Ovid’s Ars Amatoria is a treatise of how to
gain love. The first two books are for men and the third and final book is
directed to women. As such a work has also to deal with things sexual, Ovid
can’t avoid being explicit and so – as I was surprised to read in the wiki link
below- US Customs found reason to seize
an English translation of it. In 1930 that was - I hope they have come to their
senses by now.
As love
is of every time, so are the advices Ovid tells his readers. In the following
extract Ovid is talking about laughing. I hope female readers of this blog can
still take profit from Ovid’s thoughts about this subject! As a bonus there is
some more advice by Ovid.
Ovidius,
Ars Amatoria 3, 281-396
Quis
credat? discunt etiam ridere puellae,
Quaeritur atque illis hac quoque parte
decor.
Sint
modici rictus, parvaeque utrimque lacunae,
Et summos dentes ima labella tegant.
Nec sua
perpetuo contendant ilia risu,
285
Sed leve nescio quid femineumque sonent.
Est,
quae perverso distorqueat ora cachinno:
Risu concussa est altera, flere putes.
Illa
sonat raucum quiddam atque inamabile ridet,
Ut rudit a scabra turpis asella mola. 290
Quo non
ars penetrat? discunt lacrimare decenter,
Quoque volunt plorant tempore, quoque
modo.
Quid,
cum legitima fraudatur littera voce,
Blaesaque fit iusso lingua coacta sono?
In vitio
decor est: quaerunt male reddere verba; 295
Discunt posse minus, quam potuere, loqui.
quaeritur decor: charm is also looked for
rictus –us (m.): opening of the mouth
lacuna: hole, dimple
Et summos dentes ima labella tegant: litt. let the deepest parts of the lips cover the
highes parts of the teeth. A typical Ovidian sentence: with a few words an
image is created. What is meant is that the lips should only be opened to such
extent, that they cover the gum (summos
dentes, `dental roots’, so the gum) and they should not uncover more.
contendere ilia: to shake the entrails
quae…altera: the one…the other
distorqueo distorti distortum:
to twist, distort
cachinnus: immoderate laughter
flere putes: cf. crying from laughing
Ut rudit a scabra turpis asella mola: like a wretched she-donkey roars
from the rough millstone. (so
Quoque volunt plorant tempore, quoque modo = et plorant quo tempore volunt et quo modo
ploro: to weep
legitima littera: the correct pronunciation
Blaesaque fit iusso lingua coacta sono: the tongue becomes lisping, forced
by the imposed sound I found an online German translation with an
excellent commentary by Heinrich Lindemann (1861) who thinks that these lines
refer to colloquial language (gemüthliche Umgangssprache), but I rather think
that Roman girls distorted their voice in a childish manner in order to appear
charming.)
reddere verba = loqui
vitium: imperfection
minus: less perfect
potuere = potuerunt
Translation
by A. S. Kline (2001)
Who’d
believe it? Girls must even learn to laugh,
they
seek to acquire beauty also in this way.
Laugh
modestly, a small dimple either side,
the
teeth mostly concealed by the lips.
Don’t
strain your lungs with continual laughter,
but let
something soft and feminine ring out.
One girl
will distort her face perversely by guffawing:
another
shakes with laughter, you’d think she’s crying.
That one
laughs stridently in a hateful manner,
like a
mangy ass braying at the shameful mill.
Where
does art not penetrate? They’re taught to cry,
with
propriety, they weep when and how they wish.
Why! Aren’t true words cheated by the voice,
and
tongues forced to make lisping sounds to order?
Charm’s
in a defect: they try to speak badly:
they’re
taught, when they can speak, to speak less.
Latin
text with German translation and commentary:
http://gutenberg.spiegel.de/buch/liebeskunst-4724/1
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