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Examples

  • I was dining at home, alone, that evening, and for form's sake I asked this faithful dog of Andriaovsky's to share my meal; but he excused himself -- he was dining with Hallard and Connolly.

    Widdershins Oliver [pseud.] Onions 1917

  • Hallard, Connolly, and the rest, to suppose that he "thought highly" of them and their work, had been giving play to that malicious humour of his; and they naturally did not see the joke.

    Widdershins Oliver [pseud.] Onions 1917

  • Artists of varry considerable talents both Hallard and Connolly are; Michael thought varry highly of their abilities.

    Widdershins Oliver [pseud.] Onions 1917

  • He was still shaken with the storm of defending his ideals from profanation, and Hallard easily drew from him an admission that

    We Can't Have Everything Rupert Hughes 1914

  • Jim left the old man in such agitation that a reporter named Hallard, who shadowed him, feeling in his journalistic bones that a big story would break about him soon, noted his condition and called on Doctor

    We Can't Have Everything Rupert Hughes 1914

  • His publishers told him that it was only the libraries that bought any fiction, with the exception of volumes by certain popular authors -- and yet he saw at these booksellers novels by numbers of people who could not lay claim to the success that "Reuben Hallard" had secured for its writer.

    Fortitude Hugh Walpole 1912

  • His reviews were written he knew not how, the editions of "Reuben Hallard" might run into the gross for all he cared, "The Stone House" lay neglected.

    Fortitude Hugh Walpole 1912

  • He had left his heroine very much alone in "Reuben Hallard" and those occasions when he had been obliged to bring her on the stage had not been too successful.

    Fortitude Hugh Walpole 1912

  • The shout of applause with which "Reuben Hallard" was greeted still remains one of the interesting cases in modern literary history.

    Fortitude Hugh Walpole 1912

  • Peter, that evening, took the manuscript of "Reuben Hallard" into Miss

    Fortitude Hugh Walpole 1912

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