'^^J> m^ r Boett$W$ f two-Boon eotir$e f In grdmnan 4 Class„LiJ.57A Book._ i-L^__ Copyriglit)^^. COPYRIGHT DEPOSIT TEACHERS' MANUAL FOE HOENSHEL'S T\N^O-BOOK COURSE IN GRAMMAR By E. J. HOENSHEL, A.M., Late President of the Kansas Normal College, Fort Scott, Kansas. Crane & Company, Publishers ToPEKA, Kansas 1901 THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS, Two Copies Received JUN. 5 1901 Copyright entry CLASS CbxXc. N*. 973o COPY B. Copyrighted by Crane & Company, Topeka, Kansas 1901 PEEFAOE. My aim has been to make this book more than a key. I have not only analyzed or diagrammed the difficult sen- tences, explained the close constructions, and corrected the examples of false syntax, but I have inserted many hints for teachers. These hints are not collected in one place, but they are scattered here and there through the book, wherever they seem to be suggested by the topic under consideration. (3] ENGLISH IN COMMON SCHOOLS. Probably no subject of the school curriculum has re- ceived more attention during the past two decades than the study of English. It has been discussed in all its phases from the primary school to the senior year of the great university, but it still lacks much of being settled. Close observers are still complaining that the results obtained are not commensurate with the time devoted to the subject. The English used by the average college student 'is still held up for ridicule by the press and the platform. A short glance backwards may not be out of place. Twenty-five years ago but little instruction in English was given to pupils in the common schools until they had reached the age of twelve or fifteen, at which time they began the study of technical grammar. Pupils were ex- pected to commit all the definitions, rules, exceptions to the rules, and exceptions to the exceptions, but they w^ere expected to write nothing at all, or, at most, but very little. It was generally believed that a pupil would use correct English when he could correct the examples of ''false syn- tax,'' and could analyze and parse Pope's "Essay on Man,'' Milton's "Paradise Lost," or Pollok's "Course of Time." It is not necessary to say that this general belief did not prove true. The mental development and literary acumen to be derived from such a study of our language are valua- ble, but this course did not make good speakers and writers, (5) 6 TEACHERS MANUAL. because the pupils were not drilled in speaking and writing. As a natural consequence there came a reaction. The re- frain was heard all over the land, ^'The way to learn to write is to write." In a short time the country was literally flooded with a mass of silly stuff which was poured out under the name of '"language lessons.''- Children were to learn to use correct English clearly and forcibly by imitation. Grammars were thrown away. Analysis and parsing were things of the past. The terms noun, adjective, verb, etc., were obso- lete, and in their stead we had name-words, qual'dy-words, action-words, etc. The innovation was heralded as the dawning of a new era in methods of teaching. Good results were obtained in the primary grades, and it was afSrmed that this method would be followed by results equally good through all the grades, and even through the high school. But before many of these classes had entered the high school, and before any of them had graduated, it was discovered that their knowledge of English rested on a sandy foundation, or rather, on no foundation at all. There was neither mental development nor basic knowl- edge. The ]3upils could give no reason why one expres- sion is correct and another is incorrect. The old method was all theory and no practice. The new was all practice and no theory. Again there came a reaction. Gradually technical gram- mars, many of them no improvement on the old, were put back into the upper grades of the schools, but as a rule language lessons kept their place in the lower grades, and are still to be found there. This method is better than either of the two former ones, but the mistake of keeping ENGLISH IN COMMON SCHOOLS. " « tlieorj and practice separate is still made. In some grades it is all imitation and practice, and in other grades it is all definitions and theory. A few teachers are still to be found who claim that tech- nical grammar has no place in the common schools. They say that an accurate knowledge of the use and construction of words and sentences does not aid us in using correct English, and that we learn to use English by- imitation. The present author dissents from this view. He believes that the ability to use correct language can not be obtained without a knowledge of technical grammar. It should be granted, however, that correct English is not always elegant English. The author believes that all children of ordinary ability can learn to use correct language, but the ability to use elegant English belongs only to the few. The latter seems to be a gift akin to that of being able to write poetry. The writer believes there is a place in our schools for language lessons, but he also believes that there is a place — an important place — for "old-fashioned technical gram- mar," and that these two methods should not be separated. The only method that rests on a sound pedagogical basis is that theory and practice should go hand in hand through the entire school curriculum. The work should begin with language lessons, but technical terms and definitions should be introduced very early. A child can use and comprehend the term noun as easily as he can the term name-word. Practice work should be connected with the introduction of each new subject and definition, and should be continued v/hile studying technical grammar, rhetoric, and literature. When this course is followed, and not till then, our pupils will form the habit of using good English in a clear and forcible manner. <5 TEACHERS MANUAL. Correct oral and written expression must be a habit,- or the pupil will always be hampered in the practice of com- position. The ability to write properly on a special occa- sion is one, thing, the habit of writing properly is another. There must be practice sufficient to form this habit, and it ought to be formed early. If in every lesson in which an- swers composed of complete sentences are desirable the teacher will require the answers in complete sentences, the habit will soon take care of itself. Habits in written work are acquired just as certainly as in oral work, but more slowly. Every statement written on slate or paper should be correct as to arrangement, spell- ing, capitals, and punctuation. All the pupil's written work should be examined by the teacher. A child never learns to make good sentences by using careless English which the teacher accepts without protest. In this way he not only fails to form good habits, but he succeeds in forming bad ones. A child whose work is seldom examined and never corrected will not form the habit of using good English. The mistake is often made of attempting connected dis- course too early. The sentence habit should be well estab- lished before much attention is paid to composition-writing. And when composition-writing is begun, the child should not work by himself at the first trial. The first few com- positions should be made class exercises, in which the teacher should guide the thought, leading the pupils to see first the main divisions of the subject, and then the subdi- visions. Each pupil should express himself on each topic of the outline, the teacher rejecting all ambiguous and inaccurate expressions, and writing on the board those ENGLISH IN COMMON SCHOOLS. if sentences excelling in conciseness, vividness, and beauty. After a lesson or two of this kind on any interesting sub- ject, tlie pnpils will write mncli better than if this prepara- tory work had not been done. Sometimes the mistake is made of having too much written work. There should be a minimum, but it should be chosen with a purpose. Too much writing will produce carelessness. The quality, not the quantity, should be the object of commendation. A good vocabulary and a thorough acquaintance with its use are essential to good conversation and writing, but they are not the only essentials. Clear expression is de- pendent on clear thinking. Words without ideas are dead. But the effort to express thought to others in a clear and forcible manner reacts upon thinking and makes it more discriminating. Careful composition increases the power of expression, incites the imagination to greater activity, and develops an appreciation of literature. Before good composition work, such as we should expect from pupils of the upper grades or of the high school, must come wide and intelligent reading. Generally, the well- read person is the good speaker and writer. He has some- thing to speak and write about. He has unconsciously added largely to his vocabulary, and has appropriated suit- able expressions for his thought. The study of English, then, should begin with sentence- making, oral and written ; and this should be continued until correct sentence-making is a habit. Then familiar subjects should be studied as a class exercise in which a clear and logical outline is made, and appropriate sen- tences given under each head. These sentences should 10 TEACHEES' MANUAL. then be arranged and combined by the pupils. After a few compositions have been prepared in this way, the pupils can make their own outlines. In all grades above the third or fourth, pupils should be encouraged to read ^od books, and to tell or write the main facts of what they have read. In the higher grades, a book can be taken as the subject for a more extended essay. In all this work the productions of the jDupils should be carefully examined and criticised by the teacher. Technical grammar should be introduced gradually early in the course, and should be continued at least until the pupil enters the high school. Here, the studj^ of rhetoric may take its place. If the teacher will conscientiously follow some such plan as here outlined, he will surely secure good results. Of course, not every one can command the rhythm of the great masters of human speech, but every one can make reasonably sure that he knows what he means, and that he has found the right word to express what he means. THIRD GRADE. Teacher, no matter in what grade you are teaching, I would urge you to study the work of all the grades of the two grammars, carefully reading the appropriate part of this Manual in connection with the study of each grade. LESSON I. After the pupils have written what is required in the first ten paragraphs, by proper questions you can lead them to discover the facts that are given in the two state- ments under paragraph 11. A fact discovered by the pupils themselves is worth much more to them than one learned from the text-book. LESSON n. Some teachers may think that a few paragraphs of this lesson are too difficult. I do not think so. Even if your third-grade pupils have never studied geography, you will find that many of them can answer paragraphs 1, 2, 6, and 7. But if they can not answer all of them, that is no reason for saying they are too difficult. Let them find out the answers. If pupils are required to write nothing except what is already well known, there will be but very little advancement in knowledge. (11) 12 teachers' manual. LESSON VII. Paeageaph 3. — IsTotice that there will be three state- ments here: one about a tree^ one about a hoohj and one about hoys. Paeageaph 4. — Five statements are required here. Paeageaph 6. — This paragraph means the same as if it were written — 1. Use the word I and make a statement telling three things jou saw on jour way to school. 2. Use the word / and make a statement telling two things JOU like to do. See that the pupils begin each statement with a capital and close with a period. LESSON VIIL In this lesson, and in all other lessons, have the pupils make the best sentences possible. If a pupil should write for paragraph 1, " The boj is large," it would be correct, but not more than one such sentence should be accej^ted in one recitation. Have variety in words and varietj in sentences. Let some words be verj familiar to the pupils and some not so familiar. Let some sentences be short and some long. LESSON IX. In writing the statements for this lesson, it is not difS- oult to have varietj. Encourage the pupils in their efforts to select subjects different from those selected bj the other members of the class. Trj to avoid sameness in all writ- ten work done bj the pupils. When the sentences are read in the class, there will doubtless be some discussion in regard to the truth of some THIED GRADE, 13 of tliejn. For example, for the third sentence some one might write, "A squirrel eats nuts," but probably not all the members of the class would agree that squirrels burrow in the ground. LESSOI^ XL Lead the pupils to see that in the fourth sentence the statement is made about only one animal, either the dog or the cat. LESSOIT XIL In changing the verbs as required, it will be noticed that the nouns must be changed also. This will prove a profitable exercise. LESSOIT XIV. Paragraph 1. — Have the pupils notice carefully the dif- ference in meaning between sentences five and six. lesso:n XV. Paragraph 4. — Three statements are required for each partial sentence given, but the three should be unlike ex- cept in the part given in the book. "A tall tree is in the forest." "A tall tree was blown down by the storm." "A tall tree has been cut on the top of the hill." LESSON XVIIL Before beginning this lesson, pupils ought to know the meaning of vegetahle^ fruit, insect, mineral, and all other words new to them. If you have a "miscellaneous," or "general information" period on your programme, that may be a good time to do some of this preparatory work. Suppose that during the general information period on Tuesday the pupils should 14 TEACHEES' MANUAL. have learned the meaning of the word vegetable^ and then on Wednesday they should find the word in this language lesson, do j^ou not think they would greet it as an old friend ? This would be one kind of practical correlation. LESSOR XIX. The pupils should know the meaning of each of these homonyms before they try to use them in sentences. LESSON XXL Before having the pupils write this essay, the statements should be developed by conversation about dogs. It will not be difficult to find material sufficient for a good essay. In combining the statements, the order of the outline in the book should be followed. Very likely some true statement will be given that does not belong to any subdivision of the given outline. In that case, a new subdivision should be added. The suggestions just given should be followed in all the essay-writing done by pupils while studying Grades Three and Four. As stated in the note to teachers, on page 27 of the Elementary Grammar, I think that pupils should spend three days each week on the language work given in the book, and two days on connected discourse, or composition- writing. I have not given many of the topics for composi- tion work, because no list of topics will suit all teachers. The topics suitable for one school are not suitable for another. Pupils of one locality have definite knowledge of many things that are a sealed book to pupils of other locali- ties. Besides, most principals and superintendents of THIRD GRADE. 15 graded schools have definite plans of their own in regard to the composition work of children. Some of them say that the basis for such work should be nature study, others would use current events, and still others would use lit- erary selections. I do not think that the selection of the topics is the important part. , The essential thing is that pupils write connected discourse, that they always do their best, and that they have sufficient practice to form the habit of cor- rect, concise, and clear writing. I would suggest that you select topics familiar to your pupils, and that you do not confine yourselves to any one class of subjects. A few topics and outlines will be found in this book at the end of each Grade. (Kead "English in Common Schools," in the front of this book. Also, the preface and note to teachers found in the Elementary Grammar.) LESSOI^ XXIL Paragraph 2. — To learn to use these words correctly will require much drill. Do not be discouraged if some of the class are slow in learning the use of too. Some pupils of the higher grades have not yet learned it. LESSOR XXVI. Paragraph 1. — In the second and fourth sentences, some authors would omit the comma after the words Mary and coiifi. Both methods have the sanction of good author- ity, but I believe the majority of modern authors follow the punctuation given in the book. 16 TEACHEES' MANUAL, LESSON XXVII. The sentences written hj the pupils in this lesson will show much variety, but that is what we want. Thej will select the words they understand, and these are just the words they should know how to spell. Watch the spelling carefully. LESSON XXVIIL In writing this essay (and all others) try to have at least two or three sentences for each heading in the outline, and then have the sentences under each heading form a para- graph. Teach the jDupils to indent the first line of each para- graph. LESSON XXIX. In paragraphs 3 and 4 do not use the same verb or noun twice. Also, in paragraphs 1 and 2 of the next lesson do not use any verb or noun twice. LESSON XXXL Paragraph 5. — Here we have incorrect forms placed before the children. I am aware that many teachers think that such forms should not be placed before children in school, but I am also aware that some of the strongest thinkers in the country take the position that a judicious use of "false syntax" is all right and very profitable, even in the lower grades. It is undoubtedly true that every time an incorrect form is seen by the child it makes an impression — an image — on his mind, and that the oftener he sees the iorm, THIRD GEADE. 17 the greater will be the tendency to reproduce it. There- fore, if the child never heard or saw incorrect forms out- side of the school-room, he should not meet them in the school-room. But he will meet these forms on every hand. He will not only hear them, but he will read them. Many newspapers are full of flagrant violations of the rules of syntax. The pupil should sometime learn to distinguish between tiie correct and the incorrect. My opinion is that incorrect forms should be used very sparingly (if at all) in the lower grades, but that their use in the upper grades is all right. Besides this lesson, lesson 33 of this grade, and one lesson in Grade Six, no incorrect forms (except sentences for punctuation) are used in these grammars until we reach Grade Seven. LESSON XXXV. The definitions given here for the different kinds of sentences are not logical, but they are easily understood because they are closely related to the pupil's previous knowledge. The logical definitions will be found in Grade Four. LESSON XLIL Doubtless the pupils will have some difiiculty in select- ing twenty-eight different nouns, but let them think. In all the lessons, the aim was to select exercises that require more than "finger work." Thinking and doing should go hand in hand. If you follow the exercises and the sugges- tions given, your pupils will not form the habit of using a few pet words on every occasion. TEACHERS MANUAL. LESSON XLIIL This is a valuable lesson. It may seem an easy matter to use eight diiJerent adjectives, as required in paragraph 2, or twelve different adjectives, as required in paragraph 4:, but for those who have had no drill in such work it is not so easy_ as it seems. Even some eighth-grade pupils, without previous drill, would have trouble with paragraph 4. However, it does not follow that these exercises are too difficult for this grade. They are just what pupils need to increase their vocabulary. Watch the punctuation. The important principles of punctuation are so easily learned that there is no excuse for the poor punctuation now found in the work of many teachers and pupils. ■ lesso:n xlviii. This is a profitable exercise. In class work, particularly in graded schools, it is very difficult to adapt the teaching and the exercises to the individual needs and capacities of the pupils. In this lesson each pupil will find a place for the play of his imagination. The blanks can be filled with few words or many. A few similar exercises are found elsewhere in the book, but the number can be in- creased with profit. The teacher can easily select some good stories and write them on the board, leaving blanks at suitable places. * LESSON XLIX. Paeageaph 1. — Use twelve different nouns in this paragraph. Paeageaph 2. — Use twelve different nouns in this THIED GEADE, 19 paragraph, and, if possible, use no noun that was used in paragraph 1. Paeagkaph 3. — Try to use twenty-four different adjec- tives in this paragraph. LESSON LIL Very likely the word heiiig, as used in the definition of a verb, will not be understood by the pupils. Teacher, try to think just what j'ou understand the word to mean when you first learned this definition. Did you have a clear idea of its meaning ? To say that it means existence does not helj) the matter. To say that it means life is not correct, but it would give an idea of the meaning. LESSO]^ LV. Explain the meaning of the word modify, as used in grammar. LESSON LVL These two paragraphs are worthy of careful study and practice. The pupils should always write the best sen- tences they can. LESSON LVIL Notice the definition for a phrase. Many have the idea that a phrase is a preposition with its object. This idea is not broad enough. A preposition with its object is a phrase, but there are other phrases. In the examples given under paragraph 2, numbers 1, 2, 5, 6, and 8 are phrases. LESSON LIX. The modifiers might be added gradually ; that is, the sentences might be written first with two modifiers, then with three, then with four, and so on. 20 teachers' manual. LESSON LXVL Do not omit this lesson. Its naain object is to increase the pupil's vocabulary. LESSON LXVIL In the sixth sentence under paragraph 1 have your pu- pils decide, before filling the blank, whether one thing or more than one thing are on the desk. As there are both a pen and a pencil, the verb should be plural. TOPICS AND OUTLINES FOR COMPOSITION WORK. To THE Teacher: These topics may be used during the work of this grade at the discretion of the teacher. The outlines are not intended to be complete, and the pupils will, in some cases at least, think of additional sub- heads. SPKING. 1. Months. 2. Weather. 3. Changes to be seen. 4. Flowers, grass, leaves, etc. 5. What people do in spring. a. The farmer, b. Boys and girls. FKOST. 1. When. 2. Appearance. a. On windows. h. When sun shines on it. 3. What frost does (flowers, plants). 4. How frost pleases you. ITLOWEES. 1. When. 2. Where. 3. Colors. 4. Fragrance. 5. Use. 6. Your choice. THIRD GRADE. 21 1. Winter months. 3. What people do. 4. Sports. WINTER. 2. Weather (snow, ice). a. Skating. 6. Coasting. c. Sleighing. d. Snowball battles. TREES. 1. Where found. 2. Size. 3. Kinds. a. Forest trees. h. Fruit trees. c. Evergreens. 4. Parts. a. Root. h. Trunk. c. Branches. d. Leaves. e. Bark. 5. Uses. SNOW. 1. When. 2. Where most of it is, 3. Where none is. 4. Uses. 5. How yon enjoy it. A HOT DAY. 1, When. 2. City or country. 3. Clear or cloudy. 4. Mud or dust. . 5. What animals do. 6. What people do. LEAVES. 1. When. 2. Wliere. 3. Size. 4. Shape. 5. Color. a. Spring and summer. h. Fall. 6. Use. 22 TEACHEKS' MANUAL. A COLD DAT. 1. When. 2. City or country. 3. Clear or cloudy. 4. Mud, dust, or snow. 5. What people do. 6. What you enjoy on a cold day. THE MERCHANT. 1. Where he lives. 2. What he does. 3. Are merchants needed ? 4. Do you want to be a merchant ? Why ? HOKSES. 1. Size. 2. Color. 3. Kinds. 4. Use. 5. How they defend themselves. 6. How they should be treated. THE FARMER. 1. Where he lives. 2. What he does. 3. AVliat animals he keeps. 4. Could we live without farmers? 5. Do you want to be a farmer ? Why ? THANKSGIVING DAY. 1. When. 2. Weather. 3. Church. 4. Meeting of friends. 5. Things to eat. 6. How you enjoy it. A CHURCH. (Describe a particular church.) 1. Size. 2. Material. 3. Appearance of inside. 4. Use. THIED GRADE. GARDENS. 1. Where. 2. Kinds. . 3. Use. 4. Size. 5. Wlien seeds are sown. 6. Care of garden. 7. What is done with the prodncts. SKATING. 1. When. 2. Wliere. 3. Describe skates. 4. Dangers. 5. Pleasures. ' 6. Your first attempt. 23 FOURTH GRADE. LESSOR I. In this lesson we have logical definitions for the differ- ent kinds of sentences. The exclamatory sentence is not given, becanse it is too difficult for this place. Frequently the only difference between an exclamatory sentence and either a declarative or an interrogative is a change in the manner of expression, and this change controls the j)nnc- tnation. The definition for an exclamatory sentence will be found in Geade Six. LESSONS II a:nd iil Do not use any subject or predicate twice, if you can avoid it. LESSOIT IV. Here we have the first exercise with diagrams. Have pupils analyze before diagramming. Remember that dia- gramming is only a means, not the end. The object is to be able to analyze the sentence, to see the office of each word in the sentence, and diagramming is a valuable aid in this work but is not a substitute for it. Pupils should not ask, " Where shall I put this word ? " but rather, " What is the ofiice of this word in the sentence ? " Because so many teachers and some authors seem to (24) rOUETH GRADE. 25 unduly emphasize the importance of diagrams, many thoughtful teachers have gone to the other extreme and do not use diagrams at all. This is also a mistake. Dia- grams not only are a representation of ideas previously formed in the mind of the pupil, but they also aid in forming those ideas. They have their place in grammar as well as in geometry. LESSOl^ IX. In the diagram the object is placed below the subject and predicate because it is not so essential to the sentence as they are. A sentence always has a subject and a predi- cate, but there 'are many sentences without an object. Besides, many authors consider the object a modifier of the predicate. LESSON XXIX. Many object to this definition for a transitive verb be- cause they think it does not recognize a passive verb as transitive. This is the reason, they say, why so many pupils — and some teachers — will call a passive verb in- transitive. Let us examine this matter. In "Henry saw the parade," parade is clearly the direct object of saw, and every one will call the verb transitive. When we change to the passive form, we have "The parade was seen by Henry." In this sentence the action is still exerted by Henry as an agent, and i3arade still rexoresents the receiver of the act. Parade is now both the grammati- cal subject of the verb and the receiver of the action ex- pressed by the verb. The definition given for a transitive verb is all right because a transitive verb, even in the pas- sive voice, has a receiver of the act; but the receiver is 26 TEACHERS MANUAL, the grammatical subject (the word with which the verb agrees). Of course, this discussion should not be given to j)upils of this grade. LESSON XXXIV. The definitions given in this grade for a preposition, conjunction, and interjection are not logical but thej are plain. Logical definitions will be found in Grade Five. LESSON XLIL Paragraph 2. — In this paragraph and in paragraph 2 of the next lesson we have a new exercise. Ileretofore the pupil has been required to make diagrams to suit the sentences ; now he is required to make sentences to suit the diagrams. This work will be found valuable, and it may be extended at the discretion of the teacher. LESSON XLIX. Authors ' usually give several different forms for be- ginning and closing a letter, but I have given only one. It is better for pupils of this grade to be able to write a letter correctly according to one form than to have some idea of several different forms but be unable to use any one correctly. Notice the punctuation of the address on the envelope. Some authorities are advocating the omission of punctua- tion marks from the address because they think it is a waste of time to insert them. The time may come when such omission will be considered the better form, but I do not think that time lias yet arrived. Have the pupils write more letters than are given in the FOURTH GRADE. 27 book. Some of the letters might be written to or from a place attracting mnch attention at the time. LESSOR LIII. Paragraph 1. — Notice that in the sixth sentence the quotation marks should be placed after the interrogation point. The question is the quotation. LESSO]^ LVII. Paragraph 1. 1. The pupil speaks well. He speaks a piece of poetry, 2. The bell rings. The teacher rings the bell. 3. The bird sings well. The lady sings a song. 4. Fire burns. It burns wood and coal. 5. The pupils study. They study arithmetic. 6. Some boys write neatly. They write beautiful letters. 7. The car stops here. The conductor stops it. 8. The wheel turns round. The boy turns the grind- stone. TOPICS AND OUTLINES FOR COMPOSITION WORK. ( To be used at the discretion of the teacher.) HOUSES. 1. What are they ? 2. Kinds (size, quality, etc.). 3. Materials used. 4. Who build them (carpenters, masons, etc.). 5. Could we get along without them ? OUR SCHOOL. 1. Wliere. 2. Describe the house. 3. Describe the room. 4. The teacher. 2S TEACHEES' MANUAL. 5. The pupils. «. Boys. h. Girls. 6. Studies, etc. BIRDS, 1. Appearance. 2. Movements (quick). 3. Most common kinds. 4. Some noted for beauty. 5. Some noted for singing. 6. Some noted for other things (parrot). 7. Their use. 8. Their enemies (cats). 9. Should we kill them ? A FARM. 1. Where. 2. Fields. 3. Fences. 4. Buildings. 5. Animals.' 6. Products. 7. Pleasures of life on a farm. 8. Unpleasant things of life on a farm. A RAINY DAY. 1. Appearance, of clouds. 2. How the roads and fields look, 3. Use of rain. 4. What you do on a rainy day. 5. How you like rainy days. RAILROADS. 1. The track. «• Cuts. h. Fills. c. Trestles. d. Bridges. e. Culverts. /. Ties, g. Eails. FOURTH -GKADE. 2. The engine. 3. The trains.. •a. Passenger. h. Freight. 4. Uses. 5. How we could get along without railroads. AUTUMN. 1. Months. 2. Weather. 3. Color of leaves. 4. Gathering fruit. 5. Preparation for winter. a. Men. h. Squirrels, birds, etc. SUMMER. 1. Months. 2. Weather. 3. Birds. 4. Trees. 5. Labors. 6. Sports. 1. Do you like summer ? Why ? ORCHARDS. 1. Where. 2. Kinds. 3. AjDpearance of trees. a. Spring. h. Summer. c. Fall. d. Winter. 4. Birds. 5. Bees. 6. Work to be done in orchards. MANNERS. 1. What are good manners. 2. What are bad manners. 3. Do good manners pay ? HONEY. 1. Wliere obtained. 2. Wlien. 3. What collects it. 4. Use. 29 30 ' teachers' manual. STORES. 1. What they are. 2. Where generally found. 3. What is kept in them. 4. Classes of people working in them. 5. Benefit of them. A BLACKSMITH SHOP. 1. What. . 2. Contents. 3. What is clone in it. 4. Who works in it. 5. Describe the workman. To THE Teacher: Read Longfellow's ''Village Black- smith" to the pupils before they write this essay. Whenever possible, read some appropriate selection to the pupils before they write the other essays. This will not only help them in their essay-writing, but it will also create a love for good books. ■ COASTING, 1. What it is. 2. Where. 3. When. 4. Vehicles used, 5. Pleasures. 6. Dangers, 7. (Pupils select heading.) BOOKS. 1. What they are 2. Material 3. Kinds (story, school, etc.). 4. The one I like best. Why? CHRISTMAS. 1. When, 2. Weather. 3. Pleasures (trees, gifts, etc.). FOURTH GEADE. 31 4. Say something about tlie day in some other country. 5. Why we keep Christmas. The following additional topics may be used : flour mills, saw mills, ships, steamboats. FIFTH GEADE. LESS0N I. Some authors do not give a common gender, and some do not give a neuter, but the classification given in the book is the one in general use. LESSOIST VII. 2. Henry, you are late. 3. Laura, when did you come ? 4. I, Kose Blackford, am in the Fifth Grade. 6. Ladies, please be seated. 7. I, the hoy you want, am ready to go. Although the pujiils know nothing about nominative by direct address or nominative by apposition, they will understand that these sentences fill the requirements. LESSOii IX. Drill on forming the plural of words ending in y. Have the jJ^-^pils remember that the apostrophe is not used in forming the plural. You will often find such expressions as ^'The boy's are playing ball." LESSOIT X. Paeageapii 6. — Pay particular attention to this exer- cise. Many persons will say "these kind of people," "those (32) FIFTH GKADE. 33 variety of peaches," etc., making the plurals, tliese and tJiose, modify the singulars, kind and variety. Guard against this very common error. LESSO]^ XIV. Paragraph 4. — In sentence 6, Father is in the nomi- native in predicate after the passive verb has been called. Passive verbs are often used copulatively. Pupils of this grade do not know this, but they will easily see that Father means the same person as the subject, Washington. LESSON XVI. I^otice that the predicate nominative is separated from the verb by the sign of equality. Milton was a poet — he equaled a poet. The subject and the predicate nominative always represent the same person or thing and always agree in case. If the sentence were "Milton was blind," Ijlind would be separated from the verb by a dash. I believe this is the only system of diagrams that distinguishes between the adjective in predicate and the predicate nom- inative. LESSOX XVII. Paragraph 3 should be developed from an examination of the sentences in j)aragraph 2. Some old authors say that singulars ending in s add the apostrophe only, but this is not in accordance with the best modern usage. Modern writers say, "John Adams's administration," but some earlier writers would have said, "John Adams' administration." 34 teachers' manual. LESSOR XVIII. In sentence 14, Scandinavians is in the nominative case, meaning the same persons as people. LESSON XXV. Before attempting- to write this essaj, pupils should have a clear outline in mind, and then should treat the subject in the order given in the book; that is, classifica- tion should be given before properties, and each property should be named and defined before its subdivisions are given. LESSON XXVI. Paeagkaph 3. — Xotice that the definition is not "one that stands for persons." It is a personal pronoun, but it seldom represents persons. Who , nearly always repre- sents persons, but it is not a personal pronoun. The word personal in the term personal pronoun has reference to the grammatical person, and not to person as distinguished from animals and things. Paeagkaph 6. — The forms mine, thine, hers, ours, yours, and theirs, are called possessive pronouns by some authors. This is explained in Geade Eight. LESSON XXVIL Pakageaph 5. — Which is generally called an interroga- tive pronoun, although (when used in asking a question) it can always be treated as an adjective modifying a noun understood. LESSON XXVIII. Adjective pronouns are sometimes called pronominal adjectives. FIFTPI GRADE. LESSOlvT XXIX. 35 Parageapii 2. — See that your pupils do not get tlie idea that j^i'onouns agree with their antecedents in case. LESSOX XXX. Pakageaph 2. — Before filling the blanks in the last four sentences, notice the verb that follows wJio. The ninth sentence will require he or she; the tenth, lue, you, or they; the eleventh, /; the twelfth (first blank), we, you, they. LESSOK XXXIII. Paeagkaph 3. — -.Don't should be used only when the uncontracted form is do not. The subject of don't should always be in the first, singular, or in the plural. "He don't," "she don't," "it don't," and "Mary don't" are all incorrect. LESSOX XXXVIII. Paeageaph 4. — This rule is true, even with such words as loise^ We drop the final silent e in accordance with a rule of spelling, and then add er or est. LESSOX XXXIX. Paragraphs 6, 8, and 11 should each be developed from the one just preceding. LESSOX XLVIL Paeageaph 4. — Teachers will readily see that a formal definition of the participle can not well be given at this time, but the idea of the participle must be developed 36 teachers' manual. before the definitions for regular and irregular verbs can be given. Paeagkaph 8. — Notice this definition carefully. A regular verb is usually defined as ''one that forms its past tense and past participle by adding d or ed to the present." This is not true, because hear adds d and is always classed as irregular. Some think that in liope, for instance, we add only d, but w^e have seen that the silent e is dropped in accordance with a rule of spelling, and ed is added. LESSON^ L. Pakagkaph 2. — This is not a definition for voice, but it will give pupils an idea of the difterence between the active and the passive. LESSON LI. Paragraph 5. — The third sentence, like one or tw^o others from "Gray's Elegy," can be read in two ways. Either air or stillness can be made the subject and the other can be made the object. I think air is the subject, but some take the other view. LESSON LVIL In the first sentence, the phrase in the world modifies the adverb somewhere. LESSON LVIX. Paragraph 2. — Many pupils do not get any idea of the meaning of the word relation in this definition. Give FIFTH GRADE. 37 them some such list as "He threw the ball into the house ; over the house; from the house; behind the house/' etc., and lead them to see that a change of the preposition changes the relation of the ball to the throwing. EVENING IN THE COUNTRY. 1. The setting sun behind the hills. 2. The color of clouds. 3. Chickens. 4. Cows coming home (tinkling of cow-bells). 5. All quiet early. EVENING IN THE CITY. 1. The sun setting behind hills and buildings. 2. Color of clouds. 3. Street lights. 4. Police. 5. Theaters, etc. 6. Koisj till late. COAL. 1. What it is. 2. Where found. 3. How obtained. 4. Appearance of miners 5. Uses. A TIDY ROOM. Describe a room as it would look if it belonged to a neat and careful boy or girl. AN UNTIDY ROOM. Describe a room that belongs to a careless boy or girl. NEXT SATURDAY. Tell what you intend to do next Saturday. A JOURNEY. Tell about a trip or journey you once made. 1. Preparation. 2. Departure. 3. Mode of travel. 5 TEACHERS MANUAL, 4. Sights and incidents on the way. 5. The arrival. _ 6. The return. 7. How you like traveling. EIVEES. 1. Wliat they are. 2. How formed. 3. Size. , 4. Uses. 5. What lives in them. 6, How are they crossed (give several methods). MOUNTAINS. 1. What they are. 2. Height. 3. What is on the high tops. 4. Wliat grows on the sides. 5. View from the top. 6. (Make a heading of your own.) COTTON. 1. What it is. 2. Where it grows. 3. Appearance of a cotton-field. 4. Uses of cotton, 5. ISTame different things done to it before we use it. A SNOW-STORM. ( Describe one you saw.) 1. Time of day. 2. Where you were. 3. Appearance while coming up. 4. Appearance during the storm. 5. How long it lasted. 6. Results, or effects, a. Good. h. Bad. A WATCH. 1. What it is. 2. Material. 3. Parts, and use of each. 4. Use of watches. 5. Where made. FIFTH GRADE. 39 A BIKD S NEST. 1. What it is. 2. Where (different places). 3. Appearance. a. Outside. &. Inside. 4. Material. 5. When built 6. Contents. MY SCHOOL DAYS. 1. When you began, and how long you have been going. 2. Your different schools. 3. Your different teachers. 4. Your different studies. 5. Wliieli study you like best. 6. Tell some incident of your school life. THE FOURTH OF JULY. (Let pupils furnish their own outline.) The following (or other) topics may be used, the pupils furnishing their own outlines when possible: gold, silver, copper, iron, the ocean, a desert. Many of the subjects used in the previous grades may be used in this grade. The outlines should have more sub- heads and the essays should be better and longer, than in the previous grades. SIXTH GRADE. To THE Teacher: In tliis grade many of the compo- sition subjects may be taken from the other studies of the class. Descriptive topics from geography, biographical sketches of historical characters, written reviews from arithmetic and other studies can be used with excellent results. LESSOl^ VIII. The only difficulty pupils will have in this lesson will be to comprehend the idea of an abstract noun. Com- pare such nouns as t)'ee, height; snoio, ivhiteness; horse, strength; elephant^ size. LESSO]Sr IX. Paragraph 2. — 1, swarm; 2, company; 3, crew; 4 herd ; 5, school ; 6, pack ; 7, flock ; 8, gang or pack. These are all collective nouns. LEsso:Kr XIV. Paragraph 2.-^A noun is not often found in the first person, and when it is, it is used in connection with a pronoun that represents the speaker. Paragraph 6. 3. I, William McKinley, do issue this jDroclamation. (40) SIXTH CtEADE. 41 LESSOIsT XV. Paeagkaph 1. 2. Joseph, jou ought to be more careful. 3. Harriet, jou should not neglect jour lessons. 4. I, Paul, am an apostle. Paeageaph 2. 1. Lizzie, the teacher commends you. 3. The speaker addressed me, the boy who won the prize. LESSOl^ XIX. Do not leave this subject until the pupils are proficient in writing the plurals of all classes of nouns 'given in this grade. LESSOX XXIII. Paeageaph 5. — Continue this exercise until the pupils have no trouble in writing either the possessive singular or the possessive plural. In writing the possessive plural, teach the pupils to form the plural first, then to examine it carefully before deciding whether to add the apostrophe and s or the apostrophe only. LESSOX XXIV. Although some reformers ( ? ) ridicule parsing, calling it "obsolete," "old-fashioned," etc., don't be afraid to use it. Carefully done, it is a very profitable exercise. Use both oral and written parsing. In oral parsing, usually have individual work, but for a change, you will find concert parsing quite profitable. 42 teachers' MANTJAl,. LESSON XXX. Paeageaph 4. — See that the pupils do not get the idea that a personal jDi'onoun is one that stands for persons. LESSOI^ XXXI. Paeageaph 2. — When which is nsed in asking a ques- tion, it can always be considered an adjective modifying a nonn understood, but most authors call it an interrogative pronoun. Which should not be called a pronoun in such sentences as "'Which book did you select ?" LESSOX XXXII. Paeageaph 6. — Xotice that whose is the possessive of both who and ivhich. In order to find whose in "The horse whose rider had been killed rushed into the ranks of the enemy," you should decline which, not who. Who is not used to represent horses. LESSOX XXXIV. Paeageaph 3. 8. Whom did he meet ? Whom is the object of did meet. 9. Have you deserted my friend and me ? 10. Whom did you lend my knife to ? Object of to. LESSOX XXXIX. Paeageaph 5. — In accordance with a rule of spelling, final e is dropped before er or est is added. LESSOX XL. Paeageaph 5. — While it is correct to say that such adjectives, from their meaning, cannot be compared, good SIXTH GEADE. 43 iisage seems to permit the comparison of some of them. Such expressions as " This ball is rounder than that one," and " Your house is whiter than mine," are now used by good writers. Every one knows the meaning is that neither ball is round and that neither house is white. The form, " This ball is more nearly round than that one," is more cumbersome and no clearer. LESSOIT XLIV. Paragraphs 4 and 6. — These subjects are discussed on page 35 of this Manual. Paragraph 9. — See page 25 of this Manual. LESSOl^ XLVL Have the definitions in paragraphs 2, 3, and 4 committed just as given. The reason will be found in Grade Eight. Paragraph 5. — The verbs in the second, fourth, fifth, seventh, ninth, twelfth, and thirteenth are passive. LESSOR XLVIII. Paragraph 2. — Have this definition committed just as given. The reason will be found later. Paragraph 6. — Notice carefully the sign words of the potential mode. Commit them in the order given. LESSON XLIX. Paragraph 3. — In the twelfth sentence had known is in the indicative mode. Xo subjunctives will be found in Grade Six. 44 teachers' manual. LESSOI^ L. Paeageaph 1. — The verbs in the fourth, seventh, and tenth sentences are in the passive voice. A verb in the passive voice is always transitive. LESSOI^ LI. Paeageaph 1. — Have this definition committed just as given. Paeageaph 9. — ^Drill on these verbs and others that may be selected until the pupils can name the tenses of the indicative mode without hesitation. They will have no serious trouble in doiitg this if they carefully study the definitions for the tenses, and the sign words given after some of them. In the indicative mode, tense means time. Of the verbs given in this paragraph, those derived from tear are passive. LESSON LIL Paeageaph 1. — Since in the potential mode tense does not always mean time, the best way for pupils to learn to distinguish the different tenses is to commit the sign words given in the introduction to this lesson. Drill on these- verbs and other verbs of the ]3otential mode until your pupils can readily distinguish the tenses. LESSON LIIL Paeageaph 9. — The first verb in sentence 1, and the verbs in sentences 3, 4, 6, and 7, are transitive because they are in the passive voice. The grammatical subject is the object that receives the action exj)ressed by the verb. SIXTH GEADE. 45 LESSON LIV. See that your pupils do not call to and its noun object an infinitive. Some advanced pupils have been known to call to school an infinitive. LESSON LV. The verbs in sentences 1, 4, 6, and 7 are transitive, passive. LESSON LX Paeagkaph 2. — Well and early, 1. Lie is well. 2. The orator spoke well. 3. The early train was late. 4. The farmer rises early. LESSON LXL Paeageaph 1, — See page 36 of this Manual. LESSON LXIL Paeageaph 3. — When there introduces a sentence, the subject follows the verb. This causes many to think that the)-e is the subject. Paeageaph 7. — There were once several persons living there, but I have forgotten their names. Paeageaph 8. — These blanks will be filled easily if the word there is omitted and the subject placed before the predicate; as, "Flowers are in the garden." "An apple and a peach are in the basket." 46 teachees' manual. Additional Sentences fok Diageamming oe Passing. If more sentences are desired, they can be selected from the reading or other lessons of the pupils. 1. The people of England speak the English language. 2. Come to the violet's shady nook. 3. The guest was admitted into the parlor. 4. Eainy weather and muddy roads prevented further progress. 5. The warm sun will soon melt the ice and snow. 6. The messenger might have come sooner. Y. We should seek the truth. 8. I may have seen him once before. 9. ISTumbers are expressed by ten Arabic characters. 10. Sorrow can not continue always. (Although can not is now printed together, not should be considered an ad- verb in analysis and parsing.) 11. Many excellent opportunities were lost. 12. The prize was given to the smallest boy in the room. 13. The work should have been finished by the con- tractor before December. 14. Hard study will accomplish wonders. 15. Hoj^e lightens our heaviest burdens. 16. These books, Mary left at school. 17. Gladly the martyr laid down his life. 18. Education expands and elevates the mind. expands Education This diagram shows that mind is the object of both verbs. SIXTH GKAPE. 47 19. We shall never see his like again. (LiA;e is a nonn.) 20. Agriculture is the parent of all industries. 21. Fame is the fragrance of heroic deeds. 22. Victor Hugo was a French scholar, poet, and states- man. 23. Hard things become easy by use. 24. Home should be considered the center of joy. 25. Burns, the poet, was a Scotchman. 26. The crown was offered to Eichard, the king's brother. 27. David, the son of Jesse, slew Goliath, the Philistine. 28. Franklin, an American statesman, was born in Boston, a city of Massachusetts. 29. On the banks of the fairest stream in all the land of Thessaly, dwelt a golden-haired youth. 30. The fur of the ermine becomes white in winter. 31. A pebble was thrown into the brook by the boy. 32. The mountains repose mid the roar of the streams. 33. The sound shall run along the winding vales. TOPICS AND OUTLINES FOR COMPOSITION WORK. AN IMAGINAEY JOUENEY. 1. Preparation. 2. Departure. 3. Mode of travel. 4. Sights and incidents on the way. 5. The arrival. 6. The return. (In the above, describe some journey that you have never made, but one that you would like to make.) A PICNIC. 1. Preparation. 2. The day and the weather. 3. Start and journey. 4. Describe the place. 48 teachers' manual. 5. Pleasures, games, dinner, etc. 6. Going home. 7. Reflections, or after-thonghts. A BIOGKAPHY. . Write a biography of some one you know. A DESCRIPTION. Write a description of some member of your school, or of some well-known person. Do not mention the name, but make the descrij^tion so accurate that your classmates will have no trouble in naming the right person. Describe an evening in an old-fashioned house. Ask some old people to tell you about such houses. A LOOK INTO THE FUTUKE. Describe your school, or your vicinity, or this country, or the world, as you think it will appear in twenty-five years. As stated before, the other studies of the pupils will fur- nish excellent material for composition work. Whenever an entire topic in any study has bef^n finished, the pupils should j)resent a written review of it, using a logical out- line prepared by themselves or the teacher. Such work not only forms the best possible review, and enables the teacher to determine how much the j)upils know of the subjects, but it also furnishes practical drill in ooinj)osi- tion work. SEYEJSTTH GEADE. LESSOR I. Pakageaph 7. — JSTotice that a proposition may be either a sentence or a clause. ''Flowers bloom" is a proposition and a sentence. " Flowers bloom." " Spring comes." We now have two propositions, two sentences, but no clause. "Flowers bloom when spring comes." Now we have two propositions, two clauseSj but only one sentence — a com- plex sentence. Paeageaphs 9 AND 10. — Use both methods of naming clauses: principal and subordinate, independent and de- pendent. One method is as good as the other, and pupils should be familiar with both. LESSOIST II. Parageaph 2. — In addition to the statement in the note following this paragraph, it is also true that a relative pronoun is always in an adjective clause. This is true because the clause always modifies the antecedent of the relative, and the antecedent is always a noun or some- thing used as a noun. We might say that the antecedent is always a substantive. (A substantive is a noun, pro- noun, or any word, phrase, or clause used as a noun. ) I am aware that some claim that a relative sometimes introduces a clause coordinate with the one containing —4 (49) 50 teachers' manual. the antecedent, the two clauses thus forming a compound sentence. Surely if this is ever the case, the distinction is so fine and the examples are so rare that the statement should be omitted from the ordinary text-book. Paeagkaph 6. 4. That is the object of the verb sets. 5. That is the object of caught. 7. I declare him unto you, whom ye ignorantly worship. Whom is the object of worship, LESSON IV. Paragraph 2. — In the second and the third sentence the principal clauses are placed after the subordinate clauses, but in analj'zing they should be placed first. When the subordinate clause precedes the principal clause, the antecedent will be in the subordinate clause and the j)ro- noun will be in the principal clause. This is true because no one in speaking or writing will use a pronoun until after he has used the antecedent. The correct form of the second, for instance, in ana- lyzing or diagramming, is, " He gave me a book when my friend was here." This may seem awkward, but it is cor- rect. Because it is awkward, some prefer to say, " My friend gave me a book when he was here." This exchange of subjects should not be permitted. A dependent clause introduced by though or although is nearly always (probably always) a clause of concession. In such a clause something is said or granted that seems out of harmony with what is said in the principal clause. We should not expect a man to die poor who had discov- ered a new world. SEVENTH GRADE. 51 Clauses introduced hj if, wiless, except, etc., are gen- erally conditional clauses. LESSON V. Paragraph 2. I I am — solitary not read while nobody | IS' me. LESSO]^ VL Paragraph 2. 1. "That all men are created equal" is a noun clause, object of learn. Equal is an adjective in predicate with are created. 2. "That the ISTorthmen discovered America" is a noun clause, nominative in predicate with is. 3. "That Hannibal was a brave general" is a noun clause, subject of is disputed. 4. "A rolling stone gathers no moss" is a noun clause, object of says. 5. "That there is no resurrection" is a noun clause, object of believed. 6. "I am not guilty" is a noun clause, nominative in predicate with was. 52 TEACHEKS MANUAL. LESSOI^ VII. Do not supply it in snch sentences as the sixth. The noun clause is the subject. Q that friend I would write wish statement I was book. His 9. "Why I inverted the divisor" is the object of ashed. 10. "I found them here yesterday" is the object of said. 12. I I shall go maiden | said you I go. wherever LESSON X. Paeagraph 10. 1. Having been conquered is a participial, adjective phrase, modifying Napoleon: 2. Standing on the hill is a participial, adjective phrase, modifying stack. On the hill is a prepositional, adverb phrase, modifying standing. 3. To ash aid for the colonies is an infinitive, adverb phrase, modifying seiit. For the colonies may be con- sidered an adverb phrase, modifying ash^ or an adjective phrase, modifying aid. 4. To learn to sing is an infinitive, noun phrase, object of wished. To sing is an infinitive, noun phrase, object of to learn. SEVENTH GEADE. 53 6. Both infinitives are noun phrases, in the nominative case, one being the subject, the other, predicate nominative. 2. LESSOIT XL V to lose I I love myself minds. other pronoun is followed noun |a 1 sometimes it 1 refers. a' wh tlie irt- o ch We should endeavor ^ to secure friendship ng the ^ Bei • that who I holds. »' hands reins his the the Some would probably call endeavor a transitive verb and diagram to secure as its object, but as endeavor and strive will not take a noun or pronoun for their object, I prefer to call them intransitive when followed by an infini- tive. Besides, it is difficult to make these verbs passive. Attempt and try can be made passive, and will take a noun or pronoun for their object. Thej are transitive verbs. 54 TEACHEES MANUAL. 6. To go modifies anxious. Aiixious is an adjective, Y he I departed. We I know not when time arrived. The \expeeted | finally I long 10. he laid V^ Having read I away carefully letter the LESSOR XIL Paeageaph 5. — Some writers use mathematics as plural when it refers to the different branches of mathematics. I have seen sncli sentences as "' Politics are very corrupt," but I think politics is' always singular. Give your pupils plenty of drill in forming the plural of nouns of all classes. In forming the plural of nouns ending in y, remember that u after q is a consonant. The plural of collocjuy is coUocjuies, because u in this word is a consonant. ?7 is a consonant when it has the sound of iv, and it always has this sound after q, as in quite, acquit, ecjuip, etc. LESSON XIII. Paeageaph 3. — Some authors object to this rule, and prefer to parse these nouns as the object of a preposition understood. Quite frequently a preposition can easily be SEVEXTH GRADE. 55 supplied, but sometimes such insertion makes a very cum- bersome expression. If we supply a preposition in the first sentence under this paragraph we shall have something like this: "The mountain is high to the extent of tbree miles," a sentence not to be commended for its simplicity. If we supply, miles is the object of the compound preposi- tion, to tlie extent of. I much prefer the rule as stated in the book. In the third sentence, worth is an adjective. Paeagkaph 5. — This is an important statement, and a similar one is contained in nearly all of our English 2:rammar3 and in all classic grammars. Reed & Kellos'fir's grammar is the only one I think of now that makes no mention of the objective subject of the infinitive. Some good grammarians say that the subject of the infinitive is always in the objective case. In 'T want to go," they say that me or myself understood after ivant is the subject of to go. There are times when the subject of the infinitive is understood, but I do .not think it is omitted in such sen- tences as the one just given. The subject of the proposi- tion is also the subject of the infinitive. If we say that the subject of the infinitive is always in the objective case, we must call merchant in "I want to be a merchant" in the objective case to agree with the understood subject of to he. We should also be compelled to say " I want to be him," although our best authorities say "I want to be he." Paragraph 8. — A noun or pronoun following an in- transitive verb and meaning the same person or thing as the subject will be in the same case as the subject. (Para- 56 teachers' manual. graph 7, page 193, Advanced Grammar.) When the sub- ject is in the objective case, the attribute (predicate) noun or pronoun will be in the objective case. In "I want to be a merchant," mercliant is in the nominative case to agree with /; but in "I want Henry to be a merchant," mer- cliant is in the objective case to agree with Henry, the objective subject of to he. There will be no objective attribute unless the verb is intransitive, or transitive in the passive voice. LESSON XIV. Paeagkaph 2. 1. k"That to-daj shall never dawn again" is the object of thinh. 2. Week is in the objective case without a governing word." 4. We I walked miles hour. Miles and Jiour are both in the objective case without a governing word. 6. "His son to be a lawyer" is the object of desires. 8. He I asked dollar bushel o ■^ wheat. Dollar and bushel are in the objective without a govern- ing word. LESSO]^ XV. Carefully read paragraph 1 and the explanation un- der it. SEVENTH GRADE. 67 Paeageaph 4. — If the word store were omitted from the fourth sentence, usage would permit us to place the pos- sessive sign after either Johnson or hoohseller ; thus, '' I bought the book at Johnson's, the bookseller," or " I bought the book at Johnson, the bookseller's." The word store is understood, and can be supplied after either Johnson or bookseller ; this is why either word can take the sign. I think it better to consider sto7^e understood after the last word, and therefore I prefer placing the possessive sign after the last word. I have received a number of letters from teachers and others, claiming that the sixth sentence is incorrect. They think are should be changed to is. Let us see. The use of the two possessive signs indicates separate ownership, not joint ownership. Each one owns a house, and the complete sentence is, " Bowmian's house and Haddam's house are large." The verb has two subjects connected by and, and therefore it should be plural. Paeageaph 5. 1. Howard, the philanthropist's, life was spent in alle- viating the sufferings of others. Only one sign is used when two or more nouns are in apposition. In this sentence it would be better to say, "The life of Howard, the philanthropist," etc. 2. For the prisoner's sake, his brother. Brother is in apposition with prisoner. Can you make a better arrangement of this sentence ? 3. Correct. Can you improve it? 4. Only one sign, because it was a joint reign. 5. This was neither the teacher's nor the students' de- sire. Separate ownership. 68 TEACHEKS' MANUAL, 6. Whittier, the poet's, "Snow-Bound" is miicli admired. 7. The Queen of England's salary is large. (See para- graph 3.) 8. Correct, LESSO^T XVI. Paeageaph 4. 3. Mj friend George's house. 4. Alexander the Great's domain. 5. Mary, Queen of Scots', trial. 6. Mary and Martha's home. This would not be correct if they were living in different houses. 7. Mary's and Martha's home (not homes). This would not be correct if they had the same home. 8. Bryant's or Whittier's poems. 9. Root & Cady's pianos. 10. Steinway's and Chickering's pianos." LESSON XVII. Paeageaph 5. 2. "Honor thy parents" is a noun clause, objective in apposition with command. 3. " That Cromwell was a patriot " is a noun clause, nominative in apposition with it. Some prefer calling it in such cases merely an expletive, making the clause the subject, but I prefer calling it the subject. LESSON XVIIL To prepare a list of sentences in accordance with the requirements of paragraphs 1 and 2 would not aid the SEVENTH GEADE. 59 teacher mncli, because the chief difficulty will be in decid- ing whether the sentences written by the pupils are correct or not. For the second sentence of paragraph 2, many pupils will write a sentence having an adjective clause instead of a noun clause. Something similar to this will probably be giveji : "McKinley, who is now President of the United States, was formerly Governor of Ohio." Some pupils will have difficulty in seeing that the clause introduced by lulio is not an explanatory noun clause. Sometimes they will use a noun in apposition and w^ill think that the clause is in apposition; as, "McKinley, the man who is now President of the United States, was formerly Gov- ernor of Ohio." The clause introduced by who is still an «, adjective clause, but the word man is in ajDposition with McKinley. Be careful, for I have known many teachers to make this blunder. The same difficulty will be found in writing the fifth sentence. The following is correct : ''They discussed this question : "^Would the free coinage of silver be an advan- tage to the people of the United States V " LESSOI^ XX. Paeagraphs 1 AND -2. — The double relative and the comp.ound relatives have the same use — each is equivalent to a relative and its unexpressed antecedent. The only reason for classifying them separately is that the com- pound relatives are compound words and the double rela- tive is not. Paeagraph 7. — ISTotice that whose is the possessive of both ivho and ichich. 60 TEACHEES MANUAL. l^otice that ivhoever and whosoever are declined. (See paragraph 1, page 208, Advanced Grammar.) LESSOIT XXL Paeageaph 2. 2. Distance is the object of a preposition understood, or it can be used in the objective case without a governing word. 3. This sentence is more difficult than it seems at first glance. Do the phrases denote location or condition ? Are they adverbs ? I believe they are adjectives in the predi- cate. Both phrases modify the subject, expressing a condition or characteristic of the subject. LESSOIT XXIII. Paeageaph 4. — First, ivhom; second, tJiat; third, that; fourth, that; fifth, luhich; sixth, that. Paeageaph 5. 2. Her or him are in another sentence. "Did he tell her or him ?" 6. Whom is the object of ad7nit. The object of know is SEVENTH GRADE. 61 the clause "whom you admit to your friendship." Whom is not a relative pronoun, because it is not a connective and introduces a noun clause. It is an interrogative pro- noun in an indirect question. The word person understood may be considered the object of hnow. In this case, whom is a relative pronoun, because it introduces an adjective clause and is a con- nective. 9. It to he him is the object of thought. Him is an objective attribute agreeing with it, the objective subject of to he. LESSON XXIV. 1. The clause is the object of hnow. Whom is the object of sent, and is an interrogative pronoun in an indirect question. The direct question would be, "Whom did he send ?" 2. Who is the subject of went. "Who went" is the object of Jcnoiv. 4. You and me are objective subjects of to go. "You and me to go" is the object of wants. 7. He is the subject of another proposition. "He will go." 8. Him is the object of another verb. " He met him." 11. Who is nominative in predicate with luho. Men do say I am who. The object of do say is the noun clause, "I am who." 12. The object of do thinh is "they will elect whom." 13. Him is one of the objects of the preposition hetween. 14. "You mean whom" is the object of do hnow. 15. "Whom to trust" is the object of can tell. Whom is the object of to trust. 62 teachers' manual. 16. Mary and tne are objective subjects of the infinitive {to) sit. 17. Z7s is objective in apposition with girls. LESSON xxy. 1. This is a secret between him and me. Between is a preposition. 3. He knows who it was. Who is predicate-nominative after was. 4. Was it he (she) whom joii met? 6. My brother did fnlly as well as he (did). 8. They that seek shall find. ■ TJiey is the subject of shall find. 9. Is it he you wish to see ? The connective between the two clauses is an understood relative, the object of to see. 10. Whom do you take me to be ? Whom i& the objective attribute, agreeing with me. you do take \ ^to be = Whom 11. Mother went with sister and me. 12. We did not tell her whom the letter was from. Whom is an interrogative pronoun, the object of from. 13. Can you teach him and me to draw? Hi77i and me are objects of the preposition to under- stood. ^'Can you teach to him and me," etc. Some teach- ers will probably call him and me objective subjects of to draw, but the other method is better. Him and me repeated are the subjects of to draw. The full sentence SEVENTH GRADE. 63 is, '' Can jou teach (to) him and me (him and me) to draw ?" Take another sentence : "I told him to be qniet." The complete sentence is, " I told (to) him (him) to be quiet." Him to be quiet is the object of told. (This dis- cussion should be given only to advanced students.) X ) X you Can teach V to draw? X him 3 & me 14. She is younger than I (am). 15. The teacher asked him and her to stay. The teacher asked (of) him and her (him and her) to stay; 16. It is he, she, and I that are to blame. 17. He is the same man that met us on the bridge. Use that after same. 18. There goes the man whose house was burned. 19. The gentleman whom you spoke to is my uncle. Whom is the object of to. 20. This is the longest lesson that we ever had. Use that after the superlative degree. 21. The men and the tools that you sent for have arrived. jN^otice the antecedent of that. 22. Whom do you sit with? Whom is the object of the preposition with. 23. I know whom you love. 64 teachers' manual. Whom is an interrogative pronoun, the object of love. '^Whom yon love" is the object of know. 24. Who do you think that I am ? Who is in the predicate with am. The object of do thiiik is "I am who/' a noun clause. LESSOI^T XXVI. 1. Father told James and me to go to school. (See the explanation of the 13th sentence, previous lesson.) 4. It was she who you said it was. It 1 was = she it I was = who you I said 5. It was she whom you said it to be. Whom is objective attribute, agreeing with it, the objec- tive subject of to he. It 1 was = she it you I said V to be = whom 6. Wlio is there? Only I. 7. The entertainment was pleasing to John and me. 8. Would you attend if you were she ? 10. But is a preposition in this sentence and should be followed by the objective case. 11. The merchant left word for you and me to call at his store. The phrase " for you and me to call," etc., SEVENTH GRADE. 65 modifies word. The object of for is "jou and me to call," etc. Merchant I left word you V to call I store. 12. Thej as well as I were disappointed. As well as is a conjunction. 14. Such boys as he (is) are not good companions. 16. I do not know whom to compare him to. Whom is an interrogative pronoun in an indirect ques- *^°^- ^ to compare o him. I I do know whom 17. Do jou remember whom he married ? The clause is the object of do rememher. 19. Do JOU remember whom he went with? Wlioiii is the object of with. Whom is an interrogative pronoun in the 16th, I7th, 19th, 21st, and 22d. Who is an interrogative pronoun in the ISth and 20th. (See paragraph 9, page 209, Ad- vanced Grammar.) 22. To whom did he refer ? Her or him. Did he refer to her or him ? —5 66 TEACHEKS MANUAL. 23. Lucy and I (we, you, he, she, they, it, thou, ye) go to schooL Omitting the solemn style (thou, ye), there are seven. LESSON XXVIL Paeageaph 2. — In such sentences as the 14th and 15th many prefer to use both genders, his or Jier^ but the ex- planation given in the grammar is better. It is better to avoid such sentences when possible. Say, "Each person must do his duty." LESSON XXVIIL 1. Every person should try to improve his mind and heart. 2. Each of the party carried a knapsack with him. 4. I did not notice which one of the men finished his work first. 5. Every soldier and every ofiicer remained at his sta- tion all night. Antecedents preceded by each^ every, etc., require a singular pronoun. 6. Mary and Lucy will favor us with their company. The antecedents are taken together. Y. Mary or Lucy will favor us with her company. The antecedents are taken separately. 8. Xotice is hereby given to every person to pay his taxes. (See explanation of the 5th sentence.) 10. You borrow one foot twelve inches, and add it to the upper number. This is a difiicult sentence. Inches is in apposition with foot, and the pronoun should agree with foot, the principal term, and not with inches, the explanatory term. SEVENTH GRADE. 67 On the otlier hand, it is the inches we add to the upper number. I think the following is a good rule : "When two appos- itives, differing in number, are an antecedent or a subject, the pronoun or the verb should agree with the principal word, and not with the explanatory word." 11. Every herb, every flower, and every animal shows the wisdom of Him who made it. 13. If anyone wishes to join the church, let him come forward. 14. It is difficult for any judge or juror to be un- prejudiced in his opinion. The antecedents are taken separately. If fhe antecedents were judge or witnesses, the pronoun should be plural, to agree with its nearer antecedent. " It is difficult for the judge or the witnesses to be unprejudiced in their oiDinion." 15. Every city, village, and farm furnishes its quota of soldiers. 16. This is such bad news that I cannot believe it. Neius is always singular. 17. If you find "Longfellow's Poems," send it to me. The. quotation marks and the capital P inform us that it is a book that is wanted. 18. The audience kept their seats until the close. Collective nouns referring to persons more frequently have plural pronouns and plural verbs than collective nouns referring to animals or things. 19. If you have any molasses, please send me a gallon of it. Molasses is always singular. 68 TEACHEKS' MANUAL. 21. If . any boy or girl be absent, he must go to tlie foot of tlie class. Some authorities would use he or she, but the masculine alone is better. Usually it is better to avoid such sentences entirely. We might say, " If any pupil be absent," etc. 22. Do you know which one of the students wrote his essay first? The antecedent of his is one. 23. Lincoln, the President, the Emancipator, and the Martyr, will always live in the hearts of his countrymen. LESSON XXIX. 1. American is a proper adjective, modifying citizen understood. Citizen is nominative in the predicate with each of the three verbs. 4. Him is in ajDposition with Milton. I I refer l o Milton (him) who I wrote Paradise Lost. 5. He is nominative in apposition with Hadley. g_ Reputation | is — that V to be = which are thought — | Character I is = that we I are = which But can be supplied as the connective between the principal clauses of the two complex sentences. That SEVENTH GRADE, 69 Pharaoh | promoted whom This 1 is = book \JjO study Ithe \ we 1 are — that is an adjective pronoun in each clause. Which is in the nominative to agree with ive in each clause. The phrase, ^0 he tvhich, is an adjective phrase, modifying ive. 8. Byron is in the possessive case, possessor of dissipa- tion. Poet's is possessive in apposition with Byron. 9_ It I was = Joseph (he) 10, To study is an adjective phrase modifying we. 13. I remember that which was said. 14. Conscience makes the bitter memory of that which he was. Which is in predicate with was. 15. Whosoever = he who. LESSON XXX. Here careful study on the part of the teacher will be required to decide whether the pupils' sentences are correct or not. Some of the sentences given by them will contain unexpected and unusual difficulties, LESSOl^ XXXII. Paeageaph 2. 3, To insert a before gentleman would make the sen- tence mean that he does not deserve the name of some particular gentleman (Roberts, for instance). 70 TEACHERS MANUAL. 4. The descendants would mean that all the descendants of the Europeans are in America, but we know that many of them are still in Europe. 5. Line is understood after the word north. Paeageaph 3. 1. The right and the left hand were both diseased. "The right and left hands were both diseased" is also correct, but the former is to be preferred. 2. Correct. If we saj, " The Latin and Greek words in English are many," we mean one class of words, a mixture of Latin and Greek. But there are two classes, one Latin and one Greek. 3. I do not admire those kinds of people. Those is plural and requires a plural noun. 4. Correct, "The fourth and fifth verses" is also allow- able. 5. Mj uncle owns a large and "a small house. Two houses. 6. One who rules is often known by the name of king. 7. This is correct if the sick were also the wounded ; but if there were two classes, one class sick and another class wounded, the sentence should be, " The sick and the wounded were left in the camp." 8. I have not been at home for these two weeks. LESSOIT XXXIIL Paragraphs 1 and 2 should be studied carefully. It is not uncommon to find violations of these rules in journals and magazines making some pretensions to a knowledge of good English. SEVENTH GRADE. 71 The statement, " When the comparative is nsed, the latter term of comparison must exchide the former," has reference onlj to sentences in which the comparative is followed hj than. If we were speaking of the two States, Kansas and Texas, and shonld say, " Texas is the larger of the two," it would be correct, although the two includes Texas, the former term of comparison. Paragraph 3. — Some writers of considerable reputa- tion would insert otlier before paintings in the fifth sen- tence, but the sentence is certainly- correct as it stands. This picture is one of the paintings, but it is not one of the other paintings. In this sentence, all paintings are divided into tv\^o classes ; this picture is one class by itself, and all other paintings form the other class. PaRx^CtRAph 4, 1. The vounffer of the two sisters is the handsomer. 2. Correct. 3. The boy is brighter than any of his classmates. As the boy is not one of his classmates, the sentence in the grammar is as incorrect as to say, '^' Henry is the oldest of the girls." ISTotice that the latter term, class-^ mates, does not include the former, hoy, and the super- lative degree is used. This is contrary to the rule in paragraph 2, page 126. 4. Gold is more valuable than any other metal found in the United States. Gold is found in the United States, and it is not more valuable than itself. ISTotice, too, that the comparative degree is used, and the latter term of comparison must exclude the former. Any metal will include gold. Any other metal will exclude ffold. 72 teachers' manual. 5. ISTatiiral scenery pleases me the best of anything. Else means other, and natural scenery is not one of the other things. Anything will include natural scenery, but anything else will not. 6. This is correct if the tree is not in the forest; but if the tree is in the forest, the sentence should read, " That tree overtops all the other trees in the forest." 1. Our present teacher is better than any other teacher we ever had. "Any teacher we ever had" will include the present teacher, which should not be the case when the compara- tive degree is used. 8. Our present teacher is the best we ever had. The latter term of comparison, "we ever had before," does not include the former term ; but as the superlative degree is used, ihe latter term should include the former. 9. We should say nothing else, because there is some- thing that pleases me as much as natural scenery, and that something is natural scenery itself. 10. This man above (or more than) all others deserves promotion. This man is not one of the other men. ISTotice this sentence : "Lake Superior, of all the cities, is the largest." This sentence is just as sensible as the one in the gram- mar, and yet the sentence in the grammar was taken from an editorial in a leading newspaper. We might think it was a typographical error if such expressions were not heard and read so frequently. LESSON XXXVo 6. In analyzing this sentence most authors would make lower and Mississippi each modify valley, but this is not SEVEISTTH GEADE, 73 the meaning. Mississippi modifies valley and lower modi- fies Mississippi valley. Sucli examples are numerous. An adjective frequently modifies a following adjective and noun taken together. In "a pretty little girl," little modi- fies girl, and pretty modifies little girl. When and can be placed between the two adjectives preceding a noun, they are said to be of equal rank, each modifies the noun sep- arately, and they should be separated by a comma; but when and cannot be placed between the two adjectives, they are said to be of unequal rank, the first modifies the second and the noun combined, and no comma should be used. Examples : Beautiful blue eyes. A wise old man. A long, steep hill. A faithful, loving friend. eves blue beautiful I. In the gTammar it is stated that sad and weary are predicate adjectives. They can also be considered as adjectives used appositively. If so considered, they should be placed under he in the diagram. II. The understood relative is the object of- ivanted. 12. Tliat, understood, is the object of expected. 15. Notice that you can insert neither a comma nor and between /as^ and Saxon. Last modifies Saxon hing. ■^Q^ Every one | can master grief a' c "^ him that I hath ^it. Every may be taken as an adjective modifying one. 74: 19. teachers' manual. Napoleon ( man ) | died the "Wellington | defeated St. Helena. whom Waterloo lesso:n XXXVI. Paragraph 5. — In drilling on the irregular verbs, pay special attention to those in common use. Have the pupils understand that the past tense is never used with an auxiliary and that the past 23articiple is always used with an auxiliary. If they understand this, they will not use such expressions as "He begun," or "The book was stole," Much drill will be required. Suppose the verb hreah is under consideration. The teacher can say, " I " ; "He has " ; "The stick is " ; "The rule may have been " ; and the pupils should respond promptly with the word hrohe or hroJc en, whichever they think cor- rect. Continue the drill until the pupils make no mistake. LESSOR XXXVII. Paragraph 2. 3. Can run is active voice. Remember that this gram- mar teaches that intransitive verbs denoting action have the active voice. Some authors say intransitive verbs have no voice. In stating that intransitive verbs have the active voice, I am simply uttering the words of the best linguists of the age. 8. Must be obtained is transitive, passive. Paragraph 3. — Give much drill on the formation of the passive voice. SEVENTH GRADE. 75 The following are passive: shall be seen, may have been seen, had been seen; shall have been chosen, fo be chosen, may be chosen; to have been stolen, having been stolen, is stolen. Paeageaph 4. 1. The sight astonished the traveler. 2. The glory of God is declared by the heavens. 3. Henry Watterson gave the address of welcome to the Grand Army of the Republic. 4. Young men are incited to noble careers by such examples. 5. This cannot be made passive, because the verb is intransitive. 6. The laborer was cheered by health and plenty. 7. The child's foot was trodden on by a horse. Was trodden on is a compound passive verb. O71 is not a preposition, but a part of the verb. (See paragraph 1, page 236.) 8. Intransitive. 9. Intransitive. ' 10. This matter must be attended to by the commander. Must he attended to is a compound verb. LESSOR XXXYIII. Mode is frequently a form of the verb. Go (a com- mand), you must go, and you shall go mean about the same, but the first is in the imperative, the second is potential, and the third is indicative. In these examples the form of the verb determines the mode. Paeageaph 2. 1. Wish is indicative, and luere is subjunctive. 76 teachers' manual. 2. Potential. 3. Imperative. 4. Indicative, passive. 5. Indicative, passive. 6. Potential, passive. 7. Imperative, V^to learn X I Try something day. every 8. Potential, passive. Paragraph 4. — The verb in "If it be thrown" is sub- junctive, passive. LESSON XXXIX. Paragraph 2. 1. Passive, indicative, past. 2. Active, potential, present. 3. Active, indicative, present-perfect. 4. Passive, potential, present-perfect. 5. Active, indicative, future-perfect. 6. Passive, indicative, present-perfect. 7. Reached is active, indicative, past; had disappeared is active, indicative, past-perfect; were appearing is 'active, indicative, past. 8. Sa7iJc is active, indicative, past; could arrive is active, potential, past. 9. Passive, indicative, past. 10. Passive, indicative, past. 11. Said is active, indicative, past; could write is active, potential, past ; did live is active, indicative, past. 12. Love is active, imperative, present; shouldst come is active, potential, past. SEVENTI-I GRADE. LESSON XL. 77 Paeageaph 1. — The term, finite verbs, is used because' an infinitive does not change its form to agree with its subject. We saj, " I want him to go, you to go, them to go," etc. The infinitive remains the same, no matter what subject we insert after ivant. Because infinitives do not change to agree with their subjects in person and number, they are said to have no person and number. Carefully study the seven notes under this paragraph. Paeageaph 2. 2. Many a man takes men distributively, one at a time. 3. See note 4, paragraph 1. 4. Each is the subject. 5. One is the subject. 6. Am agrees with /, (See note 6.) 8. More persons than one of us were. Persons is the subject. 9. Victuals in this sentence means eatables, plural. 10. Victuals in this sentence means one word, singular. 12. Subjects taken separately. 13. Are agrees with books, the afiirmative subject. 14. Is agrees with money, the real subject. The hear- ers understand that men are needed, and the speaker simply adds that money is needed. 15. Two phrases or two clauses taken together will have a plural verb just as two nouns connected in the same man- ner will require a plural verb. 16. The subject is they. 17. "Canterbury Tales" is used simply as the name of a book or poem. 78 TEACHERS MANUAL. 18. The subject is variety. 19. The twenty-five dollars are not considered as so many dollars, but as so much money- — a certain price. If there were twenty-five silver dollars, for instance, lying on the desk, it would be correct to say, " Twenty-five dollars are lying on the desk," if we had reference to the number of dollars, and not to the amount or sum of money. 20. The verb agrees with TJiomas. (See note 6.) 22. Conclusions is the subject. 24. The verb agrees with /. Why? LESSOR XLI. The teacher should have some systematic form for cor- recting false syntax. For instance, in correcting the first sentence, the pupil should rise and read the sentence, then say about as follows : "Incorrect, because the verb have is plural, and its subject each is singular, but a verb should agree with its subject in number and person ; therefore, have should be /las." Do not permit 23npils to say, "Incorrect, because the verb is plural and the subject is. singular." Insist that they name the verb and the subject. I am satisfied that much of the work in correcting false syntax in our schools is simply guesswork. Probably this is why some teachers are beginning to think that such exercises should be omitted from our grammars. 2. The verb should be is, to agree with its subject, one, and their should be his, to agree with its antecedent, one. 3. The verb should be is, to agree with its subject, one. . 4. The verb is should be are, to agree with its subject, SEVENTH GRADE „ 79 reasons. One or more reasons for this are (exist). Rea- S071S is the nearer subject. 5. Have should be has, to agree with its subject, ivork. Days' is in the possessive case. 6. Are should be is, to agree with he. Why? Y. Delight should be delights, to agree with its subject, nothing. Pursuits is in the objective case, object of the preposition, hut. 8. Is should be are, to agree with people, the affirmative subject. 9. The subject, numher, is singular. 10. Exists should be exist, to agree with its subject, connections. Remember that a verb ending in s is usually singular. Caress and dress end in s and are plural. The singular of these verbs is caresses and dresses, also end- ing in s. 11. Are should be is, because the subject, the word oats, is singular. 12. Youth is a collective noun denoting plurality of idea ; therefore has should be have. 13. The verb should be plural, to agree with its com- pound subject. 14. This sentence means about the same as "My brother and two friends have arrived," but most authors call with a preposition and say that have should be lias, to agree with brother. 15. Brings should be bring, to agree with arguments, the affirmative subject. 16. Were should be luas, to agree with deceit and vice, taken separately. 80 TEACHEES' MANUAL, 17. Are slioiild be is^ to agree with wagon, the nearer subject. IS. Stands should be plural, to agree with its subject, prisoners. 19. Is should be are, to agree with its subject, that; tJiat is plural, to agree with its antecedent, passions. 20. Are should be is, to agree with its subject, sun. LESSOE^ XLII. PaEACtEAPH 1. 1. Has should be have, to agree with its subject, persons, understood. More persons than one have had a hand in this affair. 2. Their should be his, to agree with its antecedent one, or everyone. 3. ^'orrect. 4. Are should be am, to agree with I, the nearer subject. Who should be whom, because it is the object of have selected. 5. Have and their should be has and its, to agree with each, a singiilar. 6. Were should be was, because there was but one report. This report was written by the mayor and the clerk. 7. Was should be were, because there were two reports, one from the mayor and one from the clerk. 8. Correct. The verb agrees with the affirmative subject. 9. Correct. 10. Attract should be attracts, to agree with its subject, that. That is singular because its antecedent, Iteauty, is singular. SEVENTH GEJlDE. 81 11. Correct. 12. Each day and each hour brings its portion of duty. Paeageaph 2. 1. Xot one of my neighbor's soils has succeeded in business. 2. There are my neighbor and her daughter, 3. Time and tide wait for no man. 4. That able scholar and critic has a valuable library. Critic is in apposition with scholar. 5. The crime, not the scaffold, is the shame. 6. A bushel of pears was taken from one tree. 7. ISTeither he nor I am frightened. 8. He or -his brother has the book. 9. There have been several vessels lost on these rocks. LESSOX XLIII. This lesson presents an excellent test of the pupil's knowledge of the agreement of a verb with its subject and the agreement of a pronoun with its antecedent. If he makes no mistakes in these sentences, he will be doing remarkably well. LESSOX XLIV. This is an important lesson. Probably as many errors are made in the use of the forms of these verbs as in the forms of all the other verbs in the language. Even among people of fair education it is not uncommon to find some who mix the forms of lie and lay, or sit and set. Xotice carefully the explanation in paragraph 1. —6 82 teachers' manual. Paeageaph 2. 1. Use lay, past tense of lie, because there is no object. 2. Use laid, j)ast of lay, because there is an object. The second verb is lies, because it has no object. 3. Were laid is passive, therefore it is taken from the transitive verb lay. 4. The first verb is set, because it has an object. The second verb is sit, because it has no object. 5. The first verb is taken from the intransitive verb sit, because there is no object. Setting is the proper adjective to apply to the sun, but sitting is the proper adjective to apply to a hen. 6. The first verb is taken from the transitive verb raise, because there is an object. The second verb is taken from the intransitive verb idse, because there is no object. 7. Rising, from the intransitive verb rise, because there is no object. Raising, from the transitive verb raise, be- cause there is an object. Paeageaph 3. 1. The book was lying on the table. Yes, I laid it there. Well, let it lie. 2. The sick man has lain on his bed a long time. The verb is intransitive. 3. What plans are you laying now? Use laying from the transitive verb lay, because there is an object (plans). 4. Have they laid their burdens down ? Burdens is the object; therefore we use the transitive verb. 5. I remember when the corner-stone was laid. Use the transitive verb, because it is passive. SEVENTH GRADE. 83 6. Lie here, and lay your head on the pillow. The first is lie^ because it is intransitive, and the second is lay^ because it has an object. Paeageaph 4. 1. Mary, you may set the table. Use the transitive verb, because it has an object (table). 2. William is sitting by the stove, but Samuel is setting the old hen. The first is intransitive and the second is transitive. After Samuel sets the hen, the hen will sit. We should not say a setting hen, but a sitting hen. 3. The traveler rose early, and set out at six o'clock. 8et is used here, because it is intransitive when meaning to set out on a journey. 4. Your coat sits well. This certainly should not be sets well, and sits well is not without objection. I think fits well much better than either. 5. Set yourself down and sit still. Since the first verb has an object (yourself), it should be transitive. 6. The creek is rising, and the men are raising that old house. 7. We found the knife lying in the road. We use the intransitive participle, because it has no object. 8. Much land has been laid waste by the high water. Use laid, from the transitive verb Ioaj, because has teen laid is passive. Waste is an adjective in predicate. 9. The trial was set for next Monday. Use the transitive verb, because luas set is passive. 84 teachers' manual, 10. After fighting all day, the soldiers lay down on the ground to sleep. The verb has no object ; therefore we use lay, the past tense of the intransitive verb lie. LESSON XLV. Paeageaph 2. 1. He did it. 2. I saw him. 3. Have you ever seen a giraffe ? 4. Has he written the letter ? 5. The letter written yesterday "was mailed to-day. 6. Has the messenger come yet ? 1. The storm soon began. 8. The boy said his book was torn. 9. Some of our best apples were stolen. 10. I knew him as soon as I saw him. 11. The train had gone an hour before I came. 12. This work can not be done in one day. 13. She ought to go. Had ought and hadn't ought are always incorrect. 14. He was chosen umpire for the game. 15. The tune was sung well. 16. The witness has surely sworn falsely. Paeageaph 3. 1. I think that he is sick. Suppose might do, but think is better. In such cases we do not guess nor expect. 2. Guess how many grains are on this ear of corn. 3. Will you teach me to skate ? 4. Mother, I will come to see you next week. SEVENTH GRADE. 85 In speaking or writing of anyone we should not say I (or anyone else) will go to see you, but will come to see you. 5. Try to learn your lesson. This error is very common. To try and go means to do two things : to try, and to go. To try to go means to try to do one thing — to go. To go is the object of ^ri/. 6. I think he has gone to Europe. We do not expect something that has already happened. 7. I expected to be in ISTew York by this time. (See paragraph 2, page 156, and paragraph 4, page 245.) 8. Tie doesn't believe in hypnotism. We often hear (and often read) such expressions as he don't, she don't, Charles don't, etc. These are all wrong. Doesn't should always be used when the subject is in the third person, singular. lesso:n xlix. PaeaCtEaph 2, PAGE 150. — Pupils should have consid- erable drill in giving the synopsis of verbs. At first, they should name each mode and tense as it is reached, but after knowing the order of the modes and tenses, the form can be shortened. The exercise then will be as follows : I am, I have been; I was, I had been; I shall be, I shall have been ; I may be, I may have been ; I might be, I might have been. In the potential mode all the tense signs might be named. Synopsis of see: I see, I have seen; I saw, I had seen; I shall see, I shall have seen; I may, can, or must see ; I may, can, or must have seen ; I might, could, would, or should see; I might, could, would, or should have seen. Passive : I am seen, I have been seen ; 86 teachers' manual. I was seen, I had been seen ; I shall be seen, I shall have been seen; I may, can, or must be seen; I may, can, or must have been seen ; I might, could, would, or should be seen ; I might, could, would, or should have been seen. It will be noticed that the synopsis or the conjugation of see in the passive voice is precisely the same as the synop- sis or the conjugation of he prefixed to the participle seen. This is always true of the passive voice. Paragraph 4. — You will find that some of your pupils will have trouble in distinguishing between the passive voice, and the active voice in the progressive form. Both have the same forms of be^ but the passive ends with the past participle, while the progressive ends with the present participle. "I have been seen" is passive, but "I have been seeing" is active, progressive. Both are in the in- dicative, present-perfect. LESSOR L. After your pupils are familiar with the synopsis and conjugation, common form, have them give the progressive and the emphatic form. LESSON LI. 11. Be chosen. Some of your puj)ils will be apt to say there is no im- perative passive. It is formed by placing the imperative be before the j)ast jDarticiple of a transitive verb. Its formation differs in no respect from the formation of the passive in other modes. 12. If he go, he will be sorry. JSTotice that go is not, goes. Goes is indicative. SEVENTH GEADE. 87 For a discussion of the subjunctive, see pages 231 and 232. 13. If lie be cbosen. This is present tense, but it denotes future time. 14. If he were chosen. This is past tense, but it denotes present time. LESSOIT LIII. Paeageaph 1. 1. To escape has the construction of an adjective, and modifies fortune. 2. To 'preach has the construction of an adjective, and modifies license. student | has The Cuckoo I tried license I a V ^ to preach. (tosteal nest. Many simple modifiers will be omitted from the dia- grams in the remainder of this book. 4. She I is — sad sister \ ^ to V X X failing. To he failing is an infinitive, progressive form, with the construction of an adjective. Sister to he failing is the object of see. Remember that the sign of the infinitive is omitted after hid, dare, feel, hear, help, let, make, see, and some others. TEACHERS MA]SrUAL„ Doubtless some would diagram the sentence in this way : 8he I is — sad VjL sister yfailii This makes sister the object of to see, which is not the meaning. She is not sad to see her failing sister, but to see her sister failing. "I want to see the dying boy" is quite different from "I want to see the boy dying." 5_ I I have come you V to hear yX sing. To hear has the construction of an adverb, and (to) sing has the construction of an adjective. To is omitted be- cause it is preceded by he,ar. 8. You I were — kind I enough V to aid. To aid has the construction of an abverb, modifying the adverb enough, I^Totice that enough nearly always follows the word it modifies. I I would do it. 12. 15. ^to be punished. ( is — good ) than SEVENTH GRADE. Than is a conjunctive adverb. 16. yto strive "^ 18. It ( right ) I is — better V to rail wrong. I (is — good) than I'T. V To hesitate y to be lost l ^ To rob IS = crime V^ to steal continent I is glory- 89 20. To deface is an adverb, modifying tbe adjective enough. LESSO:^ LV. Parageaph 1. — Some authors say that a participle may have the construction of an adverb. This will be discussed in Grade Eight. 90 TEACHERS MANUAL. LESSON LVL Paeageaph 1. 1. See j)age 162. 2. X I avoid ykeep ling company depraved. Indians V ^ screaming ran — pursuit. Screaming lias the construction of an adjective, modi- fying Indians. Many [ have amassed wealth \living economically. \^do attempting i fo much ng ■: little J 1 is = cause Much and little are adjective pronouns, but they can be treated as adjectives, modifying nouns understood. The verb is is singular because attempting much and doing little are considered as one act. ISTeither the attempting nor the doing is the cause of failure,, but the combination of the twOo SEVENTH GRADE. 91 6. Englishman V^ named = John Rolfe John Bolfe is in the objective case to agree with English- man. V buried 7. philosopher | sat 1 5' thought. he talked I more loudly. ^ reasoning more forcibly ]!^otice that more loudly and more forcibly are taken together as simple adverbs. (See paragraph 5, page 220.) Reasoning has the construction of a noun, the object of instead of. Q efforts I could prevent V going. his Going is the object of coidd prevent, 10. V ^correcting : P : a I -"^ \^ : polishing couplet. The two participles have the construction of a noun, objects of the preposition in. Couplet is the object of both participles. 92 TEACHERS MANUAL. 13. See page 161. 14. balance | is hun^ God's V watched p angels O «= sky. the " 15. l etter | has been mailed. The \ ^- written yesterday Yesterday is a noun, in the objective case without a governing word. (See paragraph 12, page 253.) LESSOI^ LVIIL It will be profitable to have the pupils analyze or dia- gram the sentences they have written, for, as has been said before, some of the sentences written by the pupils will contain unexpected and unusual difficulties. LESSOI^ LIX. Paragraph 4. — Observe that this definition is not the one usually given. (See paragraph Y, page 252.) Paragraph 6. — It must not be supposed that the ad- verbs given as examjjles of the different classes always belong to the class in which they are listed. Now is some- times a modal adverb, meaning about the same as hence or therefore. It is also sometimes a mere introductory word ; as, " ]^ow, Barabbas was a robber." 8o is sometimes an adverb of degree ; as, " He was so kind tlmt he won the love of all." How is sometimes an adverb of manner; as, "How did he succeed ?" SEVENTH GRADE. 93 Paragraph 8. 1. Till is a conjunctive adverb of time. 2. Hither is not an adverb ; it is an adjective, modify- ing ivay. FoHh is a simple adverb of place (or manner). 3. The last there is a simple adverb of place. 4. Together and happily are simple adverbs of manner. Very is a simple adverb of degree. 5. Rapidly is a simple adverb of manner. How is a simple adverb of degree, 6. Perchance is a modal adverb. - 7. Since is a conjunctive adverb of time. Some will call since' a preposition, having the clause, "T returned," as its object. 8. Whither is an interrogative adverb of place. 9. Far is a simple adverb of place or manner. How is a simple adverb of degree. 10. Slowly and sadly are simple adverbs of manner. 11. Once is a simple adverb of time. So is a simple adverb of degree. No is a simple adverb of negation. Longer is a simple adverb of time. 12. Duly is a simple adverb of manner. Immediately is a simple adverb of time. Paragraph 9. — The words forming a phrase adverb should not be parsed separately. At all is a phrase adverb, but at home is an adverb phrase. In the former there is but one part of speech — an adverb ; but in the latter at is a preposition and home is a noun. Paragraph 11. — In the explanation under this para- graph the statement is made that good, better, best is an adjective. Some good critics have found fault with this 94 TEACHERS MANUAL. expression, claiming that it should read "good, better, best are adjectives." Read the paragraph carefully, and see if there is not a good reason for the form used in the book. LESSON LX. Pakagraph 1. 1. He stood silent and alone. Silent does not express the manner of standing, but the condition of the person while standing. 2. Correct. 3. Double negative. A miser never gives anything to anybody. 4. How sweet the music sounds. The speaker did not intend to express the manner of the sounding, but the quality of the music. Sweet is an adjective in predicate. 5. The sun shines bright and the grass looks green. If the speaker intends to specialize the manner of the shining rather than the brightness of the sun, brightly is correct. Greenly is not correct, because the grass has no eyes to look with. 6. He feels very sad about his loss. The intention of the speaker is to express the condition of the subject, his state of feeling, not his manner of feeling (with his fingers). 7. The teacher was tolerably well informed. Tolerably is an adverb, modifying ivell. 8. The young lady looked beautiful and sang beauti- ■fully. Use the adjective in the first part of the sentence, be- cause you wish to express a quality of the lady, not the SEVENTH GKADE. 95' manner of an act. Use the adverb in the last part of the sentence, because jou wish to describe the manner in which she sang. 9. We arrived at home safe and sound. Both should be adjectives, because we wish to express our condition when we arrived rather than the manner of our arriving. 10. The bashful joung man appeared (to be) very awk- ward. Plainly an adjective. Suppose the young man had been 3ut of sight somewhere, and that he had been summoned to appear, and suppose that he had put in his appearance in a very awkward manner : would awkward or awhwardly be the correct word to use in this sentence ? 11. This apple looks well, but it tastes bad. This is correct if the sentence means that the apple is l^retty, a good-looking apple. But if the sentence means that the apple appears to be a good apple, the word good should be used instead of well. "This apple looks good, but it tastes bad." 12. She dresses suitably to her station and means. Use the adverb, because it modifies the verb dresses. 13. I was exceedingly glad to hear from you. Use the adverb exceedingly, to modify the adjective glad. 14. The train doesn't wait for any one ; or. The train waits for no one. 15. The doctor said she would never be any better. Avoid double negatives. 16. 'Not every man can aiford to keep a coach. Not modifies every. As the sentence stands in the book, it may mean that no one can afford to keep a coach. 96 teachers' manual. Paeagkaph 2. 1. He looked glad when his brother came. Glad is an adjective in predicate with looked, and modifies lie. 2. Lucy felt very sad when her friend died. Sad is a predicate adjective, modifying Lucy. -^ 3. The evening bells sound sweet and low. The adjective should be used, because it expresses the quality of the bells rather than the manner of the sounding. 4. The eggs were boiled soft. Soft is a predicate adjective. It does not express the manner of the boiling. 5. The house was made strong. 6. Come quickly. Here the adverb should be used, because it describes the manner of the coming. 7. The slaves were treated harshly. If harsh were used, it would be a predicate adjective, modifying slaves. This is not the meaning of the sentence. 8. The singer's voice seemed harsh. Harsh modifies voice. 9. The moon rose clear. It was a clear moon. 10. The house appears comfortable and pleasant. 11. The boy was dressed comfortably, LESSON LXL Paeagkaph 1. 1. This means that the address, and nothing else^ can be written on this side. SEVENTH GEADEo 97 2, This means that the address must be written, not printed, on this side. 3. This means that the address must be written on this side, not on the other side. Paeageaph 2. 1. We recite only three lessons a day. As the sentence stands it means we only recite the lessons,^w^e do not study them. 2. ]^ot all men are educated. The sentence as it stands may mean that no man is educated. 3. ISTot all that glitters is gold. Something that glitters is gold, and that something is gold itself. 4. Two young ladies came to the party dressed nearly alike. 5. Such prices are paid only in times of great scarcity. Oiilij does not modify paid; it modifies the phrase. 6. Corn should generally be planted in April or May. When an adverb is j)laced between the parts of a verb composed of three words, it should usually be placed after the first part of the verb, not after the second. 7. 1^0 man ever has so much that he does not want more. 8. I shall always be glad to see you. This sentence may be correct. If it is, what does it mean ? 9. The work will never be completed. 10. Having lost nearly a thousand dollars by the trans- action, I can not afford to venture again. What does the sentence mean as it stands ? 11. The secretary was daily expected to resign. —7 98 teachers' manual. 12. He walked nearly ten miles. 13. I bring forward only a few tilings. 14. We speak merely of ourselves. Merely modifies the pkrase, not speak. 15. Tlie Chinese live chiefly upon rice. 16. I ate only one apple to-day. If we make only modify ate, the sentence means I did nothing but eat the apple; I did not digest it. lesso:r lxii. Paeagkaph 1. — ISTotice the last sentence of this para- graph. *'He wrote a poem concerning the wrath of the gods." Concerning is a preposition, meaning about. Of course, as concerning, i-egarding, and respecting can be derived from verbs, they are sometimes participles. Pakageaph 6. 1. The sultry evening was followed by a heavy frost. 2. He fell from the bridge into the water. 3. Our government is based on the rights of the people. 4. He was accused of robbery. 5. This work is different from that. 6. There is a constant rivalry among these four rail- roads. If the sentence means that the rivalry exists between each railroad on the one side and the combined three on the other, hetween should be used. 7. Divide the apples between the two girls. 8. He was eager for studying grammar. 9. He was desirous of studying Latin. 10. Battles are fought with other weapons- than popguns. If we say "besides popguns," the sentence means that' SEVENTH GRADE. 99 battles are fought with popguns and also with other weapons. 11. The band was followed bj a large crowd. 12. Raise jour book off the table. Off is a preposition in this sentence, but it is some- times an adverb. Off of should not be used together. Pakagkaph 7. 1. He poured the water into the barrel. 2. We saw jou at the concert. 3. The prisoner is accused of stealing a horse. 4. You maj rely on what I say. 5. The forests abound with wild animals. 6. There is much need of prej)aration. 7. The man died of consumption. 8. The soil is adapted to corn. 9. The merchant is in want of money. 10. He stays at school late, LESSO]^ LXIIL Paragraph 1. — As well as should not always be taken together as a conjunction. (See paragraph 1, page 254.) Some authors supply an entire clause between as and if ; as, ^'He looks as (he would look) if he were sick." Paragraph 9. 2. "Where he has gone" is the object of can tell. Where is an interrogative adverb of place. 7. X I be — wiser to-day y \ X - X L.ofC. yesterday, than 100 TEACHERS MANUAL, The complete sentence is, " You be wiser to-day than you were wise yesterday." Than is a conjunctive adverb. I have diagrammed to-day and yesterday as adverbs, but see paragraph 12, page 253. I w .ESSON day 1 LXIV, that is :' = day X rite ) HH o it( ^ year. a he? irts 3. that people are — good 1 is ^ main the = statement. This means that people are good most of the time, or in most respects ; but if we make in the mam modify people, the sentence means that most people are good. 4, 5. lived Time 1 is i w not ^misspent \^ lost. plan < — unbroken o Stj Vx> ite 1:^ ^' time To he is understood before broken. SEVENTH GRADE. 101 gaming knowledge Y, Life I is = mission L.tO 9. Uo go 3 o corner reconquer God. world 8. Men I are = men 2. r prej c-t-' udice V to govern world. brain man I is — shorter he I is walking when X I X X rest. XIX- when than "A man is shorter when he is walking than he is short when he is at rest." At rest is an adjective phrase, modifying he, the understood subject; it expresses the condition of he. (See paragraph 1, page 267.) 102 10. TEACHERS MANUAL. interests | will be developed. or sooner later coal metals ^ I are found 11. There schools I are some course | provides 1 whose >-ta ^- study- little but There is simply an expletive, and should not be con- nected with the sentence. 12. is dead. faith I is lost I When honor dies when 13. trifles that make perfection | i p perfection P- ths is = It trifle. X recollect ISTotice that and that should not be taken together, SEVENTH GEADE. 103 'And connects the two noun clauses, and that introduces the second noun clause. 14. There tide I is ^ affairs which 1 leads V taken on C+ PB fortune. flood This simply asserts the existence of a certain tide. If the phrase, in ajfairs, modifies is^ the existence of the tide is assumed, and we assert its locality. 15. 16. ■ slept that ^ 1. ^ dreamed life 1 was = Beauty 1 i ^ woke that I 1 : p 3 ^ found life 1 was = Duty. ot understood is the He 1 connective, hath id i : P : 3 i ^ \ meet friend who 1 has V to spare friends a thousai he 1 shall i everywhere him who 1 ha 1 en emy 104 TEACHEKS MANUAL. A thousand slioiild be taken together as one adjective. (See paragrapli 4, page 219.) Not modifies a, or not a can be taken together, modify- ing friend. V To live ^ hearts 18. we I leave behind X L to d not The object of leave is a relative pronoun understood. 19. man | will speak The truly one I will observe he I speaks. how 20. Her is objective attribute, and agrees in case with him. 21. Try V to care X 1 o ^ that that (what = that which) which I is — best thought ^ action. LESSOIT LXVI. 1. Correct. 2. My! doesn't that deer know how to run! SEVENTH GRADE. 106 Don't is a contraction of do not. 3. Two weeks' vacation is too mucli. 4. There are a man and a woman on the bridge, 5. This kind of people will never succeed. 6. Have you any children's new shoes ? or, Have you any new shoes for children ? 7. This child is really sick. Real is an adjective, but an adverb is required to modify the adjective, sick. 8. Whom will you vote for? 9. Correct. Him is the object of have known. 10. Who do you think was with me? 11. Correct. 12. Many a captain, with all the crew, has been lost at sea. The verb is singular, to agree with its subject, caytain. - 13. Correct. Others is the subject of appear. 14. I intended to go yesterday. Ko one can intend to have gone. 15. This is in accordance with my plans. 16. Milton is more sublime than any of the other poets. 17. This opinion never has prevailed, and never can. 18. It has not only beauty, but utility. 19. We saw a man with a Koman nose digging a well. 20. He seems to have the esteem of all men. Universal is unnecessary, because it means the same as the phrase, of all men. 21. Correct. 22. Correct. Plenty is the subject. 23. ISTeither the army nor the navy was represented. 24. Two of the boys have swum, ashore. 106 teachers' manual. Swam is the past tense, and should not be used with the auxiliary. . 25. Ought we not to go ? 26. The farmer went to his neighbor and said, " My cattle are in your field" ; or, "Your cattle are in my field." 27. Has the second bell rung? 28. He owned an old house and a new house. 29. Correct. Governor is understood after the word old. 30. Correct. 31. When shall we three meet again? 32. Better, The Nile is the longest river in Africa. EESSOIT LXVII. Pakagrapii 5. 1. "My brave men," the general said, "charge for the guns !" 2. London, the largest city in the world, is in England. 3. Paris, which is situated on the Seine, is the capital of France. 4. No comma is needed in this sentence, because the parts are closely connected. 5. Maize, which is another name for Indian corn, grows in America. 6. The minstrel sang a song, played a tune, and danced a jig. T. No, no, no, you cannot go. 8. A youth, a boy, or a mere child could answer that question. 9. No comma needed. 10. My friend, will you give me a dollar ? SEVENTH GRADE. 107 Paeageaph 6. 2. This sentence may be punctuated thus : "Joseph, my uncle is a sailor." What does it mean now ? Paeageaph 8. 1. ISTo punctuation needed. 2. Saylor, the superintendent, has charge of the schools of Lincoln. 3. No punctuation needed. 4. Tennyson, the poet, wrote "In Memoriam." 5. Bryant, the American poet, wrote "Thanatopsis." Paeageaph 10. — Mary, Helen and Julia have gone. This means that the speaker addresses Mary, and tells her that Helen and Julia have gone. Mary, Helen, and Julia have gone. This means that the three girls have gone. SENTENCES FOR ANALYSIS OR DIAGRAMMING. 1. To send me away for a whole year — me, who had never crept from under the parental wing — was a startling idea. (Use from under as a compound preposition.) 2. This, and other measures of precaution, I took. 3. Fashion does not often caress the great, hut the children of the great. (Make a compound sentence.) 4. Anger compels a man to say anything. 5. They do not wish to be lovely, but to be loved. 6. A merciless oppressor hast thou been. 7. She told the questioner part of the truth. 8. That night, in the quiet village, six children sat by a peat fire, expecting the return of their parents. 108 TEACHEKS' MANUAL. 9. Our life is March weather, savage and serene in one hour, 10. I will try to keep from failing. 11. To be hurried away by every event, is to have no political system at all. (At all modifies no.) 12. At times the black volume of clouds overhead seemed rent asunder by flashes of lightning. {Overhead is an ad- jective, modifying clouds.) 13. Must we in all things look for the lioiv, and the why, and the wherefore? 14. I felt that I breathed an atmosphere of sorrow. 15. But the fact is, I was napping. 16. There were passages that reminded me of old times. IT. Shaking off from my spirit what must have been a dream, I scanned more narrowly the aspect of the build- ing. (Ojf is an adverb.) 18. Whether she said the word is uncertain. (Whether is introductory.) 19. There is but one thing of which I am afraid, and that is fear. 20. Censure is the tax a man pays to the public for being eminent. 21. I know a spot where the wild vines creep, 22. We should be as careful of our words as of our actions. 23. Her air, her manners, all who saw admired. 24. I count this thing to be grandly true, that a noble deed is a step toward God. 25. That writer does the most, who gives his reader the most knowledge and takes from him the least time. 26. He ordered the boy to go at once. SEVENTH GRADE. 109 27. Where Moses was buried has never been discovered. 28. Believing that the earth is round, he sailed around it. 29. I would not enter on my list of friends the man who needlessly sets foot upon a worm. 30. As I passed by, I heard the complaints of the labor- ers who had reaped down his fields, and the cries of the poor whose covering he had taken away. ADDITIONAL SENTENCES FOR DRILL IN SELECTING THE CORRECT WORD OR FORM. Of the two words in each parenthesis of these sen- tences, the correct one is printed in italic. When you give the sentences to the pupils, you can give them both words and let them decide, or you can leave the paren- thesis blank. 1. No one but (he, him) should be about the king. 2. (Who, ■whom) did you say you met this morning? 3. I saw the man (luho, whom) they thought was dead. 4. I saw the man (who,. ty/iom) they thought to be dead. 5. I saw Mrs. Hunter to-day, (she, her) that was Miss Brown. 6. Will you condemn those (ivho, whom) you know are right ? Y. He is a man (ivho, whom) I think will decide justly. 8. It is not I, but (he, him) you should blame. (The object of hlame is a relative understood.) 9. Will you permit my friend and (I, me) to call upon you? 10. ISTot one of the entire company could write (Jiis^ their) own name. 110 teachers' manual, 11. Wlien lie met friend or foe, lie always treated (Jiim, them) kindly. 12. {This, these) kind of beads {is, are) greatly prized by the Indians. 13. A succession of failures {has, have) discouraged them. 14. ]^o opposition, no fate, no destiny, (interfere, in- terferes) with the resolve of a brave soul. 15. Quality and not quantity (is, are) to be desired. 16. He expected {to receive, io have received) the ap- pointment. 17. She says that she knows {who, whom) I thought it was. 18. She says that she knows (who, whom) I thought it to be. 19. She says that she knows {ivho, whom) it was thought to be. 20. ISTobody was there but my friend and (I, me). 21. It seemed strange to such people as {they, them). 22. Boys, let every one of ^ou take {his, your) place. 23. Either John or his friends offered (his, their) assistance. (The pronoun agrees with the nearer antecedent.) 24. There (has, have) been several men lost here. 25. This house, as well as these other two, {was^ were) built long ago. 26. Why (don't doesn't) he answer? 27. (Had he ought, ought he) to go ? 28. This and that house {belong, belongs) to him. 29. 'Not his barns, but his house {was, were) destroyed. 30. Is it I or he (whom, that) you wish to see? SEVENTH GRADE. HI TOPICS FOR COMPOSITION WORK. Pupils should have an outline before writing the com- position. If necessary, assist them in making the outline. Use topics from the various studies of the pupils, as suggested in Gkade Six. 1. You have just returned from visiting a friend in a large city. Write a letter to him, telling of your arrival home, how you found things at home, how pleasant your visit was, and urging him to return the visit. 2. Write a letter to a friend, describing a visit to Paris. 3. Write a letter describing a voyage up the Amazon. 4. Write a letter telling about a tour in the Alps. 5. Write a letter telling about a tour in Ireland. 6. Write a letter describing a bicycle tour through the country districts of England. 7. You have just entered Harvard College. Write a letter to your parents telling them of your journey, your reception by the faculty and students, and how you felt among so many strangers. Give a description of your room and room-mate, and tell what you intend to do. 8. Write an essay on "House-Cleaning." 9. Give a description of "Moving Time." 10. Describe a fire, real or imaginary. 11. Describe a "Winter Trip to Florida." 12. Describe some factory that you have visited. 13. Give a description of "My Ideal Boy." 14. Give a description of "My Ideal Girl." 15. Give a description of "My Ideal School." 16. Write a composition on "The Evils of Examina- tions." 112 TEACPIEKS' MANUAL. 17, Write an article for a newspaper, describing a con- cert or lecture that you liave heard. The following" need no outlines : 1. Write as short a telegram as possible, telling a friend that jou have a chance to secure a situation, and asking him to send recommendations at once. 2. Write as short a telegram as possible, telling a friend that you will not arrive at the expected time, because jour train has been delayed by snow-drifts and that you have missed connection. 3. Write an application for a position in a store, stating your qualifications, experience, efforts to please, and salary desired. 4. You have just heard that a teacher is wanted in a certain school. Write an application for the position. The number of such exercises can easily be increased. EIGHTH GEADE. LESSON ni. Altlioiigh our text-books usually say very little about the different varieties of compound and complex sentences, their careful study will produce excellent results. It is well known that one of the greatest difficulties pupils have in composition work is the proper connecting or combining of their sentences. Many pupils seem to have but little ability to discriminate between connectives. It is confidently believed that a careful study of this and the next lesson will give pupils a clearer idea of the force of these little words, and increased skill in their use. ISTotice that the terms complex-compound and compound- complex are not used in this book. Paeageaph 3. — Teachers, make a careful study of this subject before attempting to pass judgment on the work .done by the pupils in this paragraph. LESSON VIL Paeageaph 12. 1. Boys is a noun, common; neuter, third, singular; objective, in apposition with word. 2. She is a noun, common; neuter, third, singular; nominative, subject of the verb is. 3. DuJce of Marlborough is a noun, proper; neuter, third, singular ; nominative, in predicate with is. —8 . { 113 ) 114 teachers' manual. 4. Now is a noun, common ; neuter, third, singular ; nominative, in predicate with is. 5. Buts and ands are both nouns, common; neuter, third, plural; objective, object of contains. LESSOR VIIL Paragraph 1. — While this is the usual definition for case, there are some who object to it and who say that case is the form of the word, and not its office in the sen- tence. As nouns have the same form for the nominative and the objective, these j)ersons say that nouns have only the possessive case. They assert that case in the classic languages is a form of the noun, and that the same is true in English. I cannot agree with this assertion. While it is true that most nouns in the classic languages have different forms for the different cases, there is always a power behind the form that controls the form, and that power is the office of the word in the sentence. Before a writer in those languages can decide what form a noun should have in any sentence, he must determine its office in that sen- tence. Therefore the real case is the office of the word, not its form. When there are different forms for the different cases (as in pronouns), the office and the form must agree. In such a sentence as "Him is a pronoun," him is in the nominative case. But in this sentence, him is a noun, not a pronoun. Paragraph 5. — l^otice the explanation given for the nominative absolute. In " The teacher, being sick, went home," teacher is not in the nominative absolute, because EIGHTH GRADE. 116 it is the subject of ive^it; but in "The teacher being sick, school was dismissed," teacher is in the nominative abso- lute. Paragraph 7. 3. In such sentences as ''I want to be President," it is not necessary to supply a subject (me or myself) for to be, because it is plainly understood that I, the subject of the proposition, is the subject of the infinitive. Presi- dent is in the nominative case to agree with I. But in "To be right is better than to be President," the subject of the first verb is the plirase, to he right, and the subject of the second verb (is understood) is the phrase, to be President. ISTow these phrases can not possibly be the subjects of the infinitives, because we should then have an infinitive used as the subject of itself; therefore, we must supply subjects. Right is an adjective modifying the understood objective subject of the first to be, and Preside7it is in the objective case to agree with the under- stood objective subject of the second to be. Paragraph 9. — JSTotice the explanation in regard to the second sentence. I confess that it seems very strange to say that hindness is nominative in apposition with a clause that does not have case. I can give no authority in support of my disposition of this word, because, as far as I know, no other author has said anything about such sentences. The construction is peculiar, and not many such sentences are found. Paragraph 10. 1. Pilgrim Fathers is in the nominative by pleonasm. 2. Lord is in the nominative by exclamation. 3. Mr. President is in the nominative by direct address. 116 TEACHERS MANUAL. 4. Dryden is in the nominative by subscription. 5. Lo7'd is in the nominative by pleonasm. 6. Joy and happiness' are in the nominative by excla- mation. 7. Meeting is . in the nominative absolute. LESSON IX. Although" illustrations of each sentence called for in this paragraph can be found on the preceding pages, I shall give one more example of each. 1. To return good for evil, a difficult task, is enjoined upon us. 2. That my friend should succeed, an unexpected event, was very gratifying to me. 3. This labor, digging for coal, is very tiresome. 4. The precept, ^'Learn to labor and to wait," is an old one. 5. I wanted the teacher to be him. 6. Mr. Roberts, can you give me change for a five-dollar bill ? 7. O Liberty ! what crimes have been committed in thy name ! 8. The prisoner, what did he say ? 9. Three removes are as bad as a fire. — Poor Richard. 10. Governor Leedy having gone to Ohio, the lieutenant- governor acted as governor. 11. She becoming weaker every day, her friends took her to the mountains for her health. 12. General Bolivar was called the Washington of South America. 13. The anarchist killed Humbert, king of Italy. EIGHTH GRADE. 117 14. Guiteau, the assassin's, crime was great. It would be better to say, " The crime of Guiteau, the assassin/' etc. LESSO:^ X. Parageaph 3. — ISTotice the questions under the third sentence. Both sentences may be correct. The first means, "I am surprised at ^oit," making you the object of the preposition, and studying a participle with the construc- tion of an adjective modifying you. In the second sen- tence, studying is the object of the preposition, and is the important word in the phrase. The difference in meaning will be plainer if we take the first sentence given in this paragraph. "I am opposed to the gentleman speaking again" means that I am op- posed to that particular gentleman who is speaking again. "I am opposed to the gentleman's speaking again" does not mean that I am opposed to him personally, but that I am opposed to his speaking again. LESSOR XL ]^otice the sub-classes of common nouns. Every common noun is an abstract, a collective, or a class noun. The other two classes — verbal and diminutive — are names ap- plied to special classes by some authors. The classification of the parts of speech, as given in this book, is logical; that is, ''The sum of the parts is equal to the whole." All the abstract, collective, and class nouns combined will equal all the common nouns. It is only just to say that very few grammarians give a logical classification of the parts of speech. Examine the 118 TEACHEES' MANUAL. classifications most frequently given, and form your own conclusions. LESSOI^ XIL Paeageaph 2. — Pronouns can be used in all of the constructions of paragraph 1 except d, e, and li in the nominative, h in the possessive, and d in the objective. LESSON XIII. Paeageaph 3. o forefathers | sleep. , Each V X laid forever 3 cell Each is an adjective pronoun, in the nominative abso- lute. Being is understood before laid. 3^ general | began cam paign. Spring ' \ coming A Ye ( peaks ) everlasting am ■$^ I again. ■rt-' I ►^ Ol you Once again means about the same as once more. g He I looked = sachem ^ yyrapt. blanket EIGHTH GEADE, 119 Do not supply like before sachem. He looked a sa- chem = lie seemed a sachem. Wrapt in a red blanket may modify sachem. Why I hath wherefore. 6. Why and luherefore are common nouns. /T boast 1 . ■ The o ^ heraldry X pomp the o "*' power g all beauty | X that ^ all wealth 1 gave 1 e'er _t^ lat await alike hour the inevitable- paths 1 lead 1 the ^ glory ° grave. / but the These are two independent sentences, but a conjunction (and, for, or because) may be supplied. But modifies the phrase, to the grave. In some editions of Gray, the verb await is singular (awaits). This will make hour the subject, and the mean- ing will be, " The inevitable hour [death] awaits the boast of heraldry," etc. He was driven exile o g land. no teachers' manual Passive verbs frequently take a predicate noun after them. He (himself) | must strike blow. 9. who I would be — free Who = whoever = he who. For the case of hloiv, see bottom of page 197. -^Q that I I have sailor | knows ships (sport) sailors | pity f winds 11. many | live = peasants. one I lives king Where 12. that 1 1 know nothing ) o '^ whereabouts. it ( I 1 M'ish V ^to be understood "That I know nothing of his whereabouts" is a noun clause, objective case, in apposition with it. EIGHTH ( shape iUA DE. execrable thou 1 art whence : : P :: 3 .■: P^ X I liX what 121 13. I believe that whence is an adjective. It does not mean, " From what place did jou come ? " but rather, " What kind of being are you ? " When jou say, " He is from England," do yon mean to tell where he came from, or that he is an Englishman ? Since art is followed by an adjective and nonn both, we can indicate this in the diagram only by expanding into a compound sentence. 16. He I did I it sake Herodias's (wife) brother (Philip's) his ISTotice that wife and brother are in the possessive case, although they do not have the sign of possession. LESSON xiy. Paeageaph 11. — When the former and the latter are used as adjective pronouns, the two words should be parsed together ; but when the understood word is supplied, each word is a simple adjective. In "The former statement is true, the latter statement is false," the and former are both adjectives, modifying statement. In "The former is true, the latter is false," the former is an adjective pro- 122 TEACHERS MANUAL, noun, neuter, third, singular, to agree with its antecedent, statement understood; nominative, subject of is. Paeageaph 14. — Study the explanation very carefully. Paeageaph 15. 1. Mi7ie is a possessive pronoun, objective case. 2. Yours is a possessive pronoun, nominative case. 3. Ou7's is a possessive pronoun, nominative case. 4. Henry's is a proper noun, objective case, object of the preposition of. 5. Hers is a possessive pronoun, objective case, object of saved. LESSON XV. -, -r> J. • ,. Paeageaph 4. 1. Kestrictive. 2. ISTot restrictive.. 3. Restrictive. 4. ]^ot restrictive. 5. Restrictive. 6. Restrictive. 7. Restrictive. Paeageaph 5. 1. He was the first that entered. We use that after the words all* very^ and same, and after an adjective in the superlative degree. First may be considered a superlative. 2. This is the same story that we read before. 4. Was it you or the wind that shut the door? 5. All that I have is thine. 6. Yesterday I met an old friend, whom I failed to recognize. *When all refers to persons, it Is not always followed by that. EIGHTH GRADE. 123 The use of the comma after friend indicates that the clause is not restrictive. The meaning is that I met but one old friend, and that I failed to recognize him. T. Yesterday I met an old friend that I failed to recog- nize. The omission of the comma indicates that the clause is restrictive. The meaning is that I may have met several old friends, but I met only one that I did not recognize. 8. He sold his bay horse, which had been given to him. The relative clause is not restrictive. He had but one bay horse. The hearers did not -know that he sold the horse, nor did they know that the horse had been given to him. The speaker gave information in both clauses. 9. He sold the bay horse that had been given to him. The clause is restrictive. The meaning of the sentence is that the owner had several bay horses and that one had been given to him. The hearers knew which horse was given to him, but they did not know that^the owner had sold that horse. The speaker, then, gave information in only one clause. LESSOR XVI. Paeagraph 1. 1. I love such as love me. As is the subject of love. 2. Tears, such as angels weep, burst forth. As is the object of weep. 3. I shall not learn my duty from such as he (is). As is nominative, in predicate with is. 4. The first as is an adverb of degree. (The modifier of an adjective pronoun is an adverb.) The second as is a relative pronoun, subject of were called. 124 TEACHERS MANUAL. Pakageaph 3. 1. Where breathes the foe but falls before us ? But is the subject of falls. 2. There is not a man here but knows it. But is the subject of hnows. 3. There is no wind but soweth seeds of a better life. But is the subject of soweth. Paragraph 4. 1. All the wealth he had ran in his veins. The understood relative is the object of had. 2. Men will reap the things they sow. The relative is the object of sow. 3. Let not harsh words mar the good we might do here. The relative is the object of might do. 4. Take the goods the gods provide thee. The relative is the object of provide. 5. The orator we heard is from Kentucky. The relative is the object of heard. Paragraph 5. 1. (He) who steals my purse steals trash. 2. (They) whom the gods love die young, 3. Let him be (the person) who he may (be)^ Paragraph 8. 1. Select whomsoever you wish (to select). Use the objective form, because in the subordinate clause it is the object of to select understood. 2. Give it to wdioever wants it. Use the nominative form, because its office in the sub- ordinate clause is the subject of wants. The understood antecedent is the object of to. EIGHTH GRADE. 125 3. Whoever lives long will find trouble. Use the nominative form, because it is the subject of lives in the dependent clause. 4. The prize is for whoever wins it. Use the nominative form, because it is the subject of IV ins in the subordinate clause. LESSOI^ XVIII. Paragraph 2. 1. It is I that is standing here. 2. It is thej that was responsible. The sentences as written above are logically correct, but good usage recognizes the predicate nominative as the antecedent of that. This will change, is to am^ and ivas to were. Paragraph 5. ~ 1. Neither of us is willing to give up his claim. The antecedent of his is one, understood after neither. If two of us have the claim in partnership, the sentence should read, " JSTeither of us is willing ^ to give up our claim." 2. John and I have our lessons. 3. John and you have your lessons. Your is plural, because it agrees with John and you taken together, 4. Each member of this class must have his own book. 5. Two or three of us have finished their work. Their agrees with persons understood. 6. The mother, as well as the father, must do her part. The antecedent of her is mother. 126 TEACHEES MANUAL. 7. If jou should find mj horse or cow, please bring it to me. Use the singular pronoun, because the two antecedents are singular and are taken separately. Use the neuter form, because it can be correctly ai^plied to both horse and cow. 8. He and I love our parents. 9. Poverty and wealth has each its own temptations. 10. Neither the judge nor the jurors were unprejudiced in their opinion. 11. Will either of you boys lend me his knife? The antecedent of his is one understood. 12. Each one of us has his faults. 13. Every one of you should bring his own book. 14. She laughs like one out of his right mind. This means that she laughs like any person, male or female, out of his right mind. If the sentence means that she laughs like a M^oman out of her right mind, the blank should be filled by lie7\ The phrase, out of his right mind, is an adjective, modi- fying one. Out of is a compound preposition. LESSON XIX. Paeageaph 1. 1. This is the friend that I love. 2. Correct. Has done is third person to agree with ivho, and who agrees with Tnan. Some would use that instead of who. 3. Take that book, which I left on the table, to the library. The relative clause is not restrictive, because the ad- EIGHTH GRADE. 127 jective that definitely points out which book is meant. If that is changed to the, the sentence should read, " Take the book that I left on the table to the library." The clause must be restrictive now, because there is nothing else to point out definitely which book is meant. 4. There was a bird that was web-footed caught by the fox. 5. The prisoner, who committed the crime, was sen- tenced by the judge. If the hearers knew that the prisoner committed the crime, the clause, should be restrictive, and that should be used instead of luho. As I have corrected the sentence, it means that the speaker gives information in both clauses. 6. Correct. 7. Jamestown was the first permanent settlement that was made in the United States by the English. Paeageaph 2. 1. Whom will you select for secretary ? Whom is the object of will select. Let him be who he may (be), 2. him X I let \ ^ X be = X he I may X = who The complete sentence is, " You let him to be the person who he may be." Person is an objective attribute, agree- ing with him. Some may think that whom is the correct form, because it may be used after {to) he — /lim to he ivhom. From an examination of the diagram we see that this would locate 128 TEACHERS MANUAL,. the relative in the principal olanse, but we have already -learned that a relative is always in the subordinate clause. 3. Correct. Who is the subject of luas. gentleman | entered who I was = governor I I learned It may seem that who is in a noun clause, thus contra- dicting the statement previously made, that a relative pronoun is always in an adjective clause. ''Who was governor," is a noun clause, the object of learned, but the entire clause, "Who I afterwards learned was gov- ernor," is an adjective clause. 4. A gentleman entered whom I afterwards found out to be the governor of the state. I gentleman | entered governor found out \ ^ to be = whom Found out is a compound verb, meaning about the same as learned. 5. Whom shall I go to ? Whom is the object of to. 6. Her who studies the teacher will commend. The teacher will commend her who studies. Y. Give the letter to Henry, him who is standing by the gate. Him is in apposition with Henry. EIGHTH GEADEo 129 8. I refer to ISTewton, him who discovered the law of >'ravitation. Him is in apposition with Newton. 9. Correct it I was = who You I may guess Who is an interrogative pronoiino 10, Correct. they I elected You I may guess whom WJiom is an interrogative pronoun. 11. Who did jou saj was chosen ? Who I was chosen ? you I did say 12. Gentle reader, let you and me walk in the paths of virtue. you X let 3: X walk 13. I do not think such persons as he (is) competent to judge. As h a relative pronoun, nominative, in predicate with is. 14. All, save me, were pleased. Save is a preposition. 130 TEACHEES MANUAL. 15. Tell me, in confidence, who is she you love. she I is = who tell X X you love. X Me is the object of a preposition understood. Some would call me the indirect object of tell. An understood relative is the object of love. LESSON XX. Paeageaph 1. He I granted request ( act ) esteem him. which I have attempted to make a diagram that will indicate that act is in apposition with the clause. I would call act in the nominative case, although the clause is not in the nominative case, because it is not a noun clause. This construction is peculiar and occurs but seldom. 2. _H^ he 1 shall hear that i formed He is in the nominative by pleonasm. EIGHTH GKADE. anger | rvished 131 next eyes 3 fire V (being) — Eyes is in the nominative absolute. On fire is an ad- jective phrase, describing the condition of the eyes; him X I let ^Z Whosoever i will X This sentence is not strictly correct, because a com- pound relative is used and its antecedent is expressed. 6. governor | selects X I shall receive Whomsoever appointment. Whomsoever = he whom. 7. X Give prize X you i deem virhomsoever V X X — worthy. Whomsoever is the objective subject of to he understood. 132 TEACHEIRS MANUAL. 1. soul lesso:n XXL is = that which chooses x: it : ^ ■ < X - X not '^ that we 1 have. which The complete sentence is, '' We are made happy by what we are, but we are not made happy by what we have," 6. Poor and unkind are adjectives in predicate. 7, Honor or reputation is dearer than life. Honor dearer reputation life I X - X The subjects are taken sejDarately, 8. The house stood on a rather narrow strip of land. Bather is an adverb, modifying narrow. 9. The remonstrance lav on the table. EIGHTH GEADE. 175 The intransitive verb should be used, because there is no object, and the verb is in the active voice. 10. Travel gives a man something else than a few sights. ( See paragraph 1, page 262.) If the sentence means that travel gives a man a few sights and something additional, besides is correct. For analysis or diagramming the full sentence is '"Travel gives a man something else than a few sights are (some- thing)." Else is an adjective, modified by the subordinate clause. If besides is used, it is a preposition. 11. We had no other alternative than to go on (is one alternative). 12. I often think of William the Conqueror, which is only another name for tyranny. Use which because it refers to William the Conqueror as a name, not as a person. 13. James is not so tall as Frank, but heavier. 14. Xot every word that men speak is true. What does the sentence mean as it stands in the book ? 15. Correct. He agrees in case with I. If we supply an objective subject for to be (as some say we should) the sentence would read, " I have always wished (myself) to be him." ^ow him is objective to agree with myself. I am confident that the correct form of the pronoun is he; therefore, I am also confident that I should be con- sidered the subject of the infijiitive, and that no objective subject should be supplied. As we have already learned, "The subject of the infinitive is in the objective case unless it is also the subject of the proposition." 176 16. TEACHERS MANUAL, snow. I lay — bloodless O 3 Linden sun I was low when all I have made all an adverb, modifying bloodless. 1 think it means entirely. Some call it an adjective, modifying snow. LESSON LL 1. Talk not too much, nor talk of thyself. 2. He I loves lands much so X X as that Egyptians embalmed It ( how dead. ) I is known 4. Since is a conjunctive adverb, modifying lived and connecting the dependent clause to has undergone. huts stand A few i o 3 Carthage t stood. j masses once where • A few should be taken together as one adjective. EIGHTH GKADEo 177 IS = room V hung \^_hung pictures thoughts. Hung is a past participle, passive. 7, V ^ to do action stealth it V to have luxu ry I 1 know V X X found out a- '^ accident. X An understood relative is the object of hnow. It is the objective subject of an infinitive. Found out is a com- pound verb, meaning discovered. 8. that poet I has had I , to We I venture V^to struggle circumstances more unfavorable Milton X I X X Ix X X than —12 178 teachers' manual. In regard to taking mo7^e unfavorable togetlier, see para- graph 5, page 220. Some maj think that to struggle is the object of has liad, but has had does not denote posses- sion in this sentence ; it means about the same as was com- pelled. unfavorable circumstances." there The understood words are, " had to struggle with 9. path depth height. There is simply an expletive. Is, in this sentence, de- notes existence, and is a complete varb ; that is, it. takes no comjDlement. This diagram takes the sentence to mean that a certain kind of path exists (place not mentioned). If the sentence means that a path (kind not mentioned) exists (place meixr tioned — from the lowest depth to the loftiest height), then the phrases modify is. I I was — alone 10. less X X X a' ^ myself. X I X when than I was never less alone than I am alone when I am by myself. Notice that alone and hy myself are adjectives. Do you think by tnyself tells where I am ? EIGHTH GEADE. 179 11. are = that strive l ^ to be what Strive is an intransitive verb; therefore the infinitive can not be its object. What is a simple relative, equiva- lent to which, and is in the nominative case to agree with we. X I do things 12. X I do X di-eam day all This is a compound sentence with the conjunction omitted. Day, is in the objective case without a govern- ing word. In such sentences, I have heard long called a preposition, meaning nearly the same as duriiig. All day long = during all the day. 13. it I would forget cunning. l ^ to should neglect hand LESSOIT LII. Paeageaph 1. IP Europe | was 180 TEACHERS MANUAL. lad 1-^ blood 1 y 1 is — roya passions | seem — C3 3 pi a> ^ control o "= men some c ^ opinion community | is — ! la !=> slumbers nidnight boy y — a r the sailor 6. In slumbers does not tell where he lay; it tells his con- dition while he was lying. The meaning is about the same as "He lay fast asleep." Each of these predicate phrases modifies the subject, and in each one the preposition shows the relation of its. object to the subject, the word the phrase modifies. Paeageapii 6. 2. Of great importance is an adjective phrase in the predicate. 3. I7i authority is an adjective phrase. It does not tell where the Whigs were, but their condition. 4. "Among the most useful words of the language" is an adjective phrase in the predicate. 5. In favor is an adjective phrase. 6. In Paris is an adverb phrase. EIGHTH GKADE. LESSON LIII. swans I float — double 181 § lake 1 X = swan X • 3 i shadow jSTo connection need be placed between the two sentences. Paragraph 11. 1, blood I shall be shed. his sheddeth : whoso blood man's Whoso is used as a simple relative in this sentencCo 2. it X I think V to be — worth en]oying. world I be — worth The second think need not be written in the diagram. Enjoying and luinning are in the objective case without a governing word. Be is in the subjunctive mode. 3. Antonio my s fire Notice that on fire is an adjective phrase, modifying I. All modifies the phrase 07i fire. 1'82 TEACHEES' MANUAL. 4. This sentence is the same as .the third, except that my is an interjection. 5. This sentence is the same as the third, except that on fire is an adverb phrase, modifying am standing. 6. \^ to be — right It ( ) I is — better ^to be = president. X - X than Right modifies the understood subject of to he. Presi- dent is in the objective case to agree with the understood subject of to he. /-. yto be = him It( ) I is — easier ^ to be = myself. I X -X than Him and myself are in the objective case to agree with the objective subject (me) of the infinitive to he. In the sixth and the seventh sentences we must supply objective subjects for the infinitives, because the subjects of the propositions are not the subjects of the infinitives. LESSON LIV. 1. Of practical value is an adjective phrase in the predicate. EIGHTH GEADE. 183 2. o l-b value tie lit conduct is — CD CD as "^ j indication conduct 1 as 1 must be looked to = : expression yet 3. Must be loohed to is a compound passive verb, meaning the same as must he regarded. With this meaning, it takes expression as a complement. 4. He I fell — asleep. Fell is a copulative verb here, meaning nearly the same as became. Asleep is an adjective. 5_ dollars •> as ga i I I are thought of = ; price. cents ^i I I The Are thought of = are regarded. Y. They (one) | love another. I I am = man I foolish I very fond old X I fourscore and upwards. Years, understood, is in the objective case without a governing word. Fourscore and upwards can be taken together as a numeral adjective modifying years. 9. Dim is an adjective in predicate. 10. Aghast is an adjective in predicate. 184 teachers' manual. 11. mistletoe ( plant ) | seemed — sacred. V growing o Druids § trees 12. ° part mine | own I 1 shall be — glad V to learn. The phrase, for mine own part, is used independently. Mine is used for my, in accordance with an old custom. 13. (It) I (is) — better. the (care) | (is) — less you I have the X \ ^ to do E^ firearms The less care which you have to do with firearms, the better it is. The, modifying better, is an adverb of degree, and the, modifying less, is a conjunctive adverb. (See paragraph 2, page 254.) Which, understood, is the object of have. The disposition of the sentence given here is not quite the same as that given in the grammar. 16. Truth shall rise L crushed agam o earth 1. 2. 5. EIGHTH GEADE. LESSON LV. These | are = warriors Saxon Clan Alpine's true I I am = Roderick Dhu. greatness some I have VX X thrust o them it 1 ^ tvill be = that you 1 o you i make o 1-15 which life . heart will be also there treasure where honor | is = approbation V defined as ^ Cicero As is an adverb of manner. 7„ I I have found plant V answering err ° description. 185 186 TEACHEES MANUAL. I I remember house I 1 was born. wher( he 1 has resided 5' 5' Virginia. CD then Since is a preposition. Then, meaning that time, can be considered a nonn. 10. Be 1 is = he i who 1 judges 1 who 1 : udges I think least best. 11. To hear lias the construction of an adverb, modifj- mff sorry. 12. \ ,to X 1 r>o expect others c not 3 ' cT w CO Vto govern you 1 have learned how yourself. = love. passion 1 seems — Vjbo have been 13. To have been bas tbe construction of an adjective. Love is in tbe nominative case, agreeing witb passion. 14. ^ taste conduct I was — bad very Under the circumstances is used independently. EIGHTH GRADE. 187 15. that continent Columbus I felt \ ^ to be discovered. Felt means believed. Was is a complete verb here, meaning existence. 16. That 1 ought Vto have been thought of. It is difficult to decide whetlier the infinitive in this sentence has the construction of an adverb, or of an adjective in the predicate. Of is part of the verb. LESSOR LVI. 1. We should not be totally overcome by present events. 2. He lived in a manner agreeable to the dictates of reason and religion. He lived 5' manner able agree dictates 3. Be so kind as to read this letter (is kind), X I be — kind V to read letter. X - X 188 4. TEACHEES MANUAL. yX be alarmed. They | need 6. Only modifies the phrase in the hosom. It should be supplied before will. To profess regard and to act differently mark a base mind. ^ To profess 7'. V to act fs regard differently mark mind. The coordinate conjunction, and, should connect similar constructions. Some would prefer the following diagram: VToprofess V to act regard and differently mark mind. 8. He was a teacher, but he is now a lawyer. 9. It is no more than what he ought to do. Use than after the comparative degree. - It I is — more that I X — X he I ought Vtodo. than which EIGHTH GRADE. 189 10. Neither good nor evil comes of itself. In analysis, neither and nor arq taken together as one conjunction. 11. Trust not him who you know is dishonest. X I Trust him who I is — dishonest. you I know 12. Trust not him whom you know to be dishonest. X I Trust him whom you know V to be — dishonest. Whom is the objective subject of to he. 13. It is so clear that it needs no explanation. It I is — clear it needs explanation. 14. This word is found only in Shakespeare. Only modifies the phrase, in Shakespeare. 15. There are oak trees and walnut trees in that grove on the former are acorns, and on the latter are walnuts. The diagram is not difficult. 16. An oak tree and a walnut tree are standing on the hill ; the one bears acorns, and the other bears walnuts. 190 TEACHERS MANUAL. When the one and the other are nsed as demonstratives, the one refers to the first mentioned, and the other to the last mentioned. LESSON LVII. 1. Cato I spent night Ireading Plato's Immortality. he durst V X give blow X himself Durst is an old form of dared, 2. None | knew thee to love thee. 3. Somebody told me, but I forget who (told me). Me is the object of to understood. Told is a transitive verb, but its object is not expressed. 4. Would that my brother were here. brother | were X I Would here. Would, in this sentence, is a transitive verb, meaning wish. Were is subjunctive past, denoting present time. 5» I I rely coming I your 3 season. EIGHTH GKADE. 191 6. We learned that the air is composed of two gases. 7. Great benefits may be derived from the reading of good books. The and of may both be omitted. benefits | may be derived reading ^the~^ books. 8. A fondness for display is, of all follies, the most ridiculous. 9. ITo one except the immediate family was present at the funeral. one I was — present U family funeral. I believe present is an adjective in this sentence, be- cause at the funeral is the adverb of j)lace. In "He was present," many will call present an adverb. 10. Six months' interest is due, interest | is — due. months' Six llo He I is = friend teacher's. the This sentence is correct, and teacher^ s is in the objec- 192 TEACIIEKS MANUAL. tive case. "He is a friend of the teacher" means nearly the same, and is preferred hj many. If I wanted to convey the idea that this was one of the teacher's many friends, I would use teacher's; but if I wanted to convey the idea that this was probably his only friend, I would use teacher. (See last, part of page 204.) 12. You might come for at least a few days. You I might come days. a few least ' At least is an inseparable phrase. 13. Here is a basket of fresh eggs. 14. Boil the milk, if fresh milk seems to make the child sick. X I Boi; milk milk V^ to make child V X X — sick. fresh To make has the construction of an adjective. ]^5^ worth I rises \depressed. | Slow ^ poverty Slow is an adverb, used by poetic license for slowly. 16. Fruit, as well as flowers, will carry its perfume. The antecedent of its is fruit. EIGHTH GRADE. 193 17. Logically, this is correct, but most writers will say, "It is you that are to be nominated." (See paragraph 1, page 210.) 18. The prince, and the duke too, has received his al- lowance. Some one else has said that the prince has received his allowance, and the speaker adds that the duke has also received his allowance. Suppose the sentence were, " The prince, and the prin- cess too, has received (his, her) allowance," should the pro- noun be his or herf Both the following are correct: 1. The queen, and the children too, have received their allowance. 2. The children, and the queen too, has received her allowance. LESSON LVIIL man is — wise so he 1 can : <:+ : tJ- learn more. Flowers | are — like nds X frie we I love Vtor neel that -13 194 TEACHERS MANUAL. crocodile | is — difficult I so V to kill 3. people I are — apt scales | have resisted \^ imagine bullets. 4. He breaks bridge that can forgive not others he (himself ) | must pass. CD which 5. A compound sentence composed of two complex mem- bers. And connects the two principal clauses. you I will reach home. 6. you I go the faster The tj or , Oxide ( ; laughing-gas ) | produces insensibilitf. Or is not a connective in this sentence. g man | is — fortun ate No V to be — successful. always X - X EIGHTH GRADE. 195 ISTo man is so fortunate as always to be successful (is fortunate). 9. We know that whicli we are, but we know not that which, we may be. 10. f Know duty X do gospel I is = 11. Nothing dries Quintilian | says \ quoting tears | X B Ci X than 12. "We I look righteousness | dwelleth heaven wherein earth Wherein is a relative adverb. Look for may be taken together, meaning expect. ]^3_ O man ! X I Murmur shortness not thou I hast (time) (that) [ (is — much) than (which) I is employed. well 196 14. TEACHEKS MANUAL. We I may be — able not yto accomplish L X X all we I desire X ^ hands ? we I shall sit — folded therefore still We may not be able to accomplish all that we desire to accomplish, etc. With folded hands is an adjective phrase, expressing the condition of we; it does not express the manner of sitting. 15. Sun 1 pours o flood •^ cottage cheerily man's the as X 1 X o as X pala ce. It ( ) 1 is — tru e IG. EIGHTH GRADE. plant I is — common 197 it I is called = monkey-cup a' Ceylon monkeys where f open spring IS 2, water when lid drink water they I can quench I where I thirst. Is, the predicate of sprm^, denotes existence, and is a complete verb. There is merely an introductory word. 1. LESSON LIX. 'T I is = X judgments X I X = as t^ watches none | SO X alike just each 1 beli eves his own. 198 TEACHERS MANUAL. It is the same (thing) with our judgments as it is with our watches. As is a relative pronoun. A connective might be supplied between the two com- plex sentences. 2, that It was = Watt he 1 dealt rticle (power). who : S' a J told kings 1 — fond X George II V to be were i said — o '^ which "~ what I forged what I set X chain V to discern it ( Nor I is given • I feet solitudes X I have diagrammed icliat as an interrogative pronoun, but it may be a double relative, equivalent to that which. 4. Pitt S Wellington (both) I were = men. EIGHTH GEADE. 199 Some would call toth an adjective, modifying Pitt and Wellington. By supplying the words understood, the remainder of the sentence is not difficult. "^'The former was great in peace, and the latter was great in war." The former and the latter are adjective pronouns. 5. Tricks is the direct object of the verb, and dog is the object of a preposition (^to) understood. 6. I I was told we I were traveling while X story- story Story is located twice in the diagram because there is a difference of opinion about its construction. Some con- sider it the object of the passive verb (see paragraph 7, page 197), some consider it the object of a preposition understood, but most authors say nothing about it. 7. In this sentence, sum has the same construction as story in the preceding sentence. Lo it I is = I sai X 1 be n X i: — afraid. voice d 1 that 1 was — calme L" silence | X — X 1 than : ,„: 200 teachers' manual, The compound clause used as the object of said may be complex: "Be not afraid, because it is I." 9. that are = his. His and ours are possessive pronouns in the nominative case. Some would supply nouns for the predicates, and make his and our personal pronouns in the possessive case. Be is in the imperative, third person. Some may claim that the complete expression is, " Let it be ours,'-' making it objective and be an infinitive. How will such dispose of " Be he who he may " ? 10. He made secret ^ having written my review. 11. X Teach ^ to hide ^ me fault I 1 see. X 12. Was lost sight of is a compound verb, in the passive voice. 13. To trespass has the construction of an adverb (of specification), modifying are forbidden. EIGHTH GEADE. 201 14. \ ^ dreaming Turk I lay — | 2, hour Greece | should tremble when knee ix bent suppliance Knee is in the nominative case absolute. 15. that she be need ( present ) I is LESSON LX. 1. Correct. The prepositional phrase, hut him and me, modifies all. o He I is = man told X you p cr o r^ whom 3. They came just behind father and me. Behind is a preposition. Just modifies behind. Richard | is = himself I again. 4. Do not get the idea that himself, because it contains the objective form him, is always in the objective case. 202 TEACHERS MANUAL. 5. It was the one who joii said it was. It 1 was = one it = who you said VJ:o have made God I seems 1. him " V X X = that he I was = which horse ! costs much cow I X X times three Costs is an intransitive verb (it can not be made pas- sive), and much is in the objective case without a govern- ing word. Supply money, if you prefer. Times is in the objective case without a governing word. 8. many | were — satisfied. As came Were satisfied can be a passive verb. The second as is a relative pronoun. 9. Such I are — happy. as I are virtuous 10. The fugitive threatened to shoot whoever tried to stop him. EIGHTH GRADE. 203 V ^to shoot fugitive I threatened X whoever ItQStop tried him. 11. I I knew whom general | appointed V^X X = captain. 12. You I can reap you after As until and after rasij both be prepositions, the fol- lowing diagram may be used : You I can reap you I sow. 13. danger it j is — bird ) flies the higher The 204 TEACHEES' MANUAL, Mo7'e may modify the phrase, out of danger. Out of danger tells the condition, not the place. 14. Of all Roman orators, Cicero is most renowned. 15. I have no other hope than this (is hope). have hope this I X == X other than 16. A whole month has passed since you arrived. Since is either a conjunctive adverb or a preposition. 17. This is correct, because some part of this year still remains. (See paragraph 8, page 233.) 18. The Ohio was very high last month. LESSON LXI. 1. If he is sincere, I am satisfied. If the meaning is that I am satisfied if he should be sin- cere at some future time, the sentence is correct as it stands in the grammar. Remember that the subjunctive present denotes future time. 2. It is no more than his due (is much). 3. This set of books was much prized. 4. Flatterers flatter as long as they have expectation of gain, and no longer. In analysis, the last part becomes " and they flatter no longer." 5. The visitor told the same story that you did. Use that after same. 6. David, the son of Jesse, was younger than any of his brothers. EIGHTH GRADE. 205 David was not one of his. brothers. 7. We need not be afraid. To is omitted after need. 8. He expected to gain more by the transaction. (Para- graph 4, page 245.) 9. Is it I that yon mean? 10. If this was his meaning, the prediction has failed. As the time is evidently past, use ivas, the indicative. 11. Is should be are. 12. Are should be is, to agree with it. Some say that in such sentences it is simply intro- ductory, and the subject is the two phrases. If this is true, the verb should be are, and the sentence is correct as it stands in the grammar. But we know that no good writer would use are in this sentence. The grammatical subject is it, and the compound phrase is in apposition Avith the subject. 13. He loves no interests but those of truth and virtue. 14. I spoke only three words on the subject. 15. Hannibal was one of the greatest generals that the world ever saw. Use tliat after the superlative degree. 16. These are the rules of grammar by observing (or by the observing of) which you may avoid mistakes. (Paragraph 6, page 246.) 17. There is no book published in which we can not find mistakes when we examine it carefully. If you analyze the sentence as it stands in the grammar^ you will find that you have an unnecessary //. 18. He accused his companion of having betrayed him. Use of after accused. 206 teachers' manual. 19. Let jour promises be few, and such as you can perform. As is the correct relative after such. 20. The winter has not been so severe as we expected it to be. winter | has been — severe it we I expected V X X - X 21. Mj sister and I, as well as mj brother, are engaged in our respective occupations. Since the speaker is making the statement about " my sister and I," the verb and pronoun should agree with sister and /. (See also paragraph 4, page 211.) 22. This grammar was purchased at Leighton^s, the bookseller. As Leighton and hoo'kseUer are in apj)osition, but one possessive sign should be used. As I have corrected the sentence, the thing possessed (store) is understood after Leighton. Some saj that the thing possessed is imderstood after IjooTxSeUer, not after Leighton. In that case, hoolseller will take the sign. 23. The time of the teacher's making the experiment at length arrived. (Paragraph 3, page 196.) 24. This picture of the art dealer does not much resemble him. As the statement is made that the picture is a portrait of the dealer, not that it is owned bj him, no possessive sign should be used. EIGHTH GRADE. 207 25. These pictures of the art dealer's were sent to liim from Europe. Here the statement is made that the dealer owns the pictures ; therefore, the sign of possession should be used. If we change dealer to a pronoun, we shall see that the form must be possessive. " These pictures of yours were sent to you from Europe." (See bottom of page 204.) Exercises for Analysis. 1. Many people regard winter as a season of enjoyment. 2. They will build the fort strong and secure. 3. The house was made large. 4. They sent him as a messenger. 5. He was sent as a messenger. 6. Our selection would, perhaps, not be yours. (Perhaps is a modal adverb, and I believe it modifies the entire sentence.) 7. They rescued the sailor from drowning — a brave deed. 8. They forgave the man that offense. 9. The man was forgiven that offense. 10. Sixty years ago, Chicago was a swamp. 11. Yes, you may recite, 12. The former invalid seems in good health. 13. The room was in perfect order. 14. To succeed in his work — that w^ill require effort. 15. Studying geometry is developing the mind. 16. The only way to have a friend is to be one. 17. Our deeds determine us as much as we determine our deeds. 18. The greatest of faults, I should say, is to be con- scious of none. 208 teachers' manual. 19. Life is not so short but that there is always time enough for courtesy. (But that should be taken together.) 20. To suffer and to do — that was thy portion in life. 21. His opinion is always original, and to the purpose. 22. I will try to keep the balance true. 23. From the moment you lose sight of the land you have left, all is vacancy. 24. A pupil cannot acquire the art of expression by merely reciting the laws that govern the expression of thought. 25. When you face a difficulty, never let it stare you out of countenance. In each of the following parentheses, the correct word is printed in italics: 1. They wall send {ichoever, whomever) is willing to go. 2. Whom can I trust if not (he, him) ? 3. He told only those {who, whom) he thought would keep the secret, 4. He told only those (who, whom) he thought he could trust. 5. Neither you nor she has brought (your, /ter) books. 6. You and she have brought {your, their) books. 7. If he {ivas, were) there, I did not see him. 8. If he (was, were) going, he w^ould tell you. 9. I do not admire this construction although it {is, be) much used. 10. He married a lady {who, whom) they say is very wealthy. 11. She married a man (who, ivhom) 1 know to be worthless. 12. I saw the man {who, whom) I think is to speak. EIGHTH GFvADE. 209 13. I do not know {who, whom) they said went, (I do not know, they said who went.) 14. The morning was chilly, and the traveler looked (cold, coldly). 15. The juror looked (cold, coldly) on the one offering the bribe. Each of the following sentences (most of them selected from standard authors) contains at least one error: 1. He examined the book which had been given him attentively. 2. Garfield was not only famous for his ability as a soldier, but for his statesmanship. 3. This man neither sinned, nor his parents. 4. I have only read three chapters in this book. 5. His success is neither the result of industry nor per- severance. 6. There is no country in which wealth is so sensible of its obligations as our own. 7. In '' Thaddeus of Warsaw " there is more crying than in any novel I remember to have read. 8. The pony had to lay down on all fours before the lads could bestride him, 9. ISTobody knows but my mate and I AVhere our nest and nestlings lie. 10. Not to render up my soul to such as thee. 11. ISTo mightier than thyself or me. 12. " Who's there ? " " Me, the porter." 13. My son is going to be married to I don't know who. 14. Thou, ISTature, partial Nature, I arraign. 15. If anyone did not know it, it was their own fault. 16. Every one must judge of their own feelings. —14 210 TEACHERS MANUAL. 17. The genius and merit of a rising poet was celebrated. 18. There is a right and a wrong in them. 19. A ray or two wanders in the darkness. 20. Both death and I am found eternal. 21. How each of these professions are crowded. Idioms and Special Constructions. While all who have studied this Manual and the Gram- mar will admit that I have discussed more of the peculiari- ties and "knotty points " of English grammar than most authors, yet there are many peculiar constructions that have not been mentioned. Our language is full of idioms and phrases that cannot be disposed of by the ordinary rules of grammar, and no teacher or student should feel discouraged because he can not promptly analyze or parse all such expressions he may meet. The only rule for disposing of these expressions is, care- fully determine the meaning, and then let the meaning control the analysis and parsing. A few of the more common idioms will now be examined. 1. He is going to read. The verb go does not have its usual meaning here ; it means about the same as intend. Is going is transitive and has to read for its object. Of course, if he actually goes some place for the purpose of reading, the infinitive is an adverb of purpose. 2. The boy has to study. This means the boy is compelled to study, and has is intransitive, modified by the infinitive, to study. To study is an adverb phrase of specification. 3. This lesson has to do with infinitives. Has to do can all be taken together as the verb, meaning EIGHTH GEADE. 211 deals; or, has can be disposed of as a transitive verb, witb to do as its object. " This lesson has to do — lias doing — with infinitives." 4. He must get rid of his vices. (Some incorrectly say "get shut of.") Must get is intransitive, meaning about the same as must become. Bid is an adjective in the predicate. 5. Special uses of it: "Trip it as you go;" " He lords it over his neighbors ;" " I made up my mind to foot it." In each of these sentences, it may be called a pronoun, having no definite antecedent, idiomatically used as the object of the verb. Or, probably better, tnp it, lord it, and foot it may be used as compound verbs. 6. Compound verbs. Some of these have already been mentioned, but there are many more. In " He broke into the house," the verb is not broke, because he did not break. The verb is broke into, having house for its object. In " He rushed into the house," the verb is rushed, because he did 7'ush. Into is a preposition. There is a compound verb in each of the following: 1. He took up a section of land. 2. The sun breaks through (pierces) the darkest clouds. 3. My uncle approved of it. 4. This idea is plainly hinted at. 5. The police winked at the violations of the law. (Did the police loink?) 6. The manager came to help out. 7. He cast up his accounts. 8. Such crimes must be put a stop to. 9. If all the red tape in our army regulations were done aioay tvith, it would be better fdr the common soldiers. 7. Had better. " He had better go," 212 teachers' manual.. Because in liad go we have the auxiliary had used with the simple form of the verb (not the past participle), many assert that the expression is incorrect. According to grammatical rules it is incorrect, but it is an idiom sanc- tioned by good authors, old and modern. Had go should be parsed as a verb, indicative, present. Better is an ad- verb. ■ - ■ 8. Methinks. " Methinks that is a ghost." This is an old for for " I think." 9. Go fishing. " He went fishing." The construction of fishing in this sentence is very different from that of singing in " He went singing up the street." The singing was a mere accompaniment of the going, not the thing for which he went. Singing is a participle, having the con- struction of an adjective in the predicate. But in " He went fishing," fishing is the object for which he went, and it has the construction of a noun, object of a preposition {for) understood. Sometimes the sentence reads: "He went a-fishing." ISTow a is a preposition, and fishing is its object. Composition. During this grade, and in the high school, pupils should be trained to notice differences in the style used by differ- ent writers. In reading a book or essay, they should decide whether the style of the author is pleasing or not, and what peculiarities it possesses. They will soon learn that our best literary productions are made up of a judicious com- bination of simple, complex, and compound sentences, and of many varieties of each. Too many short, simple sen- tences break the sense too often, and a long succession of EIGHTH GEADE. 213 complex or compound sentences is tiresome to the reader or the listener. For this reiison, pupils should have much practice in expanding and combining short sentences, and in contract- ing and breaking up long ones. Thev should also have much drill in expressing the same thought in different wavs. Anj reading-book or magazine "will furnish good mate- rial for such exercises. The following is an example : This old soldier receives a pension. He was wounded. 1. This old, wounded goldier receives a pension. 2. This old soldier, having been wounded, receives a pension. 3. This old soldier, having received a wound, draws a pension. 4. This old soldier receives a pension because he was wounded. 5. Because this old soldier was wounded, he receives a pension. 6. This old soldier was wounded: therefore, he receives a pension. 7. This old soldier, who was wounded, receives a pension. 8. Having been wounded, this old soldier receives a pension. The two given statements may be combined in still other ways. Let the pupil combine the following: 1. The river was high. It rained very hard. The bridge was carried away. 2. The country on both sides of the lower Mississippi valley is very low. The country is protected by levees. These levees sometimes break. 3. We crossed the ocean in a large steamer. We landed at Liverpool. The steamer's name was City of Xeic York. Liverpool is in England. 4. Composition-writing is of much value to pupils. There- fore, pupils should write compositions. 214 TEACHERS MANUAL. Change these simple sentences to complex: 1. Honest people will- be trusted. 2. I expected him to go. 3. Quarrelsome persons are disagreeable. 4. With patience he might have succeeded. 5. The manner of his escape is a mystery. , 6. The clouds having passed away, the sun shone again. '7. After sunset the rain fell in torrents. 8. I believe him to be honest. 9. By trying to rescue the child, he was drowned. In this grade and in the high school, suitable topics for composition work are easily found. Therefore, but few are inserted here. THE ADVENTURES OF A PENNY. Tell where the material was found. Tell where and when it was coined. Who first obtained it from the mint, and how. How many times it has been spent, and what for. Where it is now, and its probable future. THE LIFE OF A CANARY BIRD. Imagine a canary bird telling all about what has happened to him from the first day of his life. Where he has lived. The scenery and climate of his native home. What he has done. What he thinks of some of the people he has seen. THREE PEOPLE. Imagine three people in a room. Describe and name them. Tell what they are doing, and what they are talking about. Tell some of the things they say. Tell where they go as they leave the room. A BROOK. Describe a brook winding about among the meadows and through the woods. Tell where it starts from. EIGHTH GKADE. 215 What it finds on its way. Describe the flowers and trees on its banks. Tell about a shady pool in one place, and what is found in it. Tell about a shallow place ^v^th pebbles on the bottom. Tell hoV people cross it. What makes it grow larger. Where it finally goes. IF I COtXD DO AS I PLEASED. Imagine that you are now able to do just what you please: state several things that you would do, and give your reasons for doing them. COLOIBUS. Imagine that ypu were a companion of Columbus. Describe his efforts to procure aid, the preparation for the voyage, the voyage, the discovery of land, the appearance of the country and its inhabitants, the return, the reception in Spain. The preceding subjects require tlie use of the imagina- tion, but subjects for real description and true narration are easily found. June 15 IWOI JUN 5 1901 LIBRARY OF CONGRESS ^ j | 021 774 195 6 ttuamam