Anecdotes of Actors: With Other Desultory Recollections, Etc. Etc. Etc. By Mrs. Mathews ...T.C. Newby, 1844 - 430 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 61
Página 5
... fact a thing of shreds and patches ; a soulless being formed and set apart for the mere purpose of amusement to dull humanity ; to be laughed at in a comical garb ; stared at in a gorgeous one ; encored in a good song , hissed in a bad ...
... fact a thing of shreds and patches ; a soulless being formed and set apart for the mere purpose of amusement to dull humanity ; to be laughed at in a comical garb ; stared at in a gorgeous one ; encored in a good song , hissed in a bad ...
Página 12
... fact , been extracted -taken away ! What made this account incredible to all present was , that Mr. Heath had confessedly locked the room - door before he shed his teeth , and no one could by any means have entered the apart- ment until ...
... fact , been extracted -taken away ! What made this account incredible to all present was , that Mr. Heath had confessedly locked the room - door before he shed his teeth , and no one could by any means have entered the apart- ment until ...
Página 14
... fact , set his heart upon his first French dinner at Calais ; and though Bannister very con- siderately assured him that genuine French cookery required little or no mastication , and that without any such effort he would relish and ...
... fact , set his heart upon his first French dinner at Calais ; and though Bannister very con- siderately assured him that genuine French cookery required little or no mastication , and that without any such effort he would relish and ...
Página 17
... fact was , that in the darkness and confusion of the morning's preparations , Mr. Bannister , who was a very absent man , in groping about the room , had unconsciously put on Mr. Heath's coat instead of his own ; and Mr. Heath ...
... fact was , that in the darkness and confusion of the morning's preparations , Mr. Bannister , who was a very absent man , in groping about the room , had unconsciously put on Mr. Heath's coat instead of his own ; and Mr. Heath ...
Página 18
... fact : - BANNISTER AND HIS TOUPÉE . It is well known to all who remember him , that Mr. John Bannister was a singularly handsome man in his youth ; and indeed remained such , " with a difference , " even to the latest period of his life ...
... fact : - BANNISTER AND HIS TOUPÉE . It is well known to all who remember him , that Mr. John Bannister was a singularly handsome man in his youth ; and indeed remained such , " with a difference , " even to the latest period of his life ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
actor amused appeared audience augh Bannister called character cledon comedian Cooke Covent Garden Theatre cried dear Diggy Dignum dine dinner door Dowton dress Drury Lane Theatre ears effect Elliston exclaimed eyes face fact favour feelings felt gentleman George Frederick Cooke glass green-room habits hand Haymarket Theatre head Heath Holland honour Hook humour Husband Incledon John Kemble Kemble Kemble family ladies Las Cassas length Liston London looked Madeira manner master Mathews means ment mind Miss Monomania morning nature never night observed occasion once party patent theatres performance period person poor present question racter recollection replied scene seemed servants short Siddons smile soon stage Stephen Kemble stranger Street Suett taste Theodore Theodore Hook thing tion tone took toupée town turned voice waiter wife wine words young youth
Pasajes populares
Página 425 - So likewise ye, except ye utter by the tongue words easy to be understood, how shall it be known what is spoken? for ye shall speak into the air.
Página 83 - I will ask him for my place again ; he shall tell me I am a drunkard ! Had I as many mouths as Hydra, such an answer would stop them all. To be now a sensible man, by and by a fool, and presently a beast! O strange! Every inordinate cup is unblessed and the ingredient is a devil.
Página 274 - A mighty spirit is eclipsed — a power Hath passed from day to darkness — to whose hour Of light no likeness is bequeathed — no name, Focus at once of all the rays of fame ! The flash of wit, the bright intelligence, The beam of song, the blaze of eloquence, Set with their Sun — but still have left behind The enduring produce of immortal mind...
Página 99 - And concentrating into one vast heap all the malice of his offended feelings, he added, after a pause of intense meaning, " There is not a brick in your dirty town but what is cemented by the blood of a negro...
Página 98 - No, Sir!" replied his indignant guest, in grating tones of irony, as he held it up, " nor would it if it were f aqua fortis ! " adding with an authoritative voice, which seemed to be borrowed from Jove's thunder, and loud enough "to fright the isle from its propriety," " Fill the glass, Sir ! Am I not George Frederick Cooke ? ' born to command ten thousand slaves like thee...
Página 276 - Husband, at whose house he visited frequently — nay, daily (for we were near neighbours), for many years after. Theodore was at that time a tall, slim, fashionablelooking youth, with a fine figure ; black clustering curls hanging about his animated face, every line of which was full of intelligence and genius.
Página 386 - So, by a calenture misled, The mariner with rapture sees, On the smooth ocean's azure bed, Enamell'd fields and verdant trees : With eager haste he longs to rove In that fantastic scene, and thinks It must be some enchanted grove; And in he leaps, and down he sinks.
Página 47 - ... mischief. The will , chooses, follows, and embraces things evil and destructive ; but it is because the understanding first tells it that they are good and wholesome, and fit to be chosen by it. One man gives another a cup of poison, a thing as terrible as death ; but at the same time he tells him that it is a cordial ; and so he drinks it off, and dies.
Página 197 - King," some fastidious persons in the pit made a demur, and an angry stir ensued ; the question of " Where's Carles ?" became the (dis)order of the time, and " Carles .' Carles !" was the popular demand — a demand which Mr. Elliston was not backward to answer in his own way, and coming promptly forward with his most profound bow, respectfully, though haughtily, enquired of the " Ladies and Gentleman" what was
Página 274 - May of life," he had not o'ertaken the sear and yellow of his days, nor lost the summer freshness of his mind ; which might be said to have attained to the maturity and ripeness of autumn without any of its decay. He " should have died hereafter !" Mr. Hook was an extraordinary man. Those who knew him only from his writings knew but a very slight portion of the surpassing faculties of his mind. It was necessary to be acquainted with him personally, and in society, to be able to form any thing like...