Metamorphoses
Publius (Ovid) Ovidius Naso
Read by LibriVox Volunteers
The Metamorphoses of Ovid is probably one of the best known, certainly one of the most influential works of the Ancient world. It consists of a narrative poem in fifteen books that describes the creation and history of the world through mythological tales, starting with a cosmogony and finishing with the deification of Julius Caesar. Published around 8 AD, the Metamorphoses are a source, sometimes the only source, for many of the most famous ancient myths, such as the stories of Daedalus and Icarus, Arachne or Narcisus.
Ovid works his way through his subject matter often in an apparently arbitrary fashion; however, the connection between all the seemingly unconnected stories is that all of them talk about transformation. Change as the only permanent aspect of nature is the certainty that underlies the work of Ovid, who jumps from one transformation tale to another, sometimes retelling what had come to be seen as central events in the world of Greek myths and sometimes straying in odd directions. The poem is often called a mock-epic. It is written in dactylic hexameter, the form of the great heroic and nationalistic epic poems, both those of the ancient tradition (the Iliad and Odyssey) and of Ovid's own day (the Aeneid). It begins with the ritual "invocation of the muse," and makes use of traditional epithets and circumlocutions. But instead of following and extolling the deeds of a human hero, it leaps from story to story sometimes in very cunning ways, and, because of the clever ways in which it connects the stories, the Metamorphoses were once called the "Thousand and One Nights of the Ancient World". (Summary adapted from Wikipedia by Leni) (14 hr 50 min)
Chapters
01 - Book 1, Part 1 | 18:49 | Read by Leni |
02 - Book 1, Part 2 | 21:28 | Read by ontheroad |
03 - Book 1, Part 3 | 15:38 | Read by ontheroad |
04 - Book 2, Part 1 | 29:15 | Read by mwharrington |
05 - Book 2, Part 2 | 18:58 | Read by Bellona Times |
06 - Book 2, Part 3 | 21:55 | Read by ravenotation |
07 - Book 3, Part 1 | 17:10 | Read by MorganScorpion |
08 - Book 3, Part 2 | 20:52 | Read by Leni |
09 - Book 3, Part 3 | 17:39 | Read by mwharrington |
10 - Book 4, Part 1 | 15:19 | Read by Neeru Iyer |
11 - Book 4, Part 2 | 18:03 | Read by aphrael |
12 - Book 4, Part 3 | 24:45 | Read by David Goldfarb |
13 - Book 5, Part 1 | 23:04 | Read by Jenni |
14 - Book 5, Part 2 | 21:18 | Read by David Goldfarb |
15 - Book 6, Part 1 | 22:06 | Read by Elizabeth Klett |
16 - Book 6, Part 2 | 7:28 | Read by Elizabeth Klett |
17 - Book 6, Part 3 | 22:49 | Read by Elizabeth Klett |
18 - Book 7, Part 1 | 21:33 | Read by Elizabeth Klett |
19 - Book 7, Part 2 | 23:40 | Read by Elizabeth Klett |
20 - Book 7, Part 3 | 14:31 | Read by Elizabeth Klett |
21 - Book 8, Part 1 | 12:47 | Read by MorganScorpion |
22 - Book 8, Part 2 | 19:41 | Read by Paul Huckerby |
23 - Book 8, Part 3 | 12:35 | Read by MorganScorpion |
24 - Book 8, Part 4 | 20:42 | Read by Christina Vasilevski |
25 - Book 9, Part 1 | 22:15 | Read by Diapadion |
26 - Book 9, Part 2 | 14:40 | Read by Diapadion |
27 - Book 9, Part 3 | 24:53 | Read by Diapadion |
28 - Book 10, Part 1 | 20:25 | Read by Julie VW |
29 - Book 10, Part 2 | 27:22 | Read by Julie VW |
30 - Book 10, Part 3 | 13:40 | Read by Neeru Iyer |
31 - Book 11, Part 1 | 19:57 | Read by Diapadion |
32 - Book 11, Part 2 | 10:31 | Read by Diapadion |
33 - Book 11, Part 3 | 26:30 | Read by David Goldfarb |
34 - Book 12, Part 1 | 13:08 | Read by Michael Wolf |
35 - Book 12, Part 2 | 29:10 | Read by Michael Wolf |
36 - Book 13, Part 1 | 14:26 | Read by Denny Sayers (d. 2015) |
37 - Book 13, Part 2 | 27:02 | Read by Denny Sayers (d. 2015) |
38 - Book 13, Part 3 | 23:41 | Read by DrBeccaAnne |
39 - Book 13, Part 4 | 17:55 | Read by bhagerty |
40 - Book 14, Part 1 | 19:53 | Read by bhagerty |
41 - Book 14, Part 2 | 26:12 | Read by Kevin Were |
42 - Book 14, Part 3 | 18:42 | Read by Christina Vasilevski |
43 - Book 15, Part 1 | 20:39 | Read by Zoe Dickinson |
44 - Book 15, Part 2 | 16:56 | Read by MorganScorpion |
45 - Book 15, Part 3 | 20:06 | Read by David Goldfarb |
Reviews
Only public domain translation available?
librivoxbooks
At LibriVox, we can only record works that are in the Public Domain in the US. Later, and probably better, translations than the Brookes More version have been published since 1922, but these remain in copyright. EDITED 11 May 2014: We would welcome recordings of an alternative translation. We have a 'Book Suggestions' forum, and while it depends on volunteers coming forward, many suggestions are taken up sooner or later. A link in the post to a PD text always helps.
A LibriVox Listener
This was a fantastic reading for the most part. A few chapters were unlistenable and should be re-recorded. Wonderful text.
thanks to the readers for making this book available
simon murdoch
I think this is the best book I have ever come across. I wanted to listen so I could understand European art better, at least to know the stories. But I could never have guessed the quality of the poetry. I think Brookes More deserves huge credit for rendering it into English. The rhetorical style is very assured, but there is nothing showy or forced, just this kind of economical brilliance. Ovid is brilliantly inventive and imaginative. He can for example find a hundred different ways to say someone was beautiful. Even if many of the stories are focused on a pair of lovers each one is unique. Then there is the narrative arc of the whole work from the creation of the land and ocean and heavens out of chaos through to the apotheosis of Caesar. Ovid conjures a magical world where god's, nymphs, animals, humans, streams, rocks, hills, forests, mountains and oceans are all interrelated and mutable. Some say it's not a serious work like the Iliad or Aeneid. But I prefer Ovid's stories to endless battle scenes.
If someone wants to take on a new recording...
Nullifidian
...the Frank Justus Miller prose translation is far superior to this one and is available in the public domain through Archive.org. His translation was made for the Loeb Classics series. Still I think the LibriVox volunteers deserve thanks for taking the time to record any version of Ovid, even in an inferior translation.
PD-US etc
eschiss1
it used to be 1922 or earlier; however as of 2019, I think, it's now 94 years ago (that is, 1923 or earlier for 2019, 1924 for 2020, etc.) There's a reason having to do with ability to/number of renewals possible...
Unknown
Most of the readers did an an amazing job. In a few of the tracks their microphone is not picking up their voice very well. Otherwise great
The poetic translation is best.
Donald R Miller
Overseen by several great poets, the classic poetic translation is probably the one to go with.
Good
Sofia Perez
A classic for everyone who loves greek/roman mythology. Although not all perfect most readers are good