The Evolution of Expression Vol. I
odically. This irregular mental activity reports itself in unevenness of delivery; life appears in gleams not in steady shining. But with continued effort to conce
her with a dominating purpose to communicate that thought to ot
a gulf between the speaker and audience, there is conscious and apparent effort in the address
nstantly to add, never to discard or lay aside any power previously gained. Rather than outgrow it, he will grow in it. All that he will outgrow will be his faults, his
he Village Preacher."
eacher who radiates
all with whom he came in contact. The audience should feel the presence of the great-hearted man throughout the read