XXXII. In turning participles to adjectives, they sometimes ascribe actions, or active properties, to things to which they do not literally belong; as,

"The green leaf quivering in the gale,
The warbling hill, the lowing vale."
—MALLET: Union Poems, p. 26.

XXXIII. They employ several ADVERBS that are not used in prose, or are used but seldom; as, oft, haply, inly, blithely, cheerily, deftly, felly, rifely, starkly.

XXXIV. They give to adverbs a peculiar location in respect to other words; as,

1. "Peeping from forth their alleys green."
Collins.

2. "Erect the standard there of ancient Night"
Milton.

3. "The silence often of pure innocence
Persuades, when speaking fails."
Shakspeare.

4. "Where Universal Love not smiles around."
Thomson.

5. "Robs me of that which not enriches him."
Shakspeare.

XXXV. They sometimes omit the introductory adverb there: as,