Essays and Studies, Volumen25J. Murray, 1972 |
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Página 106
... translation . ' Meanly and imperfectly expressed . ' That is not a recent comment from some literary critic writing about the New English Bible , but a remark ... translation can ever be BIBLICAL TRANSLATION IN THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY Tucker.
... translation . ' Meanly and imperfectly expressed . ' That is not a recent comment from some literary critic writing about the New English Bible , but a remark ... translation can ever be BIBLICAL TRANSLATION IN THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY Tucker.
Página 107
every age , and therefore no translation can ever be made into an English which is ' timeless ' . One translator , John Worsley of Hertford , published a New Testament according to the present idiom of the English Tongue ' . This was in ...
every age , and therefore no translation can ever be made into an English which is ' timeless ' . One translator , John Worsley of Hertford , published a New Testament according to the present idiom of the English Tongue ' . This was in ...
Página 117
... translation of Isaiah is dedicated to George III . It is an attempt to set in a just light the writings of the most ... translation is not only excellent in itself , but has taken possession of our ear , and of our taste ' . Also , he ...
... translation of Isaiah is dedicated to George III . It is an attempt to set in a just light the writings of the most ... translation is not only excellent in itself , but has taken possession of our ear , and of our taste ' . Also , he ...
Contenido
CHAUCER AND THE ELUSION OF CLARITY | 23 |
VI | 45 |
THE PARADOX OF LIBERTY IN SHAKESPEARES | 57 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 2 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Essays and Studies: Being Volume ... of the New Series of Essays and Studies ... English Association Vista de fragmentos - 1952 |
Essays and Studies: Being Volume ... of the New Series of Essays and Studies ... English Association Vista de fragmentos - 1951 |
Términos y frases comunes
action Adrastus allowed appear argument asked authority become better brother brought called century Chaucer clear course court Criseide Criseide's critics cure described effect Elizabethan England English English Studies equal Eteocles examined experience expression fact Faculty final freedom give given hand hero heroine important interest Italy Jacqueline John kind King language later learning least lecture liberty literary live London Masters means medicine Middle mind moral nature never Pandarus Paris passage perhaps person play poet poetry practise present reader reason Review rhetoric romance royal says scene seems sense Shakespeare social society speech stage statement Studies suggests thing thought tion translation treated Troilus true truth Tudor University visual whole witness woman women worthy writing