Expression: A Quarterly Review of Art, Literature, and the Spoken Word, Volume 1,Edizione 2School of Expression, 1897 From the numbers consist of the Annual catalogue, Announcements, etc., of the school. |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-5 di 52
Pagina 2
... speech . The lack of attention to right speak- ing in all our education , the failure to appreciate simple and genuine rendering of our best literature , is the primary cause of the coldness , the artificiality , the abstract one ...
... speech . The lack of attention to right speak- ing in all our education , the failure to appreciate simple and genuine rendering of our best literature , is the primary cause of the coldness , the artificiality , the abstract one ...
Pagina 7
... speech , more universal recognition of the imagination and its function , and a more harmonious education of the whole man . It will endeavor also to furnish simple and practical lessons to those who are striving for personal ...
... speech , more universal recognition of the imagination and its function , and a more harmonious education of the whole man . It will endeavor also to furnish simple and practical lessons to those who are striving for personal ...
Pagina 8
... speech of the greatest actor can be completely vitiated . The true secret of acting , accordingly , consists mainly in the power of giving attention to the ideas which are being uttered by the interlocutor . The action is the response ...
... speech of the greatest actor can be completely vitiated . The true secret of acting , accordingly , consists mainly in the power of giving attention to the ideas which are being uttered by the interlocutor . The action is the response ...
Pagina 9
... speech , of which he makes no concealment , and the purpose in view is definitely presented . He directly impresses his audi- ence . A speaker is thus tempted to wholesale his ideas , to feel his general purpose rather than each ...
... speech , of which he makes no concealment , and the purpose in view is definitely presented . He directly impresses his audi- ence . A speaker is thus tempted to wholesale his ideas , to feel his general purpose rather than each ...
Pagina 10
... speech may be prepared , yet it must be really thought and felt at the time . Everything must be extemporaneous , unless , possibly , the words . Each idea must be given to his audience , not only as something he really thinks , but as ...
... speech may be prepared , yet it must be really thought and felt at the time . Everything must be extemporaneous , unless , possibly , the words . Each idea must be given to his audience , not only as something he really thinks , but as ...
Altre edizioni - Visualizza tutto
Expression: A Quarterly Review of Art, Literature and the Spoken Word Visualizzazione completa - 1924 |
Expression: A Quarterly Review of Art, Literature, and the ..., Volumi 2-5 Visualizzazione estratti - 1899 |
Parole e frasi comuni
458 Boylston Street action actor aggregate mind appreciation artistic audience awaken beautiful become Boston Boston University C. H. Patterson cause character clergymen College Copley Square courses criticism delivery Delsarte dramatic instinct earnest EDWARD EVERETT HALE elements elocution elocutionary elocutionists emotion endeavor exercises expres fact faults give given heart HENRY IRVING human ideal ideas illustrations imagination insight inspiration language lessons literary literature means mechanical method Miss Monteagle nature needs never noble Oratory painting pantomime Parthenon Plymouth poem poet poetry postpaid principles processes Professor Monroe public reader realize recitals S. S. CURRY School of Expression Shakespeare sion soul speak speaker speech spirit spoken word struggle suggest summer term sympathetic taste teaching thing tion tone true truth University Vocal Expression Vocal Training voice and body whole William Winter