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  2. Robert Rose (poet) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Rose_(poet)

    [1] Rose died in police custody on 19 June 1849, imprisoned after a drinking spree. He was 43 years old. He was buried in Manchester General Cemetery on 21 June 1849. [1] His fellow poet John Bolton Rogerson, who was the cemetery's registrar, read a specially composed service over the grave. Lines of Rose's own verse were inscribed on his ...

  3. Poetry reading - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poetry_reading

    As poetry is a vocal art, the speaker brings their own experience to it, changing it according to their own sensibilities, [3] intonation, the matter of sound making sense; controlled through pitch and stress, poems are full of invisible italicized contrasts. [2] Reading poetry aloud also makes clear the "pause" as an element of poetry. [4]

  4. Little Orphant Annie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_Orphant_Annie

    The alliteration, parallels, phonetic intensifiers and onomatopoeia add effects to the rhymes that become more detectable when read aloud. The exclamatory refrain ending each stanza is spoken with more emphasis. [12] The poem is written in the first person and in a regular iambic meter. It begins by introducing Annie, and then sets a mood of ...

  5. Jim Trelease - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jim_Trelease

    The Read-Aloud Handbook, 1982, The New Read-Aloud Handbook, 1989,The Read-Aloud Handbook, Sixth Edition, 2006. Reading Aloud: Motivating Children to Make Books Into Friends, Not Enemies (film), 1983. Turning On the Turned Off Reader (audio cassette), 1983. (Editor) Hey! Listen to This: Stories to Read Aloud, 1992. (Editor) Read all About It!:

  6. Readers theater - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Readers_theater

    [4] [2] The interpretation of the dramatic reading relies almost entirely on the actors' voices. Although the early readers theater groups used only scripts and stools, the choice to read or memorize and whether to remain seated or allow movement vary according to the desires of the performing group. [2]

  7. First-person narrative - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First-person_narrative

    The story may be told by a person directly undergoing the events in the story without being aware of conveying that experience to readers; alternatively, the narrator may be conscious of telling the story to a given audience, perhaps at a given place and time, for a given reason.

  8. What drag queen storytime is — and what it isn’t, according ...

    www.aol.com/news/drag-queen-storytime-isn-t...

    Collinsville resident Lisa Bossetto brought her 6-year-old twins to Glen Carbon’s drag queen storytime after missing the one earlier in June at the Collinsville library. Bossetto said afterward ...

  9. What Is Man? (Twain essay) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/What_Is_Man?_(Twain_essay)

    "What Is Man?" is a short story by American writer Mark Twain, published in 1906. It is a dialogue between a Young Man and an Old Man regarding the nature of man. The title refers to Psalm 8:4, which begins "what is man, that you are mindful of him...". It involves ideas of determinism and free will, as well as of psychological egoism. The Old ...

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