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  1. A History of Lost Tablets.L. Roman - 2006 - Classical Antiquity 25 (2):351-388.
    This study examines a recurrent scenario in Roman poetry of the first-person genres: the separation of the poet from his writing tablets. Catullus' tablets are stolen ; Propertius' are lost ; Ovid's are consigned to disuse and decay by their disappointed owner. Martial, who does not reproduce the specific narrative of loss, nonetheless engages with the tradition of lost tablets from within the fiction of festive gift-exchange in his Apophoreta : rather than losing or rejecting the tablets, he gives them (...)
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  • Two complementary epigrams of Meleager (A.P. vii 195 and 196).Rory B. Egan - 1988 - Journal of Hellenic Studies 108:24-32.