The Grammar of English Grammars eBook

Goold Brown
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 4,149 pages of information about The Grammar of English Grammars.

The Grammar of English Grammars eBook

Goold Brown
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 4,149 pages of information about The Grammar of English Grammars.

   “My mother! when I learned that thou wast dead,
    Say, wast thou conscious of the tears I shed?”—­Cowper.

OBS. 5.—­That the pronouns of the first and second persons are sometimes masculine and sometimes feminine, is perfectly certain; but whether they can or cannot be neuter, is a question difficult to be decided.  To things inanimate they are applied only figuratively; and the question is, whether the figure always necessarily changes the gender of the antecedent noun.  We assume the general principle, that the noun and its pronoun are always of the same gender; and we know that when inanimate objects are personified in the third person, they are usually represented as masculine or feminine, the gender being changed by the figure.  But when a lifeless object is spoken to in the second person, or represented as speaking in the first, as the pronouns here employed are in themselves without distinction of gender, no such change can be proved by the mere words; and, if we allow that it would be needless to imagine it where the words do not prove it, the gender of these pronouns must in such cases be neuter, because we have no ground to think it otherwise.  Examples:  “And Jesus answered and said unto it, [the barren figtree,] No man eat fruit of thee hereafter forever.”—­Mark, xi, 14.  “O earth, cover not thou my blood.”—­Job, xvi, 18.  “O thou sword of the Lord, how long will it be ere thou be quiet?”—­Jeremiah, xlvii, 6.  In these instances, the objects addressed do not appear to be figuratively invested with the attribute of sex.  So likewise with respect to the first person.  If, in the following example, gold and diamond are neuter, so is the pronoun me; and, if not neuter, of what gender are they?  The personification indicates or discriminates no other.

   “Where thy true treasure?  Gold says, ’Not in me;
    And, ‘Not in me,’ the diamond.  Gold is poor.”—­Young.

THE DECLENSION OF PRONOUNS.

The declension of a pronoun is a regular arrangement of its numbers and cases.

I. SIMPLE PERSONALS.

The simple personal pronouns are thus declined:—­

I, of the FIRST PERSON, any of the genders.[198]

Sing.  Nom.  I, Plur.  Nom. we,
      Poss. my, or mine,[199] Poss. our, or ours,
      Obj. me; Obj. us.

THOU, of the SECOND PERSON, any of the genders.

Sing.  Nom. thou,[200] Plur.  Nom. ye, or you,
      Poss. thy, or thine, Poss. your, or yours,
      Obj. thee; Obj. you, or ye.[201]

HE, of the THIRD PERSON, masculine gender.

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