5. When a quotation is followed by an exclamation or an interrogation point, the punctuation mark should be placed within the quotation marks, if it forms a part of the quotation; as, “I feel almost like groaning, when a young mother shows me some marvel of embroidery or machine-stitching, saying triumphantly, ‘There, I did every stitch of that myself!’”—Scribner’s Monthly.

6. When a quotation is followed by an exclamation or an interrogation point, the punctuation mark should be placed outside of the quotation marks, if it belongs to the whole sentence and not to the quotation; as, “We wonder what Handel would have said to Mozart’s scoring of ‘I know that my Redeemer liveth’!”—Atlantic Monthly. “Why cannot we hear, for instance, the wonderful curioso, ‘He gave his back to the smiters,’ that forms the second part of the air, ‘He was despised,’ and the duet for contralto and tenor, ‘O death where is thy sting’?”—Atlantic Monthly.

Rule II. Titles of Books.—Titles of books are generally inclosed in quotation marks.

EXAMPLES.

Morris’s “Story of Sigurd.”—Scribner’s Monthly.

“The Mikado’s Empire.”—N. A. Review.

“Daniel Deronda.”—Contemporary Review.

The Rev. W. W. Capes’s history of “The Early Roman Empire.”—Appleton’s Journal.

REMARKS.