Neither look nor word, from him or Cecily, madeallusion to last night's incident.
2
He sat there for twenty minutes, and even madeallusion to their former intimacy at Exeter.
3
The first is the one to which Wagner madeallusion: Jupiter has given his love to Semele.
4
Neither madeallusion to the wonderful change, but they talked more light-heartedly than for a long time.
5
That treasure of her voice, to which no one in the house madeallusion, became indeed a buried treasure.
6
I come now to the measure of policy to which I madeallusion at the beginning of my speech.
7
They were afterwards introduced to the general, who received them very kindly, and madeallusion to some of their predictions.
8
He felt somewhat guilty of not seeking the young man's confidence the previous evening when he madeallusion to Marguerite.
9
The patient had madeallusion to the loss of a hair-pin, a circumstance which corresponded with the beginning of her trouble.
10
She, feeling that the case was a serious one, insisted upon explaining and madeallusion to her large estates and her millions.
11
During the progress of the secret negotiations with Parma, he had not neglected those still more secret schemes to which he had occasionally madeallusion.
12
Some one had madeallusion to the sudden and, as was alleged, the unseemly departure of Ralph Ray on the eve of his father's funeral.
13
For the rigour of Richard Calmady's self-imposed seclusion, to which Miss St. Quentin had madeallusion in her conversation with Dr. Knott, was not relaxed.
14
"The very last dispatches I had to deal with," Sir Alfred continued, " madeallusion to him.