| British essayists - 1803 - 342 pages
...thing more exasperating than that of Richard, when he insults his superiors ? To beseech gracefully, to approach respectfully, to pity, to mourn, to love, are the places wherein "Wilks may be made to shine with the utmost beauty. To rally pleasantly, to scorn artfully, to flatter,... | |
| Joseph Addison, Sir Richard Steele - English essays - 1804 - 450 pages
...thing more exasperating than that of Richard when he insults his superiors ? To beseech gracefully, to approach respectfully, to pity, to mourn, to love, are the places wherein Wilks may be made to shine with the utmost beauty. To rally pleasantly, to scorn artfully, to flatter,... | |
| Alexander Chalmers - 1817 - 342 pages
...thing more exasperating than that of Richard when he insults his superiors ? To beseech gracefully, to approach respectfully, to pity, to mourn, to love, are the places wherein Wilks may be made to shine with the utmost beauty. To rally pleasantly, to scorn artfully, to flatter,... | |
| Colley Cibber - Actors - 1822 - 564 pages
...justify the very warm light in which I wish to place his serious assumptions. " To beseech gracefully, to approach respectfully, to pity, to mourn, to love, are the places," says Steele, (1) " wherein Wilks may be made to shine with the utmost beauty." That he understood the... | |
| James Ferguson - English essays - 1823 - 410 pages
...thing more exasperating than that of Richard when he insults his superiors ? To beseech gracefully, to approach respectfully, to pity, to mourn, to love, are the places wherein Wilks may be made to shine with the utmost beauty. To xally pleasantly, to scorn artfully, to flatter,... | |
| Lionel Thomas Berguer - English essays - 1823 - 334 pages
...thing more exasperating than thd.t of Richard when he insults his superiors ? To beseech gracefully, to approach respectfully, to pity, to mourn, to love, are the places wherein Wilks may be made to shine with the utmost beauty. To rally pleasantly, to scorn artfully, to flatter,... | |
| English essays - 1829 - 804 pages
...thing more exasperating than that of Richard, when he insults his superiors ? To beseech gracefully, to approach respectfully, to pity, to mourn, to love, are the places wherein Wilks may be made to shine with the utmost beauty. To rally pleasantly, to scorn artfully, to flatter,... | |
| 1831 - 704 pages
...thing more exasperating than that of Richard, when he Insults his superiors ? To beseech gracefully, & ' ( = % & Wilks may be made to shine with the utmost beauty. To rally pleasantly, to scorn artfully, to flatter,... | |
| John Galt - Actors - 1831 - 336 pages
...tragic talents. Sir Richard Steele, in speaking of him as a tragedian, says, " To beseech gracefully, to approach respectfully, to pity, to mourn, to love, are the places wherein Wilks may be said to shine with the utmost beauty." And Davies, in his Dramatic Miscellanies, remarks,... | |
| John Galt - Actors - 1831 - 332 pages
...tragic talents. Sir Richard Steele, in speaking of him as a tragedian, says, " To beseech gracefully, to approach respectfully, to pity, to mourn, to love, are the places wherein Wilks may be said to shine with the utmost beauty." And Davies, in his Dramatic Miscellanies, remarks,... | |
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