Unfortunately Benton would interlard even his best speeches with theories of economics often more or less crude, and, still worse, with a series of classic quotations and allusions; for he was grievously afflicted with the rage for cheap pseudo-classicism that Jefferson and his school had borrowed from the French revolutionists.
"Thomas Hart Benton"
Theodore Roosevelt
Although he was not angry, he seemed to find it necessary to interlard his conversation with some very strong and unpleasant sounding expressions, and once or twice Harrington followed his example.
"Two Boys and a Fortune"
Matthew White, Jr.
You gradually began to know her, in fact, when you first began to interlard your letters with conceited revelations about yourself.
"In Luck at Last"
Walter Besant