ipl-logo

Who Is Ovid Approvals In Ars Amatoria

244 Words1 Pages
Ovid’s poem Ars Amatoria infuriated the emperor, which banned Ovid from setting foot back on Roman soil. Ars Amatoria justified Roman rulers from having wives (committing adultery) raping and/or sleeping with Sabine women unwillingly. Ovid had no clue this poem would lead him to trouble; he was fearful and had no way of getting back into the empire without the approval of the emperor. After being sentenced into a city where no one spoke his language, Ovid wanted to get back into the Roman city by writing apology poems. Unfortunately, none of the poems received approval from the emperor. The very last poem Ovid wrote during his exile was a dactylic hexameter, also known as "heroic hexameter" and "the meter of epic", poem. This poem is Greek
Open Document