The Noblesse oblige reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Apr-2004
(provided by Fixed Reference: snapshots of Wikipedia from wikipedia.org)

Noblesse oblige

Time you got around to sponsoring a child
In French, noblesse oblige means, literally, nobility obliges. It is generally used to imply that with wealth, power and prestige come responsibilities.

Table of contents
1 Origin
2 Example
3 Sources

Origin

F. A. Kemble first used the term in 1837 when he wrote in a letter, “To be sure, if ‘noblesse oblige,’ royalty must do so still more.” The essence of noblesse oblige is that social (possibly legal) pressures compel nobility to act selflessly and for the good of all.

Example

In the book Athens on Trial, Jennifer Tolbert Roberts provides a perfect example of noblesse oblige in the liturgies of ancient Athens--public burdens assigned to the wealthy such as outfitting warships, holding banquets and training choruses for dramatic performances. She notes that “The rich were understandably ambivalent about exercising this sort of ‘privilege,’ noblesse oblige could be very expensive.”

Sources

The Oxford English Dictionary. (1989). New York: Oxford University Press.

Roberts, Jennifer Tolbert. Athens on Trial: The antidemocratic tradition in western thought. New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1994.