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 |
From inside the book
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Page 29
... meaning a little difficult . It is , however , a great misfortune if a person grows up without an appreciation of poetry when it is so simple a matter to give the young an abiding love for it . A little help now and then , a word of ...
... meaning a little difficult . It is , however , a great misfortune if a person grows up without an appreciation of poetry when it is so simple a matter to give the young an abiding love for it . A little help now and then , a word of ...
Page 49
... meaning and purpose of the text . Here the artist shows not only the physical attributes of the real animal , but in a subtle way goes a step further and through the features or the attitude suggests the characteristics attributed in ...
... meaning and purpose of the text . Here the artist shows not only the physical attributes of the real animal , but in a subtle way goes a step further and through the features or the attitude suggests the characteristics attributed in ...
Page 52
... meaning of the printed forms , that he may discover the story for himself ; it gives him facts regarding unfamiliar things without which knowledge the printed symbol means little ; it leads him to the discovery of unseen beauties in his ...
... meaning of the printed forms , that he may discover the story for himself ; it gives him facts regarding unfamiliar things without which knowledge the printed symbol means little ; it leads him to the discovery of unseen beauties in his ...
Page 86
... meaning somewhat different from their present signifi- cance . Among such lapses in syntax we find the slight confusion of tenses in the first stanza , caused in the poet's mind by the necessity of mak-. 86 TELLING STORIES The Ballad of ...
... meaning somewhat different from their present signifi- cance . Among such lapses in syntax we find the slight confusion of tenses in the first stanza , caused in the poet's mind by the necessity of mak-. 86 TELLING STORIES The Ballad of ...
Page 88
... meaning of the sentences and an expressive reading aloud . The former , we can supply here , the latter the reader must contribute . Poetry must be read aloud to be appreciated by any but those who can listen to their thoughts and hear ...
... meaning of the sentences and an expressive reading aloud . The former , we can supply here , the latter the reader must contribute . Poetry must be read aloud to be appreciated by any but those who can listen to their thoughts and hear ...
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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