<h2 name="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III</h2>
<h3>THE SENTENCE</h3>
<h4>Different Kinds—Arrangement of
Words—Paragraph</h4></center>
<p>A sentence is an assemblage of words so arranged as to convey a
determinate sense or meaning, in other words, to express a complete
thought or idea. No matter how short, it must contain one finite
verb and a subject or agent to direct the action of the verb.</p>
<p>"Birds fly;" "Fish swim;" "Men walk;"—are sentences.</p>
<p>A sentence always contains two parts, something spoken about and
something said about it. The word or words indicating what is
spoken about form what is called the <i>subject</i> and the word or
words indicating what is said about it form what is called the
<i>predicate</i>.</p>
<p>In the sentences given, <i>birds</i>, <i>fish</i> and <i>men</i>
are the subjects, while <i>fly</i>, <i>swim</i> and <i>walk</i> are
the predicates.</p>
<p>There are three kinds of sentences, <i>simple</i>,
<i>compound</i> and <i>complex</i>.</p>
<p>The <i>simple sentence</i> expresses a single thought and
consists of one subject and one predicate, as, "Man is mortal."</p>
<p>A <i>compound sentence</i> consists of two or more simple
sentences of equal importance the parts of which are either
expressed or understood, as, "The men work in the fields and the
women work in the household," or "The men work in the fields and
the women in the household" or "The men and women work in the
fields and in the household."</p>
<p>A <i>complex sentence</i> consists of two or more simple
sentences so combined that one depends on the other to complete its
meaning; as; "When he returns, I shall go on my vacation." Here the
words, "when he returns" are dependent on the rest of the sentence
for their meaning.</p>
<p>A <i>clause</i> is a separate part of a complex sentence, as
"when he returns" in the last example.</p>
<p>A <i>phrase</i> consists of two or more words without a finite
verb.</p>
<p>Without a finite verb we cannot affirm anything or convey an
idea, therefore we can have no sentence.</p>
<p>Infinitives and participles which are the infinite parts of the
verb cannot be predicates. "I looking up the street" is not a
sentence, for it is not a complete action expressed. When we hear
such an expression as "A dog running along the street," we wait for
something more to be added, something more affirmed about the dog,
whether he bit or barked or fell dead or was run over.</p>
<p>Thus in every sentence there must be a finite verb to limit the
subject.</p>
<p>When the verb is transitive, that is, when the action cannot
happen without affecting something, the thing affected is called
the <i>object</i>.</p>
<p>Thus in "Cain killed Abel" the action of the killing affected
Abel. In "The cat has caught a mouse," mouse is the object of the
catching.</p>
<h3>ARRANGEMENT OF WORDS IN A SENTENCE</h3>
<p>Of course in simple sentences the natural order of arrangement
is subject—verb—object. In many cases no other form is
possible. Thus in the sentence "The cat has caught a mouse," we
cannot reverse it and say "The mouse has caught a cat" without
destroying the meaning, and in any other form of arrangement, such
as "A mouse, the cat has caught," we feel that while it is
intelligible, it is a poor way of expressing the fact and one which
jars upon us more or less.</p>
<p>In longer sentences, however, when there are more words than
what are barely necessary for subject, verb and object, we have
greater freedom of arrangement and can so place the words as to
give the best effect. The proper placing of words depends upon
perspicuity and precision. These two combined give <i>style</i> to
the structure.</p>
<p>Most people are familiar with Gray's line in the immortal
<i>Elegy</i>—"The ploughman homeward plods his weary way."
This line can be paraphrased to read 18 different ways. Here are a
few variations:</p>
<p>Homeward the ploughman plods his weary way.<br/>
The ploughman plods his weary way homeward.<br/>
Plods homeward the ploughman his weary way.<br/>
His weary way the ploughman homeward plods.<br/>
Homeward his weary way plods the ploughman.<br/>
Plods the ploughman his weary way homeward.<br/>
His weary way the ploughman plods homeward.<br/>
His weary way homeward the ploughman plods.<br/>
The ploughman plods homeward his weary way.<br/>
The ploughman his weary way plods homeward.<br/></p>
<p>and so on. It is doubtful if any of the other forms are superior
to the one used by the poet. Of course his arrangement was made to
comply with the rhythm and rhyme of the verse. Most of the
variations depend upon the emphasis we wish to place upon the
different words.</p>
<p>In arranging the words in an ordinary sentence we should not
lose sight of the fact that the beginning and end are the important
places for catching the attention of the reader. Words in these
places have greater emphasis than elsewhere.</p>
<p>In Gray's line the general meaning conveyed is that a weary
ploughman is plodding his way homeward, but according to the
arrangement a very slight difference is effected in the idea. Some
of the variations make us think more of the ploughman, others more
of the plodding, and still others more of the weariness.</p>
<p>As the beginning and end of a sentence are the most important
places, it naturally follows that small or insignificant words
should be kept from these positions. Of the two places the end one
is the more important, therefore, it really calls for the most
important word in the sentence. Never commence a sentence with
<i>And</i>, <i>But</i>, <i>Since</i>, <i>Because,</i> and other
similar weak words and never end it with prepositions, small, weak
adverbs or pronouns.</p>
<p>The parts of a sentence which are most closely connected with
one another in meaning should be closely connected in order also.
By ignoring this principle many sentences are made, if not
nonsensical, really ridiculous and ludicrous. For instance: "Ten
dollars reward is offered for information of any person injuring
this property by order of the owner." "This monument was erected to
the memory of John Jones, who was shot by his affectionate
brother."</p>
<p>In the construction of all sentences the grammatical rules must
be inviolably observed. The laws of concord, that is, the agreement
of certain words, must be obeyed.</p>
<ol>
<li>
<p>The verb agrees with its subject in person and number. "I have,"
"Thou hast," (the pronoun <i>thou</i> is here used to illustrate
the verb form, though it is almost obsolete), "He has," show the
variation of the verb to agree with the subject. A singular subject
calls for a singular verb, a plural subject demands a verb in the
plural; as, "The boy writes," "The boys write."</p>
<p>The agreement of a verb and its subject is often destroyed by
confusing (1) collective and common nouns; (2) foreign and English
nouns; (3) compound and simple subjects; (4) real and apparent
subjects.</p>
<p><small>(1) A collective noun is a number of individuals or
things regarded as a whole; as, <i>class regiment</i>. When the
individuals or things are prominently brought forward, use a plural
verb; as The class <i>were</i> distinguished for ability. When the
idea of the whole as a unit is under consideration employ a
singular verb; as The regiment <i>was</i> in camp. (2) It is
sometimes hard for the ordinary individual to distinguish the
plural from the singular in foreign nouns, therefore, he should be
careful in the selection of the verb. He should look up the word
and be guided accordingly. "He was an <i>alumnus</i> of Harvard."
"They were <i>alumni</i> of Harvard." (3) When a sentence with one
verb has two or more subjects denoting different things, connected
by <i>and</i>, the verb should be plural; as, "Snow and rain
<i>are</i> disagreeable." When the subjects denote the same thing
and are connected by <i>or</i> the verb should be singular; as,
"The man or the woman is to blame." (4) When the same verb has more
than one subject of different persons or numbers, it agrees with
the most prominent in thought; as, "He, and not you, <i>is</i>
wrong." "Whether he or I <i>am</i> to be blamed."</small></p>
</li>
<li>
<p>Never use the past participle for the past tense nor <i>vice
versa</i>. This mistake is a very common one. At every turn we hear
"He done it" for "He did it." "The jar was broke" instead of
broken. "He would have went" for "He would have gone,"
etc.</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>The use of the verbs <i>shall</i> and <i>will</i> is a rock upon
which even the best speakers come to wreck. They are interchanged
recklessly. Their significance changes according as they are used
with the first, second or third person. With the first person
<i>shall</i> is used in direct statement to express a simple future
action; as, "I shall go to the city to-morrow." With the second and
third persons <i>shall</i> is used to express a determination; as,
"You <i>shall</i> go to the city to-morrow," "He <i>shall</i> go to
the city to-morrow."</p>
<p>With the first person <i>will</i> is used in direct statement to
express determination, as, "I will go to the city to-morrow." With
the second and third persons <i>will</i> is used to express simple
future action; as, "You <i>will</i> go to the city to-morrow," "He
<i>will</i> go to the city to-morrow."</p>
<p>A very old rule regarding the uses of <i>shall</i> and
<i>will</i> is thus expressed in rhyme:</p>
<p>In the first person simply <i>shall</i> foretells,<br/>
In <i>will</i> a threat or else a promise dwells.<br/>
<i>Shall</i> in the second and third does threat,<br/>
<i>Will</i> simply then foretells the future feat.<br/>
<br/></p>
</li>
<li>
<p>Take special care to distinguish between the nominative and
objective case. The pronouns are the only words which retain the
ancient distinctive case ending for the objective. Remember that
the objective case follows transitive verbs and prepositions. Don't
say "The boy who I sent to see you," but "The boy whom I sent to
see you." <i>Whom</i> is here the object of the transitive verb
sent. Don't say "She bowed to him and I" but "She bowed to him and
me" since me is the objective case following the preposition
<i>to</i> understood. "Between you and I" is a very common
expression. It should be "Between you and me" since <i>between</i>
is a preposition calling for the objective case.</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>Be careful in the use of the relative pronouns <i>who</i>,
<i>which</i> and <i>that</i>. Who refers only to persons; which
only to things; as, "The boy who was drowned," "The umbrella which
I lost." The relative <i>that</i> may refer to both persons and
things; as, "The man <i>that</i> I saw." "The hat <i>that</i> I
bought."</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>Don't use the superlative degree of the adjective for the
comparative; as "He is the richest of the two" for "He is the
richer of the two." Other mistakes often made in this connection
are (1) Using the double comparative and superlative; as, "These
apples are much <i>more</i> preferable." "The most universal motive
to business is gain." (2) Comparing objects which belong to
dissimilar classes; as "There is no nicer <i>life</i> than a
<i>teacher</i>." (3) Including objects in class to which they do
not belong; as, "The fairest of her daughters, Eve." (4) Excluding
an object from a class to which it does belong; as, "Caesar was
braver than any ancient warrior."</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>Don't use an adjective for an adverb or an adverb for an
adjective. Don't say, "He acted nice towards me" but "He acted
nicely toward me," and instead of saying "She looked
<i>beautifully</i>" say "She looked <i>beautiful</i>."</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>Place the adverb as near as possible to the word it modifies.
Instead of saying, "He walked to the door quickly," say "He walked
quickly to the door."</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>Not alone be careful to distinguish between the nominative and
objective cases of the pronouns, but try to avoid ambiguity in
their use.</p>
<p>The amusing effect of disregarding the reference of pronouns is
well illustrated by Burton in the following story of Billy
Williams, a comic actor who thus narrates his experience in riding
a horse owned by Hamblin, the manager:</p>
<p>"So down I goes to the stable with Tom Flynn, and told the man
to put the saddle on him."</p>
<p>"On Tom Flynn?"</p>
<p>"No, on the horse. So after talking with Tom Flynn awhile I
mounted him."</p>
<p>"What! mounted Tom Flynn?"</p>
<p>"No, the horse; and then I shook hands with him and rode
off."</p>
<p>"Shook hands with the horse, Billy?"</p>
<p>"No, with Tom Flynn; and then I rode off up the Bowery, and who
should I meet but Tom Hamblin; so I got off and told the boy to
hold him by the head."</p>
<p>"What! hold Hamblin by the head?"</p>
<p>"No, the horse; and then we went and had a drink together."</p>
<p>"What! you and the horse?"</p>
<p>"No, <i>me</i> and Hamblin; and after that I mounted him again
and went out of town."</p>
<p>"What! mounted Hamblin again?"</p>
<p>"No, the horse; and when I got to Burnham, who should be there
but Tom Flynn,—he'd taken another horse and rode out ahead of
me; so I told the hostler to tie him up."</p>
<p>"Tie Tom Flynn up?"</p>
<p>"No, the horse; and we had a drink there."</p>
<p>"What! you and the horse?"</p>
<p>"No, me and Tom Flynn."</p>
<p>Finding his auditors by this time in a <i>horse</i> laugh, Billy
wound up with: "Now, look here, —every time I say horse, you
say Hamblin, and every time I say Hamblin you say horse: I'll be
hanged if I tell you any more about it."</p>
</li></ol>
<h3>SENTENCE CLASSIFICATION</h3>
<p>There are two great classes of sentences according to the
general principles upon which they are founded. These are termed
the <i>loose</i> and the <i>periodic</i>.</p>
<p>In the <i>loose</i> sentence the main idea is put first, and
then follow several facts in connection with it. Defoe is an author
particularly noted for this kind of sentence. He starts out with a
leading declaration to which he adds several attendant connections.
For instance in the opening of the story of <i>Robinson Crusoe</i>
we read: "I was born in the year 1632 in the city of York, of a
good family, though not of that country, my father being a
foreigner of Bremen, who settled first at Hull; he got a good
estate by merchandise, and leaving off his trade lived afterward at
York, from whence he had married my mother, whose relations were
named Robinson, a very good family in the country and from I was
called Robinson Kreutznaer; but by the usual corruption of words in
England, we are now called, nay, we call ourselves, and write our
name Crusoe, and so my companions always called me."</p>
<p>In the periodic sentence the main idea comes last and is
preceded by a series of relative introductions. This kind of
sentence is often introduced by such words as <i>that</i>,
<i>if</i>, <i>since</i>, <i>because</i>. The following is an
example:</p>
<p>"That through his own folly and lack of circumspection he should
have been reduced to such circumstances as to be forced to become a
beggar on the streets, soliciting alms from those who had formerly
been the recipients of his bounty, was a sore humiliation."</p>
<p>On account of its name many are liable to think the <i>loose</i>
sentence an undesirable form in good composition, but this should
not be taken for granted. In many cases it is preferable to the
periodic form.</p>
<p>As a general rule in speaking, as opposed to writing, the
<i>loose</i> form is to be preferred, inasmuch as when the periodic
is employed in discourse the listeners are apt to forget the
introductory clauses before the final issue is reached.</p>
<p>Both kinds are freely used in composition, but in speaking, the
<i>loose</i>, which makes the direct statement at the beginning,
should predominate.</p>
<p>As to the length of sentences much depends on the nature of the
composition. However the general rule may be laid down that short
sentences are preferable to long ones. The tendency of the best
writers of the present day is towards short, snappy, pithy
sentences which rivet the attention of the reader. They adopt as
their motto <i>multum in parvo</i> (much in little) and endeavor to
pack a great deal in small space. Of course the extreme of brevity
is to be avoided. Sentences can be too short, too jerky, too
brittle to withstand the test of criticism. The long sentence has
its place and a very important one. It is indispensable in argument
and often is very necessary to description and also in introducing
general principles which require elaboration. In employing the long
sentence the inexperienced writer should not strain after the
heavy, ponderous type. Johnson and Carlyle used such a type, but
remember, an ordinary mortal cannot wield the sledge hammer of a
giant. Johnson and Carlyle were intellectual giants and few can
hope to stand on the same literary pedestal. The tyro in
composition should never seek after the heavy style. The best of
all authors in the English language for style is Addison. Macaulay
says: "If you wish a style learned, but not pedantic, elegant but
not ostentatious, simple yet refined, you must give your days and
nights to the volumes of Joseph Addison." The simplicity, apart
from the beauty of Addison's writings causes us to reiterate the
literary command—"Never use a big word when a little one will
convey the same or a similar meaning."</p>
<p>Macaulay himself is an elegant stylist to imitate. He is like a
clear brook kissed by the noon-day sun in the shining bed of which
you can see and count the beautiful white pebbles. Goldsmith is
another writer whose simplicity of style charms.</p>
<p>The beginner should study these writers, make their works his
<i>vade mecum</i>, they have stood the test of time and there has
been no improvement upon them yet, nor is there likely to be, for
their writing is as perfect as it is possible to be in the English
language.</p>
<p>Apart from their grammatical construction there can be no fixed
rules for the formation of sentences. The best plan is to follow
the best authors and these masters of language will guide you
safely along the way.</p>
<h3>THE PARAGRAPH</h3>
<p>The paragraph may be defined as a group of sentences that are
closely related in thought and which serve one common purpose. Not
only do they preserve the sequence of the different parts into
which a composition is divided, but they give a certain spice to
the matter like raisins in a plum pudding. A solid page of printed
matter is distasteful to the reader; it taxes the eye and tends
towards the weariness of monotony, but when it is broken up into
sections it loses much of its heaviness and the consequent
lightness gives it charm, as it were, to capture the reader.</p>
<p>Paragraphs are like stepping-stones on the bed of a shallow
river, which enable the foot passenger to skip with ease from one
to the other until he gets across; but if the stones are placed too
far apart in attempting to span the distance one is liable to miss
the mark and fall in the water and flounder about until he is again
able to get a foothold. 'Tis the same with written language, the
reader by means of paragraphs can easily pass from one portion of
connected thought to another and keep up his interest in the
subject until he gets to the end.</p>
<p>Throughout the paragraph there must be some connection in regard
to the matter under consideration,—a sentence dependency. For
instance, in the same paragraph we must not speak of a house on
fire and a runaway horse unless there is some connection between
the two. We must not write consecutively:</p>
<p>"The fire raged with fierce intensity, consuming the greater
part of the large building in a short time." "The horse took fright
and wildly dashed down the street scattering pedestrians in all
directions." These two sentences have no connection and therefore
should occupy separate and distinct places. But when we
say—"The fire raged with fierce intensity consuming the
greater part of the large building in a short time and the horse
taking fright at the flames dashed wildly down the street
scattering pedestrians in all directions,"—there is a natural
sequence, viz., the horse taking fright as a consequence of the
flames and hence the two expressions are combined in one
paragraph.</p>
<p>As in the case of words in sentences, the most important places
in a paragraph are the beginning and the end. Accordingly the first
sentence and the last should by virtue of their structure and
nervous force, compel the reader's attention. It is usually
advisable to make the first sentence short; the last sentence may
be long or short, but in either case should be forcible. The object
of the first sentence is to state a point <i>clearly</i>; the last
sentence should <i>enforce</i> it.</p>
<p>It is a custom of good writers to make the conclusion of the
paragraph a restatement or counterpart or application of the
opening.</p>
<p>In most cases a paragraph may be regarded as the elaboration of
the principal sentence. The leading thought or idea can be taken as
a nucleus and around it constructed the different parts of the
paragraph. Anyone can make a context for every simple sentence by
asking himself questions in reference to the sentence.
Thus—"The foreman gave the order"— suggests at once
several questions; "What was the order?" "to whom did he give it?"
"why did he give it?" "what was the result?" etc. These questions
when answered will depend upon the leading one and be an
elaboration of it into a complete paragraph.</p>
<p>If we examine any good paragraph we shall find it made up of a
number of items, each of which helps to illustrate, confirm or
enforce the general thought or purpose of the paragraph. Also the
transition from each item to the next is easy, natural and obvious;
the items seem to come of themselves. If, on the other hand, we
detect in a paragraph one or more items which have no direct
bearing, or if we are unable to proceed readily from item to item,
especially if we are obliged to rearrange the items before we can
perceive their full significance, then we are justified in
pronouncing the paragraph construction faulty.</p>
<p>No specific rules can be given as to the construction of
paragraphs. The best advice is,—Study closely the paragraph
structure of the best writers, for it is only through imitation,
conscious or unconscious of the best models, that one can master
the art.</p>
<p>The best paragraphist in the English language for the essay is
Macaulay, the best model to follow for the oratorical style is
Edmund Burke and for description and narration probably the
greatest master of paragraph is the American Goldsmith, Washington
Irving.</p>
<p>A paragraph is indicated in print by what is known as the
indentation of the line, that is, by commencing it a space from the
left margin.</p>
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