Criticisms and Dramatic Essays of the English StageG. Routledge and Company, 1851 - 324 psl. |
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xii psl.
... things ; and I have suf- ficient courage to declare ( somewhat abruptly ) what they are . This is the only singularity I am conscious of . I do not shut my eyes to extraordinary merit because I hate it , and re- fuse to open them till ...
... things ; and I have suf- ficient courage to declare ( somewhat abruptly ) what they are . This is the only singularity I am conscious of . I do not shut my eyes to extraordinary merit because I hate it , and re- fuse to open them till ...
xiv psl.
... things remarkable . One set of persons , out of the excess of their unbounded admiration , furnished him with all sorts of ex- cellences which he did not possess or pretend to , and covered his defects from the wardrobe of their own ...
... things remarkable . One set of persons , out of the excess of their unbounded admiration , furnished him with all sorts of ex- cellences which he did not possess or pretend to , and covered his defects from the wardrobe of their own ...
xv psl.
... thing , because he was not something quite different from himself . They did not consider that an actor might have the eye of an eagle with the voice of a raven , a " pigmy body , " and " a fiery soul that o'er - informed its tenement ...
... thing , because he was not something quite different from himself . They did not consider that an actor might have the eye of an eagle with the voice of a raven , a " pigmy body , " and " a fiery soul that o'er - informed its tenement ...
xvi psl.
... to me , as far as the mind alone is concerned , and leaving the body out of the question , fully equal to any thing of Mrs. Siddons's . But I hate such comparisons ; and only make them on strong provocation xvi AUTHOR'S PREFACE .
... to me , as far as the mind alone is concerned , and leaving the body out of the question , fully equal to any thing of Mrs. Siddons's . But I hate such comparisons ; and only make them on strong provocation xvi AUTHOR'S PREFACE .
16 psl.
... thing beyond themselves and their immediate sphere of action ; they are , as it were , circumscribed , and de- fined by their particular circumstances ; they are what their situation makes them , and nothing more . Each is absorbed in ...
... thing beyond themselves and their immediate sphere of action ; they are , as it were , circumscribed , and de- fined by their particular circumstances ; they are what their situation makes them , and nothing more . Each is absorbed in ...
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Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
action actor actress admirable appearance applause audience beauty Beggar's Opera character Charles Kemble comedy comic Coriolanus Covent Garden criticism dance Desdemona dignity dramatic dress Drury Lane Drury Lane Theatre effect Elliston equal excellence expression fancy farce fault favourite feel Garrick genius give grace Hamlet heart human humour Iago imagination Ivanhoe Jack Bannister John Kemble Junius Brutus Booth Kean Kean's acting Kemble Kemble's lady laugh Lear living look Lord Macbeth Macready manager manner merit mind Miss O'Neill nature never Othello pantomime passages passion pathos perfect performance person piece play players poet racter Richard Richard II scene seemed seen sense sentiment Shakspeare shew Shylock Siddons Sir Giles Sir Giles Overreach soul speak spirit stage taste theatre thing thou thought tion tone tragedy tragic ventriloquism voice whole WILLIAM HAZLITT wish word write
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