Ovid's sympathy in transformation Ovid reveals two similar incest stories in metamorphosis. Initially, he explained about love other than the sister Byblis received for her twin brother, Caunus. Later, he remembered the theme of incestuous love in the story of Myrrh, and Myrrha developed a non-intimate love to her father, Cinyras. There are many similarities between these two explanations, causing different reactions. Ovid always pulls our emotions and creates another kind of compassion and disgust in the head.
Ovid is best known for Metamorphoses. By creating a transformation in Okimid's epic, Okimid's epic, Ovid invited him to compare with his oldest Roman poet Virgil who deliberately wrote Eneid's Epic. Regarding morphology, rhythm and size, the transformation record is entirely in the epic category. However, with regard to content, metamorphosis has little in common with epics like Aeneid, Aeneid is characterized by a single story and a hero. Indeed, Ovid clearly expresses the magnificent type of pleasure. "Makeover" is similar to the work by Hesiod and Alexandrin poets, and I agree with a series of independent stories on the theme theme. There are 250 stories in metamorphosis, they are related only to the common theme of transformation.
Conversion from one shape and shape to another is the central theme of Ovid's transformation. The popularity and eternity of this work come from how to tell the story. Orbit tells stories about his culture and times and incorporates them into works that go through changing themes. A humorous theme through metamorphosis is consistent with the sarcasm of the work and commentary. This theme will be presented at the beginning of transformation. There, the poet summons God who is responsible for change and appreciates his creative efforts. There are various variations from people to animals, from animals to people, from things to people, from people to things. Some changes are the opposite: human versus humans. Sometimes the transformation is partial, and the physical characteristics and personal qualities of the initial existence are preserved in the form of mutation.
Reading Ovid's "metamorphosis" means that you suddenly returned to the beginning of the time - or at least to the beginning of our common imagination. The story Ovid told is a story which has been handed down for centuries and its simplicity is as bad as Orviet's mythical character. Although only the Bible and the Arabian Knight will emerge in my head, Shake Spear 's plays may qualify, but this only restores us. For Ovid, this is one of his greatest influences. Oh, he seems to have identified all the desires, and since then we have learned his insights.