The following exercise is presented merely to show the mode in which, in conformity with the suggestions just made, the student's compositions may be corrected. The exercise is one of a class of very young students. By this example, the teacher will become acquainted with a set of arbitrary marks for the correction of errors, which may easily be explained to a class, and when understood will save the teacher much writing. Thus, when a word is misspelt or incorrectly written, it will be sufficient to draw a horizontal line under it, as in the following exercise. If a capital is incorrectly used, or is wanted instead of a small letter, a short perpendicular mark is used. When entire words or expressions are to be altered, they are surrounded with black lines, and the correct expression is written on the blank page on the left. When merely the order of the words is to be altered, figures are written over the words designating the order in which they are to be read. Transposition. Synonymes, collected, applied, defined, distinguished, and illustrated. Variety of expression, phrases generalized, particularized, translated from Latin to Saxon derivatives, and the reverse, expanded, compressed. Figures of speech analyzed. Students of higher grade may also be exercised in the Logical Analysis of the same subject, noticing the subject with its scope, topics, method, and lastly in a Critical Analysis, relating to the choice of words. Structure of the sentences. Style. Eloquence. Of these he will give the general charac ter, with a particular analysis. Errors. Beauties. It was a beautiful evening, in the month of August, when The night was such, that it would have been almost instant death to have ventured upon the waters in an 1 mingled ship could long survive such a tempest, and we were soon Despairing of saving more, the hardy fishermen reached the open boat, and we could render no assistance to them. The shrieks of the unhappy persons, mixed with the But no LXXXII. MARKS USED BY PRINTERS IN THE CORRECTION OF PROOF-SHEETS. Many mistakes in printing may be avoided, when the printer and the writer clearly understand one another. It is thought it will be useful to present in this volume a view of the manner in which proof-sheets are corrected. On the opposite page is a specimen of a proof-sheet, with the corrections upon it. A little attention will readily enable the student to understand the object of the various marks which it contains, particularly if taken in connexion with the explanation here given. An inverted letter is indicated by the character and in the mode represented in No. 2. When a wrong letter is discovered, a line is drawn through it and the proper letter written in the margin, as in No. 1. The correction is made in the same manner when it is desired to substitute one word for another. If a letter or word is found to be omitted, a caret (^) is put under its place, and the letter or word to be supplied is written in the margin ; as in Nos. 8 and 19. If there be an omission of several words, or if it is desired to insert a new clause or sentence, which is too long to admit of being written in the side margin, it is customary to indicate by a caret the place of the omission, or for the insertion of the new matter, and to write on the bottom margin the sentence to be supplied, connecting it with the caret by a line drawn from the one to the other; as in No. 15. If a superfluous word or letter is detected, it is marked out by drawing a stroke through it, and a character which stands for the Latin word dele (expunge) is written against it in the margin; as in No. 4. The transposition of words or letters is indicated as in the three examples marked No. 12. If two words are improperly joined together, or there is not sufficient space between them, a caret is to be interposed, and a character denoting separation to be marked in the margin opposite; as in No. 6. If the parts of a word are improperly separated, they are to be linked together by two marks, resembling parentheses placed horizontally, one above and the other beneath the word, as in the manner indicated in No. 20. Where the spaces between words are too large, this is to be indicated in a similar manner, excepting that instead of two marks, as in the case of a word improperly separated, only one is employed; as in No. 9. Where it is desired to make a new paragraph, the appropriate character (T) is placed at the beginning of the sentence, and also noted in the margin opposite; as in No. 10. Where a passage has been improperly broken into two paragraphs, the parts are to be hooked together, and the words "no break" written opposite in the margin; as No. 18. If a word or clause has been marked out or altered, and it is afterwards 1 a THOUGH a veriety of opinions exists as to the individual by wчom the art of printing was first discovered; yet all authorities concur in admitting Peter Schoeffer to be the person 3 who invented cast metal types, having learned 48 the art of of cutting the letters from the Gut 29 Caps. tembergs, he is also supposed to have been by Jo. Fred. Faustus of Ascheffenburg: 3 10 ¶¶"Peter Schoeffer of Gernshiem, perceiving Caps his master Fausts design, and being himself 12 tr. (desirous ardently) to improve the art, found 11 14 21 out (by the good providence of God) the method of cutting incidendi) the characters 13 stet/ in a matrix, that the letters might easily be singly cast; instead of bieng cut. I vately cut matrices for the whole Λ Faust was He pri- 12/ alphabet: so pleased with the contrivance that he promised Peter to give him his only daughter Christina in marriage, a promise which he soon after performed.] But there were many difficulties at first A 17wf. 3 Ital. no 18 break with these letters, as there had been before 3 Prom. with wooden ones, the metal being too soft 3 Ital. to support the force of the impression: but 20 this defect was soon remedied, by mixing 3 a substance with the metal which sufficiently -and when he showed his master the letters cast from these matrices, |