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 in us, "was pretty and industrious; the other," voice and face expressing disapproval of her, "was ugly and idle." "A certain man had a donkey," says the story-teller, with such suggestion of possibilities in the donkey evident in forward posture, in face and voice, that the listener at once suspects that, as Hans Andersen would put it, that donkey "became worth talking about."

The story-teller begins then, as both prophet and sibyl, telling yet, especially at this stage, not "giving it away." He must let the story reveal and the child discover; this is the joy of it.

Building out the story. Having laid the foundation upon which he is to build the happening, the story-teller should, as a rule, in building fashion pause. He then enters upon the action, carrying it forward, slowly or rapidly, according as its course demands, arousing suspense and increasing the interest in the outcome. How he does this will be suggested farther on. As the story proceeds he must of course treat character consistently. Sensibility to the nature of the particular character he is interpreting will enable him to voice and conduct it appropriately. Nothing more than suggestion is in place. The story-teller's fairy voice may be light and tinkling like silver bells, his witch made graphic through pointed, hag-like chin and fingers and