A View of the English Stage: Or, A Series of Dramatic Criticisms |
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Page 10
... hope of criticism , for it shows that we have nothing else to compare him with . " Take him for all in all , " it will be long , very long , before we “ look upon his like again , ” if we are to wait as long as we have waited . We wish ...
... hope of criticism , for it shows that we have nothing else to compare him with . " Take him for all in all , " it will be long , very long , before we “ look upon his like again , ” if we are to wait as long as we have waited . We wish ...
Page 16
... , as one of disappointed hope , of bitter regret , of affec- 1 Hamlet , II , ii , 381 . 2 Ibid . , II , ii , 472 . 3 Ibid . , III , i , 71 . tion suspended , not obliterated , by the distractions of 16 A View of the English Stage .
... , as one of disappointed hope , of bitter regret , of affec- 1 Hamlet , II , ii , 381 . 2 Ibid . , II , ii , 472 . 3 Ibid . , III , i , 71 . tion suspended , not obliterated , by the distractions of 16 A View of the English Stage .
Page 30
... hope to charm by simplicity and sensibility ; but a tawdry courtesan , who , when her paint and patches , her rings and jewels are stripped off , can excite only disgust and ridicule . This is the state to which she has been reduced by ...
... hope to charm by simplicity and sensibility ; but a tawdry courtesan , who , when her paint and patches , her rings and jewels are stripped off , can excite only disgust and ridicule . This is the state to which she has been reduced by ...
Page 38
... hope none living , sir , " was , we thought , quite out of character . The motion was performed , and the sounds uttered , in the smallest possible time in which a puppet could be made to mimic or gabble the part . For this we see not ...
... hope none living , sir , " was , we thought , quite out of character . The motion was performed , and the sounds uttered , in the smallest possible time in which a puppet could be made to mimic or gabble the part . For this we see not ...
Page 50
... hope , or love in it . He seems chiefly sensible to pain , or to the passions that spring from it , and to the terrible energies of mind or body , which are necessary to grapple with , or to avert it . Even over the world of passion he ...
... hope , or love in it . He seems chiefly sensible to pain , or to the passions that spring from it , and to the terrible energies of mind or body , which are necessary to grapple with , or to avert it . Even over the world of passion he ...
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Common terms and phrases
acting action actor admirable allusion appearance applause audience Bartley beautiful Beggar's Opera better Bruges character Charles Kemble comedy comic Comus Coriolanus Covent Garden critics début delight display Dowton dramatic Drury Lane Drury-Lane Duke effect English equal excellent expression farce favour favourite feeling gaiety Garrick genius gentleman give grace Hamlet Haymarket Haymarket Theatre Hazlitt humour Iago Ibid imagination indifferent interest Kean Kean's Kemble Kemble's King Lady Liston look Lord lover Macbeth manner Mardyn mind Miss Kelly Miss O'Neill Miss Stephens Molière moral Munden nature never night O'Neill's October Othello pantomime passages passion perfect performance person piece play plot poet produced revived Richard Richard III Romeo scene seems sense sentiment Shakespeare Shylock Siddons singing Sir Giles song soul spirit stage sung Theatre theatrical thing thou thought tion tone tragedy voice whole Wife words young
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