Book,  Par.

 1    II,    111|        affection for him or by genius. His name was to be celebrated
 2    IV,     49|   contrary, the persecution of genius fosters its influence; foreign
 3    IV,     70|       him a speaker of natural genius. Henceforward as a counsel
 4    IV,     79|  monuments which remain of his genius are not admired as of old.
 5     V,     11|  refined manners and brilliant genius, bore his adverse fortune
 6  XIII,      4|   famous man had an attractive genius which suited the popular
 7  XIII,      4|      boyhood turned his lively genius in other directions; he
 8  XIII,     12|     teaching or to display his genius, published to the world
 9   XIV,     26|      Afer, whom he equalled in genius, rendered the more conspicuous. ~ ~
10   XIV,     28|    would furnish a stimulus to genius, and it could not be a burden
11    XV,     51| historical monuments of men of genius, and, notwithstanding the
12    XV,     52| Severus and Celer, who had the genius and the audacity to attempt
13   XVI,     33|       because he had exhibited genius." ~ ~
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