| Leigh Hadley Irvine - 1886 - 56 頁
...and the genius of gesture. The orator loves the real, the simple, the natural. He places the thought above all. He knows that the greatest ideas should be expressed in the shortest words — that the greatest statues need the least drapery.'' Orators should be students of nature and of... | |
| Allen Thorndike Rice - 1886 - 804 頁
...and the genius of gesture. The orator loves the real, the simple, the natural. He places the thought above all. He knows that the greatest ideas should be expressed in the shortest words — that the greatest statues need the least drapery. Lincoln was an immense personality — firm but... | |
| Allen Thorndike Rice - 1886 - 928 頁
...and the genius of gesture. The orator loves the real, the simple, the natural. He places the thought above all. He knows that the greatest ideas should be expressed in the shortest wdrds — that the greatest statues need the least drapery. Lincoln was an immense personality —... | |
| Robert Green Ingersoll - 1888 - 344 頁
...and the genius of gesture. The orator loves the real, the simple, the natural. He places the thought above all. He knows that the greatest ideas should be expressed in the shortest words — that the greatest statues need the least drapery. Lincoln was an immense personality — firm but... | |
| Stedman, Edmund C. and Hutchinson Ellen M. - 1889 - 686 頁
...and the genius of gesture. The orator loves the real, the simple, the natural. He places the thought above all. He knows that the greatest ideas should be expressed in the shortest words—that the greatest statues need the least drapery. Lincoln was an immense personality—firm... | |
| Robert Green Ingersoll - 1894 - 346 頁
...and the genius of gesture. The orator loves the real, the simple, the natural. He places the thought above all. He knows that the greatest ideas should be expressed in the shortest words : —that the greatest statues need the least drapery. Lincoln was an immense personality—firm but... | |
| Abraham Lincoln - 1894 - 394 頁
...and the genius of gesture. The orator loves the real, the simple, the natural. He places the thought above all. He knows that the greatest ideas should be expressed in the shortest words — that the greatest statues need the least drapery. Lincoln was an immense personality — firm but... | |
| Robert Green Ingersoll - 1895 - 78 頁
...and the genius of gesture. The orator loves the real, the simple, the natural. He places the thought above all. He knows that the greatest ideas should be expressed in the shortest words — that the greatest statues need the least drapery. Lincoln was an immense personality — firm but... | |
| Richard Garnett - 1899 - 442 頁
...and the genius of gesture. The orator loves the real, the simple, the natural. He places the thought above all. He knows that the greatest ideas should be expressed in the shortest words — that the greatest statues need the least drapery. " Lincoln was an immense personality — firm... | |
| Robert Green Ingersoll - 1901 - 530 頁
...Everett will never be read. The orator loves the real, the simple, the natural. He places the thought above all. He knows that the greatest ideas should be expressed in the shortest words — that the greatest statues need the least drapery. Lincoln was an immense personality — firm but... | |
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