event? till forced by some necessity? what, then, are we to think of your present condition ? To free men, the disgrace attending on misconduct is, in my opinion, the most urgent necessity. Or say, is it your sole ambition to wander through the public places, each inquiring of the other, What new advices ?" Can anything be more new than that a man of Macedon should conquer the Athenians, and give law to Greece? “Is Philip dead ?” “No-but he is sick.” Pray, what is it to you whether Philip is sick or not? Supposing he should die, you would raise up another Philip, if you continue thus regardless of your interest. It is not surely necessary to warn you, that votes alone can be of no consequence. Proceed, then, Athenians, to support your deliberations with vigour. What time so proper for action? what occasion so happy ? and when can you hope for such ano er, if this be neglected ? Has not Philip, contrary to all treaties, insulted you in Thrace? Does he not, at this instant, straiten and invade your confederates, whom you have solemnly sworn to protect? Is he not an implacable enemy? a faithless ally ?—the usurper of provinces, to which he has no title or pretence ?—a stranger, a barbarian, a tyrant ? 7. Truth. Attend, ye sons of men; attend and say, Does not enough of my refulgent ray Break through the veil of your mortality ? Say, does not reason in this form descry Unnumber'd, nameless glories, that surpass The angel's floating pomp, the seraph's glowing grace? Shall, then, your earth-born daughters vie With me? Shall she, whose brightest eye But emulates the diamond’s blaze, Whose cheek, but mocks the peach's bloom, Whose breath, the hyacinth's perfume, Whose melting voice, the warbling woodlark's lays, Shall she be deem'd my rival ? Shall a form pass, and she is gone; while I appear Flush'd with the bloom of youth, through Heaven's eternal year. Mason. 8. British Energy. No, ye soft sons of Ganges, and of Ind, Ye feebly delicate, life little needs Your feminine toys, nor asks your nerveless arms To cast the strong-flung shuttle, or the spear. Can ye defend your country from the storm ye the weather-beaten vessel steer, Dyer. ye 9. Virtue remaining after Death. Will the stork, intending rest, Man alone, intent to stray, Soon this elemental mass, Then, ye boasted works of men, Pass the world, and what's behind ? E. Moore. XV.-Pause and Inflections, with marked Change of Voice. PARENTHESIS. A parenthesis is an explanatory clause, introduced between two members of a sentence. It is usually included between brackets ( ) or []; but when the explanation does not occasion an obvious interruption in the construction, it is sometimes marked only by commas. The words constituting the parenthesis must be read generally in a lower tone than that of the separated members; the voice being dropped to about the ordinary pitch in reading the parenthesis, but raised again to that from which it was lowered, as soon as the parenthesis is completed. In long parentheses, the reading is a little quickened, * In the following Exercises, such cases are denoted by commas in a larger type. the monotone predominating, but not so as to exclude proper regard to expression and intonation. When an explanatory clause is introduced, parenthetically, between a nominative case and the verb, it is usual to mark the commencement and conclusion by a slightly perceptible pause. SIMULTANEOUS EXERCISES. 1. I will restore thy daughter to life' - (said the Eastern sage' - to a prince, who grieved immoderately for the loss of a beloved child') - provided' - thou can'st engrave' upon her tomb' - the names of three persons', who have never' mourned'. 2. If envious people were to ask themselves - whether they would exchange their entire' situation' with the persons envied (I mean their minds - passions' notions'; as well as their persons'; - fortunes' - and dignities') - I presume the self-love', common to human' nature', - would generally make them prefer their own' condition'. 3. It is a common conviction' - that the world', - at least this lower' world', - with its various appurtenances', - was intended purely for man'; - that it is appropriated to him'; - and that he' - (in subordination to God's glory') - is the end of its creation'. 4. Let us suppose', - that all your plans of avarice and ambition' are ad accomplished', and your most sanguine wishes' - gratified in the fear, as well as the hatred', - of the people',-can age itself forget that you are now in the last act of life'? can grey hairs' make folly venerable'? and is there no' period to be reserved' for meditation and retirement ? 5. I am well, and have been so' in mind' and body' - (uneasiness on your account' excepted') - ever since I wrote to you last'. 6. I should recommend to you therefore', - (but after all'- you must judge' for yourself') - to allot the two next years of so young' a boy's scholarship’ to writing and arithmetic; - together with which', - for variety's sake', - and because it is capable of being formed into an amusement', - I would mingle geography'. 7. Peace be to those' - (such peace' as earth' can give') Who live in pleasure' - dead' even while they live'. Cowper. 8. But her humility' - is well content With one wild floweret' - (call it not forlorn ) - Wordsworth. 9. What - if our numbers' barely could defy The arithmetic of babes', -must foreign hordes', Wordsworth. 10. Say firsť, - (for Heaven' hides nothing from thy view, Milton. PRACTICE. [After reading the following mixed Examples, it will be useful to make the pupils point out in them such figures of speech as they have learned to distinguish; viz., Enumeration, Antithesis, Interrogation, and Parenthesis. The teacher may in some cases draw their attention to these figures by suitable questions.] |