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Ovid: Metamorphoses III: Latin Texts

Autor Ovid A.A.R. Henderson
en Limba Engleză Paperback – iun 1991
This simple, utilitarian edition offers sixth-form and undergraduate students an introduction to the enchanted, sometimes violent, often sad, often funny world of the "Metamorphoses". Book III is ideal in this respect, for it possesses a homogeneity unusual among the fifteen books of the poem and follows the fortunes of the royal house of Thebes in episodes which are related at some length, allowing the reader to savour the individual quality of each story and fix its 'dramatis personae' in mind and memory. The brief introduction places the book in its ancient context. Notes serve primarily to aid comprehension of the Latin but also give aesthetic and antiquarian information. A vocabulary is included.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780906515020
ISBN-10: 0906515025
Pagini: 138
Dimensiuni: 148 x 228 x 12 mm
Greutate: 0.22 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bristol Classical Press
Seria Latin Texts

Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom

Cuprins

Foreword
Introduction
1. The Poet
2. The Poem
3. The Poetry
4. Note on the Text
5. Genealogical Tables
6. Select Bibliography
Text
Abbreviations (Notes and Vocabulary)
Notes
Vocabulary

Recenzii

"...the volume provides ample expert assistance for understanding what is going on in each sentence, and in each poem..." James J. O'Hara, New England Classical Journal
"...we owe in great part to Kenney's own sound editorial efforts. Teachers and students should get a lot from this text, which earns admiration for both Ovid and Kenney." William S. Anderson, Classical World
"...the most advanced undergraduates would profit from using this commentary. For them, for their teachers, and for all professional Latinists, kenney has admirably fulfilled his aim -- `to help others to appreciate these brilliant poems as warmly' as he himself does." Betty Rose Nagle, The Classical Outlook
"Teachers and students should get a lot from this text, which earns admiration for both Ovid and Kenney." William S. Anderson, Classical World