Autobiography, a Collection of the Most Instructive and Amusing Lives Ever Published, Volume 1Hunt and Clarke, 1826 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 37
Page 9
... of it during my share of administration in the state of the theatre . This work therefore , which I hope they will not expect a man of hasty head should confine to any regular method ( for I shall make no scruple C 3 MR COLLEY CIBBER .
... of it during my share of administration in the state of the theatre . This work therefore , which I hope they will not expect a man of hasty head should confine to any regular method ( for I shall make no scruple C 3 MR COLLEY CIBBER .
Page 20
... hope it will be no offence to say , that king Log himself must have made but a very simple figure in history . The man who chooses never to laugh , or whose be- calmed passions know no motion , seems to me only in the quiet state of a ...
... hope it will be no offence to say , that king Log himself must have made but a very simple figure in history . The man who chooses never to laugh , or whose be- calmed passions know no motion , seems to me only in the quiet state of a ...
Page 22
... hope it has not made me so far misunderstood as not to have allowed , that in all the dispensations of Providence the exercise of a great and virtuous mind is the most elevated state of happiness . No , sir ; I am not for setting up ...
... hope it has not made me so far misunderstood as not to have allowed , that in all the dispensations of Providence the exercise of a great and virtuous mind is the most elevated state of happiness . No , sir ; I am not for setting up ...
Page 34
... hope you will give a place in your next , to show that we can be quick , as well as smart , upon a proper occasion . And as I think it the lowest mark of a scoundrel to make bold with any man's character in print , without sub- scribing ...
... hope you will give a place in your next , to show that we can be quick , as well as smart , upon a proper occasion . And as I think it the lowest mark of a scoundrel to make bold with any man's character in print , without sub- scribing ...
Page 47
... hope that my having kept them decently secret for full fifty years , may be now a good round plea for their par- don ? Were I now qualified to say more of this celebra- ted lady , I should conclude it thus : that she has lived ( to all ...
... hope that my having kept them decently secret for full fifty years , may be now a good round plea for their par- don ? Were I now qualified to say more of this celebra- ted lady , I should conclude it thus : that she has lived ( to all ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
acted actors actress Æsop affairs allowed applause approbation audience auditors Beggar's Opera better Betterton Booth character Cibber COLLEY CIBBER Collier comedian comedy court delight distress Dogget Drury-lane duke's company entertainment equal excellence excuse extraordinary farther favour folly fortune gave gentleman give happiness Haymarket Haymarket theatre honour hope humour imagined inclination judge judgment king knew labour laugh least Leigh less liberty license lord chamberlain Love for Love managers master ment merit nature never obliged observed occasion Oldfield opera opinion Othello particular passion patentees perhaps person play pleasure pounds Powel pretend profits proper racter reader reason scenes seemed share sir John Vanbrugh sir Richard sir Richard Steele sometimes sort speak spectators spirit stage sure Swiney taste Tatler terton theatre theatrical thought tion Tony Leigh took tragedy true truth vanity voice Wilks word write
Popular passages
Page 101 - ... at once; and that the letter might not embarrass her attack, crack ! she crumbles it at once into her palm, and pours upon him her whole artillery of airs, eyes, and motion. Down goes her dainty, diving, body to the ground, as if she were sinking under the conscious load of her own attractions ; then launches into a flood of fine language and compliment, still playing her chest forward in fifty falls and risings, like a swan upon waving water ; and, to complete her...
Page 66 - All this ? ay, more: Fret, till your proud heart break; Go, show your slaves how choleric you are, And make your bondmen tremble.
Page 87 - ... before his time; and yet his general excellence may be comprehended in one article, viz. a plain and palpable simplicity of nature, which was so utterly his own, that he was often as unaccountably diverting in his common speech, as on the stage. I saw him once...
Page 164 - Such then was the mettlesome modesty he set out with ; upon this principle he produced several frank and free farces, that seemed to knock all distinctions of mankind on the head. Religion, laws, government, priests, judges, and ministers, were all laid flat at the feet of this Herculean satirist...
Page 65 - Betterton ; and it has often amazed me to see those who soon came after him, throw out in some parts of a character a just and graceful spirit which Betterton himself could not but have applauded ; and yet, in the equally shining passages of the same character, have heavily...
Page 101 - Melantha is as finished an impertinent as ever fluttered in a drawing-room, and seems to contain the most complete system of female foppery that could possibly be crowded into the tortured form of a fine lady.
Page 293 - Meaning, the Fable of Mars and Venus* was form'd into a connected Presentation of Dances in Character, wherein the Passions were so happily expressed, and the whole Story so intelligibly told by a mute Narration of Gesture only, that even thinking Spectators allow'd it both a pleasing and a rational Entertainment...
Page 100 - Mountfort, whose second marriage gave her the name of Verbruggen, was mistress of more variety of humour than I ever knew in any one woman actress. This variety too was attended with an equal vivacity, which made her excellent in characters extremely different. -As she was naturally a pleasant...
Page 64 - Hamlet should be in so violent a passion with the gho«t, which, though it might have astonished, had not provoked him ? For you may observe, that in this beautiful speech the passion never rises beyond an almost breathless astonishment, or an impatience limited by filial reverence, to...
Page 310 - ... if the common fame of her may be believed, which in my memory was not doubted, she had less to be laid to her charge, than any other of those ladies who were in the same state of preferment : she never meddled in matters of serious moment, or was the tool of working politicians ; never...