Time to Begin Anew: Dryden's Georgics and AeneisTime to Begin Anew places Dryden's translations of Virgil's Georgics and Aeneis firmly in the context of late seventeenth-century literary and political dilemmas and transitions. Arguing that these translations are important documents in a watershed period of English literature, this study demonstrates that they are not hackwork or party pieces. This book also demonstrates both the continuities with and departures from Dryden's own early works, particularly his Virgilian poems, showing both the wholeness of his literary career and its diversity. |
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Page 33
... call'd by other Names . . . . For Mankind is ever the same , and nothing lost out of Nature , though every thing is ... calls his " logos theory of translation . " As she argues , for Dryden all " poetry involves translating ideas from ...
... call'd by other Names . . . . For Mankind is ever the same , and nothing lost out of Nature , though every thing is ... calls his " logos theory of translation . " As she argues , for Dryden all " poetry involves translating ideas from ...
Page 160
... calls the " notoriously discontinuous quality of Gulliver's character , " but in the next section , when the hero visits the Arcadian king Evander to request reinforcements , it could just as easily be him as Swift's hero that McKeon is ...
... calls the " notoriously discontinuous quality of Gulliver's character , " but in the next section , when the hero visits the Arcadian king Evander to request reinforcements , it could just as easily be him as Swift's hero that McKeon is ...
Page 186
... calls [ what happens in the cave ] a marriage , and by that name covers the sin " ( " Conjugium vocat , hoc prætexit nomine culpam " [ 172 ] ) , is tinged with social considerations in Dryden's version , where Dido " call'd it Marriage ...
... calls [ what happens in the cave ] a marriage , and by that name covers the sin " ( " Conjugium vocat , hoc prætexit nomine culpam " [ 172 ] ) , is tinged with social considerations in Dryden's version , where Dido " call'd it Marriage ...
Contents
Acknowledgments | 9 |
On Equal Terms with Ancient Wit Engaging | 27 |
Studying Natures Laws | 55 |
Copyright | |
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Absalom and Achitophel Aeneas Aeneas's Aeneis VII Albion and Albanius Amphitryon Annus Mirabilis Apollo argues Augustus Augustus Caesar Britannia Rediviva Caesar California editors Cleomenes concern contemporary contrast couplet dedication den's Dido Dido's divine Dryden seems Dryden's Dryden's Georgics Dryden's Vergil echo eighteenth century emphasis England English epic Fables Faerie Queene faith Fame Fate Father Glorious Revolution glory Gods Heav'n hero heroic highlighted Hind Hind's human interpolated Jacobite James John Dryden Jove king land language Latin laws lines literary London Love McKeon Milbourne mind mock-heroic monarch nature notes novel Ovid Panther passage Peace perhaps poem poet poet's poetic poetry political Pow'r present Prince rage recalls reinforced Roman sacred satire scene seventeenth-century Shepheardes Calender Sloman speech Spenser stresses Stuart Throne tion toils tradition trans translation Trojans Troy Venus Vergil's Vergil's text Vergilian verse Weinbrot William III William III's woes word Zwicker