PRONOUNS
72. When we wish to speak of a
name several times in succession, it is clumsy and tiresome to repeat the noun.
For instance, instead of saying, "The pupil will succeed in the pupil's
efforts if the pupil is ambitious," we improve the sentence by shortening
it thus, "The pupil will succeed in his efforts if he is ambitious."
Again, if we wish to know about
the ownership of a house, we evidently cannot state the owner's name, but by a
question we say, "Whose house is that?" thus placing a word instead
of the name till we learn the name.
This is not to be understood as
implying that pronouns were invented because nouns were tiresome, since history
shows that pronouns are as old as nouns and verbs. The use of pronouns must
have sprung up naturally, from a necessity for short, definite, and
representative words.
Definition.
A pronoun is a reference word,
standing for a name, or for a person or thing, or for a group of persons or
things.
Classes of pronouns.
73. Pronouns may be grouped in
five classes:—
(1) Personal pronouns, which
distinguish person by their form (Sec. 76).
(2) Interrogative pronouns, which
are used to ask questions about persons or things.
(3) Relative pronouns, which
relate or refer to a noun, pronoun, or other word or expression, and at the
same time connect two statements They are also called conjunctive.
(4) Adjective pronouns, words,
primarily adjectives, which are classed as adjectives when they modify nouns,
but as pronouns when they stand for nouns.
(5) Indefinite pronouns, which
cannot be used as adjectives, but stand for an indefinite number of persons or
things.
Numerous examples of all these
will be given under the separate classes hereafter treated.
PERSONAL PRONOUNS..
Person in grammar.
74. Since pronouns stand for
persons as well as names, they must represent the person talking, the person or
thing spoken to, and the person or thing talked about.
This gives rise to a new term,
"the distinction of person."
Person of nouns.
75. This distinction was not needed
in discussing nouns, as nouns have the same form, whether representing persons
and things spoken to or spoken of. It is evident that a noun could not
represent the person speaking, even if it had a special form.
From analogy to pronouns, which
have forms for person, nouns are sometimes spoken of as first or second person
by their use; that is, if they are in apposition with a pronoun of the first or
second person, they are said to have person by agreement.
But usually nouns represent
something spoken of.
Three persons of pronouns.
76. Pronouns naturally are of
three persons:—
(1) First person, representing
the person speaking.
(2) Second person, representing a
person or thing spoken to.
(3) Third person, standing for a
person or thing spoken of.
FORMS OF PERSONAL PRONOUNS.
77. Personal pronouns are
inflected thus:—
FIRST PERSON.
Singular. Plural.
Nom. I we
Poss. mine, my our, ours
Obj. me us
SECOND PERSON.
Singular.
Old Form Common Form.
Nom. thou you
Poss. thine, thy your, yours
Obj. thee you
Plural.
Nom. ye you
Poss. your, yours your, yours
Obj. you you
THIRD PERSON.
Singular.
Masc. Fem. Neut..
Nom. he she it
Poss. his her, hers its
Obj. him her it
Plur. of all Three.
Nom. they
Poss. their, theirs
Obj. them
Remarks on These Forms.
First and second persons without
gender.
78. It will be noticed that the
pronouns of the first and second persons have no forms to distinguish gender.
The speaker may be either male or female, or, by personification, neuter; so
also with the person or thing spoken to.
Third person singular has gender.
But the third person has, in the
singular, a separate form for each gender, and also for the neuter.
Old forms.
In Old English these three were
formed from the same root; namely, masculine hē, feminine hēo, neuter hit.
The form hit (for it) is still
heard in vulgar English, and hoo (for hēo) in some dialects of England.
The plurals were hī, heora, heom,
in Old English; the forms they, their, them, perhaps being from the English
demonstrative, though influenced by the cognate Norse forms.
Second person always plural in
ordinary English.
79. Thou, thee, etc., are old
forms which are now out of use in ordinary speech. The consequence is, that we
have no singular pronoun of the second person in ordinary speech or prose, but
make the plural you do duty for the singular. We use it with a plural verb
always, even when referring to a single object.
Two uses of the old singulars.
80. There are, however, two
modern uses of thou, thy, etc.:—
(1) In elevated style, especially
in poetry; as,—
With thy clear keen joyance
Languor cannot be;
Shadow of annoyance
Never came near thee;
Thou lovest; but ne'er knew
love's sad satiety.
—Shelley.
(2) In addressing the Deity, as
in prayers, etc.; for example,—
Oh, thou Shepherd of Israel, that
didst comfort thy people of old, to thy care we commit the helpless.—Beecher.
The form its.
81. It is worthwhile to consider
the possessive its. This is of comparatively recent growth. The old form was
his (from the nominative hit), and this continued in use till the sixteenth
century. The transition from the old his to the modern it is shown in these
sentences:—
1 He anointed the altar and all
his vessels.—Bible
Here his refers to altar, which
is a neuter noun. The quotation represents the usage of the early sixteenth
century.
2 It's had it head bit off by it
young—Shakespeare
Shakespeare uses his, it, and
sometimes its, as possessive of it.
In Milton's poetry (seventeenth
century) its occurs only three times.
3 See heaven its sparkling
portals wide display—Pope
A relic of the olden time.
82. We have an interesting relic
in such sentences as this from Thackeray: "One of the ways to know 'em is
to watch the scared looks of the ogres' wives and children."
As shown above, the Old English
objective was hem (or heom), which was often sounded with the h silent, just as
we now say, "I saw 'im yesterday" when the word him is not emphatic.
In spoken English, this form 'em has survived side by side with the literary
them.
Use of the pronouns in
personification.
83. The pronouns he and she are
often used in poetry, and sometimes in ordinary speech, to personify objects
(Sec. 34)
CASES OF PERSONAL PRONOUNS
84. The nominative forms of
personal pronouns have the same uses as the nominative of nouns (see Sec. 58).
The case of most of these pronouns can be determined more easily than the case
of nouns, for, besides a nominative use, they have a nominative form. The words
I, thou, he, she, we, ye, they, are very rarely anything but nominative in
literary English, though ye is occasionally used as objective.
85. In spoken English, however,
there are some others that are added to the list of nominatives: they are, me,
him, her, us, them, when they occur in the predicate position. That is, in such
a sentence as, "I am sure it was him," the literary language would
require he after was; but colloquial English regularly uses as predicate
nominatives the forms me, him, her, us, them, though those named in Sec. 84 are
always subjects. Yet careful speakers avoid this, and follow the usage of
literary English.
II. The Possessive.
Not a separate class.
86. The forms my, thy, his, her,
its, our, your, their, are sometimes grouped separately as POSSESSIVE PRONOUNS,
but it is better to speak of them as the possessive case of personal pronouns,
just as we speak of the possessive case of nouns, and not make more classes.
Absolute personal pronouns.
The forms mine, thine, yours,
hers, theirs, sometimes his and its, have a peculiar use, standing apart from
the words they modify instead of immediately before them. From this use they
are called ABSOLUTE PERSONAL PRONOUNS, or, some say, ABSOLUTE POSSESSIVES.
As instances of the use of
absolute pronouns, note the following:—
'Twas mine, 'tis his, and has
been slave to thousands. —Shakespeare.
And since thou own'st that
praise, I spare thee mine.—Cowper.
My arm better than theirs can
ward it off.—Landor.
Thine are the city and the people
of Granada.—Bulwer.
Old use of mine and thine.
Formerly mine and thine stood
before their nouns, if the nouns began with a vowel or h silent; thus,—
Shall I not take mine ease in
mine inn?—Shakespeare.
Give every man thine ear, but few
thy voice.—Id.
If thine eye offend thee, pluck
it out.—Bible.
My greatest apprehension was for
mine eyes.—Swift.
This usage is still preserved in
poetry.
Double and triple possessives.
87. The forms hers, ours, yours,
theirs, are really double possessives, since they add the possessive s to what
is already a regular possessive inflection.
Besides this, we have, as in
nouns, a possessive phrase made up of the preposition of with these double
possessives, hers, ours, yours, theirs, and with mine, thine, his, sometimes
its.
Their uses.
Like the noun possessives, they
have several uses:—
(1) To prevent ambiguity, as in
the following:—
I have often contrasted the
habitual qualities of that gloomy friend of theirs with the astounding spirits
of Thackeray and Dickens.—J. T. Fields.
No words of ours can describe the
fury of the conflict.—J. F. Cooper.
(2) To bring emphasis, as in
these sentences:—
This thing of yours that you call
a Pardon of Sins, it is a bit of rag-paper with ink.—Carlyle.
This ancient silver bowl of mine,
it tells of good old times. —Holmes.
(3) To express contempt, anger,
or satire; for example,—
"Do you know the charges
that unhappy sister of mine and her family have put me to already?" says
the Master.—Thackeray.
He [John Knox] had his pipe of
Bordeaux too, we find, in that old Edinburgh house of his.—Carlyle.
"Hold thy peace, Long
Allen," said Henry Woodstall, "I tell thee that tongue of thine is
not the shortest limb about thee."—Scott.
(4) To make a noun less limited
in application; thus,—
A favorite liar and servant of
mine was a man I once had to drive a brougham.—Thackeray.
In New York I read a newspaper
criticism one day, commenting upon a letter of mine.—Id.
What would the last two sentences
mean if the word my were written instead of of mine, and preceded the nouns?
About the case of absolute
pronouns.
88. In their function, or use in
a sentence, the absolute possessive forms of the personal pronouns are very
much like adjectives used as nouns.
In such sentences as, "The
good alone are great," "None but the brave deserves the fair,"
the words italicized have an adjective force and also a noun force, as shown in
Sec. 20.
So in the sentences illustrating
absolute pronouns in Sec. 86: mine stands for my property, his for his
property, in the first sentence; mine stands for my praise in the second. But
the first two have a nominative use, and mine in the second has an objective
use.
They may be spoken of as
possessive in form, but nominative or objective in use, according as the
modified word is in the nominative or the objective.
III. The Objective.
The old dative case.
89. In Old English there was one
case which survives in use, but not in form. In such a sentence as this one
from Thackeray, "Pick me out a whip-cord thong with some dainty knots in
it," the word me is evidently not the direct object of the verb, but
expresses for whom, for whose benefit, the thing is done. In pronouns, this
dative use, as it is called, was marked by a separate case.
Now the objective.
In Modern English the same use is
frequently seen, but the form is the same as the objective. For this reason a
word thus used is called a dative-objective.
The following are examples of the
dative-objective:—
Give me neither poverty nor
riches.—Bible.
Curse me this people.—Id.
Both joined in making him a
present.—Macaulay
Is it not enough that you have
burnt me down three houses with your dog's tricks, and be hanged to you!—Lamb
I give thee this to wear at the
collar.—Scott
Other uses of the objective.
90. Besides this use of the
objective, there are others:—
(1) As the direct object of a
verb.
They all handled it.—Lamb
(2) As the object of a
preposition.
Time is behind them and before
them.—Carlyle.
(3) In apposition.
She sate all last summer by the
bedside of the blind beggar, him that so often and so gladly I talked with.—De
Quincey.
SPECIAL USES OF PERSONAL
PRONOUNS.
Indefinite use of you and your.
91. The word you, and its
possessive case yours are sometimes used without reference to a particular
person spoken to. They approach the indefinite pronoun in use.
Your mere puny stripling, that
winced at the least flourish of the rod, was passed by with indulgence.—Irving
To empty here, you must condense
there.—Emerson.
The peasants take off their hats
as you pass; you sneeze, and they cry, "God bless you!" The thrifty
housewife shows you into her best chamber. You have oaten cakes baked some
months before.—Longfellow
Uses of it.
92. The pronoun it has a number
of uses:—
(1) To refer to some single word
preceding; as,—
Ferdinand ordered the army to
recommence its march.—Bulwer.
Society, in this century, has not
made its progress, like Chinese skill, by a greater acuteness of ingenuity in
trifles.—D. Webster.
(2) To refer to a preceding word
group; thus,—
If any man should do wrong merely
out of ill nature, why, yet it is but like the thorn or brier, which prick and
scratch because they can do no other.—Bacon.
Here it refers back to the whole
sentence before it, or to the idea, "any man's doing wrong merely out of
ill nature."
(3) As a grammatical subject, to
stand for the real, logical subject, which follows the verb; as in the
sentences,—
It is easy in the world to live
after the world's opinion. —Emerson.
It is this haziness of
intellectual vision which is the malady of all classes of men by nature.—Newman.
It is a pity that he has so much
learning, or that he has not a great deal more.—Addison.
(4) As an impersonal subject in
certain expressions which need no other subject; as,—
It is finger-cold, and prudent
farmers get in their barreled apples.—Thoreau.
And when I awoke, it
rained.—Coleridge.
For when it dawned, they dropped
their arms.—Id.
It was late and after
midnight.—De Quincey.
(5) As an impersonal or
indefinite object of a verb or a preposition; as in the following sentences:—
(a) Michael Paw, who lorded it
over the fair regions of ancient Pavonia.—Irving.
I made up my mind to foot
it.—Hawthorne.
A sturdy lad ... who in turn
tries all the professions, who teams it, farms it, peddles it, keeps a
school.—Emerson.
(b) "Thy mistress leads thee
a dog's life of it."—Irving.
There was nothing for it but to
return.—Scott.
An editor has only to say
"respectfully declined," and there is an end of it.—Holmes.
Poor Christian was hard put to
it.—Bunyan.
Reflexive use of the personal
pronouns.
93. The personal pronouns in the
objective case are often used reflexively; that is, referring to the same
person as the subject of the accompanying verb. For example, we use such
expressions as, "I found me a good book," "He bought him a horse,"
etc. This reflexive use of the dative-objective is very common in spoken and in
literary English.
The personal pronouns are not
often used reflexively, however, when they are direct objects. This occurs in
poetry, but seldom in prose; as,—
Now I lay me down to sleep.—Anon.
I set me down and sigh.—Burns.
And millions in those solitudes,
since first
The flight of years began, have
laid them down
In their last sleep.
—Bryant.
REFLEXIVE OR COMPOUND PERSONAL
PRONOUNS.
Composed of the personal pronouns
with -self, -selves.
94. The REFLEXIVE PRONOUNS, or
COMPOUND PERSONAL, as they are also called, are formed from the personal
pronouns by adding the word self, and its plural selves.
They are myself, (ourself),
ourselves, yourself, (thyself), yourselves, himself, herself, itself,
themselves.
Of the two forms in parentheses,
the second is the old form of the second person, used in poetry.
Ourself is used to follow the
word we when this represents a single person, especially in the speech of
rulers; as,—
Methinks he seems no better than
a girl;
As girls were once, as we ourself
have been.
—Tennyson.
Origin of these reflexives.
95. The question might arise, Why
are himself and themselves not hisself and theirselves, as in vulgar English,
after the analogy of myself, ourselves, etc.?
The history of these words shows
they are made up of the dative-objective forms, not the possessive forms, with
self. In Middle English the forms meself, theself, were changed into the
possessive myself, thyself, and the others were formed by analogy with these.
Himself and themselves are the only ones retaining a distinct objective form.
In the forms yourself and
yourselves we have the possessive your marked as singular as well as plural.
Use of the reflexives.
96. There are three uses of
reflexive pronouns:—
(1) As object of a verb or
preposition, and referring to the same person or thing as the subject; as in
these sentences from Emerson:—
He who offers himself a candidate
for that covenant comes up like an Olympian.
I should hate myself if then I
made my other friends my asylum.
We fill ourselves with ancient
learning.
What do we know of nature or of
ourselves?
(2) To emphasize a noun or
pronoun; for example,—
The great globe itself ... shall
dissolve.—Shakespeare.
Threats to all;
To you yourself, to us, to everyone.
—Id.
Who would not sing for Lycidas!
he knew
Himself to sing, and build the
lofty rhyme.
—Milton.
NOTE.—In such sentences the
pronoun is sometimes omitted, and the reflexive modifies the pronoun
understood; for example,—
Only itself can inspire whom it
will.—Emerson.
My hands are full of blossoms
plucked before, Held dead within them till myself shall die.—E. B. Browning.
As if it were thyself that's
here, I shrink with pain.—Wordsworth.
(3) As the precise equivalent of
a personal pronoun; as,—
Lord Altamont designed to take
his son and myself.—De Quincey.
Victories that neither myself nor
my cause always deserved.—B. Franklin.
For what else have our
forefathers and ourselves been taxed?—Landor.
Years ago, Arcturus and myself
met a gentleman from China who knew the language.—Thackeray.
Exercises on Personal Pronouns.
(a) Bring up sentences containing
ten personal pronouns, some each of masculine, feminine, and neuter.
(b) Bring up sentences containing
five personal pronouns in the possessive, some of them being double
possessives.
(c) Tell which use each it has in
the following sentences:—
1.
Come and trip it as we go,
On the light fantastic toe.
2. Infancy conforms to nobody;
all conform to it.
3. It is an ill wind that blows
nobody good.
4. Courage, father, fight it out.
5. And it grew wondrous cold.
6. To know what is best to do,
and how to do it, is wisdom.
7. If any phenomenon remains
brute and dark, it is because the corresponding faculty in the observer is not
yet active.
8. But if a man do not speak from
within the veil, where the word is one with that it tells of, let him lowly
confess it.
9. It behooved him to keep on
good terms with his pupils.
10. Biscuit is about the best
thing I know; but it is the soonest spoiled; and one would like to hear counsel
on one point, why it is that a touch of water utterly ruins it.
INTERROGATIVE PRONOUNS.
Three now in use.
97. The interrogative pronouns
now in use are who (with the forms whose and whom), which, and what.
One obsolete.
There is an old word, whether,
used formerly to mean which of two, but now obsolete. Examples from the Bible:—
Whether of them twain did the
will of his father?
Whether is greater, the gold, or
the temple?
From Steele (eighteenth
century):—
It may be a question whether of
these unfortunate persons had the greater soul.
Use of who and its forms.
98. The use of who, with its
possessive and objective, is seen in these sentences:—
Who is she in bloody coronation robes
from Rheims?—De Quincey.
Whose was that gentle voice,
that, whispering sweet,
Promised, methought, long days of
bliss sincere?
—Bowles.
What doth she look on? Whom doth
she behold?—Wordsworth.
From these sentences it will be
seen that interrogative who refers to persons only; that it is not inflected
for gender or number, but for case alone, having three forms; it is always
third person, as it always asks about somebody.
Use of which.
99. Examples of the use of
interrogative which:—
Which of these had speed enough
to sweep between the question and the answer, and divide the one from the
other?—De Quincey.
Which of you, shall we say, doth
love us most?—Shakespeare.
Which of them [the sisters] shall
I take?—Id.
As shown here, which is not
inflected for gender, number, or case; it refers to either persons or things;
it is selective, that is, picks out one or more from a number of known persons
or objects.
Use of what.
100. Sentences showing the use of
interrogative what:—
Since I from Smaylho'me tower
have been,
What did thy lady do?
—Scott.
What is so rare as a day in
June?—Lowell.
What wouldst thou do, old
man?—Shakespeare.
These show that what is not
inflected for case; that it is always singular and neuter, referring to things,
ideas, actions, etc., not to persons.
DECLENSION OF INTERROGATIVE
PRONOUNS.
101. The following are all the
interrogative forms:—
SING. AND PLUR. SING. AND PLUR.
SINGULAR
Nom. who? which? what?
Poss. whose? — —
Obj. whom? which? what?
In spoken English, who is used as
objective instead of whom; as, "Who did you see?" "Who did he
speak to?"
To tell the case of
interrogatives.
102. The interrogative who has a
separate form for each case, consequently the case can be told by the form of
the word; but the case of which and what must be determined exactly as in
nouns,—by the use of the words.
For instance, in Sec. 99, which
is nominative in the first sentence, since it is subject of the verb had;
nominative in the second also, subject of doth love; objective in the last,
being the direct object of the verb shall take.
Further treatment of who, which
and what.
103. Who, which, and what are
also relative pronouns; which and what are sometimes adjectives; what may be an
adverb in some expressions.
They will be spoken of again in
the proper places, especially in the treatment of indirect questions (Sec.
127).
RELATIVE PRONOUNS.
Function of the relative pronoun.
104. Relative pronouns differ
from both personal and interrogative pronouns in referring to an antecedent,
and also in having a conjunctive use. The advantage in using them is to unite
short statements into longer sentences, and so to make smoother discourse. Thus
we may say, "The last of all the Bards was he. These bards sang of Border
chivalry." Or, it may be shortened into,—
"The last of all the Bards
was he,
Who sung of Border
chivalry."
In the latter sentence, who
evidently refers to Bards, which is called the antecedent of the relative.
The antecedent.
105. The antecedent of a pronoun
is the noun, pronoun, or other word or expression, for which the pronoun
stands. It usually precedes the pronoun.
Personal pronouns of the third
person may have antecedents also, as they take the place usually of a word
already used; as,—
The priest hath his fee who comes
and shrives us.—Lowell
In this, both his and who have
the antecedent priest.
The pronoun which may have its
antecedent following, and the antecedent may be a word or a group of words, as
will be shown in the remarks on which below.
Two kinds.
106. Relatives may be SIMPLE or
INDEFINITE.
When the word relative is used, a
simple relative is meant. Indefinite relatives, and the indefinite use of
simple relatives, will be discussed further on.
The SIMPLE RELATIVES are who,
which, that, what.
Who and its forms.
107. Examples of the relative who
and its forms:—
1. Has a man gained anything who
has received a hundred favors and rendered none?—Emerson.
2. That man is little to be
envied whose patriotism would not gain force upon the plain of Marathon.—Dr
Johnson.
3.
For her enchanting son,
Whom universal nature did lament.
—Milton.
4. The nurse came to us, who were
sitting in an adjoining apartment.—Thackeray.
5.
Ye mariners of England,
That guard our native seas;
Whose flag has braved, a thousand
years,
The battle and the breeze!
—Campbell.
6. The men whom men respect, the
women whom women approve, are the men and women who bless their species.—Parton
Which and its forms.
108. Examples of the relative
which and its forms:—
1. They had not their own luster,
but the look which is not of the earth.—Byron.
2.
The embattled portal arch he
pass'd,
Whose ponderous grate and massy
bar
Had oft roll'd back the tide of
war.
—Scott.
3. Generally speaking, the dogs
which stray around the butcher shops restrain their appetites.—Cox.
4. The origin of language is
divine, in the same sense in which man's nature, with all its capabilities ...,
is a divine creation.—W. D. Whitney.
5.
(a) This gradation ... ought to
be kept in view; else this description will seem exaggerated, which it
certainly is not.—Burke.
(b) The snow was three inches
deep and still falling, which prevented him from taking his usual ride.—Irving.
That.
109. Examples of the relative
that:—
1.
The man that hath no music in
himself,...
Is fit for treasons, stratagems,
and spoils.
—Shakespeare
2. The judge ... bought up all
the pigs that could be had.—Lamb
3. Nature and books belong to the
eyes that see them.—Emerson.
4. For the sake of country a man
is told to yield everything that makes the land honorable.—H. W. Beecher
5. Reader, that do not pretend to
have leisure for very much scholarship, you will not be angry with me for
telling you.—De Quincey.
6. The Tree Igdrasil, that has
its roots down in the kingdoms of Hela and Death, and whose boughs overspread
the highest heaven!—Carlyle.
What.
110. Examples of the use of the
relative what:—
1. Its net to entangle the enemy
seems to be what it chiefly trusts to, and what it takes most pains to render
as complete as possible.—Goldsmith.
2. For what he sought below is
passed above, Already done is all that he would do.—Margaret Fuller.
3. Some of our readers may have
seen in India a crowd of crows picking a sick vulture to death, no bad type of
what often happens in that country.—Macaulay
[To the Teacher.—If pupils work
over the above sentences carefully, and test every remark in the following
paragraphs, they will get a much better understanding of the relatives.]
REMARKS ON THE RELATIVE PRONOUNS.
Who.
111. By reading carefully the sentences
in Sec. 107, the following facts will be noticed about the relative who:—
(1) It usually refers to persons:
thus, in the first sentence, Sec. 107, a man...who; in the second, that
man...whose; in the third, son, whom; and so on.
(2) It has three case forms,—who,
whose, whom.
(3) The forms do not change for
person or number of the antecedent. In sentence 4, who is first person; in 5,
whose is second person; the others are all third person. In 1, 2, and 3, the
relatives are singular; in 4, 5, and 6, they are plural.
Who referring to animals.
112. Though in most cases who
refers to persons there are instances found where it refers to animals. It has
been seen (Sec. 24) that animals are referred to by personal pronouns when
their characteristics or habits are such as to render them important or
interesting to man. Probably on the same principle the personal relative who is
used not infrequently in literature, referring to animals.
Witness the following examples:—
And you, warm little housekeeper
[the cricket], who class With those who think the candles come too soon.—Leigh
Hunt.
The robins...have succeeded in
driving off the bluejays who used to build in our pines.—Lowell.
The little gorilla, whose wound I
had dressed, flung its arms around my neck.—Thackeray.
A lake frequented by every fowl
whom Nature has taught to dip the wing in water.—Dr. Johnson.
While we had such plenty of
domestic insects who infinitely excelled the former, because they understood
how to weave as well as to spin.—Swift.
My horse, who, under his former
rider had hunted the buffalo, seemed as much excited as myself.—Irving.
Other examples might be quoted
from Burke, Kingsley, Smollett, Scott, Cooper, Gibbon, and others.
Which.
113. The sentences in Sec. 108
show that—
(1) Which refers to animals,
things, or ideas, not persons.
(2) It is not inflected for
gender or number.
(3) It is nearly always third
person, rarely second (an example of its use as second person is given in
sentence 32, p. 96).
(4) It has two case forms,—which
for the nominative and objective, whose for the possessive.
Examples of whose, possessive
case of which.
114. Grammarians sometimes object
to the statement that whose is the possessive of which, saying that the phrase
of which should always be used instead; yet a search in literature shows that
the possessive form whose is quite common in prose as well as in poetry: for
example,—
I swept the horizon, and saw at
one glance the glorious elevations, on whose tops the sun kindled all the
melodies and harmonies of light.—Beecher.
Men may be ready to fight to the
death, and to persecute without pity, for a religion whose creed they do not
understand, and whose precepts they habitually disobey.—Macaulay
Beneath these sluggish waves lay
the once proud cities of the plain, whose grave was dug by the thunder of the
heavens.—Scott.
Many great and opulent cities
whose population now exceeds that of Virginia during the Revolution, and whose
names are spoken in the remotest corner of the civilized world.—Mcmaster.
Through the heavy door whose
bronze network closes the place of his rest, let us enter the church
itself.—Ruskin.
This moribund '61, whose career
of life is just coming to its terminus.—Thackeray.
So in Matthew Arnold, Kingsley,
Burke, and numerous others.
Which and its antecedents.
115. The last two sentences in
Sec. 108 show that which may have other antecedents than nouns and pronouns. In
5 (a) there is a participial adjective used as the antecedent; in 5 (b) there
is a complete clause employed as antecedent. This often occurs.
Sometimes, too, the antecedent
follows which; thus,—
And, which is worse, all you have
done
Hath been but for a wayward son.
—Shakespeare.
Primarily, which is very notable
and curious, I observe that men of business rarely know the meaning of the word
"rich."—Ruskin.
I demurred to this honorary title
upon two grounds,—first, as being one toward which I had no natural aptitudes
or predisposing advantages; secondly (which made her stare), as carrying with
it no real or enviable distinction.—De Quincey.
That.
116. In the sentences of Sec.
109, we notice that—
(1) That refers to persons,
animals, and things.
(2) It has only one case form, no
possessive.
(3) It is the same form for
first, second, and third persons.
(4) It has the same form for
singular and plural.
It sometimes borrows the
possessive whose, as in sentence 6, Sec. 109, but this is not sanctioned as
good usage.
What.
117. The sentences of Sec. 110
show that—
(1) What always refers to things;
is always neuter.
(2) It is used almost entirely in
the singular.
(3) Its antecedent is hardly ever
expressed. When expressed, it usually follows, and is emphatic; as, for
example,—
What I would, that do I not; but
what I hate, that do I.—Bible
What fates impose, that men must
needs abide.—Shakespeare.
What a man does, that he
has.—Emerson.
Compare this:—
Alas! is it not too true, what we
said?—Carlyle.
DECLENSION OF RELATIVE PRONOUNS.
118. These are the forms of the
simple relatives:—
SINGULAR AND PLURAL.
Nom. who which that what
Poss. whose whose — —
Obj. whom which that what
HOW TO PARSE RELATIVES.
119. The gender, number, and
person of the relatives who, which, and that must be determined by those of the
antecedent; the case depends upon the function of the relative in its own
clause.
For example, consider the
following sentence:
"He uttered truths that
wrought upon and molded the lives of those who heard him."
Since the relatives hold the
sentence together, we can, by taking them out, let the sentence fall apart into
three divisions: (1) "He uttered truths;" (2) "The truths
wrought upon and molded the lives of the people;" (3) "These people
heard him."
That evidently refers to truths,
consequently is neuter, third person, plural number. Who plainly stands for
those or the people, either of which would be neuter, third person, plural
number. Here the relative agrees with its antecedent.
We cannot say the relative agrees
with its antecedent in case. Truths in sentence (2), above, is subject of wrought
upon and molded; in (1), it is object of uttered. In (2), people is the object
of the preposition of; in (3), it is subject of the verb heard. Now, that takes
the case of the truths in (2), not of truths which is expressed in the
sentence: consequently that is in the nominative case. In the same way who,
standing for the people understood, subject of heard, is in the nominative
case.
Exercise.
First find the antecedents, then
parse the relatives, in the following sentences:—
1. How superior it is in these
respects to the pear, whose blossoms are neither colored nor fragrant!
2. Some gnarly apple which I pick
up in the road reminds me by its fragrance of all the wealth of Pomona.
3. Perhaps I talk with one who is
selecting some choice barrels for filling an order.
4. Ill blows the wind that
profits nobody.
5. Alas! it is we ourselves that
are getting buried alive under this avalanche of earthly impertinences.
6. This method also forces upon
us the necessity of thinking, which is, after all, the highest result of all
education.
7. I know that there are many
excellent people who object to the reading of novels as a waste of time.
8. I think they are trying to
outwit nature, who is sure to be cunninger than they.
Parsing what, the simple
relative.
120. The relative what is handled
differently, because it has usually no antecedent, but is singular, neuter,
third person. Its case is determined exactly as that of other relatives. In the
sentence, "What can't be cured must be endured," the verb must be
endured is the predicate of something. What must be endured? Answer, What can't
be cured. The whole expression is its subject. The word what, however, is
subject of the verb can't be cured, and hence is in the nominative case.
"What we call nature is a certain
self-regulated motion or change." Here the subject of is, etc., is what we
call nature; but of this, we is the subject, and what is the direct object of
the verb call, so is in the objective case.
Another way.
Some prefer another method of
treatment. As shown by the following sentences, what is equivalent to that
which:—
It has been said that
"common souls pay with what they do, nobler souls with that which they
are."—Emerson.
That which is pleasant often
appears under the name of evil; and what is disagreeable to nature is called
good and virtuous.—Burke.
Hence some take what as a double
relative, and parse that in the first clause, and which in the second clause;
that is, "common souls pay with that [singular, object of with] which
[singular, object of do] they do."
INDEFINITE RELATIVES.
List and examples.
121. INDEFINITE RELATIVES are, by
meaning and use, not as direct as the simple relatives.
They are whoever, whichever,
whatever, whatsoever; less common are whoso, whosoever, whichsoever, whatsoever.
The simple relatives who, which, and what may also be used as indefinite
relatives. Examples of indefinite relatives (from Emerson):—
1. Whoever has flattered his
friend successfully must at once think himself a knave, and his friend a fool.
2. It is no proof of a man's
understanding, to be able to affirm whatever he pleases.
3. They sit in a chair or sprawl
with children on the floor, or stand on their head, or what else soever, in a
new and original way.
4. Whoso is heroic will always
find crises to try his edge.
5. Only itself can inspire whom
it will.
6. God offers to every mind its
choice between truth and repose. Take which you please,—you cannot have both.
7. Do what we can, summer will
have its flies.
Meaning and use.
122. The fitness of the term
indefinite here cannot be shown better than by examining the following
sentences:—
1. There is something so
overruling in whatever inspires us with awe, in all things which belong ever so
remotely to terror, that nothing else can stand in their presence.—Burke.
2. Death is there associated, not
with everything that is most endearing in social and domestic charities, but
with whatever is darkest in human nature and in human destiny.—Macaulay.
It is clear that in 1, whatever
is equivalent to all things which, and in 2, to everything that; no certain
antecedent, no particular thing, being referred to. So with the other
indefinites.
What simple relative and what
indefinite relative.
123. The above helps us to
discriminate between what as a simple and what as an indefinite relative.
As shown in Sec. 120, the simple
relative what is equivalent to that which or the thing which,—some particular
thing; as shown by the last sentence in Sec. 121, what means anything that,
everything that (or everything which). The difference must be seen by the
meaning of the sentence, as what hardly ever has an antecedent.
The examples in sentences 5 and
6, Sec. 121, show that who and which have no antecedent expressed, but mean any
one whom, either one that, etc.
OTHER WORDS USED AS RELATIVES.
But and as.
124. Two words, but and as, are
used with the force of relative pronouns in some expressions; for example,—
1. There is not a leaf rotting on
the highway but has force in it: how else could it rot?—Carlyle.
2. This, amongst such other
troubles as most men meet with in this life, has been my heaviest
affliction.—De Quincey.
Proof that they have the force of
relatives.
Compare with these the two
following sentences:—
3. There is nothing but is
related to us, nothing that does not interest us.—Emerson.
4. There were articles of comfort
and luxury such as Hester never ceased to use, but which only wealth could have
purchased.—Hawthorne.
Sentence 3 shows that but is
equivalent to the relative that with not, and that as after such is equivalent
to which.
For as after same see
"Syntax" (Sec. 417).
Former use of as.
125. In early modern English, as
was used just as we use that or which, not following the word such; thus,—
I have not from your eyes that
gentleness
And show of love as I was wont to
have.
—Shakespeare
This still survives in vulgar
English in England; for example,—
"Don't you mind Lucy
Passmore, as charmed your warts for you when you was a boy? "—Kingsley
This is frequently illustrated in
Dickens's works.
Other substitutes.
126. Instead of the phrases in
which, upon which, by which, etc., the conjunctions wherein, whereupon,
whereby, etc., are used.
A man is the facade of a temple
wherein all wisdom and good abide.—Emerson.
The sovereignty of this nature
whereof we speak.—Id.
The dear home faces whereupon
That fitful firelight paled and
shone.
—Whittier.
PRONOUNS IN INDIRECT QUESTIONS.
Special caution needed here.
127. It is sometimes hard for the
student to tell a relative from an interrogative pronoun. In the regular direct
question the interrogative is easily recognized; so is the relative when an
antecedent is close by. But compare the following in pairs:—
1.
(a) Like a gentleman of leisure
who is strolling out for pleasure.
(b) Well we knew who stood
behind, though the earthwork hid them.
2.
(a) But what you gain in time is
perhaps lost in power.
(b) But what had become of them
they knew not.
3.
(a) These are the lines which
heaven-commanded Toil shows on his deed.
(b) And since that time I thought
it not amiss To judge which were the best of all these three.
In sentences 1 (a), 2 (a) and 3
(a) the regular relative use is seen; who having the antecedent gentleman, what
having the double use of pronoun and antecedent, which having the antecedent
lines.
But in 1 (b), 2 (b), and 3 (b),
there are two points of difference from the others considered: first, no
antecedent is expressed, which would indicate that they are not relatives;
second, a question is disguised in each sentence, although each sentence as a
whole is declarative in form. Thus, 1 (b), if expanded, would be, "Who
stood behind? We knew," etc., showing that who is plainly interrogative.
So in 2 (b), what is interrogative, the full expression being, "But what
had become of them? They knew not." Likewise with which in 3 (b).
How to decide.
In studying such sentences, (1)
see whether there is an antecedent of who or which, and whether what = that +
which (if so, it is a simple relative; if not, it is either an indefinite relative
or an interrogative pronoun); (2) see if the pronoun introduces an indirect
question (if it does, it is an interrogative; if not, it is an indefinite
relative).
Another caution.
128. On the other hand, care must
be taken to see whether the pronoun is the word that really asks the question
in an interrogative sentence. Examine the following:—
1.
Sweet rose! whence is this hue
Which doth all hues excel?
—Drummond
2.
And then what wonders shall you
do
Whose dawning beauty warms us so?
—Walker
3.
Is this a romance? Or is it a
faithful picture of what has lately been in a neighboring land?—Macaulay
These are interrogative
sentences, but in none of them does the pronoun ask the question. In the first,
whence is the interrogative word, which has the antecedent hue. In the second,
whose has the antecedent you, and asks no question. In the third, the question
is asked by the verb.
OMISSION OF THE RELATIVES.
Relative omitted when object.
129. The relative is frequently
omitted in spoken and in literary English when it would be the object of a
preposition or a verb. Hardly a writer can be found who does not leave out
relatives in this way when they can be readily supplied in the mind of the
reader. Thus,—
These are the sounds we feed
upon.—Fletcher.
I visited many other apartments,
but shall not trouble my reader with all the curiosities I observed.—Swift.
Exercise.
Put in the relatives who, which,
or that where they are omitted from the following sentences, and see whether
the sentences are any smoother or clearer:—
1. The insect I am now describing
lived three years,—Goldsmith.
2. They will go to Sunday schools
through storms their brothers are afraid of.—Holmes.
3. He opened the volume he first
took from the shelf.—G. Eliot.
4. He could give the coals in
that queer coal scuttle we read of to his poor neighbor.—Thackeray.
5. When Goldsmith died, half the
unpaid bill he owed to Mr. William Filby was for clothes supplied to his
nephew.—Forster
6. The thing I want to see is not
Redbook Lists, and Court Calendars, but the life of man in England.—Carlyle.
7. The material they had to work
upon was already democratical by instinct and habitude.—Lowell.
Relative omitted when subject.
130. We often hear in spoken
English expressions like these:—
There isn't one here ‸ knows how
to play ball.
There was such a crowd ‸ went,
the house was full.
Here the omitted relative would
be in the nominative case. Also in literary English we find the same omission.
It is rare in prose, and comparatively so in poetry. Examples are,—
The silent truth that it was she
was superior.—Thackeray
I have a mind presages me such
thrift.—Shakespeare.
There is a nun in Dryburgh bower,
Ne'er looks upon the sun.
—Scott.
And you may gather garlands there
Would grace a summer queen.
—Id.
'Tis distance lends enchantment
to the view.—Campbell.
Exercises on the Relative
Pronoun.
(a) Bring up sentences containing
ten instances of the relatives who, which, that, and what.
(b) Bring up sentences having
five indefinite relatives.
(c) Bring up five sentences
having indirect questions introduced by pronouns.
(d) Tell whether the pronouns in
the following are interrogatives, simple relatives, or indefinite relatives:—
1. He ushered him into one of the
wherries which lay ready to attend the Queen's barge, which was already
proceeding.
2. The nobles looked at each
other, but more with the purpose to see what each thought of the news, than to
exchange any remarks on what had happened.
3. Gracious Heaven! who was this
that knew the word?
4. It needed to be ascertained
which was the strongest kind of men; who were to be rulers over whom.
5. He went on speaking to who
would listen to him.
6. What kept me silent was the
thought of my mother.
ADJECTIVE PRONOUNS.
Function of adjective pronouns.
131. Most of the words how to be
considered are capable of a double use,—they may be pure modifiers of nouns, or
they may stand for nouns. In the first use they are adjectives; in the second
they retain an adjective meaning, but have lost their adjective use. Primarily
they are adjectives, but in this function, or use, they are properly classed as
adjective pronouns.
The following are some examples
of these:—
Some say that the place was
bewitched.—Irving.
That mysterious realm where each
shall take
His chamber in the silent halls
of death.
—Bryant.
How happy is he born or taught
That serveth not another's will.
—Wotton
That is more than any martyr can
stand.—Emerson.
Caution.
Adjectives, not pronouns.
Hence these words are like
adjectives used as nouns, which we have seen in such expressions as, "The
dead are there;" that is, a word, in order to be an adjective pronoun,
must not modify any word, expressed or understood. It must come under the
requirement of pronouns, and stand for a noun. For instance, in the following
sentences—"The cubes are of stainless ivory, and on each is written, in
letters of gold, 'Truth;'" "You needs must play such pranks as
these;" "They will always have one bank to sun themselves upon, and
another to get cool under;" "Where two men ride on a horse, one must
ride behind"—the words italicized modify nouns understood, necessarily
thought of: thus, in the first, "each cube;" in the second,
"these pranks," in the others, "another bank," "one
man."
Classes of adjective pronouns.
132. Adjective pronouns are
divided into three classes:—
(1) DEMONSTRATIVE PRONOUNS, such
as this, that, the former, etc.
(2) DISTRIBUTIVE PRONOUNS, such
as each, either, neither, etc.
(3) NUMERAL PRONOUNS, as some,
any, few, many, none, all, etc.
DEMONSTRATIVE PRONOUNS
Definition and examples.
133. A DEMONSTRATIVE PRONOUN is
one that definitely points out what persons or things are alluded to in the
sentence.
The person or thing alluded to by
the demonstrative may be in another sentence, or may be the whole of a
sentence. For example, "Be that as it may" could refer to a sentiment
in a sentence, or an argument in a paragraph; but the demonstrative clearly
points to that thing.
The following are examples of
demonstratives:—
I did not say this in so many
words.
All these he saw; but what he
fain had seen He could not see.
Beyond that I seek not to
penetrate the veil.
How much we forgive in those who
yield us the rare spectacle of heroic manners!
The correspondence of Bonaparte
with his brother Joseph, when the latter was the King of Spain.
Such are a few isolated
instances, accidentally preserved.
Even as I have seen, they that
plow iniquity, and sow wickedness, reap the same.
They know that patriotism has its
glorious opportunities and its sacred duties. They have not shunned the one,
and they have well performed the other.
NOTE.—It will be noticed in the
first four sentences that this and that are inflected for number.
Exercises.
(a) Find six sentences using
demonstrative adjective pronouns.
(b) In which of the following is
these a pronoun?—
1. Formerly the duty of a
librarian was to keep people as much as possible from the books, and to hand
these over to his successor as little worn as he could.—Lowell.
2. They had fewer books, but
these were of the best.—Id.
3. A man inspires affection and
honor, because he was not lying in wait for these.—Emerson
4. Souls such as these treat you
as gods would.—Id.
5. These are the first mountains
that broke the uniform level of the earth's surface.—Agassiz
DISTRIBUTIVE PRONOUNS.
Definition and examples.
134. The DISTRIBUTIVE PRONOUNS
are those which stand for the names of persons or things considered singly.
Simple.
Some of these are simple pronouns;
for example,—
They stood, or sat, or reclined,
as seemed good to each.
As two yoke devils sworn to
other's purpose.
Their minds accorded into one
strain, and made delightful music which neither could have claimed as all his
own.
Compound.
Two are compound pronouns,—each
other, one another. They may be separated into two adjective pronouns; as,
We violated our reverence each
for the other's soul. —Hawthorne.
More frequently they are
considered as one pronoun.
They led one another, as it were,
into a high pavilion of their thoughts.—Hawthorne.
Men take each other's measure
when they react.—Emerson.
Exercise.—Find sentences
containing three distributive pronouns.
NUMERAL PRONOUNS.
Definition and examples.
135. The NUMERAL PRONOUNS are
those which stand for an uncertain number or quantity of persons or things.
The following sentences contain
numeral pronouns:—
Trusting too much to others' care
is the ruin of many.
'Tis of no importance how large
his house, you quickly come to the end of all.
Another opposes him with sound
argument.
It is as if one should be so
enthusiastic a lover of poetry as to care nothing for Homer or Milton.
There were plenty more for him to
fall in company with, as some of the rangers had gone astray.
The Soldan, imbued, as most were,
with the superstitions of his time, paused over a horoscope.
If those [taxes] were the only
ones we had to pay, we might the more easily discharge them.
Much might be said on both sides.
If hand of mine another's task
has lightened.
It felt the guidance that it does
not claim.
So perish all whose breast ne'er
learned to glow
For others' good, or melt for
others' woe.
None shall rule but the humble.
Some inflected.
It will be noticed that some of
these are inflected for case and number; such as one other, another.
The word one has a reflexive
form; for example,—
One reflexive.
The best way to punish oneself
for doing ill seems to me to go and do good.—Kingsley.
The lines sound so prettily to
one's self.—Holmes.
Exercise.—Find sentences
containing ten numeral pronouns.
INDEFINITE PRONOUNS.
Definition and examples.
136. Indefinite pronouns are
words which stand for an indefinite number or quantity of persons or things;
but, unlike adjective pronouns, they are never used as adjectives.
Most of them are compounds of two
or more words:—
List.
Somebody, some one, something;
anybody, any one (or anyone), anything; everybody, every one (or everyone),
everything; nobody, no one, nothing; somebody else, anyone else, everybody
else, every one else, etc.; also aught, naught; and somewhat, what, and they.
The following sentences contain
indefinite pronouns:—
As he had them of all hues, he
hoped to fit everybody's fancy.
Every one knows how laborious the
usual method is of attaining to arts and sciences.
Nothing sheds more honor on our
early history than the impression which these measures everywhere produced in
America.
Let us also perform something
worthy to be remembered.
William of Orange was more than
anything else a religious man.
Frederick was discerned to be a
purchaser of everything that nobody else would buy.
These other souls draw me as
nothing else can.
The genius that created it now
creates somewhat else.
Every one else stood still at his
post.
That is perfectly true: I did not
want anybody else's authority to write as I did.
They indefinite means people in
general; as,—
At lovers' perjuries, they say,
Jove laughs.—Shakespeare.
What indefinite is used in the
expression "I tell you what." It means something, and was indefinite
in Old English.
Now, in building of chaises, I
tell you what,
There is always somewhere a
weakest spot.
Exercise.—Find sentences with six
indefinite pronouns.
137. Some indefinite pronouns are
inflected for case, as shown in the words everybody's, anybody else's, etc.
See also "Syntax" (Sec.
426) as to the possessive case of the forms with else.
HOW TO PARSE PRONOUNS.
A reminder.
138. In parsing pronouns the
student will need particularly to guard against the mistake of parsing words according
to form instead of according to function or use.
Exercise.
Parse in full the pronouns in the
following sentences:—
1. She could not help laughing at
the vile English into which they were translated.
2. Our readers probably remember
what Mrs. Hutchinson tells us of herself.
3. Whoever deals with M. de Witt
must go the plain way that he pretends to, in his negotiations.
4. Some of them from whom nothing
was to be got, were suffered to depart; but those from whom it was thought that
anything could be extorted were treated with execrable cruelty.
5. All was now ready for action.
6. Scarcely had the mutiny broken
up when he was himself again.
7. He came back determined to put
everything to the hazard.
8. Nothing is more clear than
that a general ought to be the servant of his government, and of no other.
9. Others did the same thing, but
not to quite so enormous an extent.
10. On reaching the approach to
this about sunset of a beautiful evening in June, I first found myself among
the mountains,—a feature of natural scenery for which, from my earliest days,
it was not extravagant to say that I hungered and thirsted.
11. I speak of that part which
chiefly it is that I know.
12. A smaller sum I had given to
my friend the attorney (who was connected with the money lenders as their
lawyer), to which, indeed, he was entitled for his unfurnished lodgings.
13. Whatever power the law gave
them would be enforced against me to the utmost.
14. O thou that rollest above,
round as the shield of my fathers!
15. But there are more than you
ever heard of who die of grief in this island of ours.
16. But amongst themselves is no
voice nor sound.
17. For this did God send her a
great reward.
18. The table was good; but that
was exactly what Kate cared little about.
19. Who and what was Milton? That
is to say, what is the place which he fills in his own vernacular literature?
20. These hopes are mine as much
as theirs.
21. What else am I who laughed or
wept yesterday, who slept last night like a corpse?
22. I who alone am, I who see
nothing in nature whose existence I can affirm with equal evidence to my own,
behold now the semblance of my being, in all its height, variety, and curiosity
reiterated in a foreign form.
23.
What hand but would a garland
cull
For thee who art so beautiful?
24.
And I had done a hellish thing,
And it would work 'em woe.
25. Whatever he knows and thinks,
whatever in his apprehension is worth doing, that let him communicate.
26. Rip Van Winkle was one of
those foolish, well-oiled dispositions, who take the world easy, eat white
bread or brown, whichever can be got with least thought or trouble.
27.
And will your mother pity me,
Who am a maiden most forlorn?
28.
They know not I knew thee,
Who knew thee too well.
29.
I did remind thee of our own dear
Lake,
By the old Hall which may be mine
no more.
30.
He sate him down, and seized a
pen, and traced
Words which I could not guess of.
31.
Time writes no wrinkle on thine
azure brow:
Such as creation's dawn beheld,
thou rollest now.
32.
Wild Spirit which art moving
everywhere;
Destroyer and preserver; hear,
oh, hear!
33. A smile of hers was like an
act of grace.
34. No man can learn what he has
not preparation for learning.
35. What can we see or acquire
but what we are?
36. He teaches who gives, and he
learns who receives.
37. We are by nature observers;
that is our permanent state.
38. He knew not what to do, and
so he read.
39. Who hears me, who understands
me, becomes mine.
40. The men who carry their
points do not need to inquire of their constituents what they should say.
41. Higher natures overpower
lower ones by affecting them with a certain sleep.
42. Those who live to the future
must always appear selfish to those who live to the present.
43. I am sorry when my
independence is invaded or when a gift comes from such as do not know my
spirit.
44. Here I began to howl and
scream abominably, which was no bad step towards my liberation.
45. The only aim of the war is to
see which is the stronger of the two—which is the master.
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