Children's Classics in Dramatic Form - Book Two by Augusta Stevenson
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page 1 of 128 (00%)
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CHILDREN'S CLASSICS IN DRAMATIC FORM
BOOK TWO BY AUGUSTA STEVENSON Formerly a Teacher in the Indianapolis Public Schools 1908 [Illustration] FOREWORD This series of books aims to serve three distinct purposes: first, to arouse a greater interest in oral reading; second, to develop an expressive voice--sadly lacking in the case of most Americans; and third, to give freedom and grace in the bodily attitudes and movements which are involved in reading and speaking. The stories given are for the most part adaptations of favorite tales from folklore,--Andersen, Grimm, Æsop, and the Arabian Nights having been freely drawn upon. Children are dramatic by nature. They _are_ for the time the kings, the fairies, and the heroes that they picture in their imaginations. They _are_ these characters with such abandon and with such intense pleasure that the on-looker must believe that nature intended that they should |
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