![]() ![]() Most of the Amores is tongue-in-cheek, and, while Ovid adhered to standard elegiac themes - such as the exclusus amator (locked-out lover) lamenting before a paraklausithyron (a locked door) - he portrays himself as romantically capable, not emotionally struck by it, (unlike Propertius, whose poetry portrays him under love's foot). Book 1 contains 15 elegiac love poems about aspects of love. Originally, the Amores were a five-book collection, circa 20 BC the surviving, extant version, reduced to three books, includes poems written as late as AD 1. He was thrice-married and twice-divorced by the time he was thirty years old yet only one marriage yielded offspring - a daughter. He was part of the circle centered upon the patron Marcus Valerius Messalla Corvinus. He held minor public posts, but resigned to pursue poetry. After the death of his brother, Ovid renounced law and began travelling - to Athens, Asia Minor, and Sicily. According to Seneca the Elder, Ovid tended to the emotional, not the argumentative pole of rhetoric. His father wished him to study rhetoric toward the practice of law. ![]() Ovid was born in Sulmo (Sulmona), in an Apennine valley, east of Rome, to an equestrian family, and was educated in Rome. ![]()
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