1.给<达芬奇密码>里的10句英文和翻译
1、A voice spoke, chillingly close. "Do not move."翻译:一个声音,从不远处阴森森地传来:“不许动!”这是英文原版第2页,序言中的一句话,是白化病人塞拉斯追赶卢浮宫馆长索尼埃时说的一句话。
2、I must pass on the secret.我必须把这个秘密传下去。这是在塞拉斯枪击了馆长并离开后,馆长心里最迫切的念头。
3、Symbologists often remarked that France—a country renowned for machismo, womanizing, and diminutive insecure leaders like Napoleon and Pepin the Short.符号学家常说,法国是一个因那些有男子汉气概、沉溺于女色的、像拿破仑和矮子丕平那样危险的小个子领袖而出名的国家。这是主角兰登被载到卢浮宫“协助调查”的路上的一小段旁白。
当时兰登正在看着车窗外的埃菲尔铁塔。4、Jacques Saunière was considered the premiere goddess iconographer on earth.雅克·索尼埃被认为是全球有关女性崇拜图像符号学的第一专家。
这句话出现在书中20页第一行,作者简单说明了死者索尼埃生前在他的学术领域中享有的地位。5、"Silas has located the keystone," the caller said. "It is in Paris. Within the Church of Saint-Sulpice."“塞拉斯已经知道拱顶石在什么地方了。”
打电话的人说。“在巴黎。
在圣叙尔皮斯教堂里。”这段话在书上26页,神秘的导师给飞机上的阿洛加林沙打去了电话,告诉他计划的进展。
6、In his final moments of life, the curator had stripped off his clothing and arranged his body in a clear image of Leonardo da Vinci's Vitruvian Man.在生命的最后一刻,馆长脱光了衣服,明白无误地用自己的身体摆成了达·芬奇《维特鲁威人》的样子。书上38页,作者用旁白的方式向读者们叙述了此刻兰登心中的想法。
7、SO DARK THE CON OF MAN.男人的欺骗是多么黑暗。这是索菲在蒙娜丽莎脸上发现的她祖父索尼埃留下的信息。
8、Adorned in masters' loving art, She lies.她躺在大师们令人钟爱的杰作的怀抱里。书中377页,兰登从心中发出的对卢浮宫的感叹。
9、The quest for the Holy Grail is the quest to kneel before the bones of Mary Magdalene. A journey to pray at the feet of the outcast one.圣杯在上,剑刃在下。剑刃和圣杯一道看护着她的门外。
最后一页383页,全书近尾处,对真正圣杯的描述。10、For a moment, he thought he heard a woman's voice。
the wisdom of the ages。 whispering up from the chasms of the earth.好一会儿,兰登感觉他听到了一个女人的声音……在那些世纪里存留的智慧,从大地的裂口中,悄声响起。
全书的结尾句。这句也是自己译的。
多有不妥,楼主见笑呵呵~~。
2.电影达芬奇密码中结尾有四句特经典的英文台词
原文(英语):
The Holy Grail 'neath ancient Roslin waits.
The blade and chalice guarding o'er Her gates.
Adorned in masters' loving art, She lies.
She rests at last beneath the starry skies.
中文:
圣杯在古老的罗斯林教堂下面等待。
剑刃和圣杯一道看护着她的门外。
她躺在大师们令人钟爱的杰作的怀抱里,
在繁星闪烁的天底下终于得到了安息
3.求一篇《达芬奇密码》的英文读书笔记
Try Putting This Book Down "Like the Arabian brotherhood of hashishim, the legendary Knights Templar waited for the Desired Knight to rescue the world from tyranny and establish the benevolent rule of the Grail."— Barbara G. Walker, The Women's Enclopedia of Myths and Secrets Whenever I read a 454 page book in one sitting, it's probably a safe bet for me to think that other people will like the book. Not that my criteria for excellence necessarily matches that of the literary masses -- but the words "breakout thriller" certainly apply here. Dan Brown's The Da Vinci Code is going to make publishing history. Trust me. There are already tables at the local Barnes & Nobles featuring books about the Freemasons, biographies of Leonardo Da Vinci, guidebooks to the Louvre and Renaissance art, all centered around Brown's book. And the book has been out less than two weeks. It's good, damn good. The Da Vinci Code has all the right ingredients to create a massive market share of the fiction sold during the next year. The characters are believable, the fictional premise intriguing, and it has two major components to insure sales -- the Knights Templar and the search for the Holy Grail. The book received the kind of "push" from Doubleday usually reserved for the likes of John Grisham and Daniel Steele. They're extremely pleased by the advance copy sales and overwhelming support of retailers for the book. Brown, who quietly moved from Pocket to his new publishing house Doubleday when senior editor Jason Kaufman, (publisher of Brown's two previous books) moved to there in 2001. Brown received a small advance, a boon to Doubleday who can now spend money on a literary show of force, pushing the book with sales incentives and an extensive advertising campaign. According to publishing pundits, many houses held back their spring releases because of the February 2nd laydown of John Grisham's latest King of Torts. Brown's book received a slam dunk response from advance copies to reviewers and booksellers sent out months ahead of publication (Doubleday gave out 5,000 advance reader copies at regional shows and in the field last year). Doubleday reps devoted themselves to making sure the book received prominent display space, something not usually reserved for breakout books. The house will even launch a website where readers can attempt to "break the code". Brown has also committed to a six-city promotion tour, but as the response for this book will probably multiply exponentially, I suspect he'll be going to more than six. When publishing houses throw books at us, often we, as reviewers are disappointed. The writing lacks substance; the plot fails to hold our interest; or perhaps the characters aren't fully developed. Then, after writing a review of the book, an honest take on what we consider an inferior book, we see the book on the New York Times Best Seller List. We can't help but wonder about the effect of massive advertising campaigns upon sales by the reading public. Take heart, reviewers and readers, The Da Vinci Code will be on the list and it belongs there. You all deserve a quick plot summary. Know that there can't be one here -- the book is a thriller and details will destroy it for you. I just had to delete the next 250 or more words I'd written, because I realized it would destroy the suspense in the book. I'd defined the Holy Grail in terms of Celtic, Moor (pick your pagan) traditions. Then I wrote about the myths surrounding the Knights Templar, the persecution of Jews, the relationship between Jesus and his love, Mary Magdalene, and more. What I can tell you without ruining the book, is that Brown's book takes myth and reality and combines it in just the right way. He appears to be right on target with his many of his conclusions, and while the book is "fiction", one can't help but believe much of it. Brown doesn't insist you believe him, in fact, he's almost apologetic about how strange and unusual his conclusions may sound. In a subtle way, he warns the reader that everyone is allowed their own belief system and whatever gives someone spiritual comfort should be respected. But Using Will and Ariel Durant's The History of Civilization, Francis and Joseph Gies' Women in the Middle Ages, and Barbara Walker's The Women's Encyclopedia of Myths and Secrets to confirm Brown's facts, I learned that when he puts two and two together, it's amazing what he comes up with. This book will have what is probably an unintentional effect. The Da Vinci Code counteracts the WalMart best sellers by Tim LaHaye. Brown presents an intellectual and fact-。
4.求英文的简短的《达芬奇密码》的英文故事介绍
Plot summary This book concerns the attempts of Robert Langdon, Professor of Religious Symbology at Harvard University, to solve the murder of renowned curator Jacques Saunière (see Bérenger Saunière) of the Louvre Museum in Paris. The title of the novel refers, among other things, to the fact that Saunière's body is found in the Denon Wing of the Louvre naked and posed like Leonardo da Vinci's famous drawing, the Vitruvian Man, with a cryptic message written beside his body and a Pentagram drawn on his stomach in his own blood. The interpretation of hidden messages inside Leonardo's famous works, (which relate to the concept of the Sacred feminine) including the Mona Lisa and The Last Supper, figure prominently in the solution to the mystery. Vitruvian Man, by Leonardo da Vinci.The main conflict in the novel revolves around the solution to two mysteries: What secret was Saunière protecting that led to his murder? Who is the mastermind behind his murder and the murder of the three other sénéchaux (keepers of the secrets of the grail)? The novel has several concurrent storylines that follow different characters throughout different parts of the book (DVC chapter summaries). Eventually all the storylines and characters are brought together and resolved in its denouement. The unraveling of the mystery requires the solution to a series of brain-teasers, including anagrams and number puzzles. The solution itself is found to be intimately connected with the possible location of the Holy Grail and to a mysterious society called the Priory of Sion, as well as to the Knights Templar. The story also involves the Catholic organization Opus Dei. The novel is the second book of a trilogy by Brown in which Robert Langdon is the main character. The previous book, Angels and Demons, took place in Rome and concerned the Illuminati. Although Angels and Demons is centered on the same character it is not necessary to read the book in order to understand the plot of The Da Vinci Code. The next book is tentatively scheduled for release in 2007. Its working title is The Solomon Key, and it is understood to concern Freemasonry.。
5.gripping
ThegrippingprequeltoTheDa ,aHarvardprofessor,RobertLangdon,issummonedtoidentifythemysteriousoftheIlluminati,asecretbrotherhoodpresumedextinctfornearlyfourhundredyears,nowreborntocontinuetheirbittervendettaagainsttheirswornenemy,theCatholicchurch。
InRome,thecollegeofcardinalsassemblestoelectanewpope。YetsomewherewithinthewallsoftheVatican,anunstoppablebombofterifyingpowerrelentlesslycountsdowntooblivion。
Whitetheminutestickaway。 LangdonjoinsforceswithVittoriaVetra,abeautifulandmysteriousLtalianscientist,todecipherthelabyrinthinetrailofancientsymbolsthatsnakesacrossRometothelong-forgttenIlluminatilairasecretrefugewhereinliestheonlyhopefortheVatican。