Ars Amatoria (The Art of Love) by Ovid (c. 2 AD)
The ancient world's most famous guide to seduction. Ovid instructs men and women on where to find lovers, how to attract them, how to keep them, and how to manage affairs — all with wit, irony, and astonishing frankness.
Historical Significance:
Ovid published Ars Amatoria around 2 AD, and it may have contributed to his mysterious exile by Emperor Augustus in 8 AD (the official charge was "a poem and a mistake"). The poem is simultaneously a practical dating manual, a parody of didactic poetry, and a subversive attack on Augustus' moral legislation promoting marriage and childbearing. Ovid advises readers on grooming, conversation, gift-giving, and the psychology of desire with a sophistication that feels startlingly modern. The poem was banned, burned, and condemned by the Church throughout the Middle Ages — which only increased its popularity. It influenced the troubadours, Chaucer, Shakespeare, and every subsequent writer on love and seduction.
This public domain classic was originally composed c. 2 AD. Free to read and share.
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