The Oral Study of LiteratureF. S. Crofts & Company, 1932 - 483 pages |
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Page 8
... mind in reading a sentence by the eye alone suspends its decision as to the relationship of phrase with phrase until ... mind are generally lost in delivery . The truth is simple and unescapable - whatever the mind understands it ...
... mind in reading a sentence by the eye alone suspends its decision as to the relationship of phrase with phrase until ... mind are generally lost in delivery . The truth is simple and unescapable - whatever the mind understands it ...
Page 9
... mind which has temporarily ab- sented itself , but one which was never present at all - utter- ing words which it ... mind . What the mind understands the voice , granted the words , can communicate . The voice may in a dozen ways ...
... mind which has temporarily ab- sented itself , but one which was never present at all - utter- ing words which it ... mind . What the mind understands the voice , granted the words , can communicate . The voice may in a dozen ways ...
Page 307
... mind . But during those solitary days it was a rare thing for any thought to cross my mind ; animal forms did not cross my vision or bird - voices assail my hearing more rarely . In that novel state of mind I was in , thought had become ...
... mind . But during those solitary days it was a rare thing for any thought to cross my mind ; animal forms did not cross my vision or bird - voices assail my hearing more rarely . In that novel state of mind I was in , thought had become ...
Contents
PREFACE INTRODUCTION | 1 |
PASSAGES FOR READING AND STUDY | 39 |
Assertion and Implication | 433 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
A. C. SWINBURNE ALFRED LORD TENNYSON ARTHUR HUGH CLOUGH assertion beauty breath Cæsar CLARENCE DAY consciousness dark dead death Dionysus divine doth dream earth emotional emphasis eternal eyes fact fear feel flowers give glory grow H. L. MENCKEN hand happy hath hear heart heaven hope human ideas immortal king Knopf Lady of Shalott LEO TOLSTOI light literary live look LORD man's MATTHEW ARNOLD means mind moral nature never night o'er Odysseus once oral passion permission of Charles person poets poor published by Alfred reader reason religion rest ROBERT BROWNING sense sentence silent sing slave sleep song soul speak spirit stars student sweet tears thee thine things thought tion to-day truth voice whole wild WILFRED SCAWEN BLUNT WILLIAM WILLIAM WORDSWORTH wind words writer wrong youth