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CHAMBERS,
LYTTON-ANON.,

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Demosthenes-Creasy. Cicero and Demosthenes Compared - Fen-
elon. Alfred the Great Dickens. Mary, Queen of Scots - Rob-
ertson. Last Moments of Addison- Macaulay. Lord Chatham
in Parliament-Hazlitt. As Secretary of State- Grattan. Ed-
mund Burke-Anon.,

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Degeneracy of Athens- Demosthenes. Value of Literature- - Cice-
ro. On Taxing the American Colonics - - Chatham. Justice-
Sheridan. Impeachment of Hastings - Burke. The Impractica-
ble Undesirable-Ib. American Progress - Ib. The Schoolmas-
ter Abroad-Brougham. Reply to De Brézé- Mirabeau. Men
and Measures - Canning. Resistance to the British — Henry. The
Union-Webster. Civil War- Clay,

Know before you Speak-True Generosity-Moral and Physical
Courage- Religion the Cement of Society- Habits of Observa-
tion- Good Advice-Humorous Retaliation,

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CONTENTS.

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81. SELECT PASSAGES IN VERSE.
Ulysses' Dog. Feigned Courage Miss Lamb. Beauty - Gay.
The Pleasures of Memory Rogers. Ambition - Byron. Deti-
Young. Affectionate Remembrance— Wordsworth,

ance -

35. Hymn,

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ADDISON,
HEMANS,

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Keble. Friendship- Wordsworth. Comfort in Adver-

sity - Southey. Futurity-Dryden. Short-sightedness. Trench.
Independence- Thomson. The Moral Law - Wordsworth.

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Essen-

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Trust in God -Young. He lives long who lives well-
Retirement- Goldsmith. The Old Man by the Brook- Words-
worth. Freedom - Bryant. Folly of Procrastination — Practical
Charity Crabbe. The Guilty Conscience-Byron.

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The Lessons of this Part contain much that the memory should be repeatedly refreshed with; and they have been constructed and arranged to serve as Reading Exercises, either after some of the simpler Exercises of Part II., or before, according to the capacity of pupils.

INTRODUCTORY REMARKS.

1. THE ability to read aloud in an easy and agreeable manner ought to rank first among the physical and intellectual accomplishments of the young. Apart from the service it may enable us to render to others, is the benefit to health which the habit of exercising the voice, under proper restrictions, may afford. 66 'Reading aloud, and recitation," says Dr. Combe, "are more useful and invigorating muscular exercises than is generally imagined."

2. To attain a good elocutionary delivery, the articulation must be firm and complete, the pronunciation correct, the modulation or management of the voice appropriate, and the expression animated and sympathetic. In proportion as these conditions are complied with, the delivery will be distinct, significant, and impressive. Audibleness depends less on a loud voice than on a clear and faithful articulation.

3. It will thus be seen that there are three stages of advancement for the pupil. In the first, his attention is confined to the mechanical effort of uttering letters, syllables and words with precision and ease; in the second, which presupposes the first, he utters sentences according to their grammatical significance; and in the third, which presupposes the first

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