The Political Background To Ovid's Tristia 2

Classical Quarterly 25 (2):264-271 (1975)
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Abstract

Although the view dies hard that the poetry which Ovid wrote during his years in exile at Tomi consists largely of the ‘querulous and sycophantic’ complaints of a weak man unable to come to terms with a personal disaster, it has been recognized for many years that the Tristia and the Epistolae ex Ponto are not mere expressions of emotion but are as well thought out and constructed as any other of the doctus poeta's products. Of these poems, Tristia 2 must be placed in a category by itself-if only because of its length and because it purports to be a plea by Ovid to Augustus, the man responsible for his exile, on the very practical matter of mitigating the sentence.

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Citations of this work

Ovid's autobiographical poem, Tristia 4.10.Janet Fairweather - 1987 - Classical Quarterly 37 (01):181-.
The Settlement of 26 June a.d. 4 and its Aftermath.R. A. Birch - 1981 - Classical Quarterly 31 (02):443-.

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