Part 81 (1/2)
LESSON I--PARSING
”A Verb is a hereby so, acting, or being acted upon, at some particular time, past, present, or future; and this in various lish Verb_, p 1
”Error is a savage, lurking about on the twilight borders of the circle illuminated by truth, ready to rush in and take possession, the rows dim”--_Beecher_
”The science of criticis the different parts of education into a regular chain”--_Ld Ka, a tree growing, or cattle grazing, I cannot doubt but that these objects are really what they appear to be Nature determines us to rely on the veracity of our senses; for otherwise they could not in any degree answer their end, that of laying open things existing and passing around us”--_Id, ib_, i, 85
”But, advancing farther in life, and inured by degrees to the crooked ways of h the crowd, and the bustle of the world; obliged to contend with this man's craft, and that man's scorn; accustomed, sometimes, to conceal their sentis; they become at last hardened in heart, and familiar with corruption”--BLAIR: _Murray's Sequel_, p 140
”Laugh'd at, he laughs again; and stricken hard, Turns to his stroke his adamantine scales, That fear no discipline of human hands”--_Cowper's Task_, p 47
LESSON II--PARSING
”Thus shanation united with hatred in the hearts of others, are the punishments provided by nature for injustice”--_Ka man as under the influence of novelty, would one suspect that custom also should influence his of action, is wonderfully, and, indulging the expression, intricately constructed”--_Id, ib_, i, 325
”Dryden frequently introduces three or four persons speaking upon the sa out his own notions separately, without regarding what is said by the rest”--_Id, ib_, ii, 294
”Nothing is ardens, than to raise wonder and surprise So unexpectedly in a landscape enriched with all that nature affords the most delicious”--_Id, ib_, ii, 334
”The answer to the objection here implied, is obvious, even on the supposition of the questions put being answered in the affir, so will the Lord of hosts defend Jerusale over, he will preserve it”--_Isaiah_, xxxi, 5
”Here, by the bonds of nature feebly held, Minds co and repell'd”--_Goldsled over, Coore he lay insteeped”--_Shakspeare_
LESSON III--PARSING
”Every change in the state of things is considered as an effect, indicating the agency, characterizing the kind, and ree, of its cause”--_Dr Murray, Hist of En L_, i, 179
”Having loved his oere in the world, he loved the ended, (the devil having now put it into the heart of Judas Iscariot, Si that the Father had given all things into his hand, and that he had co to God, arose froirded hian to wash the disciples' feet, and to wipe theirded”--See _John_, xiii
”Spiritual desertion is naturally and judicially incurred by sin It is the withdrawal of that divine unction which enriches the acquiescent soul with moral power and pleasure The subtraction leaves the raded, and distracted”--ho, but in all things approving ourselves as the , and, behold, we live; as chastened, and not killed; as sorrowful, yet always rejoicing; as poor, yetall things”--_2 Cor_, vi
”O ence of a father's love, Pour'd forth on _
IMPROPRIETIES FOR CORRECTION
ERRORS OF PARTICIPLES
[Fist] [As the principles upon which our participles ought to be for chapter on verbs, the reader must recur to that chapter for the doctrines by which the following errors are to be corrected The great length of that chapter see these exaht, that such words as are erroneously written for participles, should, for the sake of order, be chiefly noticed in this place In many of these examples, however, the participle is not really a separate part of speech, but is in fact taken with an auxiliary to form some compound tense of its verb]
LESSON I--IRREGULARS
”Many of your readers have e”--_Steele, Spect_, No
544