Whether Silas enjoyed being called a scoundrel, a villain, a loafer, and a liar, is not known, but he certainly heard these expressions very frequently; for Tug seemed to tolerate him only because of his total and thorough depravity, though the other acquaintances of Silas regarded him as a mild-mannered little man without either vices or virtues.
"The Mystery of the Locks"
Edgar Watson Howe
Something said by this quiet, gentle-mannered girl had evidently given him a shock of surprise.
"George Eliot"
Mathilde Blind
Zulus are by nature well-mannered people, and the brutal rudeness of the man they had just met could betoken nothing less than the most undisguised hostility, but, worse than all, his last words were an abundant confirmation of the ugly rumours which had been taking shape of late with regard to this mysterious and redoubtable clan.
"The Luck of Gerard Ridgeley"
Bertram Mitford