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  2. Heroides - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heroides

    Front matter of Boswell's copy of the 1732 edition of the Heroides, edited by Peter Burmann. Note the title Heroides sive Epistolae, The Heroides or the Letters.. The Heroides (The Heroines), [1] or Epistulae Heroidum (Letters of Heroines), is a collection of fifteen epistolary poems composed by Ovid in Latin elegiac couplets and presented as though written by a selection of aggrieved heroines ...

  3. Epistulae ex Ponto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epistulae_ex_Ponto

    It is a collection of letters describing Ovid's exile in Tomis (modern-day Constanța) written in elegiac couplets and addressed to his wife and friends. The first three books were composed between 12 and 13 AD, according to the general academic consensus: "none of these elegies contains references to events falling outside that time span". [ 2 ]

  4. Tristia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tristia

    Ovid Banished from Rome (1838) by J. M. W. Turner. The Tristia ("Sad things" or "Sorrows") is a collection of poems written in elegiac couplets by the Augustan poet Ovid during the first three years following his banishment from Rome to Tomis on the Black Sea in AD 8.

  5. Ars Amatoria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ars_Amatoria

    Ovid's jeu d'esprit, the Ars Amatoria, was playfully set in a framework of Alexandrian didacticism. It was mildly amusing in his day to assume that rules could be laid down, by the use of which any one could become 'a master of the art of love,' to use the phrase of Diotima in Plato's Symposium. This work was well known to clerks in its Latin ...

  6. Remedia Amoris - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Remedia_Amoris

    Remedia Amoris (also known as Love's Remedy or The Cure for Love; c. 2 AD) is an 814-line poem in Latin by Roman poet Ovid.In this companion poem to The Art of Love, Ovid offers advice and strategies to avoid being hurt by love feelings, or to fall out of love, with a stoic overtone.

  7. Exile of Ovid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exile_of_Ovid

    Ovid was one of the most prolific poets of his time, and before being banished had already composed his most famous poems – Heroides, Amores, Ars Amatoria, Remedia Amoris, Medicamina Faciei Femineae, his lost tragedy Medea, the ambitious Metamorphoses and the Fasti. The latter two works were left, respectively, without a final revision and ...

  8. Baucis and Philemon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baucis_and_Philemon

    Jean de la Fontaine's poem follows Ovid closely. John Dryden translated Ovid's poem in 1693. Jonathan Swift wrote a poem on the subject of Baucis and Philemon in 1709. Joseph Haydn wrote a marionette opera Philemon und Baucis, oder Jupiters Reise auf die Erde in 1773. Baucis and Philemon are characters in the fifth act of Goethe's Faust II (1832).

  9. The customer is always right - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_customer_is_always_right

    American department store entrepreneur Marshall Field is sometimes credited with coining the phrase, as is his one-time employee Harry Gordon Selfridge, and the marketing pioneer John Wanamaker. [4] The earliest known printed mention of the phrase is a September 1905 article in the Boston Globe about Field, which describes him as "broadly ...