p. 372. “The tyrant stript me to the skin:
My skin he flay’d, my hair he cropt; At head
and foot my body lopt.”—Ib., On
a Pen, p. 338. “I see the greatest
owls in you, That ever screecht or ever flew.”—Ib.,
p. 403. “I sate with delight, from morning
till night.”—Ib., p. 367.
“Dick nimbly skipt the gutter.”—Ib.,
p. 375. “In at the pantry door this morn
I slipt.”—Ib., p. 369.
“Nobody living ever toucht me but you.”—Walker’s
Particles, p. 92. “Present, I ship;
Past, I shipped or shipt; Participle,
shipped or shipt.”—Murray the
schoolmaster. Gram., p. 31. “Then
the king arose, and tare his garments.”—2
Sam., xiii, 31. “When he lift up his
foot, he knew not where he should set it next.”—Bunyan.
“He lift up his spear against eight hundred,
whom he slew at one time.”—2 SAM.:
in Joh. Dict. “Upon this chaos rid
the distressed ark.”—BURNET:
ib. “On whose foolish honesty, my practices
rid easy.”—SHAK.: ib.
“That form of the first or primogenial Earth,
which rise immediately out of chaos.”—BURNET:
ib. “Sir, how come it you have holp to
make this rescue?”—SHAK.: in
Joh. Dict. “He sware he had rather
lose all his father’s images than that table.”—PEACHAM:
ib. “When our language dropt its ancient
terminations.”—Dr. Murray’s
Hist., ii, 5. “When themselves they
vilify’d.”—Milton, P.
L., xi, 515. “But I choosed rather to do
thus.”—Barclay’s Works,
i, 456. “When he plead against the parsons.”—
School History, p. 168. “And he that
saw it, bear record.”—Cutler’s
Gram., p. 72. “An irregular verb has
one more variation, as drive, drivest, drives, drivedst,
drove, driving, driven.”—REV.
MATT. HARRISON, on the English Language,
p. 260. “Beside that village Hannibal pitcht
his camp.”—Walker’s Particles,
p. 79. “He fetcht it even from Tmolus.”—
Ib., p. 114. “He supt with his morning
gown on.”—Ib., p. 285.
“There stampt her sacred name.”—Barlow’s
Columbiad, B. i, l. 233.
“Fixt on the view the great
discoverer stood,
And thus addrest the messenger
of good.”—Barlow, B, i, l.
658.
LESSON II.—MIXED.
“Three freemen were being tried at the date of our last information.”—Newspaper.
[FORMULE.—Not proper, because the participle being is used after its own verb were. But, according to Observation 4th, on the compound form of the conjugation, this complex passive form is an absurd innovation. Therefore, the expression should be changed; thus, “Three freemen were on trial”—or, “were receiving their trial—at the date of our last information.”]