Adde manūs in vincla meās (meruēre catēnās),

dum furor omnis abit, sī quis amīcus ades:

nam furor in dominam temerāria bracchia mōvit;

flet mea vēsānā laesa puella manū.

tunc ego vel cārōs potuī violāre parentēs5

saeva vel in sānctōs verbera ferre deōs.

quid? nōn et clipeī dominus septemplicis Aiax

strāvit dēprēnsōs lāta per arva gregēs,

et vindex in mātre patris, malus ultor, Orestēs

ausus in arcānās poscere tēla deās?10

ergō ego dīgestōs potuī laniāre capillōs?

nec dominam mōtae dēdecuēre comae:

sīc fōrmōsa fuit; tālem Schoenēida dīcam

Maenaliās arcū sollicitāsse ferās;

tālis periūrī prōmissaque vēlaque Thēsei15

flēvit praecipitēs Crēssa tulisse Notōs;

sīc, nisi vittātīs quod erat, Cassandra, capillīs,

prōcubuit templō, casta Minerva, tuō.

quis mihi nōn 'dēmēns,' quis nōn mihi 'barbare' dīxit?

ipsa nihil: pavidō est lingua retenta metū.20

sed tacitī fēcēre tamen convīcia vultūs;

ēgit mē lacrimīs ōre silente reum.

ante meōs umerīs vellem cecidisse lacertōs;

ūtilius potuī parte carēre meī:

in mea vēsānās habuī dispendia vīrēs25

et valuī, poenam fortis in ipse meam.

quid mihi vōbīscum, caedis scelerumque ministrae?

dēbita sacrilegae vincla subīte manūs.

an, sī pulsāssem minimum dē plēbe Quirītem,

plecterer: in dominam iūs mihi māius erit?30

pessima Tȳdīdēs scelerum monimenta relīquit:

ille deam prīmus perculit; alter ego.

et minus ille nocēns: mihi quam profitēbar amāre

laesa est; Tȳdīdēs saevus in hoste fuit.

ī nunc, magnificōs victor mōlīre triumphōs,35

cinge comam laurō vōtaque redde Iovī,

quaeque tuōs currūs comitantum turba sequētur,

clāmet 'iō, fortī victa puella virō est!'

ante eat effūsō trīstis captīva capillō,

sī sinerent laesae, candida tōta, genae.40

aptius impressīs fuerat līvēre labellīs

et collum blandī dentis habēre notam.

dēnique sī tumidī rītū torrentis agēbar

caecaque mē praedam fēcerat īra suam,

nōnne satis fuerat timidae inclāmāsse puellae45

nec nimium rigidās intonuisse minās

aut tunicam ā summā dīdūcere turpiter ōrā

ad mediam (mediae zōna tulisset opem)?

at nunc sustinuī raptīs ā fronte capillīs

ferreus ingenuās ungue notāre genās.50

astitit illa āmēns albō et sine sanguine vultū,

caeduntur Pariīs quālia saxa iugīs;

exanimēs artūs et membra trementia vīdī,

ut cum pōpuleās ventilat aura comās,

ut lēnī Zephyrō gracilis vibrātur harundō55

summave cum tepidō stringitur unda Notō;

suspēnsaeque diū lacrimae fluxēre per ōra,

quāliter abiectā dē nive mānat aqua.

tunc ego mē prīmum coepī sentīre nocentem;

sanguis erant lacrimae, quās dabat illa, meus.60

ter tamen ante pedēs voluī prōcumbere supplex;

ter formīdātās reppulit illa manūs.

at tū nē dubitā (minuet vindicta dolōrem)

prōtinus in vultūs unguibus īre meōs;

nec nostrīs oculīs nec nostrīs parce capillīs:65

quamlibet infirmās adiuvat īra manūs.

nēve meī sceleris tam trīstia signa supersint,

pōne recompositās in statiōne comās.

    1.7: Violence and Love

    This poem, like Amores 1.5, plays with a topic about which it is hard for modern readers to be playful, physical abuse. The poet has used violence on his girlfriend. [full essay]

    1–2: adde manūs: addō can mean "insert"; binding the hands was the traditional treatment for the insane. meruēre = meruērunt. catēnās: whereas vincla are chains or restraints in general, catēnae are long and heavy chains. dum: dum + indicative can mean "until." sī quis amīcus ades: for the use of indefinite quis, quid with sī, nisi, nē and num see AG §310a. The second person singular is hard to translate; it is almost the equivalent of a vocative, though not as strong; perhaps, "if any of you, my friends, are present."

    5–6: tunc: tunc can be used to refer to a hypothetical situation: "if I could do X, then." verbera ferre: a variation of the idiom arma ferre, which means "make war on."

    7–8: clipeī dominus septemplicis: "lord of the seven-layered shield," a reference to Ajax’s famous "tower" shield of seven ox hides (Homer, Iliad 7.219–223). Aiax: Ajax went insane with anger because he had not been awarded the prize in the funeral games held in honor of Achilles; he destroyed a flock of sheep because he mistook them for the Greeks who had done him the (as he saw it) injustice. English artist John Flaxman provides a rare illustration of the killing of the sheep (strāvit dēprēnsōs lāta per arva gregēs), from a set of drawings made for Sophocles' Ajax. More usually Ajax is portrayed at the moment of his suicide.

    9–10: in mātre: "in the matter of his mother"; in + abl. used in a judicial context (e.g., in rē). patris: objective genitive with vindex (AG §348). malus ultor, Orestēs: Orestes, driven temporarily mad by the Furies, avenged the murder of his father Agamemnon by killing his mother Clytemnestra; the morality of this vengeance was of course highly problematic, hence malus ultor (Aeschylus, Orestes). ausus: understand est. arcānās ... deās: the Furies, who were associated with the underworld (i.e. "secret," "mystical," or "hidden" from mortal view). Orestes asked for a bow with which to defend himself from the Furies (Euripides, Orestes 268).

    11–12: ergō: introduces an indignant rhetorical question. Despite the mythological precedents just mentioned, the speaker is shocked at his own actions. dīgestōs: "carefully arranged." motae ... comae: "her locks having been moved," i.e., her disheveled hair. nec ... dēdecuēre: "were not unbecoming to" + acc. (litotes).

    13–14: sīc fōrmōsa fuit: sīc points to an action or a situation: "she was lovely thus" (= "in the way that I have just described her, with her hair messed up"). The narrator now proceeds to describe several women from mythology (Atalanta, Ariadne, and Cassandra) who were beautiful despite their messy hair; the tone shifts from self-reproach to a clueless romanticism. Schoeneida: Atalanta, literally "the daughter of Schoenius," a king of Boeotia. For the Greek form of the accusative case, see AG §81. dīcam: potential subjunctive (AG §447.1). Maenaliās > Maenalius, -a, -um "of Mount Maenalus" (a range of mountains in Arcadia), "Arcadian." sollicitāsse: syncopated form of sollicitāvisse, perfect active infinitive in an indirect statement: "I would say that she were such a one as the daughter of Schoeneus (i.e., Atalanta), who harassed ...." ; a 4th c. AD mosaic pavement shows Atalanta participating in the hunt for the Calydonian boar, a common mythological subject in art made for those who enjoyed hunting, from seventh century BC Greek vases right up through late antiquity.

    15–16: tālis ... Notōs = tālis Cressa flēvit praecipitēs Notōs prōmissaque vēlaque periūrī Thēseī tulisse; flēvit ("wailed, lamented") introduces an indirect statement. The Cretan princess Ariadne fell in love with Theseus when he came to face her brother the Minotaur, and helped him kill the Minotaur and escape from the Labyrinth; Theseus then abandoned her on the island of Naxos. See especially the description of Ariadne in Catullus 64.63–70, where much is made of the disordered state of her hair and clothes as she watches Theseus sailing away. prōmissaque vēlaque: zeugma: these two nouns are governed by a single verb, tulisse, which applies to each in a different sense. An English example would be, "she gave him her heart and her purse." Thēseī: two syllables, by synizesis (the running together of two vowels in different syllables without full contraction) (AG §603c). A wall-painting from Herculaneum is typical of many from Herculaneum and Pompeii: it prortrays Ariadne, waking, scantily clad, as she watches Theseus depart in his ship. His face is inscrutable as he gestures urgently for the rowers to hurry. In this version, unusually, Theseus seems to have thought to leave Ariadne a row-boat. For Roman poets and artists Ariadne abandoned was perhaps the most passionate and erotic single image from mythology.

    17–18: sīc: i.e. with hair similarly messy. nisi ... quod: "except for the fact that." vittātīs ... capillīs > vittātus -a -um, "bound up by a fillet"; the vitta was a headband worn by priestesses. Ablative of description (AG §415). Cassandra: Cassandra, a daughter of Priam, was a priestess of Athena (Minerva), from whose temple she was taken at the fall of Troy; she was an inspired prophetess (cursed with being always accurate and always ignored) and was therefore often depicted as having messy hair. templō ... tuō: ablative of place where (AG §421). casta Minerva: vocative case, apostrophe. On a Roman onyx cameo (1st-2nd c. AD) Cassandra takes refuge in the temple of Athena (casta Minerva), clutching the Palladion (statue of Minerva), as Ajax drags her off in preparation for raping her, a crime for which he later paid with his life. Why this should be a good subject for Roman jewellery is unclear.

    19–20: ipsa: understand dīxit. vultūs: nominative plural; vultūs here has its original meaning of "facial expression, look."

    21–22: ēgit mē ... reum: reum agere means "to accuse, prosecute, put on trial"; the subject is inferred from ipsa (line 20). ōre silente: a concessive ablative absolute, "even though her mouth was silent" (AG §420).

    23–24: ante: "beforehand" (adverbial). vellem: potential subjunctive, (AG §447.1) (first person singular expressions of cautiously saying, thinking or wishing). = utinam lacertī cecidissent. umerīs: ablative of separation (AG §400). carēre: "to be without, lack," regularly construed with the ablative of separation (here parte). meī: partitive genitive (AG §346a1).

    25–26: in mea ... dispendia > dispendium, -(i)ī, n. "loss"; with in + acc. it means "so as to produce my own loss," i.e., at a cost to myself. et ... meam: "and I was (physically) powerful, strong (enough) for my own punishment myself," i.e., strong enough to punish myself. The contorted word order foregrounds ipse, which accentuates the paradox. For fortis in + acc. = "strong (enough) for" a task, see Ovid, Metamorphoses 4.149–50.

    27–28: quid mihi vōbīscum: apostrophe (to the poet’s hands); quid mihi (est) cum ... ? means "what have I to do with ...?" mihi is dative of reference (AG §376). caedis scelerumque: objective genitives (AG §348). sacrilegae ... manūs: vocative plural (as is ministrae in 27). subīte: plural imperative, "endure, submit to."

    29–30: an: an is a particle used to introduce questions, often with a sense of surprise or indignation (AG §335b). pulsāssem: = pulsāvissem, syncopated form of the pluperfect subjunctive. minimum: minimus can be used of social status to mean "least important, lowest, humblest." Quirītem > Quirīs, Quirītis, m. the formal term for a Roman citizen, used particularly in legal situations to emphasize civic rights. plecterer > plectō, plectere, "to beat, punish" (occurs only in the passive); a mixed contrary to fact condition (AG §517a). in dominam: "over my mistress"; in + acc. is used with words indicating power or control over someone. Note the asyndeton. 

    31–32: Tȳdīdēs: Tȳdīdēs, -ae, m. "the son of Tydeus," i.e. Diomedes, who wounded Aphrodite/Venus when she took part in the battle before Troy (Homer, Iliad 5.334–351). monimenta: "reminder, example," perhaps also with overtones of "warning" (the word is derived from moneō). In the Aeneid (11.275–280) and the Metamorphoses (14.477–495) Diomedes tells of the punishment he suffered for his violence to Venus. ille ... ego: antithesis and chiasmus. alter ego: undestand deam perculī. A mid-nineteenth century etching shows a menacing Diomedes pointing his spear at Aphrodite, who carries off her son, the rather less menacing Aeneas.

    33–34: nocēns: "guilty." mihi: dative of agent, with laesa est (AG §375). quam profitēbar amāre: understand ea as the antecedent of quamprofitēbar > profiteor, profitērī, professus (+ inf.), here "to claim." in hoste: "when dealing with an enemy" as at line 9 above.

    35–36: ī nunc, magnificōs victor molīre triumphōs: The poet sarcastically addresses himself as if he were a victorious general celebrating a triumph. victor: here used as an adjective or in apposition to the subject. molīre: imperative singular. vōtaque redde: vōtum reddere means "to discharge a vow"; in a triumph the victorious general would offer previously promised prayers and sacrifices in the temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus on the Capitoline. quaeque: = et quae, the antecedent of quae being turba.

    37–38: tuōs currūs: plural for singular. io ... est!: a bitter parodyof the kinds of ritual cries made by the crowds at triumphal processions. fortī virō is dative of agent (AG §375).

    39–40: ante eat: "let her go before you" (in the triumphal procession). eat = hortatory subjunctive (AG §439). effūsō > effūsus, -a, -um "flowing." capillō: capillus though more commonly plural, can be a collective noun, "the hair." candida tōta: in apposition to trīstis captīva. The protasis of the condition is replaced by a hortatory subjunctive (AG §521b): ante eat ... candida tōta, sī sinerent laesae ... genae, i.e., "Let her go before you ... all white, if her wounded cheeks permitted it."

    41–42: aptius: neuter singular comparative of aptus, -a, -um, "appropriate." fuerat = fuisset; the indicative is used in certain expressions where we might expect a potential subjunctive, e.g. satius erat, "it would have been better" (AG §437a). līvēre > līveō, līvēre "to be livid, to be black and blue with bruises"; the subject is collum in the next line. labellīs: the Roman poets speak often of love bites. collum: subject of līvēre in the preceding line and of habēre. blandī dentis: oxymoron.

    43–44: dēnique: "at least" (adverb). rītū: rītus, -ūs, m. in the ablative singular can mean "in the manner of, like" (+ genitive).

    45–46: fuerat: = fuisset; see on line 41. inclāmāsse: "to shout abuse" + dat. For the form of the perfect infinitive (inclāmāsse = inclāmāvisse), see AG §184. nec nimium rigidās ... minās = et minās nōn nimium rigidās; rigidus here means "stern, strict."

    47–48: turpiter: "in a way that brings discredit"; the primary reference is apparently to the discredit that such an act would bring on the woman, but there may also be an implication that it would bring discredit to the perpetrator as well. ōrā > ōra, ōrae, f. here in its original sense of "edge, border" (including the border of a piece of clothing). ad ... opem: "to its middle (her belt would have come to the rescue at the middle)."

    49–50: at nunc: "but as it is," nunc in an adversative sense introducing a fact contrary to previous possibilities. sustinuī > sustineō, sustinēre, sustinuī, "to allow oneself to, be cruel enough to" + infin. ingenuās > ingenuus -a -um, "tender, delicate." Notice the play on words with genās.

    51–52: albō ... vultū: "her face white and bloodless"; abl. of description (AG §415). Pariīs > Parius, -a, -um "of Paros"; the island of Paros was famous for its marble; the puella was as white (albō ... vultū, 51) as a statue made of Parian marble.

    53–54: exanimēs > exanimis -e "scared stiff, frightened out of one’s wits." ut cum: "as when," introducing a simile.

    55–56: stringitur: "is touched lightly, is grazed."

    57–58: suspensaeque diū: "long pent up." abiectā > abiciō, abicere, abiēcī, abiectum, "to throw down"; the text has been suspected, but if correct abiecta dē nive means "from snow that has been thrown down into a pile," i.e., "piled up."

    59–60: sanguis erat lacrimae ... meus: we would say "the tears were my blood," but Ovid reverses the predicate nominative for emphasis, "it was my blood that those tears were."

    61–62: tamen: the reading has been suspected, since there is no obvious contrast with what precedes; an obvious alternative is tandem. If tamen is right the point seems to be "it took me a long time to feel any pity (tunc ego mē prīmum coepī sentīre nocentem), at which point her tears were my blood, but nevertheless (I eventually did)."

    63–64: at tū: the poet now addresses his girlfriend directly for the first time. nē dubitā: "do not hesitate" = nōlī dubitāre; the use of nē + present imperative in prohibitions is poetic, (AG §450a). vindicta: "vengeance, punishment." prōtinus: "at once, immediately" (adverb). in vultūs ... meōs: plural for singular.

    65–66: parce: > parcō, parcere, pepercī + dative, "to act forbearingly towards, show consideration for." quamlibet: modifies infirmās, i.e., "weak though they are."

    67–68: in statiōne: > statiō, statiōnis, f. "position"; the word is often used in military contexts, for guard duty, garrisons, etc.

    catēna -ae f.: chain, fetter

    temerārius -a -um: accidental; thoughtless, impetuous

    bracchium -ī n.: the forearm (elbow to hand), arm

    vēsānus -a -um: wild, frenzied, insane

    violō -āre: profane, dishonor, treat with violence, violate5

    verber -eris n.: whip; blow

    clipeus -ī m.: round shield

    septemplex -icis: sevenfold

    Ājax -ācis m.: Ajax, a Greek hero

    sternō sternere strāvī strātum: spread out; strike down, lay low

    dēpre(he)ndō -pre(he)ndere -pre(he)ndī -pre(he)nsum: catch, seize, trap

    grex -egis m.: herd, flock

    vindex -icis m.: champion, defender; avenger

    ultor -ōris m.: avenger, punisher

    Orestēs -is or -ae m.: Orestes, a Greek hero

    arcānus -a -um: secret, mysterious, hidden10

    dīgerō -gerere -gessī -gestum: separate, spread; arrange carefully

    laniō -āre: tear to pieces, mangle, lacerate

    capillus -ī m.: hair

    dēdecet, -ēre, -uit: be unsuitable for or unbecoming to (+acc.)

    fōrmōsus -a -um: shapely, beautiful

    Schoenēis -idis f.: the daughter of Schoenius, Atalanta

    Maenalius -a -um: of Mount Maenalus

    arcus arcūs m.: bow; arch, arc

    sollicitō -āre: harass, agitate, attack

    periūrus (pēiūrus) -a -um: oath-breaking, perjuring

    vēlum -ī n.: sail; fabric15

    Thēseus -ī m.: Theseus

    Cressa -ae f.: Cretan woman

    Notus -ī m.: the south wind

    vittātus -a -um: bound up by a fillet

    Cassandra -ae f.: Cassandra, a daughter of Priam

    prōcumbō -cumbere -cubuī -cubitum: lie outstretched (in worship)

    Minerva -ae f.: Minerva

    dēmens -ntis: out of one’s mind, insane, senseless

    barbarus -a -um: foreign, strange, savage

    pavidus -a -um: trembling, quaking, fearful20

    convīcium -ī n.: clamor, uprair; insulting talk, abuse, mockery

    sileō silēre siluī: be still, be silent

    umerus -ī m.: shoulder

    lacertus -ī m.: the arm, esp. the upper arm

    dispendium -ī n.: loss25

    ministra -ae f.: servant, attendant

    sacrilegus -a -um: guilty of impiety, sacrilegious

    pulsō -āre: strike, beat

    minimus -a -um: smallest; youngest; lowest; least

    Quirīs, Quirītis, m.: the formal term for a Roman citizen

    plectō -ere: beat; punish30

    pessimus -a -um: worst

    Tȳdīdēs -ae m.: the son of Tydeus, Diomedes

    monimentum (monumentum) -ī n.: reminder, example

    percellō -cellere -culī -culsum: strike down, overturn, shatter

    profiteor -fitērī -fessus sum: claim

    magnificus -a -um: grand, splendid, magnificent

    mōlior mōlīrī mōlītus sum: set in motion, stir; toil, struggle

    triumphus -ī m.: triumph, triumphal procession35

    laurus -ī f.: laurel

    Iuppiter Iovis m.: Jupiter

    comitor -ārī: accompany, follow

    clāmō -āre: shout, call

    iō: hurrah! oh!

    captīvus -a -um: captured, captive

    gena -ae f.: cheek40

    imprimō -primere -pressī -pressum: apply with pressure, press onto, imprint

    līveō -ēre: be livid, be black and blue with bruises

    lābellum -ī n.: lip

    collum -ī n.: neck

    blandus -a -um: flattering, caressing

    dens -ntis m.: tooth

    nota -ae f.: mark; sign; brand

    tumidus -a -um: swollen, tumid; enraged, violent

    rītū: + gen., in the manner of, like

    torrens -ntis m.: a rushing stream, torrent

    nōnne: (adv.) surely

    timidus -a -um: fearful, timid, shy

    inclāmō -āre: shout abuse at (+dat.)45

    rigidus -a -um: stern, strict

    intonō -tonāre -tonuī: thunder forth

    minae -ārum f. pl.: threats

    tunica -ae f.: tunic

    summus -a -um: highest, uppermost; final

    dīdūcō -dūcere -dūxī -ductum: draw apart, separate

    zōna -ae f.: girdle

    ferreus -a -um: made of iron; hard-hearted, cruel

    ingenuus -a -um: tender, delicate

    unguis -is m.: fingernail; claw, talon50

    notō -āre: mark, distinguish

    astō -stāre -stitī: stand by; stand still

    amēns, -ntis: out of one's mind, insane; distracted, frantic

    Parius -a -um: of Paros

    exanimis -e: scared stiff, frightened out of one's wits

    artus -ūs m.: joint; limb

    tremō tremere tremuī: tremble, quake

    pōpuleus -a -um: of the poplar tree

    ventilō -āre: wave, fan; brandish

    lēnis -e: soft, smooth, gentle

    Zephyrus -ī m.: a gentle west wind, the western breeze, zephyr

    gracilis -e: slender, thin

    vibrō -āre: vibrate, shake, move to and fro

    harundō -inis f.: reed55

    ve: or, or if you will, or as you please

    tepidus -a -um: warm, tepid

    stringō stringere strinxī strictum: touch lightly, graze

    suspendō -pendere -pendī -pensum: suspend, hold up, check, keep under control

    abiciō -icere -iēcī -iectum: throw down

    nix, nivis f.: snow

    mānō -āre: flow 

    nocens, nocentis: guilty

    ter: (adv.) three times, thrice

    supplex -icis: kneeling, supplicating, suppliant61

    formīdō -āre: fear, dread

    repellō repellere reppulī repulsum: drive back, repel

    minuō minuere minuī minūtum: make smaller, leesen, diminish

    vindicta -ae f.: vengeance, punishment

    quamlibet: (adv.) however, in whatever degree66

    infirmus -a -um: weak, feeble

    adiuvō -iuvāre -iūvī -iūtum: help, assist

    nēve or neu: and not, nor, and that not, and lest

    recompōnō -pōnere -posuī -positum: put back together; readjust, rearrange

    statiō -ōnis: position

    Maps and Images
    Article Nav
    Previous
    Next

    Suggested Citation

    William Turpin. Ovid: Amores Book 1. Carlisle, Pennsylvania: Dickinson College Commentaries, 2012. ISBN: 978-1-947822-00-9. https://dcc.dickinson.edu/pt/ovid-amores/amores-1-7