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in which our excellent mother-tongue delights to disguise herself, and it is unnecessary to quote examples.

But perhaps the most characteristic style of all is the tally-ho, or Nimrodian style. This method of composition consists in starting some fresh idea at the beginning of every paragraph; in losing sight of it as soon as it is started; and in pursuing in its stead the first stray conceit that turns up. During the chase the reader gets occasional glimpses of the particular notion with which the writer set out. He sometimes even fancies that he is once more on its track, and on the point of coming up with it. But he soon discovers his error; for now it appears that the writer had mistaken one idea for another, and had lost sight of the old in his pursuit of the new. At times the reader is hurried on in a straight line. At others he is dragged through apparently interminable windings, and finds himself, at the winding up, on the exact spot whence he had taken his departure. The great beauty of this style consists in jumbling in one sentence every form and figure of speech. The longer the sentence, the more rugged its construction, the more intricate its involutions, the more gaps it presents in the way of dashes, the more barriers it opposes in the way parentheses, the more fences it shows in compound epithets; the more pleasurable will be the reader's excitement, and the

keener his appreciation of the author's dexterity and skill.

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The greatest adept in the tally-ho style, if not its inventor, is the famous Christopher North. Once he gets into his jacket, nothing will get him out of it until he has led his reader through one of his favourite "Recreations.' Some of his sentences are a page and a half long, and so intricate withal, that the reader often sinks exhausted from lack of breath. This method of composition is to be found at almost every page of the "Recreations." I cannot, however, refrain from quoting the following sample, which is presented to the reader at the commencement of the first "Fytte," as if to give him a foretaste of the rare sport that is in store for him.

"All such pastimes, whether followed merely as pastimes or as professions, or as the immediate means of sustaining life, require sense, sagacity, and knowledge of Nature and Nature's laws; nor less, patience, perseverance, courage even, and bodily strength or activity, while the spirit which animates and supports them is a spirit of anxiety, doubt, fear, hope, joy, exultation, and triumph-in the heart of the young a fierce passion -in the heart of the old a passion still, but subdued and tamed down, without, however, being much dulled or deadened by various experience of all the mysteries of the calling, and by the gradual subsiding of all impetuous impulses in the frames of all mortal men beyond perhaps threescore, when the blackest head will be becoming grey, the most nervous knee less firmly knit, the most steely-springed instep less elastic, the keenest eye less of a far-keeker, and, above all, the most boiling heart less of a cauldron or a crater-yea, the whole man subject to some dimness or decay, and, consequently, the whole duty of

man, like the new edition of a book, from which many passages, that formed the chief glory of the editio princeps, have been expunged-the whole character of the style corrected without being thereby improved-just like the later editions of the 'Pleasures of Imagination,' which were written by Akenside when he was about twenty-one, and altered by him at fortyto the exclusion or destruction of many most splendida vitia, by which process the poem, in our humble opinion, was shorn of its brightest beams, and suffered disastrous twilight and eclipse-perplexing critics."

Here is a sentence of thirty lines, beginning with "pastimes" and ending with "poems," in which upwards of one hundred ideas are thrown together in one mess of crudity and confusion; congenial food, I have no doubt, for your true sportsman, but somewhat too massive and multifarious for the digestive organs of ordinary mortals. In regard, however, to mere length, Wilson and all other writers are surpassed by Hazlitt, who, in his notice of Coleridge, has contrived to spin out a single sentence to one hundred and ten lines! It contains the word "and" ninety-seven times, with only one semicolon, and is probably the longest sentence in any author, ancient or modern.

In an inscription to the memory of the late Lord George Bentinck, I have discovered a style of composition of an entirely novel character. The inscription was thus put forth in the public prints:

"Bentinck Testimonial.-The Committee connected with

the Notts Testimonial to the late Lord George Bentinck, have at length decided upon the following inscription :

"To the memory of Lord George Frederick Cavendish Bentinck, second surviving son of William Henry Cavendish Scott, fourth duke of Portland, &c., whose ardent patriotism and uncompromising honesty were only equalled by the persevering zeal and extraordinary talents, which called forth the grateful homage of those who, in erecting this memorial, pay a heartfelt tribute to exertions which prematurely brought to the grave one who might long have lived the pride of his native country."

This is a style unknown to any system of rhetoric, ancient or modern. It is peculiar to the nineteenth century, and may, not inappropriately, be called the railway style. It is alike remarkable for the rapidity of its transitions from thought to thought, and for the length of theme the writer may go over without drawing breath. It has no time for colons or semicolons, and bestows but a passing notice on the commas. As to full stops, it admits of only one, and that it calls a terminus. Stops were well enough in the steady, stately, stage-coach phraseology of the Johnsons, but they are unsuited to our days of electricity and steam. Towards the construction of the above "Inscription," it is to be presumed that, as each member of the committee supplied his quota of the funds, so he furnished his share of the phrase, the different verbal contributions being afterwards strung together by means of "who's" and "which's." One member suggested his lordship's "ardent patriotism;" a

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second his "uncompromising honesty;" a third his "persevering zeal;" a fourth his "extraordinary talents;" a fifth the committee's "grateful homage;" a sixth "their heart-felt tribute ; a seventh his lordship's "exertions;" and an eighth, "the pride of his country brought to a premature grave." The great advantage of this style consists in the facility with which the sentence may be spun out to any length, without the slightest effort of memory or understanding, each "who" and "which" suggesting a new thought, conjuring up a fresh idea to the mind's eye, and serving as a cue to what should follow. Had the Notts committee been so advised, they might have continued the inscription thus:

"The pride of his native country, which has been sacrificed by the policy of Lord John Russell, who carried the repeal of the Corn Laws, which has proved so injurious to the agriculturists, who are brought to the verge of ruin by the modern doctrines of free trade, which is daily becoming more popular with our statesmen, who are leagued with the Continental democrats for the annihilation of British commerce, which is the pride and boast of our country."

Style, however, must not be confounded with "mannerism." Every writer has a style of his own, a mode of expressing his thoughts peculiar to himself. Style in this sense is as various as the bodily or the mental characteristics of the

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