Part 233 (1/2)

”So much ability and [so much] merit _are_ seldoy and syntax_ of the language _are_ thus spread before the learner”--_Bullions cor_ ”Dr Johnson tells us, that, in English poetry, the accent and the quantity of syllables _are_ the saeneral scope and tendency, having never been clearly apprehended, _are_ not renty _were_ not purchased of the natives”--_Knapp cor_ ”The boldness, freedom, and variety, of our blank verse, _are_ infinitely more favourable to _sublimity of style_, than [are the constraint and uniformity of] rhyme”--_Blair cor_ ”The vivacity and sensibility of the Greeks _seereater than ours”--_Id_ ”For sonified by the verb, so else”--_R Johnson cor_ ”The verb and the nouna complete sense, _whereas_ the participle and the noun _do_ not”--_Id_ ”The growth and decay of passions and eh all theirlike the present”--_Kay of soht cor_ ”When the force and direction of personal satire _are_ no longer understood”--_Junius cor_ ”The frame and condition of man _admit_ of no other principle”--_Dr Brown cor_ ”Some considerable time and care _were_ necessary”--_Id_ ”In consequence of this idea, much ridicule and censure _have_ been thrown upon Milton”--_Blair cor_ ”With rational beings, nature and reason _are_ the sa”--_Collier cor_ ”And the flax and the barley _were_ smitten”--_Bible cor_ ”The colon and semicolon _divide_ a period; this with, and that without, a connective”--_Ware cor_ ”Consequently, wherever space and time _are_ found, there God must also be”--_Newton cor_ ”As the past tense and perfect participle of LOVE _end_ in ED, it is regular”--_Chandler cor_ ”But the usual arrange readily seen”--_N Butler cor_ ”_Do_ and _did_ simply _imply_ opposition or emphasis”--_A Murray cor_ ”_I_ and _an other_ make the plural WE; _thou_ and _an other are equivalent to_ YE; _he, she_, or _it_, and _an other_, make THEY”--_Id_ ”_I_ and _an other_ or _others are_ the same as WE, the first person plural; _thou_ and _an other_ or _others are_ the same as YE, the second person plural; _he, she_, or _it_, and _an other_ or _others, are_ the same as THEY, the third person plural”--_Buchanan and Brit Grahbour are two”--_Love Conquest cor_ ”Just as AN and A _have_ arisen out of the numeral ONE”--_Fowler cor_ ”The tone and style of _all_ of them, particularly _of_ the first and the last, _are_ very different”--_Blair cor_ ”Even as the roebuck and the hart _are_ eaten”--_Bible cor_ ”Then I may conclude that two and three _do not make_ five”--_Barclay cor_ ”Which, at sundry times, thou and thy brethren _have_ received from us”--_Id_ ”Two and two _are_ four, and one is five:”

i, e, ”and _one, added to four, is five_”--_Pope cor_ ”Hunorance under costly array”--See _Murray's Key_, Rule 2d ”A page and a half _have_ been added to the section on composition”--_Bullions cor_ ”Accuracy and expertness in this exercise _are_ an iroves are of thy dressing, Hill and dale _proclai” Or thus:-- ”Hill and _valley_ boast thy blessing”--_Milton cor_

UNDER THE RULE ITSELF--THE VERB BEFORE JOINT NOMINATIVES

”There _are_ a good and a bad, a right and a wrong, in taste, as in other things”--_Blair cor_ ”Whence _have_ arisen much stiffness and affectation”--_Id_ ”To this error, _are_ owing, in a great urative language, which I before _noticed_”--_Blair and Jahts, there _prevail_ an obscurity and _a_ hardness _of_ style”--_Blair cor_ See _Jamieson's Rhet_, p 167 ”There _are_, however, in that work, ood sense and excellent criticism”--_Blair cor_ ”There _are_ too much loit and scurrility in Plautus” Or: ”There _is, in Plautus_, too much _of_ loit and scurrility”--_Id_ ”There _are_ tooand refinement, too much pomp and studied beauty, in the and refinement, too much _of_ pomp and studied beauty, in them”--_Id_ ”Hence _arise_ the structure and characteristic expression of exclamation”--_Rush cor_ ”And such pilots _are_ he and his brethren, according to their own confession”--_Barclay cor_ ”Of who the truth have erred”--_Bible cor_ ”Of whom _are_ Hymeneus and Alexander; whom I have delivered unto Satan”--_Id_ ”And so _were_ James and John, the sons of Zebedee”--_Id_ ”Out of the sa”--_Id_ ”Out of the ood”--_Id_ ”In which there _are_ ”--_Bp Butler cor_ ”In this sentence, there _are_ both an actor and an object”--_R C Smith cor_ ”In the breastplate, _were_ placed the ender, number, and person, _of the pronoun_[541] in the first _example_?”--_R C Smith cor_ ”There _seenity in it”--_Priestley cor_ ”It has been often asked, what _are_ Latin and Greek?”--_Lit Journal cor_ ”For where _do_ beauty and high wit, But in your constellation, meet?”--_Saes and Indus”--_Milton cor_ ”On these foundations, _seeht riot and dissipation of modern assemblies”--_Dr Brown cor_ ”But what _have_ disease, deforhts can be allured to dwell?”--_Dr Johnson cor_ ”How _are_ the gender and nuh rides the sun, thick rolls the dust, And feebler _speed_ the blow and thrust”--_Scott cor_

UNDER NOTE I--CHANGE THE CONNECTIVE

”In every language, there prevails a certain structure, _or_ analogy of parts, which is understood to give foundation to the h his whole manner a stiffness, _an_ affectation, which renders hieneral model”--_Id_ ”But where declamation _for_ improvement in speech is the sole aim”--_Id_ ”For it is by these, chiefly, that the train of thought, the course of reasoning, the whole progress of the mind, in continued discourse of _any kind_, is laid open”--_Lowth cor_ ”In all writing and discourse, the proper cohest importance”--_Dr Blair cor_ ”Here the wishful _and expectant_ look of the beggar naturally leads to a vivid conception of that which was the object of his thoughts”--_Ca of Christ, _with the sign of_ the cross, puts away devils”--_Barclay cor_ ”By which an oath _with a_ penalty was to be ie, in what manner soever afforded us, is equally from God”--_Bp Butler cor_ ”For instance, sickness _or_ untirief _or_ blood ill-terief, _with_ blood ill-tempered, _vexes_ him”--_Shak cor_ ”Does continuity, _or_ connexion, create sympathy and relation in the parts of the body?”--_Collier cor_ ”His greatest concern, _his_ highest enjoyht of his Creator”--_L Murray cor_ ”Know ye not that there is[542] a prince, a great man, fallen this day in Israel?”--_Bible cor_ ”What is vice, _or_ wickedness? No rarity, you may depend on it”--_Collier cor_ ”There is also the fear _or_ apprehension of it”--_Bp Butler cor_ ”The apostrophe _with s_ (_'s_) is an abbreviation for _is_, the terenitive”--_Bullions cor_ ”_Ti, ce_, OR _ci_, when followed by a vowel, usually has the sound of _sh_; as in _partial, ocean, special_”--_Weld cor_

”Bitter constraint _of_ sad occasion dear Compels me to disturb your season due”--_Milton cor_

”_Debauch'ry, or_ excess, though with less noise, As great a portion of mankind destroys”--_Waller cor_

UNDER NOTE II--AFFIRMATION WITH NEGATION

”Wisdom, and not wealth, _procures_ esteem”--_Inst, Key_, p 272

”Prudence, and not pomp, _is_ the basis of his fame”--_Ib_ ”Not fear, but labour _has_ overcome him”--_Ib_ ”The decency, and not the abstinence, _makes_ the difference”--_Ib_ ”Not her beauty, but her talents _attract_ attention”--_Ib_ ”It is her talents, and not her beauty, _that attract_ attention”--_Ib_ ”It is her beauty, and not her talents, _that attracts_ attention”--_Ib_

”His belly, not his brains, this irow immortal; for he cannot live” Or thus:-- ”His _bowels_, not his brains, this i cor_

UNDER NOTE III--AS WELL AS, BUT, OR SAVE

”Common sense, as well as piety, _tells_ us these are proper”--_Fam Com

cor_ ”For without it the critic, as well as the undertaker, ignorant of any rule, _has_ nothing left but to abandon _hily hatred, as well as love, _is_ extinguished by long absence'”--_Id_ ”But at every turn the richest melody, as well as the sublimest sentiments, _is_ conspicuous”--_Id_ ”But it, as well as the lines ie cor_ ”But their religion, as well as their custobroke, on History_, Paris Edition of 1808, p 93

”But his jealous policy, as well as the fatal antipathy of Fonseca, _was_ conspicuous”--_Robertson cor_ ”When their extent, as well as their value, _was_ unknown”--_Id_ ”The etyy, as well as the syntax, of the more difficult parts of speech, _is_ reserved for his attention at a later period”--_Parker and Fox cor_ ”What I ht cor_ ”None, but thou, O hty prince! _can_ avert the blow”--_Inst, Key_, p 272 ”Nothing, but frivolous aht, save the gurglings of the rill, _was_ heard”--_G B_

”All songsters, save the hooting oere_ mute”--_G B_

UNDER NOTE IV--EACH, EVERY, OR NO

”Give every word, and every ht and force”--_Murray's Gras_ every noun, and every third person of every verb”--_Dr Wilson cor_ ”No law, no restraint, no regulation, _is_ required to keep him _within_ bounds”--_Lit Journal cor_ ”By that time, everyand every door in the street _was_ full of heads”--_Observer cor_ ”Every systeion, and every school of philosophy, _stands_ back from this field, and _leaves_ Jesus Christ alone, the solitary exaion, and _all schools_ of philosophy, _stand_ back from this field, and _leave_ Jesus Christ alone, the solitary exas its_ portion of duty”--_Inst, Key_, p 272 ”And every one that was in distress, and every one that was in debt, and every one that was discontented, _resorted_ unto him”--_Bible cor_ ”Every private Christian, _every_ ht to read and peruse the Scriptures, that _he_ may know _his_ faith and belief _to be_ founded upon them”--_Barclay cor_ ”And every mountain and _every_ island was moved out of _its place_”--_Bible cor_

”No bandit fierce, no tyrant mad with pride, No cavern'd hermit _rests_ self-satisfied”--_Pope_

UNDER NOTE V--WITH, OR, &c, FOR AND

”The _sides_, A, B, _and_ C, cole”--_Tobitt, Felch_, and _Ware cor_ ”The stream, the rock, _and_ the tree, ure in the iination”--_Dr Blair cor_ ”While this, with euphony, _constitutes_, finally, the whole”--_O B Peirce cor_ ”The bag, with the guineas and dollars in it, _was_ stolen”--_Cobbett cor_ ”Sobriety, with great industry and talent, _enables_ a reat deeds” Or: ”Sobriety, industry, and talent, _enable_ a ether with the verb, _expresses a state_ of being”--_Id_ ”Where Leonidas the Spartan king, _and_ his chosen band, fighting for their country, were cut off to the last man”--_Kames cor_ ”And Leah also, and _her_ children, came near and bowed themselves”--_Bible cor_ ”The First _and_ the Second will either of them, by _itself_, coalesce with the Third, but _they do_ not _coalesce_ with each other”--_Harris cor_ ”The whole edy _and_ Coerous representations”--_Forrief _and_ joy are infectious: the emotions _which_ they raise in the spectator, resemble them perfectly”--_Kames cor_ ”But, in all other words, the _q and u_ are both sounded”--_Ensell cor_ ”_Q and u_ (which are always together) have the sound of _kw_, as in _queen_; or _of k only_, as in _opaque_” Or, better: ”_Q_ has always the sound of _k_; and the _u_ which follows it, that of _w_; except in French words, in which the _u_ is silent”--_Goodenow cor_ ”In this selection, the _a and i_ form distinct syllables”--_Walker cor_ ”And a considerable village, with gardens, fields, &c, _extends_ around on each side of the square”--_Lib cor_ ”Affection _and_ interest guide our notions and behaviour in the affairs of life; iination and passion affect the sentiments that we entertain in matters of taste”--_Jamieson cor_ ”She heard none of those intier, produce a, Lords, and Coovernment”--_Crombie et al cor_ ”If we say, 'I am the man who commands you,' the relative clause, with the antecedent _man, forms_ the predicate”--_Croh, The blue ethereal _vault_ of sky, And spangled heav'ns, a shi+ning frainal proclaim”--_Addison cor_