Mores hominum = The manners of men / described in sixteen satyrs by Juvenal, as he is published in his most authentick copy, lately printed by command of the King of France ; whereunto is added the invention of seventeen designes in picture, with arguments to the satyrs ; as also explanations to the designes in English and Latine ; together with a large comment, clearing the author in every place wherein he seemed obscure, out of the laws and customes of the Romans, and the Latine and Greek histories, by Sir Robert Stapylton, Knight.

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Title
Mores hominum = The manners of men / described in sixteen satyrs by Juvenal, as he is published in his most authentick copy, lately printed by command of the King of France ; whereunto is added the invention of seventeen designes in picture, with arguments to the satyrs ; as also explanations to the designes in English and Latine ; together with a large comment, clearing the author in every place wherein he seemed obscure, out of the laws and customes of the Romans, and the Latine and Greek histories, by Sir Robert Stapylton, Knight.
Author
Juvenal.
Publication
London :: Printed by R. Hodgkinsonne,
1660.
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"Mores hominum = The manners of men / described in sixteen satyrs by Juvenal, as he is published in his most authentick copy, lately printed by command of the King of France ; whereunto is added the invention of seventeen designes in picture, with arguments to the satyrs ; as also explanations to the designes in English and Latine ; together with a large comment, clearing the author in every place wherein he seemed obscure, out of the laws and customes of the Romans, and the Latine and Greek histories, by Sir Robert Stapylton, Knight." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A46427.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 3, 2024.

Pages

Sencences in B.

Fol. 80. verse 181.

In wretched Beggery nothing's harder, then To see what laughing Stocks it makes of Men.

Fol. 82. verse 213.

Our Common Crimes proud Beggery.

Fol. 109. verse 9.

No bad Man is bless'd.

Fol. 114. verse 117.

Let me be rather then a Man of Birth. The Gyants Brother, th' Offspring of th' earth.

Page [unnumbered]

Fol. 331. verse 7.

The Belly's cheaply fed.

Fol. 347. verse 354.

Seldome Beauty is with Virtue matcht.

Fol. 470. verse 304.

No Playes no Shows like Businesses of Men.

Fol. 317. verse 134.

What thou shalt in thy Bed-chamber commit, Ev'n when the Cock the second time shall crow, E're it be day, shall the next Tavern know.

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