The Clubs of London ...H. Colburn, 1832 |
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Página 84
... . The two first lines seem to have suggested the sentence of the speech which I have quoted ; and the next couplet to have supplied the passage im- " 6 mediately following : But when he was told 84 THE CLUBS OF LONDON .
... . The two first lines seem to have suggested the sentence of the speech which I have quoted ; and the next couplet to have supplied the passage im- " 6 mediately following : But when he was told 84 THE CLUBS OF LONDON .
Página 85
Esq. Charles Marsh. " 6 mediately following : But when he was told , that it was not foreign barbarism that had spread so wide a calamity ; -that no disputed succession had deluged the land with blood ; -that it was not religious fury ...
Esq. Charles Marsh. " 6 mediately following : But when he was told , that it was not foreign barbarism that had spread so wide a calamity ; -that no disputed succession had deluged the land with blood ; -that it was not religious fury ...
Página 95
... told us , for instance , that he thought the boulevards that were served up to him at a certain table d'hôte , delicious . We could never satisfactorily trace through the laby- rinth of poor Dick's misapprehensions , what was the ...
... told us , for instance , that he thought the boulevards that were served up to him at a certain table d'hôte , delicious . We could never satisfactorily trace through the laby- rinth of poor Dick's misapprehensions , what was the ...
Página 101
... told me , that long before Shakspeare's time , the stage was in posses- sion of a succession of historical dramas , which Shakspeare was employed to alter , and adapt to the more improved taste of a more modern` audience ; that this ...
... told me , that long before Shakspeare's time , the stage was in posses- sion of a succession of historical dramas , which Shakspeare was employed to alter , and adapt to the more improved taste of a more modern` audience ; that this ...
Página 104
... told Steevens , in the second part of Henry the Sixth , the greater part of which is genuine . There , the hereditary title of the Duke of York is stated with the greatest per- spicuity ; whereas , in the first part , which the ablest ...
... told Steevens , in the second part of Henry the Sixth , the greater part of which is genuine . There , the hereditary title of the Duke of York is stated with the greatest per- spicuity ; whereas , in the first part , which the ablest ...
Términos y frases comunes
afterwards amidst amongst amusement anecdote Arthur Murphy banker barrister Beef Beef-Steaks Burke called character Charles Charles Morris Cobb conversation convivial counsellor Court Curran delighted Dick Dick's dine dinner Drûg Dublin Duke of Norfolk eloquence English Erskine exclaimed Farmer feelings fortune French revolution gave genius gentleman give Grace heard heart holy honour Horne Tooke hour humour Humphrey Sturt intellect Irish Jasus John JOHN HORNE TOOKE Kemble Killarney kind lady late laugh Linley literary Lord Lord Kingsborough Lord Sandwich Mackintosh ment Micky mind mirth morning natural never night notes observed occasion party person play political poor port wine powers racter remarked replied returned Rooney Serjeant Shakspeare Sheridan Sir Francis Burdett speech spirit Steaks Sublime Society sure taste tell theatre thing tion told Walsh whilst whole Wilkes WILLIAM LINLEY wine word