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 * glean.
   The word glean comes from the French {glaner} to gather ears
   or grains of corn.  This was formerly a general custom in
   England and Ireland:  the poor went into the fields, and
   collected the straggling  ears of corn after the reapers; and
   it was long supposed that this was their right, and that the
   law recognized it; but although it has been an old custom, it
   is now settled by a solemn judgment of the Court of Common
   Pleas, that a right to glean in the harvest field cannot be
   claimed by any person at common law.  Any person may permit or
   prevent it on his own grounds.  By the Irish Acts, 25; Henry
   VIII. c. 1, and 28; Henry VIII. c. 24, gleaning and leasing are
   so restricted as to be in fact prohibited in that part of the
   United Kingdom.

 * reproach.  Heb. shame.
  Jas 1:5 

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