| Arthur Colby Sprague - 1926 - 344 стор.
...again visiting it, he was "vexed all the while with two talking ladies and Sir Charles Sedley . . . and by that means lost the pleasure of the play wholly,...against both words and pronouncing were very pretty." On November 27 1 Probably Rebecca: see the quotation from Pepys below. ' Pp. 5, 8, 16, 17. ' Reprinted... | |
| Samuel Pepys - 1928 - 1250 стор.
...pulling off her mask. He was mighty witty, and she also making sport with him very inoffensively, that a more pleasant rencontre I never heard. But by that...against both words and pronouncing were very pretty. So home and to the office, did much business, then home, to supper, and to bed. 1 9th. Up, and to the... | |
| Samuel Pepys - 1997 - 820 стор.
...pulling off her mask. He was mighty witty, and she also making sport with him very inoffensively, that a more pleasant rencontre I never heard. But by that...against both words and pronouncing were very pretty. 20th. They talked how the King's viallin, Bannister, is mad; that the King hath a Frenchman come to... | |
| Deborah Payne Fisk - 2000 - 326 стор.
...pulling off her mask. He was mighty witty; and she also making sport with him very inoffensively, that a more pleasant rencontre I never heard. But by that means lost the pleasure of the play wholly.12 Other afternoons - for performances were after lunch - Pepys was less distracted. Even if... | |
| Peter Thomson - 2006 - 259 стор.
...pulling off her mask. He was mighty witty, and she also making sport with him very inoffensively, that a more pleasant rencontre I never heard. But by that...Charles Sedley's exceptions against both words and pronouncings were very pretty. Samuel Pepys, Diary, 18 February 1667 Rochester's enemy, the Earl of... | |
| 140 стор.
...pulling off her mask. He was mighty witty, and she also making sport with him very inoffensively, that a more pleasant rencontre I never heard. But by that...against both words and pronouncing were very pretty. 7th March. — To the Duke's playhouse, and saw " The English Princesse, or Richard the Third " ; a... | |
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