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4. And hath man the power, with his pride and will,
To arouse all nature with storms at will?

Hath he power to color the summer cloud?
To allay the tempest, when hills are bówed?
Can he waken the spring with her festal wréath?
Can the sun grow dim by his latest breath?
Will he come again, when death's vale is tród?
Who then shall dare murmur,
66 There is no God ?"

REMARK.-The same degree of inflection is not, at all times, used, or indicated by the notation. The due degree to be employed, depends on the nature of what is to be expressed. For example; if a person, under great excitement,

asks another: are you in

earnest ?

the degree of inflection would be much greater, than if he playfully asks: Are you

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Direct questions, or those which may be answered by yes or no, usually take the rising inflection; but their answers, generally, the falling.

EXAMPLES.

1 Will you send me those flowers? Yès; or, I will.

2. Did you give me séven? Nò; I gave you sìx.

3. Are we better than they?

No; in no wise.

4. Is he the God of the Jews only? is he not also of the Gé tiles? Yès; of the Gentiles also.

QUESTIONS.—Is the same degree of inflection to be used at all times? Repeat Rule I. Give examples.

5. Do we then make void the law through faith? God forbid: we establish the law. Bible.

6. Will he plead against me with his great power? No; tut he will put strength in me. Id.

7. Was it ambition that induced Regulus to return to Cárthage? No; but a love of country and respect for truth--an act of moral sublimity, arising out of the firmest intègrity.

8.

Hark! comes there from the pyramids

And from Siberian wastes of snow?

And Europe's hills; a voice that bids

The world be awed to mourn him? Nd. Pierpont.

NOTE I.-When the direct question becomes an appeal, and the reply to it is anticipated, it takes the intense falling inflection.

EXAMPLES.

1. William, did we not recite our lessons correctly?

2. Can a more inconsistent argument be urged in its fàvor?

3. Did he not perform his part most àdmirably?

4. Was the Crystal Palace in New York, equal in size to that in London?

RULE II.

Indirect questions, or those which can not be answered by yes or no, usually take the falling inflection, and their answers the same.

EXAMPLES.

1. How many lessons have you learned? Thrèe. 2. Which has the most credit marks to-day? Julia. 3. Where did your father go, last week? To Boston. 4. When do you expect him to return? Next week. 5. Who first discovered Amèrica? Christopher Columbus.

NOTE I.-When the indirect question is one asking a repetition of what was not, at first, understood, it takes the rising inflection.

QUESTIONS.-Does the direct question ever require the falling inflection? Give examples. Repeat Rule II. Give examples. Does the indirect question ever require the rising inflection?

EXAMPLES.

1. Where did you find those flowers? In the lawn. Where did you say? In the lawn.

2. When did you say congress adjourned? Last week.

NOTE II.-Answers to questions, whether direct or indirect, when expressive of indifference, take the rising inflection, or the circumflex.

EXAMPLES.

1. Where shall we go? I am not particular.
2. Shall William go with us? If he chooses.
3. Which do you prefer? I have no choice.
4. Did you care for his friendship? Not much.

NOTE III. In some instances, direct questions become indirect by a change of the inflection from the rising to the falling.

EXAMPLES.

1. Will you come to-morrow or next day? Yes.

2. Will you come to-morrow, or next day? I will come to

morrow.

REMARK.—The first question asked if the person addressed will come within the two days, and may be answered by yes or no; but the second asks on which of the two days he will come, and it can not be thus answered.

RULE III.

When questions are connected by the conjunction or, the first requires the rising, and the second, the falling inflection.

EXAMPLES.

1. Does Napoleon merit práise, or cènsure?

2. Was it an act of moral courage, or cowardice, for Cato to fall on his sword?.

How do direct questions become indirect!

Repeat Note II.
What is Rule III? Give examples.

3. Is it lawful to do good on the Sabbath days, or to do èvil? to save life, or to kill? Bible.

4. Art thou he that should cóme, or do we look for another?

RULE IV.

Antithetic terms or clauses usually take opposite inflections; generally, the former has the rising, and the latter the falling inflection.

EXAMPLES.

1. It appears more like a dream than real life; more like a rómance than a dreadful reality.

2. By hónor and dishonor, by evil repórt and good repòrt; as decéivers, and yet true; as únknown, and yet well known; as dying, and behold, we live; as chástened, and not killed; as sorrowful, yet always rejoicing; as poor, yet making many rìch; as having nothing, yet possessing all things. Bible.

NOTE I.—When one of the antithetic clauses is a negative, and the other an affirmative, generally the negative has the rising, and the affirmative the falling inflection.

EXAMPLES.

1. Aim not to shów knowledge, but to acquire it.

2. Let another man pràise thee, and not thine own mouth; a stranger, and not thine own lips.

3. You should not say government, but government.

4. Show your courage by your deèds, not by your words.

RULE V.

The Pause of Suspension, denoting that the sense is incomplete, usually has the rising inflection.

EXAMPLES.

1. Sir, I implore gentlemen, I adjure them by all they hold dear in this world, by all their love of liberty, by all their ven

Repeat Rule IV. Give examples. Repeat Note I., and examples Repeat Rule V., and examples

eration for their ancestors, by all their regard for postérity, by all their gratitude to Him who has bestowed on them such unnumbered and countless bléssings, by all the duties which they owe to mankind, and by all the duties which they owe to themselves, to pause, solemnly pause at the edge of the precipice, before the fearful and dangerous leap is taken into the yawning abyss below, from which none who ever take it, shall return in safety.

NOTE I. The ordinary direct address, not accompanied with strong emphasis, takes the rising inflection, on the principle of the pause of suspension.

EXAMPLES.

1. Ye men of Judéa, and all ye that dwell in Jerúsalem, be this known unto you, and hearken to my words. Bible. 2. Fight, gentlemen of England! fight, bold yeóman! Draw, archers, draw your arrows to the head.

NOTE II.-In some instances of a pause of suspension, the sense requires an intense falling inflection.

EXAMPLE.

1. The prodigal, if he does not become a pauper, will at least, have but little to bestow on others.

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REMARK. If the rising inflection is given on pauper, the sense would be perverted, and the passage made to mean, that, in order to be able to bestow on others, it is necessary that he should become a pauper.

RULE VI.

Expressions of tenderness, as of grief, or kindness, commonly incline the voice to the rising inflection.

EXAMPLES.

1. O my son Ab'salom! my són, my son Ab'salom! Would God I had died for theé, Ab'salom, my són, my són! Bible.

Repeat Note I., and examples. Repeat Note II., and example. Rule VI., and example.

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