Plain English |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 14
Page 1
... ment . The happy landlord of a London theatre builds in odd holes and corners - in back - yards and blind - alleys , in slums and dust - holes ; and when his temple of the drama is nearly complete , he obtains a narrow en- trance and a ...
... ment . The happy landlord of a London theatre builds in odd holes and corners - in back - yards and blind - alleys , in slums and dust - holes ; and when his temple of the drama is nearly complete , he obtains a narrow en- trance and a ...
Page 2
... ment clerk at the West - end have no mis- giving as to their power of directing his faltering footsteps . Sixty newspapers , more or less , seem to be written , printed , and pub- lished for no other purpose than to point out to him the ...
... ment clerk at the West - end have no mis- giving as to their power of directing his faltering footsteps . Sixty newspapers , more or less , seem to be written , printed , and pub- lished for no other purpose than to point out to him the ...
Page 10
... ment . He may forget many things , but he must never forget the great fact that , no matter what persons may form his audience , they have a much clearer idea as to the article they want to see than he can possibly give them . He must ...
... ment . He may forget many things , but he must never forget the great fact that , no matter what persons may form his audience , they have a much clearer idea as to the article they want to see than he can possibly give them . He must ...
Page 44
... ment . An editor who had any real respect for the Stage would hardly have admitted such aimless and impracticable twaddle into his columns , and patrons of the Stage who really had its welfare at heart would not have made such feeble ...
... ment . An editor who had any real respect for the Stage would hardly have admitted such aimless and impracticable twaddle into his columns , and patrons of the Stage who really had its welfare at heart would not have made such feeble ...
Page 45
... ment to the latter . It is about on a level with the politeness of a man in the gutter who thrusts a tract into your hands on the presumption that you are going headlong to the Devil . FIRES IN THEATRES . HE lamentable fire at the ...
... ment to the latter . It is about on a level with the politeness of a man in the gutter who thrusts a tract into your hands on the presumption that you are going headlong to the Devil . FIRES IN THEATRES . HE lamentable fire at the ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
absurd Academy Notes actors ALFRED CONCANEN amusing Anecdotes appeared Artists BESANT and JAMES BRET HARTE building called Carnival Charles Mathews Charley chimney City cloth extra cloth gilt cloth limp Coloured Covent Garden Crown 8vo dancing Davenant patents Demy 8vo dress-coat Drury Lane Edendale Edited engagement England English Essay Facsimile fifty French Frontispiece Gaiety Theatre gilt edges History illustrated boards JAMES PAYN JAMES RICE Joblochskoff journal JUSTIN MCCARTHY Killigrew lady license little Truffles London theatre look Lord Chamberlain LYNN LINTON MACQUOID magistrates ment MOYR SMITH music-halls mysterious nearly never night NOVEL numerous Illustrations OUIDA patent theatres person piece play Poems popular Portrait Post 8vo profusely Illustrated proprietors Prose Queen Radical waiter Royal Shakespeare Small 8vo Square 8vo stage Stories Théâtre Français theatrical manager THOMAS tion told town umbrella Vols volume week WILKIE COLLINS WILLIAM WILLIAM HURRELL MALLOCK young Electro-plater
Popular passages
Page 10 - The illustrations of this volume . . . are of quite sterling and admirable art, of a class precisely parallel in elevation to the character of the tales which they illustrate; and the original etchings, as I have before said in the Appendix to my
Page 13 - Hook's (Theodore) Choice Humorous Works, including his Ludicrous Adventures, Bons-mots, Puns, and Hoaxes; With a new Life of the Author, Portraits, Facsimiles, and Illustrations. Crown 8vo, cloth extra, js.
Page 3 - Imperial 4to, cloth extra, gilt and gilt edges, 2is. per volume. Beautiful Pictures by British Artists : A Gathering of Favourites from our Picture Galleries. In Two Series. The FIRST SERIES including Examples by WILKIE, CONSTABLE, TURNER, MULREADY, LANDSEER, MACLISE, EM WARD, FRITH, Sir JOHN GILBERT, LESLIE, ANSDELL, MARCUS STONE, Sir NOEL. PATON, FAED, EYRE CROWE, GAVIN O'NEIL, and MADOX BROWN.
Page 9 - Tobacco : Its History and Associations ; with an Account of the Plant and its Manufacture, and its Modes of Use in all Ages and Countries. By F. W. FAIRHOLT, FSA With Coloured Frontispiece and upwards of 100 Illustrations by the Author. Crown 8vo, cloth extra, js.
Page 19 - Works. Now First Collected. Complete in Three Vols. Vol. I. contains the Plays complete, including the doubtful ones; Vol. II. the Poems and Minor Translations, with an Introductory Essay by ALGERNON CHARLES SWINBURNE.
Page 25 - Our Place among Infinities: A Series of Essays contrasting our Little Abode in Space and Time with the Infinities Around us.
Page 5 - More Worlds than One. The Creed of the Philosopher and the Hope of the Christian.
Page 30 - Thackerayana : Notes and Anecdotes. Illustrated by a profusion of Sketches by WILLIAM MAKEPEACE THACKERAY, depicting Humorous Incidents in his School-life, and Favourite Characters in the books of his everyday reading. With Hundreds of Wood Engravings, facsimiled from Mr.
Page 8 - Emanuel.— On Diamonds and Precious Stones ; their History, Value, and Properties ; with Simple Tests for ascertaining their Reality. By HARRY EMANUEL, FRGS With numerous Illustrations, Tinted and Plain. Crown 8vo, cloth extra, with Illustrations, 7s.
Page 29 - Syntax's (Dr.) Three Tours: In Search of the Picturesque, in Search of Consolation, and in Search of a Wife. With the whole of ROWLANDSON'S droll page Illustrations in Colours and a Life of the Author by JC HOTTEN.