"Mr. Pemberton has already given us some excellent books, but in this he has produced a biography which is at once charming and fascinating reading."

DAILY TELEGRAPH

"Extremely interesting."

ATHENÆUM

"The story is well told, and constitutes agreeable reading, and the volume is a pleasing record of artistic achievement."

London: C. ARTHUR PEARSON, Limited


FOOTNOTES:

[1] Fechter did not discard that soliloquy, but expressed to Lester Wallack, who mentioned it to William Winter, his opinion that the omission of that passage would be advantageous to the movement of the play; and he always spoke it as if it were prose.

[2] Here is another proof of a fact I have already emphasised, i.e. Ellen Terry's invariable and sweet unselfishness.