Book, Paragraph

1   I,  63|            can in any wise reach by fancy and conjecture; which none
2  II,  35|           are not all whatever whom fancy supposes to exist, gods,
3  II,  39|        through uncertain bypaths of fancy?
4  II,  45|          this monstrous and impious fancy be put far from us, that
5 III,   6|   frankly-what he thought of such a fancy; and if you would proceed
6 III,  23|       invented by our superstitious fancy, not grasped with assured
7  IV,   7| superstition, and the false gods of fancy? Puta, you say, presides
8   V,   1|          invented by the licentious fancy of the poets? Now if they
9  VI,  12|         connivance, that the wanton fancy of artists has found full
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