The Age of Fable eBook

Thomas Bulfinch
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 528 pages of information about The Age of Fable.

The Age of Fable eBook

Thomas Bulfinch
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 528 pages of information about The Age of Fable.
he chose;
    He sunk in Greece, in Italy he rose,
    And, tedious years of Gothic darkness past,
    Emerged all splendor in our isle at last. 
    Thus lovely Halcyons dive into the main,
    Then show far off their shining plumes again.”

OVID

Ovid, often alluded to in poetry by his other name of Naso, was born in the year 43 B.C.  He was educated for public life and held some offices of considerable dignity, but poetry was his delight, and he early resolved to devote himself to it.  He accordingly sought the society of the contemporary poets, and was acquainted with Horace and saw Virgil, though the latter died when Ovid was yet too young and undistinguished to have formed his acquaintance.  Ovid spent an easy life at Rome in the enjoyment of a competent income.  He was intimate with the family of Augustus, the emperor, and it is supposed that some serious offence given to some member of that family was the cause of an event which reversed the poet’s happy circumstances and clouded all the latter portion of his life.  At the age of fifty he was banished from Rome, and ordered to betake himself to Tomi, on the borders of the Black Sea.  Here, among the barbarous people and in a severe climate, the poet, who had been accustomed to all the pleasures of a luxurious capital and the society of his most distinguished contemporaries, spent the last ten years of his life, worn out with grief and anxiety.  His only consolation in exile was to address his wife and absent friends, and his letters were all poetical.  Though these poems (the “Trista” and “Letters from Pontus”) have no other topic than the poet’s sorrows, his exquisite taste and fruitful invention have redeemed them from the charge of being tedious, and they are read with pleasure and even with sympathy.

The two great works of Ovid are his “Metamorphoses” and his “Fasti.”  They are both mythological poems, and from the former we have taken most of our stories of Grecian and Roman mythology.  A late writer thus characterizes these poems: 

“The rich mythology of Greece furnished Ovid, as it may still furnish the poet, the painter, and the sculptor, with materials for his art.  With exquisite taste, simplicity, and pathos he has narrated the fabulous traditions of early ages, and given to them that appearance of reality which only a master hand could impart.  His pictures of nature are striking and true; he selects with care that which is appropriate; he rejects the superfluous; and when he has completed his work, it is neither defective nor redundant.  The ‘Metamorphoses’ are read with pleasure by youth, and are re-read in more advanced age with still greater delight.  The poet ventured to predict that his poem would survive him, and be read wherever the Roman name was known.”

The prediction above alluded to is contained in the closing lines of the “Metamorphoses,” of which we give a literal translation below: 

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The Age of Fable from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.