
“766. Better suffer ill than doe ill.”
Jacula Prudentum (1651)
Source: Instructions to his Son and to Posterity (published 1632), Chapter II
“766. Better suffer ill than doe ill.”
Jacula Prudentum (1651)
“He's as great a master of ill language as ever was bred at a Bear-Garden.”
Source: London Terraefilius, No. 3, p. 29, (1707).
“To care only for well-being seems to me positively ill-bred.”
Part 1, Chapter 9 (page 32)
Notes from Underground (1864)
Context: To care only for well-being seems to me positively ill-bred. Whether it's good or bad, it is sometimes very pleasant, too, to smash things.
“In my mind, there is nothing so illiberal and so ill-bred, as audible laughter.”
9 March 1748
Letters to His Son on the Art of Becoming a Man of the World and a Gentleman (1774)
“Against a better will the will fights ill,…”
Canto XX, line 1 (tr. C. E. Norton).
The Divine Comedy (c. 1308–1321), Purgatorio