"Vain _tamp"ring_ has but _foster"d_ his disease; _"Tis desp"rate_, and he sleeps the sleep of death."--_Cowper_.

""I have a pain upon my forehead here"-- "Why _that"s_ with watching; _"twill_ away again.""--_Shakspeare_.

"I"ll to the woods, among the happier brutes; Come, _let"s_ away; hark! the shrill horn resounds."--_Smith_.

"_What_ prayer and supplication _soever_ be made."--_Bible_. "By the grace of G.o.d, we have had our conversation in the world, and more abundantly _to_ you _ward_."--_Ib._

LESSON III.--FIGURES OF SYNTAX.

FIGURE I.--ELLIPSIS.

"And now he faintly kens the bounding fawn, And [--] villager [--] abroad at early toil."--_Beattie_.

"The cottage curs at [--] early pilgrim bark."--_Id._

""Tis granted, and no plainer truth appears, Our most important [--] are our earliest years."--_Cowper_.

"To earn her aid, with fix"d and anxious eye, He looks on nature"s [--] and on fortune"s course."--_Akenside_.

"For longer in that paradise to dwell, The law [--] I gave to nature him forbids."--_Milton_.

"So little mercy shows [--] who needs so much."--_Cowper_.

"Bliss is the same [--] in subject, as [--] in king; In [--] who obtain defence, and [--] who defend."--_Pope_.

"Man made for kings! those optics are but dim That tell you so--say rather, they [--] for him."--_Cowper_.

"Man may dismiss compa.s.sion from his heart, But G.o.d will never [-------]."--_Id._

"Vigour [--] from toil, from trouble patience grows."--_Beattie_.

"Where now the rill melodious, [--] pure, and cool, And meads, with life, and mirth, and beauty crown"d?"--_Id._

"How dead the vegetable kingdom lies!

How dumb the tuneful [------------]!"--_Thomson_.

"Self-love and Reason to one end aspire, Pain [--] their aversion, pleasure [--] their desire; But greedy that its object would devour, This [--] taste the honey, and not wound the flower."--_Pope_.

LESSON IV.--FIGURES OF SYNTAX.

FIGURE II.--PLEONASM.

"_According_ to their deeds, _accordingly_ he will _repay_, fury to his adversaries, _recompense_ to his enemies; to the islands he will repay recompense."--_Isaiah_, lix, 18. "Open to me, my sister, my love, my dove, my undefiled: for my head is filled with dew, _and my locks with the drops of the night_."--_Song of Sol._, v, 2. "Thou hast chastised me, _and I was chastised_, as a bullock unaccustomed to the yoke: turn thou me, _and I shall be turned_; for thou art the Lord my G.o.d."--_Jer._, x.x.xi, 18.

"Consider the _lilies_ of the field how _they grow_."--_Matt._, vi, 28.

"_He_ that glorieth, let _him_ glory in the Lord."--_2 Cor._, x, 17.

"_He_ too is witness, n.o.blest of the train That wait on man, the flight-performing horse."--_Cowper_.

FIGURE III.--SYLLEPSIS.

""Thou art Simon the son of Jona: thou shalt be called _Cephas:" which_ is, by interpretation a stone."--_John_, i, 42. "Thus saith the Lord of hosts, "Behold, I will break the bow of _Elam_, the chief of _their_ might.""--_Jer._, xlix, 35. "Behold, I lay in Sion a _stumbling-stone_ and _rock_ of offence: and whosoever believeth on _him_ shall not be ashamed."--_Rom._, ix, 33.

"Thus _Conscience_ pleads _her_ cause within the breast, Though long rebell"d against, not yet suppressed."--_Cowper_.

"_Knowledge_ is proud that _he_ has learn"d so much; _Wisdom_ is humble that _he_ knows no more."--_Id._

"For those the _race_ of Israel oft forsook _Their_ living _strength_, and unfrequented left _His_ righteous altar, bowing lowly down To b.e.s.t.i.a.l G.o.ds."--_Milton, Paradise Lost_, B. i, l. 432.

LESSON V.--FIGURES OF SYNTAX.

FIGURE IV.--ENALLAGE.

"Let me tell _you_, Ca.s.sius, _you_ yourself _Are_ much condemned to have an itching palm, To sell and mart _your_ offices for gold."--_Shakspeare_.

"Come, Philomelus; let us _instant_ go, O"erturn his bow"rs, and lay his castle low."--_Thomson_.

"Then palaces shall rise; the joyful son Shall finish what the short-liv"d sire _begun_"--_Pope_.

"Such was that temple built by Solomon, Than _whom_ none richer reign"d o"er Israel."--_Author_.

"He spoke: with fatal eagerness we _burn_, And _quit_ the sh.o.r.es, undestin"d to return."--_Day_.

"Still as he pa.s.s"d, the nations he _sublimes_."--_Thomson_.

"Sometimes, with early morn, he mounted _gay_."--_Id._

""I"ve lost a day"--the prince who n.o.bly cried, _Had been_ an emperor without his crown."--_Young_.

FIGURE V.--HYPERBATON.

"Such resting found _the sole_ of unblest feet."--_Milton_.

"Yet, though successless, _will the toil_ delight."--_Thomson_.

"Where, "midst the changeful scen"ry ever new, Fancy a thousand wondrous _forms_ descries."--_Beattie_.

"Yet so much bounty is in G.o.d, such grace, That who advance his glory, not their own, _Them_ he himself to glory will advance."--_Milton_.

"No quick _reply_ to dubious questions make; Suspense and caution still prevent mistake."--_Denham_.

LESSON VI.--FIGURES OF RHETORIC.

FIGURE I.--SIMILE.

"Human greatness is short and transitory, _as the odour of incense in the fire_."--_Dr. Johnson_. "Terrestrial happiness is of short continuance: _the brightness of the flame is wasting its fuel, the fragrant flower is pa.s.sing away in its own odours_."--_Id._ "Thy nod is _as the earthquake that shakes the mountains_; and thy smile, _as the dawn of the vernal day_."--_Id._

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