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" And thus he bore without abuse The grand old name of gentleman, Defamed by every charlatan, And soil'd with all ignoble use. "
Eclectic Magazine: Foreign Literature - Page 108
1852
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Belgravia: A London Magazine, Volume 95

1898 - 614 pages
...appear in this year of grace 1897 I most firmly aver, for " seeing is believing ! ' Sbe Bounfcer. " And thus he bore without abuse The grand old name of gentleman." THERE was really no help for it — the fiat had gone forth — and the " Bounder" must go. In these...
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Elements of Literary Criticism

Charles Frederick Johnson - 1898 - 312 pages
...regal seat— Of England, not the schoolboy heat And blind hysterics of the Celt." Again he writes: " And thus he bore without abuse The grand- old name of gentleman, Defamed by every charlatan, And soiled with all ignoble use." The strophe which embodies the main ideas...
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An Introduction to the Study of Literature: For the Use of Secondary and ...

Edwin Herbert Lewis, Lewis, Edwin Hebert - 1899 - 440 pages
...life around him, to which he brought the flower of noble manners without touch of narrowness or spite. And thus he bore without abuse the grand old name of gentleman. To Thackeray the name of gentleman seemed one of the noblest. His Colonel Newcome is one of the gracious...
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Some Colonial Mansions and Those who Lived in Them: With Genealogies of the ...

Thomas Allen Glenn - 1899 - 552 pages
...26th of August, 1744, at his own loved Westover, passed away one of whom it could well be said — "And thus he bore without abuse The grand old name of gentleman." He left a widow (b. Nov. 10, 1698, d. April 20, 17/1) and six children, viz. : i. Wilhemina (only surviving...
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Memorial Addresses on the Life and Character of Nelson Dingley: Late a ...

United States. Congress - 1899 - 182 pages
...joined Each office of the social hour To noble manners, as the flower And native growth of noble mind, And thus he bore without abuse The grand old name of gentleman. Mr. DINGLEY possessed in an eminent degree the quality which we well name integrity, wholeness; for...
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Proceedings of the ... Annual Convention and Organization of the ..., Volume 10

1899 - 188 pages
...the day shall come that it may be said of the large majority as it may already be said of the many, "And thus he bore without abuse The grand old name of Gentleman," then shall we see the happy attainment of conditions for which we have worked. The close of the 19th...
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Report of the ... Annual Meeting of the North Carolina Bar ..., Volume 21

North Carolina Bar Association - 1920 - 334 pages
..."Love God, fear no man, and tell the truth." (Original.) "Tennyson has somewhere written these lines: "And thus he bore without abuse, The grand old name of Gentleman." Looking back upon his life, we adopt this tribute as a most fitting summing up of the universal estimate...
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The Institutional Church: A Primer in Pastoral Theology

Edward Judson - 1899 - 224 pages
...stand in close relation to morals, and the teacher of religion should be a kind of Arthur Hallam : " And thus he bore without abuse The grand old name of gentleman, Defamed by every charlatan, And soiled with all ignoble use." (c.) Healthy mental fibre is requisite...
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A Cotswold Village, Or, Country Life and Pursuits in Gloucestershire

Joseph Arthur Gibbs - 1899 - 498 pages
...times, yet a conqueror for all that in the battle of life, and one of whom it may in truth be said, "And thus he bore without abuse The grand old name of gentleman." As to the morals of the Gloucestershire peasants in general, and of our village in particular, it may...
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Minnesota Reports: Cases Argued and Determined in the Supreme ..., Volume 79

Minnesota. Supreme Court - 1901 - 612 pages
...Each office of the social hour To noble manners, as the flower And native growth of noble mind. ***** And thus he bore without abuse, The grand old name of gentleman.' "The story of the life of William Mitchell is a simple tale of struggle and progress. He grew in purity...
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