The Satyrs of Decimus Junius Juvenalis


Read by Nick Hillier

(5 stars; 1 reviews)

16 satires in verse of the celebrated classical poet of the 1st and 2nd Century translated into verse by John Dryden an English satirist of the 17th Century in which Juvenal complains about and ridicules aspects of life in the Rome of his day her habits mores and celebrities - Summary by N L Hillier (5 hr 49 min)

Chapters

The first Satyr 17:29 Read by Nick Hillier
The second Satyr 14:38 Read by Nick Hillier
The third Satyr 28:15 Read by Nick Hillier
The fourth Satyr 15:49 Read by Nick Hillier
The fifth Satyr 15:23 Read by Nick Hillier
The sixth Satyr 54:32 Read by Nick Hillier
The seventh Satyr 20:05 Read by Nick Hillier
The eighth Satyr 30:13 Read by Nick Hillier
The ninth Satyr 15:23 Read by Nick Hillier
The tenth Satyr 33:15 Read by Nick Hillier
The eleventh Satyr 22:42 Read by Nick Hillier
The twelfth Satyr 11:11 Read by Nick Hillier
The thirteenth Satyr 23:42 Read by Nick Hillier
The fourteenth Satyr 25:55 Read by Nick Hillier
The fifteenth Satyr 13:51 Read by Nick Hillier
The sixteenth Satyr 6:43 Read by Nick Hillier

Reviews


(5 stars)

"Once the power of monetary emission is yielded by a ruler or state to private or external interests, it is rare that it can be recovered except as the result of all consuming cataclysm. Immense monopolies and vastly unequal money fortunes are neither gained nor saved by lawful labour or trade. Of necessity they are the natural outcome of the exercise of the power to discriminate, the power to reject or prefer that follows as inevitable consequence, when, in any state, private persons are permitted to create and issue the unit of exchange, whether tangible or abstract; and by whatever device of law such as may be needed to create appearance of legality. So far as the future of mankind is concerned, out of the deceit it practises on the simple, kind, and trusting, this instrument will be responsible for the complete enslavement and ultimate destruction of most, if not all, of this world. " -David Astle, π˜›π˜©π˜¦ π˜‰π˜’π˜£π˜Ίπ˜­π˜°π˜―π˜ͺ𝘒𝘯 𝘞𝘰𝘦