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historian says, "he hasted to be at Jerusalem, on the day of Pentecost.' Therefore he could not afford the time it would require to visit his dear friends, the Ephesian church, and he chose to pursue his voyage without seeing them. But can the words be made to express this sense? Perfectly ;--and that with only an increase of stress on one particle. "Paul had determined to sail by Ephesus."

Another example shows us a succession of small words raised to importance, by becoming peculiarly significant. In Shakspeare's Merchant of Venice, Bassanio had received a ring from his wife, with the strongest protestation that it should never part from his finger; but, in a moment of generous gratitude for the preservation of his friend's life, he forgot this promise, and gave the ring to the officer to whose kind interposition he ascribed that deliverance. With great mortification at the act, he afterwards made the following apology to his wife, an unemphatic pronunciation of which leaves it scarcely intelligible; whlie distinct emphasis on a few small words gives it precision and vivacity, thus:

If you did know To whom I gave the ring,
If you did know FOR whom I gave the ring,
And would conceive for WHAT I gave the ring,
And how UNWILLINGLY I left the ring,
When nought would be accepted BUT the ring,

You would abate the strength of your displeasure.

In the case that follows too, we see how the meaning of a sentence often depends on the manner in which we utter one short word. "One of the servants of the high priest, (being his kinsman whose ear Peter cut off,) saith,

did not I see thee in the garden with him?" Now if we utter this, as most readers do, with a stress on kinsman, and a short pause after it, we make the sentence affirm that the man whose ear Peter cut off was kinsman to the high priest, which was not the fact. But a stress upon his, makes this servant, kinsman to another man, who received the wound.

One more example may suffice, on this point. When our Saviour said to Peter ;-"Lovest thou me more than these?"-he probably referred to the confident professions of his own attachment to Christ, which the apostle had presumed would remain unshaken, though that of his brethren should fail; but which professions he had wofully violated in the hour of trial. If this is the spirit of the question, it is a tender but severe admonition, which would be expressed by emphasis, thus; "Lovest thou me, more than these?" that is, more than thy brethren love me?

But respectable interpreters have supposed the question to refer to Peter's affection merely, and to contrast two objects of that affection; and this would change the emphasis thus ;--"Lovest thou me more than these ?"that is, more than thou lovest thy brethren?

These illustrations show that the principle of emphatic stress is perfectly simple; and that it falls on a particular word, not chiefly because that word belongs to one or another class in grammar, but because, in the present case, it is important in sense. To designate the words that are thus important, by the action of the voice in emphasis, is just what the etymological import of this term implies, namely, to show, to point out, to make manifest.

But farther to elucidate a subject, that has been treat

ed with much obscurity, emphatic stress may be distinguished into that which is absolute, and that which is antithetic or relative.

20] 1. Absolute emphatic stress.

Walker, and others who have been implicitly guided by his authority, without examination, lay down the broad position, that emphasis always implies antithesis; and that it can never be proper to give emphatic stress to a word, unless it stands opposed to something in sense. Accordingly, to find the emphasis in a sentence, the direction given is, to take the word we suppose to be emphatical, and try if it will admit of those words being supplied, which antithesis would demand; and if the words thus supplied, agree with the meaning of the writer, the emphasis is laid properly,--otherwise, improperly.

EXAMPLE.

Exercise and temperance strengthen even an indifferent consti

tution.

The emphatic word here suggests, as the antithetic clause to be supplied;--not merely a good constitution; and this accords with the meaning of the writer.

Now the error of these treatises is, that what in truth is only one important ground of emphasis, is made the sole, and the universal ground. Indeed, if it were admitted that there is no emphasis without antithesis, it would by no means follow, (as I shall show under emphatic inflection,) that all cases of opposition in thought are to be analysed in the mode above proposed. But the principle assumed cannot be admitted; for to say that there is

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no absolute emphasis, is to say that a thought is never important, considered by itself; or that the figure of contrast is the only way in which a thought can be expressed with force. The theory which supposes this, is too narrow to correspond with the philosophy of elocution. Emphasis is the soul of delivery, because it is the most discriminating mark of emotion. Contrast is among the sources of emotion: and the kind of contrast really intended by Walker and others, namely, that of affirmation and negation, it is peculiarly the province of emphasis to designate. But this is not the whole of its province. There are other sources, besides antithetic relation, from which the mind receives strong and vivid impressions, which it is the office of vocal language to express. Thus exclamation, apostrophe, and bold figures in general, denoting high emotion, demand a correspondent force in pronunciation; and that too in many cases where the emphatic force laid on a word is absolute, because the thought expressed by that word is forcible of itself, without any aid from contrast. Of this the reader may be satisfied by turning to [13] p. 57, and noting such examples as these :

Up! comrades,—ùp !—

Wo unto you, Pharisees!

Hènce !—hòme, you idle creatures-

Angels! and ministers of grace,-defend us.'

*The following anecdote of Whitefield, which is probably familiar to most readers, contains an illustration altogether to my purpose. It is a passage repeated by Hume, from the close of a sermon which he heard from that preacher." After a solemn pause, Mr. Whitefield thus addressed his numerous audience: 'The attendant angel is just about to leave the threshold, and ascend to

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Now, in such a case, we may speculate on the emphatic force of the exclamation, and try if the sense will admit some antithetic clause to be supplied ;' but it is mere trifling. The truth is, when strong passion speaks, it speaks strongly, and, if no untoward habit intervenes, speaks with just that degree and kind of stress which the passion itself demands.

21] 2. Antithetic or relative stress.

Though we cannot consider opposition in sense as the exclusive ground of strong emphasis, it is doubtless a more common one than any other. The principle on which the stress depends in this case, will be evident from a few examples.

Study, not so much to show knowledge as to acquire it.
He that cannot bear a jest, should not make one.

It is not so easy to hide one's faults, as to mend them.
We think less of the injuries we do, than of those we suffer.
It is not so difficult to talk well, as to live well.
We must take heed not only to what we say, but to what we do,

In these short sentences the antithetic words, requiring emphatic force, are so obvious that they can hardly be mistaken by any one. When the antithetic terms in a sentence, are both expressed, the mind instantly per

heaven. And shall he ascend, and not bear with him the news of one sinner, among all this multitude, reclaimed from the error of his ways?' Then he stamped with his foot, lifted up his hands and eyes to heaven, and with gushing tears, cried aloud,-Stop, Gabriel! stop, Gabriel! stop, ere you enter the sacred portals, and yet carry with you the news of one sinner converted to God."" The high emotion of the speaker in this case, and the powers of utterance with which that emotion was expressed, melted the as sembly into tears.

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