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94. Life and Death....

96. The Votary of Pleasure

99. The Laborer

101. Labor.

103. Spring..

107. The Watcher on the Tower..

111. The Hermit....

117. Address to the Deity

118. The Universal Prayer.....

122. The Old Clock on the Stairs

125. The Death of the Flowers..

127. The Arab's Farewell to his Steed.

129. Friendship..

130. Forgive and Forget.

132. The Brothers

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149. From the Tragedy of King John-continued
150. From the Tragedy of King John-concluded..
168. A Sister Pleading for a Condemned Brother

.Miss Edgeworth. 100
Ruhnken. 170

173

Henry Fielding. 194
Shakspeare. 344

346

350

Shakspeare. 387

177. Scenes from the Comedy of "Money.".. Edward Bulwer Lytton. 407

179. Scene from The Poor Gentleman."

.Colman. 413

THE

NATIONAL FOURTH READER.

PART I.

ELOCUTION.

ELOCUTION is the delivery of extemporaneous or written composition. Its more general divisions are ARTICULATION, SYLLABICATION, ACCENT, EMPHASIS, INFLECTION, MODULATION, and PAUSES.

SECTION I.-ARTICULATION.

DEFINITIONS.

1. ARTICULATION is the distinct utterance of the Oral Elements, in syllables and words.

2. ORAL ELEMENTS are the sounds that, uttered separately or in combination, form syllables and words.

3. ELEMENTS ARE PRODUCED by different positions of the organs of speech, in connection with the voice and the breath.

4. THE PRINCIPAL ORGANS OF SPEECH are the lips, teeth, tongue, and palate.

5. VOICE IS PRODUCED by the action of the breath upon the larynx.1

6. ELEMENTS ARE DIVIDED into three classes: eighteen Tonics, fifteen Subtonics, and ten Atonics.

7. TONICS are pure tones produced by the voice, with but slight use of the organs of speech.

8. SUBTONICS are tones produced by the voice, modified by the organs of speech.

'The larynx is the upper part of the trachea, or windpipe.

9. ATONICS are mere breathings, modified by the or gans of speech.

10. VOWELS are the letters that usually represent the Tonic elements, and form syllables by themselves. They are a, e, i, o, u, and sometimes y.

11. A DIPHTHONG is the union of two vowels in one syllable; as, oi in oil, ou in our.

12. A DIGRAPH, or improper diphthong, is the union of two vowels in a syllable, one of which is silent; as, oa in loaf.

13. A TRIPHTHONG is the union of three vowels in one syllable; as, eau in beau, ieu in adieu.

14. CONSONANTs are the letters that usually represent either Subtonic or Atonic elements. They are of two kinds, single letters and combined, viz.: b, c, d, f, g, h, j, k, l, m, n, p, q, r, s, t, v, w, x, y, z; fh Subtonic, th Atonic, ch, sh, wh, ng.

The term Consonant, literally meaning sounding with, is applied to these letters and combinations, because they are rarely used in words without having a vowel connected with them in the same syllable, although their elements may be uttered separately, and without the aid of a vowel.

15. COGNATES are letters whose elements are produced by the same organs, in a similar manner: thus, ƒ is a cognate of v; k of g, &c.

16. ALPHABETIC EQUIVALENTSs are letters, or combinations of letters, that represent the same elements, or sounds; thus, i is an equivalent of e, in pique.

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'First require the pupils to utter an element by itself, then to pronounce distinctly the words that follow, uttering the element after each word thus: age, à; åte, à: åt, å; lånd, å, &c. Exercise the class upon

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