Public Speaking: Principles and PracticeMacmillan, 1913 - 398 sider |
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Side xx
... learned the needs , observed the efforts , considered the successes and failures , of many men and women of various ages and of many callings . The constant and insistent fact in all this period of experience has been that skillful ...
... learned the needs , observed the efforts , considered the successes and failures , of many men and women of various ages and of many callings . The constant and insistent fact in all this period of experience has been that skillful ...
Side 4
... out of its proper place , it is dissipated and more or less lost . A student once told the writer , when complimented on the good placement of his voice , that he learned this in his summer employment 4 Public Speaking.
... out of its proper place , it is dissipated and more or less lost . A student once told the writer , when complimented on the good placement of his voice , that he learned this in his summer employment 4 Public Speaking.
Side 5
Principles and Practice Irvah Lester Winter. voice , that he learned this in his summer employment as a public crier at the door of a show tent . He said he could not possibly have endured the daily wear upon the voice in any other way ...
Principles and Practice Irvah Lester Winter. voice , that he learned this in his summer employment as a public crier at the door of a show tent . He said he could not possibly have endured the daily wear upon the voice in any other way ...
Side 29
... learned , with full ex- pression by voice and action , repetition again , and again , and again , until the sentiment of them becomes a living reality to the speaker , is the only way to acquire the ability to indicate to others the ...
... learned , with full ex- pression by voice and action , repetition again , and again , and again , until the sentiment of them becomes a living reality to the speaker , is the only way to acquire the ability to indicate to others the ...
Side 48
... learned to know himself . The intensity of debating often leads , in the case of a speaker vocally untrained , to a tightening of the throat in striving for force , to a stiffening of the tongue and lips for making incisive articulation ...
... learned to know himself . The intensity of debating often leads , in the case of a speaker vocally untrained , to a tightening of the throat in striving for force , to a stiffening of the tongue and lips for making incisive articulation ...
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Abraham Lincoln American arms audience blessing blood Boston Brutus Cæsar called citizen court Daniel Webster Democratic E. J. Bowen eloquence England eyes face faith Faneuil Hall fathers feel fellow Fowler freedom G. P. Putnam's Sons gentlemen GEORGE WILLIAM CURTIS give glory Gunga Gunga Din hand head hear heard heart HENRY W honor human John Julius Cæsar jury justice land liberty Lincoln live look Lord ment mind mother nation ness never Nolan O'Connell orator party peace permission President principles publishers Republic Senate soldiers South speak speaker speech spirit stand tell thing thought tion to-day to-night tone United United States Senate voice WENDELL PHILLIPS WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE witnesses Woodrow Wilson words York young youth