Autobiographies: A Collection of the Most Instructive and Amusing Lives Ever Published, Volumen1Whittaker, Treacher, and Arnot, 1830 |
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Página 8
... spectators to know what he really was when in no- body's shape but his own ; and whether he , who by his profession had so long been ridiculing his benefac- tors , might not , when the coat of his profession was off , deserve to be ...
... spectators to know what he really was when in no- body's shape but his own ; and whether he , who by his profession had so long been ridiculing his benefac- tors , might not , when the coat of his profession was off , deserve to be ...
Página 46
... spectator , something very particular surprised me : the noble guests at the table happening to be more in number than attendants out of liveries could be found for , I , being well known in the lord Devonshire's family , was desired by ...
... spectator , something very particular surprised me : the noble guests at the table happening to be more in number than attendants out of liveries could be found for , I , being well known in the lord Devonshire's family , was desired by ...
Página 53
... spectators who have made it so terribly mean to appear there ? Were there no ground for this question , where could be the disgrace of entering into a society whose institution , when not abused , is a delightful school of morality ...
... spectators who have made it so terribly mean to appear there ? Were there no ground for this question , where could be the disgrace of entering into a society whose institution , when not abused , is a delightful school of morality ...
Página 54
... spectator , as so much rank theatrical popery ; but cannot still allow these enormities to impeach the profession , while they are so palpably owing to the depraved taste of the multitude . While vice and farcical folly are the most ...
... spectator , as so much rank theatrical popery ; but cannot still allow these enormities to impeach the profession , while they are so palpably owing to the depraved taste of the multitude . While vice and farcical folly are the most ...
Página 55
... spectator into a partiality in his favour . That while he is conscious , that as an actor he must be always in the hands of injustice , it does him at least this involuntary good , that it keeps him in a settled resolution to avoid all ...
... spectator into a partiality in his favour . That while he is conscious , that as an actor he must be always in the hands of injustice , it does him at least this involuntary good , that it keeps him in a settled resolution to avoid all ...
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