A third, with a gift for singing and
mimicry, who had achieved success at the smoking concerts of the Medical School by his imitation of notorious comedians, had abandoned the hospital for the chorus of a musical comedy.
From the date of their conversation after the party at Princess Tverskaya's he had never spoken again to Anna of his suspicions and his jealousies, and that habitual tone of his bantering
mimicry was the most convenient tone possible for his present attitude to his wife.
One shouted in taunting
mimicry: "Oh, mother, come quick an' look at th' sojers!"
Ups and downs, generosity, dark fates, the most delicate goodness, have nowhere been more prominent than in the private existence of those devoted to the public
mimicry of men and women.
Halting beneath this outer gate, the youth winded the horn which hung at his side in
mimicry of the custom of the times.
We go cautiously for a lifetime, and then, just for an instant, we forget, and--" he ground his teeth in
mimicry of the crunching of great jaws in flesh.
The wearing of the Arab burnoose which Tarzan had placed upon his person had aroused in the mind of the anthropoid a desire for similar
mimicry of the Tarmangani.
His seeming rescue by a votaress of the high priestess of the sun had been but a part of the
mimicry of their heathen ceremony--the sun looking down upon him through the opening at the top of the court had claimed him as his own, and the priestess had come from the inner temple to save him from the polluting hands of worldlings--to save him as a human offering to their flaming deity.
The young apes refought the battle in
mimicry of their mighty elders.
All savages appear to possess, to an uncommon degree, this power of
mimicry. I was told, almost in the same words, of the same ludicrous habit among the Caffres; the Australians, likewise, have long been notorious for being able to imitate and describe the gait of any man, so that he may be recognized.
Sharp; how dissolute and poor he was; how good- natured and amusing; how he was always hunted by bailiffs and duns; how, to the landlady's horror, though she never could abide the woman, he did not marry his wife till a short time before her death; and what a queer little wild vixen his daughter was; how she kept them all laughing with her fun and
mimicry; how she used to fetch the gin from the public-house, and was known in all the studios in the quarter--in brief, Mrs.
Her talent for every species of drollery, grimace, and
mimicry,--for dancing, tumbling, climbing, singing, whistling, imitating every sound that hit her fancy,--seemed inexhaustible.