CHAPTER V.
LItERARY StYLE No one can obiograp feeling t ses unusually fine Engliseacion kno o t of ing errors in syntax or in t is just tion fixes as t to ion accounts for. try to make ion not to be explained by any sucion, fortify tion by an appeal to the remarkable excellence of her use of language even when she was a child.
to a certain degree valid; for, indeed, tional ies of t s of teacive to ties of language and to terplay of t which demands expression in melodious word groupings.
At time t of style can be starved or stimulated. No innate genius can invent fine language. tuff of be given to t and given skilfully.
A c e fine Engliss nouris. In teac aste and an ent up on t;Juvenile Literature,quot; ense of being simply p, like quot;treasure Islandquot; or quot;Robinson Crusoequot; or t;Jungle Book,quot; be in good style.
If Miss Sullivan e fine Englisy of yle , be explicable at once.
But tracts from Miss Sullivans letters and from s, alte, ty o be measured by ion. to o t t sly recovered . eac ao t are in books, from during her years of blindness.
In Captain Kellers library s books, Lambs quot;tales from S; and better still Montaigne. After t year or so of elementary ogether.
Besides tion of good books, ting, for . t is ireless and unrelenting discipline, ters taste, but made e til t only correct, but charming and well phrased.
Any one o e knoo tice eacyle insist on a cing a paragrapil it is more t, and raining, even b