The Book of the Boudoir, Band 1H. Colburn, 1829 - 662 Seiten |
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Seite 27
... would exclaim , Allons , Denon , contez - nous cela ! " The talent which , by its animation , renders French society so agreeable , has found its way into French literature . tome is always the prelude to some c 2 RACONTEURS . 27.
... would exclaim , Allons , Denon , contez - nous cela ! " The talent which , by its animation , renders French society so agreeable , has found its way into French literature . tome is always the prelude to some c 2 RACONTEURS . 27.
Seite 33
... Denon often told me that the best raconteur he ever knew , except Voltaire , was Voltaire's disciple , the Marquis de Vilette , the husband of Belle et Bonne . Ferney was a good school . Every one knows the anecdote of D'Alembert ...
... Denon often told me that the best raconteur he ever knew , except Voltaire , was Voltaire's disciple , the Marquis de Vilette , the husband of Belle et Bonne . Ferney was a good school . Every one knows the anecdote of D'Alembert ...
Seite 34
... Denon himself obtained over time , and even sometimes over nature , ( for " he could murder sleep , " by the exercise of this amusing gift , ) was often exemplified upon our- selves , during our various residences at Paris . Denon kept ...
... Denon himself obtained over time , and even sometimes over nature , ( for " he could murder sleep , " by the exercise of this amusing gift , ) was often exemplified upon our- selves , during our various residences at Paris . Denon kept ...
Seite 35
... Denon , saying " Go to bed , my good fellow - there , that will do ; " - and in he came on the very tip - toe of excitation , hum- ming " On revient toujours , " with applicable em- phasis . He was all star , ribbon , and the legion of ...
... Denon , saying " Go to bed , my good fellow - there , that will do ; " - and in he came on the very tip - toe of excitation , hum- ming " On revient toujours , " with applicable em- phasis . He was all star , ribbon , and the legion of ...
Seite 36
... Denon . " - " I see it , " said Denon , and gently taking my candle , he lighted the bougies on the table - drew a chair for me near the fire - threw a log on the hearth , and , with a petitioning air , solicited encore un petit moment ...
... Denon . " - " I see it , " said Denon , and gently taking my candle , he lighted the bougies on the table - drew a chair for me near the fire - threw a log on the hearth , and , with a petitioning air , solicited encore un petit moment ...
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Beliebte Passagen
Seite 50 - Biron they call him ; but a merrier man. Within the limit of becoming mirth, I never spent an hour's talk withal : His eye begets occasion for his wit ; For every object that the one doth catch, The other turns to a mirth-moving jest...
Seite 124 - ... vanished. I remembered that his wife carried on some little trade in the old town ; I remembered even the house and flat she occupied, which I had often visited in my boyhood. Having made it out, I found the old woman in widow's mourning. Her husband had been dead for some months, and had told her, on his death-bed, that my father's steward had wronged him of some money ; but that when Master Tom returned he would see her righted.
Seite viii - O'Briens' was going through the press, Mr. Colburn was sufficiently pleased with the subscription (as it is called in the trade) to the first edition, to desire a new work from the author. I was just setting off for Ireland, the horses literally putting-to—when Mr.
Seite 110 - Mr. Kemble was evidently much pre-occupied, and a little exalted ; and he appeared actuated by some intention, which he had the will, but not the power, to execute. He was seated...
Seite 123 - I was descending the steps of a close, or coming out from a bookseller's shop, I met our old family butler. He looked greatly changed, pale, wan, and shadowy as a ghost. " Eh! old boy," I said, "what brings you here ?" He replied, " To meet your honour, and solicit your interference with my lord, to recover a sum due to me, which the steward...
Seite 100 - English tan, without time to go through the necessary course of training in manners or millinery, for such an awful transition : so, with no chaperon but my incipient notoriety, and actually no toilet but the frock and...
Seite 109 - I had got into a very delightful conversation with my veteran beaux, when Mr. Kemble was announced. Lady C k reproached him as " the late Mr. Kemble ;" and then, looking significantly at me, told him who I was. Kemble, to whom I had been already presented by Mrs. Lefanu, acknowledged me by a kindly nod; but the intense stare which succeeded, was not one of mere recognition. It was the glazed, fixed look, so common to those who have been making libations to altars which rarely qualify them for ladies
Seite 104 - ... of a salon. As we stood wedged on the threshold of fashion my dazzled eyes rested for a moment on a strikingly sullen-looking handsome creature, whose boyish person was distinguished by an air of singularity, which seemed to vibrate between hauteur and shyness. He stood with his arms crossed, and alone, occupying a corner near the door, and though in the brilliant bustling crowd, was 'not of it.
Seite 111 - C k), and, reading, with his deep emphatic voice, one of the most high-flown of its passages, he paused, and patting the page with his fore-finger, with the look of 'Hamlet' addressing ' Polonius,' he said, 'Little girl, -why did you write such nonsense ? and where did you get all these dd hard words ? ' Thus taken by surprise, and ' smarting with my wounds ' of mortified authorship, I answered unwittingly and witlessly, the truth : ' Sir, I wrote as well as I could, and I got the hard words out...
Seite 125 - I remember you having expressed your approbation of my style of writing, and a wish that I would lose no occasion of rendering it useful. I wish I could agree with your ladyship in your kind and partial opinion ; but, as there never was an occasion in which it can be more useful to excite popular feeling than in the cause of the Greeks, I send your ladyship a copy of the second edition, published a few days ago. "With regard and esteem, &c. &c. E. " No. 13, Arabella Row, Pimlico, London, October...