Every sharp young man's Bona fide inexperience lands him in that delusion."
"Somehow Good"
William de Morgan
Bona vacantia can't belong to anybody-therefore they belong to the king; that's a pretty piece of reasoning, isn't it?
"Prince Fortunatus"
William Black
What differentiates "Life and Habit" from the "Principles of Psychology" is the prominence given to continued personal identity, and hence to Bona fide memory, as between successive generations; but surely this makes the two books differ widely.
"Luck or Cunning?"
Samuel Butler