I have never seen men go in to cry so undisguisedly as they did at that reading yesterday afternoon. They made no attempt whatever to hide it, and certainly cried more than the women. As to the "Boots" at night, and " Mrs. Gamp " too, it was just one... the letters of charles dickens - 459 ページhis sister- in law and his eldest daughter 著 - 1893全文表示 - この書籍について
| 1880 - 592 ページ
...out of the bouquet from my coat. And yesterday morning, as I had showered the leaves from my geranium in reading " Little Dombey," they mounted the platform,...that sometimes I could not compose my face to go on. . . . Tell the girls that Arthur and I have each ordered at Belfast a trim, sparkling, slap-up Irish... | |
| John Forster - 1874 - 656 ページ
...sometimes dream may he ,-^y B>'°"g HARBOGATE: reading; and as to the Boots and Mrs. Gamp "it — ISM. «Was just one roar with me and them. For they "made...sometimes I could not "compose my face to go on." His greatest trial in this way however was a little later at Harrogate — "the queerest place, with... | |
| John Forster - 1874 - 616 ページ
...cry so undisguisedly," as they did at the Belfast Dombey reading; and as to the Boots and Mrs. Gamp "it was just one roar with me and them. For they made...that sometimes I could not compose my face to go on." His greatest trial in this way however * " Shillings get into stalls, and half-crowns get into shillings,... | |
| John Forster - 1874 - 586 ページ
...cry so undisguisedly,' as they did at the Belfast Dombey reading; and as to the Boots and Mrs. Gamp ' it was just ' one roar with me and them. For they...that sometimes I could not compose my face to go on.' His greatest trial in this way however was a little later at Harrogate—' the queerest place, with... | |
| Charles Dickens - 1880 - 514 ページ
...out of the bouquet from my coat. And yesterday morning, as I had showered the leaves from my geranium in reading "Little Dombey," they mounted the platform,...Forster's that night, for a million of wild mistakes at eightyyears of age. I hope to be at Tavistock House before five o'clock next Saturday morning, and... | |
| Nicholas Patrick Wiseman - 1880 - 644 ページ
...sobbed undisguisedly, shedding tears as freely as the women ; and during his comic reading, he wrote, "it was just one roar with me and them; for they made...that sometimes I could not compose my face to go on." Irish voices in the streets stopped him with blessings, and begged a grasp of the readily-given hand,... | |
| Charles H. Jones - 1882 - 276 ページ
...go in to cry so undisguisedly as they did at that reading yesterday afternoon. They made no attempt to hide it, and certainly cried more than the women....that sometimes I could not compose my face to go on." (To Mis» Hogarth, from Scarborough, September llth.) — "Apropos of children, there was one gentleman... | |
| Charles Dickens - 1894 - 574 ページ
...out of the bouquet from my coat. And yesterday morning, as I had showered the leaves from my geranium in reading " Little Dombey," they mounted the platform,...Landor efface the former image of the fine old man. I would n't blot him out, in his tender gallantry, as he sat upon that bed at Forster's that night, for... | |
| Charles Dickens - 1899 - 602 ページ
...so undisguisedly," as they did at the Belfast Dombey reading ; ' and as to the Boots and Mrs. Gamp 1 it was just one roar with me and them. For they made me ' laugh so, that sometimes I coidd not compose my face to go on.' His greatest trial in this way however was a little later at Harro-... | |
| Sir Frank Thomas Marzials - 1908 - 600 ページ
...so undisguisedly," as they did at the Belfast " Dombey " reading; "and as to the Boots and Mrs. Gamp it was just one roar with me and them. For they made...that sometimes I could not compose my face to go on." His greatest trial in this way, however, wa, a little later at Harrogate — " the queerest place,... | |
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