Heroides

The Heroides, also known as the Heroines, the Letters of the Heroines or simply as Epistles are a very famous collection of poems by Ovid, not only for their interesting subject - letters by famous mythological characters addressed to their beloved ones - but also because it's considered by some the first example of the Epistle as a literary genre - a statement made by Ovid himself in his Ars Amatoria. The book as we have it nowadays consists of 21 letters, divided in two parts. The first is composed of fifteen letters presented as if written by a female mythological character to her lover; the second part, also known as Double Heroides, brings three pairs of letters, being the first in each pair supposedly written by a hero, and the second one, the heroine's response to the first letter. Along the Metamorphoses and the Ars Amatoria, the Heroides were one of the most influential works of Ovid, not only in the Antiquity, but also throughout the Middle Ages and up to Modern times.

By : Publius (Ovid) Ovidius Naso (c. 43 BC - 18 AD)

01 - Penelope to Ulysses



02 - Phyllis to Demophoon



03 - Briseis to Achilles



04 - Phaedra to Hippolytus



05 - Oenone to Paris



06 - Hypsipyle to Jason



07 - Dido to Aeneas



08 - Hermione to Orestes



09 - Deanira to Hercules



10 - Ariadne to Theseus



11 - Canace to Macareus



12 - Medea to Jason



13 - Laodamia to Protesilaus



14 - Hypermnestra to Lynceus



15 - Sappho to Phaon



16 - Paris to Helen



17 - Helen to Paris



18 - Leander to Hero



19 - Hero to Leander



20 - Acontius to Cydippe



21 - Cydippe to Acontius

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