Scherf onder aarden scherven : Jesaja 45: 9-10

Scherf onder aarden scherven : Jesaja 45: 9-10. N. Matsier.
In: Een verbeelde God. Red. J. Goud. Zoetermeer : Meinema, 2001, p. 37-43
ISBN 90-211-3846-8

Eerder verschenen als onderdeel van twee lezingencycli, in Trouw van 23 mei 1998, al dan niet in verkorte vorm.

FitzGerald’s Rubáiyát: ‘a Thing must live’

FitzGerald’s Rubáiyát: ‘a Thing must live’. Matthew Reynolds.
In: Reynolds (Ed.) 2011 – The poetry of translation. Oxford, Oxford University Press.

Summary

In Pope, contrasting metaphors collaborated as guides to his translation; in Pound, an explicit metaphor of translation is, in practice, haunted by its opposite. FitzGerald associated various metaphors with his Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyam: friendship with Omar, preservation of the ‘Oriental Idiom’ and: ‘at all Cost, a Thing must live.. Better a live Sparrow than a stuffed Eagle’. This last is the most inward with his practice as it is nourished by reflections in the original Persian as to how life might continue into different creatures, or even somehow persist in inanimate matter. Yet such ‘life’ is radically ambiguous: the Rubáiyát is a questioning text in which the categories that usually discipline translation dissolve—as do my own categories of metaphorical explanation.