a. (UN-1 7.)

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c. 1611.  Chapman, Iliad, IX. 597. O unremorseful man!… thee a … cruel spirit the Gods for plague have given.

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1616.  R. Niccols, Sir T. Overbury’s Vis., B 1 b. Vnremorsefull fate Did worke the falls of those two Princes dead. Ibid., C 2. Monsters … vnremorsefull of my forepast woes.

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1855.  Lynch, Rivulet, LXXVIII. v. By unremorseful joys, O, woo Our hearts to holy efforts still.

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1876.  Stedman, Victorian Poets, 316. Sebald and Ottima have murdered the latter’s aged husband, and are unremorseful in their guilty love.

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