Resumen
Amores: elegías amatorias is a collection of passionate and witty love elegies by the Roman poet Ovid, originally published around 16 BCE.
Through a series of poems mostly addressed to a fictional lover named Corinna, Ovid explores the pleasures, pains, and paradoxes of romantic desire with playful irony and emotional depth.
Blending personal confession with mythological allusion, the Amores balance sensuality and satire, making them a quintessential example of Latin elegiac poetry.
This early work showcases Ovid's masterful use of language and foreshadows the enduring themes he would later develop in works like The Art of Love and Metamorphoses.