EMBRACED IN THE PUBLIC LIBRARY 175047A Gclectic Educational Series. READING AND SPELLING. McGUFFEY'S ECLECTIC FIRST READER ; lessons in reading and spelling for the younger pupils. McGUFFEY'S ECLECTIC SECOND READER ; lessons in reading and spelling for young pupils. McGUFFEY'S ECLECTIC THIRD READER, for middle classes ; chaste and instructive lessons in prose and poetry. McGUFFEY'S ECLECTIC FOURTH READER, for more advanced classes ; elegant extracts in prose and poetry. McGUFFEY'S ECLECTIC FIFTH READER, (Rhetorical Guide); a rhetorical reading book for the highest classes. NEW ENGLISH GRAMMAR. plete work for beginners in the study. ARITHMETIC. tables for little learners. RAY'S ARITHMETIC, PART SECOND; a complete text-book in Mental Arithmetic, by induction and analysis. RAY'S ARITHMETIC, PART THIRD ; for schools and academies ; a full and complete treatise, on the inductive and analytic methods of instruction. ALGEBRA. RAY'S ALGEBRA, PART FIRST ; for common schools and academies; a simple, progressive, and thorough elementary treatise. RAY'S ALGEBRA, PART SECOND; for advanced students in acade mies, and for colleges; a progressive, lucid, and comprehensive work, Euch PART of the Arithmetical course, as well as the Algebraic, is a complete book in itself, and is sold separately. Entered according to act of Congress, in the year Eighteen Hundred and Fifty-Three, by WINTHROP B. SMITH, in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States, for the District of Ohio. ELECTROTYPED AT THE FRANKLIN TYPD FOUNDRY, CINCINNATI, OHIO. PREFACE. THE favor with which this book has been received by the public, and the consequent extensive demand for it, having rendered necessary another renewal of the stereotype plates, the opportunity has been improved for a minute examination and thorough revision of its pages. A slight change has been made in the introductory matter, rhetorical marks are used more sparingly in the lessons, and it is believed, all remaining typographical errors corrected. No change has been made in the matter or arrangement of the Reading Lessons. In the preparation of the work, the compiler has not aimed at originality, but has endeavored to combine and present, as far as could be done in a single volume, the most valuable features of many popular books on the subject of Elocution and Rhetorical reading. has been made, therefore, of the works of Bell, Graham, Ewing, Pinnock, Scott, Wood, McCulloch, Enfield, Mylius, Sheridan Knowles, Walker, and others. While the compiler will not compare the present work with elaborate treatises on the subject, he trusts he will be found to have included every thing that could be made available for a school manual. The compiler has also received much valuable assistance from an able and experienced teacher, who has devoted much time and study to the subject of Elocution.* He is not without the hope, therefore, that his labors may prove serviceable to those engaged in the business of education. Free use #T. S. PINNEO, M. A., M. D., a graduate of Yale College, late Professor in tho Charlotte Hall Institute ; and more recently, Professor in Marietta College. 4. Industry necessary to form the Orator 16. Prospects of the Cherokees 17. Effects of Universal Benevolence 20. Character of Napoleon Bonaparte 23. Speech before the Virginia Convention. .Patrick Henry. 92 25. Speech in reproof of Mr. Pitt . 26. Reply to Sir Robert Walpole 39. Paul's Defense before King Agrippa . . . . . . 54. Massachusetts and South Carolina 59. Influence of Natural Scenery. 69. Colloquial Powers of Dr. Franklin 74. The Moon and Stars.-A Fable. 78. Impeachment of Warren Hastings 79. Speech on the trial of Warren Hastings. 89. Incentives to Youthful Devotion 92. Description of a Bee Hunt. 93. Mechanical Wonders of a Feather 98. Supposed Speech of John Adams. 99. Death of Queen Elizabeth . 102. Character of Louis Fourteenth 106. Anecdote of the Duke of Newcastle. 113. Reception of Columbus in Spain 119. Character of Blannerhassett 120. Speech on the Trial of a Murderer 125. The Little Brook and the Star 133. Character of the Puritans PAGE. Wirt. 260 Webster. 262 Lit. Souvenir. 269 16. 273 Charles Lamhe. 281 Kidd. 283 Edinburg Review. 289 |