Amores

Ovid

Ovid. Ovid's Art of Love (in three Books), the Remedy of Love, the Art of Beauty, the Court of Love, the History of Love, and Amours. Dryden, John, et al., translator. New York: Calvin Blanchard, 1855.

  1. Asham'd, and weary of this tragic whim,
  2. For tender thoughts I quitted the sublime.
  3. My mind my mistress bends another way,
  4. Her must my muse in all her songs obey;
  5. Though oft I do not what I write approve,
  6. Like, or not like it, I must sing of love.
  7. Whether for Ithaca's illustrious dame,
  8. To great Ulysses I a letter frame,
  9. Or for Oenone tender things indite,
  10. Or soft complaints for injur'd Phillis write;
  11. Whether fair Canace's incestuous care
  12. I sooth, or flatter Dido's fierce despair;
  13. Whether I fan Medea's raging fire,
  14. Or for sweet Sappho touch the Lesbian lyre;
  15. Whether I Phaedra's lawless love relate,
  16. Or Theseus' flight and Ariadne's fate:
  17. Oh, that Sabinus, my departed friend,
  18. Could from all quarters now his answers send!
  19. Ulysses' hand should to his queen be known,
  20. And wretched Phaedra hear from Theseus' son;