Helena Faucit (Lady Martin)W. Blackwood, 1900 - 416 páginas |
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Página 9
... play , beyond seeing many kind people in my dressing - room , and wondering what this meant . Our good family doctor from London was among the audience , and bound up the wounded hand . This never occurred again , because they ever ...
... play , beyond seeing many kind people in my dressing - room , and wondering what this meant . Our good family doctor from London was among the audience , and bound up the wounded hand . This never occurred again , because they ever ...
Página 11
... play Romeo to her Juliet , and that the play must be changed . Accordingly , the announcement in the playbills of 29th December 1835 that " on Tuesday the 5th of January will be acted Romeo and Juliet , the part of Juliet by a young ...
... play Romeo to her Juliet , and that the play must be changed . Accordingly , the announcement in the playbills of 29th December 1835 that " on Tuesday the 5th of January will be acted Romeo and Juliet , the part of Juliet by a young ...
Página 14
... play . Then came a knock at my dressing - room door , which my mother answered , and I heard the dear accustomed voice of my friend and master say , " Have you given the poor child anything ? " I cried out for him to come to me , but ...
... play . Then came a knock at my dressing - room door , which my mother answered , and I heard the dear accustomed voice of my friend and master say , " Have you given the poor child anything ? " I cried out for him to come to me , but ...
Página 15
... play should be changed to The Hunchback , he offered to resume his original part of Sir Thomas Clifford to support me . Never can I forget his rendering of it . What a high and noble bearing ! What tender respect in his approaches as a ...
... play should be changed to The Hunchback , he offered to resume his original part of Sir Thomas Clifford to support me . Never can I forget his rendering of it . What a high and noble bearing ! What tender respect in his approaches as a ...
Página 18
... play . The character of Belvidera , great as it afterwards became in her hands , is not one to move the sympathies of a young woman , while it demands a measure of passion and tragic force , especially in the concluding scenes , with ...
... play . The character of Belvidera , great as it afterwards became in her hands , is not one to move the sympathies of a young woman , while it demands a measure of passion and tragic force , especially in the concluding scenes , with ...
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Palavras e frases frequentes
acting actors actress admiration afterwards Anne Bracegirdle Antigone appeared applause artist Athelwold audience Beatrice beautiful Belvidera Blackwood called character Charles Kemble charm Covent Garden critic Crown 8vo dear delight Demy 8vo Desdemona Diary drama dress Drury Lane Dublin Edinburgh engagement expression exquisite Fcap feeling felt friends genius George Eliot Geraldine Jewsbury give Glasgow grace happy Haymarket Theatre heart Helen Faucit Hermione heroine Illustrations Imogen impersonation impression Iolanthe Jewsbury Juliet Kemble kind Lady Macbeth Lady Martin letter London look Macready Macready's Manchester mind Miss Faucit Miss Helen Faucit morning nature never night noble pain passion Pauline performance play pleasure poet Portia Portraits Post 8vo Professor Queen rehearsal remember Romeo Rosalind scene Scotland Second Edition seemed seen Shakespeare Shakespearian speak spirit stage tell theatre things thought triumphs voice vols wife woman words writes wrote young
Passagens conhecidas
Página 190 - Heaven doth with us as we with torches do, Not light them for themselves ; for if our virtues Did not go forth of us, 'twere all alike As if we had them not.
Página 25 - Svo, cloth, 6s. Piccadilly. With Illustrations by Richard Doyle. New Edition, 3s. 6d. Cheap Edition, boards, 2s. 6d. Traits and Travesties ; Social and Political. Post Svo, 10s. 6d. Episodes in a Life of Adventure ; or, Moss from a Rolling Stone.
Página 175 - Nought's had, all's spent, Where our desire is got without content : 'Tis safer to be that which we destroy Than by destruction dwell in doubtful joy.
Página 126 - I was confirmed in this opinion, that he who would not be frustrate of his hope to write well hereafter in laudable things, ought himself to be a true poem...
Página 15 - Crown 8vo, 6s. Singularly Deluded. Crown 8vo, 6s. GRANT. Bush-Life in Queensland. By AC GRANT. New Edition. Crown 8vo, 6s. GRIER. In Furthest Ind. The Narrative of Mr EDWARD CARLYON of Ellswether, in the County of Northampton, and late of the Honourable East India Company's Service, Gentleman. Wrote by his own hand in the year of grace 1697. Edited, with a few Explanatory Notes, by SYDNEY C.
Página 21 - Post 8vo, 7s. 6d. Goethe's Faust. Part I. Translated into English Verse. Second Edition, crown 8vo, 6s. Ninth Edition, fcap. 8vo, 3s. 6d. Goethe's Faust. Part II. Translated into English Verse.
Página 25 - With Excursions in the Lebanon. With Illustrations and Maps. Demy Svo, 21s. Memoir of the Life of Laurence Oliphant, and of Alice Oliphant, his Wife.
Página 31 - Fcap. Svo, 6s. Vallombrosa. Post Svo, 5s. Poems. 2 vols., 7s. 6d. Fiammetta. A Summer Idyl. Crown Svo, 7s. 6d. Conversations in a Studio. 2 vols. crown Svo, 12s. 6d. Excursions in Art and Letters. Crown Svo, 7s. 6d. A Poet's Portfolio : Later Readings.
Página 20 - MACKENZIE. Studies in Roman Law. With Comparative Views of the Laws of France, England, and Scotland. By Lord MACKENZIE, one of the Judges of the Court of Session in Scotland.
Página 25 - Lectures (or 1898. By the Rev. THOMAS NICOL, DD, Professor of Divinity and Biblical Criticism in the University of Aberdeen; Author of ' Recent Explorations in Bible Lands.