Jan Priddy’s Reviews > The Song of Roland > Status Update
Like flag
Jan’s Previous Updates

Jan Priddy
is on page 131 of 206
I was warned about the body count—details of slaughter, celebration by the victor!
— Mar 25, 2023 05:17PM

Jan Priddy
is on page 108 of 206
Cross comparisons were going along fine and then abruptly at "stanza" 110, my two translations diverge. argh! —Burgess seems to have broken a stanza in two and now his stanza numbers no longer match, though the lines #s do.
B: Who did not expect to die. AOI
[end of 8-line stanza 110; stanza 109 is also 8 lines]
S: Who ne'er had thought such death should be their dole. AOI
[end of 16-line stanza 109]
— Mar 24, 2023 06:19PM
B: Who did not expect to die. AOI
[end of 8-line stanza 110; stanza 109 is also 8 lines]
S: Who ne'er had thought such death should be their dole. AOI
[end of 16-line stanza 109]

Jan Priddy
is on page 102 of 206
I am working between two translations, reading all of Sayers's and some of the other. Sayers has honored both lines and sound, managing music, form, and meaning—an astonishing accomplishment.
— Mar 24, 2023 02:47PM

Jan Priddy
is on page 58 of 206
I am working my way through two translations side by side. Sayers's from 1957 and the later translation by Glyn Burgess (1990). Both are Penguin and each translates line by line. So far, I prefer the former; the latter is ordinary modern prose cut into lines—no attempt to capture the rhythm or sound (or wording) of the original archaic French.
— Mar 23, 2023 02:17PM

Jan Priddy
is on page 51 of 206
Ha! I joked about it being a lie before I began reading, and wouldn't you know the first thing Sayers does in her lengthy (and excellent) intro is clarify the known history and its [near total] lack of connection to The Song of Roland. Most characters, the death of Roland and his companions and army—historical, but motive, roles, & antagonists have shifted around—not history but epic of another age.
— Mar 23, 2023 12:49PM

Jan Priddy
is starting
This is Dorothy Sayers's translation, which is the reason I will read it. It is war and battles (and mostly lies), but poetry too. I will try.
— Mar 22, 2023 08:05PM