[85] Cf. Tac. Hist. iii. 65.
[86] Mart. vii. 63.
[87] Mart. xi. 48; 49.
[88] Mart. viii. 66.
[89] Mart. ix. 68.
[90] The references are to L. Friedländer’s edition (Leipzig, 1886).
[91] Ed. of Book x., Introd. p. 9 (Oxford, 1891).
[92] A passage probably inserted by the pseudo-Frontinus from memoirs of the genuine Frontinus to give an air of authenticity to his work.
[93] J. Dürr, Das Leben Juvenals (Ulm, 1888). L. Friedländer (ed. of Juvenal: Leipzig, 1895) attaches little importance to this and the other vitae, but his arguments do not appear to us to be convincing.
[94] E. G. Hardy (ed. of Juvenal: London, 1891, introd. p. 8) thinks that this is supported by Juvenal’s gentile name Iunius. As a representative of the middle classes he (thinks Hardy) could not have been related by blood to either of the two gentes of that name. Hardy also states that Decimus is a common praenomen of the plebeian gens Iunia, and suggests that Juvenal may have got his praenomen from them. There is no reason, however, to think that every Iunius must be related or associated in some way with one of these two gentes.