You have in your hands, benevolent reader, a set of twenty-one mythical love cards, divided into two collections of fifteen simple cards and six double cards. Its author was Publius Ovidio Nasón, who lived sixty years (43 BC-17 AD), almost all of them under the reign of Augustus. He was a poet who had heard the poetic recitals of universal poets such as Virgil, Horace, Cornelius Gallus, Tibullus and Propertius, whom he venerated as gods. I am not going to dwell on philological analyzes for specialists, but rather on showing you what Ovid intended with the letters of his legendary figures. I am going to introduce you, following my own reading, to Ovid's Heroides as they have come down to us.