Metamorphoses (Lombardo Edition)

"Stanley Lombardo successfully matches Ovid’s human drama, imaginative brio, and irresistible momentum; and Ralph Johnson’s superb Introduction to Ovid's 'narratological paradise' is a bonus to this new and vigorous translation that should not be missed. Together, Introduction and text bring out the delightful unpredictability of Ovid’s 'history of the world' down to his times."
     —Elaine Fantham, Giger Professor of Latin, Emerita, Princeton University

"Lombardo’s translation is the most readable I’ve seen. . . . Its language is modern, accessible, and unpretentious. . . . I can imagine reading all the way through this version with students. I also admire the catalog of transformations . . . and, as usual, an Introduction by Ralph Johnson is worth the price of the book." —Margaret Musgrove, University of Central Oklahoma

SKU
26983g

Ovid
Translated by Stanley Lombardo
Introduction by W. R. Johnson

2010 - 538 pp.

Grouped product items
Format ISBN Price Qty
Cloth 978-1-60384-308-9
$40.00
Paper 978-1-60384-307-2
$15.00
Instructor Examination (Review) Copy 978-1-60384-307-2
$2.00

eBook available for $11.95. Click HERE for more information.

               Mercury was poised to tell the whole story
               When he saw that all of the eyes had closed.
               He stopped speaking and deepened Argus’ slumber
               By waving his wand over those languid orbs.
               And then he brought his sickled sword down
               On that nodding head where it joined the neck
               And sent it spattering down the steep rocks.
               Now you lie low, Argus, and all your lights are out,
               Those hundred eyes mastered by one dark night.
                                                                                (1.766–74)

_______

Ovid's Metamorphoses gains its ideal twenty-first-century herald in Stanley Lombardo's bracing translation of a wellspring of Western art and literature that is too often treated, even by poets, as a mere vehicle for the scores of myths it recasts and transmits rather than as a unified work of art with epic-scale ambitions of its own. Such misconceptions are unlikely to survive a reading of Lombardo's rendering, which vividly mirrors the brutality, sadness, comedy, irony, tenderness, and eeriness of Ovid's vast world as well as the poem’s effortless pacing. Under Lombardo's spell, neither Argus nor anyone else need fear nodding off.

The translation is accompanied by an exhilarating Introduction by W. R. Johnson that unweaves and reweaves many of the poem’s most important themes while showing how the poet achieves some of his most brilliant effects.

An analytical table of contents, a catalog of transformations, and a glossary are also included.

 

Reviews:

"Stanley Lombardo successfully matches Ovid’s human drama, imaginative brio, and irresistible momentum; and Ralph Johnson’s superb Introduction to Ovid's 'narratological paradise' is a bonus to this new and vigorous translation that should not be missed. Together, Introduction and text bring out the delightful unpredictability of Ovid’s 'history of the world' down to his times."
     —Elaine Fantham, Giger Professor of Latin, Emerita, Princeton University

"Lombardo’s translation is the most readable I’ve seen. . . . Its language is modern, accessible, and unpretentious. . . . I can imagine reading all the way through this version with students.
     "I also admire the catalog of transformations . . . and, as usual, an Introduction by Ralph Johnson is worth the price of the book."
     —Margaret Musgrove, University of Central Oklahoma 

"A superb teaching text. The translation is readable, witty, and very accessible to today’s students. The glossary is useful, and Johnson’s essay is a great introduction to Ovid."
     —John Makowski, Loyola University, Chicago

 

About the Authors:

Stanley Lombardo is Professor of Classics, University of Kansas.

W. R. Johnson is Professor of Classics and Comparative Literature, Emeritus, University of Chicago.