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  2. Ars Amatoria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ars_Amatoria

    The Ars amatoria created considerable interest at the time of its publication. On a lesser scale, Martial's epigrams take a similar context of advising readers on love. . Modern literature has been continually influenced by the Ars amatoria, which has presented additional information on the relationship between Ovid's poem and more current wri

  3. Amores (Ovid) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amores_(Ovid)

    The Roman poet Ovid, born in the city.. Amores (Latin: Amōrēs, lit. ' The Loves ') [1] is Ovid's first completed book of poetry, written in elegiac couplets.It was first published in 16 BC in five books, but Ovid, by his own account, later edited it down into the three-book edition that survives today.

  4. Sappho 16 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sappho_16

    [a] It is from Book I of the Alexandrian edition of Sappho's poetry, and is known from a second-century papyrus discovered at Oxyrhynchus in Egypt at the beginning of the twentieth century. Sappho 16 is a love poem – the genre for which Sappho was best known – which praises the beauty of the narrator's beloved, Anactoria , and expresses the ...

  5. Pamphilia to Amphilanthus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pamphilia_to_Amphilanthus

    After a series of songs, the next section, of ten poems, takes on a darker tone as Pamphilia confronts doubt and jealousy, but the end of the sequence finds her seeking forgiveness from Cupid, the god of love, to whom she promises a crown of sonnets as penance for her doubt. The crown's fourteen sonnets form the sequence's third section.

  6. Strange fits of passion have I known - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strange_fits_of_passion...

    Each of its seven stanzas is four lines long and has a rhyming scheme of ABAB. The poem is written in iambic tetrameter and iambic trimeter. In the poem, the speaker narrates a night time ride to the cottage of his beloved Lucy, who always looks as "fresh as a rose in June". The speaker begins by saying that he has experienced "strange fits of ...

  7. Odes (Horace) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Odes_(Horace)

    Book 1 consists of 38 poems. The opening sequence of nine poems are all in a different metre, with a tenth metre appearing in 1.11. It has been suggested that poems 1.12–1.18 form a second parade, this time of allusions to or imitations of a variety of Greek lyric poets: Pindar in 1.12, Sappho in 1.13, Alcaeus in 1.14, Bacchylides in 1.15, Stesichorus in 1.16, Anacreon in 1.17, and Alcaeus ...

  8. Marie Anne Lenormand - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marie_Anne_Lenormand

    Arrest engraving of Marie-Anne Lenormand from the book frontispiece of Les Souvenirs prophétiques d'une sibylle sur les causes secrètes de son arrestation (The Prophetic Memories of a Sibyl on the Secret Causes of Her Arrest), Paris, 11 December 1809, by Mademoiselle Marie Anne Le Normand.

  9. The Clod and the Pebble - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Clod_and_the_Pebble

    It shows two contrary types of love. The poem is written in three stanzas. [2] The first stanza is the clod's view that love should be unselfish. The soft view of love is represented by this soft clod of clay, and represents the innocent state of the soul, and a childlike view of the world. [2] The second stanza connects the clod and the pebble.