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Free Air

Free Air is a 1919 novel written by Sinclair Lewis. (This page needs more than only one sentence referencing the book, and not four lines talking about the movie, this is a book not a movie.)

A silent movie adaptation of the novel was also released on April 30, 1922. The film starred Tom Douglas as Milt Daggett and Marjorie Seaman as Claire Boltwood.

Usage examples of "free air".

He looked down as if he rode on the back of a bird, not in any flitter, for the free air was all about him and he knew that he was here by his will and not because he had no choice.

For an instant--and then they passed out of the prison archway into the free air of heaven--and the sunlight glowed golden on their faces.

His blind and aged father, and his gentle sister, lay in a noisome dungeon, while he enjoyed the free air, and the society of her whom he loved.

He wandered around, staying within the fluctuating column of dust-free air that every city created, thinking the situation over as he surveyed the city.

He scraped his knuckles against the cliff wall and then swung into free air, as the vine curved inward, still secured to the shuttle docking brace.

When Clifford heard their sunny, buzzing murmur in the heart of the great yellow blossoms, he looked about him with a joyful sense of warmth, the blue sky, and green grass, and of God's free air in the whole height from earth to heaven.

By then my nerves had relaxed in the free air of Scandinavia and I could see humor in things that had not seemed at all funny at the time.

I know, I know, I get a lot of rhetoric from the locals who think we should just drop our immigration restrictions and let every off-worlder in the whole damned universe move in and take advantage of our free air and water.

He realized at once that this was not true, and groaned at his hard-heartedness while he paced the deck and breathed free air.

He realized at once that this was not true, and groaned at his hardheartedness while he paced the deck and breathed free air.

He had yet to treat for a drink at his bar, spring for a second cup of coffee in his diner, give free air at his gas station, an extra towel in his motel, or double bag groceries at his convenience store.

He hurried into the free air, as a child runs on a bright day in the wide fields.

When you know her as well as I do, I am sure you will agree that she does, and that she ought never to be long banished from the free air, and liberty of the country.