Old England and New England, in a Series of Views Taken on the SpotB. Blom, 1969 - 315 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 23
Seite 174
... Theatre in 1741 , * under the management of Gif- fard ; that his success was so great as to arouse the attention of the patentees of the two large houses , and that , in consequence of their determination to avail themselves of the well ...
... Theatre in 1741 , * under the management of Gif- fard ; that his success was so great as to arouse the attention of the patentees of the two large houses , and that , in consequence of their determination to avail themselves of the well ...
Seite 193
... Theatre , or to the reference to ourselves while we were in the management of it ; * our objection is , that he did not equally anatomize the Lyceum , which his letter began by pro- mising to do . Instead of simply admitting that in ...
... Theatre , or to the reference to ourselves while we were in the management of it ; * our objection is , that he did not equally anatomize the Lyceum , which his letter began by pro- mising to do . Instead of simply admitting that in ...
Seite 194
... Theatre , and Mr. Albert Smith complained of a supposititious loss of a similar sum per week at the Egyptian Hall , while Mr. Webster published the subjoined statistical account of free admissions issued by the London news- papers in ...
... Theatre , and Mr. Albert Smith complained of a supposititious loss of a similar sum per week at the Egyptian Hall , while Mr. Webster published the subjoined statistical account of free admissions issued by the London news- papers in ...
Inhalt
Americas account of its own greatnessGeneral acquiescence therein | 13 |
CHAPTER II | 19 |
CHAPTER III | 28 |
Urheberrecht | |
18 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
actor Alfred Bunn Ameri American amongst appearance Arkansas gentleman arrived become believe better Boston called character Charles Kean Charles Mathews Choctaw Cuba dollars Drury Lane Edmund Kean England English entertained fact feeling feet Forrest give habit hand Harriet Beecher Stowe hear honor hundred indulged inhabitants Jenny Jenny Lind John Bull Kean Kossuth lady Lake land live London look Lord matter means ment miles mind mode never notion observation Old England ourselves party pass peculiar person Philadelphia present principle quantity question racter raps reader replied respect River scene side slave slavery speak spirit Stage Stowe streets talent tell theatre Theodore Hook things thou thousand tion town turn Uncle Tom's Cabin Union United Washington whole William Penn wine wondrous writing York