Product Description This edition of three Ovidian tales translated and partly rewritten in the 1560s (Thomas Peend's 'The Pleasant fable of Hermaphroditus and Salmacis', Thomas Underdowne's 'The Excellent Historye of Theseus and Ariadne' and William Hubbard's 'The Tragicall' and lamentable Histoire of two faithfull mates: Ceyx Kynge of Thracine and Alcione his wife) calls attention to the possible literary influence of such minor texts on later poets and playwrights like Marlowe and Shakespeare. Indeed, as narrative poems they deal with the popular themes of metamorphosis and desire. Even though they may well have been used as sources for such works as 'Hero and Leander', 'Venus and Adonis' or 'A Midsummer Night's Dream', they have never been re-edited since the XVIth century. This volume may thus allow Renaissance scholars to rediscover the 'embarrassment of riches' of poems which provide us with new details, developments and perspectives about the original myths, thereby refashioning Ovid's stories in a typical Renaissance manner. About the Author Sophie Alatorre is Lecturer in English Literature at the University of Provence, France. She is specialized in Elizabethan studies and her forthcoming publications include a monograph on Renaissance mazes (Champion, 2010). She is currently working on Shakespeare's classical mythology as well as early modern translation.
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