Martial's name is a byword for caustic and often obscene wit. The
fiercest Roman satirist after Juvenal, he was also a poet with a more
reflective nature, whose acute observations of life are tinged with a
keen awareness of death. Peter Whigham's selection from his enormous
output represents both the serious and lighter aspects of a many-sided
professional poet. His translations also convey, in their frequent
homage to earlier translators and English followers of Martial, a sense
of his enduring influence on the English poetic tradition.
J.P. Sullivan's critical introduction sets Martial's life and poetry in
the social and political context of his times, and accounts for his
continuing popularity through the ages.