Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] generation 2 generations 5 geneva 2 genius 22 geniuses 5 gens 1 genteel 1 | Frequency [« »] 22 can 22 case 22 est 22 genius 22 greatest 22 human 22 nothing | François-Marie Arouet de Voltaire Letters on the English or Lettres Philosophiques IntraText - Concordances genius |
Letter
1 IV | lady conspicuous for her genius and knowledge, and to whom 2 XI | Montague, a woman of as fine a genius, and endued with as great 3 XII | received from heaven a mighty genius, and in having employed 4 XIII | judicious or more methodical genius, or was a more acute logician 5 XIII | being attended by a familiar genius must infallibly be either 6 XIV | sagacity and penetration of his genius, in searching for new proofs 7 XIV | geometrical and inventive genius to dioptrics, which, when 8 XIV | was perhaps as great a genius as he who afterwards conducted 9 XVII | some marks of that creative genius with which Sir Isaac Newton 10 XVIII| boasted a strong fruitful genius. He was natural and sublime, 11 XVIII| Charles II.-a writer whose genius was too exuberant, and not 12 XVIII| is lifted up, raises the genius at the same time very far 13 XVIII| moderns. Hitherto he poetical genius of the English resembles 14 XXI | describe in him the man of genius, the great poet. Among other 15 XXI | letter being to display the genius of the English poets, and 16 XXI | with an easy and frivolous genius, was the first who shone 17 XXII | highly derogatory to his genius. The former has interspersed 18 XXII | history. Possibly the English genius, which is either languid 19 XXII | been a man of little or no genius, and some Jansenists affirm 20 XXIV | of his fellow members. A genius like that of Sir Isaac belonged 21 XXIV | that if an author of some genius in this age had the misfortune 22 XXIV | gentleman eminent for his genius, his fine sense and just