| Thomas Ewing - 1832 - 428 pages
...his mistress, was urged with so moving and graceful an energy, that while I walked in the cloisters, I thought of him with the same concern as if I waited...and I began to be extremely afflicted, that Brutus and Cassius had any difference ; that Hotspur's gallantry was so unfortunate ; and the mirth and good-humour... | |
| William Herbert - 1853 - 234 pages
...any of the occasions in which he has appeared on our stage ; so that while I walked in the cloisters, I thought of him with the same concern as if I waited for the remains of a person, who in real life had done all I had seen him represent. The gloom of the place, and fault lights before... | |
| English literature - 1875 - 642 pages
...his mistress, was urged with so moving and graceful an energy that, while I walked in the cloisters, I thought of him with the same concern as if I waited...real life done all that I had seen him represent." Upon the death of Betterton the part of Othello was inherited by Wilks, who had, indeed, already assumed... | |
| Charles Dickens - English literature - 1881 - 642 pages
...philosophers, or the descriptions of the most charming poets I had read While I walked in the cloister I thought of him with the same concern as if I waited...and I began to be extremely afflicted that Brutus and Cassius had any difference ; that Hotspur's gallantry was so 246 [June 11, 1881.l [Conducted by... | |
| Arthur Penrhyn Stanley - Church buildings - 1882 - 372 pages
...the descriptions of the most charming poets I had ever read. . . . While I walked in the Cloisters, I thought of him with the same concern as if I waited...was in ; and I began to be extremely afflicted that Brntns and Cassius had any difference, that Hotspur's gallantry was so unfortunate, and that the mirth... | |
| Sir Richard Steele - English essays - 1885 - 568 pages
...his mistress, was urged with so moving and graceful an energy, that, while I walked in the cloisters, I thought of him with the same concern as if I waited...done all that I had seen him represent. The gloom of :o the place, and faint lights before the ceremony appeared, contributed to the melancholy disposition... | |
| John Galt - Actors - 1886 - 374 pages
...his mistress, was urged with so moving and graceful an energy, that while I walked in the cloisters I thought of him with the same concern as if I waited...and I began to be extremely afflicted that Brutus and Casaius had any difference — that Hotspur's gallantry was so unfortunate —and that the mirth... | |
| Thomas Betterton - Theater - 1888 - 180 pages
...a reader that has seen Bcttcrton act, observes there could not be a word added ; that longer speech had been unnatural, nay, impossible, in Othello's...and I began to be extremely afflicted, that Brutus and Cassias had any difference, that Hotspur's gallantry was so unfortunate, and that the mirth and... | |
| Thomas Betterton - Theater - 1888 - 176 pages
...a reader that has seen Betterton act, observes there could not be a word added ; that longer speech had been unnatural, nay, impossible, in Othello's...the melancholy disposition I was in ; and I began to bo extremely afflicted, that Brutus and Cassius had any difference, that Hotspur's gallantry was so... | |
| Robert William Lowe - Actors - 1891 - 212 pages
...his mistress, was urged with so moving and graceful an energy, that while I walked in the cloisters, I thought of him with the same concern as if I waited...real life done all that I had seen him represent." About this time, too, Betterton seems to have played his own productions pretty often, .as we learn... | |
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