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IV. Of a Similitude
V. Of the Purity of Language
VI. Of the Amplitude and Tenuity of Language
VII. Of the Convenience or Decency of Elocution
VIII. Of Two Sorts of Styles
IX. Of Those Things that Grace an Oration, and Make It
Delightful
X. In What Manner an Oration Is Graced by the Things
Aforesaid
XI. Of the Difference between the Style to Be Used in
Writing and the Style to Be Used in Pleading
XII. Of the Parts of an Oration, and Their Order
XIII. Of the Proem
XIV. Places of Crimination and Purgation
XV. Of the Narration
XVI. Of Proof, or Confirmation and Refutation
XVII. Of Interrogations, Answers, and Jests
XVIII. Of the Peroration
An Essay on Elocution with Rules and Commentaries
"Let Your Articulation Be Distinct and Deliberate »
"Let Your Pronunciation Be Bold and Forcible »
"Acquire Compass and Variety in the Height of Your Voice »
"Pronounce Your Words with Propriety and Elegance »
"Pronounce Every Word Consisting of More than One Syllable
with Its Proper Accent »
"In Every Sentence, Distinguish the More Significant Words by
a Natural, Forcible, and Varied Emphasis »
Acquire a Just Variety of Pause and Inflection »
"Accompany the Emotions and Passions which Your Words Ex-
press by Correspondent Tones, Looks, and Gestures»
LIVED
HEADLEY, JOEL Tyler
1813-
An Essay on the Rise and Fall of Eloquence in the French
Revolution
BEECHER, HENRY WARD
How to Become an Orator
SPENCER, HERBERT
The Philosophy of Style
PAGE
281
The Principle of Economy Applied to Words
The Effect of Figurative Language Explained
Arrangement of Minor Images in Building up a Thought
The Superiority of Poetry to Prose Explained
Causes of Force in Language which Depend upon Economy of
the Mental Sensibilities
CELEBRATED PASSAGES FROM THE BEST ORATIONS, ANCIENT AND MODERN