Ovid, Metamorphoses (3.511–733)
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Ovid, Metamorphoses (3.511–733)

Latin Text with Introduction, Commentary, Glossary of Terms, Vocabulary Aid and Study Questions

Ingo Gildenhard, Andrew Zissos

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eBook - ePub

Ovid, Metamorphoses (3.511–733)

Latin Text with Introduction, Commentary, Glossary of Terms, Vocabulary Aid and Study Questions

Ingo Gildenhard, Andrew Zissos

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Über dieses Buch

This part of Ovid's 'Theban History' recounts the confrontation of Pentheus, king of Thebes, with his divine cousin, Bacchus, the god of wine. Notwithstanding the warnings of the seer Tiresias and the cautionary tale of a character Acoetes (perhaps Bacchus in disguise), who tells of how the god once transformed a group of blasphemous sailors into dolphins, Pentheus refuses to acknowledge the divinity of Bacchus or allow his worship at Thebes. Enraged, yet curious to witness the orgiastic rites of the nascent cult, Pentheus conceals himself in a grove on Mt. Cithaeron near the locus of the ceremonies. But in the course of the rites he is spotted by the female participants who rush upon him in a delusional frenzy, his mother and sisters in the vanguard, and tear him limb from limb.This course book offers a wide-ranging introduction, the original Latin text, study aids with vocabulary, and an extensive commentary. Designed to stretch and stimulate readers, Gildenhard and Zissos's incisive commentary will be of particular interest to students of Latin at AS and undergraduate level. It extends beyond detailed linguistic analysis to encourage critical engagement with Ovid's poetry and discussion of the most recent scholarly thought.

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Information

Jahr
2018
ISBN
9788027246632
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Symbols and Terms
Reference Works
Grammatical Terms
Ancient Literature
INTRODUCTION
1. Ovid and His Times
2. Ovid’s Literary Progression: Elegy to Epic
3. The Metamorphoses: A Literary Monstrum
3a. Genre Matters
3b. A Collection of Metamorphic Tales
3c. A Universal History
3d. Anthropological Epic
3e. A Reader’s Digest of Greek and Latin Literature
4. Ovid’s Theban Narrative
5. The Set Text: Pentheus and Bacchus
5a. Sources and Intertexts
5b. The Personnel of the Set Text
6. The Bacchanalia and Roman Culture
TEXT
COMMENTARY
511–26 Tiresias’ Warning to Pentheus
527–71 Pentheus’ Rejection of Bacchus
531–63 Pentheus’ Speech
572–691 The Captive Acoetes and his Tale
692–733 Pentheus’ Gruesome Demise
APPENDICES
1. Versification
2. Glossary of Rhetorical and Syntactic Figures
Bibliography

Acknowledgements

Table of Contents
The present volume joins other commentaries in the OBP Classics Textbook Series, which is designed to offer support and stimulation to student-readers. We would like to express our gratitude to Alessandra Tosi for her patience throughout a longer gestation period than she must have initially hoped for and Inge Gildenhard for supplying the illustrations. A special thanks goes to John Henderson, who twice, virtually overnight, supplied us per litteras with copious notes of nonpareil insight. We have incorporated a number of his notes into the Introduction and the Commentary, attributing these simply to ‘John Henderson’ (to be distinguished from A. A. R. Henderson, whose commentary on Metamorphoses 3 we occasionally cite as ‘Henderson 1979’). He tried his best to inject the project with an appropriate dose of Dionysiac spirit, and if readers don’t find the final product as tipsy as it ought to be, the blame’s on us.
* * *
Note on translations : unless indicated otherwise, translations of Greek and Latin texts are from the Loeb Classical Library, often somewhat modified.


Statue of Ovid in Constanţa, Romania. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/
File:Constanta_-_Ovid-Platz_-_Statue_des_Ovid.webp

Abbreviations

Table of Contents

Symbols and Terms

Table of Contents
§ Indicates a section (e.g. of the Introduction or of a reference work).
* Indicates a term defined in either Appendix 1 (Versification) or Appendix 2 (Glossary of Rhetorical and Syntactic Figures).
Indicates a syllable that scans short (for details of scansion, see Appendix 1).
Indicates a syllable that scans long (for details of scansion, see Appendix 1).
CE/BCE Common Era/Before Common Era (a designation for the calendar year, equivalent to AD/BC). In this volume CE should be assumed when no indication is provided.
Comm. Refers to the Commentary in this volume.
Intro. Refers to the Introduction (normally with following section specification).
n. Refers to an entry in the Commentary (normally with preceding line specification).

Reference Works

Table of Contents
AG Allen and Greenough’s New Latin Grammar for Schools and Colleges , edited by J. B. Greenough, G. L. Kitteredge, A. A. Howard, and B. L. D’Ooge (Boston, 1903).
CIL Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum (Berlin, 1862).
L-S A Latin Dictionary, edited by C. T. Lewis and C. Short (Oxford, 1879).
LSJ A Greek-English Lexicon, 9th edition, with Supplement, edited by H. J. Liddle and R. Scott, revised by H. S. Jones (Oxford, 1968)
OLD Oxford Latin Dictionary, edited by P. G. W. Glare (Oxford, 1968–82).
TLL Thesaurus Linguae Latinae (Leipzig, 1900).

Grammatical Terms

Table of Contents
abl. ablative (similarly nom. = nominative; gen. = genitive; dat. = dative; acc. = accusative)
act. active voice (similarly pass. = passive voice)
fut. future tense (similarly perf. = perfect; pres. = present; etc.)
indic. indicative (similarly subjunct. = subjunctive)
part. participle
pers. person
pl. plural (similarly sing. = singular)

Ancient Literature

Table of Contents
Apollod. Apollodorus, Bibliotheca (Library)
Ap. Rhod. Apollonius Rhodius, Argonautica
Apul. Apuleius
Met. Metamophoses (or Golden Ass)
Arat. Aratus
Phaen. Phaenomena
Cat. Catullus, Carmina (Poems)
Cic. Cicero
Fam. Epistulae ad Familiares (Letters to his Friends)
Leg. De Legibus (On the Law)
Nat. D. De Natura Deorum (On the Nature of the Gods)
Enn. Ennius
Ann. Annales (Annals)
Eur. Euripides
Bacch. Bacchae
Hdt. Herodotus, Histories
Hes. Hesiod
Op. Opera et Dies (Works and Days)
Hom. Homer
Il. Iliad
Od. Odyssey
Hor. Horace
Carm. Carmina (Odes)
Epod. Epodes
Hyg. Hyginus
Fab. Fabulae
Hymn. Hom. Homeric Hymns
Liv. Livy, Ab urbe condita
Luc. Lucan, Bellum Civile (Civil War)
Lucr. Lucretius, De Rerum Natura
Mart. Martial
Ep. Epigrams
Ov. Ovid
Am. Amores
Ars Ars Amatoria (The Art of Love)
Fast. Fasti
Her. Heroides
Met. Metamorphoses
Trist. Tristia
Plaut. Plautus
Cas. Casina
Merc. Mercator
Plin. Pliny (the Elder)
NH Naturalis Historia (Natural History)
Plut. Plutarch
Caes. Caesar
Prop. Propertius, Carmina (Poems)
Sen. Seneca (the Younger)
Oed. Oedipus
Serv. Statius
Ach. Achilleid
Silv. Silvae
Theb. Thebaid
Suet. Suetonis
Aug. Divus Augustus (Life of Augustus)
Theoc. Theocritus
Id. Idylls
Val. Max. Valerius Maximus
Val. Flacc. Valerius Flaccus, Argonautica
Varr. Varro
Ling. De Lingua Latina (On the Latin Language)
Virg. Virgil
Aen. Aeneid
Ecl. Eclogues
G. Georgics

INTRODUCTION

Table of Contents

1. Ovid and His Times

Table of Contents
Ovid, or (to give him his full Roman name) Publius Ovidius Naso, was born in 43 BCE to a prominent equestrian family in Sulmo (modern Sulmona), a small town about 140 km east of Rome. He died in banishment, a resident of Tomi on the Black Sea, in 17 CE. Ovid was one of the most prolific authors of his day, as well as one of the most controversial.1 He had always been constitutionally unable to write anything in prose — or so he claims in his autobiography (composed, of course, in verse). Whatever flowed from his pen was in metre, even after his father had told him to put an end to such nonsense:
saepe pater dixit ‘studium quid inutile temptas?
Maeonides2 nullas ipse reliquit opes’.
motus eram dictis, totoque Helicone3 relicto
scribere temptabam verba soluta modis.
sponte sua carmen numeros veniebat ad aptos,
et quod temptabam dicere versus erat.
(Trist. 4.10.21–26)
My father often said, ‘Why try a useless
Vocation? Even Homer left no wealth’.
So I obeyed, all Helicon abandoned,
And tried to write in prose that did not scan.
But poetry in metre came unbidden,
And what I tried to write in verses ran.
(tr. Melville)
Students of Latin may well be familiar with Naso senior’s banausic attitude: classics graduates, some wrongly assume, have similarly dismal career prospects. But eventually Ovid would shrug off paternal disapproval in pursuit of his passion. After dutifully filling certain minor offices, he chose not to go on to the quaestorship, thereby definitively renouncing all ambition for a senatorial career. In his case, the outcome was an oeuvre for the ages. For quick orientation, here is a time-line with the basics:4
Battle of Actium
Secular Games; Augustus adopts Gaius and LuciusAugustus dies; Tiberius accedes
Time-line Historical Events Ovid's Biography Literary History
50s BCE Catullus, Lucretius
44 Julius Caesar murdered
43 Cicero murdered Ovid born
30s [Gallus Amores 1-4 (lost)],
Horace Epodes
35 Virgil Eclogues
Horace Satires 1
31
29 Virgil Georgics
27 Octavian becomes 'Augustus'
Early 20s Livy 1-10
20s Propertius 1-3, Tibullus, 1, Horace Odes 1-3, Epistles 1
19 Virgil Aeneid, Tibullus 1-2
18 Leges Iuliae (initial Augustan marriage legislation)
17 Horace Carmen Saeculare
16 Propertius 4
10s-0s Amores 1-3, Heroides, Medicamina faciei femineae, Medea (a lost tragedy) Horace Ars Poetica, Epistles 2, Odes 4
2 BCE Ars Amatoria 1-2
1 CE Birth of Jesus
2 Ars Amatoria 3 and Remedia Amoris
4 Augustus adopts Tiberius
8 Scandal at court; Augustus relegates Ovid to Tomi on the Black Sea Finished just before the relegation (?): Metamorphoses 1-15, Fasti 1-6
8-17 Tristia 1-5, Epistulae ex Ponto 1-4, Ibis, Double Heroides
14
Manilius Astronomica
Ovid dies Livy dies
Ovid was born when the Republic, the oligarchic system of government that had ruled Rome for centuries, was in its death throes. He was a teenager at the time of the Battle of Actium, the final showdown between Mark Antony and Octavian that saw the latter emerge victorious, become the first princeps, and eventu...

Inhaltsverzeichnis