The Bucknell Review, 第 16 卷Bucknell University Press, 1968 |
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第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 83 筆
第 109 頁
... suggest that our ignorance is often , as in the case of approaching evil , our greatest bliss ; lines 91-98 offer blind hope as a consolation for our lack of knowledge ; line 123 defines our greatest error as false pride in our actually ...
... suggest that our ignorance is often , as in the case of approaching evil , our greatest bliss ; lines 91-98 offer blind hope as a consolation for our lack of knowledge ; line 123 defines our greatest error as false pride in our actually ...
第 111 頁
... suggest that other parts of the Essay on Man are also written to contest Paradise Lost : God's chain in Epistle I certainly needs little help from human moral choice ; the psychology of Epistle II at least plays with the notion that ...
... suggest that other parts of the Essay on Man are also written to contest Paradise Lost : God's chain in Epistle I certainly needs little help from human moral choice ; the psychology of Epistle II at least plays with the notion that ...
第 109 頁
... suggest that our ignorance is often , as in the case of approaching evil , our greatest bliss ; lines 91-98 offer blind hope as a consolation for our lack of knowledge ; line 123 defines our greatest error as false pride in our actually ...
... suggest that our ignorance is often , as in the case of approaching evil , our greatest bliss ; lines 91-98 offer blind hope as a consolation for our lack of knowledge ; line 123 defines our greatest error as false pride in our actually ...
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