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There is nothing a woman does not allow herself in; she

thinks nothing base,

When she has placed green gems round her neck, and when
She has committed large pearls to her extended ears :
Nothing is more intolerable than a rich woman.

Mean while, filthy to behold, and to be laugh'd at, her face 460
Swells with much paste, or breathes fat Poppaan,

And hence the lips of her miserable husband are glued together. To an adulterer she will come with a wash'd skin: when is she Willing to seem handsome at home? perfumes are prepared for her [hither. 465 Gallants for these is bought whatever the slender Indians send At length she opens her countenance, and lays by her first coverings :

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She begins to be known, and is cherish'd with that milk, [dants,
On account of which she leads forth with her she-asses her atten-
If an exile she be sent to the Hyperborean axis. [changed 470
But that which is cover'd over, and cherish'd with so many
Medicaments, and receives cakes of baked and wet flour,
Shall it be called a face, or an ulcer?

It is worth while, to know exactly, for a whole

imported various sweet essences and perfumes, as well as the nard, which the ladies made use of. See Esther ii. 12.

466. She opens her countenance, &c.] Takes off the paste, (see 1. 461, note,) and washes off the other materials, only smoothing her skin with asses' milk.

Her first coverings.] The plaster or paste.

467. She begins to be known.] To look like herself.

With that milk, &c.] The poet alludes here to Poppaa, the wife of Nero, above mentioned, (1. 461.) who, when she was ba nished from Rome, had fifty she-asses along with her, for their milk ́to wash in, and to mix up her paste with.

469. Hyperborean axis.] The northern pole, (from vre, supra, and Bopeas, the north,) because from thence the north wind was supposed to come.

470-1. Changed medicaments.] Such a variety of cosmetics, or medicines for the complexion, which are for ever changing with the fashions or humours of the ladies.

471. Baked and wet flour.] Siliginis.-Siligo signifies a kind of grain, the flour of which is whiter than that of wheat; this they made a kind of poultice or paste of, by wetting it with asses' milk, and then applying it like a moist cake to the face. Offa denotes a pudding, or such like, or paste made with pulse. Also a cake, or any like composition.

472. A face, or an ulcer.] Because the look of it, when these cakes or poultices are upon it, is so like that of a sore, which is treated with poultices of bread and milk, in order to assuage and cleanse it, that it may as well be taken for the one as the other.

Quid faciant, agitentque die. Si nocte maritus
Aversus jacuit, periit libraria, ponunt
Cosmetæ tunicas, tarde venisse Liburnus
Dicitur, et poenas alieni pendere somni
Cogitur hic frangit ferulas, rubet ille flagello,
Hic scuticâ sunt quæ tortoribus annua præstant.
Verberat, atque obiter faciem linit; audit amicas,
Aut latum pictæ vestis considerat aurum ;
Et cædens longi relegit transacta diurni.
Et cædit donec lassis cædentibus, "Ex1,"
(Intonet horrendum,) " jam cognitione peractâ."
Præfectura domûs Siculâ non mitior aulâ :
Nam si constituit, solitoque decentius optat

&

Ornari; et properat, jamque expectatur in hortis,
Aut apud Isiacæ potius sacraria lenæ ;

475

480

485

475. Turned away.] Turns his back towards her, and goes to sleep. See below, 1. 477.

The housekeeper.] Libraria a weigher of wool or flax, (from libra, a balance,) a sort of housekeeper, whose office it was to weigh out and deliver the tasks of wool to the other servants for spinning.

Is undone.] Ruined-turned out of doors after being

cruelly lashed.

-The tire-women.] Cosmetæ, from Gr. xooμaw, to adorn, were persons who helped to dress their mistresses, and who had the care of their ornaments, clothes, &c.-something like our valets de chambre, or lady's women.

476. Strip.] Ponunt tunicas-put down their clothes from their backs to be flogged.

The Liburnan, &c.] One of her slaves, who carried her lit ter. These chairmen, as we should call them, were usually from Liburnia, and were remarkably tall and stout. See sat. iii. 1. 240.-The lady, in her rage, doesn't spare her own chairmen-these she taxes with coming after their time, and punishes.

477. For another's sleep.] Because her husband turned his back to her, and fell asleep. See above, 1. 475.

478. Ferules.] Rods, sticks, or ferules made of a flat piece of wood, wherewith children and slaves were corrected. One poor fellow has one of these broken over his shoulders.

Reddens with the whip.] Is wipped till his back is bloody. 479. The thong.] Scutica a terrible instrument of punishment, made of leathern thongs, though not (according to HOR. Sat. lib. i. sat. iii. 119.) so severe as the flagellum. Horace also mentions the ferula (1. 120.) as the mildest of the three.

Tormentors.] Hire people by the year, who, like executioners, put in execution the cruel orders of their employers. 480. He beats, &c.] One of these tormentors, hired for this pur

Day, what they do, and how they employ themselves. If at night The husband hath lain turned away, the housekeeper is undone, the tire-women

Strip, the Liburnan is said to have come late,
And to be punish'd for another's sleep

475

Is compell'd: one breaks ferules, another reddens with the whip, Another with the thong: there are some who pay tormentors by the year. [friends, 480 He beats, and she, by the bye, daubs her face; listens to her Or contemplates the broad gold of an embroider'd garment: And as he beats, she reads over the transactions of a long journal: And still he beats, till the beaters being tir'd-" Go,” (She horridly thunders out,) "now the examination is finished."The government of the house is not milder than a Sicilian

court:

than usual

485 For if she has made an assignation, and wishes more becomingly [gardens, To be dressed, and is in a hurry, and now waited for in the Or rather at the temple of the bawd Isis,

pose, lashes the poor slaves, while madam is employed in her usual course of adorning her person, or conversing with company, or looking at some fine clothes.

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482. And as he beats, &c.] The fellow still lays on, while she, very unconcernedly, looks over the family accounts.

483. He beats, &c.] Still the beating goes forward, till the beaters are quite tired.

"Go," &c.] Then she turns the poor sufferers out of doors, in the most haughty manner. "Be gone, now," says she, “the “examination is over-all accounts are now settled between us. "" Cognitio signifies the examination of things, in order to a discovery, as accounts, and the like.

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Cognitio also signifies trial, or hearing of a cause.-If we are to understand the word in this sense, then she may be supposed to say, in a taunting manner- "Be gone-you have had your trial-the

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cause is over."

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485. Than a Sicilian court.] Where the most cruel tyrants presided; such as Phalaris, Dionysius, &c. See HoR. lib. i. epist. ii. 1. 58, 9.

486. An assignation.] Constituit-has appointed-i. e. to meet a gallant. See sat. iii. 12, and note.

487. In the gardens.] Of Lucullus-a famous place for pleasant walks, and where assignations were made.

488. At the temple.] Sacraria-places where things sacred to the goddess were kept, which had been transferred from Ægypt to Rome.

The bawd Isis.] Or the Isiacan bawd-for her temple was. the scene of all manner of lewdness, and attended constantly by pimps, bawds, and the like. See sat. ix. 1. 22.

Componit crinem laceratis ipsa capillis

Nuda humeros Psecas infelix, nudisque mamillis.
Altior hic quare cincinnus? taurea punit

Continuo flexi crimen, facinusque capilli.

Quid Psecas admisit? quænam est hic culpa puellæ,

Si tibi displicuit nasus tuus? Altera lævum
Extendit, pectitque comas, et volvit in orbem.
Est in consilio matrona, admotaque lanis
Emeritâ quæ cessat acu: sententia prima
Hujus erit; post hanc ætate, atque arte minores
Censebunt: tanquam famæ discrimen agatur
Aut animæ tanti est quærendi cura decoris.
Tot premit ordinibus, tot adhuc compagibus altum
Edificat caput, Andromachen a fronte videbis;
Post minor est: aliam credas. Cedo, si breve parvi

490

495

500.

489. Unhappy Psecas.] Juvenal gives to the waiting-maid the name of one of chaste Diana's nymphs, who attended on the person of the goddess, and assisted at her toilet in the grotto of the vale Gargaphie. OVID. Met. lib. iii. 1. 155-172. This is very humourous, if we consider the character of the lady spoken of, who is attended at her toilet by her filles de chambre, who have each, like Diana's nymphs, a several office in adorning her person, while all these pains, to make herself look more handsome than usual, were because she was going to meet a gallant. The sad condition of poor Psecas bespeaks the violence which she suffered, from her cruel mistress, on every the least offence. However, this circumstance of her torn and dishevelled locks seems a farther humourous parody of the account which Ovid gives of one of Diana's nymphs, who dressed the goddess's hair:

Doctior illis
Ismenis Crocale, sparsos per colla capillos
Colligit in nodum, quamvis erat ipsa solutis.

Ov. ubi supr. 1. 168–70.

491. "Why is this curl higher ?" i. e. Than it ought to be says the lady, peevishly, to poor Psecas.

The bull's hide.] Taurea-a leather whip made of a bull's hide, with the strokes of which, on her bare shoulders, (Comp. I. 490.) poor Psecas must atone for her mistake about the height of the curl.

492. The crime, &c.] The poet humourously satirizes the monstrous absurdity of punishing servants severely for such trifles as setting a curl either too high or too low, as if it were a serious crimea foul deed (facinus) worthy stripes.

494. If your nose, &c.] If you happen to have a deformity in your features-for instance, a long and ugly nose-is the poor girl, who waits on you, to blame for this? are you to vent your displea 'sure upon her?

495. The left side.] Another maid-servant dresses a different side

Unhappy Psecas arranges her hair, herself with torn locks, Naked to the shoulders, and with naked breasts."Why is this curl, higher ?"-The bull's hide immediately

punishes

The crime and fault of a curled lock.

490

What has Psecas committed? what is here the fault of the girl, your nose has displeased you? Another extends

If

[495

The left side, and combs the locks, and rolls them into a circle.
A matron is in council, and who, put to the wool,
Ceases from the discharged crisping-pin: her opinion

Shall be first; after her, those who are inferior in age and art
Shall judge as if the hazard of her reputation, or of her life,
Were in question; of so great importance is the concern of get-
ting beauty.

She

500

presses with so many rows, and still builds with so many joinings,

Her high head, that you will see Andromache in front:

Behind she is less; you'd believe her another. Excuse her if

of the lady's head, combs out the locks, and turns them into rings. Extendit expresses the action of drawing or stretching out the hair with one hand, while the other passes the comb along it.

496. A matron, &c.] She then calls a council upon the subject of her dress-first, an old woman, who has been set to the wool, (i. e. to spin,) being too old for her former occupation of handling dexterously the crispin-pin, and of dressing her mistress's hair_ she, as the most experienced, is to give her opinion first-then the younger maids, according to their age and experience. Emerita here is metaphorical; it is the term used for soldiers, who are discharged from the service-such were called milites emeriti.

500. Of so great importance, &c.] One would think that her reputation, or even her life itself, was at stake, so anxious is she of appearing beautiful.

501. She presses, &c.] She crowds such a quantity of rows and stories of curls upon her towering head.

502. Andromache.] Wife of Hector, who is described by Ovid as very large and tall.

Omnibus Andromache visa est spatiosior æquo,
Unus, qui modicam diceret, Hector erat.

De Art. ii.

503. Another.] There is so much difference in the appearance of her stature, when viewed in front, and when viewed behind, that you would not imagine her to be the same woman-you would take her for another.

Excuse her.] Cedo-da-veniam understood-q. d. To be sure one should in some measure excuse her, if she happen to be a little woman, short-waisted, and, when she has not high shoes on, seeming, in point of stature, shorter than a pigmy, insomuch that she is forced to spring up on tip-toe for a kiss-I say, if such be the case,

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