Sulpicius Lupercus Servastus
Appearance
Sulpicius Lupercus Servastus (or Servasius; fl. c. 4th century AD or later) was a Latin poet. Two poems are extant; an elegy, De Cupiditate ('On Avarice'), in forty-two lines, and a sapphic ode, De Vetustate ('The Work of Time'), in twelve lines.
Quotes
[edit]- Omne quod Natura parens creavit,
quamlibet firmum videas, labascit:
tempore ac longo fragile et caducum
solvitur usu.- Each thing our parent Nature hath created,
How firm soever, Time will see it waste, and
By a long usage, feeble grown and fragile,
Fall into ruin. - De Vetustate, 1–4 (Tr. Henry C. Knight)
- Each thing our parent Nature hath created,
- Heu misera in nimios hominum petulantia census!
- Alas for the wretched craving after excessive incomes!
- De Cupiditate, 1 (Tr. Duff & Duff)
- Heu mala paupertas numquam locupletis avari!
dum struere immodice quod tenet optat, eget.- Alas for the baleful poverty of the miser who is never rich! His desire for a limitless heap of what he holds makes him a beggar.
- De Cupiditate, 13–14 (Tr. Duff & Duff)
- Romani sermonis egent, ridendaque verba
frangit ad horrificos turbida lingua sonos.- They are beggared of Latin style, and their confused jargon minces ridiculous words to an accompaniment of shocking sounds.
- De Cupiditate, 29–30 (Tr. Duff & Duff)
External links
[edit]- J. Wright Duff; Arnold M. Duff, Minor Latin Poets, Loeb Classical Library 284 (1934), p. 573
- Henry C. Knight, Poems, Vol. 1 (Boston: Wells and Lilly, 1821), p. 188