Glass P /y HA W Book , \\ y w ~" n ncuv liuing : the secpnd'is frormMKKENt, an able pro- fessor in the Uiuver^ty^f^ppetoilua. \ % \ J|^ "\ V 1 3VLr' 5 Samu.eI Kirkhaiw^if Baltimore, kndVn to many orour citizen3%s the author of a popular Ertol^lr>*rBaib3fe)ar, haSvpublished " An Essay on Elocution, designed for the usj^o ft, gfeJioolg»and j)n,vate lea\ner6."» After a careful perusal of this work, 1 am de- cfuedly of opinlSa, - - that jjis the o'hly^^s^u^fc'tftm}*: of^ieVind. .|Th e £ules are copious, and the author's explanations »d illustrations ^We^ti&ppilywtajwkl to the comprehension of learners. No school sfculd be without this book, and it ought to find a place in the library of every gentleman who values the attainment of a just and forcible elocution. ' Pittsburg Mgprttry, April, IS, 1834. The Essay now before us, needs not depend on any former work of itsjuithor for a borrowed reputation : it has intrinsick merits of its own. It lays down principles clearly and concisely. It presents the reader with many new and judicious selections both in prose and poetry ; and altogether evinces great industry, combined with taste and ingenuity. Courier of Upper Canada, York, Oct. 12, 1833. Of the talent and judgment of Mr. Kirkham, we have already had occasion to speak in terms of honest, praise. His work on Elocution raises him still higher in our esti mation, for we find it (and we have perused it attentively, and with the utmost pleasure) one highly calculated to mend the manners, and correct the taste, of a certain barbar- ous class of readers and declaimcrs that, at present, infest almost every rank in so- ciety. Besides this, the book would be of great utility in schools — such a one as has long been wanted; and we are glad to see it forthcoming. In his selections, tin author has displayed his usual tact and ability. It abounds in beautiful extracts, and judicious illustrations and remarks. Baltimore Visiter, July, 1833. We think Mr. Kirkham's Elocution worthy of publick patronage, and, have no doubt that, were it introduced into our academies, it would be found a most valuable book, both to the teacher and pupil. The familiar and forcible style of Mr. Kirk bain, so justly admired in his work on Grammar, is fully preserved in his work before us. Eastern Shore Whig, March 18, 1834. Mr. Kirkham has performed a very acceptable service to teachers, by presenting them with this "Essay." The selections are remarkably judicious ; the arrangement, good; the rules, simple and perspicuous. National Intelligencer, July 7, 1834. No part of education, equally important, is so generally neglected as Elocurion; and this neglect arises principally from the want of some suitable book on the subject. In my opinion, Mr. Kirkham's Essay is a work every way calculated to supply this want, and is far better adapted to the use of schools and private learners, than any other system with which I am acquainted. S. CAVERNO Lewistown Academy, JSf. Y. Oct. 7, 1833. Mr. B. F. Winchester :— Sir, I have examined the " Essay on Elocution" by Samuel Kirkham.— It clearly explains and illustrates the principles of the science, and, wilh diligence on the part of the student, cannot fail to answer the end designed. I cuuld wish that the last chapter of part first, might be read by every clergyman in the world. . Respectfully, vours, (Rev.) S.G. WINCHESTER. Philadelphia, July 22, 1834. Mr. Kirkhim: Dear Sir, In the course of thirty years' experience in teaching Eng- li: h Grammar and Reading in this city, no event of the kind has so highly gratified me, as the opportunity you have afforded me of examining your English Grammar and treatise on Elocution. I most heartily acknowledge, that, upon a careful and thorough perusal of them, I find that every facility which I have so often needed, but never oefore found, is exactly furnished ;— principles are clearly and concisely laid which beset their path. Indeed, in modern times, authorship has be come a mania, or, perhaps I should say, an epidemick, which appears t< be infectious, and which threatens to inundate our land, and leave it en cumbered with sand and rubbish. To the no small annoyance of the community, this alarming malad) has particularly affected the honourable fraternity of teachers; and thereby plunged many a thriving family into deep — mystification and doubt. When one of them happens to blunder on to the track of a straggling idea that he deems unique, or to get hold of a foolish conceit, or a new-fangled notion, every intellectual current in his cranium runs riot, and gives him no rest, until he has it written out and— printed. Hence, the onerous amount of maudlin abortions in the shape of school- books which is- annually disgorged from the press. Without once taking into consideration the enormous difference between carping at the defi- ciencies, and condemning the faults, of others, and that of avoiding faults and supplying deficiencies, and, losing sight, also, of the important uism, that knowledge derived from experience, in order to subserve PREFACE. 5 any useful purpose either in authorship, or in its application to business, must be drawn from successful experience, many of these book-mongers seem to take it for granted, that, to be able to raise plausible objections to the books that have fallen in their way, and to profess experience in teaching a particular science, constitute the grand climacterick of all that is requisite in order to form a successful writer upon that science. But it is not the man who has merely taught, or who has taught long, or who is able to point out defects in authors, that is capable of enlightening the world in the respective sciences which have engaged his attention ; but the man who has taught wdl. It is the man of genius and enterprise, he who has brought to the task of his calling uncommon powers of dis- crimination and a sound judgment, and whose ambition has led him, not to rest satisfied with following the tedious routine of his predeces- sors, but to strike out a new and a better track, or, at least, to render smoother and brighter the path long trodden. It is to such men, and such only, that we are indebted for all our great improvements in the cons! ruction of elementary works for schools and private learners. Book-makers are too often like office-seekers, who first procure the place, and tnen oethink themselves of the qualifications necessary to the discharge of its duties. They too frequently set down merely to make a book, without considering, either the importance of the undertaking, or whether they possess the qualifications requisite for its successful ac- complishment. But the course pursued by such writers, is as evidently inverted as that which would induce one to read a discourse backwards, or to commence a speech with the peroration, and close it with the ex- ordium, or to attempt to discover the sources of the Nile, by strolling down the banks of the Scamander. There is not, perhaps, a more preva- lent and mischievous errour than that which supposes the writers of bad books to be an innocent set of beings, who do little or no harm, unless, indeed, it is that which imagines that the authors of good books, are gen- erally rewarded according to their merit. Bad books are like bad medicines, which, when they do no good, are sure to produce ill effects. If bad books were entirely neutral, they would, of course, have no evil tendency ; but the misfortune is, they are much read, and lead- their un- fortunate votaries into errour. One who is pursuing the path of errour, is certainly farther from truth than he was before he set out, for it leads directly from her temple ; and before he can enter this temple, he has to retrace his steps. But does not the publick always discriminate between merit and de- merit, and distribute its rewards accordingly 1 Far from it. The publick is, indeed, a potent umpire, and one that opens a liberal purse to itsya- vouriies ; but to its greatest benefactors, it generally proves a heartless tyrant, by taking care, that they shall first be duly starved to death, and then handed over to posterity for their rewards, which come in the shape of monuments, reared to perpetuate their memories. The truth is, the general mass are not proper judges of books. Hence, their liability to be deceived. How often are they robbed of their time, by poring over pages of trifling, inane, and uninstructive matter — to the perversion of their taste, and the debasement of their minds — when this mispent time, were it devoted to the perusal of works filled with sound sense and solid instruction, would afford them an intellectual banquet from which they might arise with minds refreshed and richly stored with that wisdom which adorns and dignifies human nature, elevates man to his proper rank in the scale of being, and qualifies him to fulfil, with honour and usefulness, his various offices in life. I* D PREFACE. But school-books, more especially, as they fall into the hands of chil- dren and youth — of such as peculiarly need lights to guide them, and encouragements to excite them, when defective or erroneous, are more pernicious than any others ; for they prove either false guides, which lead their readers astray, or no guides, which leave them in darkness. Hence, such books are worse than no books. What, then, is to be done, in order to avert the evil influence of bad books — an evil which has been' rapidly increasing ever since Cadmus had the kindness to in- vent letters 1 — If this evil cannot be remedied, surely it may be easily retarded in its progress. Let parents, and guardians, and publick func- tionaries, at once set themselves at work to elevate the profession of school-keeping to the rank and dignity of the other, less important, learned professions, by increasing the salaries of instructers, so much as to enlist in this noble cabling, none but men of genuine talents and truly liberal acquirements, and, not only will bad books soon hide their diminished heads, but the youth of our country will receive twice as good an edu- cation as they now do, at a less expense, because, in a. far shorter lime. When we reflect upon the mighty influence which early impressions have over the minds and conduct of men, the importance of putting good books into the hands of the young, as well as, of giving them proper, oral instructions, presents itself with increased magnitude. Errours im- bibed in early life, are seldom rooted out in riper years. As a mere pebble may turn the course of a stream at the fountain-head, so, a vir- tuous hint, or a poisonous errour, instilled into the mind of a youth, may not only influence his career through this life, by directing him into the path of honour and usefulness, or by leading him into the road of infamy and disgrace, but its influence may extend to his well or ill being through the endless ages of eternity. It may be justly said, that teachers and authors, in no small degree, preside over the destinies of a free people. According to the bias which they give to the minds of those who receive instructions from them, they either exalt or lower the dignity of a nation. How high a meed of praise, then, does he merit, whose labours are successful in improving our systems of learning in such a manner as to give a new impetus to the intellectual energies of the rising generation ! The seeds of knowl- edge which he sows, will be continually springing up in a more and more genial soil, as generation succeeds generation, and will produce more and more abundantly those luxu riant germes of liberty and science which adorn, and beautify, and polish, and exalt a free people. The benefits of his labours will shine forth with increasing lustre through those brilliant geniuses who will hereafter arise and pour fresh floods of light into the moral world — streams that will blaze along the track of time, bearing light and glory down to the remotest posterity. When we take into consideration the vast and growing resources of our country, and associate them with the intellectual advancement she has already made, it may not be altogether forlorn to hope, nor chimer- ical to suppose, that the day is not remote in which the attention of our statesmen and publick functionaries generally, will be more singly direct- ed to the all-important object of raising our literary character to a far loftier height than has hitherto been attained by any nation. In such a day of prosperity as this, when it has become a moot point of national legislation how to dispose of surplus revenue — when the highest honours and rewards await the man of genius and scientifick enterprise, what but the want of enlightened views and liberal measures can prevent lit- erary, and scientifick, and political, and religious knowledge, from soon PREFACE. 7 llDwing through our land in channels broad and deep — knowledge, pure as the mountain rill, abundant as the waters of the ocean 1 What but the want of such views and such measures, can prevent this republick from soon raising a literary, as well as a political, standard, that shall wave as a proud beacon to all the nations of the earth 1 I must confess my unwillingness to abandon the hope, that to us such a day of national prosperity and literary pre-eminence is rapidly rolling on — aday in which our statesmen will become far more enlightened and liberalized; when talented authors will be more substantially encouraged; the profession of teaching, elevated ; and bad books, discarded ; when our national dig- nity, rising in its literary greatness, will shed an undying halo of glory around our political horizon ; when our publick institutions will extend their civilizing, and humanizing, and christianizing influence over every island, sea, and mountain, and penetrate the remotest corners of the earth — a day in which Europe, Asia, and Africa, will thankfully look up to her for light and direction, and be proud to imitate her noble example — an era of literary redemption, and the advent of science, in which national prejudices will be overthrown, national animosities, trampled down, national restrictions, rescinded, and the sons of science rise up in every republick, and kingdom, and country, and hold commun- ion at the fountain of Apollo — in short, a literary millennium, in which the Alps will salute the Alleganies, the Himalayas will make obeisance to the Andes, the Niger, the Volga, the Ganges, and the Nile, will claim kindred with the Columbia, the Mississippi, and the Colorado, and the waters of the Caspian and of the Superiour, will rise up and em- brace each other. Courteous reader, lest, by this time, you may think me inclined to be garrulous, if not flighty, upon topicks quite foreign to the subject before me, I will now put a bridle upon my wayward thoughts, and lead them directly into the channel marked out for preface-makers by the good old rules of criticism. Possibly the following pages will justify the conclu- sion, that the author of them does not possess the qualifications which he has prescribed as indispensable to the successful writer ; and that, whilst he deals out his censures to others with an unsparing hand, he is himself guilty of greater faults than those he condemns. Every one knows how much easier it is to point out faults, than to produce original ex- cellences. But whatever may be the defects of the work now merging into being, as author and compiler of it, I have one strong consolation, which is, that its utility will not depend alone on the efforts of my own talents. If the pages penned by myself, present little that is new and use- ful, a redeeming virtue may be claimed, by presenting in those which follow, much that has been long tried in the crucible of criticism, and which, like pure gold, has been found always to grow brighter by the process of refining. It may not be altogether inappropriate, in passing, for me to explain (he grounds on which is based the presumption of my coming forward to enrol my humble name upon the list of authors on Elocution. It is well known, that, but a few years ago, the tide of grammatical science, as it pertains to the English language, was at a verv low ebb in our- country, as well as in Great Britain. What the efforts of a few in- dividuals have since done to swell this tide, and conduct it into the humblest walks of life, is equally known. Among those who have suc- cessfully laboured in the philological field, Mr. Lindley Murray stands forth in bold relief, undeniably at the head of the list. That the writer's own labours in the same field, have also contributed, in some degree, to 8 PREFACE. effect that great revolution which has recently taken place with regard to the cultivation of grammatical science, and which so highly redounds to the honour and glory of the age in which we live, he is proud to be- lieve. Since the days of Lowth, no other work on grammar, Mur- ray's excepted, has been so favourably received by the publick as his own. As one proof of this he would mention, that within the last six years } it has passed through Jifly editions* By its unfolding, and explaining, and applying the principles of grammar, it has brought this hitherto abstruse science within the reach of the humblest capacity, and thereby encouraged thousands, and tens of thousands, to acquire a knowledge of this important branch of learning, Avho, otherwise, would have passed it by with neglect. In the interiour of Pennsylvania and the State of New York, in the Western States, in the lower regions of the Mississippi valley, and in many other sections of our country into which the author's work has penetrated, and become the general text-book in grammar, the number Df those who are now successfully cultivating a knowledge of this science, is nearly or quite twice as great as it was before his treatise was introduced; and in many neighbourhoods, it has more than quadru- pled. This flattering success, then, of his first essay in authorship, has encouraged hiin to adventure upon another branch of science which, for some years past, has particularly engaged his attention. That he is capable of doing ample justice to his present subject, he has not the vanity to imagine; but if his knowledge drawn from observation, and experience in teaching elocution, enable him so to treat the science as to call the attention of some to its cultivation, and induce others more capable than himself to write upon it, he will thereby contribute his mite towards rescuing from neglect a branch of learning which, in its important bearings upon the prosperity of the free citizens of this great republiek, stands second to none : and thus, in the consciousness of having rendered a new service to his country, he will secure the reward of his highest ambition. Should this first edition be at all greeted by the friendsof science, he will endeavour to improve his work, and ultimately send it forth with less imperfections resting upon its head. Some may think, that, in a [ew instances, the author has taken an undue liberty with the style of the writers whose labours he has appro- priated. But when it is considered, that this work is designed chiefly to be read in schools, where grammatical improprieties would be ex- tremely injurious to the germinating taste of the young reader, it will doubtless be conceded, that the sacrilege of disturbing the monuments of the dead — the profanation of removing a little of the rust and rubbish which adhere to the precious gems of an antiquated, or even of a modern, author, is, on the whole, a lighter transgression than either to neglect to furnish the rich banquet, or to get it up in a slovenly manner. The scientiflck portion of this manual, is far more defective than it would have been, had not the author, since making arrangements fot publishingit,beenprevented,by unfavourable, unforeseen, and uncontrol- lable circumstances, from devoting- half that time and attention to its composition and arrangement, which even a tolerable degree of excel- lence in execution, required. His highest aim has been to treat the subject briefly and practically; and thereby to render his work useful to such as have but little leisure to devote to this science. *It has now (1835) passed through over one hundred and twenty editions. ADVERTISEMENT TO THE THIRD EDITION. \> In the selected part, he has endeavoured to present such pieces as are calculated to cultivate the taste, enlighten the understanding, improve the judgment, and establish the morals of the young, and, at the same time, to inspire them with a fondness for reading, and a desire to excel in the science of elocution. In conclusion, it affords the author no small degree of pleasure to ac- knowledge the obligation he is under to Dr. James Rush, who, with a liberality peculiar to superiour minds, and a courtesy exercised only by accomplished men, tendered to the author, in the compilation and ar- rangement of his work, such a use of his own, admirable treatise on the " Philosophy of the Human Voice," as he might think proper to make. This remark will sufficiently explain to the reader, the grounds of that license by which the author has drawn so many of his best materials from the rich depository alluded to.* ADVERTISEMENT TO THE THIRD EDITION. Mankind are more frequently swayed by prejudice than reason. Reason has a clear eye ; but prejudice is blind, and either clings tena- ciously to old doctrines and time-worn systems, or gropes forward in im- minent danger of stumbling upon the dark mountains, of errour. Hence, tiew systems generally meet with more opposers than advocates; and lence, too, bad systems and false doctrines, on their first promulgation, s^ain as many proselytes as those that are genuine and useful. We aeed not wonder, then, that philosophers have been imprisoned, states- men banished, poets starved, apostles beheaded, and that the Saviour of men was crucified, while dupes and impostors have been counte- nanced, honoured, and even deified. Nor need we be astonished that every successful improvement in science and the arts, has gained its popularity only by slow degrees. That reformer, therefore, who would succeed, must not attempt, at once, any great innovation. It is in ac- cordance with this maxim, that I have undertaken to do but a little in the following Essay. They who have long groped in the darkness of a dungeon, cannot bear to be suddenly ushered into the full glare of a noonday's sun. How can it be expected, then, that those who have hitherto been con- tent to read, or rather, try to read, without a knowledge of any of the principles of reading, can be persuaded to adopt, at once, all the princi- ples of the science'? Believing it better to do a. little good, than wo good, I have contented myself, for the present, with presenting to the publick, 07ily those principles of elocution that I deem most important in practice, leaving it for a future opportunity, or to those who may succeed me, * It is the design of the Author to publish, in the course of a year or two, a Sequel to this work, ancf soon to follow that by a treatise on Rhetorics. He may likewise deem it advisable to publish an Introduction to this Essay. 10 ADVERTISEMENT TO THE THIRD EDITION. to give a more extensive and complete treatise upon the subject. To a man who is wandering in the dark, a farthing candle is better than no light. Inattention to principles in our systems of instruction, has long been complained of by the discerning few; and, although some slight refor- mation in regard to this point, has taken place :;n our schools, yet the grer.t importance of it, is still, both by teachers and parents, too gener- ally overlooked. That the examination and investigation of princi- ples, in any art or science, are highly calculated to call into active ex- ercise the reasoning faculties, is universally admitted. How incon- sistent is it, then, to think of teaching children to read, without causing them to pay attention to the principles of reading ! — It is hoped that so gross an absurdity as this, will not much longer disgrace our schools and seminaries of learning. ■ The investigation and application of the principles of elocution, as well as the study of the principles of grammar, arithmetick, philosophy, phrenology, and so forth, tend not only to develop and expand the in- tellectual powers, but, also, in a pre-eminent degree, to cultivate the taste, and refine the mind. We boast of our liberal institutions, and of our admirable form ol government : nay, more ; of our intelligence. It is admitted that we have done much for the cause of learning; but who cannot perceive, that much remains to be done before we can justly lay claim to that noble and refined excellence which ought to adorn a great, a prosper- ous, and a free people? Who will deny, that, in the general scramble after wealth, most of our citizens overlook the refined, the beautiful, in their too eager pursuit of the useful? Who will deny, that, with us, even at the present day, the standard value of every discovery and im- provement in science and the arts, is not, (as it ought to be,) the amount it will add to the happiness of man — is not, its tendency to enlighten, to refine, to liberalize him, and elevate him in the scale of being ; but — its ability to improve his condition in the mere matter of dollars and cents? — and that most of our systems of education, as well as the branches taught in our schools, are exclusively shaped to this end 1 — Intelligence ! And is this our standard of intelligence, flowing from our boasted principles of enlightened freedom 1 Has refinement, has '"gance, nothing to do with national excellence, with national great- *s 2 Shall it any longer be said, that the breath of liberty blights the e a r *.?, and banishes refinement '? Shall American freemen merit • reproach of being a nation of misers ? — I leave it to the legislators A statesmen of our country to answer these interrogatories, and to % whether a state of prosperity has not arrived, which would justify nore liberal course of policy in regard to our school-systems and encouragement of the fine arts — a course embracing, not only the ful, but. also, the elegant: — and especially to decide, whether refine- nt of manners (which would naturally flow" from such a course of poli- i would be dangerous to the liberties of our country. ** To the teacher it may be proper to remark, that one hundred and hty pages of this third edition, exactly correspond with the same :>es of the second edition ; but that other parts of the work have beec arged, and slightly altered, and, it is hoped, for the better. In order prevent farther alterations, however, the work has been stereotyped. CONTENTS PART I.— Elocution. Page Elocution— Introduction, - 15 Articulation, - - - - 21 Distinctness, 21 Of the Elementary Sounds, - 22 Of the Radical and Vanishing Movement of the Voice, - - 24 Of the Tonick, Subtonick, and Atonick elements, - - - 26 Diphthongs and Monothongs, 27 Of the formation of Syllables, - 28 Of the unaccented Vowel Sounds — defects in exploding them, 34, 35 Of the Consonant Sounds, - 36 Errour of blending Syllables, - 38 Pronunciation of and, - - 40 Suppression and perversion of elementary _ Sounds to be guarded against, - - - 42 Affected Pronunciation of par- ticular Vowels, - - 42 to 47 Of miscalling Words, - : - 48 Importance of a good Articula- tion, - - - - 49 to 53 Of Tones and Modulation, 53 to 67 Semitone, Monotone, - - 54 Interval, Qualities of Voice, Ab- ruptness, Pitch, - - - 55 Diatonick Scale, Note, Tone, Concrete and Discrete Slides, 54, 55, 67 Tones— Modulation, - 68 Errours in regard to Pitch and Tones— Affected Tones, - 61 to 63 Errours in Modulation — Monot- ony—Artificial Variety, - - 64 Uniform Variety, - - 65 Inflections of the Voice, Cir- cumflex, Concrete Slides, - 67 Rising Inflection or Slide, of a third, fifth, and octave, - 68 Falling Inflection, - - - 69 Rule.* for the Inflections, 74 to 91 A Series— Simple, Compound, &C, - - - 87 to 92 Rules for the Simple Series, - 88 Rules for the Compound Series, 91 Rules for Series of Series, - - 92 Circumflex or Wave, - - 94 Single and Double Wave, Con- tinued, Equal, Direct, &c, - 95 Wrong Inflection capable of per- verting the sense, - - 9? Analysis of Force, - - 105, 106 Radical Stress, Vanishing Force or Stress, - - - - 107 Compound, and Median Stress, Aspirate Elements, - - 10S Accent, 109 Emphasis. - - - - - 111 Antithetick Emphasis, - - 1J2 Emphasis of Specification, - 115 Emphasis of Enumeration, - 117 Emphasis, Simple and Compound, 1 1 9 Emphasis, Superiour and Inferi- our, 120 Emphasis of Radical, Median, Vanishing, and Compound Stress, - - - - - 121 Emphatick Inflections, - - 122 The sense of a passage, de- pendant on Emphasis, - 123 Of Time, 129 Of Quantity, 131 Of Rhetorical Pauses, 133 to 135 Of the Emphatick Pause, - 136 Of Poetry and Versification, - 137 Blank Verse, Poetick Feet, - 138 Manner of Reading Poetry, — Poetical Pauses, - - - 139 On reading Blank Verse, - - 140 Caesural Pause, 141 Rhetorical Action, - - - 147 General Hints to the Reader and the Speaker, - - - - 151 Hints on Pulpit Eloquence, - 152 CONTENTS. PART II. — Selections in Prose and Poetry. Page Paragraphs in Prose, 155 Manner of Reading Prose, 155 Alexander Hamilton, Webster, 158 Eloquence of Daniel Webster, 159 Waste of Time, Lindsey, 159 Injustice of Revenge— Political and Moral Maxims, Dr. Johnson, 160 Female fortitude— Affected great- ness—America and Europe compared, Dr. Johnson, 162, 163 Paragraphs in Verse, 164 The Family Altar, Burns, 164 Bliss of the Future State. Byron, 165 Musick — Mercy — Solitude, Shakspeare, 166 Anticipation, • Campbell, 167 The Miser, Pollok, 167 Hamlet's Reflections on Yor- ick's Scull, Shakspeare, 169 Reflections on the Tomb of Shakspeare, Irving, 169 On Studies, Lord B aeon, 170 Liberty and Slavery, Sterne, 172 On the Starry Heavens, Flint, 173 Scenes in Italy, Lady Morgan, 176 Affection for the Dead, Irving, 177 Character of Bonaparte, Phillips, 179 Speech— Bunker-Hill Monument, Webster, 182 Hezekiah, King of Judah, Gleig, 183 Destruction of Sennacherib's Army, Byron, 186 Psalm 137, 187 Version of the same, Barlow, 187 Version of the same, Byron, 188 Cardinal Wolsey's Soliloquy on Ambition, Shakspeare, 189 Wolsey's Address to Cromwell, Shakspeare, 189 Hohenlinden, Campbell, 190 The Burial of Sir John Moore, Wolfe, 191 Messiah, _ Pope, 192 On receiving his Mother's Picture, Cowper, 195 Man was made to Mourn, a Dirge , Burns, 198 To the Skies, Bryant, 200 Musick of the Ocean, National Gazette, 201 The Ocean at the Resurrection Morn, Pollok, 202 Address to the Ocean, Byron, 204 Colloquial Powers of Doctor Franklin, Wirt, 207 Intellectual Qualities of Milton, Channing, 208 Hamlet's Advice to the Players, S/vakspeare, 210 Efficacy of the Sacred Scrip- tures, Wayland, 211 St. John, chapter 9, 214 Industry necessary to the Attain- ment of Eloquence, Ware, 216 On Eloquence, Wirt, 218 Caspar Hauser, 221, 224, 230 Traits of Indian Character, Irving, 240, 243 Speech of Logan, Jefferson, 247 Speech of Farmers Brother, 248 Red Jacket, Halleck, 249 Psalm 90, 251 Version of the same, Watts, 252 St. John, chapter 12, 253 Version of the same, Moore, 253 There's nothing true but Heaven, Moore, 264 Secret Devotion, Moore, 254 The Soul in Eternity, Byron, 255 Henry the Fourth's Soliloquy on Sleep, Shakspeare, 255 Apostrophe to Light, Milton, 255 Darkness, Byron, 257 Lochiel's Warning, Campbell, 259 Gray's Elegy, 261 Stanzas, Dr. Percival, 261 Dedications, Lord Bacon, 2G6 Reflections on Westminster Ab- bey, Addison, 267 Reflections on Westminster Ab- bey, Irving, 26? On Subscribing for Books, Flint, 272 On Natural and Fantastical Pleasures, Guardian, 274 Thoughts on Death, Bacon, 277 On Ugly Women, 282,' 285 Philosophy of Apparitions, Quarterly Review, 288, 20 1 Perpetuity of the Church, Dr. Mason, 294 Letter to the Earl of Chesterfield, Dr. Johnson, 296 Rolla's Speech to the Peruvians, Sheridan, 297 Speech of Caius Marius to the Romans, 29S Reply of Mr. Pitt to Walpole, 301 On the Death of Gen. Hamilton, Dr. Nott, 302 Webster's Speech .in reply to Hayne, . 304 The Broken Heart, Irving, 307 Speech of Robert Emmet, 309 Brutus' Harangue on the Death of Cesar, Shakspeare, 315 Antony's Oration over Cesar's Dead Body, Shakspeare, 310" Speech of Henry the Fifth, Shakspeare, 31 S CONTENTS AND KEY. 13 Page Parting of the Three Indian Friends, Moore, 319 The Sailor Boy's Dream, 319 Hamlet's Soliloquy on Death, Shakspeare, 320 Cato's Soliloquy on the Immor- tality of the Soul, Addison, 321 The Dying Christian to his Soul, Pope, 322 The Alhambra by Moonlight, Irving, 323 Moslem Domination in Spain, Irving, 324 Thoughts on Handwriting, Verplanck, 327 The Monk, Sterne, 332 Storv of Lft Fever, Sterne, 334 Page Advantages of a Civilized, over a Savage, State, Spurzheim, 342 Superiority of Christianity over Paganism, Spurzheim, 343 The Wisdom and Majesty of God, attested by the Works of Creation, Dr. Chalmers, 345 Arguments showing the proba- bility that the Planetary and Astral Worlds are Inhabited, Dr. Chalmers, 346 The same subject continued, Dr. Chalmers, 348 Pleasures of Hope, Campbell, 350 Address to Greece, Byron, 352 The Passions, Collins, 353 Alexander's Feast ; or, The Power of Musick, Dryden, 355 KEY To the Characters Employed in this Work. The Falling Inflection of the voiee is indicated by the grave accent : v , thus, -.--- - ' " (X The Rising Inflection, by the acute accent : ~ ' " ~ " iA The Circumflex or Wave, by the circumflex :----- ( A ) A tonick or vowel sound that is to be prolonged, by this charac- ter - placed over the vowel : thus. aeiou A, short vowel sound, by this " placed over the vowel : thus, aeibu Tiie shortest Rhetorical Pause, by two dots : (..) A longer Rhetorical Pause, by three :(...) - - - .... A longer still, by four : (,....) - - - - - -'.... Words italicised, are to receive a moderate degree of emphatick force; as, .__.-_..._ man Words in small capitals, a higher degree of the same :"---■ maiv Words in CAPITALS, a degree still higher: .... MAN IN PART II. The Figured Vowels employed in pronouncing words at the bottom of tho pages, are used in accordance with Mr. Walker's Key, as adopted in Cobb's Dictionary : thus, Fate, far, fall,, fat, — me, met,— pine, pin, — no, move, nor, not. -oil — pound— pirn, this. 2 -tube, tub, bull- ADDRESS TO TEACHERS. On a preceding page, the author has intimated, that most instructed