| Samuel Pepys - 1854 - 510 páginas
...backs with great triumph, the City's cause being apparently too weak : but here I observed Mr. Gold,2 the merchant, to speak very well, and very sharply,...afternoon, before the play, I called with my wife at Dancre's,4 the great landscape-painter, by Mr. 1 There were two translations, about this period, of... | |
| Samuel Pepys - 1867 - 530 páginas
...backs with great triumph, the City's cause being apparently too weak: but here I observed Mr. Gold,2 the merchant, to speak very well, and very sharply,...: but, I think, one of the weakest plays that ever 1 saw on the stage. This afternoon, before the play, I called with my wife at Dancre's,3 the great... | |
| Samuel Pepys - 1884 - 384 páginas
...backs with great triumph, the City's cause being apparently too weak : but here I observed Mr. Gold,1 the merchant, to speak very well, and very sharply,...afternoon, before the play, I called with my wife at Dancre's,2 the great landscape-painter, by Mr. Povy's advice ; and have bespoke him to come to take... | |
| Samuel Pepys, Mynors Bright - 1896 - 202 páginas
...Hewer to Hercules Pillars, calling to do two or three things by the way, and there dined, and thence to the Duke of York's house, and saw "Twelfth Night,"...afternoon, before the play, I called with my wife at Dancre's, 8 the great landscape-painter, by Mr. Povy's mouth. See Evelyn's "Diary," under February... | |
| William Shakespeare - 1901 - 472 páginas
...Twelfth Night ' acted well, though it be but a silly play, and not related at all to the name or day. it is now revived ; but, I think, one of the weakest plays that ever I saw on the stage. DOWNES (1662, p. 32) : Twelfth Night, or what you will ; wrote by Mr Shakespear, had mighty success... | |
| William Shakespeare - 1901 - 474 páginas
...•Twelfth Night' acted well, though it be but a silly play, and not related at all to the name or day. it is now revived ; but, I think, one of the weakest plays that ever I saw on the stage. DOWNES (1662, p. 32) : Twelfth Night, or what you will ; wrote by Mr Shakespear, had mighty success... | |
| William Shakespeare - 1901 - 472 páginas
...well, though it be but a silly play, and not related at all to the name or day. January 20 ( 1 668).— To the Duke of York's house and saw ' Twelfth Night,' as it is now revnei ; but, I think, one of the weakest plays that ever I saw on the stage. DOWNES (1662, p. 32)... | |
| Samuel Pepys - 1906 - 736 páginas
...backs with great triumph, the City's cause being apparently too weak : but here I observed Mr. Gold,2 the merchant, to speak very well, and very sharply,...and have bespoke him to come to take measure of my dining-room panels. There I met with the pretty daughter of the coalseller's, that lived in Cheapside,... | |
| Sir Sidney Lee - 1906 - 282 páginas
...witnessed Twelfth Night twice again in a less perturbed spirit, and then he called it a "silly" play, or "one of the weakest plays that ever I saw on the stage." Again, of Romeo and Juliet, Pepys wrote: "It is a play of itself the worst I ever heard in my life."... | |
| Sir Sidney Lee - 1906 - 48 páginas
...saw Twelfth Night twice again in a less perturbed spirit, and then he called it a " silly" play : " one of the weakest plays that ever I saw on the stage." Again, of Romeo and Juliet, Pepys wrote : " It is a play of itself the worst I ever heard in my life."... | |
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