London at the End of the Century:A Book of Gossip
a Beckett, Arthur William
1900
WHERE TO GO AFTER THE THEATRE.
My have run away with me and carried me from to the | |
322 | Vaudeville Theatre. But if the operation were reversed I am not sure that the experiment would not be successful. I am not quite sure what is being played at the old house at this moment. But tired brains from the play-houses, not only in the Strand but elsewhere, will find Tunbridge Wells a delightful restorative. It is quaint and beautiful, old-fashioned and lovely beyond compare. Above all and before all, it is the very land of health. Invalids revive like drooping flowers thirsting for water on the appearance of a summer shower. There are shops of all sorts and conditions; but during my stay I never noticed the presence of an establishment belonging to an undertaker. And this being so, I venture to raise the appropriate cry of |