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[personal profile] muckefuck
I had to revist that cache of translated children's books that made my day last week. Here's an excerpt from one that I somehow overlooked before. Who can be the first to tell me the title, author, and original language? (Whoever you are, be sure to mention what bit it was that tipped you off.)
Briollaic a bhí ann; bhí na tóibhí sleo
ag gírleáil 's ag gimleáil ar an taof.
B'an-chuama go deo na borragóibh
is bhí na rádái miseacha ag braíomh.

Fainic an Gheabairleog, a mhic!
na gialla géara, greim na gcrúb!
Fainic an Gumailéan is teith
ó Bhandarsnap na bhfriúch!

Thóg sé bórpalchlaíomh 'na ghlac
is lorg i bhfad an manann-namhaid.
Faoin gcniogaidchrann a dhein sé reast
is mhachnaigh seal san áit.

Is é 'na sheasamh faoi ufmhidheamhain,
bhuifleáil an Gheabairleog an treo,
trín tulach-choill--ba lasta a súil--
is i ag plobaireacht insa ród.

'Aon 'do, 'aon 'do, trí fheith, trí fheoil
do ghearr a bhórpalchlaíomh slis! sleais!
Thit an beithíoch marbh; do thóg sé a cheann,
is go frábhógach rith sé ar ais.

Ar mharaigh tú mar sin an Gheabairleog?
Gabh i leith chúm anall a mhic mo bhéibh!
Nach fraoibiúil an lá! Hurú! Hurá!
a dúirt sé le scliogar a scléip.

Briollaic a bhí ann; bhí na tóibhí sleo
ag gírleáil 's ag gimleáil ar an taof.
B'an-chuama go deo na borragóibh
is bhí na rádái miseacha ag braíomh.
Date: 2006-06-19 07:03 pm (UTC)

From: [identity profile] kcatalyst.livejournal.com
Yay! Jabberwocky! It was "gimleáil" that did it, then "Briollaic" and "borragóibh" backed it up.
Date: 2006-06-19 07:05 pm (UTC)

From: [identity profile] snowy-owlet.livejournal.com
Go me! I guessed the same thing.
Date: 2006-06-19 07:06 pm (UTC)

From: [identity profile] niemandsrose.livejournal.com
Oi, me too. It was saying the first word out loud that did it.
Date: 2006-06-19 07:50 pm (UTC)

From: [identity profile] bunj.livejournal.com
For me it was the structure, and the prominent placement of the word "Gheabairleog" at the appropriate places.

So how does the translation compare with the German?
Date: 2006-06-19 08:17 pm (UTC)

From: [identity profile] muckefuck.livejournal.com
Not surprisingly, it follows the English less. Recall the first paragraph of the German:
Es brillig war. Die schlichte Toven
Wirrten und wimmelten in Waben;
Und aller-mümsige Burggoven
Die mohmen Räth' ausgraben.
No one could miss the connexion between mome raths and mohmen Räthe, but neither bears much resemblance to rádái miseacha. Sleo for slithy and an-chuam for mimsy are also pretty cryptic. I assume these are portmanteaux of Irish words in the same way as the originals are of English words, but my vocabulary isn't broad enough to confirm that.

It's also interesting to note that it doesn't scan the same as the other two or have end-rhyme. A lot of Irish verse--like Old English poetry--is light on the rhyme and heavy on the assonance, so I wonder if they aren't following a more complex scheme of vowel/consonant alternations. If so, it's not leaping out at me.
Date: 2006-06-19 08:25 pm (UTC)

From: [identity profile] princeofcairo.livejournal.com
For me it was "borragóibh."
Date: 2006-06-19 08:51 pm (UTC)

From: [identity profile] lhn.livejournal.com
I'm slow-- I twigged at "Bhandarsnap".
Date: 2006-06-19 09:01 pm (UTC)

From: [identity profile] muckefuck.livejournal.com
That was such a dead giveaway, I almost took it out rather than just hiding it behind a cut.
Date: 2006-06-20 06:43 am (UTC)

Jabberwocky

ext_78: A picture of a plush animal. It looks a bit like a cross between a duck and a platypus. (Default)
From: [identity profile] pne.livejournal.com
Without looking at comments or anything beyond the first two lines: Lewis Carroll, Jabberwocky.

(I had to google for the title, though -- I recognised the poem but didn't remember its title. "Twas brillig slithy toves" as a search string found it quickly, though.)

FWIW, the very first word made me suspect which poem it was; the presence of "ag gírleáil 's ag gimleáil " in the second confirmed it.

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