The Grammar of English Grammars eBook

Goold Brown
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 4,149 pages of information about The Grammar of English Grammars.

The Grammar of English Grammars eBook

Goold Brown
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 4,149 pages of information about The Grammar of English Grammars.

SECTION IV.—­OF PERSPICUITY.

Perspicuity consists in freedom from obscurity or ambiguity.  It is a quality so essential to every kind of writing, that for the want of it no merit of other name can compensate.  “Without this, the richest ornaments of style, only glimmer through the dark, and puzzle in stead of pleasing the reader.”—­Dr. Blair.  Perspicuity, being the most important property of language, and an exemption from the most embarrassing defects, seems even to rise to a degree of positive beauty.  We are naturally pleased with a style that frees us from all suspense in regard to the meaning; that carries us through the subject without embarrassment or confusion; and that always flows like a limpid stream, through which we can “see to the very bottom.”  Many of the errors which have heretofore been pointed out to the reader, are offences against perspicuity.  Only three or four hints will here be added.

PRECEPT I.—­Place adjectives, relative pronouns, participles, adverbs, and explanatory phrases near enough to the words to which they relate, and in a position which will make their reference clear.  The following sentences are deficient in perspicuity:  “Reverence is the veneration paid to superior sanctity, intermixed with a certain degree of awe.”—­Unknown.  “The Romans understood liberty, at least, as well as we.”—­See Murray’s Gram., p. 307.  “Taste was never made to cater for vanity.”—­J.  Q. Adams’s Rhet., Vol. i, p. 119.

PRECEPT II.—­In prose, avoid a poetic collocation of words.  For example:  “Guard your weak side from being known.  If it be attacked, the best way is, to join in the attack.”—­KAMES:  Art of Thinking, p. 75.  This maxim of prudence might be expressed more poetically, but with some loss of perspicuity, thus:  “Your weak side guard from being known.  Attacked in this, the assailants join.”

PRECEPT III.—­Avoid faulty ellipses, and repeat all words necessary to preserve the sense.  The following sentences require the words which are inserted in crotchets:  “Restlessness of mind disqualifies us, both for the enjoyment of peace, and [for] the performance of our duty.”—­Murray’s Key, 8vo, p. 166.  “Double Comparatives and [Double] Superlatives should be avoided.”—­Fowler’s E. Gram., 1850, p. 489.

PRECEPT IV.—­Avoid the pedantic and sense-dimming style of charlatans and new theorists, which often demands either a translation or a tedious study, to make it at all intelligible to the ordinary reader.  For example:  “RULE XL Part 3.  An intransitive or receptive asserter in the unlimited mode, depending on a word in the possessive case, may have, after it, a word in the subjective case, denoting the same thing:  And, when it acts the part of an assertive name, depending on a relative, it may have after it a word in the subjective case. 

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The Grammar of English Grammars from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.