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Examples
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During the trekking/orienteering segment of the 10-day, 400-mile race, Aylott, an Australian native, died after being struck by a 300-pound boulder.
Archive 2004-09-26 Toby O'B 2004
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During the trekking/orienteering segment of the 10-day, 400-mile race, Aylott, an Australian native, died after being struck by a 300-pound boulder.
IN THE NEWS Toby O'B 2004
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In compliance with this latter request, Messrs. Aylott suggest that copies and advertisements of the work should be sent to the
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No half-knowledge — no trusting to other people for decisions which she could make for herself; and yet a generous and full confidence, not misplaced, in the thorough probity of Messrs. Aylott and Jones.
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All this time, notwithstanding the domestic anxieties which were harassing them — notwithstanding the ill-success of their poems — the three sisters were trying that other literary venture, to which Charlotte made allusion in one of her letters to the Messrs. Aylott.
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Esq.; but at this time some “little mistake occurred,” and she desired Messrs. Aylott and Co. in future to direct to her real address, “MISS Bronte,” &c.
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She states, in addition, that it is not their intention to publish these tales on their own account; but that the authors direct her to ask Messrs. Aylott and Co. whether they would be disposed to undertake the work, after having, of course, by due inspection of the MS., ascertained that its contents are such as to warrant an expectation of success.
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They communicated with the now extinct firm of Aylott
Charlotte Brontë and Her Circle Clement King Shorter 1891
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First Publication: Poems by Currer, Ellis, and Acton Bell London: Aylott and Jones, 8, Paternoster Row, 1846.pp. 31-32.
Poems by Currer, Ellis, and Acton Bell Bront 1846
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First Publication: Poems by Currer, Ellis, and Acton Bell London: Aylott and Jones, 8, Paternoster Row, 1846.pp. 94-95.
Poems by Currer, Ellis, and Acton Bell Bront 1846
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