Verse satire, Latin (Medieval and modern)See also what's at your library, or elsewhere.
Broader terms:Narrower term:Used for:- Latin verse satire, Medieval and modern
- Medieval Latin verse satire
- Modern Latin verse satire
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Filed under: Verse satire, Latin (Medieval and modern) -- Translations into English
Items below (if any) are from related and broader terms.
Filed under: Latin poetry, Medieval and modern
Filed under: Latin poetry, Medieval and modern -- England Anecdotae Bedae, Lanfranci, et Aliorum: Inedited Tracts, Letters, Poems, &c. of Venerable Bede, Lanfranc, Tatwin, and Others (in Latin, with English notes; London: Pub. for the Caxton Society by D. Nutt, 1851), ed. by J. A. Giles (multiple formats at Google) Filed under: Latin poetry, Medieval and modern -- History and criticism
Filed under: Epic poetry, Latin (Medieval and modern) -- AdaptationsFiled under: Epigrams, Latin (Medieval and modern) Ludvig Holbergs Moralske Tanker (Danish translations and notes on Latin epigrams; Copenhagen: K. Schønberg, 1859), by Ludvig Holberg, ed. by Gotfred Benjamin Rode
Filed under: Verse satire, AmericanFiled under: Verse satire, English London; and The Vanity of Human Wishes: With Notes, Historical and Biographical, and a Glossary (sixth edition (uses the 1755 Vanity text); London: Longmans, Green and Co., 1890), by Samuel Johnson, ed. by I. P. Fleming (multiple formats at archive.org) The Vanity of Human Wishes (1749), by Samuel Johnson (HTML at Renascence Editions) Academia: or, The Humours of the University of Oxford in Burlesque Verse (London: Randal Taylor, 1691), by Alicia D'Anvers (HTML at Celebration of Women Writers) Eighteen Hundred and Eleven (London: Printed for J. Johnson and Co., 1812), by Mrs. Barbauld (HTML at Celebration of Women Writers)
Filed under: Verse satire, English -- 18th century Satirical Poems: Published Anonymously by William Mason, With Notes by Horace Walpole, Now First Printed from His Manuscript (Oxford: At the Clarendon press, 1926), by William Mason, ed. by Paget Jackson Toynbee, contrib. by Horace Walpole Filed under: Verse satire, English -- BibliographyFiled under: Verse satire, English -- History and criticismFiled under: Verse satire, English -- Roman influences
Filed under: Verse satire, Latin -- Translations into English A New and Literal Translation of Juvenal and Persius: With Copious Explanatory Notes By Which These Difficult Satirists are Rendered Easy and Familiar to the Reader (2 volumes; Oxford: Printed by J. Vincent for Thomas Tegg, 1839), by Juvenal and Persius, ed. by Martin Madan
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