Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Hamlet" ¶ 104
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

London and Edmund
Anderson lives in Highbury, north London, with his wife and three children ; Isabella, Flora and Edmund.
From around 1810 to 1840, the best-known Shakespearean performances in the United States were tours by leading London actors — including George Frederick Cooke, Junius Brutus Booth, Edmund Kean, William Charles Macready, and Charles Kemble.
Abbadie's income as dean of Killaloe was so small that he could not afford a literary amanuensis ; and Hugh Boulter, archbishop of Armagh, having appealed in vain to Lord Carteret, the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, on Abbadie's behalf, gave him a letter of introduction to Dr. Edmund Gibson, bishop of London, and Abbadie left Ireland.
His successor as the leading actor of London, Edmund Kean, was more often criticised for emotional excess, particularly in the fifth act.
Edmund Mortimer died in the final battle and Owain ’ s wife Margaret along with two of his daughters ( including Catrin ) and three of Mortimer's grand-daughters were taken prisoner and incarcerated in the Tower of London.
The SPR was founded in 1882 in London by a group of eminent thinkers including Edmund Gurney, Frederic William Henry Myers, William Fletcher Barrett, Henry Sidgwick and Edmund Dawson Rogers.
Edmund Bonner, Bishop of London ( c 1500-1569 ) stopped this in 1542.
* September 5 – Edmund Bonner, Bishop of London ( b. c. 1500 )
* October 17 – British magistrate Sir Edmund Berry Godfrey is found murdered in Primrose Hill, London.
Æthelred was able to hold out against Cnut in London, but in April 1016 Æthelred died, as did Edmund in November.
Maskelyne was born in London, the third son of Edmund Maskelyne of Purton, Wiltshire.
Edmund went to London.
Æthelred died on 23 April 1016, and the citizens and councillors in London chose Edmund as king and probably crowned him.
While the Danes laid siege to London, Edmund headed for Wessex, where the people submitted to him and he gathered an army.
They renewed the siege while Edmund went to Wessex to raise further troops, returning to again relieve London, defeat the Danes at Otford, and pursue Cnut into Kent.
Shortly afterwards, on 30 November 1016, King Edmund died, probably in London.
Born in London, Blunden was the eldest of the nine children of Charles Edmund Blunden ( 1871 – 1951 ) and his wife, Georgina Margaret née Tyler, who were joint-headteachers of a London school.
Born in London, and educated at St Paul's School and Merton College, Oxford, Edmund's father John Edmund Bentley, was professionally a civil servant but was also a rugby union international having played in the first ever international match for England against Scotland in 1871.
William was a successful, well-connected and wealthy London lawyer who died in 1534, and Joyce was the daughter of courtier Sir Edmund Denny and the sister of Sir Anthony Denny, who was the principal gentleman of King Henry VIII's privy chamber.
William Walsingham served as a member of the commission that was appointed to investigate the estates of Cardinal Thomas Wolsey in 1530, and his elder brother, Sir Edmund Walsingham, was the lieutenant of the Tower of London.
In London in 1906, Sir George Sydenham Clarke wrote, " The battle of Tsu-shima is by far the greatest and the most important naval event since Trafalgar "; decades later, historian Edmund Morris maintained that it remained the greatest naval battle since Trafalgar.
Time Out London critic Tom Milne writes: " and Edmund Goulding almost transform the soap into style ; a Rolls-Royce of the weepie world.

London and Kean
The Macbeth of the next predominant London actor, William Charles Macready, provoked responses at least as mixed as those given Kean.
The 1990s saw Jacobi keeping on with repertoire stage work in Kean at the Old Vic, Becket in the West End ( the Haymarket Theatre ) and Macbeth at the RSC in both London and Stratford.
From his " tour round the world " Kean returned in 1866 in broken health, and died in London on 22 January 1868 at the age of 57.
Kean was born in London.
Kean had previously acted Tate's Lear, but told his wife that the London audience " have no notion of what I can do till they see me over the dead body of Cordelia.
* Kean, a comedy by Jean-Paul Sartre, 1953 ( produced 1954 with Pierre Brasseur, revived London 2007 starring Antony Sher )
* Francis Phippen, Authentic memoirs of Edmund Kean, containing a specimen of his talent at composition ( London, 1814 )
* Frederick William Hawkins, The life of Edmund Kean ( Tinsley Brothers, London, 1869 )
* Joseph Fitzgerald Molloy, The Life and Adventures of Edmund Kean, Tragedian, 1787-1833 ( Downey & Co. Limited, London, 1897 )
Stephen presented London stars such as Edmund Kean, Alexander and Elizabeth Pope ( née Elizabeth Younge ), Mrs. Dorothea Jordan, his brother John Philip Kemble, Wright Bowden, his sister Sarah Siddons, Elizabeth Billington, Michael Kelly ( tenor ), Anna Maria Crouch, and Charles Lee Lewes.
* P. M. Kean, " The Pearl: An Interpretation " ( London, 1967 )
Grant was a seasoned actor and had previously been employed by Charles Kean in his theatre company at the Princess's Theatre in London.
When he gave Hamlet in London, his portrayal was said to equal that of Edmund Kean.
A publisher of hardcover fiction and nonfiction, Knopf's list of authors includes John Banville, Max Beerbohm, Carl Bernstein, Willa Cather, Julia Child, Bill Clinton, Michael Crichton, Joan Didion, Fernanda Eberstadt, Bret Easton Ellis, Joseph J. Ellis, James Ellroy, Anne Frank, Lee H. Hamilton, Carl Hiaasen, Kazuo Ishiguro, Thomas Kean, John Keegan, Christopher Lasch, Jack London, Thomas Mann, Gabriel García Márquez, Gabriella De Ferrari, Cormac McCarthy, H. L. Mencken, Toni Morrison, Alice Munro, Haruki Murakami, P. D. Ouspensky, Christopher Paolini, Henry Petroski, Ezra Pound, Anne Rice, Dorothy Richardson, Andy Russell, Susan Swan, Donna Tartt, Anne Tyler, John Updike, Andrew Vachss, Carl Van Vechten, James D. Watson, Edmund White and Elinor Wylie.

London and was
That was the new advertising angle -- something about a Lloyd's of London policy to insure the secrecy of the secret ingredient.
Thus, to cite but one example, the Pax Britannica of the nineteenth century, whether with the British navy ruling the seas or with the City of London ruling world finance, was strictly national in motivation, however much other nations ( e.g., the United States ) may have incidentally benefited.
His London contract was rescinded, and now, he explains cheerfully, as a bright smile lightens his intense, mobile face, `` I conduct only one hundred and twenty concerts ''!!
In B. M. Spinley's portrayal of the underprivileged and undereducated youth of London, a salient finding was the inability to postpone gratification, a need to satisfy impulses immediately without the pleasure of anticipation or of savoring the experience.
The result was that I found myself in the ridiculous position of having made a formal engagement by letter for the next week, only two days before my departure from London.
After Thompson came to London to live, he received a letter from Katie, which was dated February 8, 1897.
He worked as a `` clothier '' in London, but was greatly concerned with religion.
Adrian Quiney wrote to his son Richard on October 29 and again perhaps the next day, since the bearer of the letter, the bailiff, was expected to reach London on November 1.
He listed what he had spent for `` My own diet in London eighteen weeks, in which I was sick a month ; ;
He was in London `` searching records for our town's causes '' in 1600 with young Henry Sturley, the assistant schoolmaster.
Quiney was in London again in June, 1601, and in November, when he rode up, as Shakespeare must often have done, by way of Oxford, High Wycombe, and Uxbridge, and home through Aylesbury and Banbury.
With these and similar tales he was entertaining his English friends, all of whom he was seeing when he was not showing Blackman the sights of London and its environs.
Lewis gave him a guidebook tour of London and, motoring and walking, took him to Stratford, but the London stay was for only ten days, and on the twentieth they took the train for Southampton, where they spent the night for an early morning Channel crossing.
The issue was acute because the exiled Polish Government in London, supported in the main by Britain, was still competing with the new Lublin Government formed behind the Red Army.
Even though it was known that the Luftwaffe in the north was now being directed by the young and energetic General Peltz, the commander who would conduct the `` Little Blitz '' on London in 1944, a major raid on Bari at this juncture of the war was not to be considered seriously.
This trade was subject to a tariff of 7.5 per cent after February 1835, but much was smuggled into Assiniboia with the result that the duty was reduced by 1841 to 4 per cent on the initiative of the London committee.
There was Sounder, too, also a veteran of the North Rim, and Rastus and the Rake from a pack of English fox-hounds, and a collie from a London pound, and Simba, a terrier.

0.242 seconds.