3. Shame being lostˊ, all virtue is lost.
4. Fathˊers, Senators of Romeˊ, arbiters of naˊtions, to you I fly for refuge.
5. Poor were the expectations of the modˊest, the virˊtuousˊ, and the goodˊ, if the reward of their labors were expected only from man.
6. An honest manˊ, (as the poet has saidˊ,) is the noblest work of God.
II. At the end of a sentence, and in all places where the sense is complete, the falling inflection should be used.
EXAMPLES.
1. Peace will soon be estabˋlished; confidence will come with peaceˋ; capˋital will follow conˋfidence; employment will increase with capˋital; educationˊ will be diffuˊsed, and virtue will grow with educaˋtion.
2. It is of the last importance to season the passions of a child with devoˋtion; which seldom dies in a mind that has received an early tincˋture of it.
3. Temˊperance, by fortifying the mind and bodˊy, leads to hapˋpiness.
4. Sincerity is to speak as we thinkˋ, to do as we pretend and professˋ, to perform and make good what we promˋise, and really to be what we appearˋ to be.