Journeys Through Bookland: A New and Original Plan for Reading, Applied to the World's Best Literature for Children, Volume 1Bellows-Reeve Company, 1909 - Anthologies |
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Page 2
... begin to form ; by the time he is four- teen his future usually can be predicted , and after he is twenty , few real changes are brought about in the character of the man . The schools can do little more than plant the seeds of culture ...
... begin to form ; by the time he is four- teen his future usually can be predicted , and after he is twenty , few real changes are brought about in the character of the man . The schools can do little more than plant the seeds of culture ...
Page 20
... begin to read what they already knew , things in which the same words were many times repeated were helpful . Two examples are The House that Jack Built ( page 37 ) and There Is the Key of the Kingdom ( page 33 ) . C. The numbers from ...
... begin to read what they already knew , things in which the same words were many times repeated were helpful . Two examples are The House that Jack Built ( page 37 ) and There Is the Key of the Kingdom ( page 33 ) . C. The numbers from ...
Page 31
... begin to find the interest that our aborigines always have for our youth . Volume Six . The first three selections in this volume form a little cycle on one of the great heroes of the Scotch , while the two selections at ITS CONTENTS ...
... begin to find the interest that our aborigines always have for our youth . Volume Six . The first three selections in this volume form a little cycle on one of the great heroes of the Scotch , while the two selections at ITS CONTENTS ...
Page 71
... begin . 1. Use Your Own Words . Simple words , graphic , commonplace words , are the best . The older children will be just as much entertained , and the younger ones can understand better . On the other hand , do not talk down to their ...
... begin . 1. Use Your Own Words . Simple words , graphic , commonplace words , are the best . The older children will be just as much entertained , and the younger ones can understand better . On the other hand , do not talk down to their ...
Page 72
... begin to talk . 2. Talk Naturally . Forget that you are telling a story for the effect it will produce . Forget yourself . Tell the story as you would tell them an incident you have just seen . 3. Look Your Children in the Eyes . Find ...
... begin to talk . 2. Talk Naturally . Forget that you are telling a story for the effect it will produce . Forget yourself . Tell the story as you would tell them an incident you have just seen . 3. Look Your Children in the Eyes . Find ...
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appear Arthur artist battle Baucis and Philemon beautiful Bedivere begin bird Blynken Brown Thrush Cæsar called Canoe Race character child Cinderella cloud color Crow Drummer English essay eyes fable facts fairy fairy tales father feel figures flowers Gelert Gettysburg Address girls give Hervé Riel idea imagination incidents inspiration interest Journeys Through Bookland Julius Cæsar King King Arthur lessons light lines literature lives look lyric masterpieces meaning mind mother nature never night nursery rhymes paragraph parent person phrases picture plot poem poet poetry prose questions reader Robin Hood scenes selections sentence song stanza story style talk teacher teaching tell things thou thought tion trees VIII Volume VII Warren Hastings Water Baby Wee Willie Winkie wind words write written young