bowelless

English

Etymology

bowel + -less

Adjective

bowelless (comparative more bowelless, superlative most bowelless)

  1. (obsolete) Without pity.
    • 1716, Thomas Browne, edited by Samuel Johnson, Christian Morals, 2nd edition, London: J. Payne, published 1756, pages 49–50:
      If avarice be thy vice, yet make it not thy punishment. Miserable men commiserate not themselves, bowelless unto others, and merciless unto their own bowels.
    • 1792, “Louis XIV,” The European Magazine and London Review, Volume 22, July 1792, p. 8,
      On his coffin at St. Denis, by the side of which stands the urn that contains his bowels, some one wrote,
      C’y gyst sans entrailles,
      Comme il etoit à Versailles.
      What little change in men by death is made!
      Louis the Great here bowelless is laid;
      Such as he play’d the tyrant’s lofty part
      At proud Versailles, and liv’d without a heart.

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References

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