Plain English

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FOREWORD

TABLE OF CONTENTS PLAIN ENGLISH I. Language Study 9 II. Nouns

PLAIN ENGLISH Lesson I Open Letter

SPELLING LESSON 1

PLAIN ENGLISH LESSON 2

SPELLING LESSON 2

PLAIN ENGLISH LESSON 3

SPELLING LESSON 3

PLAIN ENGLISH LESSON 4

SPELLING LESSON 4

PLAIN ENGLISH LESSON 5

SPELLING LESSON 5

PLAIN ENGLISH LESSON 6

SPELLING LESSON 6

PLAIN ENGLISH LESSON 7

SPELLING LESSON 7

PLAIN ENGLISH LESSON 8

SPELLING LESSON 8

PLAIN ENGLISH LESSON 9

SPELLING LESSON 9

PLAIN ENGLISH LESSON 10

SPELLING LESSON 10

PLAIN ENGLISH LESSON 11

SPELLING LESSON 11

PLAIN ENGLISH LESSON 12

SPELLING LESSON 12

PLAIN ENGLISH LESSON 13

SPELLING LESSON 13

PLAIN ENGLISH LESSON 14

SPELLING LESSON 14

PLAIN ENGLISH LESSON 15

SPELLING LESSON 15

PLAIN ENGLISH LESSON 16

SPELLING LESSON 16

PLAIN ENGLISH LESSON 17

SPELLING LESSON 17

PLAIN ENGLISH LESSON 18

SPELLING LESSON 18

PLAIN ENGLISH LESSON 19

SPELLING LESSON 19

PLAIN ENGLISH LESSON 20

SPELLING LESSON 20

PLAIN ENGLISH LESSON 21

SPELLING LESSON 21

PLAIN ENGLISH LESSON 22

SPELLING LESSON 22

PLAIN ENGLISH LESSON 23

SPELLING LESSON 23

PLAIN ENGLISH LESSON 24

SPELLING LESSON 24

PLAIN ENGLISH LESSON 25

SPELLING LESSON 25

PLAIN ENGLISH LESSON 26

SPELLING LESSON 26

PLAIN ENGLISH LESSON 27

SPELLING LESSON 27

PLAIN ENGLISH LESSON 28

SPELLING LESSON 28

PLAIN ENGLISH LESSON 29

SPELLING LESSON 29

PLAIN ENGLISH LESSON 30

SPELLING LESSON 30

INDEX

Title: Plain English

Author: Marian Wharton

Language: English

Character set encoding: UTF-8

E-text prepared by Mark C. Orton, Anita Hammond,
and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
(http://www.pgdp.net)


PLAIN ENGLISH

By

MARIAN WHARTON

For the Education of the Workers
by the Workers

PUBLISHED BY
THE PEOPLE'S COLLEGE
FORT SCOTT, KANSAS
1917

¶ He who aspires to master the art of expression must first of all consecrate himself completely to some great cause and the greatest cause of all is the cause of humanity. He must learn to feel deeply and think clearly, to express himself eloquently. He must be absolutely true to the best there is in him, if he has to stand alone.

¶ Such natural powers as he may have should be cultivated by the study of history, science and literature. He must not only keep close to the people but remember that he is one of them, and not above the meanest. He must feel the wrongs of others so keenly that he forgets his own, and resolve to combat these wrongs with all the power at his command.

¶ The most thrilling, inspiring oratory, the most powerful and impressive eloquence is the voice of the disinherited, the oppressed, the suffering and submerged; it is the voice of poverty and misery, of rags and crusts, of wretchedness and despair; the voice of humanity crying to the infinite; the voice that resounds throughout the earth and reaches Heaven; the voice that awakens the conscience of a race and proclaims the truths that fill the world with life and liberty and love.

—EUGENE V. DEBS.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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