Oral Reading, Discussion and Principles: And an Anthology of Practice Materials from Literature, Classical and Modern |
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Page 217
No one who has any business to preach at all need preach uninteresting sermons . ... a faulty technic or he never has clearly seen what he should be trying to do in a sermon , and so , having no aim , hits the target only by accident .
No one who has any business to preach at all need preach uninteresting sermons . ... a faulty technic or he never has clearly seen what he should be trying to do in a sermon , and so , having no aim , hits the target only by accident .
Page 220
The people often blindly know that there is something the matter with the sermon although they cannot define it . The text was good and the truth was undeniable . The subject was well chosen and well developed but , for all that ...
The people often blindly know that there is something the matter with the sermon although they cannot define it . The text was good and the truth was undeniable . The subject was well chosen and well developed but , for all that ...
Page 223
The danger involved in starting a sermon with a problem is that the very word problem suggests something to be merely debated and its solution may suggest nothing more than the presentation of a helpful idea to the mind .
The danger involved in starting a sermon with a problem is that the very word problem suggests something to be merely debated and its solution may suggest nothing more than the presentation of a helpful idea to the mind .
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Contents
CHAPTER PAGE | 1 |
THE PROVINCES OF THE READER THE ACTOR AND | 13 |
Walt Whitman Vocalism | 38 |
Copyright | |
45 other sections not shown
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Oral Reading: Discussion and Principles, and an Anthology of Practice ... Lionel Crocker,Louis Michael Eich No preview available - 1955 |
Common terms and phrases
American audience become begin better breath Browning called CHAPTER characters CHORUS comes common Company course dead effect emotion English example experience expression eyes face fact father feel five give hand hear heart human idea important interest John language less light listeners literature living look Lord marked material matter meaning method mind natural never once passage pause person phrase play poem poetry practice preacher present problem pronunciation question radio reader recital remember rhythm Robert Robin Hood selection sense sentence sermon sound speaker speaking speech stand story student talk tell thing thought tongue understand unto voice whole words writing York young