Читать книгу The Grammar of English Grammars - Goold Brown - Страница 94

UNDER RULE XIII.—OF POETRY.

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"Reason's whole pleasure, all the joys of sense,

lie in three words—health, peace, and competence;

but health consists with temperance alone,

and peace, O Virtue! peace is all thy own."

Pope's Essay on Man, a fine London Edition.

[FORMULE.—Not proper, because the last three lines of this example begin with small letters. But, according to Rule 18th, "Every line in poetry, except what is regarded as making but one verse with the preceding line, should begin with a capital." Therefore, the words, "Lie," "But," and "And," at the commencement of these lines, should severally begin with the capitals L, B, and A.]

"Observe the language well in all you write, and swerve not from it in your loftiest flight. The smoothest verse and the exactest sense displease us, if ill English give offence: a barbarous phrase no reader can approve; nor bombast, noise, or affectation love. In short, without pure language, what you write can never yield us profit or delight. Take time for thinking, never work in haste; and value not yourself for writing fast." See Dryden's Art of Poetry:—British Poets, Vol. iii, p. 74.

The Grammar of English Grammars

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