Fleeing Sisters: the Golden Age in Juvenal 6

Gergő Gellérfi
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Abstract

The opening of Juvenal’s longest and maybe the most well-known poem, Satire 6, is based on the ancient concept of the “Ages of Man”, starting from the reign of Saturn and ending with the flight of the two sisters, Pudicitia and Astraea. The first part of this 24-line-long passage depicts the Golden Age by making use of two different sources: the idealized Golden Age appearing in Vergil’s poetry among others and the prehistoric primitive world from Book 5 of Lucretius. The Juvenalian Golden Age, presented briefly in a naturalistic way, is a curious amalgam of these two traditions, being the only time in human history according to the poet when marital fidelity was unblemished. However, while reading Satire 6, it seems far from obvious that the lack of adultery should be attributed to higher morals.
逃离的姐妹:尤文图斯的黄金时代
朱维纳尔最长,也许也是最著名的诗歌《讽刺》的开头是基于“人类时代”的古老概念,从萨图恩统治时期开始,以普迪西提亚和阿斯特拉亚两姐妹的逃跑结束。这篇24行的文章的第一部分通过使用两个不同的来源来描述黄金时代:一个是维吉尔诗歌中理想化的黄金时代,另一个是卢克莱修第五卷中的史前原始世界。尤维纳的黄金时代,以一种自然主义的方式简单地呈现出来,是这两种传统的奇怪混合体,根据诗人的说法,这是人类历史上唯一一个婚姻忠诚没有瑕疵的时代。然而,在阅读《讽刺作品6》时,似乎远不能明显地将通奸的缺乏归因于更高的道德。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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