.Nw.MTA3Nw: Difference between revisions
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On reading | On reading Lectures in public | ||
_ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ | _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ | ||
The public reader of | The public reader of Lectures should be | ||
especially careful to avoid a manner and | |||
tone of utterance which are not natural | |||
to him - Good reading differs from | |||
conversation only in being more distinct | |||
slow and grave: but there should be the | slow and grave: but there should be the | ||
same inflections of voice, variations of tone | same inflections of voice, variations of tone | ||
and ease of utterance. Let herein not begin | |||
in a | in a key which he cannot sustain throughout | ||
but with great effort and so inflict upon | but with great effort and so inflict upon | ||
his hearers a painful feeling when they | his hearers a painful feeling when they | ||
percieve the difficulty under which he | |||
labours: but let him | labours: but let him commence only | ||
sufficiently loud to be heard and in the | sufficiently loud to be heard and in the | ||
natural key of his voice, so as to allow for | natural key of his voice, so as to allow for | ||
all the necessary variations of tone: -then | all the necessary variations of tone: -then | ||
let | let him rise by degree, warming with the | ||
subject, and | subject, and slowing as it proceeds 'till, in | ||
the | the application, when instructor has performed | ||
[illegible] | [illegible] office, he may allow all the feelings of his | ||
heart to flow forth in the stirring or persuasive | |||
[or?] | [or?] pathetic] strains with which it closes.- | ||
The following | The following gradual but brief directions by | ||
[illegible] | [illegible] author of considerable experience will | ||
[ | understand thou[?] selves to our readers | ||
Begin low Take fie{?] Be self possessed | |||
[illegible] | [illegible] read slow Rise higher When most impressed |
Latest revision as of 08:54, 17 July 2017
On reading Lectures in public _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
The public reader of Lectures should be especially careful to avoid a manner and tone of utterance which are not natural to him - Good reading differs from conversation only in being more distinct slow and grave: but there should be the same inflections of voice, variations of tone and ease of utterance. Let herein not begin in a key which he cannot sustain throughout but with great effort and so inflict upon his hearers a painful feeling when they percieve the difficulty under which he labours: but let him commence only sufficiently loud to be heard and in the natural key of his voice, so as to allow for all the necessary variations of tone: -then let him rise by degree, warming with the subject, and slowing as it proceeds 'till, in the application, when instructor has performed [illegible] office, he may allow all the feelings of his heart to flow forth in the stirring or persuasive [or?] pathetic] strains with which it closes.- The following gradual but brief directions by [illegible] author of considerable experience will understand thou[?] selves to our readers Begin low Take fie{?] Be self possessed [illegible] read slow Rise higher When most impressed