Letters Concerning Poetical Translations: And Virgil's and Milton's Arts of Verse, &c

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CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, 15 серп. 2017 р. - 42 стор.
William Benson's letters of his interpretation to different kinds of classical arts, poetry and literature. He gives great advises on how to correctly translate a Poet, "Whoever sits down to translate a Poet, ought in the first place to consider his Author's peculiar Stile; for without this, tho' the Translation may be very good in all other respects, it will hardly deserve the Name of a Translation".

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Про автора (2017)

William Benson (1682 - 2 February 1754) was a talented amateur architect and an ambitious and self-serving Whig place-holder in the government of George I. In 1718, Benson arranged to displace the aged Sir Christopher Wren as Surveyor of the King's Works, a project in which he had the assistance of John Aislabie, according to Nicholas Hawksmoor, who was deprived of his double post to provide places for Benson's brother.

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