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Translation in Aulus Gellius
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 February 2009
Extract
In the last twenty years, the study of translation has emerged as a discipline in its own right.1 Scholars in various fields have turned their attention to the linguistic, philosophical, and ideological issues involved in the ‘carrying over’ of ideas from one language into another. This new discipline has a natural affinity with Latin philology, since the Romans may be regarded as pioneers in the art of translation in the West. At present, however, we have only begun to study what they really thought about translation and how they went about doing it. In the present paper,31 will re-examine a valuable but under-appreciated witness: Aulus Gellius, author of the Attic NightsSome of Gellius′ brief essays contain translations from Greek, and a few of them were prepared specifically as exercises in the ars interpretandi.By studying them, we learn how the questions associated with translation were addressed by a Roman litterateur of the Antonine period.
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References
1 Cf. Bassnett-McGuire, S., Translation Studies(Revised Edition, London and New York, 1991), xi-xix and 1–11.Google Scholar
2 Cf. Bassnett-McGuire (n. 1), 43, and Wilss, W.Ubersetzungwissenschaft. Probleme und Methoden(Stuttgart, 1977), 29–32.Google Scholar
3 This paper includes material presented at the annual meetings of the American Philological Association (1991) and the Classical Association of the Middle West and South (1995). I owe particular thanks to the referee, Dr. Leofranc Holford-Strevens, for several corrections and suggestions.
4 It is hoped that these observations will supplement the work of Gamberale, L.Traduzione in Gellio(Rome, 1969), and Steinmetz, P. ‘Gellius als Ubersetzer’, in Zum Umgang mit fremden Sprachen in der griechisch-romischen Antike,edd. C. Miiller et al.(Stuttgart, 1992 = Palingenesia36), 201–11. For a general appreciation of Gellius′ life and work, see L. A. Holford-Strevens, Aulus Gellius(London, 1988); see also Beall, S. Civilis Eruditio: Style and Content in theAttic Nights of Aulus Gellius(Diss. California, Berkeley, 1988).Google Scholar
5 ‘Videsne... crebrum et coruscum et convexum brevibusque et rotundis numeris cum quadam aequabili circumactione devinctum?’ I use (with slight adjustments in punctuation) P. Marshall′s corrected OCT text (1990); I have often adapted the translation of J. C. Rolfe (Loeb, rev. edn 1946).
6 The anecdote may be partly or wholly fictitious. The lemma of a lost chapter (8.8) mentions difficulties encountered while translating ‘quosdam locos platonicos’ into Latin; the version presented in 17.20 might actually have formed part of this more comprehensive exercise. Holford-Strevens, however, argues that Gellius would not have created ex nihiloa situation in which he was made to look a fool. See his Aldus Gellius,49, and ‘Fact and Fiction in Aulus Gellius’, LCM7.5 (May 1982), 66–7.Google Scholar
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12 ‘Et manifesta est exercitationis huiusce ratio. Nam et rerum copia Graeci auctores abundant et plurimum artis in eloquentiam intulerunt et hos transferentibus verbis uti optimis licet: omnibus enim utimur nostris. Figuras vero, quibus maxime ornatur oratio, multas ac varias excogitandi etiam necessitas quaedam est, quia plerumque a Graecis Romana dissentiunt’ (Inst.10.5.3).
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16 Sententiaeand purple passages: Plato (17.20, cf. 8.8), Aeschines (18.3). Letters: Philip to Aristotle (9.3, discussed below), Alexander to Aristotle and back again (20.5). Stories: Arion and the dolphin, from Herodotus (16.19, discussed below); Androclus and the Lion, from Apion (5.14); the death of Alexander′s horse, from Chares (5.2). Gellius also summarized and partially translated speeches of Favorinus (12.1,14.1) and Musonius (5.1). For a more exhaustive list and commentary on Gellius′ translations, see Gamberale (n. 4), 71–172.
17 For a summary of extant and lost translations, see Richter (n. 7). It is worth noting that a much-discussed text, Cicero′s Timaeus,may not have been intended for publication as a translation at all. See J. G. F. Powell ‘Cicero′s Translations from Greek’, in Cicero the Philosopher: Twelve Papers,ed. J. G. F. Powell (Oxford, 1995), 280–1.
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24 It is impossible as well as misleading to construct a ‘Roman theory’ of translation on the basis of simple formulae such as Cicero′s ‘nee tamen exprimi verbum e verbo necesse erit′ (Defin.3.15), even if the idea is echoed by Horace Ars poetica133–4. and Gellius himself (9.9.1). Cf. Powell (n. 17), 278.
25 So Steinmetz (n. 4), 210: ‘ihre Bandbreite (i.e., that of Gellius′ versions) reicht, ohne daC dies besonders vermerkt wird, von einer wortlichen Wiedergabe iiber gewisse Nuancierungen der wortlichen Wiedergabe bis zu einer recht freien Nachgestaltung der Vorlage’. Cf. Gamberale (n. 4), 66–7.
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38 I am inclined to accept Gamberale′s suggestion n. 4, 158–9. that was not in Gellius′ own text of Plato.Google Scholar
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40 Cf. Schmidt, J.H.H.Handbuch der lateinischen und griechischen Synonomik(repr. Amsterdam, 1968), 301, 305.Google Scholar
41 Ficino has ‘Actionis cuiuslibet haec est conditio...’. Gaza, standing somewhat closer to Plato′s line, has ‘omnis enim actio sic sese habet...’. Actioin this sense is frequent in Cicero and Seneca; see TLL1.439.Google Scholar
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46 Pace Gamberale (n. 4), 146. Another instance of the ‘felicitous’ juxtaposition of archaic Latin and Greek is 4.5.5–7. where the proverb ‘malum consilium consultori pessimum est’ is traced to Hesiod, WD166.Google Scholar
47 Cf. Hache (n. 34), 14.Google Scholar
48 Hache (n. 34), 40–1. cf. Gamberale (n. 4), 159.Google Scholar
49 Hache (n. 34), 15. 50 Cf. Albrecht (n. 34), 5–7.Google Scholar
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