Read The Art of Love Online

Authors: Ovid

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

The Art of Love (5 page)

BOOK: The Art of Love
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[L
ATIN
:
Tempora qui solis…
]

    There’s a mistaken notion

That only those who work the fields or sail the ocean

Observe the seasons. You can’t entrust grain

To the treacherous earth, or hulls to the green main,

Any day of the year, and the same is the case

With catching girls: the right time and place

Improve the chances. Thus, on certain dates

(Her birthday; April the First, when Rome celebrates

Venus conjoined with Mars; and the Saturnalia,

When the Circus displays rich gifts and regalia,

Not the pottery images of a former age),

Postpone your attempt—then the worst storms rage,

The Pleiads glower, and the huge swell

Half drowns the little Kid. You’ll do well

To pause now. Blithely launch a boat,

And with luck and a spar you may just survive afloat.

Start work on a grim day, like the one when Allia’s water

Was crimsoned with the slaughter

Of Roman dead, or the sabbath feast

The Syrian Jews observe, the day least

Fit for business, when most trade is dead.

But view with superstitious dread

Your mistress’s birthday, surely the most unpleasant

Day in the calendar—you’re forced to give a present.

Dodge as you may, she’ll collect: every woman discovers

Ways of extracting loot from ravenous lovers.

When she’s in a spending mood,

Some half-naked, rude

Huckster comes up and spreads his wares for her,

Poor you sitting by. To make you feel like a connoisseur,

She begs you to look them over, then starts to ply

You with kisses and, finally, asks you to buy—

She wants it right now, it’ll please her for years to come,

Now’s the time to get it … Protest that you don’t have the sum

In cash in the house, she’ll demand

(You’ll wish you’d never learnt to write!) a note-of-hand.

Good God, she can have a birthday at will, can make

Any date an excuse for claiming a birthday-cake.

She can burst into tragic tears

And pretend that a jewel’s dropped from one of her ears.

They’re always borrowing things that don’t get returned:

It’s your loss, and not a thank-you earned.

I’d need ten mouths and ten tongues to list the damnable arts

Of these money-grubbing tarts.

[L
ATIN
:
Cera vadum temptet…
]

    Let the wax of the writing tablet smooth your way,

Let the wax, like a boat, cross over and convey

Your mind, and a cargo of flatteries in the style

Lovers use; however grand you are, pile

The entreaties on. By speaking fair

Priam made Achilles give back Hector’s body. Prayer

Moves even an angry god. By all means throw

Promises in. Do they do any harm? No.

We’re all rich men as far as promises go.

Hope, once trust starts her off, will run and run,

A deceptive goddess, but a useful one.

Once you’ve given her something, you may be dropped—reasonably so:

It’s hers, she’s lost nothing, she can let you go.

What you don’t give she’ll keep thinking she’s going to receive:

That’s how, so often, barren fields deceive

Their owners, how the gambler, for fear of loss,

Goes on losing with every toss

Of the dice which his greedy fingers ask

To have again and again. “Herein lies the task,

The great labour”
*
—to part with nothing before

She’s given herself, so she’ll give more and more

Lest she lose what she’s given already. So,

Let a persuasive letter go

In a careful hand, in order to find

A way forward and to test her mind.

By a message scratched on an apple Cydippe was betrayed:

The words, once read aloud, were hers, and trapped the maid.

[L
ATIN
:
Disce bonas artes…
]

    
Young Romans, study the noble art

Of eloquence—not merely to take the part

Of some trembling client: just as the common herd,

Grave judges, elected senators, find the power of the word

Irresistible, so do women. But take care

To hide your powers, avoid long words, too clever an air.

Who but a fool would be declamatory?

The effect of a letter can be most
un
amatory.

Write in a natural, credible style,

In words that are simple but can still beguile,

As though you were there, with her. If she rejects your letter

And sends it back unread, just hope for better

Luck tomorrow and hold fast

To your purpose. Time at last

Breaks stubborn oxen to the plough, in time the horse

Learns to put up with the bridle, in the course

Of time the rub of long use wears

An iron ring thin, and even ploughshares

Crack with the furrows’ friction.

It’s no contradiction

That water’s soft, stone hard, and yet

A drip can hollow rock. Don’t forget,

Troy took a long time to fall, but it fell:

Persist and you’ll take even Penelope’s citadel.

So she’s read it and won’t reply? You feel like assault and battery?

Just see that she goes on receiving regular flattery.

Once she’s consented to read, she’ll consent to answer. These

Matters proceed by gradual degrees.

First you may get an unfriendly note requesting

You to stop “this pestering and molesting.”

What she demands she dreads, she wants the unasked, in a word

Your pursuit. Press on, and you’ll catch your bird.

[L
ATIN
:
Interea, sive illa…
]

    Meanwhile, if she’s being carried in the street,

Cushioned, in her litter, approach. Act cool, be discreet,

And to foil eavesdroppers mask your talk,

As well as you can, with double meanings. If she should walk

Down the colonnade, share her outing, adjust your speed,

Dawdling or brisk, to hers—you can trail her or take the lead.

Or slip round the columns between you—don’t be shy—

And in passing brush her thigh.

If she goes to the theatre, go too, your admiring glance

Following her (she’s sure to wear something to enhance

Those shoulders!). Turn round, gaze to your heart’s content,

And make your hands and eyebrows eloquent.

When a dancer plays a girl’s role, lead the cheers,

And clap whenever the lover appears.

When she rises, rise; as long as she stays, sit on. Kill

Time entirely at your mistress’s will.

[L
ATIN
:
Sed tibi nec…
]

    Don’t torture your hair with curling-tongs

Or depilate your legs with pumice—that belongs

To Mother Cybele’s eunuch priests who shriek

Their Phrygian choruses. Casual chic

Suits men best. Theseus managed to win

Ariadne without benefit of a hair-pin.

Phaedra loved Hippolytus and he wasn’t smart;

Adonis, a man of the woods, captured a goddess’s heart.

If you want to please, be neat and clean; when it’s hot,

Tan in the Campus; wear a toga that fits, without spot;

As for shoes, don’t lace them too tightly, take care

That the buckles are rust-free, and never wear

A too large size that your feet swim in; your hair

Should be well cut so that it doesn’t stand

At all angles—hair and beard need an expert’s hand;

Nails should be pared and kept clean;

Make sure there isn’t an obscene

Tuft in your nostrils; and guard against halitosis,

Don’t be a prime goat who offends all noses.

Further refinements leave to the courtesan

And the half-man cruising for another man.

[L
ATIN
:
Ecce, suum vatem…
]

    Lo, Bacchus summons his bard, the god who carries a torch

For lovers, who feels, himself, the flames that scorch—

As, fresh from sleep, the Cretan princess found,

Grief-crazed, barefoot, robe ungirt, blonde hair unbound,

Pacing the unknown shores of Naxos (little isle

In the great weltering ocean), all the while

Crying “Cruel Theseus!” The sea hears

Nothing, the innocent tears

Run down her tender cheeks, she weeps, she screams,

Yet still, somehow, she seems

Beautiful, her allure unrobbed

By the tears. Hands beating her soft breasts, she sobbed,

“He’s betrayed me, he’s gone! What will become of me?

What …” Suddenly,

The whole shore resounded

With the noise of cymbals and drums frenziedly pounded.

She broke off, the blood drained from her cold,

Limp body, she fainted with fear. Behold

The wild-tressed bacchanals, the wanton, gay

Satyrs, the rout that leads the wine-god’s way,

Old reeling-drunk Silenus in the train,

Half off his sway-backed donkey, clutching its mane,

While the maenads tease him with hide-and-seek,

Fleeing, then pouncing, until the weak

Rider, whipping the beast on, falls

Off his long-eared mount on his head, to the satyrs’ calls

Of “Get up again, Daddy!” Then the god arrives.

In his chariot roofed with grape-clusters, he drives

A team of tigers with golden harness on.

Her voice, her colour, her Theseus, all gone,

Three times the girl attempted flight,

Three times stayed rooted to the spot with fright,

Shivering like a slender cornstalk in a harsh

Wind, or a frail reed in a marsh.

“I am here,” said the god, “a truer lover than he was. Your life

Is in no danger. You shall be Bacchus’ wife.

The sky is your dowry; henceforward you are

The Cretan Crown; a looked-for star,

You will act as a guide to ships lost at night.”

And lest she should take fright

At the tigers, he leapt down (the sand held the print of his foot)

And went to her and put

His arms round her and carried her off. No struggle—with ease

The gods accomplish anything they please.

Some sang a wedding chorus, others cried

“Long live Bacchus!” And so to bed go god and bride.

[L
ATIN
:
Ergo ubi contigerint…
]

    So, when the gifts of Bacchus bless the board

And a girl’s sharing your couch, pray to the Lord

Of Night and Licence not to allow

His wine to fuddle your head, for now

Is the time for ambiguities and hidden sense,

Which she’ll feel are solely for her. Trace compliments

In spilt wine on the table so she’ll surmise

That she’s your sweetheart, gaze into her eyes

With obvious ardour—a long, silent look

Can say as much as a speech or a book.

If she puts her wine down, be the first to snatch it up

And drink from the side of the cup

Her lips have touched; if she’s fingered some food, demand

That bit, and in reaching for it brush her hand.

If she’s come escorted, your best plan

Is (he could be useful) to cultivate the man:

When you dice for the drinking order, let him instead

Of you have the honour; give him the garland from your head;

Whether he’s placed below or with you, let him be

The first to be served; defer to him, agree.

A safe and well-worn ploy is to pretend

To be the husband’s friend—

Safe and practised all the time,

But nevertheless a crime,

As if some greedy steward were to enlarge

His master’s remit and take total charge.

Next, advice on the bounds you should set to drinking.

Feet and mind should do their duty, walking and thinking.

Beware, above all, of brawls brought on

By liquor, of short-fused fist-fights. Eurytion

The centaur died through mindless boozing. The table

And wine are meant for good fun. If you’re able

To sing, sing; if you’re supple, dance a measure:

Please with whatever talent can give pleasure.

Real drunkenness can harm you, but when it’s feigned

It can be of use. With a clever tongue, trained

To slip and slur, the risqué things you say or do

Will be blamed on the wine, not you.

Toast the lady, toast “the man who shares her bed”

(Secretly wishing him dead);

But when the tables are moved and the guests go, if the crowd

Parts and you’re allowed

The chance, mingle, drift close, and as you both leave

Touch her foot with yours, tug at her sleeve.

Now comes the chat-up stage. Away with naive

Ploughboy shyness! Behave

Boldly—Fortune and Venus favour the brave.

Speak, but don’t follow some poet’s rule of thumb:

Just show you desire her, and the eloquence will come.

Play the lover to the hilt, you’re “desperate,” “heart-sick”;

To get her to believe it employ any trick:

It’s not hard—all women think they’re worth loving, the plain

And the pretty being, in that way, equally vain.

(Besides, sometimes an actor will begin

To feel real love, his role become genuine.

So be nice, you girls, to those who pretend:

A bogus passion may turn out true in the end.)

Like a stream eroding the bank hanging above it,

Undermine her subtly with flattery—she’ll love it.

Neat feet, slim fingers, good features, charming curls—

Never tire of praising them. Even good girls

Adore extravagant compliments, even virgins take

Loving care over the impression they make.

Why else should Juno and Pallas still begrudge

The prize lost in the Trojan glade when Paris was judge?

Juno’s peacock displays

The jewels of her plumage at a word of praise,

But shuts up shop before a silent gaze.

And racehorses, between sprints on the track,

Love their necks patted and their manes combed back.

BOOK: The Art of Love
13Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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