English Grammar in Familiar Lectures by Samuel Kirkham
page 18 of 462 (03%)
page 18 of 462 (03%)
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made. In a word, the treatise I am recommending, is a _practical_ one;
and for that reason, if there were no others to be urged, it ought to be introduced into all our schools and academies. From actual experiment I can attest to the practicability of the plan which the author has adopted. Of this fact any one may be convinced who will take the pains to make the experiment. SAMUEL CENTER. Albany, July 10, 1829. From a communication addressed to S. Kirkham, by the Rev. J. Stockton, author of the "Western Calculator" and "Western Spelling-Book." Dear Sir,--I am much pleased with both the _plan_ and _execution_ of your "English Grammar in Familiar Lectures." In giving a _systematic mode of parsing_, calculated alike to exercise the _understanding_ and _memory_ of the pupil, and also free the teacher from the _drudgery_ of continued interrogation, you have made your grammar what every _elementary_ school book ought to be--_plain, systematic_, and _easy_ to be understood. This, with the copious definitions in every part of the work, and other improvements so judiciously introduced, gives it _a decisive superiority_ over the imperfect grammar of Murray, now so generally used. JOSEPH STOCKTON, A.M. Allegheny-Town, (near Pittsburgh,) March 18, 1825. |
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