The Fifth Reader of the School and Family Series |
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Page iv
... beauty - for which we are indebted to the pencil of a Par- sons - will be acknowledged by all , it is their utility , as objects of interest and instruction to pupils , to which we would more particularly call atten- tion ; for not only ...
... beauty - for which we are indebted to the pencil of a Par- sons - will be acknowledged by all , it is their utility , as objects of interest and instruction to pupils , to which we would more particularly call atten- tion ; for not only ...
Page 19
... beauty of such a piece depends upon the manner of reading ' it ! One can almost look into the very heart of Othello , and see the first awakening of a suspicious nature , as , startled by Iago's " In- deed ' ? " he repeats the word ...
... beauty of such a piece depends upon the manner of reading ' it ! One can almost look into the very heart of Othello , and see the first awakening of a suspicious nature , as , startled by Iago's " In- deed ' ? " he repeats the word ...
Page 21
... beauty ; but I am of the opinion that it would be better if the inflections at least were inserted in all cases where their omission , as in the example of William's answer , renders the sense obscure . No valid objection could be made ...
... beauty ; but I am of the opinion that it would be better if the inflections at least were inserted in all cases where their omission , as in the example of William's answer , renders the sense obscure . No valid objection could be made ...
Page 29
... beauty . What is there in these days that you have not attempted ' ? What have you not pro- faned ? What name shall I give to this assembly ? Shall I call you soldiers ' ? You who have besieged with your arms , and surrounded with a ...
... beauty . What is there in these days that you have not attempted ' ? What have you not pro- faned ? What name shall I give to this assembly ? Shall I call you soldiers ' ? You who have besieged with your arms , and surrounded with a ...
Page 36
... beauty , a good poet will always strive to attain it . In reading verse , the pronunciation should conform as nearly to the melody as the sense will admit , care being taken to break the monotony by a judicious use of the inflections ...
... beauty , a good poet will always strive to attain it . In reading verse , the pronunciation should conform as nearly to the melody as the sense will admit , care being taken to break the monotony by a judicious use of the inflections ...
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Common terms and phrases
ACROGENS Angiosperms animals beauty bells Bernardo black crows blood body BONY FISHES brain breath bright Cæsar called carbonic acid Catiline cerebellum character Chimæra circumflex color common creatures Crito dark death DICOTYLEDONOUS division dorsal fin drachmas earth example expression falling inflection feeling feet ferns fins fish flowers forest Fourth Reader gavial give green hand hath heart heaven hundred Iago kind land LESSON lichens light live lizard look lungs mind moss motion mountain muscles nature nerves o'er ocean optic nerve oxygen plants poet principle reptiles rhetorical pause rising inflection river rocks Romans rose Rule Saladin seen sentence serpents shark Shylock side sometimes species spinal spirit stamens substance surface thee thing thou thought thousand tion tone tortoises trees turtle vegetable voice waves wild words