Autobiographies: A Collection of the Most Instructive and Amusing Lives Ever Published, Volumen1Whittaker, Treacher, and Arnot, 1830 |
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Página 7
... friend , without saying a word to dissuade me from it : concluding , I suppose , that such a wild thought could not possibly require a serious answer . But you see I was in earnest . And now you will say , the world will find me , under ...
... friend , without saying a word to dissuade me from it : concluding , I suppose , that such a wild thought could not possibly require a serious answer . But you see I was in earnest . And now you will say , the world will find me , under ...
Página 12
... friend aside , and asked him , how he came to be so earnestly against me ? To which , with some glouting confusion , he replied , " Because you are always jeering and making a jest of me to every boy in the school . " Many a mischief ...
... friend aside , and asked him , how he came to be so earnestly against me ? To which , with some glouting confusion , he replied , " Because you are always jeering and making a jest of me to every boy in the school . " Many a mischief ...
Página 13
... friend may have a passive indulgence for your mirth , if you find him silent at it , though you were as intrepid as ... friends , will never be grave upon an attack of this kind , but rather thank you that you have given him a right to ...
... friend may have a passive indulgence for your mirth , if you find him silent at it , though you were as intrepid as ... friends , will never be grave upon an attack of this kind , but rather thank you that you have given him a right to ...
Página 16
... friends to rally him out of ; in lieu of which they have equipped him with one they thought had a better sound in good company . He is the first man of so sociable a spirit that I ever knew capable of quitting the allurements of wit and ...
... friends to rally him out of ; in lieu of which they have equipped him with one they thought had a better sound in good company . He is the first man of so sociable a spirit that I ever knew capable of quitting the allurements of wit and ...
Página 18
... friends are displeased with them ; for besides that in this light I afford them frequent matter of mirth , they may possibly be less uneasy at their own foibles , when they have so old a precedent to keep them in countenance ; nay ...
... friends are displeased with them ; for besides that in this light I afford them frequent matter of mirth , they may possibly be less uneasy at their own foibles , when they have so old a precedent to keep them in countenance ; nay ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Autobiographies: A Collection of the Most Instructive and Amusing ..., Volumen1 Vista completa - 1826 |
Autobiographies: A Collection of the Most Instructive and Amusing Lives Ever ... BiblioBazaar Sin vista previa disponible - 2013 |
Términos y frases comunes
acted actors actress affairs allowed applause approbation audience auditors Beggar's Opera better Betterton Booth Cato character Cibber Colley Cibber Collier comedian comedy confess court delight Dogget Drury-lane entertainment equal excellence excuse extraordinary farther favour folly fortune friends gave gentleman give Haymarket Haymarket theatre honour hope humour imagined inclination judge judgment king knew labour laugh least Leigh less liberty license lord lord chamberlain Love for Love managers master ment merit nature never Nonjuror notwithstanding obliged observed occasion Oldfield opera opinion Othello particular passion patentees performance perhaps person play pleased pleasure pounds Powel pretend profits racter reader reason scenes seemed share sir John Vanbrugh sir Richard Steele sometimes speak spectators spirit stage sure Swiney taste Tatler temper terton theatre theatrical thought tion Tony Leigh took tragedy true truth vanity voice Whig Wilks