打字猴:1.705041252e+09
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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1705041270 inalienable, incapable of being estranged or taken away from them.
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1705041272 Prussian militarists, referring to the Prussian military leaders who controlled the destiny of the German nation previous to the Great World War which broke out in 1914.
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1705041274 the Kaiser, William II (1859-1941), king of Prussia and Kaiser of Germany from 1888 to 1918 when, at the close of Great World War, he was forced to abdicate. Later he lived in retirement in Holland. The German word Kaiser and the Russian word Czar come from the Latin word Cæsar , originating with the imperialistic designs of Julius Cæsar.
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1705041276 Questions
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1705041278 1. What is the author’s purpose in the first nineteen lines?
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1705041280 2. What is the author’s “highly explanatory idea”? What does it explain?
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1705041282 3. What are the mistakes of a tactless person?
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1705041284 4. What is the meaning of “There are half a dozen Dromios under one hat”?
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1705041286 5. What is it that makes it embarrassing to offer service to another?
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1705041288 6. Why do we practice on work that does not strictly belong to us?
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1705041290 7. How does the desire to be somebody else explain many of the aberrations of artists and writers?
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1705041292 8. What is the origin of the desire to be somebody else?
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1705041294 9. Explain how the choice of a profession and specialized education makes the possibilities for self-realization less and less.
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1705041296 10. What becomes of the other selves? Is it desirable that they should exist? How may they be provided for?
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1705041298 参考译文
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1705041300 【作品简介】
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