A note on Ovid, Metamorphoses 11.48

Classical Quarterly 45 (02):578- (1995)
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Abstract

These lines come from the passage describing the mourning of the natural world following the death of Orpheus. A. D. Melville translates as follows: [‘ … ] and naiads wore, and Dryads too, their mourning robes of black And hair dishevelled.’

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