
The Satyricon
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Narrated by:
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Charlton Griffin
About this listen
The moral cesspool that Rome had become in the first century AD is the subject of The Satyricon by Petronius. The work itself was originally quite a long one, perhaps as long as a thousand pages. The extant portion, however, is only a small fraction of the original. The work contains a mixture of prose and verse, serious and comic elements, and erotic and decadent passages. It possesses a sophisticated humor and a very ironic tone. It is the creation of a Roman gentleman whose insights were keen.
The most famous part of this book is the description of Trimalchio’s banquet. It is a marvelous glimpse of the utter degradation and opulence on display in the home of a fabulously wealthy freedman. We are also provided with informal table talk that abounds in vulgarisms and solecisms which give us insight into the unknown Roman proletariat. From start to finish, The Satyricon is one of the best descriptions we have of daily life among the common denizens of Rome.
This version was translated by W. C. Firebaugh.
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What listeners say about The Satyricon
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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Overall
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Performance
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- William
- 09-14-23
very entertaining performance by reader
wonderful job by Griffin.
Effective translation, note it is from 1922 and includes some guessed-at (or spurious) passages as only a fragment of the whole work has survived.
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