Memoir of Mr. SheridanJ. Cross, 1840 - 74 sider |
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Side 18
... soon after we arrived Mr. Sheridan drove up in his curricle , was full of apologies , all politeness and courtesy ; and I was immediately struck with a sort of modesty in his manner , that I thought very remarkable and indeed very good ...
... soon after we arrived Mr. Sheridan drove up in his curricle , was full of apologies , all politeness and courtesy ; and I was immediately struck with a sort of modesty in his manner , that I thought very remarkable and indeed very good ...
Side 19
... soon left us . The house had belonged to Garrick . Madam Genlis and Pamela had only just left it ; it was classic ground . The Thames , too , had a thou- sand associations belonging to it , so that Morris and I had no difficulty in ...
... soon left us . The house had belonged to Garrick . Madam Genlis and Pamela had only just left it ; it was classic ground . The Thames , too , had a thou- sand associations belonging to it , so that Morris and I had no difficulty in ...
Side 35
... soon change colour , and , evidently in a state of great confusion and distress , hide himself as well as he could in the bottom of his box and sit down . Exhibitions of this kind , of Mr. Sheridan's very superior 35.
... soon change colour , and , evidently in a state of great confusion and distress , hide himself as well as he could in the bottom of his box and sit down . Exhibitions of this kind , of Mr. Sheridan's very superior 35.
Side 36
... soon left there to ourselves , for sea - gulls and sounding shores could not interest Sheridan long . It happened that I had law - business in Lon- don , and that I was obliged to ask permission to come to town . I knew that Sheridan ...
... soon left there to ourselves , for sea - gulls and sounding shores could not interest Sheridan long . It happened that I had law - business in Lon- don , and that I was obliged to ask permission to come to town . I knew that Sheridan ...
Side 46
... soon throw me overboard or wish me in Davy Jones's locker . On the whole , Tom , that note bodes neither of us any good , in my opinion . " 66 Oh , think not so . thing about Drury - Lane , 66 Well , we shall see . Never fear ; ' tis ...
... soon throw me overboard or wish me in Davy Jones's locker . On the whole , Tom , that note bodes neither of us any good , in my opinion . " 66 Oh , think not so . thing about Drury - Lane , 66 Well , we shall see . Never fear ; ' tis ...
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
Addington afterwards appeared appointed audience bank-notes Bognor Brooks's Burke carriage celebrated certainly chaise charm Chichester child clever cocks and hens countenance curricle Dear dine dinner dramas Drury-Lane Duenna eloquence express extraordinary eyes father Faulkland fire folly forget friend Richardson genius gentleman going to Cambridge Grosvenor-Street Guilford happiness heard heart hope horses hour House of Commons idolatry Isleworth James's-Street kind knew lady letter Linley listen Liverpool look Lord MADINGLEY manner married Martha master mean Memoir mind Miss Cotton Miss Ogle morning Morris mortification ness never night observed occasion passed perfect Pitt poor proper pupil recollect remember replied Richardson ridan ruin scene School for Scandal sea-gulls seemed seen servant Sheri Sheridan skait Smyth speech suffer suppose theatre ther thing thought tick Tickell toge told Tom Sheridan town turned tutor walked Wanstead Whig word write a tragedy
Populære passager
Side 70 - Can storied urn or animated bust Back to its mansion call the fleeting breath? Can Honour's voice provoke the silent dust, Or Flattery soothe the dull cold ear of death...
Side 61 - Oh, certainly not, my dear Smyth,' he said ; ' I shall never think of what you have said in it, be assured ;' and, putting his hand in his pocket, ' Here it is,' he said, offering it to me. I was glad enough to get hold of it; but looking at it as I was about to throw it into the fire, lo and behold, I saw that it had never been opened !" Such exasperating yet ludicrous incidents were now commonplaces of Sheridan's life.
Side 26 - In one of the MS. books which came to Mrs. Canning on her death were written some pathetic verses of Mrs. Sheridan's, which reveal her situation : ' When first the cruel truth I found, Nor thou thy love of change disowned, Fierce madness seized my brain ; But happier now, a milder grief, A softer thought, can give relief ; I weep and can complain.
Side 24 - She told me that nothing could be done — that he would tease and irritate Mrs. Sheridan in this manner till she was ready to dash her head against the wall, being of the same temperament of genius as her husband ; that she had seen her burst into tears and leave the room ; then the scene changed, and the wall seemed full as likely to receive his head in turn. The folly, however, Mrs. Canning said, was not merely once and away, but was too often repeated ; and Mrs. Canning used sometimes, as she...
Side 23 - but I cannot rest or think about anything but this d — d ice and this skaiting, and you must promise me that there shall be no more of » i it. ' Never was such a nonsensical person as this father of yours...
Side 40 - Pray, my good father (said he), did you ever do anything in a state of perfect indifference ; without motive, I mean, of some kind or other?' Sheridan, who saw what was coming, and by no means relished such subjects, even from Tom or any one else, said — 'Yes, certainly.' 'Indeed,' said Tom. 'Yes, indeed.' 'What! total indifference — total, entire, thorough indifference?
Side 23 - ... had to submit to. Sheridan had been paying a hurried visit to the house at Wanstead in which Tom and his tutor lived : " It was a severe frost, and had been long, when he came one evening to dine, after his usual manner, on a boiled chicken, at 7, 8, or 9 o'clock, just as it happened, and had hardly drunk his claret, and got the room filled with wax lights, without which he could not exist, when he sent for me ; and, lo and behold, the business was that he was miserable on account of Tom's being...
Side 4 - All that he had ever heard, all that he had ever read, when compared with it, dwindled into nothing, and vanished like vapour before the sun;
Side 23 - In about half an hour afterwards, as I was going to bed, I heard a violent ringing at the gate ; I was wanted ; and sure enough what should I see, glaring through the bars, and outshining the lamps of the carriage, but the fine eyes of Sheridan. ' Now do not laugh at me, Smyth...
Side 48 - Guildford business. About my own age — better me to marry her, you will say. I am not of that opinion. My father talked to me two hours last night, and made out to me that it was the most sensible thing he could do. Was not this very clever of him ? Well, my dear Mr. S., you should have been tutor to him, you see. I am incomparably the most rational of the two.