Page:In Spite of Epilepsy, Woods, 1913.djvu/27

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JULIUS CÆSAR
21

selected as illustrious examples, and who in spite of epilepsy have achieved universal prominence in the great things of life, the things worth while, we need not hesitate to bring to notice by name, because there is no possibility, except in one instance, of compromising their descendants. We allude to Julius Cæsar, Mohammed, and Lord Byron,—the founders, respectively, of an Empire, a Religion, and a School of Poetry.