
Love in Another Language
Description
Alles über E-Books | Antworten auf Fragen rund um E-Books, Kopierschutz und Dateiformate finden Sie in unserem Info- & Hilfebereich.
In Love in Another Language Dick Davis is shown to be the outstanding formal poet of his generation, a master of rhyme and metre, a poet worthy of keeping company with the best lyric writers in our tradition. His Collected Poems draws on eight previous publications and includes a section of new work. Davis has also established himself as 'the leading translator of Persian literature in our time' (Washington Post) and this volume includes a selection of his celebrated translations.
Davis's original poems evoke the experiences of travel and of living in a culture in which one is a stranger, where empathy is at once difficult and necessary. His translations can be read as a record of his attempts at such empathy, in poetic terms, across centuries and cultures.
Reviews / Votes
'It is marvelous to find a poet whose poetry lives through its metre. His handling of it is masterful, and you are never aware of the effort. And the language is exact but relentless, like the perceptions ... Davis is one of the best poets around.'Thom Gunn '...throughout Love in Another Language, a strange perfusion of elements is at work, at once familiar and exotic; there are bizarre depths, weird echoes, beneath the seemingly traditional and seemingly quite "English surfaces of the poems... Dick Davis's collected poems of over forty-three years constitute what the great Persian poet Nizami called a "makhzan-i-asrar", a treasure-house of mysteries and perfected marvels.'
Eric Ormsby, the TLS 'Original poetry and translated Persian verse weave together into a single life, translation as border and as invitation.'
A.E. Stallings, The TLS
More details
Other editions
Additional editions

Person
Dick Davis has also contributed an appreciation of Matthew Mead's poetry to The Autumn-Born in Autumn.
Content
- Intro
- Title Page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Prefatory Note
- IN THE DISTANCE (1975)
- The Diver
- The Shore
- Touring a Past
- A Mycenaean Brooch
- Scavenging After a Battle
- Among Ruins
- Byzantine Coin
- The Expulsion from Eden
- Diana and Actaeon
- The Virgin Mary
- St George and the Villagers
- Childhood
- Youth of Telemachus
- Families
- Reason in his Kingdom
- Old Man Seated Before a Landscape
- Service
- Desire
- Love in Another Language
- Don Giovanni at the Opera
- Irony and Love
- The Epic Scholar
- North-West Passage
- Jesus on the Water
- Ikon Angel
- The Socratic Traveller
- Anchorite
- The Novice
- Narcissus' Grove
- Living in the World
- Littoral
- Reading After Opium
- Buyer's Market
- Names
- SEEING THE WORLD (1980)
- Travelling
- Desert Stop at Noon
- Night on the Long-Distance Coach
- The City of Orange Trees
- Syncretic and Sectarian
- Memories of Cochin
- Me, You
- Marriage as a Problem of Universals
- Don Giovanni
- 'Vague, vagrant lives .'
- Government in Exile
- Metaphor
- Climbing
- Dawn
- Zuleikha Speaks
- Simeon
- St Christopher
- Winter
- Withernsea
- A Recording of Giuseppe de Luca (1903)
- False Light
- Opening the Pyramid
- Wittgenstein in Galway
- An Entry
- Philosopher and Metaphysics
- Two Epigrams on Victory
- Love
- To Exorcize Regret
- A Perfect Ending
- Desire
- Phaedra and Hippolytus
- Rembrandt's Return of the Prodigal Son
- Rembrandt Dying
- Leonardo
- On a Painting by Guardi
- Epitaph
- Maximilian Kolbe
- THE COVENANT (1984)
- Fräulein X
- In the Gallery
- Portrait Painter
- What the Mind Wants
- The Jigsaw
- Annunciation
- Four Visitations
- Baucis and Philemon
- Semele
- Jacob I
- Jacob II
- St Eustace
- Getting There
- 'Uxor vivamus .'
- To His Wife
- Travelling
- A Short History of Chess
- Off-Shore Current
- A Letter to Omar
- Exiles
- Woman on a Beach
- Two East Anglian Poems
- With John Constable
- Edward FitzGerald
- The Tribe of Ben
- A Photograph: Tehran, 1920s
- Richard Davis
- On an Etching by J. S. Cotman
- Childhood of a Spy
- Near Coltishall
- The Ransom
- Mariam Darbandi
- Reading
- My Daughter Sleeping
- Auction - Job Lot
- A Christmas Poem
- Abandoned Churchyards
- Hearing a Balkan Dance in England
- Translating Hafez
- Exile
- LARES (1986)
- Acedia
- 6 a.m. Thoughts
- 'And who is good? .'
- Undine
- Middle East 1950s
- Ibn Battuta
- The Departure of the Myths
- Evening
- Household Gods
- DEVICES AND DESIRES (1989)
- Jealousy
- Wisdom
- With Johnson's Lives of the Poets
- Janet Lewis, Reading Her Poems
- To the Muse
- Magic
- Making a Meal of It
- The Sentimental Misanthrope
- Made in Heaven
- Heresy
- Afkham
- A KIND OF LOVE (1991)
- Lady with a Theorbo
- Qatran
- Socrates' Daimon
- Fatherhood
- 'Outside the snow.'
- Three Versions of the Maker
- Discipline
- Learning a Language
- Arghavan
- Mohsen: A Gardener in California
- On the Iranian Diaspora
- TOUCHWOOD (1996)
- To 'Eshqi
- A Monorhyme for Miscegenation
- Given Back, After Illness
- After the Angels
- Still
- Your Children Growing
- Comfort
- Into Care
- Pragmatic Therapy
- Touchwood
- Anthony 1946-1966
- A Photograph of Two Brothers
- The Suicide
- Aftershocks
- May
- Going Home
- A Sasanian Palace
- Flight
- Gold
- Mirak
- Names
- We Should Be So Lucky
- Masters
- Tenured in the Humanities
- New Reader
- Art History
- Epitaph
- Couples
- Old Couple
- Middle Age
- Repentance
- Desire
- A Tease
- A Qasideh for Edgar Bowers on his Seventieth Birthday
- In Praise of Auden
- Suzanne Doyle's Poems
- A Translator's Nightmare
- Late
- Fireflies
- BELONGING (2002)
- Shadows
- A Monorhyme for the Shower
- Haydn and Hokusai
- Night Thoughts
- Iran Twenty Years Ago
- To the Persian Poets
- Political Asylum
- In History
- Góngora
- A Petrarchan Sonnet
- Casanova
- Dido
- In the Restaurant
- Duchy and Shinks
- West South West
- Teresia Sherley
- What
- 'A world dies .'
- 'Sweet Pleasure .'
- Hibernation
- No Going Back
- Secrets
- Out of Time
- Aubade
- A Se Stesso
- 'Live happily'
- Guides for the Soul
- Games
- Victorian
- A Mind-Body Problem
- Just a Small One, as You Insist
- Desire
- Farewell to the Mentors
- A Bit of Paternity
- Kipling's Kim, Thirty Years On
- New at It
- Déjà Lu
- Growing Up
- Old
- Small Talk
- At the Reception
- Checking Out While Checking In
- The Business Man's Special
- Et in Arcadia Ego
- Overheard in Khajuraho
- Just So
- A TRICK OF SUNLIGHT (2006)
- 'The heart has its abandoned mines .'
- Chèvrefeuille
- Getting Away
- Water
- Happiness
- Hérédia
- The Man from Provins
- Before Sleep
- The Old Model's Advice to the New Model
- Edgar
- Listening
- What I Think
- The Scholar as a Naughty Boy
- Anglais Mort à Santa Barbara
- The Sceptic
- Driving
- 'Do you remember those few hours we spent'
- Flying Back
- Three Emilys
- Turgeniev and Friends
- UNDER 6 a Bottle" name="title-252" /&
- 'They are not long, the days of wine and roses .'
- Shopping
- Chagrin
- Pasts
- A Visit to Grandmother's
- Can We?
- Cythère
- Young Scholar
- Farsighted
- On a Remark of Karl Kraus
- 'I lay down in the darkness of my soul'
- Preferences
- Small Talk
- Not-Waking
- Imitatio
- 'Live all you can
- it's a mistake not to'
- Magic
- Soteriological
- 'Interpretation is the revenge of the intellect upon art'
- Author, Translator .
- Damnation à la Mode
- Finding
- There
- Acculturation
- Spleen
- The Phoenix
- Dis's Defence
- William McGonagall Welcomes the Initiative for a Greater Role for Faith-Based Education
- William Morris
- Driving Westward
- Are We Going the Same Way?
- Emblems
- A Mystery Novel
- NEW POEMS
- A Storm in the Mid-West
- The Lighthouse
- A Personal Sonnet
- To Take Courage in Childhood
- Brahms
- A Winter's Tale
- The Missing Tale
- Translating a Medieval Poem
- Wil Mills (1969-2011)
- Walking the Dog
- The Fall
- For my mother-in-law, during her last illness
- A Dream
- New Development
- Darwinian
- The Maple Tree
- The Introduction
- Wine
- Admonition for the Seventh Decade
- Campanilismo
- Later
- Keeping a Diary
- Euro-trash
- Paying for It
- The Saving Grace
- Going, going .
- Reconnoitring
- Leaving the Fair
- To Vis
- A Student Reading Vis and Ramin
- Translating Hafez, or Trying To
- WWHD?
- Words
- SELECTED TRANSLATIONS
- Note on the Translations
- From Farid ud-din Attar's The Conference of the Birds
- The Valley of Poverty and Nothingness
- The Moths and the Flame
- From Borrowed Ware: Medieval Persian Epigrams
- From Ferdowsi's Shahnameh: the Persian Book of Kings
- From Fakhraddin Gorgani's Vis and Ramin
- From Faces of Love: Hafez and the Poets of Shiraz
- Poems by Hafez
- Poems by Jahan Khatun
- NOTES ON THE POEMS
- INDEX OF TITLES
- About the Author
- By Dick Davis
- Copyright
System requirements
File format: ePUB
Copy protection: Watermark-DRM (Digital Rights Management)
System requirements:
- Computer (Windows; MacOS X; Linux): Use a reading software that can process the file format ePUB: e.g., Adobe Digital Editions or FBReader – both free (see eBook Help).
- Tablet/Smartphone (Android; iOS): Before downloading, install the free app Adobe Digital Editions (see eBook Help).
- E-reader: Bookeen, Kobo, Pocketbook, Sony, Tolino and many more (not Kindle).
The file format ePUB works well for novels and non-fiction books – i.e., „flowing” text without complex layout. On an e-reader or smartphone, line and page breaks automatically adjust to fit the small displays.
This eBook uses Watermark-DRM, a „soft” copy protection. This means that there are no technical restrictions to prevent illegal distribution. However, there is a personalised watermark embedded in the eBook that can be used to identify the purchaser of the eBook in the event of misuse and to provide evidence for legal purposes.
For more information, see our eBook Help page.