¶ … Duly do ye worship the goddess, ye Latin mothers and brides, and ye, too, who wear not the fillets and long robe.13 Take off the golden necklaces from the marble neck of the goddess14; take off her gauds; the goddess must be washed from top to toe." (Ovid and Fantham)
OVID, a Latin poet, who gained fame and success in 1st Century BC and early 1st Century AD in Rome is best known for his works during the reign of the Emperor Augustus. His works include Heroides, Metamorphoses, and Fasti. Fasti is an unfinished series of six books of poems that depict the initial six months of the Roman calendar. The month of April which is in book 4, will be analyzed for its beautiful use of language and style. Book IV or 4, covers the telling of stories of the three daughter of Minyas which include forbidden love, godly affairs, and sexual escapades.
The three daughters of Minyas bored of worshipping Bacchus sit together to tell tales of romance, adventure, and lust. The first one, who remained unnamed, starts her story of the forbidden love of Thisbe and Pyramus. A classic story of fathers opposing the couple, they elect to run away to bathe in corporeal delights. Now the story can automatically be determined as Roman because Bacchus is the Roman name for the god of wine. If he had used Dionysus, the reader would have assumed it was Greek. From here the first daughter explains that Thisbe, upon being the first to arrive sees a lioness and runs in order to evade certain death. Upon seeing her belongings on the ground, Pyramus assumes the worse and commits suicide by sword to the belly. Thisbe, seeing her lover dead, also commits suicide.
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