Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: Lou's not Times foole, though rofie lips and cheeks Within his bending fickles compafle come, Loue alters not with his breefe houres and weekes, Sonnet cxvi. 2. locative followed but not preceded by a comma. But note me fignior. Ant. Marke you this Bajfamo, The Merchant of Venice, i. iii. p8. Ant. Well Shylocke, fhall we be beholding to you ? Ibid., 106. Ant. Yes Shylocke, I will feale vnto this bond. Ibid., 171. Ant. Hie thee gentle lew. Ibid., 178. Why doft thou bull, and bore fo feelily Difletnble weaknefle . . . ? Donne, Poems, ijj, p. 37. Eld: bro. Peace brother, be not over exquifite To caft the faftiion of uncertaine evils, Milton, A Mafk, 1637, 1. j-p (p. 13). Fly envious Time, till thou run out thy race, Milton, On Time (Poems, 164, p. ip). Com penfive Nun, devout and pure, Milton, // Penseroso, 31 (Ibid., p. 38). chapter{Section 43. Vocative without commas. Now infidell I haue thee on the hip. The Merchant of Venice, iv. i. 33. Seb. I prethee foolifh greeke depart from me, TweJfe Night, iv. i. 1.9. Come my yong fouldier put vp your yron: Ibid., 43. Now Thomas Mowbray do I turne to thee, Richard the Second, i. i. 3 f. Kent, To be acknowledg'd Madam is ore-pai'd, King Lear, iv. vii. 4. Be by good Madam when we do awake him, Ibid., 23. For thee opprefled King I am caft downe, Ibid., v. iii. f. Within thine owne bud burieft thy content, And tender chorle makft waft in niggarding: Sonnet i. Vnthrifty louelinefle why doft thou fpend, . . . Sonnet iv. Raffe. O thou haft a fweet life Mariner to be pinde in a few boordes, Lyly, Gallathea, i. iv. 1o (ed. Bond). Make glad and forry feafons as thou fleet'ft, And do what ere thou wilt fwift-fboted time To the w...