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EN
In case of Tibullus, we deal with the metric‑semantic dominant: the poet combines an elegiac couplet with erotic and rustic issues. Anna Świderkówka and Jan Sękowski – his post‑war translators – in their interpretations preserve the relevance of formal aspects of the poems, concordantly transforming the original meter into the verse of thirteen syllables. However, simultaneously they propose new semantic “attributes”. While Świderkówna in her translation mainly exposes so‑called antique realities, thereby enriching the modern reader’s knowledge on antiquity, Sękowski creates mawkish, almost drowsy atmosphere, giving the audience completely erroneous vision of the original content.
EN
In case of Tibullus, we deal with the metric‑semantic dominant: the poet combines an elegiac couplet with erotic and rustic issues. Anna Świderkówka and Jan Sękowski – his post‑war translators – in their interpretations preserve the relevance of formal aspects of the poems, concordantly transforming the original meter into the verse of thirteen syllables. However, simultaneously they propose new semantic “attributes”. While Świderkówna in her translation mainly exposes so‑called antique realities, thereby enriching the modern reader’s knowledge on antiquity, Sękowski creates mawkish, almost drowsy atmosphere, giving the audience completely erroneous vision of the original content.
|
2011
|
tom 21
|
nr 1
49-57
EN
By dint of efficient compilation of genres, Tibullus changes his elegy I 1 into a syncretic form, vivid combination of comedy, hymns, bucolic elements and others. The poet raises many themes, like love to a girl or affection to the country. His elegy is no less erudite than the poetry of Propertius
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