a. (UN-1 7.)

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  Also, in recent use, unjealously adv.

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1673.  Clarendon, Relig. & Policy, x. (1811), II. 706. The gentle and unjealous temper of the King.

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1789.  E. Darwin, Bot. Gard., II. 8. And three unjealous husbands wed the dame.

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1824.  Miss Mitford, Village, Ser. I. 121. A pure and unjealous delight that made its own happiness.

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1850.  L. Hunt, Autobiog., II. x. 23. The poet, though not unjealous of his dignity.

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1876.  S. Lanier, Poems, Clover, 2. My large unjealous Loves.

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1893.  Emma C. Embury, Sel. Pr. Writ., 23. How fearlessly and unjealously does he [Schiller] disclose the benefits he has derived from his recently formed attachment!

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1907.  [Josephine Porter], A White Rose, 26. And she loved him so well and so unjealously that she rejoiced in his having a pass-key, as it were, which admitted him at all times into his mother’s heart, wherein lay a vast store of love and tender forgiveness.

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1916.  Olive Tilford Dargan, The Cycle’s Rim, 59.

        But of thy joy I dream unjealously,
Knowing in all thy loves thou lovest me.

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