Part 239 (1/2)
LESSON IX--CONJUNCTIONS
”He readily co of sentences_, and _their_ applicability _to_ the examples before him”--_Greenleaf cor_ ”The works of aeschylus have suffered edian_”--_Dr Blair cor_ ”There is much more story, more bustle, and _more_ action, than on the French theatre”--_Id_ (See Obs 8th on Rule 16th) ”Such an unrerosses _all_ our tihts, _is_ forbidden”--_Jenyns cor_ ”It see else _than_ the siht cor_ ”But when I talk of _reasoning_, I do not intend any other _than_ such as is suited to the child's capacity”--_Locke cor_ ”pronouns have no other use in language, _than_ to represent nouns”--_Jamieson cor_ ”The speculative relied no farther on their own judgement, _than_ to choose a leader, whom they implicitly followed”--_Kames cor_ ”Unaccommodated man is no more _than_ such a poor, bare, forked aniestion which is_ introduced into the body of a sentence obliquely, _and which_ rammatical construction”--_Mur et al cor ”The_ Caret ( that happened_ to be left out, _is to be put into_ the line”--_Iid ”When_ I visit them, they shall be cast down”--_Bible cor_ ”Neither our virtues _nor our_ vices are all our own”--_Johnson and Sanborn cor_ ”I could not give him _so early_ an answer as he had desired”--_O B Peirce cor_ ”He is not _so_ tall as his brother”--_Nixon cor_ ”It is difficult to judge _whether_ Lord Byron is serious or not”--_Lady Blessington cor_ ”Some nouns are of _both_ the second and _the_ third declension”--_Gould cor_ ”He was discouraged neither by danger _nor by_ misfortune”--_Wells cor_ ”This is consistent neither with logic nor _with_ history”--_Dial cor_ ”Parts of sentences are _either_ siulated rather by the number of syllables, than _by_ feet:” or,--”than by the number of feet”--_Id_ ”I know not what more he can do, _than_ pray for hi_ theood humour”--_Id_ ”A man cannot have too much of it, nor _have it_ too perfectly”--_Id_ ”That you ht, as _to_ overcome” Or thus: ”That you ht, _that_ you may overcome”--_Penn cor_ ”It is the _artifice_ of some, to contrive false periods of business, _that_ they may seem men of despatch”--_Bacon cor_ ”'A tall man and a woman' In this _phrase_, there is no ellipsis; the adjective _belongs only to the former noun_; the quality _respects_ only the man”--_Ash cor_ ”An abandonment of the policy is neither to be expected _nor to be_ desired”--_Jackson cor_ ”Which can be acquired by no other ”--_Dr Blair cor_ ”The chief _or_ fundalish _and_ the Latin tongue” Or:--”are _applicable_ to the English as well as _to_ the Latin tongue”--_Id_ ”Then I exclaionist is void of all taste, or that his taste is corrupted in a ree”
Or thus: ”Then I exclaionist is _either_ void of all taste, or _has a taste that is miserably_ corrupted”--_Id_ ”I cannot pity any one who is under no distress _either_ of body _or_ of enius in the world, before there were learning _and_ arts to refine it”--_Dr Blair cor_ ”Such a writer can have little else to do, _than_ to _new-model_ the paradoxes of ancient scepticis else _than collections_ of the ordinary qualities observed in theive _neither_ pleasure nor pain”--_Kames cor_ ”So _that_ they shall not justle and embarrass one an other”--_Dr Blair cor_ ”He firmly refused to make use of any other voice _than_ his own”--_Murray's Sequel_, p 113 ”Your uards their example, either as soldiers or _as_ subjects”--_Junius cor_ ”Consequently they had neither_nor_ beauty, to any but the natives of each country”--_Sheridan cor_
”The man of worth, _who_ has not left his peer, Is in his narrow house forever darkly laid”--_Burns cor_
LESSON X--PREPOSITIONS
”These nable limits”--_Kale member of a period, is still worse than to crowd theidly insist _on having_ melodious prose”--_Id_ ”The aversion we have _to_ those who differ fro _of_ the scene _at_ every line”--_Halifax cor_ ”We shall find that we coainst_ this he has no better _defence_ than that”--_Barnes cor_ ”Searching the person who stolen his casket”--_Dr Blair cor_ ”Who, as vacancies occur, are elected _by_ the whole Board”--_Lit Jour cor_ ”Almost the only field of ambition _for_ a German, is science”--_Lieber cor_ ”The plan of education is very different _from_ the one pursued in the sister country”--_Coley cor_ ”Sorammar have contended, that adjectives _sometimes_ relate to _verbs_, and modify _their_ action”--_Wilcox cor_ ”They are therefore of athe properties both of pronouns and _of_ adjectives”-- _Ingersoll cor_ ”For there is no authority which can justify the inserting _of_ the aspirate or _the_ doubling _of_ the vowel”--_Knight cor_ ”The distinction and arrangeht cor_ ”And see thou a hostile world spread its delusive snares”--_Kirkham cor_ ”He may be precautioned, and be made _to_ see how those _join_ in the conte _of_ themselves in the _present_ want of what they wished for, is a _virtue_”-- _Id_ ”If the co really worthy _of_ your notice”--_Id_ ”True fortitude I take to be the quiet possession of a_of_ his duty”--_Id_ ”For the custorees, harden their minds even towards men”--_Id_ ”Children are whipped to it, and made _to_ spend many hours of their precious time uneasily _at_ Latin”--_Id ”On_ this subject, [the Harmony of Periods,] the ancient rhetoricians have entered into a very minute and particular detail; ards language”--See _Blair's Rhet_, p 122 ”But the one should not be omitted, _and the other retained_” Or: ”But the one should not be _used without_ the other”--_Bullions cor ”From_ some common forms of speech, the relative pronoun is usually omitted”--_Murray and Weld cor_ ”There are _veryreceived to testify in particular cases”--_Adaard to interest, we should expect that,” &c--_Webster cor_ ”My opinion was given _after_ a rather cursory perusal of the book”--_L Murray cor_ ”And, [_on_] the next day, he was put on board _of_ his shi+p” Or thus: ”And, the next day, he was put _aboard_ his shi+p”--_Id_ ”Having the coht”--_Kames cor_ ”Did these_besides_ hi _than_ himself”--_Wayland cor_ ”He did not behave in that manner _from_ pride, or [_from_] contempt of the tribunal”--_Murray's Sequel_, p 113 ”These prosecutions _against_ William seem to have been the most iniquitous measures pursued by the court”--_Murray and Priestley cor_ ”To restore races of my fair critics”--_Dryden cor_ ”Objects denominated beautiful, please not _by_ virtue of any one quality common to them all”--_Dr Blair cor_ ”This would have been less worthy _of_ notice, had not a writer or two of high rank lately adopted it”--_Churchill cor_
”A Grecian youth, _of_ talents rare, Whom Plato's philosophic care,” &c--WHITEHEAD: E R, p 196
LESSON XI--PROMISCUOUS
”To excel _has_ become a much less considerable object”--_Dr Blair cor_ ”My robe, and rity to _Heav'n_, are all I dare now call _arland _wearst_ successively”--_Shak cor_; also _Enfield_ ”If _then_ thou _art_ a _Roman_, take it forth”--_Id_ ”If thou _prove_ this to be real, thou must be a se of four hundred _feet_ in length”--_Brightland cor_ ”METONYMY is _the_ putting _of_ one name for _an other_, on account of the near relation _which_ there is between the _of_ an appellative or common name for a proper name”--_Id_ ”_That it is I, should_ make no difference in your deteres_ are torn” Or ”The first and _the_ second _page_ are torn” Or: ”The first _page_ and _the_ second are torn”--_Id_ ”John's _absence_ frolect of_ opportunities for irace”--_Id_ ”He will regret his _neglect of his_ opportunities _for_ improvement, when it _is_ too late”--_Id_ ”His _expertness at dancing_ does not entitle hiard”--_Id_ ”Caesar went back to Rome, to take possession of the public treasure, which his opponent, by a lected _to carry aith hiold_ to the aht, besides an immense quantity of silver” [548]--_Id_ ”Rules and definitions, which should always be _as_ clear and intelligible as possible, are thus rendered obscure”--_Greenleaf cor_ ”So much both of ability and _of_ merit is seldom found” Or thus: ”So much _of both_ ability and merit is seldom found”[549]--_L Murray cor_ ”If such maxims, and such practices prevail, what _has_ become of decency and virtue?”[550]--_Murray's False Syntax_, ii, 62 Or: ”If such maxims and practices prevail, what _will_ become of decency and virtue?”--_Murray and Bullions cor_ ”Especially if the subject _does not require_ so much poht and shade in such courative circumstances with the literal sense,--_has_ ever been _found an affair_ of great nicety”--_Blair's Rhet_, p 151 ”And adding to that hissing in our language, which is so ners”--_Addison, Coote, and Murray, cor_ ”_To speak_ i that betrays unkindness, or ill-humour, is certainly criminal” Or better: ”Impatience, unkindness, or ill-humour, is certainly crirandeur of expression, well suited to the subject”--_Dr Blair cor_ ”I single _out_ Strada _fro the moderns, because he had the foolish presule hibroke cor_ ”This _rule is not_ always observed, even by good writers, _so_ strictly as it ought to be”--_Dr Blair cor_ ”But this gravity and assurance, which _are_ beyond boyhood, being neither wisdoe, do never reach to ularity and polish even of a turnpike-road, _have_ sohbourhood”--_Kaularity and neatness; _and this improvement of their taste_ is displayed, first upon their yards and little enclosures, and next within doors”--_Id_ ”The phrase, '_it is iives us the idea, _that it is_ impossible for ive a thousand _pounds_ to look upon hie, as Dr Ca it”--_Crombie and Murray cor_ ”When tords are set in contrast, or in opposition to _each_ other, they are both emphatic”--_L Murray cor_ ”The number of _the_ persons--reat” Or thus: ”The number of persons--men, woreat”--_Id_ ”Nor is the rese object pointed out”--_Jamieson cor_ ”I think it the best book of the kind, _that_ I have met with”--_Mathews cor_
”Why should not we their ancient rites restore, And be what Rome or Athens _was_ before?”--_Roscommon cor_
LESSON XII--TWO ERRORS
”It is labour only _that_ gives relish to pleasure”--_L Murray cor_ ”Groves are never _”--_Id_ ”His Philosophical Inquiry into the Origin of our Ideas _of_ the Sublime and _the_ Beautiful, soon made him known to the literati”--See _Blair's Lect_, pp 34 and 45 ”An awful precipice or tower _from which_ we look down on the objects which _are_ below”--_Dr Blair cor_ ”This passage, though very poetical, is, however, harsh and obscure; _and for_ no other cause _than_ this, that three distinct ether”--_Id_ ”I _purpose to make_ some observations”--_Id_ ”I shall _here_ follow the sa pursued”--_Id_ ”Mankind _at no other tiinnings of society”--_Id_ ”But no ear is sensible of the ter _of a_ hexa, says he, _that_ a writer _either_ of fables or of heroic poems does, is, to choose some maxim or point of morality”--_Id_ ”The fourth book has _always_ been most justly adhest kind”--_Id_ ”There is _in_ the poe _of_ characters”--_Id_ ”But the artificial contrasting of characters, and the _constant_ introducing _of_ theive_ too theatrical and affected an air to the piece”--_Id_ ”Neither of the _of_ figures _is_ bad, it is still worse to graft one figure upon _an other_”--_Id_ ”The _crowding-together of_ so many objects lessens the pleasure”--_Id_ ”This therefore lies not in the _putting-off of_ the hat, nor _in the_of compliments”--_Locke cor_ ”But the Samaritan Vau may have been used, as the Jews _used_ the Chaldaic, both for a vowel and _for a_ consonant”--_Wilson cor_ ”But if a solemn and _a_ fae, is it not the business of a gra sounds follow _one an_ other _agreeably_ to certain laws”--_Gardiner cor_ ”If there _were_ no drinking _of_ intoxicating draughts, there could be no drunkards”--_Peirce cor_ ”Socrates knew his own defects, and if he was proud of any thing, it was _of_ being thought to have none”--_Goldsht his aralleys_”--_Id_ ”The use of these signs _is_ worthy _of_ rehtland cor_ ”He received me in the same manner _in which_ I would _receive_ you” Or thus: ”He received me _as_ I would _receive_ you”--_R C S of _both_ the direct and _the_ collateral evidence”--_Bp Butler cor_ ”If any man or woman that believeth _hath_ s, let _hied”--_Bible cor_ ”For _men's sake_ are beasts bred”--_W
Walker cor_ ”Fro”--_Id_ ”Is this he that I a _of_ every _one's_ own opinion, there is so much ado”--_Sewel cor_ ”Some of them, however, will _necessarily_ be _noticed_”--_Sale cor_ ”The boys conducted themselves _very indiscreetly_”--_Merchant cor_ ”Their example, their influence, their fortune,--every talent they possess,--_dispenses_ blessings on all _persons_ around them”--_Id and Murray cor_ ”The two _Reynoldses_ reciprocally converted _each_ other”--_Johnson cor_ ”The destroying _of_ the _last two_, Tacitus calls an attack upon virtue itself”--_Goldsmith cor_ ”_Moneys are_ your suit”--_Shak cor_ ”_Ch_ is commonly sounded like _tch_, as in _church_; but in words derived from Greek, _it_ has the sound of _k_”--_L Murray cor_ ”When one is obliged to make soinally destined”--_Campbell cor_ ”But that a _baptis-away_ of sin, thou canst not hence prove”--_Barclay cor_ ”Being _spoken_ to _but_ one, it infers no universal coives force and liveliness, a redundancy of theuid”--_Buchanan cor_ ”James used to cos”--_Adas, And sails trius”--_Lloyd cor_
LESSON XIII--TWO ERRORS
”An ostentatious, a feeble, a harsh, or an obscure style, for instance, _is_ always _faulty_”--_Dr Blair cor_ ”Yet in this we find _that_ the English pronounce _quite agreeably_ to rule” Or thus: ”Yet in this we find the English _pronunciation_ perfectly agreeable to rule” Or thus: ”Yet in this we find _that_ the English pronounce _in a reeable to rule”--_J Walker cor_ ”But neither the perception of ideas, nor knowledge of any sort, _is a habit_, though absolutely necessary to the for of _habits_”--_Bp Butler cor_ ”They were cast; and _a_ heavy fine _was_ i this reflection, he cannot enter into the spirit _of the author, or_ relish the composition”--_Dr Blair cor_ ”The scholar should be instructed _in relation_ to _the_ finding _of_ his words” Or thus: ”The scholar should be _told how_ to _find_ his words”--_Osborn cor_ ”And therefore they could neither have forged, _nor have_ reversified theht cor_ ”A dispensary is _a_ place _at which_ medicines are dispensed _to the poor_”--_L Mur cor_ ”Both the connexion and _the_ nueneral laws”--_Neef cor_ ”An Anapest has the _first two_ syllables unaccented, and the last _one_ accented; as, c~ontr~av=ene, acquiesce”--_L Mur cor_ ”An explicative sentence is _one in which_ a thing is said, _in a direct manner_, to be or not to be, to do or not to do, to suffer or not to suffer”--_Lowth and Mur cor_ ”BUT is a conjunction _whenever_ it is neither an adverb nor _a_ preposition”
[551]--_R C S _Ahasuerus_, and sealed _the writing_ with the king's ring”--_Bible cor_ ”Camm and Audland _had_ departed _from_ the town before this time”--_Sewel cor_ ”_Before they will relinquish_ the practice, they must be convinced”--_Webster cor_ ”Which he had thrown up _before he set_ out”--_Grimshaw cor_ ”He left _to him_ the value of _a_ hundred drachms in Persian money”--_Spect cor_ ”All _that_ thethe_ the three”--_Cardell cor_ ”Tom Puzzle is one of the most eminent immethodical disputants, of _all_ that _have_ fallen under ot hi, by the praise _which_ is given hie”--_Locke cor_ ”In all matters _in which_ simple reason, _or_ mere speculation is concerned”--_Sheridan cor_ ”And therefore he should be spared _fro else _than_ his y _that_ is distinguished by the epithet _idioinally the spawn, partly of ignorance, and partly of affectation”--_Campbell and Murray cor_ ”That neither the inflection nor _the letters_ are such as could have been eht cor_ ”In _those_ cases _in which_ the verb is intended to be applied to any one of the terms”--_L Murray cor_ ”But _these_ people _who_ know not the law, are accursed”--_Bible cor_ ”And the ht and sublimity”--_Gardiner cor_ ”_Dares_ he deny _that_ there are so an account of most, if not all, _of_ the papers _which_ had passed betwixt the and correcting, _should_ all the rules of syntax be treated, _being taken up_ regularly according to their order”--_L Murray cor_ ”_To_ Ovando _were_ allowed a brilliant retinue and a _body-guard_”--_Sketch cor_ ”_Was_ it I or he, _that_ you requested to go?”--_Kirkhao on”--_Bunyan cor_ ”This I nowhere affirmed; and _I_ do wholly deny _it_”--_Barclay cor_ ”But that I deny; and _it_ remains for him to prove _it_”--_Id_ ”Our country sinks beneath the yoke: _She_ weeps, _she_ bleeds, and each new day a gash Is added to her wounds”--_Shak cor_ ”Thou art the Lord who _chose_ Abrahaht_ him forth out of Ur of the Chaldees”--_Bible and Mur cor_ ”He is the exhaustless fountain, frohout this wide creation”--_Wayland cor_ ”I am he who _has_ comardens of pleasure”--_Wright cor_
”Such _were_ in ancient tiood forefathers _were_ believed”--_Rowe cor_
LESSON XIV--TWO ERRORS
”The noun or pronoun that _stands_ before the active verb, _usually represents_ the agent”--_A Murray cor_ ”Such _seerarammar”--_Merchant cor_ ”Two dots, the one placed above the other [:], _are_ called Sheva, and _are used to represent_ a very short _e_”--_Wilson cor_ ”Great _have_ been, and _are_, the obscurity and difficulty, in the nature and application of them” [: ie--of natural remedies]--_Butler cor_ ”As two _are_ to four, so _are_ four to eight”--_Everest cor_ ”The invention and use of arithmetic, _reach_ back to a period so ree of history”-- _Robertson cor_ ”What it presents as objects of contemplation or enjoyment, _fill_ and _satisfy_ his mind”--_Id_ ”If he _dares_ not say they are, as I know he _dares_ not, how rown so fond of solitude, that all company _had_ become uneasy to him”--_Life of Cic cor_ ”Violence and spoil _are_ heard in her; before rief and wounds”--_Bible cor_ ”Bayle's Intelligence from the Republic of Letters, which _makes_ eleven volumes in duodecimo, _is_ truly a model in this kind”--_For and expressive, ht place, but also _be_ accompanied with a proper tone of voice”--_L Murray cor_ ”_To oppose_ the opinions and _rectify_ the mistakes of others, is what truth and sincerity sometimes require of us”--_Locke cor_ ”It is very probable, that this asse had, _whether it were lawful for the Hollanders to throw_ off the iance to that crown” Or:--”About the lawfulness of the Hollanders' _rejection of_ the iance to that crown”--_L Murray cor_ ”_A_ na _of_ the numbers and cases of a noun in their order, is called _the_ declining _of_ it, or _its declension_”--_Frost cor_ ”The e _of_ such component parts of words”--_Town cor_ ”The one is the voice heard _when Christ was_ baptized; the other, _when he was_ transfigured”--_Barclay cor_ ”_An_ understanding _of_ the literal sense”--or, ”_To have understood_ the literal sense, would not have prevented _theuiltless”--_Bp Butler cor_ ”As if this were, _to take_ the execution of justice out of the hands of God, and _to give_ it to nature”--_Id_ ”They will say, you ood opinion of yourself; which yet is _an_ allowing _of_ the thing, though not _of_ the showing _of_ it” Or:--”which yet is, _to allow_ the thing, though not the showing _of_ it”--_Sheffield cor_ ”So as to signify not only the doing _of_ an action, but the causing _of_ it to be done”--_Pike cor_ ”This, certainly, was both _a_ dividing _of_ the unity of God, and _a_ li infinite in nu _of_ the _of_ them to any fixed and peruage”--_Knight cor_ ”The fierce anger of the Lord shall not return, until he _hath_ done it, and until he _hath_ performed the intents of his heart”--_Bible cor_ ”We seek for deeds _more_ illustrious and heroic, for events ”--_Dr Blair cor_ ”We distinguish the genders, or the male and _the_ female sex, _in_ four different ways”--_Buchanan cor_ ”Thus, _ch_ and _g_ are ever hard It is therefore proper to retain these sounds in _those_ Hebrew naed by public use”--_Dr Wilson cor_ ”_A_ Substantive, or Noun, is the na _which is_ conceived to subsist, or of which we have any notion”--_Murray and Lowth cor_ ”_A_ Noun is the na _which_ exists, or of which we have, or can for in existence, or _of any thing_ of which we can for to be _attended to_, is, to keep hi of truth”--_Locke cor_ ”The etable, and _the_ ani to their several capacities”--_Dial cor_ ”And yet it is fairly defensible on the principles of the schools_ can be called principles, which _consist_ merely in words”--_Campbell cor_
”Art thou so bare, and full of wretchedness, And _fearst_ to die? Famine is in thy cheeks, Need and oppression _starve_ in thy _sunk_ eyes”--_Shak cor_
LESSON XV--THREE ERRORS
”The silver age is reckoned to have coustus, and _to have_ continued _till_ the end of Trajan's reign”--_Gould cor_ ”Language _has indeed_ become, in modern times, more correct, and _more determinate_”--_Dr Blair cor_ ”It is evident, that _those_ words are _the_ reeable to the ear, which are composed of smooth and liquid sounds, _and in which_ there is a proper intermixture of vowels and consonants”--_Id_ ”It would have had no other effect, _than_ to add _to_ the sentence _an unnecessary_ word”--_Id_ ”But as rues _had_ been corrupted by ave _occasion_ to much popular clamour, and _threw_ a heavy odium on Cluentius”--_Id_ ”A Participle is derived _from_ a verb, and partakes of the nature both of the verb and _of an_ adjective”--_Ash and Devis cor_ ”I _shall_ have learned ramston cor_ ”There is no _other_ earthly object capable of_so_ various and _so_ forcible impressions upon the human mind, as a co _of_ the bag, _that_ ”--_South cor_ ”As the reasonable soul and _the_ flesh _are_ one man, so God and man _are_ one Christ”--_Creed cor_ ”And I will say to them _ere not my people, _Ye are_ my people; and they shall say, Thou art _our_ God”--_Bible cor_ ”Where there is _in the sense_ nothing _that_ requires the last sound to be elevated or _suspended_, an easy fall, sufficient to show that the sense is finished, will be proper”--_L Mur cor_ ”Each party _produce_ words _in which_ the letter _a_ is sounded in the manner _for which_ they contend”--_J Walker cor_ ”To countenance persons _that_ are guilty of bad actions, is scarcely one remove from _an actual commission of the same criuilty of bad actions,' is a _phrase or clause_ which is _made_ the _subject of_ the verb 'is'”--_Id_ ”What is called _the_ splitting of particles,--_that is, the_ separating _of_ a preposition frooverns, is always to be avoided”--_Dr Blair et al cor_ (See Obs 15th on Rule 23d) ”There is properly _but_ one pause, or rest, in the sentence; _and this falls_ betwixt the two o_ barefoot, does not at all help _a man_ on, _in_ the way to heaven”--_Steele cor_ ”There is _nobody who does not condeh _many_ overlook it in themselves”--_Locke cor_ ”Be careful not to use the same word _in_ the same sentence _either_ too frequently _or_ in different senses”--_L Murray cor_ ”Nothing could have made her _more_ unhappy, _than to have married_ a man _of_ such principles”--_Id_ ”A warlike, various, and tragical age is _the_ best to write of, but _the_ worst to write in”--_Cowley cor_ ”When thou _instancest Peter's_ babtizing [sic--KTH] _of_ Cornelius”--_Barclay cor_ ”To introduce two or hts or _topics_, which have no natural _affinity_ or _ain, are fitted to one _an other_, and to the eleions in which_ they live, and to which they are as appendices”--_Id_ ”This_of_ the sound of each word, is a proof of nothing, but of the fine ear of that people”--_Jamieson cor_ ”They can, each in _its turn_, be _used_ upon occasion”--_Duncan cor_ ”In this reign, lived the _poets_ Gower and Chaucer, who are the first authors _that_ can properly be said to have written English”--_Bucke cor_ ”In translating expressions _of this_ kind, consider the [phrase] '_it is_' as if it were _they are_”--_W Walker cor_ ”The chin has an iree of_ its activity, we disclose _either_ a polite or _a_ vulgar pronunciation”--_Gardiner cor_ ”For no other reason, _than that he was_ found in bad company”--_Webster cor_ ”It is usual to compare them _after_ the manner _of polysyllables_”--_Priestley cor_ ”The infinitive nized more easily_ than any _other_, because the preposition TO precedes it”--_Bucke cor_ ”Prepositions, you recollect, connect words, _and so do_ conjunctions: how, then, can you tell _a conjunction_ frouish_ the _former_ from the _latter_?”--_R C Smith cor_
”No kind of work requires _a nicer_ touch, And, _this_ well finish'd, _none else_ shi+nes so much”