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Metamorphoses (poem)

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Metamorphoses (poem)



 
 
The Metamorphoses by the Roman
Ancient Rome

Ancient Rome was a civilization that grew out of a small agricultural community founded on the Italian Peninsula as early as the 10th century BC....
 poet Ovid
Ovid

Publius Ovidius Naso was a Roman Empire poet known as Ovid to the English language-speaking world, who wrote about love, seduction, and Roman mythology transformation....
 is a narrative poem
Narrative poetry

Narrative poetry is poetry that tells a story and is a snapshot of a poet's thoughts and feelings. The poems may be short or long, and the story it relates to may be simple or complex....
 in fifteen books that describes the creation and history
HIStory

HIStory: Past, Present and Future, Book I is a double album by Michael Jackson, released on June 20, 1995, and is Jackson's ninth. The first disc, named "HIStory Begins" consists of a selection of Jackson's greatest hits from the singer's past fifteen years, while the second, named "HIStory Continues" features new songs, with the...
 of the world. Completed in 8 AD, it has remained one of the most popular works of mythology
Mythology

The word mythology refers to a body of folklore/myths/legends that a particular culture believes to be true and that often use the supernatural to interpret natural events and to explain the nature of the universe and humanity....
, being the Classical work best known to medieval writers and thus having a great deal of influence on medieval poetry.

works his way through his subject matter, often in an apparently arbitrary fashion, by jumping from one transformation tale to another, sometimes retelling what had come to be seen as central events in the world of Greek myth and sometimes straying in odd directions.






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Ovidius Metamorphosis   George Sandy's 1632 Edition
The Metamorphoses by the Roman
Ancient Rome

Ancient Rome was a civilization that grew out of a small agricultural community founded on the Italian Peninsula as early as the 10th century BC....
 poet Ovid
Ovid

Publius Ovidius Naso was a Roman Empire poet known as Ovid to the English language-speaking world, who wrote about love, seduction, and Roman mythology transformation....
 is a narrative poem
Narrative poetry

Narrative poetry is poetry that tells a story and is a snapshot of a poet's thoughts and feelings. The poems may be short or long, and the story it relates to may be simple or complex....
 in fifteen books that describes the creation and history
HIStory

HIStory: Past, Present and Future, Book I is a double album by Michael Jackson, released on June 20, 1995, and is Jackson's ninth. The first disc, named "HIStory Begins" consists of a selection of Jackson's greatest hits from the singer's past fifteen years, while the second, named "HIStory Continues" features new songs, with the...
 of the world. Completed in 8 AD, it has remained one of the most popular works of mythology
Mythology

The word mythology refers to a body of folklore/myths/legends that a particular culture believes to be true and that often use the supernatural to interpret natural events and to explain the nature of the universe and humanity....
, being the Classical work best known to medieval writers and thus having a great deal of influence on medieval poetry.

Content

Ovid works his way through his subject matter, often in an apparently arbitrary fashion, by jumping from one transformation tale to another, sometimes retelling what had come to be seen as central events in the world of Greek myth and sometimes straying in odd directions. The poem is often called a mock-epic. It is written in dactylic hexameter
Dactylic hexameter

Dactylic hexameter is a form of meter in poetry or a rhythmic scheme. It is traditionally associated with the quantitative meter of classical epic poetry in both Greek language and Latin, and was consequently considered to be the Grand Style of classical poetry....
, the form of the great heroic and nationalistic epic poems; both those of the ancient tradition (the Iliad
ILiad

The iLiad is an electronic handheld device, or e-book device, which can be used for document reading and editing. Like the Sony Reader or Amazon Kindle, the iLiad makes use of an electronic paper display....
 and Odyssey
Odyssey

The Odyssey is one of two major ancient Hellenic civilization epic poetrys attributed to Homer. It is, in part, a sequel to the Iliad, the other work traditionally ascribed to Homer....
) and of Ovid's own day (the Aeneid
Aeneid

The Aeneid is a Latin Epic poetry written by Virgil in the late 1st century BC that tells the legendary story of Aeneas, a Troy who traveled to Italy, where he became the ancestor of the Rome....
). It begins with the ritual "invocation of the muse
Muse

File:Muse reading Louvre CA2220.jpgThe Muses in Greek mythology, poetry, and literature are the goddesses or spirits who inspire the creation of literature and the arts....
", and makes use of traditional epithet
Epithet

An epithet is a descriptive word or phrase accompanying or occurring in place of the name of a person or thing, which has become a fixed formula....
s and circumlocutions. But instead of following and extolling the deeds of a human hero
Hero

A hero , in Greek mythology and folklore, was originally a demigod, the offspring of a mortal and a deity,their Greek hero cult being one of the most distinctive features of Religion in ancient Greece....
, it leaps from story to story with little connection.

Tizian 012
The recurring theme, as with nearly all of Ovid's work, is that of love — be that personal love or love personified in the figure of Amor (Cupid
Cupid

In Roman mythology, Cupid is the god of eroticism love and beauty. He is also known by another one of his Latin names, Amor . He is the son of goddess Aphrodite....
). Indeed, the other Roman gods
Roman mythology

Roman mythology, or more appropriately, Latin mythology, refers to the mythology beliefs of the Italic people inhabiting the region of Latium and its main city, Rome....
 are repeatedly perplexed, humiliated, and made ridiculous by Amor
Amor

Amor, meaning love in many languages, may refer to:*Cupid, the Roman god of love also known by his Latin name Amor* 1221 Amor, an asteroid*Amor asteroid, a group of near-Earth asteroids named after 1221 Amor...
, an otherwise relatively minor god of the pantheon
Pantheon (gods)

A pantheon is a set of all the gods of a particular polytheistic religion or mythology.Max Weber's 1922 opus, Economy and Society discusses the link between a pantheon of gods and the development of monotheism....
 who is the closest thing this mock-epic has to a hero. Apollo
Apollo

In Greek mythology and Roman mythology, Apollo , is one of the most important and many-sided of the Twelve Olympians. The ideal of the kouros , Apollo has been variously recognized as a god of light and the sun; truth and prophecy; archery; medicine and healing; music, poetry, and the arts; and more....
 comes in for particular ridicule as Ovid shows how irrational love can confound the god of pure reason
Reason

Reason may refer to Mind#Mental faculties that consciously create explanations in order to judge, decide, solve problems, generalize, and give examples, among other activities....
. The work as a whole inverts the accepted order, elevating humans and human passions while making the gods and their desires and conquests objects of low humor.

Apollo and Daphne

Main episodes

  • Book I: Cosmogony
    Greek mythology

    Greek mythology is the body of myths and legends belonging to the Ancient Greece concerning their List of Greek mythological figures#Immortals and Greek hero cult, Cosmology#Metaphysical cosmology, and the origins and significance of their own cult and ritual practices....
    , Ages of Man
    Ages of Man

    The Ages of Man are the stages of human existence on the Earth according to Classical mythology. Two classical authors in particular offer accounts of the successive ages of mankind, which tend to progress from an original, long-gone age in which humans enjoyed a nearly divine existence to the current age of the writer, in which humans are be...
    , Gigantes
    Gigantes

    In Greek mythology, the Gigantes or, commonly, Giants, were a race of giants, children of Gaia or Gaea, who were fertilized by the blood of Uranus_, after being castration by his son Cronus....
    , Daphne
    Daphne

    According to Greek mythology, Apollo chased the nymph Daphne , daughter either of Peneus and Creusa in Thessaly, or of Ladon River in Arcadia. The pursuit of a local nymph by an Twelve Olympians, part of the archaic adjustment of religious cult in Greece, was given an arch anecdotal turn in Ovid's Metamorphoses, where the god's infatuati...
    , Io
    Io (mythology)

    In Greek mythology, Io was a priestess of Hera in Argos who was seduced by Zeus, who changed her into a heifer to escape detection. Her mistress Hera set ever-watchful Argus Panoptes to guard her, but Hermes was sent to distract the guardian and slay him....
    ;
  • Book II: Phaëton
    Phaeton

    Phaeton, Pha?ton, Phaethon, or Pha?thon may refer to:*Pha?ton, in Greek mythology, either the son of Helios, the sun god; or son of Eos, the Dawn Goddess...
    , Callisto
    Callisto (mythology)

    In Greek mythology, Callisto was a nymph of Artemis. Transformed into a bear and Catasterism, she was the bear-mother of the Arcadians, through her son Arcas....
    , Jupiter
    Jupiter (mythology)

    In Roman mythology, Jupiter or Jove was the king of the gods,and the god of sky and thunder. He is the equivalent of Zeus in the Greek pantheon....
     and Europa
    Europa (mythology)

    Europa was a Phoenician woman of high lineage in Greek mythology, from whom the name of the continent Europe has ultimately been taken. The story of her abduction by Zeus in the form of a white bull was a Cretan story, as K?roly Ker?nyi points out; "most of the love-stories concerning Zeus originated from more ancient tales describing his ma...
    ;
  • Book III: Cadmus
    Cadmus

    Cadmus or Kadmos , in Greek mythology mythology, was a Phoenician prince, the son of Agenor and the brother of Phoenix , Cilix and Europa ....
    , Actaeon
    Actaeon

    In Greek mythology, Actaeon , son of the priestly herdsman Aristaeus and Autonoe in Boeotia, was a famous Thebes, Greece hero, trained by the centaur Cheiron, who suffered the fatal wrath of Artemis; ....
    , Echo
    Echo (mythology)

    In Greek mythology, Echo was an Oread who loved her own voice. Zeus loved consorting with beautiful nymphs and visited them on Earth often. Eventually, Zeus's wife, Hera, became suspicious, and came from Mount Olympus in an attempt to catch Zeus with the nymphs....
     et Pentheus
    Pentheus

    In Greek mythology, Pentheus was a king of Thebes, Greece, son of the strongest of the Spartes, Echion, and of Agave , daughter of Cadmus, the founder of Thebes, and the goddess Harmonia....
    ;
  • Book IV: Pyramus and Thisbe
    Pyramus and Thisbe

    The love story of Pyramus and Thisbe, is a part of Roman mythology, and is also a sentimental romance. The tale is told by Ovid in his Metamorphoses ....
    , Perseus
    Perseus

    Perseus , the legendary founder of Mycenae and of the Mycenae there, was the first of the mythic heroes of Greek mythology whose exploits in defeating various archaic monsters provided the founding myths in the cult of the Twelve Olympians....
     and Andromeda
    Andromeda (mythology)

    Andromeda was a woman from Greek mythology who, as divine punishment for her mother's bragging, was chained to a rock as a sacrifice to a sea monster....
    .
  • Book V: Phineas
    Phineas

    In Greek mythology, Phineas was a King of Thrace.The name 'Phineas' or 'Phineus' may be associated with the ancient city of Phinea on the Thracian Bosphorus....
    , the Rape of Proserpina
    Proserpina

    Proserpina is an ancient Roman goddess whose story is the basis of a Mythology of Springtime. Her Greek mythology goddess' equivalent is Persephone....
    ;
  • Book VI: Arachne
    Arachne

    In Greco-Roman mythology, Arachne was a great mortal weaver who boasted that her skill was greater than that of Minerva, the Latin parallel of Pallas Athena, goddess of crafts....
    , Niobe
    Niobe

    Niobe was the daughter of the semi-legendary ruler Tantalus, called the "Phrygian" and sometimes even as "King of Phrygia" . Although Tantalus ruled in Sipylus, a city located in the western extremity of Anatolia where Lydia was to emerge as a state as of the 8th century BC, and not in the traditional heartland of Phrygia, situated more in...
    , Philomela and Procne
    Procne

    Procne may refer to:*In Greek mythology, Procne was sister to Philomela , wife of Tereus, and mother of Itys*194 Prokne, an asteroid*In the Golden Sun videogame series, one summon is Procne, described as "a goddess in bird form"...
    ;
  • Book VII: Medea
    Medea

    Medea is a woman in Greek mythology. She was the daughter of Aeetes of Colchis, niece of Circe, granddaughter of the sun god Helios, and later wife to the hero Jason, with whom she had two children: Mermeros and Pheres....
    , Cephalus
    Cephalus

    Cephalus is an Ancient Greek name, used both for historical persons and for characters in Greek mythology. The word cephalus is Greek for "head", perhaps used here because Cephalus was the founding "head" of a great family that includes Odysseus....
     and Procris
    Procris

    In Greek mythology, Procris was the daughter of Erechtheus, king of Athens and his wife, Praxithea. She married Cephalus#Cephalus the husband of Procris, the son of Deion....
    ;
  • Book VIII: Nisos
    Nisos

    In Greek mythology, Nisos was the King of Megara, and one of the four sons of Pandion II, King of Athens.He was married to Abrota, and when she died, Nisos commanded that the Megarian women wear clothes like she had....
     and Scylla
    Scylla (princess)

    Scylla is a princess of Megara in Greek mythology. She is mentioned by Ovid.As the story goes, Scylla was the daughter of Nisus the King of Megara, who possessed a single lock of purple hair which granted him invincibility....
    , Daedalus
    Daedalus

    In Greek mythology, Daedalus was a most skillful artificer, or craftsman, so skillful that he was said to have invented images that seemed to move about....
     and Icarus
    Icarus

    Icarus, Ikarus, or Ikaros, is a proper noun with a variety of meanings, most deriving from its use in Greek mythology:* Icarus , the son of Daedalus according to Greek mythology...
    , Baucis and Philemon
    Baucis and Philemon

    In Ovid's moralizing fable , which stands on the periphery of Greek mythology and Roman mythology, Baucis and Philemon were an old married couple in the region of Tyana, which Ovid places in Phrygia, and the only ones in their town to welcome disguised gods Zeus and Hermes , thus embodying the pious exercise of hospitality, the ritualized gu...
    ;
  • Book IX: Heracles
    Heracles

    In Greek mythology, Heracles or Herakles meaning "glory of Hera", or "Glorious through Hera" Alcides or Alcaeus " was a hero, the son of Zeus and Alcmene, foster son of Amphitryon and great-grandson of Perseus....
    , Byblis
    Byblis

    In Greek mythology, Byblis was a daughter of Miletus. Her mother was either Tragasia, Cyanee, daughter of the river-god Meander , or Eidothea, daughter of King Eurytus of Caria....
    ;
  • Book X: Eurydice
    Eurydice

    In Greek mythology, Eurydice was an oak nymph or a sweet maiden. She was the wife of Orpheus. Orpheus loved her dearly; on their wedding day, Orpheus played songs filled with happiness as his bride danced through the meadow....
    , Hyacinth
    Hyacinth (mythology)

    Hyacinth is a divine hero from Ancient Greek mythology. His cult at Amyclae, where his tomb was located, at the feet of Apollo's statue, dates from the Mycenean era....
    , Pygmalion
    Pygmalion (mythology)

    Pygmalion is a legendary figure of Cyprus. Though Pygmalion is the Greek version of the Phoenician royal name Pumayyaton, he is most familiar from Ovid's Metamorphoses , in which Pygmalion is a sculptor who falls in love with a statue he has made....
    , Adonis
    Adonis

    Adonis is a figure of West Semitic origin, where he is a central cult figure in various mystery religions, who enters Greek mythology in Hellenistic culture....
    , Atalanta
    Atalanta

    Atalanta is a character from ancient Greek mythology.After being told by an oracle she would be ruined if she were to marry, Atalanta set up a contest to win her hand in marriage....
    , Cyparissus
    Cyparissus

    In Greek mythology, the myth set in Chios tells of Cyparissus , a young boy and son of Telephus. Though the mythic context and the setting is Hellenic, the subject is essentially known from Hellenizing Latin literature and Pompeiian frescoes....
    ;
  • Book XI: Orpheus
    Orpheus

    Orpheus was a legendary figure, probably from Thracian origin, venerated by the Greeks and Thracians of the Classical age as a chief among poets and musicians, and the perfector of the lyre invented by Hermes....
    , Midas
    Midas

    In Greek mythology, Midas or King Midas is popularly remembered for his ability to turn everything he touched into gold: the Midas touch....
    , Alcyone
    Alcyone

    In Greek mythology, Alcyone was the daughter of Aeolus, either by Enarete or Aegiale . She married Ceyx , son of Eosphorus, the Morning Star....
     and Ceyx
    Ceyx

    Ceyx may be:*In Greek mythology:**Ceyx, son of Eosphorus, husband to Alcyone. After whom is named:***Ceyx , son of Lucifer and Diana .***Ceyx , a genus of kingfisher ...
    ;
  • Book XII: Iphigeneia
    Iphigeneia

    Iphigenia is a daughter of Agamemnon and Clytemnestra in Greek mythology. In Attic accounts, Iphigenia is sometimes called a daughter of Theseus and Helen raised by Agamemnon and Clytemnestra....
    , Centaur
    Centaur

    In Greek mythology, the centaurs are a race of creatures composed of part human and part horse. In early Attica Pottery of ancient Greece, they are depicted with the torso of a human joined at the waist to the horse's withers, where the horse's neck would be....
    s, Achilles
    Achilles

    In Greek mythology, Achilles was a Greeks hero of the Trojan War, the central character and the greatest warrior of Homer's Iliad, which takes for its theme ; the Wrath of Achilles....
    ;
  • Book XIII: the Sack of Troy
    Trojan War

    In Greek mythology, the Trojan War was waged against the city of Troy by the Achaeans after Paris of Troy stole Helen from her husband Menelaus, the king of Sparta....
    , Aeneas
    Aeneas

    This article is about the Roman hero. For other uses, see Aeneas .In Greco-Roman mythology, Aeneas was a Troy hero, the son of prince Anchises and the goddess Venus_....
    ;
  • Book XIV: Scylla
    Scylla

    Scylla , also known as Scylle , was one of the two monsters in Greek mythology that lived on either side of a narrow channel of water. The two sides of the strait were within an arrow's range of each other?so close that sailors attempting to avoid Charybdis would pass too close to Scylla and vice versa....
    , Aeneas, Romulus
    Romulus

    Romulus may refer to any of these articles:...
    ;
  • Book XV: Pythagoras
    Pythagoras

    Pythagoras of Samos was an Ionians Ancient Greeks mathematician and founder of the religious movement called Pythagoreanism. He is often revered as a great mathematician, mysticism and scientist; however some have questioned the scope of his contributions to mathematics and natural philosophy....
    , Hippolytus
    Hippolytus (mythology)

    In Greek mythology, Hippolytus was a son of Theseus and either Antiope or Hippolyte. He was identified with the Roman mythology forest god Virbius....
    , Aesculapius, Caesar
    Julius Caesar

    'Gaius Julius Caesar' , July 13, 100 BC ? March 15, 44 BC,) was a Roman Republic military and political leader. He played a critical role in the transformation of the Roman Republic into the Roman Empire....
    .


Inspirations and adaptations

The story of Coronis and Phoebus Apollo was adapted by Geoffrey Chaucer
Geoffrey Chaucer

Geoffrey Chaucer was an English author, poet, philosopher, Bureaucracy, Noble court and diplomat. Although he wrote many works, he is best remembered for his unfinished frame narrative The Canterbury Tales....
 in the Canterbury Tales, where it forms the basis for the Manciple's tale.

The Metamorphoses was a considerable influence on English playwright William Shakespeare
William Shakespeare

William Shakespeare was an English people poet and playwright, widely regarded as the greatest writer in the English language and the world's preeminent dramatist....
. Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet
Romeo and Juliet

Romeo and Juliet is a Shakespearean tragedy written early in the career of playwright William Shakespeare about two young "Star-crossed" whose untimely deaths ultimately unite their feuding families....
 is influenced by the story of Pyramus and Thisbe
Pyramus and Thisbe

The love story of Pyramus and Thisbe, is a part of Roman mythology, and is also a sentimental romance. The tale is told by Ovid in his Metamorphoses ....
 (Metamorphoses Book 4), and, in A Midsummer Night's Dream
A Midsummer Night's Dream

A Midsummer Night's Dream is a romantic love Shakespearean comedies by William Shakespeare, suggested by "The Knight's Tale" from Geoffrey Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales, written around 1594 to 1596....
, a band of amateur actors performs a play about Pyramus and Thisbe. In Titus Andronicus
Titus Andronicus

Titus Andronicus may be William Shakespeare earliest tragedy; it is believed to have been written sometime between 1584 and the early 1590s....
 the story of Lavinia's rape is drawn from Tereus
Tereus

In Greek mythology, Tereus was a son of Ares and husband of Procne. Procne and Tereus had a son, Itys.Tereus desired his wife's sister, Philomela ....
' rape of Philomela
Philomela

In Greek mythology, Philomela was a daughter of Pandion I , and Zeuxippe, and a sister of Procne....
, and the text of Metamorphoses is used within the play to enable Titus to interpret his daughter's story. Yet, most tellingly, Shakespeare adapts, with minor changes, a passage from Book 7 of the Golding translation into an important speech in Act V of the Tempest
TEMPEST

TEMPEST is a codename referring to investigations and studies of compromising emanations . Compromising emanations are defined as unintentional Intelligence -bearing signals which, if intercepted and analyzed, may disclose the information transmitted, received, handled, or otherwise processed by any information-processing equipment....
.
  • In 1613, Spanish poet Luis de Góngora
    Luis de Góngora

    Luis de G?ngora y Argote was a Spanish Baroque literature lyric poet. G?ngora and his lifelong rival, Francisco de Quevedo, were the most prominent Spanish poets of their age....
     wrote an illustrious poem titled La Fábula de Polifemo y Galatea
    La Fábula de Polifemo y Galatea

    La F?bula de Polifemo y Galatea , or simply the s:es:F?bula de Polifemo y Galatea, is a literary work written by Spanish poet Luis de G?ngora y Argote....
     that retells the story of Polyphemus, Galatea and Acis found in Book XIII of the Metamorphoses.
  • In 1625, sculptor Gian Lorenzo Bernini
    Gian Lorenzo Bernini

    Giovanni Lorenzo Bernini was a pre-eminent Baroque sculpture and architect of 17th Century Rome....
     finished his piece entitled Apollo and Daphne
    Apollo and Daphne (Bernini)

    Apollo and Daphne is a baroque, life-sized marble sculpture by Italian Gian Lorenzo Bernini, housed in the Galleria Borghese in Rome. It was inspired by one of the stories included in Ovid's Metamorphoses....
    , taken from the episode in Book 1 in which Apollo
    Apollo

    In Greek mythology and Roman mythology, Apollo , is one of the most important and many-sided of the Twelve Olympians. The ideal of the kouros , Apollo has been variously recognized as a god of light and the sun; truth and prophecy; archery; medicine and healing; music, poetry, and the arts; and more....
    , pierced by a love-inducing arrow from Cupid
    Cupid

    In Roman mythology, Cupid is the god of eroticism love and beauty. He is also known by another one of his Latin names, Amor . He is the son of goddess Aphrodite....
    , pursues the fleeing nymph Daphne
    Daphne

    According to Greek mythology, Apollo chased the nymph Daphne , daughter either of Peneus and Creusa in Thessaly, or of Ladon River in Arcadia. The pursuit of a local nymph by an Twelve Olympians, part of the archaic adjustment of religious cult in Greece, was given an arch anecdotal turn in Ovid's Metamorphoses, where the god's infatuati...
    . This episode furthermore has been treated repeatedly in opera, notably by Jacopo Peri
    Jacopo Peri

    Jacopo Peri was an Italy composer and singer of the transitional period between the Renaissance music and Baroque music styles, and is often called the inventor of opera....
     (Dafne
    Dafne

    Dafne is the earliest known work that, by modern standards, could be considered an opera. It was composed by Jacopo Peri, with a libretto by Ottavio Rinuccini....
    ) in 1597 and Richard Strauss
    Richard Strauss

    Richard Georg Strauss was a German composer of the late Romantic music and early modern eras, particularly of operas, Lieder and tone poems. Strauss was also a prominent Conducting....
     (Daphne
    Daphne (opera)

    Daphne is an opera in one act by Richard Strauss, his 13th opera, subtitled "A Bucolic Tragedy in One Act". The German language libretto was by Joseph Gregor....
    , with a libretto that deviates significantly from Ovid's account) in 1938.
  • In 1783, Austrian composer Karl Ditters von Dittersdorf wrote twelve symphonies on selected stories of the Metamorphoses; only six survive, corresponding to stories from the first six books.
  • In 1951, British composer Benjamin Britten
    Benjamin Britten

    Edward Benjamin Britten, Baron Britten, Order of Merit Order of the Companions of Honour was an England composer, conducting, viola and pianist....
     wrote a piece
    Six Metamorphoses after Ovid

    English composer Benjamin Britten composed the program music Six Metamorphoses after Ovid for solo Oboe in 1951. Intended to evoke images of the Roman poet Ovid Metamorphoses , the piece is dedicated to oboist Joy Boughton who gave the first performance at the Aldeburgh Festival on 14 June 1951....
     for solo Oboe
    Oboe

    The oboe is a double reed musical instrument of the woodwind family. In English prior to 1770, the instrument was called "hautbois", "hoboy", or "French hoboy"....
     incorporating six of Ovid's mythical characters.
  • In 1988, Author Christoph Ransmayr reworked a great number of characters from The Metamorphoses in his The Last World.
  • In 2002, Author Mary Zimmerman
    Mary Zimmerman

    Mary Zimmerman is an American award winning theatre director and playwright....
     adapted some of Ovid's myths into a play by the same title, and the open-air-theatre group London Bubble also adapted it in 2006.
  • Naomi Iizuka
    Naomi Iizuka

    Naomi Iizuka is a playwright. Iizuka's works often have a non-linear storyline and are influenced by her multicultural background. Her plays are written without the use of capital letters....
    's Polaroid Stories also bases its format on Metamorphoses, setting the classic play in a modern time with drug-addicted, teenage versions of many of the characters from the original play.
  • Acis and Galatea
    Acis and Galatea

    Acis and Galatea is a musical work by George Frideric Handel with an English text by John Gay. The work has been variously described as a serenata, a masque, a pastoral or pastoral opera, a "little opera" , an entertainment and even an oratorio....
    , a masque
    Masque

    The masque was a form of festive Noble court entertainment which flourished in sixteenth and early seventeenth century Europe, though it was developed earlier in Italy, in forms including the intermedio....
     by Händel, is based on the eponymous characters out of the Metamorphoses, as is Lully
    Jean-Baptiste Lully

    Jean-Baptiste de Lully , was French composer of Italian birth, who spent most of his life working in the court of Louis XIV of France. He became a French citizenship in 1661....
    's opera Acis et Galatée
    Acis et Galatée

    Acis et Galat?e is an opera by Jean-Baptiste Lully. Unlike most of his operas, which are designated trag?dies en musique, Lully called this work a Pastorale h?ro?que, because it was on a pastoral theme and had only three acts compared to the usual five....
    .


Manuscript tradition

Ovid's Metamorphoses was an immediate success (although Quintilian
Quintilian

Marcus Fabius Quintilianus was a Roman Empire rhetorician from Hispania, widely referred to in Middle ages schools of rhetoric and in Renaissance writing....
 considered Ovid's tragedy Medea his best work), its popularity threatening that of Virgil
Virgil

Publius Vergilius Maro was a classical Roman poet, best known for three major works?the Bucolics , the Georgics and the Aeneid?although several Appendix Vergiliana are also attributed to him....
's Aeneid
Aeneid

The Aeneid is a Latin Epic poetry written by Virgil in the late 1st century BC that tells the legendary story of Aeneas, a Troy who traveled to Italy, where he became the ancestor of the Rome....
. So definitive a work on mythology was it considered that Seneca
Seneca the Younger

Lucius Annaeus Seneca was a Ancient Rome Stoicism philosopher, statesman, dramatist, and in one work humorist, of the Silver Age of Latin literature....
 joked in his Apocolocyntosis that the deification of Claudius
Claudius

Tiberius Claudius Caesar Augustus Germanicus or Claudius I was the fourth Roman Emperor, a member of the Julio-Claudian dynasty, ruling from January 24, AD 41 to his death in AD 54....
 should be added to the Metamorphoses. But the poem's immense popularity in antiquity and the Middle Ages belies the struggle for survival it faced in late antiquity. "A dangerously pagan work", the Metamorphoses was fortunate to survive Christianization
Christianization

The historical phenomenon of Christianization, the religious conversion of individuals to Christianity or the conversion of entire peoples at once, also includes the practice of converting native Paganism practices and culture, pagan religious imagery, pagan sites and the pagan calendar to Christian uses, due to the Christian efforts at Ch...
, and the vitriolic voices of Augustine and Jerome
Jerome

Saint Jerome was a Christian priest and Christian apologetics best known for translating the Vulgate. He is recognized by the Catholic Church as a canonized saint and Doctor of the Church, and his version of the Bible is still an important text in Catholicism....
, who believed the only metamorphosis worth reading about was the transubstantiation
Transubstantiation

In Roman Catholic theology, transubstantiation is the change of the Substance theory of Host and Sacramental wine into the Body of Christ and Blood of Christ occurring in the Eucharist while all that is accessible to the senses remain as before....
. Indeed an extremely concise, "inoffensive" prose summary of the poem ("a metamorphosis-free Metamorphoses") manufactured in late antiquity for Christian readers threatened to eclipse the poem itself. Though the Metamorphoses did not suffer the ignominious fate of the Medea, and survived, no ancient scholia on the poem survive (although they did exist in antiquity), and the earliest manuscript is very late, dating from the 11th century.

Collaborative editorial effort has been investigating the various manuscripts of Metamorphoses, some forty-five complete texts or substantial fragments,, all deriving from a Gallic
Gallic

Gallic is an adjective that may refer to:*Gaul, from which the name derives, a region of Europe roughly corresponding to modern France, but also comprising parts of modern northern Italy, Belgium, western Switzerland and parts of the Netherlands and Germany....
 archetype, with the result of several centuries of critical reading is that the poet's meaning is firmly established on the basis of the manuscript tradition or restored by conjecture where the tradition is deficient. The modern critical editions are two: W. S. Anderson's, first published in 1977 in the Teubner series, and R. J. Tarrant's, published in 2004 by the Oxford Clarendon Press.

See also


  • List of characters in Metamorphoses
    List of characters in Metamorphoses

    This is a list of characters in the poem Metamorphoses by Ovid....
  • Tales from Ovid
    Tales from Ovid

    Tales from Ovid is a Poetry written by the England poet Ted Hughes. Published in 1997 by Faber and Faber, it is a retelling of twenty-four tales from Ovid's Metamorphoses....
     - Ted Hughes
    Ted Hughes

    Edward James Hughes Order of Merit was an England poet and Children's literature, known as Ted Hughes. Critics routinely rank him as one of the best poets of his generation....
    ' poetical work


External links

  • Latin text with English translation
  • (Latin text, 2.300 illustrations)
    • (An elaborate environment allowing simultaneous access to Latin text, English translations, commentary from multiple sources along with wood cut illustrations by Virgil Solis.)
    • (From Perseus
      Perseus Project

      The Perseus Project is a digital library project of Tufts University that assembles digital collections of humanities resources. It is hosted by the Department of Classics....
       with hyperlinked commentary, mythological, and grammatical references)
  • Latin text
  • English translation
    • By A. S. Kline
      A. S. Kline

      A. S. Kline, known as Tony Kline is a British poet and translator, living in England.He graduated with a degree in Mathematics from the University of Manchester, and was Chief Information Officer of a large UK Company before dedicating himself to his literary work and interests....
      , 2000
      • . (Enhanced viewer with links and notes. Can be downloaded in different formats.)
    • By Sir Samuel Garth, John Dryden et al., 1717
    • By Others:
      • , trans. by Arthur Golding, 1567.
      • trans. by George Sandys, 1632.
      • trans. by Brooke Moore, 1922.
      • , trans. Rev. Dr. Giles, a learning translation/crib in PDF graphic format.
  • Insight and commentary
    • (Illustrations by Johann Whilhelm Baur (1600–1640) and anonymous illustrations from George Sandys's edition of 1640.)
    • .
    • (Concordance and narrative index.)
  • Audio Readings
    • Selections from Metamorphoses, read in Latin and English by Rafi Metz. Approximately 4 1/2 hours.