Part 235 (1/2)

Murray cor_ ”Please _to_ divide it for them, as it should be _divided_”--_J Willetts cor_ ”So as neither to embarrass nor _to_ weaken the sentence”--_Blair and Mur cor_ ”Carry her to his table, to view his poor fare, and _to_ hear his heavenly discourse”--_Same_ ”That we need not be surprised to find this _to_ hold [ie, to find _the same to be true_, or to find _it so_] in eloquence”--_Blair cor_ ”Where he has no occasion either to divide or _to_ explain” [_the topic in debate_]--_Id_ ”And they will find their pupils _to_ improve by hasty and pleasant steps”--_Russell cor_ ”The teacher, however, will please _to_ observe,”

&c--_Inf S Gr cor_ ”Please _to_ attend to a few rules in what is called syntax”--_Id_ ”They may dispense with the laws, to favour their friends, or _to_ secure their office”--_Webster cor_ ”To take back a gift, or _to_ break a contract, is a wanton abuse”--_Id_ ”The legislature _has_ nothing to do, but _to_ let it bear its own price”--_Id_ ”He is not to form, but _to_ copy characters”--_Ra-horn”--_Spect cor_ ”Finding this experiment _to_ answer, in every respect, their wishes”--_Day cor_ ”In fine, let hiement _to_ conclude in the term of the question”--_Barclay cor_

”That he perhly”

[Omit ”_face_,” to keep the measure: or say,]

”That he _did never let_ the winds of heaven _Visit her face_ too roughly”--_Shak cor_

CORRECTIONS UNDER RULE XIX--OF INFINITIVES

Instances after Bid, Dare, Feel, Hear, Let, Make, Need, See

”I dare not proceed so hastily, lest I give offence”--See _Murray's Key_, Rule xii ”Their character is formed, and made _to_ appear”--_Butler cor_ ”Let there be but matter and opportunity offered, and you shall see theain”--_Bacon cor_ ”It has been ainst a revelation”--_Bp Butler cor_ ”MANIFEST, v t To reveal; to n, like good Aurelius, or let him bleed like _Seneca_:”

[Socrates did not bleed, he was poisoned]--_Kirkha_ I could not; _coill cor_ ”If T M be not so frequently heard _to_ pray by them”--_Barclay cor_ ”How many of your own church members were never heard _to_ pray?”--_Id_ ”Yea, we are bidden _to_ pray one for an other”--_Id_ ”He was 's death nor _his_ imprison sensation creep over ot home yet”--_Ib_ ”We sometimes see bad men honoured”--_Ib_ ”I saw him move”--_Felch cor_ ”For see thou, ah! see thou, a hostile world its _terrors_ raise”--_Kirkham cor_ ”But that he make him rehearse so”--_Lily cor_ ”Let us rise”--_Fowle cor_

”Scripture, you know, exhorts us to it; It bids us 'seek peace, and ensue it'”--_Swift cor_

”Who bade the s of Lazarus?

Co heaven that ruled it thus”--_Christmas Book cor_

CHAPTER VII--PARTICIPLES

CORRECTIONS UNDER THE NOTES TO RULE XX

UNDER NOTE I--EXPUNGE OF

”In for his sentences, he was very exact”--_L Murray_ ”For not believing which, I condemn the that book”--_Id_ ”You will please the down ordinances”--_Mitchell cor_ ”The olf subsequently beca of stones”--_Cons

Misc cor_ ”The art of dressing hides and working in leather was practised”--_Id_ ”In the choice they hadorder”--_Rollin cor_ ”The Arabians exercised the orations and poeathering sticks”--_Bible cor_ ”The priests were busied in offering burnt-offerings”--_Id_ ”But Asahel would not turn aside fro Ramah, and dwelt in Tirzah”--_Id_ ”Those who accuse us of denying it, belie us”--_Barclay cor_ ”And breaking bread from house to house”--_Acts_, iv, 46 ”Those that set about repairing the walls”--_Barclay cor_ ”And secretly begetting divisions”--_Id_ ”Who his church”--_Id_ ”In defining and distinguishi+ng the _acceptations_ and uses of those particles”--_W Walker cor_

”In _ this a crime_, we overthrow The laws of nations and of nature too”--_Dryden cor_

UNDER NOTE II--ARTICLES REQUIRE OF

”The_of_ them makes a miserable jumble of truth and fiction”--_Ka _of_ statues”--_Id_ ”More efficacious than the venting _of_ opulence upon the fine arts”--_Id_ ”It is the giving _of_ different names to the sa _of_ a colu _of_ an elevated subject beyond due bounds, is a vice not so frequent”--_Id_ ”The cutting _of_ evergreens in the shape of ani _of_ juries without _meat_, drink, or fire, can be accounted for only on the sath on his slate, will be a very useful exercise”--_Beck cor_ ”The avoiding _of_ them is not an object of anyor decreasing _of_ the signification of a word by degrees”--_Brit Gra _of_ the quality by degrees”--_Buchanan cor_ ”The placing _of_ a circumstance before the hich it is connected is the easiest of all inversion”--_Id_ ”What is eer and fuller sound of voice,” &c--_Bradley cor_ ”Besides, the varying _of_ the terms will render the use of the _of_ themselves to this true principle, has misled them”--_Tooke cor_ ”What is here co _of_ his reat a quantity of knowledge at rando it”--_For _of_ his point”--_Rollin cor_ ”To the introducing _of_ such an inverted order of things”--_Bp Butler cor_ ”Which require only the doing _of_ an external action”--_Id_ ”The i _of_ my body is to satisfy your wills”--_Fox cor_ ”Who oppose the conferring _of_ such extensive command on one person”--_Duncan cor_ ”Luxury contributed not a little to the enervating _of_ their forces”--_Sale cor_ ”The keeping _of_ one day of the week for a sabbath”--_Barclay cor_ ”The doing _of_ a thing is contrary to the forbearing of it”--_Id_ ”The doubling _of_ the Sight cor_ ”The inserting _of_ the common aspirate too, is i _of_ the _ed_ [as a separate syllable,] see of an archais _of_ the effect of their verses on the eye”--_Id_ ”When it was not in their power to hinder the taking _of_ the whole”--_Dr Brown cor_ ”He had indeed given the orders hiates”--_Id_ ”So his whole life was a doing _of_ the will of the Father”--_Penington cor_ ”It signifies the suffering or receiving _of_ the action expressed”--_Priestley cor_ ”The pretended cri _of_ hi is the resolving _of_ a sentence into its different parts of speech”--_Beck cor_

UNDER NOTE II--ADJECTIVES REQUIRE OF

”There is _no_ expecting _of_ the ad _of_ you in the house”--_Shak cor_ ”For the better regulating _of_ government in the province of Massachusetts”--_Brit Parl

cor_ ”The precise overnment”--_Adams cor_ ”This state of discipline requires the voluntary foregoing _of__of_ ourselves to e have no inclination to”--_Bp Butler cor_ ”This aion”--_Id_ ”Which engaged our ancient friends to the orderly establishi+ng _of_ our Christian discipline”--_Friends cor_ ”So _of_ our own property or life, but by opposing force to force”--_Rev John Brown cor_ ”An Act for the better securing _of_ the Rights and Liberties of the Subject”--_Geo III cor_ ”Miraculous curing _of_ the sick is discontinued”--_Barclay cor_ ”It would have been no transgressing _of_ the apostle's rule”--_Id_ ”As far as consistent with the proper conducting _of_ the business of the House”--_El at the just conde _of_ them at that day” Or:--”at _their just conde _of_ this natural manner will insure propriety”--_Rush cor_ ”If a ate, he should have old [ie, frequent] turning _of_ the key”--_Singer's Shakspeare cor_

UNDER NOTE II--POSSESSIVES REQUIRE OF

”So very si _of_ himself”--_Dr Blair cor, and Murray_ ”Or with that ns”--_Blair, Mur, et al cor_ ”On his putting _of_ the question”--_Ada _of_ their pupils to read each section many ti _of_ one's self, in order to be agreeable to others”--_Rareeableness of epistolary writing, will depend on its introducing _of_ us into some acquaintance with the writer”--_Blair and Mack cor_ ”Richard's restoration to respectability depends on his paying _of_ his debts”--_O