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Cover of Love poems, Letters, and Remedies of Ovid

Love poems, Letters, and Remedies of Ovid

โœ Scribed by Slavitt, David R.(Author)


Publisher
Harvard University Press
Year
2011
Tongue
English
Weight
226 KB
Category
Fiction
City
Cambridge;Mass
ISBN
0674061225

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

โœฆ Synopsis


Widely praised for his recent translations of Boethius and Ariosto, David R. Slavitt returns to Ovid, once again bringing to the contemporary ear the spirited, idiomatic, audacious charms of this master poet.

The love described here is the anguished, ruinous kind, for which Ovid was among the first to find expression. In theAmores, he testifies to the male experience, and in the companionHeroides--through a series of dramatic monologues addressed to absent lovers--he imagines how love goes for women. "You think she is ardent with you? So was she ardent with him," cries Oenone to Paris. Sappho, revisiting the forest where she lay with Phaon, sighs, "The place / without your presence is just another place. / You were what made it magic." TheRemedia Amorissees love as a sickness, and offers curative advice: "The beginning is your best chance to resist"; "Try to avoid onions, / imported or domestic. And arugula is bad. / Whatever may incline your body to Venus / keep away from." The voices of men and women produce a volley of extravagant laments over love's inconstancy and confusions, as though elegance and vigor of expression might compensate for heartache.

Though these love poems come to us across millennia, Slavitt's translations, introduced by Pulitzer Prize winner Michael Dirda, ensure that their sentiments have not faded with the passage of time. They delight us with their wit, even as we weep a little in recognition.

โœฆ Subjects


Science


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