III. ELEMENTARY PRINCIPLES OF COMPOSITION
- Make the paragraph
the unit of composition: one paragraph to each
topic.
If the subject on which you
are writing is of slight extent, or if you intend
to treat it very briefly, there may be no need of
subdividing it into topics. Thus a brief
description, a brief summary of a literary work,
a brief account of a single incident, a narrative
merely outlining an action, the setting forth of
a single idea, any one of these is best written
in a single paragraph. After the paragraph has
been written, it should be examined to see
whether subdivision will not improve it.
Ordinarily, however, a subject requires
subdivision into topics, each of which should be
made the subject of a paragraph. The object of
treating each topic in a paragraph by itself is,
of course, to aid the reader. The beginning of
each paragraph is a signal to him that a new step
in the development of the subject has been
reached.
The extent of subdivision will vary with the
length of the composition. For example, a short
notice of a book or poem might consist of a
single paragraph. One slightly longer might
consist of two paragraphs:
- Account of the work.
- Critical discussion.
A report on a poem, written for a class in
literature, might consist of seven paragraphs:
- Facts of composition and publication.
- Kind of poem; metrical form.
- Subject.
- Treatment of subject.
- For what chiefly remarkable.
- Wherein characteristic of the writer.
- Relationship to other works.
The contents of paragraphs C and D would vary
with the poem. Usually, paragraph C would
indicate the actual or imagined circumstances of
the poem (the situation), if these call for
explanation, and would then state the subject and
outline its development. If the poem is a
narrative in the third person throughout,
paragraph C need contain no more than a concise
summary of the action. Paragraph D would indicate
the leading ideas and show how they are made
prominent, or would indicate what points in the
narrative are chiefly emphasized.
A novel might be discussed under the heads:
- Setting.
- Plot.
- Characters.
- Purpose.
A historical event might be discussed under
the heads:
- What led up to the event.
- Account of the event.
- What the event led up to.
In treating either of these last two subjects,
the writer would probably find it necessary to
subdivide one or more of the topics here given.
As a rule, single sentences should not be
written or printed as paragraphs. An exception
may be made of sentences of transition,
indicating the relation between the parts of an
exposition or argument.
In dialogue, each speech, even if only a
single word, is a paragraph by itself; that is, a
new paragraph begins with each change of speaker.
The application of this rule, when dialogue and
narrative are combined, is best learned from
examples in well-printed works of fiction.
- As a rule, begin
each paragraph with a topic sentence; end it in
conformity with the beginning.
Again, the object is
to aid the reader. The practice here recommended
enables him to discover the purpose of each
paragraph as he begins to read it, and to retain
the purpose in mind as he ends it. For this
reason, the most generally useful kind of
paragraph, particularly in exposition and
argument, is that in which
- the topic sentence comes at or near the
beginning;
- the succeeding sentences explain or
establish or develop the statement made
in the topic sentence; and
- the final sentence either emphasizes the
thought of the topic sentence or states
some important consequence.
Ending with a digression, or with an
unimportant detail, is particularly to be avoided.
If the paragraph forms part of a larger
composition, its relation to what precedes, or
its function as a part of the whole, may need to
be expressed. This can sometimes be done by a
mere word or phrase (again; therefore; for the
same reason) in the topic sentence. Sometimes,
however, it is expedient to precede the topic
sentence by one or more sentences of introduction
or transition. If more than one such sentence is
required, it is generally better to set apart the
transitional sentences as a separate paragraph.
According to the writer's purpose, he may, as
indicated above, relate the body of the paragraph
to the topic sentence in one or more of several
different ways. He may make the meaning of the
topic sentence clearer by restating it in other
forms, by defining its terms, by denying the
converse, by giving illustrations or specific
instances; he may establish it by proofs; or he
may develop it by showing its implications and
consequences. In a long paragraph, he may carry
out several of these processes.
| 1 Now, to be
properly enjoyed, a walking tour should
be gone upon alone. |
1 Topic sentence. |
| 2 If you go in a
company, or even in pairs, it is no
longer a walking tour in anything but
name; it is something else and more in
the nature of a picnic. |
2 The meaning made
clearer by denial of the contrary. |
| 3 A walking tour
should be gone upon alone, because
freedom is of the essence; because you
should be able to stop and go on, and
follow this way or that, as the freak
takes you; and because you must have your
own pace, and neither trot alongside a
champion walker, nor mince in time with a
girl. |
3 The topic
sentence repeated, in abridged form, and
supported by three reasons; the meaning
of the third ("you must have your
own pace") made clearer by denying
the converse. |
| 4 And you must be
open to all impressions and let your
thoughts take colour from what you see. |
4 A fourth reason,
stated in two forms. |
| 5 You should be as
a pipe for any wind to play upon. |
5 The same reason,
stated in still another form. |
| 6 "I cannot
see the wit," says Hazlitt, "of
walking and talking at the same time. |
6-7 The same
reason as stated by Hazlitt. |
| 7 When I am in the
country, I wish to vegetate like the
country," which is the gist of all
that can be said upon the matter. |
| 8 There should be
no cackle of voices at your elbow, to jar
on the meditative silence of the morning.
|
8 Repetition, in
paraphrase, of the quotation from Hazlitt. |
| 9 And so long as a
man is reasoning he cannot surrender
himself to that fine intoxication that
comes of much motion in the open air,
that begins in a sort of dazzle and
sluggishness of the brain, and ends in a
peace that passes comprehension.--Stevenson,
Walking Tours. |
9 Final statement
of the fourth reason, in language
amplified and heightened to form a strong
conclusion. |
| 1 It was chiefly
in the eighteenth century that a very
different conception of history grew up. |
1 Topic sentence. |
| 2 Historians then
came to believe that their task was not
so much to paint a picture as to solve a
problem; to explain or illustrate the
successive phases of national growth,
prosperity, and adversity. |
2 The meaning of
the topic sentence made clearer; the new
conception of history defined. |
| 3 The history of
morals, of industry, of intellect, and of
art; the changes that take place in
manners or beliefs; the dominant ideas
that prevailed in successive periods; the
rise, fall, and modification of political
constitutions; in a word, all the
conditions of national well-being became
the subjects of their works. |
3 The definition
expanded. |
| 4 They sought
rather to write a history of peoples than
a history of kings. |
4 The definition
explained by contrast. |
| 5 They looked
especially in history for the chain of
causes and effects. |
5 The definition
supplemented: another element in the new
conception of history. |
| 6 They undertook
to study in the past the physiology of
nations, and hoped by applying the
experimental method on a large scale to
deduce some lessons of real value about
the conditions on which the welfare of
society mainly depend.--Lecky, The
Political Value of History. |
6 Conclusion: an
important consequence of the new
conception of history. |
In narration and description
the paragraph sometimes begins with a concise,
comprehensive statement serving to hold together
the details that follow.
| The breeze served us admirably. |
| The campaign opened with a series of
reverses. |
| The next ten or twelve pages were
filled with a curious set of entries. |
But this device, if too often
used, would become a mannerism. More commonly the
opening sentence simply indicates by its subject
with what the paragraph is to be principally
concerned.
| At length I thought I might return
towards the stockade. |
| He picked up the heavy lamp from the
table and began to explore. |
| Another flight of steps, and they
emerged on the roof. |
The brief paragraphs of
animated narrative, however, are often without
even this semblance of a topic sentence. The
break between them serves the purpose of a
rhetorical pause, throwing into prominence some
detail of the action.
- Use the active voice.
The active voice is usually more direct and
vigorous than the passive:
| I shall always remember my first
visit to Boston. |
This is much better than
| My first visit to Boston will always
be remembered by me. |
The latter sentence is less
direct, less bold, and less concise. If the
writer tries to make it more concise by omitting
"by me,"
| My first visit to Boston will always
be remembered, |
it becomes indefinite: is it
the writer, or some person undisclosed, or the
world at large, that will always remember this
visit?
This rule does not, of course, mean that the
writer should entirely discard the passive voice,
which is frequently convenient and sometimes
necessary.
| The dramatists of the Restoration are
little esteemed to-day. |
| Modern readers have little esteem for
the dramatists of the Restoration. |
The first would be the right
form in a paragraph on the dramatists of the
Restoration; the second, in a paragraph on the
tastes of modern readers. The need of making a
particular word the subject of the sentence will
often, as in these examples, determine which
voice is to be used.
The habitual use of the active voice, however,
makes for forcible writing. This is true not only
in narrative principally concerned with action,
but in writing of any kind. Many a tame sentence
of description or exposition can be made lively
and emphatic by substituting a transitive in the
active voice for some such perfunctory expression
as there is, or could be heard.
| There were a
great number of dead leaves lying on the
ground. |
Dead leaves
covered the ground. |
| The sound of
the falls could still be heard. |
The sound of
the falls still reached our ears. |
| The reason
that he left college was that his health
became impaired. |
Failing
health compelled him to leave college. |
| It was not
long before he was very sorry that he had
said what he had. |
He soon
repented his words. |
As a rule, avoid making one
passive depend directly upon another.
| Gold was not
allowed to be exported. |
It was
forbidden to export gold (The export of
gold was prohibited). |
| He has been
proved to have been seen entering the
building. |
It has been
proved that he was seen to enter the
building. |
In both the examples above,
before correction, the word properly related to
the second passive is made the subject of the
first.
A common fault is to use as the subject of a
passive construction a noun which expresses the
entire action, leaving to the verb no function
beyond that of completing the sentence.
| A survey of
this region was made in 1900. |
This region
was surveyed in 1900. |
| Mobilization
of the army was rapidly carried out. |
The army was
rapidly mobilized. |
| Confirmation
of these reports cannot be obtained. |
These
reports cannot be confirmed. |
Compare the sentence, "The
export of gold was prohibited," in which the
predicate "was prohibited" expresses
something not implied in "export."
- Put statements in positive form.
Make definite assertions. Avoid tame,
colorless, hesitating, non-committal language.
Use the word not as a means of denial or
in antithesis, never as a means of evasion.
| He was not
very often on time. |
He usually
came late. |
| He did not
think that studying Latin was much use. |
He thought
the study of Latin useless. |
| The
Taming of the Shrew is rather weak in
spots. Shakespeare does not portray
Katharine as a very admirable character,
nor does Bianca remain long in memory as
an important character in Shakespeare's
works. |
The women in
The Taming of the Shrew are
unattractive. Katharine is disagreeable,
Bianca insignificant. |
The last example, before
correction, is indefinite as well as negative.
The corrected version, consequently, is simply a
guess at the writer's intention.
All three examples show the weakness inherent
in the word not. Consciously or
unconsciously, the reader is dissatisfied with
being told only what is not; he wishes to be told
what is. Hence, as a rule, it is better to
express a negative in positive form.
| not honest |
dishonest |
| not important |
trifling |
| did not remember |
forgot |
| did not pay any attention to |
ignored |
| did not have much confidence in |
distrusted |
The antithesis of negative and
positive is strong:
| Not charity, but simple justice. |
| Not that I loved Caesar less, but
Rome the more. |
Negative words other than not
are usually strong:
| The sun never sets upon the British
flag. |
- Omit needless
words.
Vigorous writing is concise. A sentence should
contain no unnecessary words, a paragraph no
unnecessary sentences, for the same reason that a
drawing should have no unnecessary lines and a
machine no unnecessary parts. This requires not
that the writer make all his sentences short, or
that he avoid all detail and treat his subjects
only in outline, but that every word tell.
Many expressions in common use violate this
principle:
| the question as to whether |
whether (the question whether) |
| there is no doubt but that |
no doubt (doubtless) |
| used for fuel purposes |
used for fuel |
| he is a man who |
he |
| in a hasty manner |
hastily |
| this is a subject which |
this subject |
| His story is a strange one. |
His story is strange. |
In especial the expression the
fact that should be revised out of every
sentence in which it occurs.
| owing to the fact that |
since (because) |
| in spite of the fact that |
though (although) |
| call your attention to the fact that |
remind you (notify you) |
| I was unaware of the fact that |
I was unaware that (did not know) |
| the fact that he had not succeeded |
his failure |
| the fact that I had arrived |
my arrival |
See also under case,
character,
nature,
system
in Chapter
V.
Who is, which was, and the like are
often superfluous.
| His brother,
who is a member of the same firm |
His brother,
a member of the same firm |
| Trafalgar,
which was Nelson's last battle |
Trafalgar,
Nelson's last battle |
As positive statement is more
concise than negative, and the active voice more
concise than the passive, many of the examples
given under Rules 11
and 12
illustrate this rule as well.
A common violation of conciseness is the
presentation of a single complex idea, step by
step, in a series of sentences which might to
advantage be combined into one.
| Macbeth was
very ambitious. This led him to wish to
become king of Scotland. The witches told
him that this wish of his would come true.
The king of Scotland at this time was
Duncan. Encouraged by his wife, Macbeth
murdered Duncan. He was thus enabled to
succeed Duncan as king. (55 words.) |
Encouraged
by his wife, Macbeth achieved his
ambition and realized the prediction of
the witches by murdering Duncan and
becoming king of Scotland in his place. (26
words.) |
- Avoid a succession of loose
sentences.
This rule refers
especially to loose sentences of a particular
type, those consisting of two co-ordinate clauses,
the second introduced by a conjunction or
relative. Although single sentences of this type
may be unexceptionable (see under Rule 4),
a series soon becomes monotonous and tedious.
An unskilful writer will sometimes construct a
whole paragraph of sentences of this kind, using
as connectives and, but, and less
frequently, who, which, when, where, and while,
these last in non-restrictive senses (see under
Rule 3).
| The third concert of the subscription
series was given last evening, and a
large audience was in attendance. Mr.
Edward Appleton was the soloist, and the
Boston Symphony Orchestra furnished the
instrumental music. The former showed
himself to be an artist of the first rank,
while the latter proved itself fully
deserving of its high reputation. The
interest aroused by the series has been
very gratifying to the Committee, and it
is planned to give a similar series
annually hereafter. The fourth concert
will be given on Tuesday, May 10, when an
equally attractive programme will be
presented. |
Apart from its triteness and
emptiness, the paragraph above is bad because of
the structure of its sentences, with their
mechanical symmetry and sing-song. Contrast with
them the sentences in the paragraphs quoted under
Rule 10,
or in any piece of good English prose, as the
preface (Before
the Curtain) to Vanity Fair.
If the writer finds that he has written a
series of sentences of the type described, he
should recast enough of them to remove the
monotony, replacing them by simple sentences, by
sentences of two clauses joined by a semicolon,
by periodic sentences of two clauses, by
sentences, loose or periodic, of three clauses--whichever
best represent the real relations of the thought.
- Express co-ordinate
ideas in similar form.
This principle, that
of parallel construction, requires that
expressions of similar content and function
should be outwardly similar. The likeness of form
enables the reader to recognize more readily the
likeness of content and function. Familiar
instances from the Bible are the Ten Commandments,
the Beatitudes, and the petitions of the Lord's
Prayer.
The unskilful writer often violates this
principle, from a mistaken belief that he should
constantly vary the form of his expressions. It
is true that in repeating a statement in order to
emphasize it he may have need to vary its form.
For illustration, see the paragraph from
Stevenson quoted under Rule 10.
But apart from this, he should follow the
principle of parallel construction.
| Formerly,
science was taught by the textbook method,
while now the laboratory method is
employed. |
Formerly,
science was taught by the textbook method;
now it is taught by the laboratory method. |
The left-hand version gives the
impression that the writer is undecided or timid;
he seems unable or afraid to choose one form of
expression and hold to it. The right-hand version
shows that the writer has at least made his
choice and abided by it.
By this principle, an article or a preposition
applying to all the members of a series must
either be used only before the first term or else
be repeated before each term.
| The French,
the Italians, Spanish, and Portuguese |
The French,
the Italians, the Spanish, and the
Portuguese |
| In spring,
summer, or in winter |
In spring,
summer, or winter (In spring, in summer,
or in winter) |
Correlative expressions (both,
and; not, but; not only, but also; either, or;
first, second, third; and the like) should be
followed by the same grammatical construction.
Many violations of this rule can be corrected by
rearranging the sentence.
| It was both
a long ceremony and very tedious. |
The ceremony
was both long and tedious. |
| A time not
for words, but action |
A time not
for words, but for action |
| Either you
must grant his request or incur his ill
will. |
You must
either grant his request or incur his ill
will. |
| My
objections are, first, the injustice of
the measure; second, that it is
unconstitutional. |
My
objections are, first, that the measure
is unjust; second, that it is
unconstitutional. |
See also the third example
under Rule 12
and the last under Rule 13.
It may be asked, what if a writer needs to
express a very large number of similar ideas, say
twenty? Must he write twenty consecutive
sentences of the same pattern? On closer
examination he will probably find that the
difficulty is imaginary, that his twenty ideas
can be classified in groups, and that he need
apply the principle only within each group.
Otherwise he had best avoid the difficulty by
putting his statements in the form of a table.
- Keep related words
together.
The position of the words in a sentence is the
principal means of showing their relationship.
The writer must therefore, so far as possible,
bring together the words, and groups of words,
that are related in thought, and keep apart those
which are not so related.
The subject of a sentence and the principal
verb should not, as a rule, be separated by a
phrase or clause that can be transferred to the
beginning.
| Wordsworth,
in the fifth
book of The Excursion, gives a
minute description of this church. |
In the fifth
book of The Excursion,
Wordsworth gives a minute description of
this church. |
| Cast iron,
when treated in a Bessemer converter, is
changed into steel. |
By treatment
in a Bessemer converter, cast iron is
changed into steel. |
The objection is that the
interposed phrase or clause needlessly interrupts
the natural order of the main clause. This
objection, however, does not usually hold when
the order is interrupted only by a relative
clause or by an expression in apposition. Nor
does it hold in periodic sentences in which the
interruption is a deliberately used means of
creating suspense (see examples under Rule 18).
The relative pronoun should come, as a rule,
immediately after its antecedent.
| There was a
look in his eye that boded mischief. |
In his eye
was a look that boded mischief. |
| He wrote
three articles about his adventures in
Spain, which were published in Harper's
Magazine. |
He published
in Harper's Magazine three
articles about his adventures in Spain. |
| This is a
portrait of Benjamin Harrison, grandson
of William
Henry Harrison, who became President
in 1889. |
This is a
portrait of Benjamin Harrison, grandson
of William
Henry Harrison. He became President
in 1889. |
If the antecedent consists of a
group of words, the relative comes at the end of
the group, unless this would cause ambiguity.
| The Superintendent of the
Chicago Division, who |
| A proposal to
amend the Sherman Act, which has been
variously judged |
A proposal,
which has been variously judged, to amend
the Sherman Act |
| A proposal
to amend the much-debated Sherman Act |
| The grandson
of William
Henry Harrison, who |
William
Henry Harrison's grandson, Benjamin
Harrison, who |
A noun in apposition may come
between antecedent and relative, because in such
a combination no real ambiguity can arise.
| The Duke of York, his brother, who
was regarded with hostility by the Whigs |
Modifiers should come, if
possible next to the word they modify. If several
expressions modify the same word, they should be
so arranged that no wrong relation is suggested.
| All the
members were not present. |
Not all the
members were present. |
| He only
found two mistakes. |
He found
only two mistakes. |
| Major R. E.
Joyce will give a lecture on Tuesday
evening in Bailey Hall, to which the
public is invited, on "My
Experiences in Mesopotamia" at eight
P. M. |
On Tuesday
evening at eight P.
M., Major R. E.
Joyce will give in Bailey Hall a lecture
on "My Experiences in Mesopotamia."
The public is invited. |
- In summaries, keep
to one tense.
In summarizing the action of a drama, the
writer should always use the present tense. In
summarizing a poem, story, or novel, he should
preferably use the present, though he may use the
past if he prefers. If the summary is in the
present tense, antecedent action should be
expressed by the perfect; if in the past, by the
past perfect.
| An unforeseen chance prevents Friar
John from delivering Friar Lawrence's
letter to Romeo. Juliet, meanwhile, owing
to her father's arbitrary change of the
day set for her wedding, has been
compelled to drink the potion on Tuesday
night, with the result that Balthasar
informs Romeo of her supposed death
before Friar Lawrence learns of the
nondelivery of the letter. |
But whichever tense be used in
the summary, a past tense in indirect discourse
or in indirect question remains unchanged.
| The Legate inquires who struck the
blow. |
Apart from the exceptions noted,
whichever tense the writer chooses, he should use
throughout. Shifting from one tense to the other
gives the appearance of uncertainty and
irresolution (compare Rule 15).
In presenting the statements or the thought of
some one else, as in summarizing an essay or
reporting a speech, the writer should avoid
intercalating such expressions as "he said,"
"he stated," "the speaker added,"
"the speaker then went on to say,"
"the author also thinks," or the like.
He should indicate clearly at the outset, once
for all, that what follows is summary, and then
waste no words in repeating the notification.
In notebooks, in newspapers, in handbooks of
literature, summaries of one kind or another may
be indispensable, and for children in primary
schools it is a useful exercise to retell a story
in their own words. But in the criticism or
interpretation of literature the writer should be
careful to avoid dropping into summary. He may
find it necessary to devote one or two sentences
to indicating the subject, or the opening
situation, of the work he is discussing; he may
cite numerous details to illustrate its qualities.
But he should aim to write an orderly discussion
supported by evidence, not a summary with
occasional comment. Similarly, if the scope of
his discussion includes a number of works, he
will as a rule do better not to take them up
singly in chronological order, but to aim from
the beginning at establishing general conclusions.
- Place the emphatic words of a
sentence at the end.
The proper
place for the word, or group of words, which the
writer desires to make most prominent is usually
the end of the sentence.
| Humanity has
hardly advanced in fortitude since that
time, though it has advanced in many
other ways. |
Humanity,
since that time, has advanced in many
other ways, but it has hardly advanced in
fortitude. |
| This steel
is principally used for making razors,
because of its hardness. |
Because of
its hardness, this steel is principally
used in making razors. |
The word or group of words
entitled to this position of prominence is
usually the logical predicate, that is, the new
element in the sentence, as it is in the second
example.
The effectiveness of the periodic sentence
arises from the prominence which it gives to the
main statement.
| Four centuries ago, Christopher
Columbus, one of the Italian mariners
whom the decline of their own republics
had put at the service of the world and
of adventure, seeking for Spain a
westward passage to the Indies as a set-off
against the achievements of Portuguese
discoverers, lighted on America. |
| With these hopes and in this belief I
would urge you, laying aside all
hindrance, thrusting away all private
aims, to devote yourselves unswervingly
and unflinchingly to the vigorous and
successful prosecution of this war. |
The other prominent position in
the sentence is the beginning. Any element in the
sentence, other than the subject, becomes
emphatic when placed first.
| Deceit or treachery he could never
forgive. |
| So vast and rude, fretted by the
action of nearly three thousand years,
the fragments of this architecture may
often seem, at first sight, like works of
nature. |
A subject coming first in its
sentence may be emphatic, but hardly by its
position along. In the sentence,
| Great kings worshipped at his shrine, |
the emphasis upon kings
arises largely from its meaning and from the
context. To receive special emphasis, the subject
of a sentence must take the position of the
predicate.
| Through the middle of the valley
flowed a winding stream. |
The principle that the proper
place for what is to be made most prominent is
the end applies equally to the words of a
sentence, to the sentences of a paragraph, and to
the paragraphs of a composition.
|