Now if the doctrine of the church of England be true, as we are obliged to believe, then are all the coelestial machines of prince Arthur unsufferable, as wanting not only human but divine probability.
"The Lives of the Poets of Great Britain and Ireland (1753),Vol. V."
Theophilus Cibber
In England, we couple it with unsufferable heat and the yellow fever.
"Newton Forster"
Frederick Marryat
Do we not rightly hear in it a note that will soon be enriched into the "Light unsufferable" of the Ode, the "endless morn of Light" of the Solemn Music, the "bosom bright of blazing Majesty and Light" of the Epitaph on Lady Winchester, and, not to multiply quotations, of the "Hail, holy Light" which opens the great invocation of the third book of Paradise Lost?
"Milton"
John Bailey