"1" . _:vb7977097 "1910, Friedrich Nietzsche, Thomas Common, transl., with poetry rendered by Paul V. Cohn and Maude D[ominica Mary] Petre, \u201CBook First\u201D, in Oscar Levy, editor, The Joyful Wisdom (\u201CLa Gaya Scienza\u201D) (The Complete Works of Friedrich Nietzsche: The First Complete and Authorised English Translation; 10), Edinburgh, London: T. N. Foulis, 13 & 15 Frederick Street, Edinburgh, \u2192OCLC, section 13, page 49:"@en . _:vb7977095 "1746 July, \u201CAn Account of the Trials, &c. of the Rebels\u201D, in The Scots Magazine. Containing, a General View of the Religion, Politicks, Entertainment, &c. in Great Britain: And a Succinct Account of Publick Affairs Foreign and Domestick, volume VIII, Edinburgh: Printed by W. Sands, A. Murray, and J. Cochran, \u2192OCLC, page 323, column 2:"@en . . _:vb7977098 "2017 August 20, \u201CThe Observer view on the attacks in Spain: We must now give into fatalism on terror [editorial]\u201D, in The Observer\u200E[1], London, archived from the original on 16 September 2017:"@en . . . _:vb7977092 . _:vb7977095 "[H]e [the witness Thomas Chadwick] deposed, That he had known [William] Bretah upwards of two years; [\u2026] that he had per\u017Fuaded the witne\u017Fs to join the rebels before he had any inclination to do it; that provi\u017Fions being \u017Fcarce at Carli\u017Fle, Bretah would have some \u017Fau\u017Fages from the witne\u017Fs, which he not caring to part with, they thereupon fought; but that the witne\u017Fs never promi\u017Fed to do him ill, and would not \u017Fwear away any man's life for a \u017Fau\u017Fage."@en . _:vb7977096 "1850, Edw[ard] Harold Browne, \u201CArticle XIII. Of Works before Justification.\u201D, in An Exposition of the Thirty-nine Articles, Historical and Doctrinal. Being the Substance of a Course of Lectures Delivered to Candidates for Orders at St. David\u2019s College, Lampeter, volume I, London: John W[illiam] Parker, West Strand, \u2192OCLC, section I (History), page 438:"@en . _:vb7977094 "1596, Edmund Spenser, \u201CBook V, Canto VIII\u201D, in The Faerie Queene.\u00A0[\u2026], part II (books IV\u2013VI), London: [\u2026] [Richard Field] for William Ponsonby, \u2192OCLC, stanza XXII, page 287:"@en . _:vb7977096 "So he who does unbelievingly, whatever he does, does ill; and he who does ill, sins. The good works which an unbeliever does are the works of Him who turns evil to good."@en . _:vb7977098 "Many jihadist plots have been foiled and the security apparatus is getting better, overall, at pre-empting those who would do us ill. But, they say, the nature of the threat and the terrorists\u2019 increasing use of low-tech, asymmetrical tactics such as hire vehicles and knives, make it all but impossible to stop every assault."@en . _:vb7977093 "But if ye would know, what grace they meene, go, and looke, and learne emonges them, and ye \u017Fhall \u017Fee that it is: First, to blu\u017Fh at nothing, And blu\u017Fhing in youth, \u017Fayth Ari\u017Ftotle is nothyng els, but feare to do ill: which feare beyng once lu\u017Ftely fraid away from youth, th\u1EBD foloweth, to dare do any mi\u017Fchief, to c\u00F5temne \u017Ftoutly any goodne\u017F\u017Fe, to be bu\u017Fie in euery matter, to be \u017Fkilfull in euery thyng, to acknowledge no ignorance at all."@en . _:vb7977097 "We exercise our power over others by doing them good or by doing them ill\u2014that is all we care for! Doing ill to those on whom we have to make our power felt; for pain is a far more sensitive means for that purpose than pleasure:\u2014 [\u2026]"@en . _:vb7977092 "(idiomatic) To harm, to injure."@en . _:vb7977093 . _:vb7977094 . _:vb7977095 . _:vb7977096 . _:vb7977094 "Me like a dog \u017Fhe out of dores did thru\u017Ft, / Mi\u017Fcalling me by many a bitter name, / That neuer did her ill, ne once de\u017Ferued blame."@en . _:vb7977093 "1570, Roger Ascham, \u201CThe First Booke for the Youth\u201D, in The Scholemaster: Or Plaine and Perfite Way of Teachying Children, to Vnderstand, Write, and Speake, the Latin Tong, [...], London: Printed by Iohn Daye, dwelling ouer Aldersgate, \u2192OCLC, folio 14, verso:"@en . _:vb7977097 . _:vb7977098 .