Dryden: The Poetics of TranslationUniversity of Toronto Press, 1985 - 265 sivua |
Kirjan sisältä
Tulokset 1 - 3 kokonaismäärästä 21
Sivu 22
... involved collections of verse fables , political satires revolving around Charles Montagu's policies , with titles like Aesop at Tun- bridge , Aesop at Bathe , and Aesop at Epsom . The earliest ones referred to English watering places ...
... involved collections of verse fables , political satires revolving around Charles Montagu's policies , with titles like Aesop at Tun- bridge , Aesop at Bathe , and Aesop at Epsom . The earliest ones referred to English watering places ...
Sivu 200
... involved in the action of the show , though she has admitted to an ability to feel passion ( 24-32 ) . The action is so transmuted into pure symbolic event – tournament , storm , reconciliation - that no one could here get involved in ...
... involved in the action of the show , though she has admitted to an ability to feel passion ( 24-32 ) . The action is so transmuted into pure symbolic event – tournament , storm , reconciliation - that no one could here get involved in ...
Sivu 208
... involved style if we were con- sidering the poem as part of the Canterbury Tales , but here it shows an ascent from pure action , rape being the archetypal action mingling sex and violence , to a search which is both physically active ...
... involved style if we were con- sidering the poem as part of the Canterbury Tales , but here it shows an ascent from pure action , rape being the archetypal action mingling sex and violence , to a search which is both physically active ...
Sisältö
Translation and Personal Identity | 26 |
Collective Translations | 51 |
Sylvae and Epicurean Art | 77 |
Tekijänoikeudet | |
6 muita osia ei näytetty
Muita painoksia - Näytä kaikki
Yleiset termit ja lausekkeet
action Aeneas Aeneis Aesop appears attack becomes beginning body Book character Chaucer Christian collection concerned contrast create Critical Cymon death Dido Dryden effect English epic Epicurean experience expressed Fables fact father feeling figure follow force give hero Hind Homer human idea ideal identity imitation important includes interest involved Italy John kind king language least less letter limits lines living Lucretius meaning mind Miscellany moral nature never once original Ovid Ovid's parallels passage play poem poet poetry political possible preface present Press provides reader recalls reference response reveals role satire says seems selections sense song speech story structure style suggests Sylvae theme thought traditional translation treated truth turn University Virgil voice wanted whole write