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Right@Sight is based on musical material from T.A. Johnson's celebrated Read and Play sight-reading series. Using an entirely new presentation, Caroline Evans brings a refreshingly direct approach to the development of this vital musical skill. Each exercise takes as its starting point TRaK - Time, Rhythm and Key. Helpful and imaginativeguidance encourages the student to meet the various practical and interpretative challenges introduced in each new piece. Conveniently presented in 8 progressive volumes corresponding to examination grades, Right@Sight is the only sight-reading course you are likely to need.
A progressive sightreading course for Piano with additional material by Paul Terry.
A progressive sightreading course for Piano with additional material by Paul Terry.
For centuries poets in all the world's cultures have offered eloquent thanks and praise for the earth and its people. Devotional lyrics drawn from the major religious traditions offer their perspectives, alongside poetic tributes to autumn and the harvest season that draw our attention to nature's bounty and poignant beauty as winter approaches.
These fifteen lively and colourful books are ideal for early readers and help to broaden their vocabulary and give them confidence with sounds and words as they learn to read.
""This book is an attempt to give a brief account of the life of the men of Ambulance Company Number 139 during their services in the Great War. It was written by the men while they were awaiting sailing orders for home, in barn-loft billets of the village of Aulnois-Sous-Vertuzey, France, while the memories of our experiences were still fresh in our minds.""This book is part of the World War One Centenary series; creating, collating and reprinting new and old works of poetry, fiction, autobiography and analysis. The series forms a commemorative tribute to mark the passing of one of the world's bloodiest wars, offering new perspectives on this tragic yet fascinating period of human history. Each publication also includes brand new introductory essays and a timeline to help the reader place the work in its historical context.
5 amazing women and 1 wise man come together in this inspiring collection of true stories. Some of which show how from the most harrowing of circumstances can come strength through unwavering belief. Weaved through this book is hope, inspiration and lots of wisdom. It is sure to impact every reader that it reaches. Each story is different and has something positive to offer.Do you live a positive life? What is your journey?
This issue of Contraposition calls our notion of authorship into question. When an idea comes into the world, when we find something beautiful for the first time, we often ask: where is this from? Where can I find more? But this impulse can leave us with a sense of being robbed - when the answer is not quite what we'd hoped - or keep us from searching beyond a source that has pleased us. We'd like to suggest that the relative anonymity of most of this issue's contributors doesn't diminish the value of their work; it gives them a special kind of authority-the kind we give to a child's first words, an openness to a new surprising, beautiful, or humorous connection. Contraposition is concerned with finding beauty and importance wherever it appears, no matter who it is that may have created it. Poetry and Fiction by various authors. Edited by Ev Malcolm, Nathan Rupp, Chelsea Rennhoff and Patrick Fallon www.Write2Grow.org
Anthropological Papers, Numbers 13-18, 1941. Includes The Mining of Gems and Ornamental Stones by American Indians, by Sydney H. Ball; Iroquois Suicide: A Study in the Stability of a Culture Pattern, and Tonawanda Longhouse Ceremonies: Ninety Years After Lewis Henry Morgan, by William N. Fenton; The Quichua-Speaking Indians of the Province of Umbabura (Ecuador) and Their Anthropometric Relations with the Living Populations of the Andean Area, by John Gillin; Art Processes in Birchbark of the River Desert Algonquin, a Circumboreal Trait, by Frank G. Speck; and Archeological Reconnaissance of Southern Utah, by Julian H. Steward.
The Golden Lotus was a monthly magazine "dedicated to those who seek The Way" (Buddhism). It began in 1944. Volume 8 covers 1951, with articles and reviews on such diverse topics as book reviews (H.P. Blavatsky), Sanskrit, The Dharma, The Kingdom of Water, The Mystery of Being, poetry, questions and answers, and much more.
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