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Title: The Last Poems of Ovid 
Author: Ovid 
Release Date: June 24, 2007 [eBook #21920] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE 
LAST POEMS OF OVID*** 
Copyright (C) 2006 by Mark Bear Akrigg 
THE LAST POEMS OF OVID 
A New Edition, with Commentary, of the Fourth Book of the 
_Epistulae ex Ponto_ 
by Mark Bear Akrigg, Ph.D. 
 
Original (unpublished) edition Copyright 1985 by Mark Bear Akrigg 
First published edition, corrected and augmented Copyright 2006 by
Mark Bear Akrigg 
 
This edition and commentary are dedicated to 
ROB MORROW 
_"quo non mihi carior alter"_ 
TABLE OF CONTENTS 
Acknowledgments i 
Preface ii 
Introduction 1 
Textual Introduction 23 
P. OVIDI NASONIS _EPISTVLARM EX PONTO_ LIBER 
QVARTVS 54 
I. Ad Sextum Pompeium 56 
II. Ad Seuerum 59 
III. Ad ingratum 63 
IIII. Ad Sextum Pompeium 68 
V. Ad Sextum Pompeium 72 
VI. Ad Brutum 76 
VII. Ad Vestalem 81 
VIII. Ad Suillium 86 
IX. Ad Graecinum 93
X. Ad Albinouanum 105 
XI. Ad Gallionem 113 
XII. Ad Tuticanum 115 
XIII. Ad Carum 120 
XIV. Ad Tuticanum 125 
XV. Ad Sextum Pompeium 131 
XVI. Ad inuidum 136 
COMMENTARY 144 
I. To Sextus Pompeius 146 
II. To Cornelius Severus 161 
III. To an Unfaithful Friend 177 
IV. To Sextus Pompeius 199 
V. To Sextus Pompeius 213 
VI. To Brutus 226 
VII. To Vestalis 244 
VIII. To Suillius 258 
IX. To Graecinus 286 
X. To Albinovanus Pedo 325 
XI. To Gallio 359 
XII. To Tuticanus 370
XIII. To Carus 389 
XIV. To Tuticanus 410 
XV. To Sextus Pompeius 429 
XVI. To a Detractor 446 
Bibliography 471 
Index of topics discussed 477 
Index of textual emendations 489 
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS 
The Editor gratefully acknowledges the permission of the Herzog 
August Bibliothek for the use of Herzog August Bibliothek 
Wolfenbüttel: Cod. Guelf. 13.11 Aug. 4° (fragmentum 
Guelferbytanum). 
PREFACE 
It is a pleasure to present to the public this digital edition, with 
commentary, of _Ex Ponto_ IV, the final poems written by the Roman 
poet Ovid, published after his death as a posthumous collection quite 
separate from the earlier _Ex Ponto_ I-III. 
These poems have a special place among Ovid's works, but have not 
received the attention which they deserve. In particular, there has been 
no full modern commentary on these poems. 
This text presented in this edition is based on my personal examination 
of ten manuscripts. I have also restored to the text certain readings 
commonly accepted by editors until the nineteenth century. Finally, the 
edition contains several dozen new textual conjectures by myself and 
others. 
The intended audience of this edition
This edition is intended to serve as a guide to the poems for 
intermediate and advanced students of Latin poetry. However, I have 
deliberately made it as straightforward as possible, and my hope is that 
even a beginning student of Latin poetry embarking on the study of 
these poems will find the commentary helpful. 
This edition is also directed towards present and future Latin textual 
critics. 
My expectation when starting my research for this edition was that I 
would be presenting a text that differed little from that to be found in 
current editions. However, I made two discoveries during my research 
into the text. 
The first discovery was that many important textual corrections 
generally accepted in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries had been 
suppressed by editors in the course of the nineteenth century. I have 
restored many of these readings to the text, and others will be found in 
the textual apparatus. 
The second discovery was that there was a surprisingly large number of 
passages which appeared to be corrupt and for which it was possible to 
suggest corrections. Given the long history of Latin textual criticism, 
and Ovid's central position in Roman literary history, it was surprising 
to find that so much remained to be done. Yet such was the case. 
Nothing is more certain than that this book of poems as well as the 
three earlier books of the _Ex Ponto_ represent an outstanding 
opportunity for future editors and commentators to contribute to the 
progress of Latin scholarship. 
History of this edition 
I originally prepared this edition and commentary during my time as a 
graduate student at the University of Toronto. Upon its completion (and 
my graduation) in 1985, a copy was deposited at the    
    
		
	
	
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