Autobiographies: A Collection of the Most Instructive and Amusing Lives Ever Published, Volumen1Whittaker, Treacher, and Arnot, 1830 |
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Página 9
... seen in the most flagrant and immoral characters , whether he might not see as great a rogue when he looked into the glass himself , as when he held it to others . It was doubtless from a supposition that this sort of curiosity would ...
... seen in the most flagrant and immoral characters , whether he might not see as great a rogue when he looked into the glass himself , as when he held it to others . It was doubtless from a supposition that this sort of curiosity would ...
Página 10
... seen the growing medals of his person from infancy to old age ) but shall likewise include with them the theatrical history of my own time , from my first appear- ance on the stage to my last exit . If then what I shall advance on that ...
... seen the growing medals of his person from infancy to old age ) but shall likewise include with them the theatrical history of my own time , from my first appear- ance on the stage to my last exit . If then what I shall advance on that ...
Página 13
... seen a couple of these clumsy combatants drub one another with as little manners or mercy as if they had two flails in their hands ; children at play with case - knives could not give you more apprehension of their doing one another a ...
... seen a couple of these clumsy combatants drub one another with as little manners or mercy as if they had two flails in their hands ; children at play with case - knives could not give you more apprehension of their doing one another a ...
Página 14
... seen these gentlemen in the same company , you must give me leave to take them separately . The first of them then has a title , and- -no matter what ; I am not to speak of the great , but the happy , part of his character , and in this ...
... seen these gentlemen in the same company , you must give me leave to take them separately . The first of them then has a title , and- -no matter what ; I am not to speak of the great , but the happy , part of his character , and in this ...
Página 18
... seen others , whose rank and fortune have laid a sort of restraint upon their liberty of pleasing their com- pany by pleasing themselves , I have said softly to myself , -Well , there is some advantage in having neither rank nor fortune ...
... seen others , whose rank and fortune have laid a sort of restraint upon their liberty of pleasing their com- pany by pleasing themselves , I have said softly to myself , -Well , there is some advantage in having neither rank nor fortune ...
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