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Answer for the clue ""Double Fantasy" figure ", 6 letters:
lennon

Alternative clues for the word lennon

Usage examples of lennon.

He had crossed Lough Swilly on the following forenoon by a little cargo steamer, which once a week steamed up the Lennon River as far as Ramelton.

For though the old master of Lennon House has not lain twenty years in his grave, he is already swollen into a legendary character.

Dermod retired into the room which he was pleased to call his office, while Feversham and Ethne spent the afternoon fishing for salmon in the Lennon River.

For the blackbirds were calling from the branches and the grass, and down beneath the overhanging trees the Lennon flowed in music between its banks.

A month had passed since the ball at Lennon House, but the uneventful country-side of Donegal was still busy with the stimulating topic of Harry Feversham's disappearance.

Brien O'Brien it was ten minutes past the hour—still in his dress clothes and with a white suicide's face, hurrying along the causeway by the Lennon Bridge.

He began with the Crimean night at Broad Place, and ended with the ball at Lennon House.

Though the Lennon House was altogether ruined, and its lands gone from her, Ethne was still amongst her own people.

For the Lennon house could be rebuilt and the estates cleared of their debt.

I want you to tell me what happened that night at Lennon House to break off your engagement, to send him away an outcast.

But Willoughby could at all events remember and repeat, and Ethne had grown by five years of unhappiness since the night when Harry Feversham, in the little room off the hall at Lennon House, had told her of his upbringing, of the loss of his mother, and the impassable gulf between his father and himself, and of the fear of disgrace which had haunted his nights and disfigured the world for him by day.

Her pride, which had never recovered from the blow which Harry Feversham had dealt to her in the hall at Lennon House, was now quite restored, and by the man who had dealt the blow.

At this very moment Harry Feversham might be struggling for breath in that dark and noisome hovel, dry of throat and fevered with the heat, with a vision before his eyes of the grass slopes of Ramelton and with the music of the Lennon River liquid in his ears.

Something had happened on the night of the ball at Lennon House, and from that date Harry had been an outcast.

Suppose that a white feather had been forwarded to Lennon House, and had been opened in Ethne's presence?