Memoirs of Mrs. Inchbald: Including Her Familiar Correspondence with the Most Distinguished Persons of Her Time. To which are Added The Massacre, and A Case of Conscience; Now First Published from Her Autograph Copies, Volume 1R. Bentley, 1833 - Authors, English |
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Page vi
... months at Canterbury— Aspire to the York Company - Visit Standingfield - Join Wilkin- son's Company at Hull - York - Davis dresses her hair - Little jealousies The Kemble family at Liverpool - Driven from the stage - Had not acted ...
... months at Canterbury— Aspire to the York Company - Visit Standingfield - Join Wilkin- son's Company at Hull - York - Davis dresses her hair - Little jealousies The Kemble family at Liverpool - Driven from the stage - Had not acted ...
Page vii
... months a widow -Dicky Gossip offers her his hand - No joke either - Suett trusts Kemble with his suit - Differs with Tate Wilkinson - Wishes a town engagement - Goes again to Edinburgh - Receives varieties of attention - some rude ...
... months a widow -Dicky Gossip offers her his hand - No joke either - Suett trusts Kemble with his suit - Differs with Tate Wilkinson - Wishes a town engagement - Goes again to Edinburgh - Receives varieties of attention - some rude ...
Page 4
... that could be had of a person in her condition had been want- ing to her , from the time she came into this coun- try ; and I think it has been the means of her con- tinuing so many months alive , contrary to the ex- 4 MEMOIR OF.
... that could be had of a person in her condition had been want- ing to her , from the time she came into this coun- try ; and I think it has been the means of her con- tinuing so many months alive , contrary to the ex- 4 MEMOIR OF.
Page 5
... months alive , contrary to the ex- pectations of all her physicians . I must add that , whenever I have conversed with her , she has al- ways expressed the greatest respect and affection- ate duty and tenderness towards you that a child ...
... months alive , contrary to the ex- pectations of all her physicians . I must add that , whenever I have conversed with her , she has al- ways expressed the greatest respect and affection- ate duty and tenderness towards you that a child ...
Page 11
... month of April , 1770 , George became an actor , and quitted home ; he corresponded affectionately and regu- larly with the family , and thus kept up the desire of his sister to secure a similar independence . She now wrote out the ...
... month of April , 1770 , George became an actor , and quitted home ; he corresponded affectionately and regu- larly with the family , and thus kept up the desire of his sister to secure a similar independence . She now wrote out the ...
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Common terms and phrases
acquaintance acted actor actress admiration amusement appears arrived attended beautiful brother called Catholic character Colman comedy compliments connexions Covent-Garden DEAR MADAM dear Muse Digges dined doubt Edinburgh engagement Eusèbe farce father George Simpson Gisborne give Glan GURET happy Hardinge Harris Holcroft honour hope husband Inchbald Jane Shore Kemble Kemble family lady Leicester Square letter lived lodgings London Lord manager mind Miss month morning mother never night Norwich occasion pantomime passed performed person piece play pleasure pounds present racter reader received rehearsal returned Richard Griffith salary School for Scandal seems sent Siddons Simple Story Simpson Sir Charles Bunbury sister Dolly sister Hunt stage Standingfield Street Sunday suppose Tate Wilkinson theatre theatrical thing thought tion took town tragedy TRICASTIN Twiss usual virtue walked week Whitfield wife wish write wrote
Popular passages
Page 155 - It must not be; there is no power in Venice Can alter a decree established: 'Twill be recorded for a precedent; And many an error, by the same example, Will rush into the state: it cannot be.
Page 208 - You see me here, you gods, a poor old man, As full of grief as age; wretched in both! If it be you that stir these daughters...
Page 208 - Thou'lt come no more, Never, never, never, never, never! Pray you, undo this button. Thank you, sir. Do you see this? Look on her, look, her lips, Look there, look there!
Page 144 - Sir Giles Overreach, how is it with Your honourable daughter ? Has her honour Slept well to-night? or, will her honour please To accept this monkey, dog, or paraquit,5 (This is state in ladies), or my eldest son To be her page, and wait upon her trencher...
Page 145 - We worldly men, when we see friends and kinsmen Past hope sunk in their fortunes, lend no hand To lift them up, but rather set our feet Upon their heads, to press them to the bottom.
Page 276 - Guided by a wish, that the reflecting reader may experience the sensation, which an attention to circumstances like these, must excite ; he is desired to imagine seventeen years elapsed, since he has seen or heard of any of those persons who, in the foregoing part of this narrative have been introduced to his acquaintance ; — and then, supposing himself at the period of those seventeen years, follow the sequel of their history.
Page 340 - What mortal eye can fix'd behold? Who stalks his round, an hideous form, Howling amidst the midnight storm ; Or throws him on the ridgy steep Of some loose hanging rock to sleep...
Page 41 - A course of small, quiet attentions, not so pointed as to alarm, nor so vague as to be misunderstood, with now and then a look of kindness, and little or nothing said upon it, leaves Nature for your mistress, and she fashions it to her mind.
Page 317 - ... but agrees with the verb, or is governed by the verb or the preposition, expressed or understood ; as, " Thou art wiser than I ;" that is,
Page 282 - Save me!" Her voice unmanned him. His long-restrained tears now burst forth, and, seeing her relapsing into the swoon, he cried out eagerly to recall her. Her name did not, however, come to his recollection — nor any name but this : " Miss Milner — dear Miss Milner...