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'''Pyramus and Thisbe''' fabulam duos amores est eodem nominibus, quae prohibentur iungere. [[Ovidius]] fabulum scripsit in [[8 BCa.C.n.]].
 
==Insidiae==
 
[[Pyramus]] et [[Thisba|Thisbe]] amores Oriente sunt. Cupunt maritare, sed parentes suaeorum hoc non tolerant hoc. Tamen,
 
 
[[Categoria:Litterae]]
Pyramus and Thisbe is the story of two lovers by the same name, who are forbidden to marry. Ovid wrote the story in 8 BC.
 
[[ca:Píram]]
Plot:
[[de:Pyramus und Thisbe]]
 
[[el:Θίσβη (μυθολογία)]]
Pyramus and Thisbe are lovers in the Orient who wish to get married. Unfortunately, their parents forbid this. This does not stop them from arranging to meet each other. Thisbe arrives first, and spots a lioness trying to quench her thirst. She flees, and leaves behind her veil. Pyramus sees the veil when he arrives, and is sad. He kills himself with a sword, thrusting it into his groin. Thisbe returns, and sees that Pyramus is dead. She mourns, and then kills herself with his sword, still warm from his slaughter. Since they both died under a mulberry tree, their blood turned the white mulberries purple.
[[en:Pyramus and Thisbe]]
 
[[es:Píramo y Tisbe]]
Latin:
[[fr:Pyrame et Thisbé]]
 
[[it:Piramo]]
 
[[nl:Pyramus en Thisbe]]
Adaptations-mutandi
[[pl:Pyram i Tysbe]]
 
[[ru:Пирам и Фисба]]
Chaucer told the story in English with The Legend of Good Women.
[[sv:Pyramus]]
 
[[uk:Тісба]]
Shakespeare used Pyramus and Thisbe as inspiration for Romeo and Juliet
 
Allusions:
 
Thisbe is a reference to Tishbe, a town stated in the Bible