The theatrocrat, a tragic play [in verse].1905 |
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Side 101
... dressing - room at the " Parthenon when he played Romeo ; and the reason " why he insisted on beginning the fourth act with " the fifth scene of the third act was the reason you guess at once : it gave them time . But that was " not the ...
... dressing - room at the " Parthenon when he played Romeo ; and the reason " why he insisted on beginning the fourth act with " the fifth scene of the third act was the reason you guess at once : it gave them time . But that was " not the ...
Side 109
... room , By your leave , for Troilus ! Stand , Diomed ! Unmanned abortion , bowelless coward , stand ! Prince Pandarus ... dressing - room . Go ? But I am dressed . Abbot . The last time : -Will you go ? 109 THE THEATROCRAT.
... room , By your leave , for Troilus ! Stand , Diomed ! Unmanned abortion , bowelless coward , stand ! Prince Pandarus ... dressing - room . Go ? But I am dressed . Abbot . The last time : -Will you go ? 109 THE THEATROCRAT.
Side 121
... room . On the left is the Dressing - room . The entrance to the Reception - room is on the right . HILDRETH is writing at a table when the act begins . Enter ABBOT . Hildreth . What ? Is the curtain down ? Abbot . Hildreth . Not yet ...
... room . On the left is the Dressing - room . The entrance to the Reception - room is on the right . HILDRETH is writing at a table when the act begins . Enter ABBOT . Hildreth . What ? Is the curtain down ? Abbot . Hildreth . Not yet ...
Side 123
... changing he sometimes stands in the doorway of his dressing- room and sometimes speaks from within . TEMPLE takes from the portmanteau SIR TRISTRAM's evening dress and goes into the dressing - room . Sir T. Who had the gallery to ...
... changing he sometimes stands in the doorway of his dressing- room and sometimes speaks from within . TEMPLE takes from the portmanteau SIR TRISTRAM's evening dress and goes into the dressing - room . Sir T. Who had the gallery to ...
Side 128
... Dressing - room , packs the clothes SIR TRISTRAM had been wearing during the day , closes the portmanteau and goes out . He Enter BLYTH , carrying a lady's hat and clothes . looks about , and then beckons at the door of the Re- ception ...
... Dressing - room , packs the clothes SIR TRISTRAM had been wearing during the day , closes the portmanteau and goes out . He Enter BLYTH , carrying a lady's hat and clothes . looks about , and then beckons at the door of the Re- ception ...
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Abbot actor Asgard beautiful Bishop of St blood Blyth Boulder brain breath Business-room chemical affinities Christendom church and stage Cressida dead deadlift death drama dream dressed Dressing-room drink earth elements eternal Ether EUROPA TROOP evolution evolved fancy feel fire flame flesh forms of Matter Gervase Goes Gorboduc Groom plays Troilus Grosvenor Theatre hate heart Heaven and Hell Hildreth hiss human hydrogen idea imagination immorality inhuman James's kill knew LADY SUMNER light live man's MARK BELFRY Martha material forces mean metaphysic mind mood music-hall mystery Natural Selection nebula nerves never Nifelheim night once oxygen Pandarus Parthenon passion phthiriasis poet poetry portmanteau Re-enter religion remember Salerne savage loves self-consciousness Sir Tristram Sumner soul speak tell Temple terror Theatrocrat there's thing thought to-night transmuted Troilus and Cressida true truth Warwick Groom wife woman women word Wordsworth
Populære avsnitt
Side 57 - is in danger of a new fanaticism, of a scientific instead of a religious tyranny. This is my protest. In the course of many ages the mind of man may be able to grasp the world scientifically: in the meantime we can know it only poetically ; science is still a valley of dead bones till imagination breathes upon it.
Side 24 - I should add that there is no key to "The Theatrocrat " : all the people in it are made essentially out of the good and evil in myself. My statement of the world and of the Universe as the world can know it...
Side 5 - ... his pastoral pipings were far from being of the importance his admirers imagined. He was essentially a cold, hard, silent, practical man, who, if he had not fallen into poetry, would have done effectual work of some sort in the world. This was the impression one got of him as he looked out of his stern blue eyes, superior to men and circumstances.
Side 47 - ... poetry that does not require to be taught or learnt ; that requires only to be told and shown to be known, welcomed, and remembered, because it is already subconscious in the Matter of which we consist.
Side 31 - That strew the ethereal waste are whirling there In agony unutterable. Pain? It may be Matter in itself is pain, Sweetened in sexual love that so mankind, The medium of Matter's consciousness, May never cease to know - the stolid bent Of Matter, the infinite vanity Of the Universe, being evermore Self-knowledge.
Side 113 - ... either. King of Hearts is his show. His feline walk, his funny drawl with its inordinate vowels, his sure-fire smile, along with whatever is less definable in an actor, though no less real, make of an ambivalent presentation an uncompromising performance and an unequivocal success. CRAFTY GODLINESS I love the stage And hate to see it made the prostitute Of crafty godliness. —John Davidson Here is a sentence I never thought I should live to write: I have just seen a play by TS Eliot in summer...
Side 32 - MINE loom of my poetry, giving the myth also a new orientation as the weaver changes the pattern of his web— an orientation which I have carried to its utmost limit in the Judgment-day of the "Prime Minister...
Side 25 - We know now that there is no moral order of the Universe, but that everything is constantly changing and becoming and returning to its first condition in a perpetual round of evolution and devolution; and this eternal tide of Matter, this restless ebb and flow I call Immorality.