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it, although not many others so late as him.” Should be he.—Trench’s English Past and Present.

“What should we gain by it but that we should speedily become as poor as them.” Should be they.—Alison’s Essay on Macaulay.

“If the king gives us leave you or I may as lawfully preach, as them that do.” Should be they or those, the latter having persons understood.—Hobbes’s History of Civil Wars.

“The drift of all his sermons was, to prepare the Jews for the reception of a prophet, mightier than him, and whose shoes he was not worthy to bear.” Should be than he.—Atterbury’s Sermons.

“Phalaris, who was so much older than her.” Should be she.—Bentley’s Dissertation on Phalaris.

“King Charles, and more than him, the duke and the Popish faction were at liberty to form new schemes.” Should be than he.—Bolingbroke’s Dissertations on Parties.

“We contributed a third more than the Dutch, who were obliged to the same proportion more than us.” Should be than we.—Swift’s Conduct of the Allies.

In all the above examples the objective cases of the pronouns have been used while the construction calls for nominative cases.

“Let thou and I the battle try”—_Anon_.

Here let is the governing verb and requires an objective case after it; therefore instead of thou and I, the words should be you (sing.) and me.

“Forever in this humble cell, Let thee and I, my fair one, dwell” —_Prior_.

Here thee and I should be the objectives you and me.

The use of the relative pronoun trips the greatest number of authors.

Even in the Bible we find the relative wrongly translated:

Whom do men say that I am?—_St. Matthew_.

Whom think ye that I am?—_Acts of the Apostles_.

Who should be written in both cases because the word is not in the objective governed by say or think, but in the nominative dependent on the verb am.

“Who should I meet at the coffee house t’other night, but my old friend?”—_Steele_.

“It is another pattern of this answerer’s fair dealing, to give us hints that the author is dead, and yet lay the suspicion upon somebody, I know not who, in the country.”—Swift’s Tale of a Tub.

“My son is going to be married to I don’t know who.”—Goldsmith’s Good-natured Man.

The nominative who in the above examples should be the objective whom.

The plural nominative ye of the pronoun thou is very often used for the objective you, as in the following:

“His wrath which will one day destroy ye both.”—_Milton_.

“The more shame for ye; holy men I thought ye.”—_Shakespeare_.

“I feel the gales that from ye blow.”—_Gray_.

“Tyrants dread ye, lest your just decree Transfer the power and set the people free.”—_Prior_.

Many of the great writers have played havoc with the adjective in the indiscriminate use of the degrees of comparison.

“Of two forms of the same word, use the fittest.”—_Morell_.

The author here in trying to give good advice sets a bad example. He should have used the comparative degree, “Fitter.”

Adjectives which have a comparative or superlative signification do not admit the addition of the words more, most, or the terminations, er, est, hence the following examples break this rule:

“Money is the most universal incitement of human misery.”—Gibbon’s Decline and Fall.

“The chiefest of which was known by the name of Archon among the Grecians.”—Dryden’s Life of Plutarch.

“The chiefest and largest are removed to certain magazines they call libraries.”—Swift’s Battle of the Books.

The two chiefest properties of air, its gravity and elastic force, have been discovered by mechanical experiments.—_Arbuthno_.

“From these various causes, which in greater or lesser degree, affected every individual in the colony, the indignation of the people became general.”—Robertson’s History of America.

“The extremest parts of the earth were meditating a submission.” —Atterbury’s Sermons.

“The last are indeed more preferable because they are founded on some new knowledge or improvement in the mind of man.”—Addison, Spectator.

“This was in reality the easiest manner of the two.”—Shaftesbury’s Advice to an Author.

“In every well formed mind this second desire seems to be the strongest of the two.”—Smith’s Theory of Moral Sentiments.

In these examples the superlative is wrongly used for the comparative. When only two objects are compared the comparative form must be used.

Of impossibility there are no degrees of comparison, yet we find the following:

“As it was impossible they should know the words, thoughts and secret actions of all men, so it was more impossible they should pass judgment on them according to these things.”—Whitby’s Necessity of the Christian Religion.

A great number of authors employ adjectives for adverbs. Thus we find:

“I shall endeavor to live hereafter suitable to a man in my station.” —_Addison_.

“I can never think so very mean of him.”—Bentley’s Dissertation on Phalaris.

“His expectations run high and the fund to supply them is extreme scanty.”—_Lancaster’s Essay on Delicacy_.

The commonest error in the use of the verb is the disregard of the concord between the verb and its subject. This occurs most frequently when the subject and the verb are widely separated, especially if some other noun of a different number immediately precedes the verb. False concords occur very often after either, or, neither, nor, and much, more, many, everyone, each.

Here are a few authors’ slips:—

“The terms in which the sale of a patent were communicated to the public.”—Junius’s Letters.

“The richness of her arms and apparel were conspicuous.”—Gibbon’s Decline and Fall.

“Everyone of this grotesque family were the creatures of national genius.”—D’Israeli.

“He knows not what spleen, languor or listlessness are.”—Blair’s Sermons.

“Each of these words imply, some pursuit or object relinquished.” —_Ibid_.

“Magnus, with four thousand of his supposed accomplices were put to death.”—_Gibbon_.

“No nation gives greater encouragements to learning than we do; yet at the same time none are so injudicious in the application.” —_Goldsmith_.

“There’s two or three of us have seen strange sights.”—_Shakespeare_.

The past participle should not be used for the past tense, yet the learned Byron overlooked this fact. He thus writes in the Lament of Tasso:—

“And with my years my soul begun to pant With feelings of strange tumult and soft pain.”

Here is another example from Savage’s Wanderer in which there is double sinning:

“From liberty each nobler science sprung, A Bacon brighten’d and a Spenser sung.”

Other breaches in regard to the participles occur in the following:—

“Every book ought to be read with the same spirit and in the same manner as it is writ“—Fielding’s Tom Jones.

“The Court of Augustus had not wore off the manners of the republic” —Hume’s Essays.

“Moses tells us that the fountains of the earth were broke open or clove asunder.”—Burnet.

“A free constitution when it has been shook by the iniquity of former administrations.”—_Bolingbroke_.

“In this respect the seeds of future divisions were sowed abundantly.” —_Ibid_.

In the following example the present participle is used for the infinitive mood:

“It is easy distinguishing the rude fragment of a rock from the splinter of a statue.”—Gilfillan’s Literary Portraits.

Distinguishing here should be replaced by to distinguish.

The rules regarding shall and will are violated in the following:

“If we look within the rough and awkward outside, we will be richly rewarded by its perusal.”—Gilfillan’s Literary Portraits.

“If I should declare them and speak of them, they should be more than I am able to express.”—_Prayer Book Revision of Psalms XI_.

“If I would declare them and speak of them, they are more than can be numbered.”—_Ibid_.

“Without having attended to this, we will be at a loss, in understanding several passages in the classics.”—Blair’s Lectures.

“We know to what cause our past reverses have been owing and we will have ourselves to blame, if they are again incurred.”—Alison’s History of Europe.

Adverbial mistakes often occur in the best writers. The adverb rather is a word very frequently misplaced. Archbishop Trench in his “English Past and Present” writes, “It rather modified the structure of our sentences than the elements of our vocabulary.” This should have been written,—“It modified the structure of our sentences rather than the elements of our vocabulary.”

“So far as his mode of teaching goes he is rather a disciple of Socrates than of St. Paul or Wesley.” Thus writes Leslie Stephens of Dr. Johnson. He should have written,—” So far as his mode of teaching goes he is a disciple of Socrates rather than of St. Paul or Wesley.”

The preposition is a part of speech which is often wrongly used by some of the best writers. Certain nouns, adjectives and verbs require particular prepositions after them, for instance, the word different always takes the preposition from after it; prevail takes upon; averse takes to; accord takes with, and so on.

In the following examples the prepositions in parentheses are the ones that should have been used:

“He found the greatest difficulty of (in) writing.”—Hume’s History of England.

“If policy can prevail upon (over) force.”—_Addison_.

“He made the discovery and communicated to (with) his friends.” —Swift’s Tale of a Tub.

“Every office of command should be intrusted to persons on (in) whom the parliament shall confide.”—_Macaulay_.

Several of the most celebrated writers infringe the canons of style by placing prepositions at the end of sentences. For instance Carlyle, in referring to the Study of Burns, writes:—“Our own contributions to it, we are aware, can be but scanty and feeble; but we offer them with good will, and trust they may meet with acceptance from those they are intended for.”

—“for whom they are intended,” he should have written.

“Most writers have some one vein which they peculiarly and obviously excel in.”—_William Minto_.

This sentence should read,—Most writers have some one vein in which they peculiarly and obviously excel.

Many authors use redundant words which repeat the same thought and idea. This is called tautology.

“Notwithstanding which (however) poor Polly embraced them all around.” —_Dickens_.

“I judged that they would (mutually) find each other.”—_Crockett_.

“….as having created a (joint) partnership between the two Powers in the Morocco question.”—_The Times_.

“The only sensible position (there seems to be) is to frankly acknowledge our ignorance of what lies beyond.”—_Daily Telegraph_.

“Lord Rosebery has not budged from his position—splendid, no doubt,—of (lonely) isolation.”—_The Times_.

“Miss Fox was (often) in the habit of assuring Mrs. Chick.”—_Dickens_.

“The deck (it) was their field of fame.”—_Campbell_.

“He had come up one morning, as was now (frequently) his wont,” —_Trollope_.

The counsellors of the Sultan (continue to) remain sceptical —_The Times_.

Seriously, (and apart from jesting), this is no light matter.—_Bagehot_.

To go back to your own country with (the consciousness that you go back with) the sense of duty well done.—_Lord Halsbury_.

The Peresviet lost both her fighting-tops and (in appearance) looked the most damaged of all the ships—_The Times_.

Counsel admitted that, that was a fair suggestion to make, but he submitted that it was borne out by the (surrounding) circumstances. —_Ibid_.

Another unnecessary use of words and phrases is that which is termed circumlocution, a going around the bush when there is no

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