
"Though through the rugged house, from sire to son,
A Sabine sanctity of manners run. " Gifford.
[669] _Pœnas metuet. _ The punishment of adulterers seems to have been
left to the discretion of the injured husband rather than to have been
defined by law.
[670] _Laqueos.