WORK
Le Ton Beau de Marot
The book takes a tiny sixteenth-century French poem by Clément Marot — 'A une Damoyselle malade' — and presents dozens of English translations Hofstadter solicited and produced himself. Each
translation captures some features of the original and loses others. Each reflects the translator's understanding of what matters most. A translator who prioritized the rhyme scheme sacrificed the tone. One who preserved the tone sacrificed the meter. One who captured both somehow lost the lightness. The translations were not ranked from best to worst. They were different, each a window onto a different reading of what the poem essentially was.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The impossibility of a single perfect translation revealed that the poem itself was not a single fixed thing but a constellation of features in productive tension. Every translation resolved the tension differently. This insight — that translation is an act of creative destruction producing