In this 1962 volume, Mr Wilkinson writes to communicate his own evident enjoyment and understanding of Ovid's fortunes.In this 1962 volume, Mr Wilkinson writes to communicate his own evident enjoyment and understanding of Ovid's fortunes. A life tells what is known of the poet, and serves as a framework to the account of the poetry. This book is designed particularly for those who have no Latin.In this 1962 volume, Mr Wilkinson writes to communicate his own evident enjoyment and understanding of Ovid's fortunes. A life tells what is known of the poet, and serves as a framework to the account of the poetry. This book is designed particularly for those who have no Latin.Ovid was, despite his faults, what Macaulay called him, 'a good fellow'. But he was also a wit, the product of an age of refinement. More important, he was an artist with conscious mastery of a great range of literary artifice; his poetry has a studied movement, a grace, a rich and patterned surface, a music, that have appealed to readers and writers with an ear for ' technique' ever since. In this 1962 volume, Mr Wilkinson writes to communicate his own evident enjoyment and understanding of Ovid's fortunes. A life tells what is known of the poet, and serves as a framework to the account of the poetry. This book, an abridgement of Ovid Recalled, is designed particularly for those who have no Latin: no special knowledge is assumed, and the ample quotation is translated into heroic couplets. The result is a delightful and serviceable introduction to Ovid.Introduction; Part I. Early Years; Part II. Latin Erotic Elegy; Part III. The Elegaic Couplet; Part IV. The Amores; Part V. The Heroides; Part VI. The Ars Amatoria and Remedia Amoris; Part VII. The Metamorphoses: 1. Spirit and treatment; 2. Grotesqueness, humour, wit; 3. Narrative and description; 4. The gods; 5. Mortals; 6. Philosophy; 7. Italy and Rome; 8. Drama, rhetoric, words; 9. Conclusion; Part VIII. The Fasti; Part IX. Banishment: Tristia I and Il³2