Memoirs of the Life of Charles Macklin, Esq: Principally Compiled from His Own Papers and Memorandums; which Contain His Criticisms on and Characters and Anecdotes of Betterton, Booth, Wilks and Most of His Contemporaries ... the Whole Forming a Comprehensive But Succinct History of the Stage ...Lackington, Allen and Company, 1799 - 471 Seiten |
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Seite 69
... wife of his abfence . Upon looking into the Rule , and finding it enlarged generally , I inquired , and did not understand any body was particularly Counsel for Leigh , at the time the Rule was enlarged . " Mr. Davenport . Mr. Wallace ...
... wife of his abfence . Upon looking into the Rule , and finding it enlarged generally , I inquired , and did not understand any body was particularly Counsel for Leigh , at the time the Rule was enlarged . " Mr. Davenport . Mr. Wallace ...
Seite 74
... wife with him , and went into the Two Shilling Gallery ; he did not mean to make a riot , having his wife with him ; and it might be well if every perfon's wife was as quiet as Mr. James's . But your Lordship will find there was another ...
... wife with him , and went into the Two Shilling Gallery ; he did not mean to make a riot , having his wife with him ; and it might be well if every perfon's wife was as quiet as Mr. James's . But your Lordship will find there was another ...
Seite 77
... wife of Mr. Macklin , who makes this application .--- The prefent queftion is , Whether or no there was a concerted defign and confpiracy between thefe Parties to hurt Mr. Macklin ? ' This would be a bad bufinefs indeed , and every per ...
... wife of Mr. Macklin , who makes this application .--- The prefent queftion is , Whether or no there was a concerted defign and confpiracy between thefe Parties to hurt Mr. Macklin ? ' This would be a bad bufinefs indeed , and every per ...
Seite 79
... wife , and two of his Friends ( for those men must be taken for his Friends ) if Mr. James had behaved at all ill , he received ample punishment from their hands , fuch as I have before reprefented ; and when Mr. Macklin refused to meet ...
... wife , and two of his Friends ( for those men must be taken for his Friends ) if Mr. James had behaved at all ill , he received ample punishment from their hands , fuch as I have before reprefented ; and when Mr. Macklin refused to meet ...
Seite 81
... wife of Mr. Macklin ; for if there was any cause of revenge , fhe and her two Affiftants fully re- venged the caufe , while my Client was down between the two benches ; therefore , my Lord , I conceive this is a full anfwer to the ...
... wife of Mr. Macklin ; for if there was any cause of revenge , fhe and her two Affiftants fully re- venged the caufe , while my Client was down between the two benches ; therefore , my Lord , I conceive this is a full anfwer to the ...
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Beliebte Passagen
Seite 33 - Haste thee, nymph, and bring with thee Jest, and youthful Jollity, Quips, and cranks,* and wanton* wiles, Nods, and becks, and wreathed smiles, Such as hang on Hebe's cheek, And love to live in dimple sleek; Sport that wrinkled Care derides, And Laughter holding both his sides.
Seite 39 - Number of performers about sixteen or eighteen. The person who provides the Cloaths and Scenes is deemed the Master of the Company, who makes all contracts for rents, etc., and is responsible for all expenses and contingencies of every kind, incidental to the...
Seite 265 - ... a passage which in the records of the theatre, had never been acted, and which on and off the stage must be looked upon as an excrescence of the worst sort...
Seite 258 - This was of no advantage to me. I can fill my house without it; but I meant to give them the popularity of doing a justice to the man they had injured^ and of convincing the public that they would never do the like again, and that they were in amity, and not in enmity, with me. My Lord, I have nothing more to say.
Seite 380 - Talking Talking of the caution necessary to be used in conversation amongst a mixed company, Macklin observed, " Sir, I have experienced, to my cost, that a man, in any situation of life, should never be off his guard — A Scotchman never is ; he never lives a moment extempore, and that is one great reason of their success in life. " In a continuation of the same subject, he used to say, with some feeling of his former imprudence, "It is a long time before men learn the * £j art of neutralizing...
Seite 424 - But you are not afraid to die ? " A. "Not in the least, sir,- — I never did any person any serious mischief in my life: — even when I gambled, I never cheated: — I know that a — a — a — see, now — death, I mean, must come, and I am ready to give it up,
Seite 267 - Latin authors, as often as his me" mory ferved him with the fcraps and mottos " it had quaintly picked up; for he knew no " book of antiquity, nor, indeed, of modern " note, Prior, la Fontaine, Swift's Poetry, and " a few more of that kind excepted ; thefe " he conftantly imitated, plundered, difguifed, " and frittered in occafional prologues, epicc logues, and complimentary poems upon " parrots, lap-dogs, monkies, birds, growing " wits, patrons, and ladies. But what he " moft excelled in, was, in...
Seite 426 - Why, sir, my opinion is, that Mr. Palmer played the character of Shylock in one style. In this scene there was a sameness, in that scene a sameness, and in every scene a sameness : — it was all same ! same I same ! — no variation.