“From short (as usual) and
disturb’d repose,
I wake: how happy they
who wake no more!”—Young, N. T.,
p. 3.
UNDER RULE II.—OF GREATER PAUSES.
“A taste of a thing, implies actual enjoyment of it; but a tase [sic—KTH] for it, implies only capacity for enjoyment: as, ’When we have had a true taste of the pleasures of virtue, we can have no relish for those of vice.’”—Bullions cor. “The Indicative mood simply declares a thing: as, ‘He loves;’ ‘He is loved:’ or it asks a question; as, ‘Lovest thou me?’”—Id. and Lennie cor.; also Murray. “The Imperfect (or Past) tense represents an action or event indefinitely as past; as, ‘Caesar came, and saw, and conquered:’ or it represents the action definitely as unfinished and continuing at a certain time now entirely past; as, ‘My father was coming home when I met him.’”—Bullions cor. “Some nouns have no plural; as, gold, silver, wisdom: others have no singular: as, ashes, shears, tongs: others are alike in both numbers; as, sheep, deer, means, news.”—Day cor. “The same verb may be transitive in one sense, and intransitive in an other: thus, in the sentence, ’He believes my story,’ believes is transitive; but, in this phrase, ’He believes in God,’ it is intransitive.”—Butler cor. “Let the divisions be distinct: one part should not include an other, but each should have its proper place, and be of importance in that place; and all the parts, well fitted together and united, should present a perfect whole.”—Goldsbury cor. “In the use of the transitive verb, there are always three things implied; the actor, the act, and the object acted upon: in the use of the intransitive, there are only two; the subject, or the thing spoken of, and the state or action attributed to it.”—Bullions cor.
“Why labours reason? instinct
were as well;
Instinct, far better:
what can choose, can err.”—Young,
vii, 622.