Religious Prose of Seventeenth-century EnglandAnne Ferry Knopf, 1967 - 258页 |
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共有 18 个结果,这是第 1-3 个
第24页
... meaning . What these meanings are we can guess partly by the names themselves , but the detailed interpretation is ... meaning ( 24 ) Introduction.
... meaning . What these meanings are we can guess partly by the names themselves , but the detailed interpretation is ... meaning ( 24 ) Introduction.
第25页
... meaning . No necessary connection with the moral or theological meaning exists in the literal events of the story itself ( we are not intended to think that Christian falls into the mud as a result of feeling sinful nor that because he ...
... meaning . No necessary connection with the moral or theological meaning exists in the literal events of the story itself ( we are not intended to think that Christian falls into the mud as a result of feeling sinful nor that because he ...
第26页
... meaning has some extraordinary effects . One such effect is characteristic of the whole work wherever Bunyan is consistent in following the demands of his allegorical form . It is characteristic that Chris- tian should " wonder " and ...
... meaning has some extraordinary effects . One such effect is characteristic of the whole work wherever Bunyan is consistent in following the demands of his allegorical form . It is characteristic that Chris- tian should " wonder " and ...
常见术语和短语
allegory Angels Apollyon Augustine Baker Barrow beasts Beelzebub behold believe Benjamin Whichcote body Book Bunyan burden called Christ Christian Church conceive conscience Countrey creatures death desire Devil Divinity doctrine Donne Donne's doth Dream Earth Eternity Evangelist evry fair Faith fear Gate Glory hand hast hath heard Heaven heavy Hell holy honour Jeremy Taylor John Bunyan John Donne John Milton Judgment King knew labour Lancelot Andrewes light live look Lord Meditation mercy metaphor mind Miracle misery moral or theological Nature never Originall sinne perswade pieces Pilgrim's Progress reason Religio Medici Religion religious Saviour Scripture Section selfe Sermon seventeenth-century sicknes sins Sir Thomas Browne Soul speak spirit Squinancy stand Sunne tell thee thereof things Thomas Traherne thou thought tion Traherne truth unto vanity Venimus vertue Wherefore wherein Wisdom words World writers