Word: englishman
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...feels most responsible toward his race. "I couldn't live with my own conscience, feeling I was getting the gravy." He stands with his people, but against segregation and abnegation alike. But he came back, too, because he found, like many another exile, that "I was never an Englishman or a Russian, I was an American." For the same reason, and by his own choice, his son came back also...
Inscrutable Pattern. Kipling, says Eliot, "is one of the most inscrutable of authors." But there is a pattern in his verse, "a unity of a very complicated kind." For the tracing of it, his verse and his prose must be studied together. So must his biography. An Englishman born in India, Kipling was neither Englishman nor Indian, yet "he might almost be called the first citizen of India." As such, he saw England and the world as might "a visitor from another planet." But though he was one of the least subjective of poets, Kipling was by no means detached...
...when four white-tied suitors leaped into a lake at her command. In 1892 (she claimed) he hired Brighton's swimming baths for their exclusive honeymoon use. In Three Weeks (1907) she revealed the effects on each other of a Swiss hotel, a Russian enchantress, a clean young Englishman, and a tigerskin rug. In Hollywood in 1927 she modernized these horse-&-buggyish ardors in the road-sterish form of It, thus provided a racy vehicle for Cinemactress Clara...
...start of a combat). Head of Eisenhower's smooth-working Intelligence is Brigadier Kenneth W. D. Strong, at 43 one of the British Army's bright young men. Strong's receding chin and horn-rimmed glasses make him look like an American caricature of an Englishman. He is a leading authority on the German Army, an able military thinker. At work he religiously wears the tartan trousers of his regiment, the Royal Scots Fusiliers; he has been accused of wearing plaid pajamas. His deputy: U.S. Colonel Thomas E. Roderick, onetime executive officer of the U.S. War Department...
...some of its most distinguished statesmen and soldiers. His father is the Marquess of Exeter; from him some day Lord Burghley will inherit enormous estates in Northamptonshire and Rutlandshire. His wife is a sister of the Duchess of Gloucester. Lord Burghley looks like someone disguised as a handsome, sporting Englishman, but his is no masquerade...