Publisher Comments:
Aeneas flees the ashes of Troy to found the city of Rome and change forever the course of the Western world--as literature as well. Virgil's Aeneid is as eternal as Rome itself, a sweeping epic of arms and heroism--the searching portrait of a man caught between love and duty, human feeling and the force of fate--that has influenced writers for over 2,000 years. Filled with drama, passion, and the universal pathos that only a masterpiece can express. The Aeneid is a book for all the time and all people.
Review
"Allen Mandelbaum has produced a living Aeneid, a version that is unmistakably poetry."
-- Erich Segal, The New York Times Book Review
"A brilliant translation; the only one since Dryden which reads like English verse and conveys some of the majesty and pathos of the original."
-- Bernard M. W. Knox
"Mandelbaum has... given us a contemporary experience of the masterpiece, at last."
-- David Ignatow
"Allen Mandelbaum has produced a living Aeneid, a version that is unmistakably poetry."
-- Erich Segal, The New York Times Book Review
"A brilliant translation; the only one since Dryden which reads like English verse and conveys some of the majesty and pathos of the original."
-- Bernard M. W. Knox
"Mandelbaum has... given us a contemporary experience of the masterpiece, at last."
-- David Ignatow
About the Author
Throughout his life Virgil was a poet and as far as we know had no interest in pursuing any other career. He was born Publius Vergilius Maro in 70 BC near Mantua, in what now is northern Italy. His parents, farm owners, were people of property and substance, if not wealth, and were able to obtain for their son a first-rate education. On completing his education, he returned home and possibly began work on the Eclogues, which appeared between the years of 42 and 37 BC. In 41 BC, the Emperor Octavian (later known as Augustus) confiscated Virgil's family's property, and Virgil was obliged to travel to Rome to negotiate for its return. Fortunately for Virgil, one of the officials secured for him an introduction to the emperor; not only was his land returned, but he also met Octavian's confidant Maecenas, who became Virgil's patron for the rest of his life. An industrious, meticulous writer, Virgil was not prolific. In addition to the ten Eclogues, which apparently took at least five years to publish, Virgil wrote the four Georgics, which took seven years, and the Aeneid, his great masterwork. Virgil worked on the Aeneid for eleven years, until his death in 19 BC. Feeling, apparently, that the epic was still unfinished, he directed in his will that the manuscript be destroyed. To the great fortune of succeeding generations, the emperor, Virgil's most prominent friend and admirer, intervened to countermand this provision. He turned the manuscript over to two of Virgil's friends, Varius and Tucca, to edit only obvious errors and repetitions, without adding to the text. The result of their work is the beautiful and brilliant Aeneid we have today.
Allen Mendelbaum's five verse volumes are: Chelmaxions; The Savantasse of Montparnasse; Journeyman; Leaves of Absence; and A Lied of Letterpress. His volumes of verse translation include The Aeneid of Virgil, a University of California Press volume (now available from Bantam) for which he won a National Book Award; the Inferno, Purgatorio, and Paradiso volumes of the California Dante (now available from Bantam); The Odyssey of Homer (now available from Bantam); The Metamorphoses of Ovid, a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in poetry; Ovid in Sicily; Selected Poems of Giuseppe Ungaretti; Selected Writings of Salvatore Quasimodo; and David Maria Turoldo. Mandelbaum is co-editor with Robert Richardson Jr. of Three Centuries of American Poetry (Bantam Books) and, with Yehuda Amichai, of the eight volumes of the JPS Jewish Poetry Series. After receiving his Ph.D. from Columbia, he was in the Society of Fellows at Harvard. While chairman of the Ph.D. program in English at the Graduate Center of CUNY, he was a visiting professor at Washington University in St. Louis, and at the universities of Houston, Denver, Colorado, and Purdue. His honorary degrees are from Notre Dame University, Purdue University, the University of Assino, and the University of Torino. He received the Gold Medal of Honor from the city of Florence in 2000, celebrating the 735th anniversary of Dante's birth, the only translator to be so honored; and in 2003 he received the President of Italy's award for translation. He is now Professor of the History of Literary Criticism at the University of Turin and the W.R. Kenan Professor of Humanities at Wake Forest University.
Book Dimension
Height (mm) 177 Width (mm) 106
几千年前的文字,又经过两次翻译,还能让人津津有点味的读下去,也就不抱怨那么多啦。这书应该小时候看呀,那些翅膀啊,海浪啊,蟒蛇啊,神们散发玫瑰光泽的脖子啊,丰富一下想象力还是不错的。最好是那种带着插图的版本,插图当然要油画风格的。 这本古代故事书里基本有两种...
评分他的长矛——那挪威山上采伐来 可做巨型旗舰樯桅的巨松 比起来就只是一根细枝短棍—— ——金发燊译弥尔顿《失乐园》第一卷,第292-294行(《失乐园》,广西师范大学出版社,上册第15-16页) 有趣的是弥尔顿描写的是被上帝逐出天堂的撒旦,他的长矛“用来支撑蹒跚的步履”,...
评分戴朵已经倒伏在利剑的吻上。 秋天的火焰,只留下诅咒 灰烬和无尽的虚无。 除了她,还有谁会殉情而亡? 不,她们所殉的,不是丘比特的 卑鄙伎俩,并不是爱情,令她们香消 玉殒。 凶手是谁?谁手中握着寒光? 谁隐藏在黑夜之中,等着给亲密的人 致命的一击?谁给了她孤独 冰冷...
评分埃涅阿斯纪,要不是有谷歌输入法的帮助,我还是不能记住这个奇怪的名字。据说这本书讲述的是罗马先祖的历史,我却只记得罗马的开国祖先是关于狼孩什么的。后来读了这部史诗才知道埃涅阿斯比他们还要早很多。西方的史诗,毋宁说史诗(诗经中的某诗)是不怎么好读的,还好翻译的...
评分埃涅阿斯纪,要不是有谷歌输入法的帮助,我还是不能记住这个奇怪的名字。据说这本书讲述的是罗马先祖的历史,我却只记得罗马的开国祖先是关于狼孩什么的。后来读了这部史诗才知道埃涅阿斯比他们还要早很多。西方的史诗,毋宁说史诗(诗经中的某诗)是不怎么好读的,还好翻译的...
为什么会有那么多人打5分...。
评分A bit too trite? Funny at times.
评分夏日之二,与Autrefois购于旧书摊闲置了近一年。读Fitzgerald神品在此之前,故乍见这一字面化和中正平稳的verse版本时不甚得其妙处。择取段落尝试对读三本,才慢慢体会到Mandelbaum的镕裁及章句技艺,继续琢磨。
评分Virgil, meet Homer.
评分Allen Mandelbaum 因此译本获得American National Book Award。
本站所有内容均为互联网搜索引擎提供的公开搜索信息,本站不存储任何数据与内容,任何内容与数据均与本站无关,如有需要请联系相关搜索引擎包括但不限于百度,google,bing,sogou 等
© 2025 book.wenda123.org All Rights Reserved. 图书目录大全 版权所有