打字猴:1.70504122e+09
1705041220 take a spiritual elevator, probe into what he thinks; find out what his mind is dwelling on.
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1705041222 He does business on the ground floor. He is there at his occupation all the time so that it is very easy to locate him and to label him.
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1705041224 The old prophet, Joel, in the Old Testament of the Bible, the Book of Joel, Chapter II, verse 28:
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1705041226 “And it shall come to pass afterward, that I will pour out my spirit upon all flesh; and your sons and your daughters shall prophesy, your old men shall dream dreams, your young men shall see visions.” The same words were uttered by Peter in the Book of Acts, Chapter II, verse 17, of the New Testament.
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1705041228 “all there,” completely there. Is he paying his whole attention to what you are saying; is the whole of him there besides you?
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1705041230 “priest’s hole,” a secret place of worship, necessary in times of religious persecution.
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1705041232 lost Atlantis, a mythical island in the west, beyond the Pillars of Hercules (Gibraltar, at the western entrance into the Mediterranean Sea), mentioned by Plato, Pliny, and other ancient writers, and said to have been sunk beneath the ocean by an earthquake. Lord Bacon has written a “New Atlantis” in which a British vessel is carried by contrary winds to the lost Atlantis.
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1705041234 Utopia, the ideal state proposed by Thomas More (1478-1535), in a book entitled “Utopia.” The word Utopia has been applied to all the pictures of ideal states created by social philosophers and visionaries.
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1705041236 Dogberry, the stupid constable in Shakespeare’s “Much Ado About Nothing.”
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1705041238 Messina, in northeast Sicily, Italy, where the action of this Shakespearean play takes place.
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1705041240 Julius Cæsar, the great Roman general, statesman, and writer (100-44 B.C.).
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1705041242 laurel crown, worn by only those Greek and Romans who have won distinction, and worn as a sign of distinction.
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1705041244 he had had losses in his hair; in other words, Cæsar was partially bald-headed, and he tried to arrange his laurel crown so that it concealed the bald spot on his head.
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1705041246 the sons of Jacob . Consult the Bible, the Book of Genesis, Chapters XLII-XLVI for the whole of this story.
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1705041248 audacities, qualities of being daring, adventurous, bold.
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1705041250 adolescence, youth, or the period between puberty and maturity.
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1705041252 as Saint Paul asked of the Galatians, see the Bible, the Book of Galatians, Chapter V, verse 7.
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1705041254 Walt Whitman (1819-1892), American poet. In 1855 the first edition of his “Leaves of Grass” appeared, which met with very little critical approval because of its frankness and its unconventional verse form. But his influence on later generations of poets was incalculable, not only by releasing poetry from accepted traditions, but by immensely expanding the thematic material.
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1705041256 Spontaneous Me, the individual acting without external stimulus but wholly from an inner impulse or energy.
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1705041258 spontaneous switchman on the railway, switchmen on railways must obey orders as to which switch to open and when, otherwise trains will be sent crashing one into another. A spontaneous switchman, one who opens switches as and when he pleases without regard to orders from those above him who know better, would be a menace to the traveling public.
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1705041260 temperamental, nervous; characterized by a strongly marked physical or mental character, especially artistic or nervous; liable to peculiar moods.
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1705041262 playgrounds, used figuratively here to mean opportunities for indulging our other selves, just as playgrounds are provided for children to play in and expend their excess energy.
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1705041264 confines, limits; boundaries; demands.
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1705041266 Sabbath, in the Jewish calendar, the seventh day of the week, observed by Jews and Christians as a day of rest and worship. The Christians call the Sabbath Sunday.
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1705041268 The Declaration of Independence, the American Declaration of Independence, when the Americans, on July 4, 1776, declared themselves to be free and independent of Greet Britain.
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