Prometheus is, as it were, the type of the highest perfection of moral and intellectual nature, impelled by the purest and the truest motives to the best and noblest ends. Littell's Living Age - Page 661848Full view - About this book
| Lionel Trilling - 1973 - 868 pages
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| Ulrich Dzwonek - 1974 - 604 pages
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| 1974 - 916 pages
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| 1974 - 598 pages
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| Stephen Rogers - 1974 - 256 pages
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| Stephen Rogers - 1974 - 264 pages
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| M. H. Abrams - 1975 - 494 pages
...other critics have speculated; even to lean on Shelley's description of Prometheus in his Preface as "the type of the highest perfection of moral and intellectual...purest and truest motives to the best and noblest ends"2— each of these falls short of the mark insofar as it assumes that the central subject of the... | |
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