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From | To | Subject | Date/Time | |||
Anton Shepelev | Ardith Hinton | Stephen Leacock again |
July 6, 2018 11:06 PM * |
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Ardith Hinton: AH> Stephen Leacock wrote: SL>> ...A high authority said: SL>> SL>> Walking in the nobler sense is a measured progress SL>> inspired of the woods and hills, by rivers and the SL>> flowers of the field, a serene partaking of the SL>> enduring sources of joy. SL>> AH> Once I'd typed out enough of the citation Google located AH> an article published in the July 1962 edition of the AH> ROTARIAN magazine which seems to be the one you are AH> referring to. This version says "inspired *by* the AH> woods and hills" They hay surely smelleth of that weed, for the parallel phrase that follows does have "by". Yet "inpired of" is not ungrammatical, and the bible, for example, is often said to be inspired of God, but how different it is from being "inspired by God" is not a simple matter. When I thought so hard that the ridges of my brain rubbed and my skull creaked, I have come to the conclusion that "of" implies a passive source of inspiration, whereas "by" refers to an active agency. Do you agree? --- * Origin: - nntp://news.fidonet.fi - Lake Ylo - Finland - (2:221/6) |
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