Part 264 (1/2)
XVII They use the forular oftener than do others; as,
1 ”Yet I had rather, if I were to chuse, _Thy_ service in soraver subject use, Such as may make _thee_ search thy coffers round, Before _thou clothe_ my fancy in fit sound”
--_Milton's Works_, p 133
2 ”But _thou_, of te like to thee”
--_Byron, Pilg_, iv, 154
3 ”Thou seest not all; but piecereat whole”
--_Id, ib_, iv, 157
4 ”Thou rightly deean the bard; The form then saas Virtue ever fair”
--_Pollok, C of T_, p 16
XVIII They sometimes omit relatives that are nominatives; (see Obs 22, at p 555;) as,
”For is there aught in sleep can charm the wise?”
--_Thomson_
XIX They omit the antecedent, or introduce it after the relative; as,
1 ”_Who_ never fasts, no banquet e'er enjoys, _Who_ never toils or watches, never sleeps”
--_Ar and an other tell, My soul detests _hiates of hell”
--_Pope's Homer_
XX They remove relatives, or other connectives, into the body of their clauses; as,
1 ”Parts the fine locks, her graceful head _that_ deck”
--_Darwin_
2 ”Not half so dreadful rises to the sight Orion's dog, the year _when_ autuhs”
--_Pope, Iliad_, B xxii, l 37
XXI Theytheir class; as,
1 ----”A while he stands, _Gazing_ the inverted landscape, half afraid To _meditate_ the blue profound below”
--_Thomson_
2 ”Still in harmonious intercourse, they _liv'd_ The rural day, and _talk'd_ the flowing heart”
--_Idem_
3 ----”I saw and heard, for we sometimes Who _dwell_ this wild, constrain'd by want, come forth”
--_Milton, P R_, B i, l 330
XXII They imen; as,
1 ”The soldiers should have _toss'd_ ranted_ to that act”