No CrossRef data available.
Article contents
ENCORE LA FEMME: OVID, ARS AMATORIA 3.27–30
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 December 2020
Extract
- nil nisi lasciui per me discuntur amores:
- femina praecipiam quo sit amanda modo.
- femina nec flammas nec saeuos discutit arcus;
- parcius haec uideo tela nocere uiris.
- Type
- Shorter Notes
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © The Author(s), 2020. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Classical Association
Footnotes
I am grateful to the anonymous CQ reader of this note for several suggestions.
References
2 Kenney, E.J., ‘Chassez la femme’, CQ 42 (1992), 551–2Google Scholar.
3 Mayer, R., ‘La femme retrouvée’, CQ 43 (1993), 504CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
4 Watt, W.S., ‘Notes on Latin poetry: Ovid, Lucan, Silius Italicus, Statius, Martial, Rutilius, and fragmentary Latin poets’, BICS 42 (1997–8), 145–58Google Scholar, at 147.
5 Gibson, R.K. (ed.), Ovid Ars Amatoria Book 3 (Cambridge, 2003)Google Scholar.
6 Other examples can be found at TLL 7.1.691.51–71 s.v. improbus [O. Prinz].
7 This was first expounded by Leach, E.W., ‘Georgic imagery in the Ars Amatoria’, TAPhA 95 (1964), 142–54Google Scholar.
8 Cf. Mart. 3.86.4 ‘non sunt haec mimis improbiora’.
9 The ‘adventurous love poems’ of Servius have not survived, but see A.S. Hollis, Fragments of Roman Poetry c.60 b.c.–a.d. 20 (Oxford, 2007), 427–8.
10 Gibson (n. 5), 26.
11 Cf. Hofmann, J.B., Szantyr, rev. A., Lateinische Syntax und Stilistik (Munich, 1972)Google Scholar, §202A and Woodcock, E.C., A New Latin Syntax (London, 1959)Google Scholar, §203.