A Life of William Charles MacreadyBrentano, 1894 - 201 ページ |
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5 ページ
... look on her placid face , " and through succeeding years that image of tranquility and love has not left me , " he wrote in his old age . In truth , Macready had a strong love for his own . His conception of his mother was ideal . He ...
... look on her placid face , " and through succeeding years that image of tranquility and love has not left me , " he wrote in his old age . In truth , Macready had a strong love for his own . His conception of his mother was ideal . He ...
8 ページ
... tinguished , on the stage . " The boy's services were really needed at this time . He had to set out at once and look after the company at Newcastle and on the circuit . 66 ' his After a little experience of this kind 8 MACREADY .
... tinguished , on the stage . " The boy's services were really needed at this time . He had to set out at once and look after the company at Newcastle and on the circuit . 66 ' his After a little experience of this kind 8 MACREADY .
30 ページ
... look at Sheil and not be struck with his singu- lar physiognomy . A quick sense of the humorous and a lively fancy gave constant animation to his features , which were remark- able for their flexibility . His chin projected rather ...
... look at Sheil and not be struck with his singu- lar physiognomy . A quick sense of the humorous and a lively fancy gave constant animation to his features , which were remark- able for their flexibility . His chin projected rather ...
31 ページ
... looks of Miss O'Neill and the others , who reserved all their fire for the actual performance . Ludwig Tieck , recording his impressions of the per- formance , remarked that : " For the first time since his arrival in England he felt ...
... looks of Miss O'Neill and the others , who reserved all their fire for the actual performance . Ludwig Tieck , recording his impressions of the per- formance , remarked that : " For the first time since his arrival in England he felt ...
34 ページ
... looks certainly would not have been dan- gerous to Sir Peter's peace . " He regained lost ground as Rolla in " Pizarro , " won a degree of success as Mordent in " The Steward , or Fashion and Feeling , " and on October 4th was applauded ...
... looks certainly would not have been dan- gerous to Sir Peter's peace . " He regained lost ground as Rolla in " Pizarro , " won a degree of success as Mordent in " The Steward , or Fashion and Feeling , " and on October 4th was applauded ...
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多く使われている語句
actor America Amintor ance appeared audience Baradas Barry Cornwall Beauseant Bulwer Bunn Cardinal career character Charles Kean Charles Kemble close Coleman Coriolanus Covent Garden daughter death Deschapelles diary Dickens dinner drama Drury Lane Edmund Kean effect engagement English Evadne eyes face farewell performances father feeling Forrest Forster fourd Gabor Garrick Garrick Club gave Gisippus Hamlet hand Haymarket heart HENRY IRVING Huguet Iago impression John Kemble Julie Kean Kean's Lady of Lyons Letitia live London look Macbeth Macready's Marston Mauprat Melantius Melnotte Melnotte's ment mind Miss morbidness never night occasion offer Othello passion Pauline play present produced profession provinces ready rehearsals remark retirement Richard Richard III Richelieu scene season seemed Shakspere Shaksperian Sheil Sheridan Knowles speech spirit stage success Talfourd tells theatre tion Ulric utterance Vandenhoff Virginius Werner wife William Charles Macready words Young
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162 ページ - We'd have no friends That were not lovers; no ambition, save To excel them all in love; we'd read no books That were not tales of love — that we might smile To think how poorly eloquence of words Translates the poetry of hearts like ours! And when night came, amidst the breathless Heavens We'd guess what star should be our home when love Becomes immortal; while the perfumed light Stole through the mists of alabaster lamps , And every air was heavy with the sighs Of orange-groves and music from...
154 ページ - I have asked that dreadful question of the hills That look eternal ; of the flowing streams That lucid flow for ever ; of the stars, Amid whose fields of azure my raised spirit Hath trod in glory : all were dumb ; but now, While I thus gaze upon thy living face, I feel the love that kindles through its beauty, Can never wholly perish ; — we shall meet Again, Clemanthe ! Clem.
164 ページ - Was my own lord. Then did I seek to rise Out of the prison of my mean estate ; And, with such jewels as the exploring Mind Brings from the caves of Knowledge, buy my ransom From those twin gaolers of the daring heart — Low Birth and iron Fortune.
162 ページ - A palace lifting to eternal summer Its marble walls, from out a glossy bower Of coolest foliage musical with birds, Whose songs should syllable thy name!
11 ページ - Yet I was filial to my humble parents. But did my sire surpass the rest of men As thou excellest all of womankind?
172 ページ - Ay, is it so? Then wakes the power which in the age of iron Burst forth to curb the great, and raise the low. Mark, where she stands, around her form I draw The awful circle of our solemn Church! Set but a foot within that holy ground, And on thy head — yea, though it wore a crown — I launch the curse of Rome!
10 ページ - Gamester" devotion to her husband stood out as the mainspring of her actions, the ruling passion of her being; apparent when reduced to poverty in her graceful and cheerful submission to the lot to which his vice has subjected her, in her fond excuses of his ruinous weakness, in her conciliating expostulations with his angry impatience, in her indignant repulse of Stukely's advances, when in the awful dignity of outraged virtue she imprecates the vengeance of Heaven upon his guilty head. The climax...
97 ページ - I have improved Macbeth. The general tone of the character was lofty, manly, or indeed as it should be, heroic, that of one living to command. The whole view of the character was constantly in sight : the grief, the care, the doubt was not that of a weak person, but of a strong mind and of a strong man.
179 ページ - ... nothing could have been less heroic than his presentation of the great criminal. He was fretful and impatient under the taunts and provocations of his wife ; he was ignoble under the terrors of remorse; he stole into the sleeping-chamber of Duncan like a man going to purloin a purse, not like a warrior going to snatch a crown.
12 ページ - If Mrs. Siddons appeared a personification of the tragic muse, certainly all the attributes of Thalia were most joyously combined in Mrs. Jordan. With a spirit of fun, that would have out-laughed Puck himself...