One look from that Quaker gintleman is worth all the praching and praying that be in you."
1906, Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch, The Delectable Duchy:
Sure enough it was a millstone, and a very neat one; and the saint, having raised a bit of a laugh, went on like a cheap-jack: "Av there's any gintleman prisunt wid an eye for millstones, I'll throuble him to turn ut here.
1916, Elbert Hubbard, Little Journeys To the Homes of the Great, Volume 3 (of 14):
There is no finer man on earth than your "thrue Irish gintleman," and Henry Clay had not only all the highest and most excellent traits of the "gintleman," but a few also of his worst.