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Ovidius (43 BC-17 AD) - OVID - in full Publius Ovidius Naso | |
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Roman poet, noted especially for his ARS AMATORIA and METAMORPHOSES. Ovid was the first major writer to grow up under the empire. He died far from home, in a desolate town by the Black Sea. During the Middle Ages and Renaissance, Ovidian stories were highly popular among artists, poets and in courts. In England the Metamorphoses was one of Chaucer's favorite books. I'm sorry for any fool who rates sleep a prime blessing Publius Ovidius Naso was a member of the Roman knightly class. Ovid came from Sulmo in the territory of the Paeligni. His last name meant a 'nose', perhaps after some ancestor who had a big nose. Ovid's parents had destined him for a career in law. He studied rhetoric under Aurelius Fuscus and Porcius Latro and his education was completed in Athens, where he decided to become a poet, and rich and famous. With the poet Macer, Ovid travelled in Asia Minor and Sicily. In Rome he started to practise law as one of the judges who tried testamentary and sometimes criminal cases. Legal phraseology is seen later in his writing. Soon he decided that public life did not suit him. Ovid retired to devote himself entirely to writing. He was married three times; his only daughter was probably his second wife. In a short while, Ovid gained the reputation of being the most brilliant poet of his generation. Among his first series of poems were love elegies, AMORES, a fictitious romance between the poet and a woman named Corinna. It was followed by HEROIDES, written in the form of love letters between mythological lovers, such as Paris and Helen. The only exception the fifteenth letter, in which the Greek poet Sappho writes to Phaon, Ovid begins with the letter of Penelope, a devoted wife, to her husband Ulysses. Heroides shows Ovid's familiarity with Greek and Roman literature, as well as a knowledge of geography and astronomy. At the age of forty Ovid published Ars Amatoria (The Art of Love), an instruction book about seducing in three volumes, two for men and one for women. The poet expressed in it his disillusionment with old ideals and stated: "Let others delight in the good old days; I am delighted to be alive right now. This age is suited to my way of life." The Metamorphoses, written in dactylic hexameters, appeared when Ovid was 52 years old. "My mind is intent on singing of shapes changed into new bodies," he wrote in it. The title was a Greek word meaning 'changes of shape'. Its fifteen books dealt with mythological, legendary, and historical figures and recorded the history of the world from chaos to the apotheosis of Julius Caesar and the reign of Augustus. Hexameter, familiar to Ovid from Homer's Iliad and Odyssey and Virgil's Aeneid. Characteristic of the epic is the view of the unpredictable nature of things and the instability of the forms of nature. Starting from Heraclitus's "all things flow, nothing abides," the idea that everything always changes was an essential part of Greek thought, and a driving force in the history of the expansive Roman Empire. In the Metamorphoses men are transformed into women and vice versa; stones become people; a statue is changed into a woman; a girl becomes a laurel tree, Neptune changes into a fierce-looking ox. In the final metamorphosis the spirit of the murdered Julius Caesar is changed into a star. "However impossible these intensities might seem to be on one level, on another, apparently more significant level Ovid renders them with psychological truth and force. In his earlier books, preoccupied with erotic love, he had been a sophisticated entertainer. Perhaps here too in the Metamorphoses he set out simply to entertain. But something else joined in, something emerging from the very nature of his materials yet belonging to the unique moment in history-the moment of the birth of Christ within the Roman Empire." (Ted Hughes in The New York Review of Books, July 17, 1997) Ovid's expectations of a quiet life was ruined when emperor Augustus banished him in 8 AD to Tomi, a fishing village on the northwest coast of the Black Sea. He had been hailed as the successor to Virgil, but lived his last ten years among barbarians, keeping up the hope of return to Rome. For Ovid, who had declared Rome to be his only home, exile was the hardest punishment. Augustus also had Ovid's works removed from public libraries. In his own time Ovid was an immensely popular writer, but he also said: "So long as you are secure you will count many friends; if your life becomes clouded you will be alone." The reasons behind the emperor's decisions are unsolved, but he may have objected to a rumored affair between Ovid and the emperor's nymphomaniac daughter Julia, whose portrait is drawn among others in Robert Graves's Claudius novels. Perhaps Ovid witnessed the affair between Julia and Silanus. Augustus himself wanted to restore old Roman family values and criminalize adultery, but he wasn't a good example: he had divorced his wife to marry his mistress, Livia. The golden age was first; when Man yet new, Ovid's poems in exile manifested complicated motives. He sent poetic supplications to the Emperor, which were published under the titles TRISTIA (Songs of Sadness) and EPISTULAE EX PONTO (Letters from the Black Sea). At the same time he covertly criticized Augustus's 'New Rome.' Among Ovid's later works is Fasti, poem of some five thousand lines on the Roman calendar, written and revised in the years between AD 4 and 16. Unlike his Metamorphoses, the "calendar poem" on the holidays and feast days of the Roman calendar, is anchored in Rome: sacred rites, history and legend, monuments, and characters. Ovid dedicated the work to the Emperor, but ambivalently interprets the ideals of the Augustan period. However, he does not mock them openly although he nearly reveals himself when Romulus, the other pater patriae of Rome, becomes an autocrat and rapist. Ovid never returned to Rome. After Tiberius's succession the visit of his nephew Germanicus, also a poet, raised new hopes, but in vain. Everything in the Metamorphoses changed, but in real life his exile was permanent. Ovid died in Tomi on the rim of the empire in AD 17. With his death, the Golden Age of Roman literature came to an end. Full of veiled political and historical references, the Metamorphoses lived on to become one of the major sources of ancient mythology in the middle ages. The alchemist Petrus Bonus claimed that it dealt esoterically with the philosophers' stone. Through the Renaissance up to modern times, from Dante to Ezra Pound, Ovid has inspired generations of poets, but he has also enjoyed fame as an immoralist. This did not stop Martin Luther from reading his works. Tomi or Tomis of today is Constanta, a seaport in Romania, characterized by gloomy architecture and rusty cranes in the harbor. Among several translations of Ovid's Metamorphoses is England's poet laureate Ted Hughes's selection (1997), which won the Whitbread Award in 1998. Hughes chose for his 24 translations some of the most violent and disturbing narratives Ovid wrote, including the stories of 'Echo and Narcissus,' 'Bacchus and Pentheus,' and 'Semele's rape by Jove'. The book followed the anthology After Ovid: New Metamorphoses (1995, ed. by Michael Hofmann and James Lasdun), in which other prominent English-language poets, such as Seamus Heaney, Amy Clampitt, and Charles Simic, contributed their own interpretations of the great classic of ancient Roman myths. For further reading: History in Ovid by Ronald Syme (1979); Ovid in Sicily by Allen Mandelbaum (1986); Ovid Renewed: Ovidian Influence on Literature and Art from Middle Ages to the Twentieth ed. by Charles Martindale (1988); Ovid's Poetry of Exile by David R. Slavitt (1989); Another Reality: Metamorphosis and the Imagination in the Poetry of Ovid, Petrarch, and Ronsard by Kathleen A. Perry (1990); The Severed Word: Ovid's Heroides and the Novela Sentimental by Marina Scordilis Brownlee (1990); Ovid and the Fasti: An Historical Study by Geraldine Herbert-Brown (1994); Banished Voices: Readings in Ovid's Exile Poetry by Gareth D. Williams (1994); After Ovid: New Metamorphoses, ed. by Michael Hofmann and James Lasdun (1995); Playing With Time: Ovid and the Fasti by Carole E. Newlands (1995); Harmful Eloquence: Ovid's Amores from Antiquity to Shakespeare by M. L. Stapleton (1997); The Face of Nature: Wit, Narrative, and Cosmic Origins in Ovid's Metamorphoses by Garth Tissol (1997); Contrast As Narrative Technique in Ovid's Metamorphoses by Richard Albert Spencer (1997); Tales from Ovid by Ovid, Ted Hughes (ed.) ( 1997); The Poet and the Prince: Ovid and Augustan Discourse by Alessandro Barchiesi (1997); Desiring Discourse: The Literature of Love, Ovid Through Chaucer, ed. by James J. Paxson and Cynthia A. Gravlee (1998); A Discourse of Wonders: Audience and Performance in Ovid's Metamorphoses by Stephen Michael Wheeler (1999); Readers and Writers in Ovid's Heroides: Transgressions of Genre and Gender by Efrossini Spentzou (2003) - See also: Geoffrey Chaucer, Ted Hughes Selected works:
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