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China Hongyang Group, is an integrated enterprise with the research & development, production and marketing of Fuel Dispenser and related accessories as well as service station concerning equipments. It concentrates on the relative manufacture & services of filling station such as Hongyang tax control Fuel dispenser, IC Card fuel dispenser, manage system of network for stations, submerge pump and liquid level devise. China Hongyang Group, designed supplier of SinoPec and PetrolChina, our HONGYANG products have been sold to over 50 countries in South-east Asia, Mid-east, Africa, Europe and well received in their markets.
we are committed to create the best workplace, encourage our staffs to put their own personalities into their jobs, and provide them a stage to show themselves.
I.B.Tauris; ÂŁ20
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TWO literary colossi, one English, the other Italian, bestride the map of Europe William Shakespeare and
Dante Alighieri. Chronologically, Dante is the mo fuel dispenser re remote; he died of malaria in 1321 almost 250 years
before Shakespeare was born. Yet Dante s greatest work, a long poem in three parts called “Commedia�
or “The Divine Comedy� lives on as if written the other day, translations into English appearing with
clockwork regularity.
This year s version by Sean O Brien, a poet who grew up in the north of England, is a verse translation of
“Inferno� the first of the three segments into which the epic is divided (the other two are “Purgatory�
and “Paradise�. In 2002 Ciaran Carson, a poet born in Belfast, produced a translation of the same
segment suffused with the violence of his city s political and religious conflict. In the 1990s, Robert
Pinsky, an American poet laureate, wrote a rac fuel dispenser ier and suppler version. And, in the early 19th century,
John Keats, an English poet, was absorbed by a Dante that had been translated into English blank verse
by the Reverend Henry Francis Cary, an exercise that made Dante sound a bit like a playwright in
Shakespeare s time.
So it goes on. Poets and other writers continue to re-cast Dante in their chosen image. Why do we refuse
to let him go?
Here is the story, in brief. A lonely pilgrim—it is Dante himself—strays into a dark wood, and is guided by
the Roman poet Virgil down into Hell to contemplate the harrowing fate of the damned. He is then led up
through Purgatory, and, in the final poem, to Paradise, where he meets a transfigured vision of Beatr fuel dispenser