EDUCATION DEPT. Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1867, by In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States, F923 HAVING been professionally engaged a number of years, as a Reader in Public, and also as a Teacher of Elocution in New York, I have frequently been consulted with reference to various works upon the subject. When a thorough inves desired, I have heartily tigation, a complete analysis was At times, in the latter case, I have had misgivings as to the results of my advice; for, in none of the lesser works I have recommended, would all the means of vocal expression sufficiently correspond in style to those I inculcated, and it semed to be the FORM alone that many persons PARTICULARLY desired. Furthermore, I have needed a manual by which instruction, in a method which I claim in many respects to be new in its plan and arrangement, could be imparted more reliably than by oral means alone. I have, therefore, prepared this volume, as an improvement upon my former efforts, the last published five years ago, which I now send forth to accomplish what it may in the furtherance of the noble art of reading and speaking well. In the following treatise I have inserted, occasionally, quotations from authors on art and painting, as well as elocu M209439 |