Ovid — "Love will enter cloaked in friendship's name."
Love will enter cloaked in friendship's name.
Love will enter cloaked in friendship's name.
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"Multa petentibus desunt multa."
"The lover is ever fearful."
"Fas est et ab hoste doceri."
"Beauty's a fragile boon, and the years are quick to destroy it, Always diminished with time, never enduring too long."
"I see and approve the better course, but I follow the worse."
Roman poet whose Metamorphoses (8 CE) is the longest surviving Latin poem and Western literature's main pagan-mythology source. Closely associated with Virgil (the Aeneid poet and other Augustan poetic giant) and Horace (third Augustan-era major poet). For an intellectual contrast, see Augustus, Roman emperor (27 BCE – 14 CE) — Augustus exiled Ovid to Tomis on the Black Sea in 8 CE, reasons tied to his erotic poetry (Ars Amatoria) and possible knowledge of imperial-family scandal — Augustus represented Roman moral-restoration politics that Ovid's witty erotic verse was structurally against.
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