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Word: gentlemanly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

Ford transformed these inner tensions into fiction that made him, at rare best, one of the finest novelists of the century. Parade's End, his tetralogy about a last Tory gentleman-the much-chivvied Christopher Tietjens-mirrors, with love and squalor, the death of prewar British society. The Good Soldier (1915) is so subtle and shapely a domestic tragedy that it very nearly makes good the narrator's extravagant claim: "The death of a mouse from cancer is the whole sack of Rome by the Goths, and I swear to you that the breaking up of our little...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: With Love and Squalor | 5/10/1971 | See Source »

...skeptical about the professor's effectiveness in opposing the war, asking if the kind of opposition which consists of "big shots talking to other big shots" could work. "I don't consider myself a big shot, I don't usually use that term," said Galbraith. "A great, perceptive gentleman, that would be the phrase...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Galbraith: An Ambassador's Journal | 4/30/1971 | See Source »

...with tiny, almost imperceptible, triumphs. The largest of these victories over rotten circumstances belongs to the shy daughter. Tillie, who successfully mounts a science fair project dealing with the effects of radiation on the growth of marigolds. It is as small an event as Laura's dance with the Gentleman Caller in the Williams prototype and just as affecting. Craftily enough Zindel goes on to turn this rinky-dink science fair exhibit into a metaphor that ties the whole work together in a neat and ambivalent fashion by the final curtain...

Author: By Frank Rich, | Title: Theatre Atomic Flowers | 4/22/1971 | See Source »

...year-old Rembrandt (Self-portrait of 1629) watches over the Dutch Room today as visitors look at his other paintings: The Sea of Galilee, The Obelisk, and A Lady and Gentleman in Black; each adds a matching pearl to her string of great masters...

Author: By Meredith A. Palmer, | Title: The Gardner Museum | 4/19/1971 | See Source »

...times like this, I get the impression that the etiquette of a gentleman's club has an absolute supremacy in the minds of scholars, just as the ideal of hierarchic obedience held an absolute supremacy in the Prussian officer corps. This leads to trouble. If we tell the truth about Kissinger, then there is a limit to how polite we can be, and the limit is low. In your letter you conveyed a false conception of the man and of the problem that he presents. Your attitude to him as a person means to me that you are being false...

Author: By Edwin E. Moise, | Title: The Mail KISSINGER | 4/19/1971 | See Source »

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