Dryden: The Poetics of TranslationUniversity of Toronto Press, 1985 - 265 sivua |
Kirjan sisältä
Tulokset 1 - 3 kokonaismäärästä 26
Sivu 68
... speaker's logic is extraordinarily devious . If the husband takes his cue from the lover and leaves his wife unguarded , hoping thus to get rid of him , he will in effect be aiding the lover to see his wife . Ovid's speaker is neither ...
... speaker's logic is extraordinarily devious . If the husband takes his cue from the lover and leaves his wife unguarded , hoping thus to get rid of him , he will in effect be aiding the lover to see his wife . Ovid's speaker is neither ...
Sivu 100
... speaker , undermine magnificent images from nature . Dryden shifts key in astonishing ways , not wholly authorized by his origin- al . Even his images present nature as an antagonist to human life , for nature is so violent , or at ...
... speaker , undermine magnificent images from nature . Dryden shifts key in astonishing ways , not wholly authorized by his origin- al . Even his images present nature as an antagonist to human life , for nature is so violent , or at ...
Sivu 105
... speaker ; in his Chaucer and Boccaccio translations Dryden has several speakers whose ideas are better than their personal characters . The assumption that speech is always a prod- uct of a speaker's character does not always work in ...
... speaker ; in his Chaucer and Boccaccio translations Dryden has several speakers whose ideas are better than their personal characters . The assumption that speech is always a prod- uct of a speaker's character does not always work in ...
Sisältö
Translation and Personal Identity | 26 |
Collective Translations | 51 |
Sylvae and Epicurean Art | 77 |
Tekijänoikeudet | |
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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