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Ovid
(redirected from Publius Ovidius Naso)

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Ovid (Publius Ovidius Naso) (ŏv`ĭd), 43 B.C.–A.D. 18, Latin poet, b. Sulmo (present-day Sulmona), in the Apennines. Although trained for the law, he preferred the company of the literary coterie at Rome. He enjoyed early and widespread fame as a poet and was known to the emperor Augustus. In A.D. 8, for no known reason, he was abruptly exiled to Tomis, a Black Sea outpost, S of the Danube, where he later died. The poems of Ovid fall into three groups—erotic poems, mythological poems, and poems of exile. His verse, with the exception of the Metamorphoses and a fragment (Halieutica), is in elegiacs, which are of unmatched perfection. The love poems include Amores [loves], 49 short poems, many of which extol the charms of the poet's mistress Corinna, probably a synthesis of several women; Epistulae heroidum [letters from heroines], an imaginary series written by ancient heroines to their absent lovers; Ars amatoria [art of love], didactic, in three books, with complete instructions on how to acquire and keep a lover. In the mythological category is the Metamorphoses, a masterpiece and perhaps Ovid's greatest work. Written in hexameters, it is a collection of myths concerned with miraculous transformations linked together with such consummate skill that the whole is artistically harmonious. The Fasti, also a mythological poem, contains six books on the days of the year from January to June, giving the myths, legends, and notable events called to mind on each day. As a source for religious antiquities, it is especially valuable. The poems of exile include Tristia [sorrows], five books of short poems, conveying the poet's despair in his first five years of exile and his supplications for mercy, and the Epistulae ex Ponto [letters from the Black Sea], in four books, addressed to friends in Rome, showing somewhat abated poetic power. Ovid wrote poetry to give pleasure; no other Latin poet wrote so naturally in verse or with such sustained wit. Unsurpassed as a storyteller, he also related the complexities of romantic involvements with verve and deft characterization. A major influence in European literature, Ovid was also a primary source of inspiration for the artists of the Renaissance and the baroque. The Metamorphoses was translated during this period by A. Golding (1567), George Sandys (1632), and John Dryden (1700).

Bibliography

See modern verse translations by R. Humphries (1955, 1958), L. R. Lind (1975), and A. D. Melville (1989); studies by L. P. Wilkinson (1955, 1962), H. F. Fränkel (1945, repr. 1969), B. Otis (1966, repr. 1971), J. W. Binns, ed. (1973), R. Syme (1978), D. R. Slavitt (1990).


Ovid

 Latin Publius Ovidius Naso

(born March 20, 43 BC, Sulmo, Roman Empire—died AD 17, Tomis, Moesia) Roman poet. A member of Rome's knightly class, Ovid dutifully started an official career but soon abandoned it for poetry. His first work, The Loves, was an immediate success. It was followed by Epistles of the Heroines; The Art of Beauty; The Art of Love, one of his best-known works; and Remedies for Love, all reflecting the sophisticated, pleasure-seeking society in which he moved. He was a well-established poet when he undertook perhaps his greatest work, Metamorphoses, on legends of transformations of human beings into nonhuman forms by gods; and Fasti (“Calendar”), an account of the Roman year and its religious festivals. His verse had immense influence because of its imaginative interpretations of classical myth and its supreme technical accomplishment. For unclear reasons, in AD 8 Augustus banished him to Tomis on the Black Sea; despite Ovid's many pleas, he was never allowed to return. He described his life in an autobiographical poem in Sorrows. He was extensively read and imitated in the Renaissance, and his influence was felt into modern times.


Ovid
Latin name Publius Ovidius Naso. 43 bc--?17 ad, Roman poet. His verse includes poems on love, Ars Amatoria, on myths, Metamorphoses, and on his sufferings in exile, Tristia

Ovid
(Publius Ovidius Naso, 43 B.C.—A.D. 17) great storyteller of classical mythology. [Rom. Lit.: Zimmerman, 187]

Ovid 

(Publius Ovidius Naso). Born 43 B.C.; died circa A.D. 18. Roman poet.

Writing individualistic, primarily erotic, poetry, Ovid in his early narrative poems Ars Amatoria (Art of Love) and Remedia Amoris (Remedies of Love) instructs the reader in amorous relations and describes scenes from Roman life. His poem Metamorphoses (Russian translation, 1874–76) marked a transition to large-scale works in the spirit of Hellenistic “learned” poetry. Conceived as an epic, it contains about 250 mythological and folkloric tales about the transformation of people into animals, plants, constellations, and even into stones. His last works were the Tristia (Sorrows) and the Epistulae ex Ponto (Pontic Epistles).

At the end of A.D. 8, Ovid was exiled by Augustus to Tomis (now the port of Constanţa in Rumania), where he died. During his exile, he created a new genre of Roman poetry—the subjective elegy, devoid of any amatory theme. Ovid was highly esteemed by A. S. Pushkin, whose interest in the exiled poet was expressed in the verses “In the Land Where He Was Crowned by Julia” and “To Ovid” and in the narrative poem The Gypsies.

WORKS

Opera, vols. 1–3. Edited by R. Ehwald and V. Levy. Leipzig, 1915–32.
Carmina selecta. Moscow, 1946.
In Russian translation:
Ballady-poslaniia. Moscow, 1913.
Metamorfozy. (Introductory article by A. Beletskii.) [Moscow] 1937.
Liubovnye elegii. (Introduced and translated by S. Shervinskii.) Moscow, 1963.
Elegii i malye poemy. Moscow, 1973.

REFERENCES

Tronskii, I. M. Istoriia antichnoi literatury, 3rd ed. Leningrad, 1957.
Istoriia rimskoi literatury, vol. 1. Moscow, 1959.
Fräncel, H. Ovid: A Poet Between Two Worlds. Berkeley, Calif., 1945.
Paratore, E. Bibliografia Ovidiana. Sulmona. 1958.

K. P. POLONSKAIA



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It hardly seems worth going to university for three years to interpret the finer sentiments in the poems of Publius Ovidius Naso, or Ovid as he was known to his tiny circle of admirers, if you can earn a crust by expanding your bottom," I said.
of Tasmania) examines the relationship between the surviving poems--particularly the erotic works--attributed to Publius Ovidius Naso (43 BC-18 AD), and the political ideology that his contemporary Augustus developed and promoted as a means of justifying his unprecedented position of virtually unchallenged power as Rome's first emperor.
That's where the lights will come up for tonight's opening performance of ``Metamorphoses,'' Zimmerman's modernized adaptation of the ancient Roman masterpiece by the poet Publius Ovidius Naso - better-known to legions of college freshmen as Ovid.
 
 
 
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