Reading Aloud: A Technique in the Interpretation of Literature |
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Page 40
... minds on the Sunday dinner waiting at home . If reading is to be real , the mind must be present . The chief cause of unreality is , in most cases , absent - mindedness . When we say , then , that we follow the natural method , we mean ...
... minds on the Sunday dinner waiting at home . If reading is to be real , the mind must be present . The chief cause of unreality is , in most cases , absent - mindedness . When we say , then , that we follow the natural method , we mean ...
Page 41
... mind and reveal the process of thinking . . . . Correct the thought , arouse interest , awaken the mind to clear , vigorous action , and the speech will take care of itself pretty well . " Another goes so far as to say that “ oral ...
... mind and reveal the process of thinking . . . . Correct the thought , arouse interest , awaken the mind to clear , vigorous action , and the speech will take care of itself pretty well . " Another goes so far as to say that “ oral ...
Page 123
... mind , I do not say which is morally the better , for it is plain that compulsory study must be a good and idleness an intolerable mischief , —but if I must deter- mine which of the two courses was the more successful in training ...
... mind , I do not say which is morally the better , for it is plain that compulsory study must be a good and idleness an intolerable mischief , —but if I must deter- mine which of the two courses was the more successful in training ...
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Common terms and phrases
accent actor artist attitude beauty bird breath captain's gig chapter consonant criticism dark diphthong dream earth emotion Eohippus expression eyes feel give GORGO Guy Wetmore Carryl hand hath hear heard hearers heart heaven Homer imagination interpretation Jesse James John Keats John of Austria King light lips literature living look meaning method metre mind Miniver Miniver Cheevy mood moon muscles nature never night Note oral reading passage pattern pause Percy Bysshe Shelley permission person phrase poem poet poet's poetry PRAXINOA preter pronounced pronunciation prose Quintilian reader resonance rhapsode rhythm rime Romeo selection sentence Shakespeare silent sing Socrates soul sound speak speech spirit student sure sweet syllables teacher thee things thou thought tion tone tongue understand verse vocal voice vowel Wilfred Owen William Shakespeare William Wordsworth words