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第1章 THE EARLY DAYS(12/23)

volcano of oaths and for blocks continued to hurl thunderous broadsides at Richard,which my mother insisted included the curse of Rome and every other famous tirade in the tragedian's repertory which in any way fitted the occasion.

Nearly forty years later my father became the president of the Edwin Forrest Home,the greatest charity ever founded by an actor for actors,and I am sure by his efforts of years on behalf of the institution did much to atone for Richard's early unhappy meeting with the greatest of all the famous leather-lunged tragedians.

From his youth my father had always been a close student of the classic and modern drama,and throughout his life numbered among his friends many of the celebrated actors and actresses of his time.In those early days Booth used to come to rather formal luncheons,and at all such functions Richard and I ate our luncheon in the pantry,and when the great meal was nearly over in the dining-room we were allowed to come in in time for the ice-cream and to sit,figuratively,at the feet of the honored guest and generally,literally,on his or her knees.

Young as I was in those days I can readily recall one of those lunch-parties when the contrast between Booth and Dion Boucicault struck my youthful mind most forcibly.Booth,with his deep-set,big black eyes,shaggy hair,and lank figure,his wonderfully modulated voice,rolled out his theories of acting,while the bald-headed,rotund Boucicault,his twinkling eyes snapping like a-->>

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