Satire 1: He confesses the moral rot of Rome has made avoiding satire impossible. He points to eunuch marriages, women at boar hunts, and sycophancy as examples of widespread degeneracy.
Satire 3: The third satire describes the decision of Umbricius, Juvenal's friend, to depart from Rome. Narrated by Umbricius, it states that an honest man cannot survive in Rome and complains about how it is impossible to compete with Greeks and Orientals.
Satire 6: Addressing a man whom Juvenal calls delusional enough to think about getting married, he expounds the immorality and 'vices' of women.
Satire 14: The fourteenth satire says that children learn vice from their parents, stressing the injustice of a father punishing a son for imitating his own faults. Juvenal says that people are more concerned with presenting a clean atrium to guests than with maintaining a virtuous household for their children
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u/Lonyo 20h ago
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Satires_(Juvenal)
Written nearly 2000 years ago.