_:b6458138 "Every body was surprised; and Darcy, after looking at her for a moment, turned silently away. Mrs. Bennet, who fancied she had gained a complete victory over him, continued her triumph."@en . _:b17655827 "So likevvi\u017Fe in that book of his [Julius Caesar's] Anticato, it may ea\u017Fily appeare that he did a\u017Fpire as vvell to victorie of vvit, as victory of vvarre: [\u2026]"@en . _:b6458129 "1605, Francis Bacon, \u201CThe First Booke\u201D, in The Twoo Bookes of Francis Bacon. Of the Proficience and Aduancement of Learning, Diuine and Humane, London: [\u2026] [Thomas Purfoot and Thomas Creede] for Henrie Tomes,\u00A0[\u2026], \u2192OCLC, folio 39, verso:"@en . . _:b17655809 "\"Farewell,\" he said, \"the only hope, which could have lighted me to fame or victory!\""@en . _:b6458132 "[S]uffering for Truths \u017Fake / Is fortitude to highe\u017Ft victorie, [\u2026]"@en . _:b17655812 "1719, [Daniel Defoe], The Farther Adventures of Robinson Crusoe;\u00A0[\u2026], London: [\u2026] W[illiam] Taylor\u00A0[\u2026], \u2192OCLC, page 353:"@en . _:b17655794 "Fortune and victorie \u017Fet on thy helme."@en . _:b17655799 "1921, The Pottery & Glass Salesman, volume 24, New York, N.Y.: O\u2019Gorman Pub. Co., \u2192OCLC, page 75:"@en . _:b17655816 "Whereupon there was a very \u017Fore battell: but Judas [Maccabeus] \u017Fide by the helpe of God got the victory, [\u2026]"@en . _:b17655817 "1665 September 24 (date written; Gregorian calendar), Samuel Pepys, Mynors Bright, transcriber, \u201CSeptember :Template:SAFESUBST:, 1665\u201D, in Henry B[enjamin] Wheatley, editor, The Diary of Samuel Pepys\u00A0[\u2026], volume V, London: George Bell & Sons\u00A0[\u2026]; Cambridge: Deighton Bell & Co., published 1895, \u2192OCLC, pages 76\u201377:"@en . _:b17655826 "c. 1593 (date written), [William Shakespeare], The Tragedy of King Richard the Third.\u00A0[\u2026] (First Quarto), London: [\u2026] Valentine Sims [and Peter Short] for Andrew Wise,\u00A0[\u2026], published 1597, \u2192OCLC, [Act V, scene v]:"@en . _:b17655787 "[S]uffering for Truths \u017Fake / Is fortitude to highe\u017Ft victorie, [\u2026]"@en . _:b17655774 . _:b17655831 "Ob\u017Ferve if he di\u017Fdains to yield the Prize; / Of Lo\u017Fs impatient, proud of Victories."@en . _:b17655802 "A hope, still indeed faint and indefinite, of victory and revenge, animated the party which had lately seemed to be extinct."@en . _:b17655834 "[S]uffering for Truths \u017Fake / Is fortitude to highe\u017Ft victorie, [\u2026]"@en . . _:b17655792 "1605, Francis Bacon, \u201CThe First Booke\u201D, in The Twoo Bookes of Francis Bacon. Of the Proficience and Aduancement of Learning, Diuine and Humane, London: [\u2026] [Thomas Purfoot and Thomas Creede] for Henrie Tomes,\u00A0[\u2026], \u2192OCLC, folio 39, verso:"@en . _:b17655786 "He had never dreamt, hovvever, of any event \u017Fo deci\u017Five and \u017Fo fatal as the victory at Pavia, vvhich \u017Feemed not only to have broken, but to have annihilated the povver of one of the rivals; [\u2026]"@en . _:b6458132 "1667, John Milton, \u201CBook X\u201D, in Paradise Lost.\u00A0[\u2026], London: [\u2026] [Samuel Simmons],\u00A0[\u2026], \u2192OCLC; republished as Paradise Lost in Ten Books:\u00A0[\u2026], London: Basil Montagu Pickering\u00A0[\u2026], 1873, \u2192OCLC, lines 1460\u20131461:"@en . _:b6458141 "Already there are certain signs that politicians within the Republican party are suffering from the intoxication of too much victory."@en . _:b17655833 "1769, William Robertson, \u201CBook IV\u201D, in The History of the Reign of the Emperor Charles V.\u00A0[\u2026], volume II, London: [\u2026] W. and W. Strahan, for W[illiam] Strahan, T[homas] Cadell,\u00A0[\u2026]; and J. Balfour,\u00A0[\u2026], \u2192OCLC, page 232:"@en . _:b6458130 "1611, The Holy Bible,\u00A0[\u2026] (King James Version), London: [\u2026] Robert Barker,\u00A0[\u2026], \u2192OCLC, 2 Maccabees 12:11, column 1:"@en . _:b17655812 "[\u2026] I thought he vvas not a Monarch only, but a great Conqueror; for that he that has got a Victory over his ovvn exorbitant De\u017Fires, and has the ab\u017Folute Dominion over him\u017Felf, vvhose Rea\u017Fon entirely governs his VVill, is certainly greater than he that conquers a City."@en . _:b6458126 "VVhy \u017Fo: then am I \u017Fure of Victorie. Novv therefore let vs hence, and lo\u017Fe no hovvre, / Till vvee meet VVarvvicke, vvith his forreine povvre."@en . _:b6458133 "1697, Virgil, \u201CThe Third Book of the Georgics\u201D, in John Dryden, transl., The Works of Virgil: Containing His Pastorals, Georgics, and \u00C6neis.\u00A0[\u2026], London: [\u2026] Jacob Tonson,\u00A0[\u2026], \u2192OCLC, page 101, lines 163\u2013164:"@en . _:b17655799 "Already there are certain signs that politicians within the Republican party are suffering from the intoxication of too much victory."@en . _:b17655806 "A hope, still indeed faint and indefinite, of victory and revenge, animated the party which had lately seemed to be extinct."@en . _:b17655800 "1813 January 26, [Jane Austen], chapter IX, in Pride and Prejudice:\u00A0[\u2026], volume I, London: [\u2026] [George Sidney] for T[homas] Egerton,\u00A0[\u2026], \u2192OCLC, page 94:"@en . _:b17655785 "[\u2026] I thought he vvas not a Monarch only, but a great Conqueror; for that he that has got a Victory over his ovvn exorbitant De\u017Fires, and has the ab\u017Folute Dominion over him\u017Felf, vvhose Rea\u017Fon entirely governs his VVill, is certainly greater than he that conquers a City."@en . _:b6458125 "Hieronimo, it greatly plea\u017Feth vs, / That in our victorie thou haue a \u017Fhare, / By vertue of thy vvorthy Sonnes exployt."@en . _:b17655801 "2011 November 12, Phil McNulty, \u201CInternational Friendly: England 1\u00A0\u2013 0 Spain\u201D, in BBC Sport\u200E[1], archived from the original on 2022-08-13:"@en . _:b6458126 "c. 1591\u20131592 (date written), William Shakespeare, \u201CThe Third Part of Henry the Sixt,\u00A0[\u2026]\u201D, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies\u00A0[\u2026] (First Folio), London: [\u2026] Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, \u2192OCLC, [Act IV, scene i], page 164, column 1:"@en . _:b17655785 "1719, [Daniel Defoe], The Farther Adventures of Robinson Crusoe;\u00A0[\u2026], London: [\u2026] W[illiam] Taylor\u00A0[\u2026], \u2192OCLC, page 353:"@en . _:b17655797 "\"Farewell,\" he said, \"the only hope, which could have lighted me to fame or victory!\""@en . _:b17655807 "1921, The Pottery & Glass Salesman, volume 24, New York, N.Y.: O\u2019Gorman Pub. Co., \u2192OCLC, page 75:"@en . _:b17655798 "[I]t vvas his [Totila's] con\u017Ftant theme, that national vice and ruin are in\u017Feparably connected; that victory is the fruit of moral as vvell as military virtue; and that the prince, and even the people, are re\u017Fpon\u017Fible for the crimes vvhich they neglect to puni\u017Fh."@en . _:b17655810 "[I]t vvas his [Totila's] con\u017Ftant theme, that national vice and ruin are in\u017Feparably connected; that victory is the fruit of moral as vvell as military virtue; and that the prince, and even the people, are re\u017Fpon\u017Fible for the crimes vvhich they neglect to puni\u017Fh."@en . _:b17655789 "1611, The Holy Bible,\u00A0[\u2026] (King James Version), London: [\u2026] Robert Barker,\u00A0[\u2026], \u2192OCLC, 2 Maccabees 12:11, column 1:"@en . _:b6458135 "1769, William Robertson, \u201CBook IV\u201D, in The History of the Reign of the Emperor Charles V.\u00A0[\u2026], volume II, London: [\u2026] W. and W. Strahan, for W[illiam] Strahan, T[homas] Cadell,\u00A0[\u2026]; and J. Balfour,\u00A0[\u2026], \u2192OCLC, page 232:"@en . _:b17655808 "1813 January 26, [Jane Austen], chapter IX, in Pride and Prejudice:\u00A0[\u2026], volume I, London: [\u2026] [George Sidney] for T[homas] Egerton,\u00A0[\u2026], \u2192OCLC, page 94:"@en . _:b6458125 "c. 1587 (date written), [Thomas Kyd], The Spanish Tragedie:\u00A0[\u2026] (Fourth Quarto), London: [\u2026] W[illiam] W[hite] for T[homas] Pauier,\u00A0[\u2026], published 1602, \u2192OCLC, Act I:"@en . _:b17655796 "(uncountable) The condition or state of having won a battle or competition, or having succeeded in an effort; (countable) an instance of this."@en . _:b17655805 "2011 November 12, Phil McNulty, \u201CInternational Friendly: England 1\u00A0\u2013 0 Spain\u201D, in BBC Sport\u200E[1], archived from the original on 2022-08-13:"@en . _:b17655793 "VVhy \u017Fo: then am I \u017Fure of Victorie. Novv therefore let vs hence, and lo\u017Fe no hovvre, / Till vvee meet VVarvvicke, vvith his forreine povvre."@en . _:b17655825 "1535 October 14 (Gregorian calendar), Myles Coverdale, transl., Biblia: The Byble,\u00A0[\u2026] (Coverdale Bible), [Cologne or Marburg: Eucharius Cervicornus and J. Soter?], \u2192OCLC, Daniel vij:[21], folio lxxxi, recto, column 1:"@en . _:b17655778 "2011 November 12, Phil McNulty, \u201CInternational Friendly: England 1\u00A0\u2013 0 Spain\u201D, in BBC Sport\u200E[1], archived from the original on 2022-08-13:"@en . _:b17655775 . _:b17655810 "1788, Edward Gibbon, chapter XLIII, in The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, volume IV, London: [\u2026] W[illiam] Strahan; and T[homas] Cadell,\u00A0[\u2026], \u2192OCLC, page 282:"@en . _:b17655829 "1665 September 24 (date written; Gregorian calendar), Samuel Pepys, Mynors Bright, transcriber, \u201CSeptember :Template:SAFESUBST:, 1665\u201D, in Henry B[enjamin] Wheatley, editor, The Diary of Samuel Pepys\u00A0[\u2026], volume V, London: George Bell & Sons\u00A0[\u2026]; Cambridge: Deighton Bell & Co., published 1895, \u2192OCLC, pages 76\u201377:"@en . _:b17655822 "1535 October 14 (Gregorian calendar), Myles Coverdale, transl., Biblia: The Byble,\u00A0[\u2026] (Coverdale Bible), [Cologne or Marburg: Eucharius Cervicornus and J. Soter?], \u2192OCLC, Daniel vij:[21], folio lxxxi, recto, column 1:"@en . _:b17655824 "It was a great victory on the battlefield."@en . _:b17655795 "(uncountable) The condition or state of having won a battle or competition, or having succeeded in an effort; (countable) an instance of this."@en . _:b17655807 "Already there are certain signs that politicians within the Republican party are suffering from the intoxication of too much victory."@en . _:b17655814 "1667, John Milton, \u201CBook X\u201D, in Paradise Lost.\u00A0[\u2026], London: [\u2026] [Samuel Simmons],\u00A0[\u2026], \u2192OCLC; republished as Paradise Lost in Ten Books:\u00A0[\u2026], London: Basil Montagu Pickering\u00A0[\u2026], 1873, \u2192OCLC, lines 1460\u20131461:"@en . _:b17655820 "c. 1591\u20131592 (date written), William Shakespeare, \u201CThe Third Part of Henry the Sixt,\u00A0[\u2026]\u201D, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies\u00A0[\u2026] (First Folio), London: [\u2026] Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, \u2192OCLC, [Act IV, scene i], page 164, column 1:"@en . _:b17655830 "c. 1591\u20131595 (date written), [William Shakespeare], [\u2026] Romeo and Juliet.\u00A0[\u2026] (First Quarto), London: [\u2026] Iohn Danter, published 1597, \u2192OCLC, [Act IV, scene i]:"@en . _:b6458129 "So likevvi\u017Fe in that book of his [Julius Caesar's] Anticato, it may ea\u017Fily appeare that he did a\u017Fpire as vvell to victorie of vvit, as victory of vvarre: [\u2026]"@en . _:b17655813 "1769, William Robertson, \u201CBook IV\u201D, in The History of the Reign of the Emperor Charles V.\u00A0[\u2026], volume II, London: [\u2026] W. and W. Strahan, for W[illiam] Strahan, T[homas] Cadell,\u00A0[\u2026]; and J. Balfour,\u00A0[\u2026], \u2192OCLC, page 232:"@en . _:b17655832 "Whereupon there was a very \u017Fore battell: but Judas [Maccabeus] \u017Fide by the helpe of God got the victory, [\u2026]"@en . _:b17655815 "Ob\u017Ferve if he di\u017Fdains to yield the Prize; / Of Lo\u017Fs impatient, proud of Victories."@en . _:b17655782 "1828 May 14, [Walter Scott], chapter VI, in Chronicles of the Canongate. Second Series.\u00A0[\u2026] (The Fair Maid of Perth), volume III, Edinburgh: [\u2026] [Ballantyne and Co.] for Cadell and Co.; London: Simpkin and Marshall, \u2192OCLC, page 128:"@en . _:b6458127 "c. 1593 (date written), [William Shakespeare], The Tragedy of King Richard the Third.\u00A0[\u2026] (First Quarto), London: [\u2026] Valentine Sims [and Peter Short] for Andrew Wise,\u00A0[\u2026], published 1597, \u2192OCLC, [Act V, scene v]:"@en . _:b17655789 "Whereupon there was a very \u017Fore battell: but Judas [Maccabeus] \u017Fide by the helpe of God got the victory, [\u2026]"@en . _:b17655806 . _:b17655807 . _:b17655804 . _:b17655805 . _:b17655830 "The teares haue got \u017Fmall victory by that, / For it vvas bad enough before their \u017Fpite."@en . _:b17655819 "So likevvi\u017Fe in that book of his [Julius Caesar's] Anticato, it may ea\u017Fily appeare that he did a\u017Fpire as vvell to victorie of vvit, as victory of vvarre: [\u2026]"@en . _:b17655802 . _:b17655803 . _:b17655780 "Already there are certain signs that politicians within the Republican party are suffering from the intoxication of too much victory."@en . _:b17655800 . _:b17655801 . _:b17655811 "[B]urn his rage / Hovv fierce \u017Foever, he \u017Fhall find it hard / VVith all his thir\u017Ft of victory, to quell / Their firm re\u017Fi\u017Ftance, [\u2026]"@en . _:b17655798 . _:b17655799 . _:b17655797 . _:b17655776 "Hieronimo, it greatly plea\u017Feth vs, / That in our victorie thou haue a \u017Fhare, / By vertue of thy vvorthy Sonnes exployt."@en . _:b17655794 . _:b6458128 "c. 1591\u20131595 (date written), [William Shakespeare], [\u2026] Romeo and Juliet.\u00A0[\u2026] (First Quarto), London: [\u2026] Iohn Danter, published 1597, \u2192OCLC, [Act IV, scene i]:"@en . _:b17655792 . _:b17655793 . _:b17655790 . _:b17655803 "c. 1587 (date written), [Thomas Kyd], The Spanish Tragedie:\u00A0[\u2026] (Fourth Quarto), London: [\u2026] W[illiam] W[hite] for T[homas] Pauier,\u00A0[\u2026], published 1602, \u2192OCLC, Act I:"@en . _:b17655791 . _:b17655788 . _:b17655789 . _:b17655835 "1791, Homer, W[illiam] Cowper, transl., \u201C[The Iliad.] Book XIII.\u201D, in The Iliad and Odyssey of Homer, Translated into Blank Verse,\u00A0[\u2026], volume I, London: [\u2026] J[oseph] Johnson,\u00A0[\u2026], \u2192OCLC, page 335, lines 384\u2013387:"@en . _:b6458137 "[B]urn his rage / Hovv fierce \u017Foever, he \u017Fhall find it hard / VVith all his thir\u017Ft of victory, to quell / Their firm re\u017Fi\u017Ftance, [\u2026]"@en . _:b17655786 . _:b17655787 . _:b17655779 "A hope, still indeed faint and indefinite, of victory and revenge, animated the party which had lately seemed to be extinct."@en . _:b17655784 . _:b17655785 . _:b17655782 . _:b17655783 . _:b17655780 . _:b6458128 "The teares haue got \u017Fmall victory by that, / For it vvas bad enough before their \u017Fpite."@en . _:b17655781 . _:b17655778 . _:b17655779 . _:b17655782 "\"Farewell,\" he said, \"the only hope, which could have lighted me to fame or victory!\""@en . _:b17655776 . _:b17655777 . _:b17655800 "Every body was surprised; and Darcy, after looking at her for a moment, turned silently away. Mrs. Bennet, who fancied she had gained a complete victory over him, continued her triumph."@en . . _:b17655803 "Hieronimo, it greatly plea\u017Feth vs, / That in our victorie thou haue a \u017Fhare, / By vertue of thy vvorthy Sonnes exployt."@en . _:b6458134 "1719, [Daniel Defoe], The Farther Adventures of Robinson Crusoe;\u00A0[\u2026], London: [\u2026] W[illiam] Taylor\u00A0[\u2026], \u2192OCLC, page 353:"@en . _:b17655775 "I behelde, and the \u017Fame horne made battail agayn\u017Ft the \u017Fayntes, yee \u00E3d gat the victory off them: [\u2026]"@en . _:b6458142 . _:b6458140 . _:b6458141 . _:b6458138 . _:b17655823 "Hieronimo, it greatly plea\u017Feth vs, / That in our victorie thou haue a \u017Fhare, / By vertue of thy vvorthy Sonnes exployt."@en . _:b6458139 . _:b17655823 "c. 1587 (date written), [Thomas Kyd], The Spanish Tragedie:\u00A0[\u2026] (Fourth Quarto), London: [\u2026] W[illiam] W[hite] for T[homas] Pauier,\u00A0[\u2026], published 1602, \u2192OCLC, Act I:"@en . _:b6458136 . _:b17655797 "1828 May 14, [Walter Scott], chapter VI, in Chronicles of the Canongate. Second Series.\u00A0[\u2026] (The Fair Maid of Perth), volume III, Edinburgh: [\u2026] [Ballantyne and Co.] for Cadell and Co.; London: Simpkin and Marshall, \u2192OCLC, page 128:"@en . _:b6458142 "England will not be catapulted among the favourites for Euro 2012 as a result of this win, but no victory against Spain is earned easily and it is right they take great heart from their efforts as they now prepare to play Sweden at Wembley on Tuesday."@en . _:b6458137 . _:b6458134 . _:b6458141 "1921, The Pottery & Glass Salesman, volume 24, New York, N.Y.: O\u2019Gorman Pub. Co., \u2192OCLC, page 75:"@en . _:b6458135 . _:b6458132 . _:b6458133 . _:b17655818 "The teares haue got \u017Fmall victory by that, / For it vvas bad enough before their \u017Fpite."@en . _:b17655811 "1791, Homer, W[illiam] Cowper, transl., \u201C[The Iliad.] Book XIII.\u201D, in The Iliad and Odyssey of Homer, Translated into Blank Verse,\u00A0[\u2026], volume I, London: [\u2026] J[oseph] Johnson,\u00A0[\u2026], \u2192OCLC, page 335, lines 384\u2013387:"@en . _:b17655776 "c. 1587 (date written), [Thomas Kyd], The Spanish Tragedie:\u00A0[\u2026] (Fourth Quarto), London: [\u2026] W[illiam] W[hite] for T[homas] Pauier,\u00A0[\u2026], published 1602, \u2192OCLC, Act I:"@en . _:b6458130 . _:b17655774 "(uncountable) The condition or state of having won a battle or competition, or having succeeded in an effort; (countable) an instance of this."@en . _:b6458131 . _:b6458128 . _:b6458129 . _:b6458135 "He had never dreamt, hovvever, of any event \u017Fo deci\u017Five and \u017Fo fatal as the victory at Pavia, vvhich \u017Feemed not only to have broken, but to have annihilated the povver of one of the rivals; [\u2026]"@en . _:b6458126 . _:b6458127 . _:b6458124 . _:b17655808 "Every body was surprised; and Darcy, after looking at her for a moment, turned silently away. Mrs. Bennet, who fancied she had gained a complete victory over him, continued her triumph."@en . _:b6458125 . _:b6458123 . _:b17655818 "c. 1591\u20131595 (date written), [William Shakespeare], [\u2026] Romeo and Juliet.\u00A0[\u2026] (First Quarto), London: [\u2026] Iohn Danter, published 1597, \u2192OCLC, [Act IV, scene i]:"@en . _:b17655788 "Ob\u017Ferve if he di\u017Fdains to yield the Prize; / Of Lo\u017Fs impatient, proud of Victories."@en . _:b6458133 "Ob\u017Ferve if he di\u017Fdains to yield the Prize; / Of Lo\u017Fs impatient, proud of Victories."@en . _:b17655791 "c. 1591\u20131595 (date written), [William Shakespeare], [\u2026] Romeo and Juliet.\u00A0[\u2026] (First Quarto), London: [\u2026] Iohn Danter, published 1597, \u2192OCLC, [Act IV, scene i]:"@en . _:b6458123 "It was a great victory on the battlefield."@en . _:b17655809 "1828 May 14, [Walter Scott], chapter VI, in Chronicles of the Canongate. Second Series.\u00A0[\u2026] (The Fair Maid of Perth), volume III, Edinburgh: [\u2026] [Ballantyne and Co.] for Cadell and Co.; London: Simpkin and Marshall, \u2192OCLC, page 128:"@en . _:b6458136 "1788, Edward Gibbon, chapter XLIII, in The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, volume IV, London: [\u2026] W[illiam] Strahan; and T[homas] Cadell,\u00A0[\u2026], \u2192OCLC, page 282:"@en . _:b17655781 "Every body was surprised; and Darcy, after looking at her for a moment, turned silently away. Mrs. Bennet, who fancied she had gained a complete victory over him, continued her triumph."@en . _:b17655828 "c. 1591\u20131592 (date written), William Shakespeare, \u201CThe Third Part of Henry the Sixt,\u00A0[\u2026]\u201D, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies\u00A0[\u2026] (First Folio), London: [\u2026] Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, \u2192OCLC, [Act IV, scene i], page 164, column 1:"@en . . _:b17655828 "VVhy \u017Fo: then am I \u017Fure of Victorie. Novv therefore let vs hence, and lo\u017Fe no hovvre, / Till vvee meet VVarvvicke, vvith his forreine povvre."@en . _:b6458140 "A hope, still indeed faint and indefinite, of victory and revenge, animated the party which had lately seemed to be extinct."@en . _:b6458139 "\"Farewell,\" he said, \"the only hope, which could have lighted me to fame or victory!\""@en . _:b17655831 "1697, Virgil, \u201CThe Third Book of the Georgics\u201D, in John Dryden, transl., The Works of Virgil: Containing His Pastorals, Georgics, and \u00C6neis.\u00A0[\u2026], London: [\u2026] Jacob Tonson,\u00A0[\u2026], \u2192OCLC, page 101, lines 163\u2013164:"@en . _:b17655798 "1788, Edward Gibbon, chapter XLIII, in The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, volume IV, London: [\u2026] W[illiam] Strahan; and T[homas] Cadell,\u00A0[\u2026], \u2192OCLC, page 282:"@en . _:b17655834 "1667, John Milton, \u201CBook X\u201D, in Paradise Lost.\u00A0[\u2026], London: [\u2026] [Samuel Simmons],\u00A0[\u2026], \u2192OCLC; republished as Paradise Lost in Ten Books:\u00A0[\u2026], London: Basil Montagu Pickering\u00A0[\u2026], 1873, \u2192OCLC, lines 1460\u20131461:"@en . _:b17655833 "He had never dreamt, hovvever, of any event \u017Fo deci\u017Five and \u017Fo fatal as the victory at Pavia, vvhich \u017Feemed not only to have broken, but to have annihilated the povver of one of the rivals; [\u2026]"@en . _:b17655819 "1605, Francis Bacon, \u201CThe First Booke\u201D, in The Twoo Bookes of Francis Bacon. Of the Proficience and Aduancement of Learning, Diuine and Humane, London: [\u2026] [Thomas Purfoot and Thomas Creede] for Henrie Tomes,\u00A0[\u2026], \u2192OCLC, folio 39, verso:"@en . _:b17655775 "1535 October 14 (Gregorian calendar), Myles Coverdale, transl., Biblia: The Byble,\u00A0[\u2026] (Coverdale Bible), [Cologne or Marburg: Eucharius Cervicornus and J. Soter?], \u2192OCLC, Daniel vij:[21], folio lxxxi, recto, column 1:"@en . _:b17655826 "Fortune and victorie \u017Fet on thy helme."@en . _:b17655816 "1611, The Holy Bible,\u00A0[\u2026] (King James Version), London: [\u2026] Robert Barker,\u00A0[\u2026], \u2192OCLC, 2 Maccabees 12:11, column 1:"@en . _:b17655814 "[S]uffering for Truths \u017Fake / Is fortitude to highe\u017Ft victorie, [\u2026]"@en . _:b17655801 "England will not be catapulted among the favourites for Euro 2012 as a result of this win, but no victory against Spain is earned easily and it is right they take great heart from their efforts as they now prepare to play Sweden at Wembley on Tuesday."@en . _:b17655835 "[B]urn his rage / Hovv fierce \u017Foever, he \u017Fhall find it hard / VVith all his thir\u017Ft of victory, to quell / Their firm re\u017Fi\u017Ftance, [\u2026]"@en . _:b17655836 "1719, [Daniel Defoe], The Farther Adventures of Robinson Crusoe;\u00A0[\u2026], London: [\u2026] W[illiam] Taylor\u00A0[\u2026], \u2192OCLC, page 353:"@en . . _:b17655793 "c. 1591\u20131592 (date written), William Shakespeare, \u201CThe Third Part of Henry the Sixt,\u00A0[\u2026]\u201D, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies\u00A0[\u2026] (First Folio), London: [\u2026] Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, \u2192OCLC, [Act IV, scene i], page 164, column 1:"@en . _:b17655829 "But before I went from the office newes is brought by word of mouth that letters are now just now brought from the fleete of our taking a great many more of the Dutch fleete, [\u2026] Down to the office, and there wrote letters to and again about this good newes of our victory, and so by water home late."@en . _:b17655820 "VVhy \u017Fo: then am I \u017Fure of Victorie. Novv therefore let vs hence, and lo\u017Fe no hovvre, / Till vvee meet VVarvvicke, vvith his forreine povvre."@en . _:b17655805 "England will not be catapulted among the favourites for Euro 2012 as a result of this win, but no victory against Spain is earned easily and it is right they take great heart from their efforts as they now prepare to play Sweden at Wembley on Tuesday."@en . _:b17655779 "1849, Thomas Babington Macaulay, chapter VI, in The History of England from the Accession of James II, volume II, London: Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans, \u2192OCLC, page 42:"@en . _:b17655784 "[B]urn his rage / Hovv fierce \u017Foever, he \u017Fhall find it hard / VVith all his thir\u017Ft of victory, to quell / Their firm re\u017Fi\u017Ftance, [\u2026]"@en . _:b17655821 "c. 1593 (date written), [William Shakespeare], The Tragedy of King Richard the Third.\u00A0[\u2026] (First Quarto), London: [\u2026] Valentine Sims [and Peter Short] for Andrew Wise,\u00A0[\u2026], published 1597, \u2192OCLC, [Act V, scene v]:"@en . _:b17655822 "I behelde, and the \u017Fame horne made battail agayn\u017Ft the \u017Fayntes, yee \u00E3d gat the victory off them: [\u2026]"@en . _:b17655790 "But before I went from the office newes is brought by word of mouth that letters are now just now brought from the fleete of our taking a great many more of the Dutch fleete, [\u2026] Down to the office, and there wrote letters to and again about this good newes of our victory, and so by water home late."@en . _:b17655836 "[\u2026] I thought he vvas not a Monarch only, but a great Conqueror; for that he that has got a Victory over his ovvn exorbitant De\u017Fires, and has the ab\u017Folute Dominion over him\u017Felf, vvhose Rea\u017Fon entirely governs his VVill, is certainly greater than he that conquers a City."@en . _:b17655778 "England will not be catapulted among the favourites for Euro 2012 as a result of this win, but no victory against Spain is earned easily and it is right they take great heart from their efforts as they now prepare to play Sweden at Wembley on Tuesday."@en . _:b6458122 "(uncountable) The condition or state of having won a battle or competition, or having succeeded in an effort; (countable) an instance of this."@en . _:b6458131 "1665 September 24 (date written; Gregorian calendar), Samuel Pepys, Mynors Bright, transcriber, \u201CSeptember :Template:SAFESUBST:, 1665\u201D, in Henry B[enjamin] Wheatley, editor, The Diary of Samuel Pepys\u00A0[\u2026], volume V, London: George Bell & Sons\u00A0[\u2026]; Cambridge: Deighton Bell & Co., published 1895, \u2192OCLC, pages 76\u201377:"@en . _:b6458140 "1849, Thomas Babington Macaulay, chapter VI, in The History of England from the Accession of James II, volume II, London: Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans, \u2192OCLC, page 42:"@en . _:b17655788 "1697, Virgil, \u201CThe Third Book of the Georgics\u201D, in John Dryden, transl., The Works of Virgil: Containing His Pastorals, Georgics, and \u00C6neis.\u00A0[\u2026], London: [\u2026] Jacob Tonson,\u00A0[\u2026], \u2192OCLC, page 101, lines 163\u2013164:"@en . _:b17655827 "1605, Francis Bacon, \u201CThe First Booke\u201D, in The Twoo Bookes of Francis Bacon. Of the Proficience and Aduancement of Learning, Diuine and Humane, London: [\u2026] [Thomas Purfoot and Thomas Creede] for Henrie Tomes,\u00A0[\u2026], \u2192OCLC, folio 39, verso:"@en . _:b17655806 "1849, Thomas Babington Macaulay, chapter VI, in The History of England from the Accession of James II, volume II, London: Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans, \u2192OCLC, page 42:"@en . _:b17655794 "c. 1593 (date written), [William Shakespeare], The Tragedy of King Richard the Third.\u00A0[\u2026] (First Quarto), London: [\u2026] Valentine Sims [and Peter Short] for Andrew Wise,\u00A0[\u2026], published 1597, \u2192OCLC, [Act V, scene v]:"@en . _:b6458124 "1535 October 14 (Gregorian calendar), Myles Coverdale, transl., Biblia: The Byble,\u00A0[\u2026] (Coverdale Bible), [Cologne or Marburg: Eucharius Cervicornus and J. Soter?], \u2192OCLC, Daniel vij:[21], folio lxxxi, recto, column 1:"@en . _:b17655780 "1921, The Pottery & Glass Salesman, volume 24, New York, N.Y.: O\u2019Gorman Pub. Co., \u2192OCLC, page 75:"@en . _:b17655787 "1667, John Milton, \u201CBook X\u201D, in Paradise Lost.\u00A0[\u2026], London: [\u2026] [Samuel Simmons],\u00A0[\u2026], \u2192OCLC; republished as Paradise Lost in Ten Books:\u00A0[\u2026], London: Basil Montagu Pickering\u00A0[\u2026], 1873, \u2192OCLC, lines 1460\u20131461:"@en . _:b17655836 . _:b17655834 . _:b17655835 . _:b17655781 "1813 January 26, [Jane Austen], chapter IX, in Pride and Prejudice:\u00A0[\u2026], volume I, London: [\u2026] [George Sidney] for T[homas] Egerton,\u00A0[\u2026], \u2192OCLC, page 94:"@en . _:b17655832 . _:b6458130 "Whereupon there was a very \u017Fore battell: but Judas [Maccabeus] \u017Fide by the helpe of God got the victory, [\u2026]"@en . _:b6458131 "But before I went from the office newes is brought by word of mouth that letters are now just now brought from the fleete of our taking a great many more of the Dutch fleete, [\u2026] Down to the office, and there wrote letters to and again about this good newes of our victory, and so by water home late."@en . _:b17655833 . _:b17655784 "1791, Homer, W[illiam] Cowper, transl., \u201C[The Iliad.] Book XIII.\u201D, in The Iliad and Odyssey of Homer, Translated into Blank Verse,\u00A0[\u2026], volume I, London: [\u2026] J[oseph] Johnson,\u00A0[\u2026], \u2192OCLC, page 335, lines 384\u2013387:"@en . _:b17655802 "1849, Thomas Babington Macaulay, chapter VI, in The History of England from the Accession of James II, volume II, London: Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans, \u2192OCLC, page 42:"@en . _:b17655830 . _:b6458122 . _:b17655831 . _:b17655828 . _:b17655815 "1697, Virgil, \u201CThe Third Book of the Georgics\u201D, in John Dryden, transl., The Works of Virgil: Containing His Pastorals, Georgics, and \u00C6neis.\u00A0[\u2026], London: [\u2026] Jacob Tonson,\u00A0[\u2026], \u2192OCLC, page 101, lines 163\u2013164:"@en . _:b17655783 "1788, Edward Gibbon, chapter XLIII, in The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, volume IV, London: [\u2026] W[illiam] Strahan; and T[homas] Cadell,\u00A0[\u2026], \u2192OCLC, page 282:"@en . _:b17655829 . _:b17655804 "It was a great victory on the battlefield."@en . _:b6458137 "1791, Homer, W[illiam] Cowper, transl., \u201C[The Iliad.] Book XIII.\u201D, in The Iliad and Odyssey of Homer, Translated into Blank Verse,\u00A0[\u2026], volume I, London: [\u2026] J[oseph] Johnson,\u00A0[\u2026], \u2192OCLC, page 335, lines 384\u2013387:"@en . _:b17655826 . _:b17655827 . _:b17655824 . _:b6458127 "Fortune and victorie \u017Fet on thy helme."@en . _:b6458139 "1828 May 14, [Walter Scott], chapter VI, in Chronicles of the Canongate. Second Series.\u00A0[\u2026] (The Fair Maid of Perth), volume III, Edinburgh: [\u2026] [Ballantyne and Co.] for Cadell and Co.; London: Simpkin and Marshall, \u2192OCLC, page 128:"@en . _:b17655791 "The teares haue got \u017Fmall victory by that, / For it vvas bad enough before their \u017Fpite."@en . _:b17655825 . _:b17655822 . _:b17655823 . "1" . _:b17655820 . _:b17655790 "1665 September 24 (date written; Gregorian calendar), Samuel Pepys, Mynors Bright, transcriber, \u201CSeptember :Template:SAFESUBST:, 1665\u201D, in Henry B[enjamin] Wheatley, editor, The Diary of Samuel Pepys\u00A0[\u2026], volume V, London: George Bell & Sons\u00A0[\u2026]; Cambridge: Deighton Bell & Co., published 1895, \u2192OCLC, pages 76\u201377:"@en . _:b17655821 . _:b17655818 . _:b17655817 "But before I went from the office newes is brought by word of mouth that letters are now just now brought from the fleete of our taking a great many more of the Dutch fleete, [\u2026] Down to the office, and there wrote letters to and again about this good newes of our victory, and so by water home late."@en . _:b17655819 . _:b17655821 "Fortune and victorie \u017Fet on thy helme."@en . _:b17655816 . _:b17655777 "It was a great victory on the battlefield."@en . _:b17655817 . _:b17655792 "So likevvi\u017Fe in that book of his [Julius Caesar's] Anticato, it may ea\u017Fily appeare that he did a\u017Fpire as vvell to victorie of vvit, as victory of vvarre: [\u2026]"@en . _:b17655814 . _:b17655815 . _:b17655832 "1611, The Holy Bible,\u00A0[\u2026] (King James Version), London: [\u2026] Robert Barker,\u00A0[\u2026], \u2192OCLC, 2 Maccabees 12:11, column 1:"@en . _:b17655812 . _:b6458136 "[I]t vvas his [Totila's] con\u017Ftant theme, that national vice and ruin are in\u017Feparably connected; that victory is the fruit of moral as vvell as military virtue; and that the prince, and even the people, are re\u017Fpon\u017Fible for the crimes vvhich they neglect to puni\u017Fh."@en . _:b17655813 . _:b17655810 . _:b17655811 . _:b17655795 . _:b17655808 . _:b17655796 . _:b17655809 . _:b17655813 "He had never dreamt, hovvever, of any event \u017Fo deci\u017Five and \u017Fo fatal as the victory at Pavia, vvhich \u017Feemed not only to have broken, but to have annihilated the povver of one of the rivals; [\u2026]"@en . _:b17655825 "I behelde, and the \u017Fame horne made battail agayn\u017Ft the \u017Fayntes, yee \u00E3d gat the victory off them: [\u2026]"@en . _:b17655783 "[I]t vvas his [Totila's] con\u017Ftant theme, that national vice and ruin are in\u017Feparably connected; that victory is the fruit of moral as vvell as military virtue; and that the prince, and even the people, are re\u017Fpon\u017Fible for the crimes vvhich they neglect to puni\u017Fh."@en . _:b17655786 "1769, William Robertson, \u201CBook IV\u201D, in The History of the Reign of the Emperor Charles V.\u00A0[\u2026], volume II, London: [\u2026] W. and W. Strahan, for W[illiam] Strahan, T[homas] Cadell,\u00A0[\u2026]; and J. Balfour,\u00A0[\u2026], \u2192OCLC, page 232:"@en . _:b6458142 "2011 November 12, Phil McNulty, \u201CInternational Friendly: England 1\u00A0\u2013 0 Spain\u201D, in BBC Sport\u200E[1], archived from the original on 2022-08-13:"@en . _:b6458134 "[\u2026] I thought he vvas not a Monarch only, but a great Conqueror; for that he that has got a Victory over his ovvn exorbitant De\u017Fires, and has the ab\u017Folute Dominion over him\u017Felf, vvhose Rea\u017Fon entirely governs his VVill, is certainly greater than he that conquers a City."@en . _:b6458138 "1813 January 26, [Jane Austen], chapter IX, in Pride and Prejudice:\u00A0[\u2026], volume I, London: [\u2026] [George Sidney] for T[homas] Egerton,\u00A0[\u2026], \u2192OCLC, page 94:"@en . _:b6458124 "I behelde, and the \u017Fame horne made battail agayn\u017Ft the \u017Fayntes, yee \u00E3d gat the victory off them: [\u2026]"@en .