A View of the English Stage: Or, A Series of Dramatic CriticismsG. Bell & sons, 1906 - 358 pages |
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Page v
... given : those which were in the periodical and in the reprint are marked " Original Note " ; those which were in the paper but not in the volume are marked " Note in " ( with the name of the journal ) ; and those which first appeared in ...
... given : those which were in the periodical and in the reprint are marked " Original Note " ; those which were in the paper but not in the volume are marked " Note in " ( with the name of the journal ) ; and those which first appeared in ...
Page vi
... given verbatim , with the exception of evident slips ; it was not thought worth while to print a wrong name in the text and correct it in the footnote unless any criticism or allusion turned upon the name used . Hazlitt's grammar is ...
... given verbatim , with the exception of evident slips ; it was not thought worth while to print a wrong name in the text and correct it in the footnote unless any criticism or allusion turned upon the name used . Hazlitt's grammar is ...
Page vii
... given . This information is most wanted just in those cases where it is most difficult to obtain it . Leading actors , who are in the biographical dictionaries , do not need more than an indication as to what stage of their career is ...
... given . This information is most wanted just in those cases where it is most difficult to obtain it . Leading actors , who are in the biographical dictionaries , do not need more than an indication as to what stage of their career is ...
Page xv
... given for the interest we feel in talking about plays and players ; they are " the brief chron- icles of the time , " the epitome of human life and manners . While we are talking about them , we are thinking about our- selves . They ...
... given for the interest we feel in talking about plays and players ; they are " the brief chron- icles of the time , " the epitome of human life and manners . While we are talking about them , we are thinking about our- selves . They ...
Page xvi
... given of the actors of his time ! How fortunate we think ourselves , when we can meet with any person who remembers the principal performers of the last age , and who can give us some distant idea of Garrick's nature , or of an ...
... given of the actors of his time ! How fortunate we think ourselves , when we can meet with any person who remembers the principal performers of the last age , and who can give us some distant idea of Garrick's nature , or of an ...
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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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