CHAPTER V.
e conclusions may be briefly suggested.
All use of language is imitative, and ones style is made up of all otyles t one .
to e good Engliso read it and . t is t any caugo use correct Englis being alloo read or ion of tter from t conscious; of his word experience.
Part I. in t volume.182
t , t one t and per first, it is true, be tention, to utter somet t often become specific, does not take sil it is painly an idea is a different tue of being pen make t, and ter of er tcing of t ;e met ttle cousin; and teac tIME I tle baby, and mingled t a baby.quot; It created ts in er of er of ts er ting quot;t Kingquot; ter t.
ence of ters not te stories tories to e. t conveys, and ter ts.
ted man is ted. tance of t is language, and language is to teac language and s tuff t language is made of, t and t be one used by a nation, not an artificial t ion. tellectual Ps are not ts of an Englis the Lords prayer in English.
In yle De Quincey says t t Engliso be found in tters of tivated gentleed by tyle of nereet, market-place, and assembly hall.
Precisely tances account for ion so read; some rivial and not excellent in style, but not one ively bad in manner or substance. tion ained t ured on imaginative literature, and s into enacious memory tyle of great ers. quot;A nes to me,quot; ses in a letter; and ill open. ;Paradise Lost,quot; s on train.
Until t year or ter of yle, ratyle been master of is only since sion a more conscio