The Art of Love (4 page)

Read The Art of Love Online

Authors: Ovid

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #History & Criticism, #Criticism & Theory, #Movements & Periods, #Poetry, #Ancient; Classical & Medieval

BOOK: The Art of Love
2.29Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

[L
ATIN
:
Hos aditus Circusque…
]

    Such openings the Circus offers for the study

Of the art of the pick-up; so does the grim Forum with its bloody

Arena of sand. Here Cupid has his killing-ground,

And the man who came to see blood himself gets a wound—

In the heart. While he’s touching her hand, bending her ear,

Borrowing her programme, asking if the charioteer

He’s backed will win, he feels

The shock of the arrow, the steel’s

Struck home, he groans—and the spectator

Joins in the show, a dying gladiator.

[L
ATIN
:
Quid, modo cum…
]

When Caesar staged that naval mock-battle between

Athenians and Persians, what a scene!

From east and west young women and men

Converged, the whole known world was in Rome then.

In such a crowd, in such a push-and-shove,

Who could fail to find someone to love?

That day hundreds of men learnt

How hot a foreign flame is, and got burnt.

[L
ATIN
:
Ecce, parat Caesar…
]

    Now Caesar’s planning to extend his powers

To the rest of the untamed world. You shall be ours,

O farthest East. Parthians, you shall be paid

In full. Exult, standards that they laid

Shaming barbarian hands on! Rejoice, the shade

Of buried Crassus! Now your avenger appears,

A boy who despite his years

Proclaims his generalship

And has strong hands to grip

The reins of a war that no one of that age

But he would dare or be allowed to wage.

Why timidly rely on arithmetic

When it comes to the age of a god? Valour is quick

To show in Caesars. Divine genius tolerates

No hanging back, accelerates

Achievement, and makes nonsense of mere dates.

The infant Hercules strangled two snakes, even

In the cradle earning the applause of heaven.

And you, Bacchus, still a young god,

How old were you when India kissed your rod?

With your father’s authority, under his lucky star,

Boy, you shall fight and win this war.

Your great name calls for a youthful victory:

Today prince of the young, one day you shall be

Prince of the old. You’re a brother, a son—then requite

The wrongs of brothers, uphold a father’s right.

Your country’s father, indeed your own,

Has armed you against a foe who seized
his
throne

By force from a father. Javelin versus bow,

Good against evil, justice and right shall go

Ahead of your standards. Parthia’s doom is sealed

By her own guilt; may every battlefield

Reflect that truth, and may my prince come home

Bringing the riches of the East to Rome!

O Mars, O Caesar, both fathers, one divine,

One god-to-be, let your numinous powers shine

On his setting forth. Lo, I predict a

Great triumph, and vow to you, the victor,

A celebratory poem to trumpet your name

Resoundingly. Using the same

Words I wrote, you’ll stand and exhort

Your battle-line—and I pray they’ll not fall short

Of your valour’s reach. I’ll describe head-on attacks

By Romans, cowardly Parthian backs,

And arrows in the sky

Shot by their swivelling horsemen as they fly.

(You Parthians, if, pursuing victory, you retreat,

What meaning’s left for the word “defeat”?

Your war-will’s sapped, it’s an ill omen.)

And so the day will come when you, our Roman

Hero, an adored, resplendent sight,

Will ride in gold, drawn by four snow-white

Horses, behind their chiefs—neck-fettered now for fear

They save their skins by a second flight. A cheer

Will rise from every watching girl and boy

On that day of heart-felt joy.

When some girl asks the names of the kings and foreign parts—

Towns, mountains, rivers etcetera—on the pageant carts,

Answer all her questions. No, don’t wait

To be asked, volunteer (though you’re guessing) with a straight

Face, “Here’s Euphrates, his forehead fringed with reeds,

And that’s Tigris with the long blue hair. There are the Medes,

And, look, the Armenians, I’m positive. There goes

Some Achaemenid valley town. And those

Must be two generals …” Give them each a name—

Right, if you can; if you can’t, give them one just the same.

[L
ATIN
:
Dant etiam positis…
]

    Banquets give openings, too: when the tables are spread,

There’s more than wine to turn your head.

There Love, with soft arms and flushed face,

Has often given the horns of Bacchus an embrace,

And when wine has soaked his thirsty plumage, Love

Stands rooted, torpid, can’t perform or move.

He
takes no time to shake his wings dry again,

But for
us
a few drops of love are intense pain.

Wine rouses the heart, wine makes all men

Lovers, wine undiluted dilutes worry. Then

Laughter arrives, even the poor

Feel as brave as bulls, wrinkles relax, out of the door

Go care and sorrow, into all hearts

Flies truth (rare bird these days), for the god expels the arts

Of the hypocrite. Then girls bewitch men with desire,

And Venus in the wine is a fire within a fire.

On these occasions don’t trust the lamps—they can lie:

Darkness and drink blur the judging eye.

It was in broad daylight, not after dinner,

That Paris made his choice: “You, Venus, are the winner.”

Blemishes are lost in the half-light,

Faults overlooked. Night

Turns any woman into a goddess.

When it comes to judging faces, bodies,

Jewels or clothes, I always say,

Consult the light of day
.

[L
ATIN
:
Quid tibi femineos…
]

    But why count grains of sand? How can I list all the places

Where girls go and you can hunt pretty faces?

Take Baiae, its shores fringed with pleasure craft,

Its springs smoking with sulphur—Cupid’s shaft

Does heart damage there. One man came back with the report:

“That’s no health resort!”

The same goes for Diana’s shrine by the lake

In the woods near Rome, where the slave-priests take

Office in turn by murder—she,

Being a virgin, spitefully,

Out of hatred of Love’s darts

Wounds, and will go on wounding, human hearts.

[L
ATIN
:
Hactenus, unde legas…
]

    Having carried you this far

In my Muse’s bumpy, elegiac car

And taught you hunters in which coverts to find

And how to spread nets for the bird you have in mind,

Now for the trickiest, subtlest part: how to get

Your darling well entangled in the net.

Men everywhere, you have something to learn, so attend!

And you, the common people, kindly lend

My enterprise your favour till the end.

[L
ATIN
:
Prima tuae menti…
]

    First and foremost, feel confidence that all

Girls can be caught; just spread your nets, they’ll fall.

Hounds will run from a hare, birds in spring sit dumb,

Cicadas in summer keep mum,

Sooner than a girl, wooed charmingly, will resist:

Even one you think doesn’t want it wants to be kissed.

Women, like men, adore secret affairs,

But our skill in dissembling is less than theirs.

If we males unanimously agreed

Not to move first, females, crushed, would take the lead.

In lush fields the heifer moos to the bull, the mare

Whinnies at stallions in the open air;

Men’s sex-urge is less primitive, less raw,

Our lust is bound by the limits of the law.

But as for women … Byblis was mad for her brother

And bravely atoned for her sin with a suicide’s noose. Another

Was Myrrha, whose love was most undaughterly

And who is now imprisoned in the tree

Whose bark still weeps the tears named after her

Which we use for perfume and call myrrh.

Once in the shady valleys of wooded Ida

There was a white bull, the herd’s pride, a

Single splash of black above the eyes

Marring perfection, milk-white otherwise.

The handsome Cretan heifers longed to bear his weight,

But Pasiphaë eyed them all with envious hate,

For to play the role of adulterous mate

Of the bull inflamed her fancy. (I only repeat

A well-known fact which hundred-citied Crete,

Proverbial home of liars, can’t rebut.)

With her own high-born hands, they say, she cut

Fresh, tender leaves and grass for him and, undeterred

By the thought of her husband, joined the herd.

So King Minos was humbled by a bull!

Queen, why bother with silks and expensive wool?

They won’t impress your lover in the least.

If you want to live like a mountain beast,

Why the mirror, the pointless fussing with your hair?

You can trust the glass, though, for one thing—there

You’re no heifer. But goodness, how

You wish you could be a plump, horned cow!

If you like Minos, then stay at home,

Don’t look elsewhere; if you prefer to roam

And betray your husband, why then, woman,

At least betray him with a fellow human.

But, leaving her palace and bower behind,

Off she goes to the woods and glens, like a maenad out of her mind,

God-intoxicated. Every time she spies

A cow, she looks daggers and cries,

“What can my darling see in her? There, she’s gambolling

In front of him on the grass—does the stupid thing

Think she’s attractive?” And she’d give the word

For the innocent to be culled from the great herd

To be yoked to the plough, or, faking piety, have her killed

At the altar “to appease the gods,” even take the spilled

Guts gleefully in her hands and jeer

At her rival’s corpse,
“Now
try to please him, dear!”

In her fantasies she’s now Europa, now

Io—riding a bull or changed to a cow.

Yet the herd-leader, fooled by a cow made of wood,

Mounted, and his fatherhood

Showed in the Minotaur. Had Aerope learnt to restrain

Her love for Thyestes (how hard it is to abstain

From the one man you fancy!), the sun’s charioteer,

Appalled in mid-career,

Would never have reined, turned round and driven

His horses dawnwards across heaven.

Scylla stole from her father his red lock of hair—

Now her loins writhe, a mad dogs’ lair.

Agamemnon escaped with his life

From land battles and sea storms, then fell to his wife.

Who hasn’t been horrified

By the tale of Jason’s wife, who died

In a flaming, poisoned robe, and Medea, red

With her own children’s blood? Of Phoenix, who shed

Tears from eyeless sockets? And Hippolytus—as for him,

Fear-crazed horses tore him limb from limb.

Phineus, why blind

Your innocent sons when you’ll soon find

Yourself sightless? All these crimes were brought about

By woman’s lust, keener and wilder than ours. Why doubt

That you can succeed with any

Woman in the world? Scarcely one out of many

Will say no. Willing or unwilling,

They all find it equally thrilling

To be propositioned. Just chance your arm:

If you make a mistake and get snubbed, where’s the harm?

But why should you be when new pleasures lure and the unknown

Holds more charm than what’s our own?

Our neighbour’s crop hints at a richer yield,

And cows’ udders look fuller in the next field.

[L
ATIN
:
Sed prius ancillam…
]

    But first get to know your quarry’s maid—she’s the key

To smooth, early intimacy.

Make sure she’s her mistress’s confidante, the sort

You can trust with the secret of your private sport.

Corrupt her with promises and prayers, make her your friend:

With her good will you’ll easily gain your end.

She’ll pick a time, just as a doctor would,

When her mistress is in the right mood—

Relaxed, seducible, full of the joy of living,

Exuberant like wheat in a rich soil giving

Promise of harvest; for when hearts are gay

And unshuttered by grief, Venus will find a way

To subtly insinuate herself. It was when the mood of Troy,

After the long, grim siege, lapsed into joy

That she welcomed that enemy-freighted horse.

Pique over a rival is another source

Of vulnerability. In that case supply aid

For her vengeance. Prime the maid

To assist the sails by putting
her
oar in,

By sighing half to herself, “Would it really be a sin

If you gave him a taste of his own medicine

And had an affair?”

(This in the morning, while she combs her hair),

Then talk about
you
, and in convincing fashion

Swear that you’re dying of a frantic passion.

Work fast, though—sails may slacken, winds die away:

Pique, like thin ice, melts with delay.

Will it help your cause, you may ask, to seduce the maid?

Playing such games is a dangerous trade;

They act as brakes as frequently as spurs:

Will she view you as her mistress’s prize, or hers?

It can go either way, and, though you may gain

By taking a bold risk, my advice is,
Abstain
.

Rock-climbing and peak-scaling aren’t part of my plan

Of attack. No young man

Will be taken prisoner while I’m in command.

On the other hand,

If, as she ferries notes to and fro, her beauty

As well as her zeal in doing her duty

Happens to please you, then take

The mistress first and make

The maid your afters. It would be a sin

Against taste to begin

By fucking the maid. One warning (if you trust

My skilled advice, if some greedy gust

Doesn’t blow my words out to sea):
Take heed
,

Either don’t try at all or make damned sure you succeed
.

Once she’s a guilty partner in your crime,

She won’t turn informer. Once its wings feel the lime,

Does the bird escape? Does the boar break out,

Once the loose net has him? Play your hooked trout,

Press her hard, harass her, haul her to land,

Don’t budge till you’ve got the upper hand.

Where there’s shared guilt, there’ll be no betraying,

And you’ll be told all your mistress is doing or saying.

But guard your spy’s secret—you’ll get the low-down on your lover

Just as long as you don’t blow
her
cover.

Other books

Linda Ford by Dreams Of Hannah Williams
Rose by Jill Marie Landis
Pieces of Rhys by L. D. Davis
The Hoods by Grey, Harry
Heart of the Matter by Emily Giffin
Don't Ask by Hilary Freeman
Lost in Clover by Travis Richardson