_:b6762752 . _:b6762753 . _:b6762748 "Edmond a\u00FEelstones bro\u00FEer\u00A0\u00B7 after him was king\u00A0\u00B7 / Godmon & doutede\u00A0\u00B7 god \u00FEoru alle \u00FEing\u00A0\u00B7"@en . _:b6762752 "At last, as they more faintly wrestling lay, / Juan contrived to give an awkward blow, / And then his only garment quite gave way; / He fled, like Joseph, leaving it; but there, / I doubt, all likeness ends between the pair."@en . _:b6762747 . _:b6762749 "1579, Immerit\u00F4 [pseudonym; Edmund Spenser], \u201CDecember. \u00C6gloga Duodecima.\u201D, in The Shepheardes Calender:\u00A0[\u2026], London: [\u2026] Hugh Singleton,\u00A0[\u2026], \u2192OCLC; republished as The Shepheardes Calender\u00A0[\u2026], London: [\u2026] Iohn Wolfe for Iohn Harrison the yonger,\u00A0[\u2026], 1586, \u2192OCLC, folio 49, recto:"@en . _:b6762751 "[H]ow many good Christians are there, who consider themselves the beloved of Christ & the invariable followers of his gospel, who with all his precepts in their mind go to Africa, wrest the mother from the infant\u2014the father from the wife\u2014chain them to the whip & lash, they & their posterity for ever, nay hold this scourge in their own hand & inflict it with all the gout of their abominable appetites, & who do not doubt that they are violating the whole doctrine of the author of their religion\u2014To what absurdities may not the human mind bring itself when this can be thought by them less offensive to God, than eating meat on a friday?\u2014"@en . _:b6762750 "Well, all's not well. I doubt some foule play, [...]"@en . _:b6762751 "1798 February 26, William Short, \u201CFrom William Short, 27 February [letter to Thomas Jefferson]\u201D, in Barbara B. Oberg, editor, The Papers of Thomas Jefferson, volume 30 (1 January 1798 to 31 January 1799), Princeton, N.J., Woodstock, Oxfordshire: Princeton University Press, published 2003, \u2192ISBN, page 152:"@en . _:b6762748 "1297, Robert of Gloucester, \u201CEdmond\u201D, in William Aldis Wright, editor, The Metrical Chronicle of Robert of Gloucester.\u00A0[\u2026] (Rerum Britannicarum Medii Aevi Scriptores; no. 86), part I, London: Printed for Her Majesty\u2019s Stationery Office, by Eyre and Spottiswoode,\u00A0[\u2026], published 1887, \u2192OCLC, page 408:"@en . _:b6762753 "1861, George Eliot [pseudonym; Mary Ann Evans], chapter XXI, in Silas Marner: The Weaver of Raveloe, Edinburgh, London: William Blackwood and Sons, \u2192OCLC, part II, page 357:"@en . "5" . _:b6762749 "Whilome in youth, when flowred my ioyfull \u017Fpring, / Like \u017Fwallow \u017Fwift I wandred here and there: / For heat of heedle\u017F\u017Fe lu\u017Ft me \u017Fo did \u017Fting, / That I of doubted daunger had no feare."@en . _:b6762750 "c. 1599\u20131602 (date written), William Shake-speare, The Tragicall Historie of Hamlet, Prince of Denmarke:\u00A0[\u2026] (First Quarto), London: [\u2026] [Valentine Simmes] for N[icholas] L[ing] and Iohn Trundell, published 1603, \u2192OCLC, [Act I, scene ii]:"@en . _:b6762747 "(ambitransitive, obsolete) To dread, to fear."@en . _:b6762748 . _:b6762753 "I shall never know whether they got at the truth o' the robbery, nor whether Mr Paston could ha' given me any light about the drawing o' the lots. It's dark to me, Mrs Winthrop, that is; I doubt it'll be dark to the last."@en . _:b6762749 . . _:b6762750 . _:b6762751 . _:b6762752 "1819 July 14, [Lord Byron], Don Juan, London: [\u2026] Thomas Davison,\u00A0[\u2026], \u2192OCLC, canto I, stanza CLXXXVI, page 96:"@en .