Part 227 (2/2)
Murray cor_
”_Jul_ Art thou not Roue?
_Rom_ Neither, fair saint, if either thee _displease_” Or:-- ”Neither, fair saint, if either _thou_ dislike”--_Shak cor_
UNDER NOTE IV--OF PassIVE VERBS
”_To us_, too,our os” Or: ”_We_ too e,” &c--_L Murray cor_ ”For not only _is_ the use of all the ancient poetic feet _allowed_ [to] us,” &c--_Id
et al cor_ ”By what code of e denied me_?”--_Bartlett cor_ ”To the children of Israel alone, _has_ the possession of it been denied”--_Keith cor_ ”At York, all quarter _was refused_ to fifteen hundred Jews”--_Id_ ”He would teach the French language in three lessons, provided _there were paid him_ fifty-five dollars in advance”--_Prof Chazotte cor_ ”And when _it_ was dedom of God should come” Or: ”And when the _Pharisees demanded_ of him,” &c--_Bible cor_ ”A book _has been shown_ me”--_Dr Campbell cor_ ”To John Horne Tooke _admission was refused_, only because he had been in holy orders”--_W Duane cor_ ”Mr
Horne Tooke having taken orders, admission to the bar was refused _hiarded_”--_Dr
Bullions cor_ ”What striking lesson _is taught_ by the tenor of this history?”--_Bush cor_ ”No less _a suhty thousand pounds had been left _him_ by a friend”--_Dr Priestley cor_ ”Where there are s to be done, _there_ must be allowed _to each_ its share of ti the subject in a far iven it_”--_Kirkha of entire impartiality should be shown the two companies”--_Dr Scott cor_ ”The command of the British army was offered _to him_”--_Grimshaw cor_ ”_To whom_ a considerable sum had been unexpectedly left”--_Johnson cor_ ”Whether such a privilege ranted _to_ a maid or a ”--_Spect cor_ ”Happily, _to_ all these affected tere _has_ been denied”--_Ca table_ next be _shown hi table_ may be _explained to hireat sum of money”--_Sanborn cor_ ”More time for study had been allowed _him_”--_Id_ ”If a little care were _bestowed on the walks_ that lie between them”--_Blair's Rhet_, p 222
”Suppose an office or a bribe _be_ offered _me_”--_Pierpont cor_
”_Is then_ one chaste, one last embrace _denied_?
Shall I not lay me by his clay-cold side?”--_Rowe cor_
UNDER NOTE V--OF PassIVE VERBS TRANSITIVE
”The preposition TO is _used_ before nouns of place, when they follow verbs _or_ participles of motion”--_Murray et al cor_ ”They were _not allowed to enter_ the house”--_Mur cor_ ”Their separate signification has been _overlooked_”--_Tooke cor_ ”But, whenever YE is _used_, it must be in the nominative case, and _not_ in the objective”--_Cobbett cor_ ”It is said, that more persons than one _receive_ handsome salaries, to see _that_ acts of parlia Rudilish Grammar have been _used_ in the University of Pennsylvania”--_Dr Rogers cor_ ”It never should be _forgotten_”-- _Newman cor_ ”A very curious fact _has been noticed_ by those expert metaphysicians”--_Campbell cor_ ”The archbishop interfered that Michelet's lectures ht be _stopped_”--_The Friend cor_ ”The disturbances in Gottengen have been entirely _quelled_”--_Daily Adv cor_ ”Besides those _which are noticed_ in these exceptions”--_Priestley cor_ ”As one, two, or three auxiliary verbs are _euments which have been _used_”--_Addison cor_ ”The circumstance is properly _noticed_ by the author”--_Blair cor_ ”Patagonia has never been taken _into possession_ by any European nation”--_cu cor_ ”He will be _censured_ nowas to be _terminated_ somehow”--_Hunt cor_ ”In 1798, the Papal Territory was _seized_ by the French”--_Pinnock cor_ ”The idea has not for a moment _escaped the attention_ of the Board”--_C S Journal cor_ ”I shall easily be excused _from_ the labour of more transcription”--_Johnson cor_ ”If I may be allowed _to use_ that expression”--_Campbell cor_ ”If without offence I may _make_ the observation”--_Id_ ”There are other characters, which are frequently _used_ in composition”--_Mur et al cor_ ”Such unaccountable infirht be _overcome_, in ht never to be _employed_, or _resorted to_”--_Id_ ”That _care_ may be taken _of the s_” Or: ”That the s may be _provided for_”--_Barclay cor_ ”Other cavils will yet be _noticed_”--_Pope cor_ ”Which implies, that _to_ all Christians _is_ eternal salvation _offered_”--_West cor_ ”Yet even the dogs are allowed _to eat_ the crumbs which fall froht within must be _heeded_”--_Barclay cor_ ”This sound of _a_ is _noticed_ in Steele's Grauineas for a pair of silver buckles”--_M Edgeworth cor_ ”Let therefore the application of the several questions in the table be carefully _shown_ [to] _hier _noticed_ by the hearers”--_Sheridan cor_ ”It will not adence, _fros, property s may be made property;” ie, ”may _become_ property”--_Beattie cor_
”And, when _soish in the work, _or_ nice”--_Butler cor_
UNDER NOTE VI--OF PERFECT PARTICIPLES
”All the words _es, are in their origin _uht forward_ by unbelievers”--_Dr Blair cor_ ”It was once the only form _used_ in the _past_ tenses”--_Dr Ash cor_ ”Of the points and other characters _used_ in writing”--_Id_ ”If THY be the personal pronoun _adopted_”--_Walker cor_ ”The Conjunction is a word _used_ to connect [words or] sentences”--_Burn cor_ ”The points _which_ answer these purposes, are the four following”--_Harrison cor_ ”INCENSE signifies _perfuious ceremonies”--_L Mur cor_ ”In most of his orations, there is too much art; _he carries it even to_ ostentation”--_Blair cor_ ”To illustrate the great truth, so often _overlooked_ in our tiures _calculated_ to affect the heart, are Exclamation, Confession, Deprecation, Cousted at the odious artifices _ee”--_Junius cor_ ”_All the_ reasons _for which there was allotted to us_ a condition out of which so much wickedness and misery would in fact arise”--_Bp Butler cor_ ”Soenerally invented or _seized upon_”--_Ld Kames cor_
”And BY is likewise used with names that shew The method or the means of _e do_”--_Ward cor_
UNDER NOTE VII--OF CONSTRUCTIONS AMBIGUOUS
”Many adverbs adrees of comparison, as _do_ adjectives”--_Priestley cor_ ”But the author who, by the number and reputation of his works, _did_ e into its present state, _was_ Dryden”--_Blair cor_ ”In some states, courts of admiralty have no juries, nor _do_ courts of chancery _erateful to my friend”--_Murray cor_ ”This requires a writer to have _in his own mind_ a very clear apprehension of the object which he means to present to us”--_Blair cor_ ”Sense has its own har to the harmony of_ sound”--_Id_ ”The apostrophe denotes the oave to the word an additional_ syllable”--_Priestley cor_ ”There are few _to whoe than _to_ Mr Addison”--_Blair cor_ ”DEATH, (in _theology_,) is a perpetual separation from God, a _state of_ eternal torments”--_Webster cor_ ”That could inform the _traveller_ as well as _could_ the old man himself!”--_O B Peirce cor_
UNDER NOTE VIII--OF YE AND YOU IN SCRIPTURE
”Ye daughters of Rabbah, gird _you_ with sackcloth”--SCOTT, FRIENDS, and the COMPREHENSIVE BIBLE: _Jer_, xlix, 3 ”Wash _you_, make you clean”--SCOTT, ALGER, FRIENDS, ET AL: _Isaiah_, i, 16 ”Strip _you_, and ird sackcloth upon your loins”--SCOTT, FRIENDS, ET AL: _Isaiah_, xxxii, 11 ”_Ye_ are not ashae to me”--SCOTT, BRUCE, and BLAYNEY: _Job_, xix, 3 ”If _ye_ knew the gift of God” Or: ”If _thou_ knew the gift of God”--See _John_, iv, 10 ”Depart froton cor_
CORRECTIONS UNDER RULE VI; OF SAME CASES
UNDER THE RULE ITSELF--OF PROPER IDENtitY
”Who would not say, 'If it be _I_,' rather than, 'If it be _me_?”--_Priestley cor_ ”Who is there? It is _I_”--_Id_ ”It is _he_”--_Id_ ”Are these the houses you were speaking of? Yes; they are _the same_”--_Id_ ”It is not _I, that_ you are in love with”--_Addison cor_ ”It cannot be _I_”--_Swift cor_ ”To that which once was _thou_”--_Prior cor_ ”There is but one man that she can have, and that _man_ is _myself_”--_Priestley cor_ ”We enter, as it were, into his body, and become in some measure _he_” Or, better:--”and become in some measure _identified_ with him”--_A Smith and Priestley cor_ ”Art thou proud yet? Ay, that I am not _thou_”--_Shak cor_ ”He knew not _who_ they were”--_Milnes cor_ ”_Whom_ do you think me to be?”--_Dr Lowth's Gram_, p 17 ”_Who_ do men say that I, the Son of man, am?”--_Bible cor_ ”But _who_ say ye that I am?”--_Id_ ”_Who_ think ye that I am? I am not he”--_Id_ ”No; I am in error; I perceive it is not the person _that_ I supposed it was”--_Winter in London cor_ ”And while it is _He that_ I serve, life is not without value”--_Ware cor_ ”Without ever drea it was _he_”--_Charles XII cor_ ”Or he was not the illiterate personage _that_ he affected to be”--_Montgoreatest apostle of the Gentiles”--_Barclay cor_ ”Sas the thrilling ecstacy; I know not if 'twas love, or _thou_”--_J Hogg cor_ ”Time hen none would cry, that oaf was _I_”--_Dryden cor_ ”No matter where the vanquished be, _or who_”--_Rowe cor_ ”No; I little thought it had been _he_”--_Gratton cor_ ”That reverence, that Godly fear, _which is ever due to_ 'Him who can destroy both body and soul in hell'”--_Maturin cor_ ”It is _we_ that they seek to please, or rather to astonish”--_J West cor_ ”Let the same be _her_ that thou hast appointed for thy servant Isaac”--_Bible cor_ ”Although I knew it to be _hientle youth, is't none but _thou_?”--_Dorset cor_ ”Who do they say it is?”--_Fowler cor_
”These are her garb, not _she_; they but express Her form, her semblance, her appropriate dress”--_More cor_