17 - Love and exile after Ovid
from Part 3 - Reception
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 May 2006
Summary
Aston Cokayne’s The Tragedy of Ovid is the only English play which tells the story of the Latin poet’s exile and death in Tomis. In the final scene the focus turns to the poet’s suffering as he receives a letter from his wife, with the news that her efforts to arrange his return have failed. Ovid connects this to news in another letter:
Besides, my friend Graecinus,
(A Roman of high note) hath writ me word
The Gracious Princess Julia, our great Empress
And my best Friend is, in Trimerus, dead.
One of these News were much too much to strike
My poor and Crazy body into my Grave:
But joyning both their Poysonous stings together;
I needs must to the world this Truth impart,
That Ovid dies here of a broken Heart.
(5.6.56–64)And Ovid does indeed die then and there. His relationship with Augustus’ grand-daughter Julia is treated decorously by Cokayne, but at this point Ovid’s grief and the possibility of ambiguity in the word ‘friend’ connect his exile and the stories of unlawful love in his Roman past. In the play the traditional equation of Julia and Corinna is given credence, but the poet’s adoration for the princess is said to be an honourable thing, more or less (‘if I er’e enjoy’d her, it was through | Her craft; I taking her to be another,’ 4.3.21–2).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Ovid , pp. 288 - 300Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2002
- 3
- Cited by