Memoirs of a Manager: Or, Life's Stage with New Scenery, Volume 1W. Bragg, 1830 |
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Página 10
... feel quite happy ! " but ( after licking his lips ) he added " I tink , though very good , I tink I should have liked it more if it had been brandy !! " Now this reply was in my opinion , a very natural one ; very innocent , conclusive ...
... feel quite happy ! " but ( after licking his lips ) he added " I tink , though very good , I tink I should have liked it more if it had been brandy !! " Now this reply was in my opinion , a very natural one ; very innocent , conclusive ...
Página 16
... feel ? The answer given him was that he might lay his hand upon it , but they thought that color could not be ascertained by feeling alone , as that depended on the differences of the surfaces on which the said color was laid . For ...
... feel ? The answer given him was that he might lay his hand upon it , but they thought that color could not be ascertained by feeling alone , as that depended on the differences of the surfaces on which the said color was laid . For ...
Página 37
... feel bold enough to have given the latter answer , instead of the first . A few trials would soon convince any impartial man that it is as improbable that he should act a part without previous trial , as it would be that he should take ...
... feel bold enough to have given the latter answer , instead of the first . A few trials would soon convince any impartial man that it is as improbable that he should act a part without previous trial , as it would be that he should take ...
Página 45
... feel as one long estranged from the place of his birth , who , after the lapse of many years , returns to the scenes of his happy days . He knows the hill and the valley and the rivulet , the oak that is the child of centuries the spire ...
... feel as one long estranged from the place of his birth , who , after the lapse of many years , returns to the scenes of his happy days . He knows the hill and the valley and the rivulet , the oak that is the child of centuries the spire ...
Página 48
... feel astonishment that we live even for a single year ? Look at the child nursed in the lap of luxury - plied with meats and unwholesome spices , enveloped in the warm- est clothing , lest the breath of heaven should visit it too ...
... feel astonishment that we live even for a single year ? Look at the child nursed in the lap of luxury - plied with meats and unwholesome spices , enveloped in the warm- est clothing , lest the breath of heaven should visit it too ...
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 alluded almanacks attention Barnstaple believe better Birmingham Bridport bull-baiting called Captain character Charles Charles Murray clever Commissaire course Covent Garden delight Devizes doctress door Dorchester eyes favorite feel frequently friends gallery give glass Guernsey hand happy heard honor hope horses Island JOHN DRYDEN joke kind knew known ladies laugh least London look Lymington manager matter mean mind never Newport Pagnel night Normanton Nottinghamshire observed old gentleman once opinion party performance perhaps person piece play pleasant present pretty Quarter Day Quotem racter rat-catching replied respect Royalty Theatre Salisbury scenes season seen Shatford shilling singing Sodbury song soon speak spirits spoken stage story supposed sure taste Taunton tell Tenby Theatre 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 120 - There is a tide in the affairs of man Which, taken at the flood, leads on to fortune; Omitted, all the voyage of their life is spent In shallows and miseries.
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 - I'm each apartment seeking, But noxious vapours every where are reeking ! Put to strange shifts, and numerous shifts while trying, I'm shivering wet, while all things round are drying. 'Tis worse, far worse, than standing with bare feet. At Christmas, doing penance in a sheet ! I pace the garden, heavy as a sledge, " Linen (as Falstaff says) on every hedge.
Página 18 - What a piece of work is man ! ... in action how like an angel, in apprehension, how like a god !
Página 126 - CAT — (notwith^anding its nine lives !) could not have lived long in such an exhausted atmosphere. I say exhausted, because there was no vital air, no oxygen, left unconsumed 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 door- way.
Página 84 - ... upon the lady, and perhaps is the only part of her conduct that is reprehensible ; 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...
Página 84 - ... which she happened just then to be using-, her left hand being thrust into a silk stocking, with a new Whitechapel 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 cruelly, Mr. Bateman's
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. Bateman's biographers differ in one...
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.