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e than one occasion advisedly used monosyllables, and monosyllables only, when he wished to express violent and overwhelming mental emotion_, ex. gratia:-- _Lear._ "Thou know'st the first time that we smell the air, We wawl, and cry:--I will preach to thee; mark me. [_Gloster._ "Alack! alack the day!] _Lear._ "When we are born, we cry, that we are come To this great stage of fools,--This a good block?" --_King Lear_, Act IV. Sc. 6. In this passage [I bracket Gloster] we find no fewer than _forty-two monosyllables_ following each other consecutively. Again, "------but through his lips do throng Weak words, so thick come, in his poor heart's aid, That no man could _distinguish_ what he said." _Rape of Lucreece_, Stanza 255. After I had kept this among other flim-flams for more than a year in my note-book, I submitted it in a letter to the examination of a friend; his answer was as follows:--"Your canon is ingenious, especially in the line taken from the sonnet. I doubt it however, much, and rather believe that sound is often sympathetically, and as it were unconsciously, adapted to sense. Moreover, monosyllables are redundant in our tongue, as you will see in the scene you quote. In _King John_, Act III. Sc. 3., where the King is _pausing_ in his wish to incense Hubert to Arthur's murder, he says:-- 'Good friend, though hast no cause to say so yet: But thou shall have; and creep time ne'er so slow, Yet it shall come, for me to do thee good. I had a thing to say,--But let it go:'-- forty monosyllables." "Credimus? an qui amant ipsi sibi somnia fingunt." The very passage he quoted seemed, to my eyes, rather a _corroboration_ of the theory, than an _argument against it_! I might, I think, have quoted the remainder of Lear's speech ending with the words "Kill, kill, kill, kill, kill, kill," and, with the exception of three words, consisting _entirely_ of monosyllables, and one or two other passages. But I have written enough to express my meaning. C. FORBES. Temple. * * * * * NOTES UPON CUNNINGHAM'S HAND-BOOK FOR LONDON. _ Wild House, Drury Lane._--Mr. Cunningham says, "Why so called, I am not aware." _Wild_ is a corruption of _Weld_. It was the town mansion of the family of the _Welds_, of Lutworth Castle. _Compton Street, Soho._--Built in the reign of Charles the First by Sir Francis Compton.
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