Memoirs of a Manager: Or, Life's Stage with New Scenery, Volume 1W. Bragg, 1830 |
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Página 6
... hope he will , as soon as convenient , oblige me by charitably stepping forward in my behalf and doing the act of penance in a white sheet ! I mean not that he should catch a cold by standing bare- footed on the damp stones of the ...
... hope he will , as soon as convenient , oblige me by charitably stepping forward in my behalf and doing the act of penance in a white sheet ! I mean not that he should catch a cold by standing bare- footed on the damp stones of the ...
Página 31
... hope among rational beings , however , is that prejudices of all kinds are on the decline , and that new generations are daily springing up who employ themselves , with some- thing better . These hopes are truly consoling , but , on the ...
... hope among rational beings , however , is that prejudices of all kinds are on the decline , and that new generations are daily springing up who employ themselves , with some- thing better . These hopes are truly consoling , but , on the ...
Página 67
... hope to outdo man in personal strength or warlike act : therefore she has a right to effect her purpose , and preserve her share of rule by such means as she thinks most advisa- ble . What she cannot do by strength , she does by ...
... hope to outdo man in personal strength or warlike act : therefore she has a right to effect her purpose , and preserve her share of rule by such means as she thinks most advisa- ble . What she cannot do by strength , she does by ...
Página 76
... hope I am equally honest . MAY 27 , 1795. - I am now , and have been for more than a year , a married man , and a father ; and stationed in a London Theatre , ( Covent Garden ) . The latter consideration would once have gratified my ...
... hope I am equally honest . MAY 27 , 1795. - I am now , and have been for more than a year , a married man , and a father ; and stationed in a London Theatre , ( Covent Garden ) . The latter consideration would once have gratified my ...
Página 84
... hope be the first thing he would catch hold of ? - would not be naturally say to himself , Ah ! she wishes me to live ! she has indeed saved my life ! and con- sequently means to make me happy ! -Alas ! alas ! Mr. Bateman ( like most ...
... hope be the first thing he would catch hold of ? - would not be naturally say to himself , Ah ! she wishes me to live ! she has indeed saved my life ! and con- sequently means to make me happy ! -Alas ! alas ! Mr. Bateman ( like most ...
Outras edições - Ver todos
Memoirs of a Manager: Or, Life's Stage with New Scenery, Volume 1 Henry Lee Visualização completa - 1830 |
Memoirs of a Manager: Or, Life's Stage with New Scenery, Volumes 1-2 Henry Lee Prévia não disponível - 2015 |
Termos e frases comuns
acquainted actor afterwards almanacks Anacreon in Heaven attention Barnstaple better Bideford Birmingham Bridgwater Bridport Bristol Channel called Captain character Charles clever Commissaire course Covent Garden delight Devizes door Dorchester eyes favorite feel frequently friends gallery give going Guernsey happy honor hope Ilfracombe Island joke journies kind knew known ladies laugh least London look Lyme manager Marquis matter mind never night Normanton observed old gentleman once opinion party performed perhaps person piece play pleasant present pretty Quarter Day Quotem racter replied respect Royalty Theatre rule of going sailed Salisbury scarcely scenes season Shatford shilling short singing song soon speak spirits spoken stage story supposed talents taste Taunton tell Tenby Theatre Theatrical thing thought to-morrow told took town truth Weymouth whole wish word young youth
Passagens mais conhecidas
Página 74 - My sledge and hammer lie reclined, My bellows, too, have lost their wind ; My fire's extinct, my forge decayed, And in the dust my vice is laid. My coal is spent, my iron's gone, My nails are drove, my work is done ; My fire-dried corpse lies here at rest, And, smoke-like, soars up to be bless'd.
Página 51 - ... scribbler, if ever there was one. He begins his recollections by telling the reader that ' he has known no regularity . . . his journey has been, like the comet's — eccentric '. Here is a self-revealing passage : I had imbibed early in life a taste of a romantic kind ; — a passion, perhaps common amongst young men whose minds are somewhat ardent, or in any degree enterprising. I had conceived a desire of notice, of notoriety of some kind or other. If not talented, so as to be capable of obtaining...
Página 82 - Where long-prong'd sticks stand up like forked devils ! Each holly-bush, tall shrub, or painted post, A pallid spectre seems or green-eyed ghost ! From boughs suspended, bodied gowns I see, As if a Bateman hung on every tree!
Página 84 - ... upon the lady, and perhaps is the only part of her conduct that is reprehen•sible; for, say what we will, if she did not mean to give his passion a suitable return, why did she feed him with hopes even to the last? — for was not this feeding him with hopes?— false hopes ?—Let any lover imagine himself hung up in the same manner and thus cut down by the fair hand of...
Página 84 - Wbitechapel needle stuck therein This peculiar incident was categorically noticed at the coroner's inquest, and considered of very material consequence : — The lady however not relaxing in her cruelty, Mr. Bateman's " tragic job•' was the next day completed in the orchard ! There is no doubt but the account here given is the true one ; and the reason why it has been hitherto suppressed, is, because it reflects...
Página 84 - Alas ! alas ! Mr. Bateman (like most lovers) argued wrongly ! Poor dear man! He remains a memorable example of illfated love, and his mistress a remarkable instance of implacable cruelty !—Mr. Bateman was not a frivolous...
Página 126 - I say exhausted, because there was no vital air, no oxygen, left uncousumed within it. As to the crowd at the top of the stairs, life was sustained in them only by the occasional whiffs of pure |air that came up from the gallery...
Página 83 - This gentleman, a pattern to all true lovers— suspended himself from the bough of a tree, in the garden belonging to the young lady who was the object of his passion. Mr.
Página 83 - They go so far as to add (but whether true or not we cannot say) that the particular tree on which he hung himself, bore that species of fruit called the AppleJohn ; and that it...
Página 83 - ... is probably the truth, as it reconciles both the former accounts ; and which is. That the unfortunate Mr. .Bateman hung himself twice ; once at the...