Busca entre varios profesores de Inglés...
XiaoDeng
one alone jeopardizes itself
Fate succumbs many a species: one alone jeopardizes itself. --idea H. Auden
What does it mean?
Someone says it should be,
Many a species succumbs Fate: one alone jeopardizes itself.
but I'm still very confused.
What's your understanding?
Any idea is welcome.
8 de ago. de 2019 15:18
Respuestas · 6
2
The quote is honestly awkward to me as well, but WH Auden was a poet and you have to let go of traditional grammatical structure to read poetry in English.
As for your correction, you are perhaps missing "to": " Many a species succumbs to fate..."
To read it as two clauses of one idea:
"Fate succumbs many a species": many species go extinct.
"One alone jeopardizes itself": if someone is alone they're in danger.
The idea seems similar to a quote from Tecumseh (a famous American Indian in the United States): "A single twig breaks, but the bundle of twigs is strong."
But that's my take. Please don't try to learn English from quotes by poets.
8 de agosto de 2019
1
I'm not sure if you were asking about the meaning of "one alone jeopardizes itself", and as far as I can see, the other answer didn't answer that correctly.
I think it means "Only one species puts itself in danger". It is referring to man, and I think it is referring to the way that we are destroying our planet and risking extinction.
9 de agosto de 2019
¿No has encontrado las respuestas?
¡Escribe tus preguntas y deja que los hablantes nativos te ayuden!
XiaoDeng
Competencias lingüísticas
Chino (otro), Inglés
Idioma de aprendizaje
Inglés
Artículos que podrían gustarte

English Vocabulary for Using Microsoft Office at Work
25 votos positivos · 3 Comentarios

How to Answer “How Was Your Weekend?” Naturally in English
55 votos positivos · 29 Comentarios

Why Some Jokes Don’t Translate: Understanding Humor in English
15 votos positivos · 6 Comentarios
Más artículos
