ChivalrousCharley is a 1921 American silent comedy film directed by Robert Ellis and starring Eugene O'Brien, George Fawcett and Nancy Deaver. Eugene...
The Frisky Mrs. Johnson (1920) Red Foam (1920) Enchantment (1921) ChivalrousCharley (1921) Society Snobs (1921) Tropical Love (1921) The Girl from Nowhere...
Two Weeks (1920) Paying the Piper (1921) Sentimental Tommy (1921) ChivalrousCharley (1921) Nobody (1921) Burn 'Em Up Barnes (1921) Little Italy (1921)...
Money (1920), Bucking the Tiger (1921), The Old Oaken Bucket (1921), ChivalrousCharley (1921), Kisses (1922), and That Old Gang of Mine (1925). In addition...
(1921) A Man of Stone (1921) The Leech (1921) The Way of a Maid (1921) ChivalrousCharley (1921) A Man's Home (1921) Conceit (1921) Gilded Lies (1921) The Last...
Last Door (1921) Worlds Apart (1921) Is Life Worth Living? (1921) ChivalrousCharley (1921) Clay Dollars (1921) Gilded Lies (1921) The Prophet's Paradise...
Dillon William Russell, Ruth Renick, Maurice 'Lefty' Flynn Comedy Fox ChivalrousCharley Robert Ellis Eugene O'Brien, George Fawcett, Huntley Gordon Comedy...
Italians. Many authors describe Rommel as having a reputation of being a chivalrous, humane, and professional officer, and that he earned the respect of both...
were fighting for the Riffians, but that there was "nothing gallant or chivalrous in the rain of bombs, dropped on defenseless villages." The Christian...
were fighting for the Riffians, but that there was "nothing gallant or chivalrous in the rain of bombs, dropped on defenseless villages." The Christian...
and boastful Renaissance era or Cavalier era swordsman or pirate. He is chivalrous, courageous, and skilled in sword fighting and acrobatics as he seeks...
Letitia Elizabeth Landon and her poetry collections. Victorians loved chivalrous stories of knights of old; they hoped to regain some of that courtly behavior...
to walk several miles for their water, until one day it was slain by a chivalrous passing knight.[citation needed] The placename actually derives from 'Griffith's-Dam'...