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Forty years later, when Alexis de Tocqueville was born, this noble way of life had largely been destroyed. But it still had enough vitality to leave a permanent mark on his attitudes, particularly towards his countrymen. "When I talk to a gentilhomme, though we have not two ideas in common, though all his wishes, and thoughts are opposed to mine, yet I feel at once that we belong to the same family, that we speak the same language, that we understand one another. I may like the bourgeois better, but he is a stranger."
Hugh Brogan, Alex de Tocqueville: Prophet of Democracy in the Age of Revolution.
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