1 / 60

Amores 1.3

Amores 1.3. Amores 1.3. Amores 1.3. Amores 1.3. Amores 1.3. Amores 1.3. Amores 1.3. Amores 1.3. Amores 1.3. Amores 1.3. Amores 1.3. Amores 1.3. Amores 1.3. Amores 1.3. Amores 1.3. Amores 1.3. Amores 1.3. Amores 1.3. Amores 1.3. Amores 1.3. Amores 1.3.

landry
Télécharger la présentation

Amores 1.3

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Amores 1.3

  2. Amores 1.3

  3. Amores 1.3

  4. Amores 1.3

  5. Amores 1.3

  6. Amores 1.3

  7. Amores 1.3

  8. Amores 1.3

  9. Amores 1.3

  10. Amores 1.3

  11. Amores 1.3

  12. Amores 1.3

  13. Amores 1.3

  14. Amores 1.3

  15. Amores 1.3

  16. Amores 1.3

  17. Amores 1.3

  18. Amores 1.3

  19. Amores 1.3

  20. Amores 1.3

  21. Amores 1.3

  22. Amores 1.3

  23. Amores 1.3

  24. Amores 1.3

  25. Amores 1.3

  26. Amores 1.3

  27. Amores 1.3

  28. Amores 1.3

  29. Amores 1.3

  30. Amores 1.3

  31. Amores 1.3

  32. Amores 1.3

  33. Amores 1.3

  34. The metaphor of the promiscuous lover as a desultoramoris (Am. 1. 3. 15) is one of the most striking in Ovid's Amores, and it is therefore of some interest to students of Ovid's style to assess its originality. As the commentators have noted (Paul Brandt ad loc.; A. E. Housman ad Manil. 5. 85), the desultor image can be traced back to Homer (Il. 15. 679), who compares Ajax, as he leaps from one Greek ship to another to keep off the Trojan attackers, to a trick-rider entertaining the crowds on the roadside by leaping from horse to horse. But there is no need to suppose that Ovid had Homer in mind rather than the Roman circus-riders described, for example, by Livy (44. 9. 4= 169 B.c.) and Varro (Rust. 2. 7. 15). It is clear from these passages that the desultores were established in the Roman circus by the earlier second century B.C., and that for the Romans the word desultor was a technical term needing no further explanation or qualification. J. A. Barsby: “DesultorAmoris in Amores 1. 3” (44)

  35. Amores 1.3

  36. Amores 1.3

  37. Amores 1.3

  38. Amores 1.3

  39. Amores 1.3

  40. Amores 1.3

  41. Amores 1.3

  42. Amores 1.3

  43. Amores 1.3

  44. Amores 1.3

  45. Amores 1.3

  46. Amores 1.3

  47. Amores 1.3

  48. Amores 1.3

  49. Amores 1.3

  50. Amores 1.3

More Related