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In the first verses of the Metamorphoses, Ovid claims to write one continuous epic, not an anthology of myths. Unlike the Iliad, however, there is no central hero, thus no simple Aristotelian unity to the work.
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Metamorphoses - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Ovid: The Metamorphoses: a new complete downloadable English translation with comprehensive index, and other poetry translations including Baudelaire , Chinese, European . ... Ovid's Metamorphoses, tr. Anthony S. Klin...
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The Electronic Text Center's holdings include a variety of Metamorphoses resources. The third link directs users to a U.Va.-hosted version of the Latin text (apparently from Ehwald ... Simple Launch | Search | Latin Texts and Translations | Ovid Illustrated: The Reception of Ovid's Metamorphoses in Image and Text...
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The Fifteen Books of ; Ovid's Metamorphoses, 1567 The first translation into English - ; credited to Arthur Golding ... Hath Ovid into one whole masse in this booke brought in frame. Fowre kynd of things in this his worke the Poet dooth conteyne. That nothing under heaven dooth ay in stedfast state remayne. ...
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The most famous statement of this view is contained in the great epic poem The Aeneid by Vergil, written shortly before Ovid's time (and an important shaping influence on parts of the Metamorphoses).
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Amazon.com: Metamorphoses (9780253200013): Ovid, Rolfe Humphries:
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