Occasional Papers: Dramatic and HistoricalBickers, 1906 - 251 страници |
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Страница 15
... regard him as something of a nuisance . / If he be the author of The Actor their impatience is not to be wondered at , for he is mighty severe in his strictures on some of the players and tiresome in his praises of others . He does not ...
... regard him as something of a nuisance . / If he be the author of The Actor their impatience is not to be wondered at , for he is mighty severe in his strictures on some of the players and tiresome in his praises of others . He does not ...
Страница 27
... regards with almost equal indignation , Italian opera , found its way on to the English stage . But the cause of these dangerous innovations is surely more general than Cibber is willing to admit . There must always be a majority of the ...
... regards with almost equal indignation , Italian opera , found its way on to the English stage . But the cause of these dangerous innovations is surely more general than Cibber is willing to admit . There must always be a majority of the ...
Страница 68
... regard its glittering triumphs and widespread popularity as unalloyed with serious endeavour , with anxiety and disappointment , with those cares and troubles that are the universal accompaniments of every other form of human ...
... regard its glittering triumphs and widespread popularity as unalloyed with serious endeavour , with anxiety and disappointment , with those cares and troubles that are the universal accompaniments of every other form of human ...
Страница 70
... his honest fellow - countrymen . One other topic suggests itself with regard to the changes that have occurred in the relative status of the actor . The resentment felt by some at his advance in public 70 THE ART AND STATUS.
... his honest fellow - countrymen . One other topic suggests itself with regard to the changes that have occurred in the relative status of the actor . The resentment felt by some at his advance in public 70 THE ART AND STATUS.
Страница 73
... regard to that art , truths which at the present time , when , in the opinion of many , the art of acting has lost something of that distinct prominence which it enjoyed a hundred years ago , may serve to remind us of its higher aspects ...
... regard to that art , truths which at the present time , when , in the opinion of many , the art of acting has lost something of that distinct prominence which it enjoyed a hundred years ago , may serve to remind us of its higher aspects ...
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Често срещани думи и фрази
actor or actress actors and actresses admiration appearance Aram's arrest art of acting artist asked Assize Court audience Bancal Barton Booth Bastide and Jausion Betterton Booth Bousquier brother calling captain Cato character Charles Chief Justice Christopher Rich Cibber Clarke Clémandot Colard Colley Colley Cibber comedy court crime criticism Danby David Garrick death declared dramatic dramatist Drury Lane eighteenth century Eugene Aram father friends Fualdès Garrick genius gentleman Goodere hand Horace Walpole Houseman John Kemble judge Kemble King's Bench Knaresborough lady lives Lord Hatton Macklin Madame Manzon Mahony manager Missonier murder nature never night occasion Oldfield passion persons play players popular Prefect prisoners profession Quin regard replied resentment respect Rodez Samuel Scroggs Scroggs's Serjeant Siddons Sir Edward Blackett Sir John speak stage story success theatre theatrical things told tragedy trial truth vanity whilst wife Wilks William witness Woffington woman Bancal writes young
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Страница 38 - If I were a woman, I would kiss as many of you as had beards that pleased me, complexions that liked me, and breaths that I defied not...
Страница 32 - Cold are those hands, which, living, were stretched forth At friendship's call to succour modest worth. Here lies James Quin ! deign reader to be taught (Whate'er thy strength of body, force of thought, In nature's happiest mould however cast), To this complexion thou must come at last.
Страница 116 - Till one wide conflagration swallows all. Thence a new world, to nature's laws unknown, Breaks out refulgent, with a heaven its own: Another Cynthia her new journey runs, And other planets circle other suns. The forests dance, the rivers upward rise, Whales sport in woods, and dolphins in the skies; And last, to give the whole creation grace, Lo! one vast egg produces human race. Joy fills his soul, joy innocent of thought; What power, he cries, what power these wonders wrought?
Страница 61 - ... is, and ought to be, in many points of view, and strictly speaking, no imitation at all of external nature. Perhaps it ought to be as far removed from the vulgar idea of imitation as the refined civilised state in which we live is removed from a gross state of nature...
Страница 25 - I have often seen her in private societies, where women of the best rank might have borrowed some part of her behaviour without the least diminution of their sense or dignity...
Страница 114 - Circe,' and others, all set off with the most expensive decorations of scenes and habits, with the best voices and dancers. " This sensual supply of sight and sound coming in to the assistance of the weaker party, it was no wonder they should grow too hard for sense and simple nature, when it is considered how many more people there are that can see and hear than think and judge.
Страница 21 - I was resolved to walk thither and see the last office done to a man whom I had always very much admired, and from whose action I had received more strong impressions of what is great and noble in human nature, than from the arguments of the most solid philosophers, or the descriptions of the most charming poets I had ever read.
Страница 36 - In spite of outward blemishes, she shone, For humour fam'd, and humour all her own. Easy, as if at home, the stage she trod, Nor sought the critic's praise, nor fear'd his rod. Original in spirit and in ease, She pleas'd by hiding all attempts to please. No comic actress ever yet could raise, On humour's base, more merit or more praise.
Страница 56 - Garrick, the charming man, the fine fellow, the delightful creature, both by men and ladies, when they were admiring everything you did and everything you scribbled, at this very time, /, the.
Страница 46 - Here Havard, all serene, in the same strains, Loves, hates, and rages, triumphs, and complains ; His easy vacant face proclaim'da heart Which could not feel emotions, nor impart. With him came mighty Davies. On my life, That Davies hath a very pretty wife :— Statesman all over !— In plots famous grown !— He mouths a sentence, as curs mouth a bone.