George A. Aitken
Capitolo 35
although it would be said that she has been the universal passion, and under
the tallest temptations, its constancy in to withstand them to served but to
you increase the number of his/her admirers. And this you perhaps want more
easily he/she believes, when I don't extend my encomiums on his/her person over a
sincerity that can be suspected; for her it didn't have greater application to the beauty
what to what the most desirable brunette would pretend. But his/her youth
and vivacious aspect threw such shine of health and the joy,
what, on the stage, the few spectators that were not over him, could see
his/her without desire. There were two very different characters in that
she was acquitted with non common applause: if anything could excuse
that desperate extravagance of love that almost frantic passion of
The Alexander of protection the Gran, is due to be when her Mrs. Bracegirdle was
his/her Statira: as when she acted Millamant, all the guilts, follies and
the affectation of that tyrant of accord was melted down venially in this way
many enchant and the attractions of an aware beauty." In the theatrical one
disputes of the times, she stuck to his/her benefactor Betterton, and
kept on completing with applause up to 1707, when, on the preference
Mrs. Oldfield being given to in an argument among that actress and
Mrs. Bracegirdle, she went out of scene when her
returned with her/it Mrs. Barry to the theater, and it completed Angelic for
The benefit of Betterton (the show described in this number). You died
in 1748.]
[Footnote 71: Thomas Doggett died in 1721. In 1695 he created the
character of Peak in the "Love of Congreve for Love." Later he was
associated with Steele in the management of Drury Lane Theater.]
[Footnote 72: The "Modern Prophets" of Of Urfey was produced in 1709. Thomas
Of Urfey died in 1723, elderly 70, leaving Steele a clock and it chains that
his/her friend brought to the funeral. He wrote many plays and songs. Also sees
Nos. 11, 43.]
[Footnote 73: Sees No 4.]
[Footnote 74: William, First Earl Cadogan (1675-1726), it was an able