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L'antiquité classique, 1968
nam illi dies per somnum, nox officiis et oblectamentis vitae transigebatur; utque alios industria, ita hunc ignavia ad famam protulerat, habebaturque non ganeo et profligator, ut plerique sua haurentium, sed erudito luxu. ac dicta factaque eius quanto solutiora et quandam sui neglegentiam praeferentia, tanto gratius in speeiem simplicitatis ...
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nam illi dies per somnum, nox officiis et oblectamentis vitae transigebatur; utque alios industria, ita hunc ignavia ad famam protulerat, habebaturque non ganeo et profligator, ut plerique sua haurentium, sed erudito luxu. ac dicta factaque eius quanto solutiora et quandam sui neglegentiam praeferentia, tanto gratius in speeiem simplicitatis ...
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The Classical Quarterly, 1976
… super scorpionem + pisciculum marinum +, super sagittarium oclopetam, super capricornum locustam marinam, super aquarium anserem, super pisces duos mullos.The unsoundness of the area followingscorpionemis brought out by its extreme vagueness (Heinsius) coupled with the stylistically inelegant repetition ofmarinum/-am, - objectionable in Petronius.
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… super scorpionem + pisciculum marinum +, super sagittarium oclopetam, super capricornum locustam marinam, super aquarium anserem, super pisces duos mullos.The unsoundness of the area followingscorpionemis brought out by its extreme vagueness (Heinsius) coupled with the stylistically inelegant repetition ofmarinum/-am, - objectionable in Petronius.
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Petronius, a Roman author traditionally identified as the “arbiter of elegance” at Nero's court, wrote the Satyrica, a partially extant prosimetric novel that may have originally consisted of 24 books. The protagonist and narrator, Encolpius, is in love with the younger Giton, and they face various adventures together.
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Classical World, 2013
In section 89 of Petronius's Satyrica we find our hero Encolpius gazing at a picture of the fall of Troy, completely rapt ( totum in illa haerere tabula ), according to his companion, the poet Eumolpus. Critics have rightly pointed out the similarity with Aeneas at Aeneid 1. 494-95. What seems not to have been noted is the parallelism with "Horace," in
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In section 89 of Petronius's Satyrica we find our hero Encolpius gazing at a picture of the fall of Troy, completely rapt ( totum in illa haerere tabula ), according to his companion, the poet Eumolpus. Critics have rightly pointed out the similarity with Aeneas at Aeneid 1. 494-95. What seems not to have been noted is the parallelism with "Horace," in
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