MS m m mm tassessa mm w& wmm ® fflttEBfcMr$ I RflSt f8HB ■nH JlHi Sfflffll -..■'•■.■■.■■■■.■ n ■ ■ '•;■/;'■' ■■■■ mm A rr* a 4 o c ■ v* # x/ .-ate- %/ .• §0* °*V»"". "oV* -«^- . s * /v *W • A * 1 THE PHILOSOPHY OF THE HUMAN VOICE: EMBRACING ITS PHYSIOLOGICAL HISTORY; TOGETHER WITH A SYSTEM OF PRINCIPLES, BY WHICH CRITICISM IN THE ART OF ELOCUTION MAY BE RENDERED INTELIGIBLE, AND INSTRUCTION, DEFINITE AND COMPREHENSIVE. TO WHICH IS ADDED A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF SONG AND RECITATIVE. BY JAMES RUSH, M.D. AUTHOR OF A ' NATURAL HISTORY OF THE INTELECT,' AND OF ' HAMLET, A DRAMATIC PRELUDE IN FIVE ACTS.' SIXTH EDITION, ENLARGED. PHILADELPHIA: J. B. LIPPINCOTT & CO. April Nineteenth, MDCCCLXVII. Entered, according to the Act of Congress, in the year 1867, BY JAMES RUSH, M. D., In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States, for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. By Trantfw CONTENTS INTRODUCTION, SECTION I. II. III. IV. Page. 43 V. VI. VII. VIII. IX. X. XI. XII. XIII. XIV. XV. XVI. XVII. XVIII. Of the General Divisions of Vocal Sound, with a more particular account of its Pitch, Of the Radical and Vanishing movement; and its different forms in Speech, Song, and Recitative, Of the Elementary Sounds of the English Lan- guage ; with their relations to the Radical and Vanish, Of the Influence of the Radical and Vanish, in the production of the various phenomena of Sylables, Of the Causative Mechanism of the Voice, in relation to its different Vocalities and to its Pitch, Of the Expression of Speech, Of the Pitch of the Voice, Of the Melody of Speech ; with an inquiry how far the terms Key and Modulation are appli- cable to it, Of Vocality of the Voice, Of Abruptness of Speech, Of the Time of the Voice, Of the Intonation at Pauses, Of the Grouping of Speech, Of the Interval of the Rising Octave, Of the Interval of the Rising Fifth, Of the Interval of the Rising Third, Of the Intonation of Interrogative Sentences, Of the Interval of the Rising Second, (iii) 102 116 130 158 172 177 196 197 199 224 233 244 246 247 250 284 IV CONTENTS. SECTION XIX. Of the Interval of the Rising Semitone; and of the Chromatic Melody founded thereon, 288 XX. Of the Downward Radical and Vanish, 301 XXI. Of the Downward Octave, 305 XXII. Of the Downward Fifth, 307 XXIII. Of the Downward Third, 310 XXIV. Of the Downward Second and Semitone, 314 XXV. Of the Wave of the Voice, 315 XXVI. Of the Equal- Wave of the Octave, 322 XXVII. Of the Equal-Wave of the Fifth, 323 XXVIII. Of the Equal-Wave of the Third, 324 XXIX. Of the Equal-Wave of the Second, 325 XXX. Of the Equal-Wave of the Semitone, 335 XXXI. Of the Wave of Unequal Intervals, 337 XXXII. Of the Intonation of Exclamatory Sentences, 347 XXXIII. Of the Tremor of the Voice, 362 XXXIV. Of Force of Voice, 372 XXXV. Of the Radical Stress, 375 XXXVI. Of the Median Stress, 380 XXXVII. Of the Vanishing Stress, 383 XXXVIII. Of the Compound Stress, 385 XXXIX. Of the Thorough Stress, 386 XL. Of the Loud Concrete, 390 XLI. Of the Time of the Concrete, 391 XLII. ' Of the Aspiration, 392 XLIII. Of the Emphatic Vocule, 396 XLIV. Of the Guttural Vibration, 398 XLV. Of Accent, 399 XLVI. Of Emphasis, 404 Of Emphasis of Vocality, 406 Of Emphasis of Force, 407 Of the Radical Emphasis, ib. Of the Median Emphasis, 409 Of the Vanishing Emphasis, 410 Of the Compound Emphasis, 411 Of the Emphasis of the Thorough Stress, and the Loud Concrete, 412 Of the Aspirated Emphasis, 413 Of the Emphatic Vocule, 414 CONTENTS. SECTION XL VI. Of the Guttural Emphasis, 414 Of the Temporal Emphasis, 415 Of the Emphasis of Pitch, 416 Of the Emphasis of the Rising Octave, 418 Of the Emphasis of the Rising Fifth, 420 Of the Emphasis of the Rising Third, 422 Of the Emphasis of the Rising Semitone, 423 Of the Downward Concrete, 424 Of the Downward Octave, 427 Of the Downward Fifth, 429 Of the Downward Third, 430 Of the Emphasis of the Wave, 432 Of the Equal-Single Direct Wave of the Octave, 433 Of the Equal-Single- Direct Wave of the Fifth, 435 Of the Unequal-Single Wave, 436 Of the Emphasis of the Tremor, 437 A Recapitulating View of Emphasis, 439 XLVII. Of the Drift of the Voice, 447 Of the Diatonic Drift, 448 Of the Drift of the Semitone, ib. Of the Drift of the Downward Vanish, 449 Of the Drift of the Wave of the Second, ib. Of the Drift of the Wave of the Semitone, ib. Of the Drift of Quantity, ib. Of the Drift of Force, 450 Of the Drift of the Loud Concrete, ib. Of the Drift of Median Stress, ib. The Partial Drift of the Tremor, ib. The Partial Drift of Aspiration, . 451 The Partial Drift of Guttural Vibration, ib. The Partial Drift of Interrogation, ib. The Partial Drift of the Phrases of Melody, ib. XL VIII. Of the Vocal Signs of Thought and Passion, 459 Note. On the Voice of Sub-animals, 467 Of Thought or Passion indicated By the Piano of the Voice, 471 By the Forte of the Voice, 472 By Quickness of Voice, ib. By Slowness of Voice, ib. VI CONTENTS. SECTION XLVIII. By Vocality of Voice, 472 By the Rising and Falling Semitone, 473 By the Rising and Falling Second, ib. By the Rising Third, Fifth and Octave, ib. By the Downward Third, Fifth and Octave, 474 By the Wave of the Semitone, ib. By the Wave of the Second, 475 By the Waves of the Third, Fifth and Octave, ib. By the Radical Stress, ib. By the Median Stress, 476 By the Vanishing Stress, ib. By the Compound Stress, ib. By the Thorough Stress, 477 By the Tremor of the Second, and Wider Intervals, ib. By the Tremor of the Semitone, ib. By the Aspiration, ib. By the Guttural Vibration, 478 By the Emphatic Vocule, ib. By the Broken Melody, ib. XLIX. Of the Means of Instruction in Elocution, 484 Of Practice on the Alphabetic Elements, 495 Of Practice on the Time of Elements, 499 Of Practice on the Vanishing Movement, 500 Of Practice on Force, ib. Of Practice on Stress, 501 Of Practice on Pitch, 502 Of Practice on Melody, 503 Of Practice on the Cadence, 504 Of Practice on the Tremor, ib. Of Practice on Vocality, 505 Of Practice in Rapidity of Speech, 506 L. Of the Rythmus of Speech, 516 LI. Of the Faults of Readers, 529 Of the Faults in Vocality, 541 Of Faults in Time, 542 Of Faults in Force, . 543 Of Faults in Pitch, 546 Of Faults in the Concrete Movement, ib. Of Faults in the Semitone, ib. CONTENTS. Vll SECTION LI. Of Faults in the Second, Of Faults in the Melody of Speech, First Fault in Melody, Second Fault in Melody, Third Fault in Melody, Fourth Fault in Melody, Fifth Fault in Melody, Sixth Fault in Melody, Seventh Fault in Melody, Of Faults in the Cadence, Of Faults in the Intonation at Pauses, Of Faults in the Third, Of Faults in the Fifth, Of Faults in the Downward Movement, Of Faults in the Discrete Movement, Of Faults in the Wave, Of Faults in Drift, Of Faults in the Grouping of Speech, Of the Fault of Mimicry, Of Monotony of Voice, Of Ranting in Speech, Of Affectation in Speech, Of Mouthing in Speech, Of the Faults of Stage-Personation, Conclusion, A Brief Analysis of Song and Eecitative, Of Song, Of Eecitative, 547 548 549 550 ib. 551 552 ib. 553 556 558 559 ib. 560 ib. ib. 562 565 566 570 ib. ib. ib. 574 590 599 600 ERRORS perceved. Page For Read 130 In the Title of section V, qualities, vocalities 395 Second line from the foot, vacality, vocality. 594 Thirteenth line from the head, preceve, perceve. TO THE READER All the reprints of this Work have successively receved additions. The recorded analysis and principles of the First edition having been derived from exact observation and experiment, remain almost without alteration. The arrangement has however been slightly changed. Three new sections^ sever- ally on Pitch, Abruptness, and Exclamatory sentences, with other divisions, have been added, in amplification of preceding views: and there will be found throughout the Work, additional facts, principles, and ilustrations, together with esthetic reflections on the subject of vocal Science and Art: while varia- tions without number have been made in the explanatory phraseology. It would have been both embarrassing and useless to have marked the places of all the additional facts, principles, divisions, and nomenclature. It is enough, to state i^he amount. The several editions, without the prefaces, and deducting the blank portions not common to all, contain respectively in letters, estimated by pages and lines, about the following numbers : EDITIONS. First Second Third Fourth Fifth Sixth CONTAINS ABOUT PUBLISHED. 742,000 letters, January, 1827. 814,000 June, 1833. 850,000 December, 1844 1,024,000 January, 1855. 1,232,000 May, 1859. 1,248,000 April, 1867. The first writing of the Work occupied about three years of leisure from Professional and Social engagements. The subsequent additions may altogether have employed about eighteen months. PREFACE SIXTH EDITION ••»►©©< After the publication of the 'Natural History of the Intelect,' the Author was disposed to dilate the former Title-page of the present Work to what it was originally intended to embrace^ the promise of a description of the voice, as the preparatory part of that 'History.'* The purpose of the History was in the mind of the Author? with only short memorandums of his penj for nearly half a century, interrupted however, time after time by profes- sional, and by social engagements ; but finally gathered, and re- duced to a written system, within the few last years of that period. Before it appeared in print, he declared to no one, either relative, or other associate, the subject of his inquiry: thereby preventing all anticipative or conjectural scientific, or literary gossip which might in a friendly manner, or otherwise have interfered with the quiet secrecy of his occupation. He has however, for causes, left the title of the Philosophy of the Human Voice unchanged. To the observant Reader of the two publications, any alteration is unnecessary; for he will find certain principles, remarks, and prospective views contained in the 'Philosophy,' systematically unfolded in the 'History;' which if developed earlier, in the 'Phi- losophy,' would have been premature, not comprehended, or most probably unnoticed; but which must now show him the manner of a direct connection between the functions of the mind and the * For an account of the purposes of the double comma here introduced, see a note on the first page of the Introduction. 2 (ix) X PREFACE TO THE SIXTH EDITION. voice. For it will be learned that the two Works are to be con- sidered as the first and second parts of one great interwoven vocal and intelectual subject: there being in the 'Philosophy of the Voice' constant reference to its mental application; and in the 4 History of the Intelect,' occasional calls for knowledge of the thoughtive and expressive power of the voice. And here the Author adds to this Sixth Edition, a record^ how the 'Philosophy' continues to be regarded by the occupants of the eminent and influential places of instruction^ with orators, players, and other suitors to the ear of the public; who finding they can succeed, each to his own satisfaction, in his limited pur- poses of Elocution^ after the old fashion of learnings leave this Work to the patronage of those early instructors and improvers, who are thus laying the foundation for some lasting usefulness and pleasure in science and in art. Philadelphia, November 21, 1866. PREFACE FIFTH EDITION. What has been offered in the several Prefaces to this Work, is to be taken as only a brief notice of the manner in which it has been regarded, within the period of thirty years from its publication; and is intended, rather for an occasional inquirer of a future age, to whom it may be interesting, than for the present generation, who, while indifferent to the Work itself, can have no curiosity about its early progress and its subsequent fate. Having however, through more sources than one, heard the remark, that its prefaces are looked upon as the only inteligible part of the Volume^ I have, to avoid driving even an unwilling intelect altogether away, retained them in their present places and not transfered them as I had intended, to an Appendix; being further induced thereto, by the consideration, that with the record of its progress, which is the principal object, they contain occasional reflections, intimating a general view of its design. Still, if the future Reader should feel no interest in early opinions, either friendly or adverse to it, he may pass on to the Introduction; which as a constituent part of the subject, regards what the Art of Speech has already accomplishedj and what is yet to be done in its purposes, both of Instruction, and Taste. But to continue the record. 2* ( xi ) XU PREFACE TO THE Since the date of the fourth edition, in eighteen hundred and fifty-five, those who hold a certain influence, in the higher depart- ments of learnings still true to the Mede-and-Persian normality of the Majesterial mind, which does not allow itself to alterj con- tinue to maintain, with here and there a rebellious exception, the same indifference to the Analysis; with a sly, if not an open opposition to its creeping advancement : although they might find in its pages, something they have pretended to be in search of. There is however another, though humble class, for so, until our purposes and means are comprehended, we are obliged to call ourselvesj who are still laboring with gradual success to enlarge the number of scholars and advocates of the New Elocution, and who, in their unheeded exertions, are contented with this sarcastic reflection on the lazy pride and unproductive favoritism of Scho- lastic Patronagej There never was a wise or holy reformation, that the Lowly and Despised did not first assist the master of it. But in regarding their exertions, especially throughout the Northern States^ under the influence of Mr. William Russell, Principal of the Normal Institute at Lancaster, Massachusetts, and of his able Coadjutors^ in extending the work of widely re- forming, if not founding anew the whole Art of Speech, without a single Judas to desert, for he could not betray them; I was accidentally told, that in an English Review, of high authority, and extended circulation, Some Body has, for the thirty pieces of silver, come along with the servants of the High Priests of the old elocution, to lay, and this is all I would hear, not only unmerciful hands on the 'Philosophy of the Human Voice/ but unmerciful sneers on its Author : being in his hardy onset, safely assured, that none of our company would defensively think of cutting off an ear, from one so deaf to the sound of the speaking voice, as to furnish the verdict of his having already lost both of his dull, and as a 'paid volunteer' in partizan- acoustics, his criminally dull and worthless ears in some other way.* * If we were disposed to be sportfully classical, we might, from our presump- tuous Reviewer having the knack of so readily transmuting pen, ink, paper, and ignorance, into pay^ have otherwise represented him as the 'ingenium pingue,' the gross-witted Midas; for whose audacious decision against the mu- sical claims of Apollo^ the indignant yet compromising God did not cut-off, but FIFTH EDITION. Xlll Besides, we profess to be only like peaceful and industrious bees, gathering from nature an abundant store for future use; yet wishing it to be remembered, that the busy colectors are, by some wise ordination, provided with the means of defense, under sufficient provocation; which means however, the quiet laborers of our little hive have not yet had, and trust they may not have, cause to employ. In the second page of our Introduction, I early declared my resolution, neither to read, nor seriously to consider, any objec- tions against this Analysis and system, that are not the result of a scrutinizing comparison of its descriptions with the phenomena of nature herself: which is only stating in other words, a precept of Baconian science^ that justifies us in disregarding every objec- tion to observations and experiments, not drawn from observa- tions and experiments, more extensive and exact; for this method saves much ill-conditioned and wasteful argument. Certainly then, if our mercenary assailant, in rejecting the facts on which we have endeavored to raise a Natural Science of speech, does not, with a more attentive ear, give us the facts by which he re- jects ihemj he must look to his own self-inflicted mortification, if we neither read what he writes, nor take particular notice of any report upon it. While in England some years ago, a Publisher proposed to me, and offered on his own partj notwithstanding school-book copy- right and other opposing influences of British Elocution-* to print a London edition of the New Analysis. But knowing from the sovereignty of Truth and Time, in their unfailing patronage of every deserving effort in science, that with wisdom in cause and only closed his ears from music and speech, in providing for their sub-animal wants, by the appropriate gift of greater extension. Nee Delius aures Humanam stolidas patitur retinere figuram : Sed trahit in spatium ; Induiturque aures lente gradientis aselli. Ovid Met. B. XL I. 174. The God to punish such presumptuous pride, Yet still with justice swayed to mercy's side^ To those so dull and tuneless ears decreed A bounteous length, to serve the Ass's need. XIV PREFACE TO THE consequence, they always bestow it in their own procrastinating way; and considering that certain contrivances and suborna- tions of Trade, are essential to present success ; I declined making what I then thought a useless submission of the work, either to the negative effect of Foreign indifference, or to that anticipated Foreign opposition, which has presented itself in the form of a thoughtless, and I must suppose a reversible condemnation. For a ' cry of critics ' is by no means to be let loose in our case, as in that of the great-baby-ism of a banquet-speech; an every-day marketable fiction; some threadbare history, a thousand times re- written; and the 'light reading' biographical gossip on a popular career; which with the commonplaces of knowledge, a habit of scholarship, and the haste of uncorrected thought, may be whipped- over in an evening, by a run and skip of the pen. Nor will more than thrice Hen sterling pounds per sheet,' pay for the Pauses and Plunges, the re-pausing and re-plunging, necessary for a deep and thorough inquiry into the new analysis and classification, and for an impartial and responsible decision upon it.* This work is to be thoroughly studied as a whole, and taught in all its fulness; not to be here and there sketched-off, in a few pages of a quarterly journal, and poorly ilustrated by occasional examples of its good or indifferent quality. If, in executing it, we had thought of the Reviewers, we would have prefigured an individual of those ready scribes-; as Horace denotes the genus, standing on one foot, and writing without fatiguej taking his text from the Title of the Workj peeping between its uncut leaves* mistaking its themej undervaluing its contents, for the purpose of * To Jeffrey go, be silent and discreet, His pay is just ten sterling pounds per sheet. English Bards, I. 70. See the whole of Byron's retortive method of distiling down to a caput mor- tuum, the enlarged spleen and personal gall of his merciless Scotch Reviewer: who though 'self constituted Judge' in the Court of the Muses, could not make himself Prophet enough, to foresee in the youthful Poet, the potential pen, and the future actual vengeance of his intended victim: and who showed quite as much ill-natured surprise, at the bare thought of a Noble Lord presuming to publish a poem^ as our Englishman of the thrice ten silver pieces has done, at the supposition of one whom he takes to be a Democrat, daring to utter some original truths, which from their not being yet vulgarized, he, himself a demo- cratic thinker and writer, cannot comprehend. FIFTH EDITION. XV concealing the use of themj and then extracting what would suit his sorry ambition to furnish a useless article, he might choose to call an original essay of his own. Having learned however, that at least one or two orders for the book had come from England; and supposing, that without being an object of general interest, it might here and there attract a curious reader, if set before him^ I proposed to the American publishers, to try an experiment with it, on the noiseless, candid, and unhired English intelect. Fifty copies of the fourth edition were sent: and immediately thereupon, one of the most powerful and popular Periodicals of the Kingdom, supported by its full share of an array of the 'intelect, learning, research,' and of the pen-paying, and mind-impairing Journalism of the Nineteenth Century, has determined for all those who do not read and think for themselves, that even if there could be the human impossibility of a Natural Science of Speechj the 'Philosophy' has hot the miraculous Gift of ear and tongue, nor the descriptive and classi- fying pen to furnish it. And yet to record fairly, I have met with one instance, from which it does appear^ there is not a universal deafness to the voice of the Work, in our over-critical, over-compiling, and compared with what she has been, and with what she rightly should be, in intelectual fertility, our present under-producing Mother Island. But notwithstanding the candid admission by Better England herself, of the decline of the originality and vigor of her intelect, into the desultory and garbling method of Criticism, which under its meanly masked, and irresponsible Oligarchy, has at last brought-down the debilitated pen with its 'thriling' narratives, 'startling' fictions, and threadbare truths, to seek the protective patronage of the reading million; still we should not altogether adopt the common opinion, that a critical age, more than the declining life of man, though it may generally, should be neces- sarily and without exception, garrulous on every-day thoughts and thingsj and turn-drowsy over the tasking pages of original truth ; should be given up to fondling the pets of a family ; and to being peevish, or rude, or vacantly ' sans ears ' to the voice of the stranger without the gate of its calculating generosity. For we have all heard that Cato, the Censor, though of the rough XVI PREFACE TO THE Roman Horde, the piratical archetype of our boasted Anglo- Saxon race, did in his old age, lay open his mind to new and re- fined instruction, even through the embarrassing inlet of a foreign tongue. The slightest clearing however, of the brow in a frowning parent deserves our grateful acknowledgment; and it is justly to be recorded here, that about eight years ago, there fell into my hands, and it is now before me, a new edition of Garrick's man- ner of reading the Liturgy -> prefaced with a 'Discourse on public reading,' by one calling himself a 'Tutor in Elocution,' and pub- lished at London, and Cambridge, in eighteen hundred and forty ; thirteen years after the date of the 'Philosophy of the Human Voice.' There is loosely scattered over this Discourse, and am- bitiously appropriated to itself, though poorly comprehended, some of the facts and principles taken without acknowledgment from the 'Philosophy;' while its Author is quoted by name, in an out-of-the-way foot-note, for a single term of his nomenclature. On the undefined and limited ground of these disjointed facts and principles, the Tutor announces a 'forthcoming work on the human voice, and its expression in speech;' derived, as his own confident promise and his means lead us to conclude, from some other source than that of his own observation and reflection. If after nineteen years, this great work has not forth- come, we must think, from what he has already in common with the 'Philosophy,' and from his vague manner of defining and dividing^ that it would save both himself and his readers much trouble, to repub- lish if permitted, the work, of which he seems so clearly to ap- prove, rather than furnish a strong resemblance to its contents, in his own manner of describing them.* He who claims the right to a discovery already published, as- sumes either to be the first and full author of it, or to have had an obscure hint of it, in some manner, he is not often forward to * The Tutor has more recently published two small pamphlets, under the re- spective names of an 'Introductory lecture,' and 'Acoustics and Logic;' in which his approbation of our new Analysis and system of the voice is further shown by his free, yet still garbled use of its pages. In the present comments, I refer indiscriminately to each of these three scrap-sketches^ which may be resolved into cases either of sad halucination or of unblushing plagiary. FIFTH EDITION. XV11 tell. On which of these two grounds then did the Tutor get the general fact, that the intervals of the diatonic scale, with the ex- ception of the second, may be perceptibly and nameably applied to individual sylables, for the purpose of vocal expression ; and that the second alone is used for unimpassioned discourse? How did he draw from a little corner of his mind, the comprehensive induction, that Emphasis, in a broad and philosophic definition, should include the distinguishable detail of every mode of the voice? From whose extended view did he sketch, on his fifty- ninth page, a synopsis of the whole science of Analytic speech? What taught him to make the long overlooked but remarkable distinction between the diatonic melodyj which he awkwardly calls, 'speech-melodyj' and the contrasted expression of other in- tervals, when laid upon it? Who told him of that threefold and nice distinction in sylabic Eorcej called in the 'Philosophy' the Kadical, Median, and Vanishing Stress? Where did he learn, that the usual elocutionary terms, found even in his own Editorial little-book, are from the want of analytic description, altogether indefinite and uninstructive? And who told him, without seeing an exact system in his 'mind's eye,' if he has one, or somewhere in print, the fact of the Old Elocution being so vague, imperfect, and impracticable, that we therefore now require a new, precise, and Scientific Institute of the speaking voice ? The history of the voice contained in the following Work, far from being only as the Tutor could comprehend and represent itj a hasty catching-up of unconnected details, to suit a compiler's purpose^ embraces generalities of related phenomena, deliberately gathered within that ever audible, yet till lately, unentered field of Intonation; where the natural voices of thought and passion had long floated on the air, inviting, but still awaiting, the event of a careful classification and nomenclature. No aimless and hasty catching here and there, at unassorted sounds, astray from intercommunion with the vocal unity of that field, could have brought them together even as awkwardly as the Tutor has done. He did not find them in Mr. Steele, or Mr. Walker, or in Au- thors who have adopted their limited and vague, or erroneous descriptions; and if they were not picked at random, from the XY111 PREFACE TO THE 'Philosophy of the Human Voice,' or taken out of some American school-book, carelessly representing a few of the facts and princi- ples, detached from that 'Philosophy,' it might be infered^ they were also original with him. But an original and pervading truth never stands still, nor travels alone in the mind; and if he who may claim to have discovered certain important facts and princi- ples of speech, should not himself have seen much further, and more clearly into related truths, he must excuse us, if we conclude, that he did not first perceve them at all.* The above case reminds me, that about a year after the first appearance of the ' Philosophy; ' the Rector of a church in the State of New York, published as his own, in a worthless little school-bookj with the common promise of a larger wort* a hud- dled compilation of facts and principles on the subject of the voice, identical with some of those set-forth in the 'Philosophy;' and with the very verbal examples, used for their ilustration; thus antedating the Tutor in his claims, by about eleven years. Had he regarded the words of the Evangelist, more than his own hopes, that a fraud undetected might pass for a discovered truth, he would have thought of his Great, but unheeded Master's liberal and just imperative ; which we alter for present application. Render his own unto Caesar; and to the literary Pilferer, the Bare-Faced Nothings that belong to him. This case of the American Rector is here added, to show that we have no contra-national, nor exclusive views to foreign grand or petty-plagiary : and to say, that could we be allowed to turn from the truth and honor of Science, to a just personal retribu- tion, we might reciprocate the Reviewing-favor of the Periodical stipendiary^ in kindly drawing British attention to our Title-page, and in hastening the call for this Fifth editionj by hanging him up, with his deficient ear, anonymously conspicuous, between two of those who are found with, or use without acknowledgment, or who sneakingly carry away what does not belong to them. * Bad spelling, says the Dictionary, 'is disreputable to a gentleman.' For an account of the disgraceful practical usefulness of the above, and our other instances of bad spelling, the Reader is refered to the note on the forty-sixth page of the Introduction. The time is perhaps far-off", when perseverance in error will be considered unbecoming in a gentleman. FIFTH EDITION. XIX There is here no prying curiosity about the names, nor idle thoughts on the motives of individuals. The rights of truth and justice, from the universality of their claims, should defend them- selves by general means, without descending into local or special contention with the temporary interest of men. Our readers will perhaps find, we have something to spare; and we may add, that with a courteous use, and acknowledgment, it might have been taken, with our recorded thanks for the patronage. This Work was written for the fair and profitable use of inteligent and honor- able Instructors; but the same sentiment that offers it with no view whatever to personal advantage, nor to present approbation, must necessarily turn with contempt and indignation, from mean- ness, artifice, and fraud, in those who choose to accept its as- sistance. If the smart writer of commonplaces, and Jester- Wit of the day, on once askings 'Who reads an American book,' had only addedj the Englishman who steals from it, he would himself have made all the taunting fun in the case; and not have left others to supply his unlucky oversight, by what he would most have felt; a retroverted sarcasm. For he has somewhere remarked, that 'it is all over with a wit,' when his expected applause is given to an unexpected turn against him : a condition to which he never even dreamed himself liable. While engaged upon this preface, I met with an Article in the Westminster Review, for July, eighteen hundred and fifty-six; in which the writer, with unusual candor towards this Country, gives a flagrant instance, showing, that he who purloins from an 'American book,' must have been the 'who' to 'read' it. The case is this. One of his countrymen brought out a Latin-English dictionary, claiming to be based on the Italian work of Forcellini, and the German of Freund; ninety-five per cent, of which, says the writer, is servilely copied from a translation of the last named Author by several American hands, and published at New York : while apparently to hoodwink his conscience in the act, the lit- erary plunder is 'most vehemently condemned' by the depredator, in the very act of carrying it away. It is no set-off to this charge of international freebooting that the instances of piracy by Amer- XX PREFACE TO THE ica, on Britain, and Continental Europe, are perhaps more than a thousandfold, beyond those of a reverse direction of the Bucaneer descent; for vices thus credited are debtors still, and are not to be canceled by the balance of an account between them. We owe this however to the Tutor; that having used with approbation, some of the leading principles of the New system ; and promising a fuler detail of them, he has intimated his belief in the possibility of so describing the constituents of speech, as to enable himself or others, to found a practical method of in- struction upon them: which is a considerable advance towards introducing among his countrymen, a New Order in the Art of speaking; at whatever time and in whatsoever manner it may be applied, to explain and justify upon principle, any instinctive proprieties, and to correct by rule, any thoughtless errors, that may be found in their old and imperfect system. But as to our Aggressor of the Thirty Pieces, with perhaps no more eye for costume than ear for speech; why may he not be some Professor under the now declining school of elocution ; who, fearful of losing even his short-lived profits in an ephemeral text- book, and with an inveterate pride in the ill-fashioned and thread- bare suit of his mastership, has artfully set himself to prevent others from adopting the new style of Oratorical Robe, in its Natural cast of vocal drapery; which on being first presented to him, he must have yet had thought enough to perceve, could never be made to fold gracefully on himself. And it is here to be remarked, that when a critic of the trading sort has a pecu- niary, an ambitious, a dogmatic, or a grumbling interest in con- demning a workj he is very apt to confound his argument on the subject, with some querulous feeling towards the author, who may inadvertently have brushed against his temperament, or thwarted his calculations.* It is for all of us, an excelent Law of Suspicion, that subjects the pretensions of both Invention and Discovery, to the slow and * It is an incident, deserving a place in our present record, that while the thousand hovering Hawks of British Periodicals dive at, and clutch-up any and every sort of game, just as it alights before the public, they should for seven and twenty years have passed by our folded wing, quietly waiting for future flight; thinking us perhaps, too tasteless or tough for their beakj and a kind of FIFTH EDITION. XXI cautious test of Time. For in the present distrusted state of human promises and powers, it affords the only means of protec- tion against the artful haste of an Impostor, by cutting-off his sole reliance on the chance of immediate success. It is however no legitimate part of this defensive ordination, that even ques- tionable claims should, with a vain view to put them beyond the future reach of a just and decisive awardj be presumptuously outlawed by an incompetent Tribunal, before their regular term of trial. But whatever may be the fair or biased opinions of others, one conclusion is quite satisfactory to the claims of the New Analysis; and it may in future prevent unnecessary dispute on those claims^ that the portion here offered as original, having been a subject of sneering animadversion, which would certainly spare no contro- verting means, at the command of European research, during thirty years of opportunity^ there seems to be almost an assurance, that its facts and principles will not be hereafter refered to any other than a modern, and for the practical outwitting of the Reverend Jester-Wit, to a Transatlantic source. An early and short paragraphic notice of this Work, which I have heard, appeared in an English magazinej far from finding in its broad and leading principles, the traces of any former sys- tem, yet perhaps to avoid the obligation of a critical survey of its character^ pronounced it to be a century in advance of the age. It may indeed be so. But the truth of to-morrow, is the truth of to-day: and he who so cautiously gave a prospective estimate, in place of an immediate and responsible decision, which the ground of that estimate must have justifiedj was not quite cri- tically honest towards the Work, nor to his own age prophetically civil; since in then offering the hope of that future award, which he acknowledged to be justly due, he rather invidiously ques- tioned the capacity of his cotemporaries, by assigning the power nourishment altogether foreign to their habitual process of assimilation: and yet, to drop our figure^ at the moment this Volume was to be distributed from the shelves of a London Bookseller, that it should have rouzed the trading in- terest of some Fellow of the Selfish Society of School-book Copyrights, to attack our proposed substitute for his superannuated Art of reading; thereby to sus- tain at once its decrepitude, and his own threatened occupation. XX11 PREFACE TO THE of comprehending the Work, to intelects a century in advance of theirs. And yet after all, what have the friends of the New and Pro- gressive System to do with the true or false calculation, and the waste-work of the every-day tongue and pen ? Let topics of the hour wrestle with topics of the hour. We offer to posterity, part of the history of the Laws of Nature, in the human voices here gathered into a comprehensive, and therefore to the present ma- jority of those it may concern, an incomprehensible Physical Science of Speech. If the critical Journalism of the nineteenth Century, though generally co-even with the conventional knowl- edge of the times, has not been able to rise so far above some of its embarrassments and errors, as to perceve the extricating agency of a few original and simple truths; but has with the old subterfuge of an indolent or deficient intelect, attempted to beat them down by sneer and denial^ all our duty here requires, is to record the story of the harmless assault, in this now unre- garded Volume ; which with its still unshaken belief in the future prevalence and sway of those truths, may yet go-forth and en- dure, because it announces, and endeavors to extend them. It was far from our intention to cast any pearls it might contain, before those who, ignorant of their value, disappointed at the unavailable proffer, and balked into unruly irritation, would only inhumanly turn again and rend us. Finally, it will be learned, from the view we have taken of an ineffectual opposition there can be neither here nor elsewhere, an intentional submission to that criticism, which, if not deceved through incapacity or ignorance, must know itself to be grossly at fault. The 'Philosophy of the Human Voice,' from its manner of observing and representing nature, does not owe this submis- sion to any unavailing attempt to condemn it. Yet it cannot avoid commiserating that deafness, and indifference in high places which thus far, it has with all its remedial instruction, utterly failed to cure. Nor do I mean to offer a responsive defense of the facts and principles set-forth in this 'Philosophy:' beleving, that under an observant, reflective, and candid investigation, they will, by the voice of others in unison with the voice of Nature, at some time truly speak for themselves. FIFTH EDITION. XX111 As a necessary part of this record, I have unfortunately been obliged, under some prospective views, to notice unnoticeable, and to me happily, unknown individualities : but having on this occa- sion taken a nearer view of the offense than of the offenders, I have, with generic touches only, and with a mitigated reaction on their thoughtless inroad, been careful to treat them as many now, and more hereafter may think, with greater kindness than their cases deserve. Philadelphia, May 5, 1859. PREFACE FOURTH EDITION. A conceit has for some time been circulating in this country, tending to persuade every body, that while they are constitu- tionally the sovereigns over their own destiny in government, they are also sovereign over the rights of individuality, and the re- straints of good-breeding, morals, and law; with the further claim to tyrannize over independence of thought, and to bind- down the free-ranging power of originality. This last authority assumes, that originality, with its Patents of discovery and in- vention, often with us, so cruelly involved in litigation, cannot in justice be the privilege of an individual; that whatever apparent novelty a person may promulgate, it is only as the spokesman of a committee of the whole human mind, which has previously coun- seled, matured, and directed, all he has reported. That what was formerly supposed to be the torch of discovery, in a single hand, is, in this popular era of equal rights and Intelect-in-Commonj found to be merely a breaking- out, at one human spot, of the full-pre- pared and anticipated light of a colective effort in progressive instruction. This may indeed be true, of gradual changes in the common affairs of life; and of politicians, in whose craft there is now, nothing new under the sun; of the lawyer, whose slow thinking by the law, is his slow law of thinking; of the physician, whose rule of progress, is just to keep along with the progress ; of the sectary, whose orthodoxy means the common-doxy of himself and 3 (xxv) XXVI PREFACE TO THE his disciple; and of the popular Great Man of the day, whose endless intimacies so identify him with every body, that his con- cerns in a joint-stock of interest and ambition, both waste his mind with reciprocal, and importunate obligations, and take from him the power of thinking for himself. It is likewise true of gov- ernments, which, with occasional commotions, always rise or fall by gradual change ; and of some of the arts, particularly Archi- tecture ; for though by its own principles, capable of any number of distinct and self-unitized Orders, yet being without examplar forms in nature, its improvement and decline have been no more than successive variations of preceding designs. It is not true however, of those who outstrip the world by unrestrained obser- vation and reflection ; unawed by the frowns of conventional' authority, and far away as possible, from the mischievous delu- sions of the opinions of men. Since the 'idols of the market,' 'of the theater,' and of the common mental-exchange, are idols, deaf as well as dumbj and altogether so impotent, that when implored for the favor of original thought, are always implored in vain. Neither is it true of that elegant Art of the Landscape, which with its 'directing wand' transforms to a Garden, the wilderness of Nature; and which presented, at the 'Improver's word,' an assemblage of the grand, the beautiful, the varied, and the pic- turesk; giving to England the claim of adding to the 'Nine,' an- other Muse, already in her few counted years, full- endowed with dignity of character softened into grace; yet never hoped-for nor expected, because never ihought-of before. This notion of co-equalityj that no one shall, without penalty for the offense, have a thought not common to every body else^ is one of the dreams of a popular 'mass-meeting;' and seems to be a confused attempt to express the simple truism, that no in- vention or discovery is adopted by the world, until every body can make use of it, or is of the same opinion as the author. For it is with the original truth of Science, as with the prudential offer of practical advice; nobody adopts it, except it confirms his previous belief. But the mass-meeting is still a mass, and will have its own stubborn and headstrong way. The Work therefore, of which I here offer the fourth edition much enlarged, will I sup- pose be tried, and perhaps condemned by its rules. If the united FOURTH EDITION. XXV11 inteligence of the age, joining immediately in the advancement of any point of knowledge, is to be the test of its truth, upon the assumed ground that the mind of the age has, up to the last step, produced the advancement; the work before us can offer scarcely a claim to attention. And I have no pride of authorship to pre- vent the candid declaration, that from its first appearance, to this time, a period of twenty-seven years, its only direct debt of gra- titude is to a comparatively small number of teachers, to a few inquiring and musical mechanics, and a few unmusical members of the Society of Friends. For, as far as I can learn, ninety- nine hundredths of all Physiologists, whose purpose it is to de- scribe the voice; of Masters of colleges and schools, who teach the art of reading; of Elocutionists, whose materials of speech are furnished here; of Naturalists, who through the wide range of zoology, might take an interest in comparative Intonation; of the Votary of the fine arts, who might here see the seventh muse, now crowned by Science; of the Universal Grammarian, who might learn that various modes of mere sylabic sound are no less naturally significant of thought and passion, than conventional words are significant of a grammatical sentence; and finally of the Philosopher of the mind, who might perceve some important and interesting relations of language to passion and thought : Of these I repeat it, there are ninety-nine hundredths, who so far from having had directly a preparatory hand in this work, do not, though it has been before them more than a quarter of a century, even yet, as to its systematic and practical application, know ivhat it means. According to this popular notion of mass-thinking co-equality, and co-laboration, our book stands in a dilemma. For on the one side, those who are eminently qualified to discover its mean- ing, have found none. Co-laboration therefore could have had no hand in it; ^and the world, on this ground, not being now pre- pared for it, certainly never can be. On the other side, if the principle of co-laboration is not always true, this Work may be founded in nature, and may be a contribution to the expressive and the beautiful in speech ; even though the Learned world was neither prepared for its reception, or even able to comprehend it when it came. But time who settles so many differences, must XXV111 PREFACE TO THE determine whether the co-laborative rule is sometimes false, or the * Philosophy of the Human Voice,' no better than a dream. All I have to say to the Votary of analytic science and taste, isj ; Strike, but ' read me ; for I cannot help thinkingj if you do read without prejudice, though you cannot take back the contemptuous blow, you will not strike again. It has been more than once said to me personally, and stated in print, that the 6 Philosophy of the Human Voice ' has exhausted its subject. It is to be regretted, with regard to the past and future in Science, to which we should always look with thankful- ness and hope, that it has ever been thought so; for if I -per ceve the future in this Work; it has but just begun its subject, on /a new and lasting foundation. And above all, it should be re- grettedj if the calculation, that nothing more can be made out of it, should be even the least cause for overlooking it. On the contrary, I cannot here withhold the prediction, that when taken up as a subject of further inquiry, and as a part of education, its inteligent Professors will extend and exalt it to a degree, I can- not now anticipate or comprehend. I would willingly have as- sisted earlier laborers at our work, by vocal proof and ilustration; but my time is fast going by, and when they do enter upon the field, I cannot be there. The history of one of the fine arts, recently revived in Eng- land, has often in my mind, been connected with our present sub- ject; and as I have followed in reading, the progress of that art, from the time it first began to gather-in its facts, and frame its principles, up to its present mature and esthetic condition^ I feign at least, a plea for noticing it here. I remember, my earliest curiosity for Gothic architecture was excited by Scott's poems; and on going to Scotland, in the year eighteen hundred and nine, the first of its proper structures I saw, was the Cathedral of Glasgow. It was then all eye-sight and novelty with mej not taste; yet perhaps, as a first instinctive step towards it, I departed with an unsatisfied desire, for that knowledge of the nomenclature of its system and detail, which would have given materials to my memory, with some order and co-relation to my thoughts. I did ask the Old Dame who con- ducted me, many questions^ but I had learned more from the FOUKTH EDITION. XXIX Minstrel and Marmion, than she ever knew. Medical studies and other inquiries occupied me a year in Edinburgh. During a subsequent residence in London, I procured the small volume of essays by Wharton and others ; and Milner's treatise, together with his History of Winchester. By means of their chronicle of styles and changes in the art> by their explanation of terms, or an incidental use of them^ and by the light of taste, just dawning in the pages of Milnerj I was enabled, after visiting churches, to compile for my own private instruction, and as my own remem- brancer, something like an elementary compend: including a description of the structure of the cathedral; the character and successions of its various styles ; an explanation of the terms of the art, as far as they had then been assigned; and an account of the division, distribution and purposes of the Monastery. This little manuscript is dated in eighteen hundred and eleven, and however trifling, is among the earliest, as far as I can learn, in that systematic manner of treating the subject. There was then neither name nor fame in the art; and the interest in it, was confined to as few perhaps, as those now interested in the analysis of speech. On revisiting England in eighteen hundred and forty-five, I found Gothic Architecture had become so popular, that the ama- teur and compiler had begun to rival the professional artist. Every gentleman was required to have a smattering at least, of its terms; and many a rail-car passenger was ready to tell you of Norman, Early English, Decorated, and Perpendicular styles. My sympathy with an enthusiast, at the Winchester Station, made quite friends of us, as we together traced the Cathedral forms and chronology^ from Walkelyn's Norman 'arches broad and round,' to the grand and graceful unity of Wykeham ; which seems yet to say to the artj Thus far shouldst thou go and no farther, and here should thy pure and finished style be staid. . Perhaps an Englishman might sayj this sudden intimacy, 'without knowing who people are,' even though the intimacy sprung from congenial knowledge in an elegant art^ was 'very improper indeed.' But we soon parted, and forever; yet I beleve, neither has since suffered any inconvenience from our XXX PREFACE TO THE FOURTH EDITION. sociability, while I very agreeably receved much satisfactory information. Regarding then the restoration of Gothic architecture^ may we ask, if the time will ever come, when the art of analytic speech, now the humble topic of a small fraternity, may so far obtain a hearing from the world, that some influential patrons will, as happened with that once o'er-shadowed art, draw ours too from obscurity ? Will the time ever come, when our School of Nature and Inquiry may say, and it will be admitted, that Mrs. Siddons derived her great dignity in Tragedy, from a well directed use of the Diatonic Melody, more than from any other means of intonation; and that Barry, in characters of tender- ness, owed his superiority over Garrick, to his delicate execution, and appropriate use of the Semitonic Wave? Will it come, when on the authority of our principles, it will be beleved if I say, that the later Booth, although rejected or undervalued, perhaps through some business calculation, by London Managers, yet apart from the ranting scenes of the poet, had in his better days, with least of the vocal vices of the stage, and hardly an affecta- tion, one of the most elegant and appropriate intonations I have ever heard? And finally, will not the time come, when in some future system of speech, raised upon the foundation here laid in Observation^ principles may take the place of authority; and the name of Master being no more bandied and kept up by conten- tious opinion, may be superseded by acknowledged precept, and then be forgotten? Philadelphia, January 1, 1855. PREFACE THIRD EDITION The < Philosophy of the Human Voice' was first published, nearly eighteen years ago ; and as the lapse of time has afforded ample opportunity for determining, how far its descriptions ac- cord with the phenomena of Nature, it may not be uninteresting to the reflective student of elocution, to have a short account of its reception, and of its progress within this period. Two editions have been published ; one of five hundred copies, in January, eighteen hundred and twenty-seven ; the other, of twelve hundred and fifty copies, in June, eighteen hundred and thirty-three. And although the work has been out of print for six years, the present edition is not perhaps essential to its pres- ervation; there being already abroad, print enough to furnish a revival-copy, when the humor of those who hold the great seals of patronage, may choose to give it a place in their encyclopedia of knowledge, and their schools of practical instruction. It is rather at the call, and for the sake of those few friendly Samari- tans, who are disposed to take charge of it, while the Priest and the Levite of learning pass along on the other side, that I have with some inconvenience at this time, undertaken to republish it. The amount of good-will thus far extended to the Work, may scarcely deserve the name of patronage; but it is rather more than was expected, and will perhaps be sufficient to keep it from oblivion. Upwards of twenty individuals with various qualifica- tions, have been occupied in teaching some of its principles; the ( xxxi ) XXX11 PREFACE TO THE greater part of whom have lived in the Northern section of the United States; at the Southj and West of the Susquehanna, it is little known. All the individuals alluded to, have respectively taught the Work, with a full, or a limited comprehension of it, and a varied ability to apply it in practice. Some have been resident and some traveling teachers ; the latter giving lectures, or temporary school-instruction, in towns and vilages. It may well be supposed, that teaching a system uninviting at least, if not repulsive from its novelty, would be no very profitable labor; and such appears to have been the case, with those who have thus far been occupied in its promulgation. As this Work professes to set forth the universal principles of speech, the subject at least, is not beneath the notice of the phi- lologist of any age or nation. But as regards its foreign relation- ships, the ' Philosophy of the Human Voice ' has been obliged to come under that English interrogative condemnation 'Who reads an American book V To the scientific, in two or three parts of Europe, it is known by an occasional whisper, that such a book exists. Two indi- viduals, Dr. Barber, and the Reverend Samuel Wood, have been the first to speak aloud of it in England ; but with what success, I am not informed. It remains all-dusty, on the shelves of many of the Public libraries of Europe ; and is in the possession of some of those who give fashion to the science of the times. Yet it has never receved a strictly investigating notice; no examina- tion by a qualified and authoritative ear, which might decide, whether what is here offered as the truth of Nature, is or is not, that very truth. And, as in preparing the Work for others, the author was, by circumstances, the solitary pupil of his own in- structionj so with hope-defered, to correct its faults by the aid of competent counsel, he has been obliged, in the enlargement, and variations of each successive edition, to be his own contributor ; and to assume the office of an insufficient, and perhaps partial critic over himself. The greater number of the pupils and friends of this system, have been of that class, which the Rank and Fashion of Science calls the humble and Unknown ; Persons of no account ; though long noted, for sometimes doing new and most excelent things, and for very frequently, first helping them along. THIRD EDITION. XXX111 Of the infinitude of demagogues in our country, from the Can- didate for Presidency, down to him who works the plot of Nomi- nation, and who all, in one debasing brotherhood but with a varied personality, are at the same time, corrupting their voices, their intelect, their moral principles, and their republican government* of all these, I have not heard of one, who has had time or repose enough to inquire, even whether this system might not, if so ill- used alas ! imbue his Speeches with a more impressive sophistry, and graceful vocal-cunning, to allure, to blind, and to mislead the people. Of the many Actors whom I have known or heard of, none seem to have the least thought of such a thing as a philosophy of the voice; or that the department of speech which this Book particularly regards, requires the improving aid of science; or indeed, that success in their art can be effected by anything else than some mysterious 'power of genius.' One individual, but not till he had left the Stage, has formed an association in Boston, for teaching the principles of this philosophy. Here and there, a young Lawyer, with that generality of mental temperament and inkling of taste, which in this country at least, is rather a drawback to advancement in his Profession, has looked into this subject, tried a few lessons, and then aban- doned his purpose. The Clergy were among the first to regard the system with favor; and many had industry enough to look into it. I have known one physician only, who comprehended the de- sign, and studied its details; but he is deceased. Why it has found no favor with the Medical Faculty, merely as a subject of physiology, is perhaps to be solved by these facts: it is strictly observative; it rejects all notions, and quarrelsome theories; has not yet come into popular use ; and is the contribution, such as it is, of a physician. Musicians and singers, together with certain amateurs and critics, who constantly hover about them, have given no attention to this subject. Of a large number of these, I have found none able to appreciate our history, or to conceve how speech and music might be different branches of the same art. To this I may add the remarkable circumstance, that while musicians and XXXIV PREFACE TO THE singersj who have through habitual practice if not by instinctive ear, the most precise discrimination of tunable sounds^ are unable to recognize the peculiar music of speech, and even to compre- hend the meaning of this Workj there is a class, the Society of Friends, who, by the strictest discipline, shun all the graces of Art; who never cultivate the ear either by instrument or voice, but fantastically corrupt it in their public discourse; who yet, when addressed by the system, have formed a large proportion of its pupils, and have comprehended its design, though they may not have always been able, vocally to execute its rules. A few teachers of Salmody appear to have read the Work; and as far as they have found its discriminations and terms appli- cable to their purpose, have adopted them in their Manuals of instruction. Of readers who hold the scientific influence, whatever that may be, of this country, very few have regarded it,either with curiosity or favor. But what makes their case remarkable is, that in their own want of capacity, they always suppose the deficiency to be on the side of the Author. One says, it is a sealed book; an- other, that it might as well have been written in Hebrew. An eminent leader of opinion, on this side of the water, says, it is not worth reviewing: while on the other side, one of the very highest rank, in British periodical criticism, declares, in the frank confession of an ineffable superiority, that 'it quite surpasses his comprehension.' One, not contented with his own single incom- petence, takes the Author into his company, by sayingj he him- self does not know its meaning; and to a high-placed medical Professor, and a practical musician, the work was altogether so uninteligible, that he recommended one of his friends to read it, as a fine example of the incoherent language of insanity. These remarks have a place here, not from their importance either to the author or his subject; but as minor chronicles, colateral to the early history of the Philosophy of Speech. And I am quite willing to beleve, that whether they came from igno- rance or from spleen, they were the offspring of a thoughtless humor, by this time, changed to something else equally foolish or bad. These however may have been words of a moment, and then forgotten. Two, and only two, as far as known, have em- THIRD EDITION. XXXV ployed time, reflection, argument, public lecturing and printing, in dispute of the claims of this Work. Under the article, Philology, in the 'Encyclopedia Americana,' the President of the American Philosophical Society, after stating, as well as he could comprehend it, the design of the 'Philosophy of the Human Voice,' gives, what he thinks, learned and suffi- cient ground for determining, not only that it has not, according to its purpose, developed and measured the expressive movements of speech; but that it never can be done. Not to contend here with a gentleman, who, at the head of all the philosophers, denies, what I perhaps vainly suppose to have been accomplishedj I must hand him over to the unknown science and industry of future ages, to argue the case of its future impossibility; only remark- ing here, that as it has been done already, in the Work, now in the distinguished President's hands, there can be nothing either impossible or miraculous in the thought of its being done again. The other formal decision against the means and end of this Work, comes, as I am told, from one of the thousand lecturers of the day, at Bostonj whose name I cannot now call to mind. All I have to say of his attempt at refutation, though I have never seen the article, is, that in addition to the direct demonstration of the truth of the analysis, which the ear has given to some few in- quirers, he has unexpectedly furnished us with that indirect proof, called by logicians, the argumentum dneens in absurd-urn : mean- ing in plain English^ the proposition must be true, when we can- not without absurdity, prove it to be false. I have a few words to add, on the subject of adapting the prin- ciples of this Work to the purposes of practical instruction. Seven or eight grammars or text-books of elocution, for the use of schools, have already been formed out of a different amount of its materials, and set forth with various degrees of ability. As the object is to render a grammar popular, it has been the aim of the compilers to simplify the system, and to furnish a cheap book; thus accommodating it as they suppose, to the mental, and other necessities of the learner. This attempt, either by its very pur- pose, or by the manner of its execution, has perhaps had the effect to retard the progress of the new system of the voice. For, the superficial character of these books, and the mingling of XXXVI PREFACE TO THE parts of the old method with parts of the new, together with an attempt to give definition and order to these scattered materials, has left the inquirer unsatisfied, if indeed, it has not brought his mind to confusion. One of the difficulties of introducing new subjects of education is, that you give the scholar, as he thinks, too much to do. But in the condition of all such cases, he must learn the whole, or he learns comparatively nothing. The method of teaching by epitome, and by sketch, if not always imperfect or useless, is barely allowable when a general knowledge of the sub- ject prevails, when hints go a great way, and expositors are found every where. I published this Work, under the expectation that it might for a time, be consigned to oblivion: hoping however, that if afterwards, a single worm-eaten copy should be recovered, with nature only for its ilustration, a knowledge of its analysis and purpose might be revived, without the living assistance of the author. I wrote it too, with all the brevity its strangeness would allow ; and as well as I can foresee, with sufficient fulness, to make it inteligible to earnest and competent inquirers. Within these limits of composition, it was my design so to describe the system and uses of the voice, that they might be audibly ilustrated for the benefit of the scholar; not to furnish materials, to be broken up, curtailed, jumbled into a text-book, and printed for the pecu- niary benefit of a master. The purpose indeed, seemed to need an apology ; and it is usually offered, under the consideration of the reduced cost of an abridgment, compared with that of a larger volume. But when was cheap knowledge, more than cheap work, ever worth even half of what was given for it? And gener- ally speaking, if a succession of cheap, puny, and insufficient books, in most branches of education, did not everlastingly invite and delude the public, there would be purchasers enough, of what are now more expensive, and more useful works, to reduce them to a convenient cost. An unfortunate result of these supposed short-hand assistants to ignorance, taking the place of full and clear description, is that each compiler has a special interest in his own little book, to the exclusion of others of the same kind. And this produces, as I have witnessed, jealousies, and not a little back-biting criticism, among these several competitors for popular favor. Thus, one is said to have made an odd assemblage of the THIRD EDITION. XXXV11 old indefinite system, with the new. One is thought to have given too little musical explanation; another too much. This one's arrangement is confused; another's is no better; and a third has no arrangement at all. One, in a desire to be popular, forgets to be descriptive. One is charged with slily taking his materials, without acknowledgment; another, with boldly palming them off as his own. Another, supposing himself to have become original, by a long habit of copyings receves, or perhaps feigns, and pub- lishes compliments to himself, on his philosophical analysis, and on Ms new system of elocution. This is what these discordant Elocutionists, while drawing from a common source, many with and some without acknowledgment, so critically say of each other; he who makes the last book, being most obnoxious to the rest, by complaining before their face, of the want of a right kind of manual, which he invidiously under- takes to supply. One of the purposes of this Work is to showj by refuting an almost universal belief to the contrary^ that elocution can be scientifically taught; but the manner of explanation and arrange- ment in too many of these garbled school-book compilations, has gone far towards satisfying the objectors that it cannot. I make these remarks, with a disposition to advance an art, in which the persons here refer ed to, have joined the distracting and questionable interest of publishing, with the occupation of ilus- trative teaching. If the time had arrived, for the friends or opponents of the system to become, by the habit of close and comprehensive investigation, authoritative and responsible critics, I would sit down with them, and together expunge all the errors of the 'Philosophy of the Human Voice;' and see, with satisfac- tion, all its omissions supplied. I never myself looked for, nor expected, nor have I receved, the least pecuniary benefit from this Work: and it ought to be regretted, if those who have that sort of gain in view, should, by their haste, or insufficiency, or their differences among one another, mar the purpose and progress of that Art, in which, as a subject of knowledge and taste, all of us should be equally interested. Philadelphia, December 2, 1844. PREFACE SECOND EDITION. ——►♦•©©«♦«««— Moke than six years ago, I offered the manuscript of the fol- lowing Work, to the then principal bookseller of this city. En- gagements which promised to be more lucrative obliged him to decline the publication. The result has shown, that with his instrumentalities of trade he might have made a profitable sale of itj as, with my motives in authorship, I would have freely given the whole right of the edition to him. I made elsewhere, no second offer of the Work; for as it had been rejected by the so- called foremost Publishing-Patron of American writers, I depre- cated the influence of his example against it. Thus the first step of my authorship was unfortunate; and as in these days of anx- ious benevolence, a very few misfortunes are sure to bring down contempt* to save further ill luck, I printed it myself; and sub- sequently found an individual not unwilling to interest himself in distributing it. I remember, one of the Patron's objections, in the prophecy of Trade, to publishing the 'Philosophy of the Human Voice' wasj 'its not being suited to this country.' It is true, the higher views of science and taste, and all individual independence of observation and thought* in a country, where, before all others, nothing is adopted, or is successful, except through the influential agency of numbersj are considered as rebellion against the Kingly- rule of Popularity, and the Majorative-Despotism of its opinion. Yet upon this very conviction I offered the Work to the public ; ( xxxix ) xl PREFACE TO THE hoping, by the diffusion of its principles, to bring it into that old and only path of truth, which begins with a few and ends with the many ; and thus, in due season, to suit the country to it. » With here and there an exception, the scoffers at this Work have been those eternal enemies to all disturbing originality, the Placemen of Learning. Supposing however that, through the influence of knowledge made light and popular and cheap, the Arts are not so far downward, as to create despair of successful efforts by a new one, before their entire decay and future revival ; I would say to many of those who hold the places and draw the profits of science, that if they will but continue to sheath their opposition in their feigned contempt, the first humble advocates of this Work may, by a gradual rise to those places and profits, see their own enlarged designs of instruction, in the course of half a century, completed. There are now several teachers of the system throughout the United States. Dr. Barber, an English physician who had de- voted himself to the study of elocution, and who came to Phila- delphia about the period of its publication^ was the first to adopt its principles, and to defend them against the double influence of doubt and sneer, by an explanatory and ilustrative course of lec- tures.* Yale College, at New Haven, was early favorable to the system. But the University of Cambridge, by appointing Dr. Barber to its department of Elocution, was the first chartered in- stitution of science in this country that gave an influential and responsible approbation of the Work. As this Work furnishes general principles for an Art, hereto- fore directed by individual instinct or capricej all wbo would teach that art by principles founded in nature, must sooner or later adopt it. Will the influential instructors of Philadelphia be the last? The objections first made to the ' Philosophy of the Human Voice,' were against its utility; now the cry among the Learned isj it is too difficult. Too difficult ! Why, all new things are dif- ficult; and if the scholastic pretender knows not this, let the * Three years after the date of the 'Philosophy,' Dr. Barber published at New Haven, 'a Grammar of Elocution' founded on that Work, as a Text-book to his oral instructions. SECOND EDITION. xli annals of the Trades instruct him. Just one century has elapsed since that common material of furniture, Mahogany, was first known in England. It is recorded that Dr. Gibbons, an eminent physician of that period, had a brother, a West-India captain, who took over to London some planks of this wood, as ballast. The Doctor was then building a house; and his brother thought they might be of service to him. But the carpenters finding the wood too hard for their tools, it was laid aside. Soon after, a candle-box being wanted in his family, Dr. Gibbons requested his cabinet-maker to use some of this plank which lay in his garden. The cabinet-maker also complained, that it was too hard. The Doctor told hinij he must get stronger tools. When however by successful means, the box was made, the Doctor ordered a bureau of the same material ; the color and polish of which were so re- markable, that he invited his friends to view it. Among them, was the Duchess of Buckingham, who being struck with its beauty, obtained some of the wood; and a like piece of furniture was immediately made for Her Grace. Under this influence, the fame of mahogany was at once established ; its manufacture was then found to be in nowise difficult; and its employment for both use and ornament has since become universal. The master-builders of science, literature, and eloquence, declared the ' Philosophy of the Human Yoice ' to be too hard for their studious energies; and threw it aside as useless. But a few humble Cabinet-makers of learning having somehow or other, got stronger tools, have already made the box ; are under way with the bureau ; and are only waiting for the authoritative influ- ence of some leader of oratorical fashion, to produce a general belief in this simple truism^ IF we wish to read well, we must FIRST LEARN HOW. Philadelphia, June 26, 1833. INTRODUCTION. The analysis of the human voice contained in the following essay, was undertaken a few years ago, exclusively as a subject of physiological inquiry. Upon ascertaining some interesting facts, in the uses of speech, I was induced to pursue the investi- gation ; and subsequently to attempt a methodical description of the various vocal phenomena, with a view to bring the subject within the limits of science, and thereby to assist the purposes of oratorical instruction. By every scheme of the cyclopedia, the subject of the voice is allotted to the physiologist; yet upon its most important function-* speech and its expression, he has strangely neglected his part by borrowing much of his. supposed knowledge from the wild notions of rhetoricians, and the intermeddling authority of grammarians. It is time at last, for physiology seriously to take up its task.* In entering on this inquiry, I resolved to have no reference to former writersj until the habit of discriminating the facts of the * In the fifth edition of this Work, I submitted to the Reader, the first im- printing, and practical use of a Double Comma, as a symbol of Punctuation. The want of a point, for a significant pause between that of a comma and a semi- colon, must have been perceved by exact and thoughtful writers, in descriptive and explanatory composition. For brevity, and easy rythmus in enumerating the points, it may, from the Greek //'?, tioice, be called Dicomma. The principal purposes for which I employ it arej First; as prefatory to an ilustrative in- stance; or a question, or the statemeut of a question; or a condition; to indi- cate by the symbol, some notable meaning, should the mind for the moment ask^ what is to follow. Second ; for cases when the grammar is prone to run on, and perspicuity requires a special suspension^ beyond a point of longer rest than that of the comma. Third; for subdivided short or long periodic sen- tencesj with or without other points^ to check the haste of grammatical parts^ if disposed to run together; thereby drawing attention to the individuality of members^ to releve the whole from intricacy. Fourth ; to bound parenthetic clauses, aud in taking the place of the Dashj which is always a formless linear 4* ( 43 ) 44 INTRODUCTION. voice should be so far confirmed, as to obviate the danger of adopting unquestioned errors, which the strongest effort of inde- pendence often finds it so difficult to avoid. Even a faint recolec- tion of school instruction was not without its forbidding inter- ference with my first attempt to discover, by the ear alone, the hidden processes of speech. After obtaining an outline of the work of Nature in the voice, sufficient to enable me to avail myself of the useful truth of other observers, and to guard against their mistakes^ I consulted every accessible treatise on the subject, particularly the European com- pilations of the day, the authors of which have opportunities for learned research, not enjoyed in this country. Finding, on a fair comparison the following description of the voice represents its phenomena more extensively and definitely than any known sys- tem, I was induced to give it the durable form of Print. Many errors may be found in it; but if the general history, and the analytic development are not drawn from nature, and do not prompt others to carry the inquiry further, and into practical detail, I shall much regret the time wasted in the publication. It becomes me however, to remark, that as the greater part of this Work has not been made-up from the quoted, or controverted, or accommodated opinions of authors, I shall totally disregard any decision upon its merits, that is not the result of a scrutiniz- ing comparison of its descriptions, with the phenomena of Nature herself. blemish on the compact neatness of prints to carry oyer the meaning and gram- mar, through the space between the pauses. Fifth; as a direction to a follow- ing proposition; showings the punctuative means for supplying the place of the demonstrative that, when this pronoun precedes the word, there, or this, or they, or their, or itself repeated, or any other word of striking similarity in sound, which might offend the ear. Sixth ; to separate, without arresting the bearing of the verb, a succession of members^ as objects of a previous action^ or as the agents of a prospective effect* which may mentally indicate a less pause than a semicolon, and greater than a comma between them. Seventh ; the application of this point, under some of the preceding heads, is so inde- terminate that the comma, not the semicolon, may be used with its meaning. All these cases and perhaps more, are exemplified throughout this Volume. But punctuation partakes in a degree, of the whims of the human mind ; and on this subject readers and writers will in many particulars, have each a whim of his own. Should however, this new point be considered worthy of adoption, others may give more precise rules for its application. INTRODUCTION. 45 The art of speaking-well, has in most civilized countries been a cherished mark of distinction between the elevated and the humble conditions of life; and has been immediately connected with some of the greater purposes of justice, religion, instruc- tion, and taste. It may therefore appear extraordinary, that the world, with all its works ■ of philosophy, should have been satisfied by an instinctive exercise of the art, and by occasional examples of its supposed perfection^ without an endeavor to found an analytic system of instruction, productive of multiplied instances of success. Due reflection however, will convince us, that even this extended purpose of the art of speaking has been one cause of the neglect. It has been a popular art; and works for present popularity are too often the commonplace product of a common- place ambition. The renowned of the bar, the senate, the pulpit, and the stage, applauded into self-confidence by the undiscerning multitude, cannot acknowledge the necessity of improvement; for the rewards that await the art of gratifying the general ear, are in no less a degree encouraging to the faults of the voice, than the approbation of the million is subversive of the rigid discipline of the mind. Physiologists have described and classed the organic positions that produce the alphabetic elements. This has been done by the rule, and with the success of philosophy. On other points their attempts have not been so satisfactory. In describing the function of Pitch, or the rise and fall of the voice, which we here call Intonation, they have not designated by some known or in- vented scale, the forms and degrees of such movements; and furnished the required and definite detail in this department of speech. They have rather given their attention to the following inquiries : Whether the organs of the voice have the structure of a wind, or of a stringed instrument* how the falsette is madej and whether acuteness and gravity are formed by variations in the aperture of the glottis, or in the tension of its chords. In their experiments, they removed the organs from men and other ani- mals, and produced something like a living voice, by artificially blowing through them. They carefully inspected the cartilages and muscles of the larynx, to discover thereby the immediate cause of intonation, yet altogether overlooked the audible forms 46 INTRODUCTION. and degrees of that intonation. In short, thej tried to see sound, and to touch it with the dissecting-knife; and all this, without reaching any positive conclusion, or describing more of the audible effect of the anatomical structure, than was known two thousand years ago. The Greek and Roman rhetoricians, and writers on music, recorded their knowledge of the functions of the voice. They distinguished its different Kinds, by the termsj harsh, smooth, sharp, clear, hoarse, full, slender, flowing, flexible, shrill, and austere. They knew the Time of the voice, and had a view to what they called its Quantity in pronunciation. They gave to Force or Stress, under its form of accent and emphasis, appro- priate places ir\ speech. They observed the variation of acute and grave in sound; and were the first to make an exact and beautiful analysis on this subject. They discovered two forms of transition between acuteness and gravity; one that ascends or descends, by a continuous movement or slide : the other, by an interrupted movement or ship from place to place, in ascent and descent. They also percevedj the former is employed in Speech; the latter, on musical instruments. Though, from carrying the inquiry no further, they supposed, but erroneously as we shall learn hereafter, that one was soley appropriated to speech; the other soley to instruments.* * To prevent doubt on the subject of the unusual orthography at the close of the above paragraph, and at other places in this Work-j it is here remarked that, as some body first cast-out the superfluous u from labour in our language^ I propose, with a cautiously used Hppogram, to lessen the redundancy of a like unpronounced i in ei, of several words similar to perceve; and of many of its double letters. We are no more bound to respect an old literary habit of speling, when advantage is to be gained, and prejudice only to be shocked by the change^ than upon proof against it, to respect a mere conventional creed on any subject. (Vrthography has always been altering for the worse as well as for the better, by ' no body knows who;' as if the innovator feared to be caught by the Norma Scribendi, or fashionable rule of the pen. The little I offer is di- rected by the grammar^ which teaches us to give the letters that make the sound of a word;; and I add, to give no more; though it is yet too soon, always to do that. Thus we prefer the smooth, and gliding quantity of impune to the half- hickuping catch of impugn. But says the Orator, we pronounce it otherwise. Then write it so. I have further changed the lip-pinching eu (yeu or oeu) for the free oral u in manuver. I must however, except from this principle of im- provement, cases that would have a temporary awkwardness to the eye; and INTRODUCTION. 47 The ancients however, show no acquaintance with the subdi- visions, definite degrees, and particular applications, of those two general forms of pitchj for the discriminative purposes of oratori- cal use : and if we may judge, from an attempt by Dionysius of Halicarnassus to point out the difference between singing and speech, and from some oiher descriptions, totally irreconcilable with the proprieties of modern, and as we shall learn hereafter, of natural and ordained intonation^ we must beleve they made on this point, only a limited analysis ; that the uses of pitch, or of the Hones' of the voice, as they are called, were conducted alto- gether by imitation ; and that the means of instruction were not reduced to any precise or available directions of art. No one can read that discourse on the management of the voice, in Quinctilian's elaborate chapter on Action, without allow- ing to the ancients a power of perceving many of the beauties and blemishes of speech. Yet among the numerous indications of their practical familiarity with the art of public speakingj we find no clear description of its constituents, nor any definite instruc- tion. The abundant detail throughout his work more than once leads the Author to an apology for its minuteness; and there- fore precludes the supposition that he designedly overlooked any well known means, by which the various uses of the voice might be represented with available precision. It is supposed, the ancient rhetoricians designated the pitch of vocal sounds by the term, Accent. They made three kinds of accentsj the acute, the grave, and the circumflex; signifying, when from the deficiency of our vowel-letters, and a repetition of consonants, there would be no habitual rule to direct the sound of a sylable. Ours is the English language; I have therefore when justified by the ear and the eye, re- jected the consonant sylables tre and que of the French; thus individually try- ing to do slowly, in part, what literary writers, newspapers, and government with its patronage, could under a wise, not party commission, accomplish by a broader, and a rapid sweep. One of the uses of a classical education might be. to make our speling like the Eating letter for sound. I have altered the speling of more than fifty words in this volume ; and have set the accent on the first broad o in orthography, to escape the hiccupy og / . To do things by degrees, as the slow and stubborn human mind requires, many other useless double letters shall be expelled in a seventh edition. What is here offered will be acceptable to those who dare to use it; others will stone the innovation, as the stiff-necked Israelites served their unconforming Prophets. 48 INTRODUCTION. severally, the rise, the fall, and a continuation of these into a turn of the voice. The existence in Greek manuscripts, of cer- tain accentual symbols, representing these movements, which however were not applied till about the seventh century, afforded the only data, for modern inquiry into the forms of Greek intona- tion; and created a learned dispute^ that was continued, without one satisfactory result, from the time of the Younger Yossius, to the recent days of Foster, and Gaily. If Greek Scholars had employed other means than wasteful wrangling with each other, for ascertaining the purpose of accent- ual marks, it would long ago have been determined, whether they direct to any practical knowledge of Greek utterance, or are only a subject for useless contention. Had the tongue and the ear, the rightful Masters in this school, been consulted, these symbols would at once have been regarded as vague and meager represen- tations of the full and measurable resources of the voice. The disputants found that degree of obscurity in the account of ancient accent, which encourages the profitless labors, and alternate triumphs of party; which subjects opinion to all the chicanery of sectarian argument; and shuts out the conclusive inquiries of independent observation. In the distracting fashion of the old dialectic art, and of its modern use, they ' discoursed about truth until they forgot to discover it:' and while they ex- hibit a distressing waste of time, and temper, by continually seek- ing in the flickering indications of unfinished records, the light which would steadily have arisen on their observation, they hold out to the future historian of literature, a temptation towards the sarcastic inquiry^ how far the writers on Greek and Roman accent were endowed with the powers of hearing and pronunciation. Since the decline, or the limitation of classic authority, modern inquirers, by listening to the sounds of their own language, have at last undertaken to discover other elemental functions of the voice, than those represented by accentual marks. The works of Steele, Sheridan, and Walker, have made large contributions to the long neglected, and still craving condition of our tongue. Mr. Joshua Steele published, at London, in the year seventeen hundred and seventy-five, 'An essay towards establishing the INTRODUCTION. . 49 melody and measure of speech, to be expressed and perpetuated, by peculiar symbols.' The purpose of this essay was to question some remarks on the subject of accent and quantity, by Lord Monboddo, in his 'Origin and progress of language:' and was executed, in part, under the form of an argumentative corre- spondence between this Author and Mr. Steele. Future times may smile at some of the effects of classical pur- suits, if ever tolclj a free inquirer had considerable difficulty, in convincing an accomplished scholar, at the end of the eighteenth century, that the English language has those attributes of Accent and Quantity, supposed to belong exclusively to the Latin and the Greek: for this was the subject of controversy. Mr. Steele has therefore given a notation of the time of the voice; and shown that the same continuous slide employed on sylables of the Greek language, is necessarily heard on those of his ow T n. But if he designed to inquire into the forms and varieties of that slide, he was unsuccessful. For with an exception of his indefinite representations of some new forms of the circumflex or turn, he made no advances beyond the few but elementary facts of the ancients : and only in one or two instances obscurely perceved, what in other cases, they entirely overlookedj the natural connec- tion between different states of the mind, and their appropriate vocal signs. In attempting to delineate the melody of speech, he adopted those vague or unfounded opinions of the Greeks, that the vocal slides are somehow made through enharmonic intervals-; by which they may have intended to denote some minute interval in the sliding concrete^ and that three tonos and a half is the measure of the accentual rise and fall in ordinary discourse. The influence of these delusions, together with his belief in some notional analogies between certain parts of the system of music, and the melody of speech, rendered his short account of intonation, meager, confused, and erroneous. He had two different objects in view. The first, to prove to his opponent, that the accentual Slide, and Quantity both belong essentially to English speech. This he briefly did ; without considering their broad and important appli- cation, and their effects. The second, and principal, was to de- scribe an original system of Rythmic Notation, by which the subjects of Quantity, of stressful emphasis, and of pause may be 50 INTRODUCTION. represented to a pupil; and the habit of attention fixed on these important points in the art of reading. Mr. Steele shows by his work, that he possessed nicety of ear, a knowledge of the science and practice of music, together with an originality and independence of mind, created by observation and reflection; powers sufficient when not restrained or perverted, to have developed the whole philosophy of speech. Had he not begun and continued his investigation through the distracting means of controversy; had not his attention been drawn into the desultory course of responsive argument ; nor his courtesy towards the opinions of others partially betrayed him to their authority; had he not assumed as identical, those facts of music and of speech, which his own closer observation would have proved to be different; and above all, had he not looked back to a supposed science, in the writings of the Greeks, and to the dark confusion of commentators upon them, but in self-superiority to this obstructive influence, kept his full-sufficient and undeviating ear on Nature, she would at last have led him up to light. Mr. Sheridan is well known by his discriminating investigation of the Art of reading; and though he improved both the detail and method of his subject, in the departments of pronunciation, emphasis, and pause, he made no analysis of intonation. A re- gretted omission ! The more so from the certainty, that if this topic had receved his attention, his inteligence and industry would have shed much light of explanation upon it. Mr. Walker, who has written usefully on Rhetoric and Philo- logy, devotes a portion of his work to the subject of the rise and fall of the voice, in its application to the emphatic sylables of a sentence: indeed, he reiterates his claims to originality on this subject. Mr. Walker may have been the first to apply the con- fused and conjectural system of ancient Accent to a modern lan- guage; but he has scarcely gone beyond the limited analysis, furnished by its history. The Greek writers on music had a dis- criminative knowledge of the rise, fall, and circumflex turn of speech. Aristoxenus the philosopher, a pupil of Aristotle, dis- covered, or first described, that peculiar rise and fall of sound by a continuous progression, which distinguishes the vocal slide, from the skipping transition on musical instruments. INTRODUCTION. 51 Mr. Walker does triumphantly claim the discovery of the in- verted circumflex accent, or the downward-and-upward continued movement. Yet, if it is correctly infered from the dates of pub- lication, and from Mr. Walker's rather derisive allusion to Mr. Steele's essay, that the latter author preceded him; he might have found, in Mr. Steele's gravo-acute accent, proof of a previous knowledge of his newly-found function of the voice. Mr. Walker was a celebrated elocutionist, and may have known how to manage his intonation; but in his attempt to delineate its forms, he is even less definite than Mr. Steele. His insinuation that speech and music, each being varied uses of the same tunable constituents, should not be ilustrated by some analogous notation; and his own erroneous diagrams of the progress of pitch, are in- stances of a want of reflection and of obtuseness of ear, quite reprehensible in one, who, without compulsion, should undertake to investigate the relationships of sound. I have endeavored to state the amount, and the sources, of what has been heretofore known of the functions of speech. In a general view, it appears : That the number, the kinds, and the organic causes of the Alphabetic Elements have long been re- corded, with accurate detail; That Quantity or the Time of syla- bic utterance, together with the subject of Pause, had been dis- tinguished only by a few indefinite terms, until Mr. Steele, with discriminative perception, applied to speech some of the principles and symbols of musical notation ; That Accent or the means of distinguishing a sylable by st?'ess or intensity of voice, has been definitely described in English pronunciation, both as to its place and degrees ; That this sylabic stress, though attentively regarded in the grammatical institute of the Greeks, is yet in their records, so confounded with some notion of the rising and the falling slide, and the circumflex turn of the voice, that we are left altogether in doubt, as to their systematic and separate use of these differ- ent functions; That Emphasis, when restricted to the purpose of making one or more words conspicuous, by force or intensity, has long been a subject of rhetorical attention ; Mr. Walker being the first among modern Elocutionists, who attempted, under the terms upward and downward slide, to connect any view of Intonation with it: And finally, that the analysis of 52 INTRODUCTION. Intonation has hardly been extended beyond the recorded knowl- edge of the ancients. Greek and Roman writers tell us of the acute, grave, and circumflex movements; and these, with the newly described inverted-circumflex, have, at a recent date, by Mr. Steele and Mr. Walker, first been vaguely regarded, in English speech. These four general heads of intonation are truly drawn from nature; yet, with the present indefinite meaning of their terms, they are useless for practical instruction, and no less imperfectly designate the measurable modifications of speech, than the four cardinal terms of the compass describe all the points, distances, and contents of space. The discovery of the above mentioned distinctions in intonation, which must justly form the outline of all nicer discrimination, was the result of philosophical inquiry. A much more abundant, but not more precise nomenclature has been derived from criti- cism. The following phrases are extracted from a description of Mr. Garrick's manner of reading the Church-service, and have an especial reference to the Intonation of his voice: 'Even tenor of smooth regular delivery,' 'Fervent tone,' 'Sincerity of devo- tional expression,' 'Repentant tone,' 'Reverential tone,' 'Even- ness of voice,' 'Tone of solemn dignity,' 'Of supplication,' 'Of sorrow, and contrition.' Those who know what constitutes accuracy of language, must admit that such attempts to name the means of vocal expression, have no more claim to the title of inteligible description, than belongs to the rambling signification of vulgar nomenclature. We seem not to be aware, that no describable perceptions of sound are connected with such common phrases of criticism, until re- quired to ilustrate them by some definite forms of intonation. 'Grandeur of feeling,' says a writer, in laying down the rules of elocution, 'should be expressed with pomp and magnificence of tone;" as if the words, pomp and magnificence were specifi- cations of perceptible 'tonesj' or explanatory and definite terms for some well-known forms and uses of the voice. But as these words describe no audible function, they can in this case denote indefinitely, only a state of mind; and are therefore convertible with the term, 'grandeur of feeling,' which denotes indefinitely INTRODUCTION. 53 only a state of mind. We may therefore presume, from their havinor n0 reference to assignable conditions of the voicej if the writer had been, conversely asked, how 'pomp and magnificence of feeling' should be expressed, he would, with no more precision, have answered^ 'by grandeur of tone.' Such rules for the ex- pression of speech, though abounding in our systems of elocution, are resolvable, into words, with no explanatory meaning. Nor can any weight of authority give them the power of description; since the terms 'sorrowful expression,' and 'tone of solemn dig- nity,' in the precepts of an accomplished Elocutionist, have no more signification as to the modes, forms, degrees, and varieties of pitch, time, and force of voice, than those of 'fine-turned cadence,' and 'chaste modulation,' in the idle criticism of a daily gazette. All arts and sciences appear under two different conditions. They may be described by terms of vague signification, suited to the limited knowledge and feeble senses of the ignorant, in every caste of society. Those who view them under this condition, in vainly pretending to discriminate, express nothing but their thoughtless approbation. Again, they may be shown in definite delineation, by a language of unchangeable meanings and inde- pendently of the perversions, which slender ability, natural temper, or momentary humor may create. He who thus surveys an art, will in expressing his approbation, always reflect and discriminate. Some branches of the art of speaking are even at this late period scarcely removed from the first of these conditions. This however, will not seem strange, when we for a moment refer to its cause. There is no growth of intelect from a metaphysical nothings no 'equivocal generation' in knowledge. It always springs from the obvious seeds of itself; and these are first planted in the mind, by definite perceptions and explanatory terms. But the elementary forms of Intonation are an essen- tial constituent of expressive speech; and though constantly heard, have never been named: the studious inquirer has there- fore wanted a definite language for those purposes of the voice, which he must have always obscurely perceved. The fulness of nomenclature in art is directly proportional to the degree of its improvement; and the accuracy of its terms insures the precision of its systematic rules. The few and indeterminate designations 51 INTRODUCTION. of the modes of the voice in Reading, compared with the number and accuracy of the terms in Music, imply the different manner in which each has been cultivated. The inquirers into the subject of speech have unproductively given up their opinions to author- ity, and their pens to quotation. The musician has devoted his ear to observation and experiment, and in their path has persisted onward to success. The words, quick, slow, long, short, loud, soft, rise, fall, and turn, indefinite as they are, include nearly all the discriminative terms of Elocution. How far they fall short of an enumeration of every precise and elegant use of the voice, and how fairly the cause of the vague and limited condition of our knowledge is here represented, shall be determined on a retro- spective view by an age to come, when the ear will have made deliberate examination. A conviction of the imperfect state of our knowledge in certain branches of the Art of Speaking, first led the Author to the en- suing investigation ; and a hope that others might assist in the completion of a desirable measurement and method of the voice, induced him to set the present publication before them. If it should not furnish a plan for the future establishment of the principles of Intonation, Time, and Forces he must still continue to beleve, without controversy, in the attainable and practical benefits of such a work. I cannot, at this timej when an unsteady Popularity, in dis- turbing everything else, has presumed to be the directive Master of Tastes withhold a few remarks on the importance of general principles, in the Fine Arts ; as these principles are not only the sure Foundation and the Preservative defense of a steadfast In- telectual Taste, distinguished from a Taste of changeable prefer- ences, and capricej but are at the same time, the most effective means for exalting it. And although the entire want of such principles or rules in the use of Intonation, has unnecessarily led to the belief^ they cannot be instituted, it will be shown in the following essays they are not only as essential but likewise as at- tainable in Elocution, as in any other art which elegantly employs the observation and reflection of the intelect. Those persons who receve the highest intelectual enjoyment from the works of art, know well, that its fulness and durability INTRODUCTION. 55 are chiefly derived from that power of broad and exact discern- ment, which is acquired by experience, and time, and by a dis- ciplined inquiry into the rules of taste that direct the production. A knowledge of these rules constitutes the executive facility of the artist, and gives delight to him who contemplates the work. Whatever the physical susceptibility may be, it is not the impres- sion of form, or color, or sound, passively receved by the eye or ear, that creates an enlightened perception of the objects of the fine arts. Delicate organization, call it 'Genius' here if you please, is indeed essential to this perception ; still it is the united activity of the senses and the brain, in the work of observation and comparison, together with the development of new, and the application of pre-established rulesj which by unfolding the latent tendencies of this physical susceptibility, constitutes the extended, the discriminative, and the enduring pleasure of taste. And if there is yet to be discovered some surpassing efficacy of art, for a surpassing intelectual delight, it can never be accomplished, except through the influence of comprehensive and still accumu- lating precepts ; derived from the study of nature it is true, but applied to represent her chosen, corrected, and combined indi- vidualities ; and thereby, under the human eye at least, to gen- eralize and exalt even that Nature, in form if not in purpose, above herself. Besides the sources of contemplative pleasure, and the means of preservation and improvement in an art, afforded by princi- ples, their influence is operative after a temporary decline, or total loss of its practice. They effect a speedy restoration when the influence of evil example has passed away, or a tradition of former excelence has produced a desire for its revival. The defi- nite description of elementary constituents, and the statement of the rule of their use, are particularly necessary in the art of speaking-well ; since its passing exercise leaves no record of it- self. The works of art, without an explanation of their meaning and use, are often as deep an enigma, as the works of nature; and a long course of observation is in each case equally required, to note and class their phenomena, and to discover their formal, their efficient, and their final causes. Although the ancients have left us abundant eulogistic anec- 56 INTRODUCTION, dotes on the art of Painting, they have done little more than allude to those principles of composition, design, shaded light, and coloring, by which their great masters improved upon nature, while they professed to imitate her ; and the want of a knowledge of these, even with the benefits of patronage, was one cause of the delay of at least two centuries, in the gradual progress of the art to its full restoration, in modern Europe. Stories of the graces of ancient Design were revolved in the minds of the image- makers of Italy, and of the decorators of cloisters, like the prob- lems of the mechanical wonders of Archimedes, that were not to be solved by record or tradition.* Ancient architecture has, by means" of the fragments of its ruins, been revived in modern days, to a degree attainable through precision of measurement ; and under this view, some of its remains have furnished the highest examples for imitation. Delicate observation, aided by a refined taste in other arts, is yet required, to retreve the knowledge of those principles which must have directed the taste of the Greeks; but of which Vitruvius gave only an imperfect sketch, while compiling a popular book for Builders; and which Pausanias, in his hurried tour, forgot to set down, as the proper preface to his Inventory of temples. If the Greek writers on music had not furnished us with a knowledge of the ancient Scales, and of the principles that directed their construction and uses, the records of Choragic monuments and the accounts of the Odeum, would have only excited our wonder at the extraordinary power of instrumental sound. The inventive mind of Guido, instead of completing the modern scale, might have only laid its foundation, by fixing a single chord across a shell, and the finished system of modern harmony might now have been but just begun. Such is the view we take of arts directed by principles, or pre- cepts colected from experience, for designing, executing, preserv- ing, and reviving the great and desirable works of usefulness and taste : precepts accumulated by the efforts of close and industrious * See an account of the above new term, shaded light, in the twenty-fifth Article of the thirty-sixth Section, under the head of Painting, in the 'Natural History of the Intelect;' since from the connection of the mind and the voice, I suppose the inquiring Reader to possess the two Works that describe it. INTRODUCTION. 57 observation, looking to the eventual aid of Time; who, himself never working impatiently, becomes the great wonder-worker of all intelectual, as well as of all physical creation. - The following essay exhibits an attempt to describe the con- stituents of speech, and the principles of their application, with a precision that may enable criticism to be systematic and in- structive thereby affording readers at other times and places, the means of comprehending its discriminations. Discussions on the subject of standard principles, in some of the arts, have always involved the question of their origin ; and nature has generally been assumed as the source. There are two conditions under which nature affords her gov- erning rules, for rules are only directive principles. In one, she is taken as the model for exact imitation, in those branches of art which profess to copy her full and actual details^ exemplified by the faultless and exquisite artistic delineations, in the various departments of Natural History. Here individual nature is the standard ; and here the excelence of art consists, in the whole- truth of the resemblance, without the least superfluous ideal-touch. In the other, where it is the purpose of art to exalt its creations, by a mental correcting of what to our eye, appears to be the ex- ceptionable details of nature, or by a selection from her scattered constituents of beautyj the rule is the result of a congenial knowl- edge in the art, exhibited in strong similarity among persons of equal instinct and cultivation: which, if it does not prove con- formity in taste to be the development of an invariable law of nature, in the human mind, at least affords education the means of tracing the causes of beauty and deformity; and of framing a satisfactory and enduring system of laws for itself. The uses of the voice have not yet been brought under either of these conditions. For the first; Nature or that unenlightened, or rather deformed instinct commonly called natural speech, does not afford examples of individual excelence; and has perhaps never furnished a single instance, worthy in all respects to be copied. For the second condition ; from the want of a full knowl- edge and definite nomenclature of the constituents of speech, and of careful experiments on the vocal signs of thought and passionj 5 58 INTRODUCTION. there lias never been that clear perception of the characteristic causes of beauty and deformity, which would warrant the institu- tion of a standard, either by the method of selection, or by that of the exalting power of creative thought. The highest achieve- ments in statuary, painting, and the landscape, consist of those forms and compositions, never perhaps found singly-existent, or variously combined in nature ; but which in the estimation of Cul- tivated Taste, and its perfecting agency, may far surpass her individual productions. The following analytic history of the human voice will enable an Elocutionist of any nation, to frame a didactic system for his own native and familiar speech. Since it shows that the vocal signs of expression have a universality, coexistent with the prev- alence of thought and passion ; and that a grammar of elocution, like that of music, must be one and the same for the whole family of man. He will also find the outline of a system of principles and practice, I have ventured to propose, on a survey of those properties of utterance, which seem to me, accommodated to the taste of the cultivated ear ; but which being rarely, if ever accom- plished by the human voices though still within the reach of natural sciencej must, until so physically accomplished, be called, in anal- ogy with the highest character of the above named arts, the Ideal Beauty of speech. Beleving, that no one age or nation has yet been able to prove its claim to superiority in the Art of speaking, I have presumed to make a universal application of the system of the following Work, on the ground, of the unity of the laws of nature, and of the universality of the fixed and describable rela- tions between the states of thought and of passion, and the vocal signs, which respectively denote them. This undertaking is directly opposed to a vulgar error. The inscrutable character, as it is affirmed, and the supposed infinity, of the vocal movements, together with the rapid course and per- petual variation of utterance, are considered as insuperable obsta- cles to a precise description of the detail and system of the speak- ing voice. This objection will be hereafter answered, otherwise than by contentious argument. But we may here, only askj if there is no other opportunity to count the radii of a wheel than in the race; or to number and describe the individuals of a herd, INTRODUCTION. 59 except in the promiscuous mingling of their flight. Music, with its infinitude of details, must still have been a mystery, could the knowledge of its intervals and its time Jaave been caught-up, only from the multiplied combinations and rapid execution of the orchestra. The accuracy of mathematical calculation, joined with the sober patience of the ear over a deliberate practice on its con- stituentsj has not had more success in disclosing the system of this beautiful and luminous science, than a similar watchfulness over the deliberate movements of speech will afford, for desig- nating the hitherto unrecorded phenomena of the voice. If there is any purpose in the works of nature, or any ordained efficiency of means to complete the circle of her designs, we shall find, on the development of her vocal system, some uniform and appro- priate rulesj within the pale of which the voice should be variously exercised, to give light to the intelect and pleasure to the ear. The accurate sciences, and the fine arts, without our having regard to the simplicity of those Primary Causes, in the mind, which the more deeply they are viewed, the more we may per- ceve only a varied unity in their effects^ have been contrasted by the kinds, rather than as it should be, by the degrees of their claims to truth. The careless argument assumes, that taste is merely a wavering thought, or feeling among mankind ; and has no rule for the co- perception of grandeur, grace, and beauty, in the selected, or exalted uses of form, color, and sound. This as- sumption is one of the delusions of ignorance. But if there is a similar method of perception among persons of equal taste and education, it must be founded on some general principle of the cultivated intelect. The agreement therefore, arising from the equalizing law of knowledge, gives a character to the principles of taste, analogous at least to that, which by a like constitutional law of the mind, in a general consent on the subject of physical relationshipsj forms the full and unquestionable truth of the accu- rate sciences. Under this view of the foundation of the princi- ples of the fine arts, we must perceve at last the measure of their truth, as that of the truth of the exact sciences, in the agreement of those who cultivate them. He who knows, that all men of education find the same properties in a circle, may learn by a similar perception, that if the mind should ever be cleared of its 00 INTRODUCTION. human rubbishy particular excelencies of the painter, poet, arch- itect, orator, statuary, composer, landscape improver, and actor, will reach the spring of congenial perception, in those who ob- serve and reflect upon their works, and spread-abroad a varied stream of ever-during approbation. The claim to accuracy of knowledge is the inherent right of every art. It is not consistent with the law of nature, that Truth, upon her simple and impartial seat within the mind should have her favorites ; let all be equally thought-free, strict, and studious, and she will reward them all alike. What has been, in the perverse yet often repentant human intelect, may be; and we learn from,. the history of the so-called sagacious Greeks who well knew the fixed and useful truths of Geometry; that those subjects of Natural philosophy, which by a 'New Organ' of" the mind, are now reduced to the clearness of experimental knowledge, and taught to the school-boyj were by that very Greek, regarded as too fleeting and disputable, to be a matter for observative science, or even to employ the fleeting logic of his endless metaphysical disputations. Though future times may possibly break down the mischevous distinction, which assigns a different kind of thought to different departments of inquiry; and may subject all nature and art, equally, to the simple and sufficient process of Observation and Classification ; still it may seem to the present age, that between the perception of beauty in the arts, and of the ratios of mathe- matical quantity, there is little similarity. But, aside from metaphysical sophistry, there can be no other ground for an ac- knowledged certainty, in our perceptions of the relationships of magnitude and number, than the undivided and unchanging per- ceptions and belief, of those who sagaciously inquire into them. They agree upon themj because they all pursue a like connected train of exact observation, or reasoning as this train is usually calledj being therein happily separated from the world of wran- glers, who taking no part or interest in a mathematical truth they cannot overthrow, do not vexatiously disturb their agreement; again, because they all employ the same precision of terms for these relationships, and are more dispassionate in their investiga- tions, than we are accustomed to be, on the many subjects that involve the distractions of our pride, and vanity, and emulation ; INTRODUCTION. 61 because they so closely observe the successions, and so strictly, by the commanding symbols of analysis, contemplate the bearing of premises embraced in a conclusion; and finally, not because they employ on the exact sciences, a different mental method^ for the mind, apart from its endless ways in popular and scholas- tic fiction, has only one methodj but because the ambitious and worldly attractions of other subjects of knowledge, have left the development of these sciences, together with the application of the above described Causes of their success, to the retired and self-contented observation and reflection of earnest, exact, and persevering inquirers. It is trifling to urge, that the properties of a Conic Section are eternal entities of 'purely Transcendental intelect,' quite independent of our accidental and physical per- ception of them, and that they would still exist as truths, though they might never be demonstrated. Truth is a comparative term, uncalled for by Nature, who has no relative errors within herself, and was only invented for the uses of a disputatious and imper- fectly-percipient being. Besides, the question before us is of knowledge, not of metaphysical notions. Otherwise we might, with like proof of an abstract and eternal rule of taste, assert that the proportions of a Greek column existed throughout all time, unhewn and unseen in the quarry; like that transcenden- tal conceit of old, which declared^ the Venus of Gnidos was not the work of Praxiteles ; Nature herself having concreted within the marble, the boundary but hidden surface of its beauty; the artist, when the statue came to light, having only produced the fragments of his chisel, and the dust of his file. I speak here against an unlimited assertion of the variableness of the thought- ful and effective principles of taste, and not with the presump- tion, at this time, even to feign for them, a comparison with any established principle of the exact sciences. But there are no degrees in truth; therefore, every mathematical purpose which remains without fulfilment by demonstration, must submit to its classification with the precepts of the arts; though happily dis- tinguished from them, in being free from the interference of Ignorance and Conceit. And yet it may be remarked, in antici- pation of what will be shown hereafter, that the Art of Speech, in three of its important modesj namely, Time, with its measur- 62 INTRODUCTION. able moments^ Intonation, with its measurable intervalsj and Force, with its measurable degrees^ though not admissible within the pale of exact calculation, is yet upon its border; and when, through future cultivation, it shall take its destined place among the liberal arts, it will be found, at least beside Architecture and Music, those beautiful combinations of taste, with mathematical truth; if indeed, from its principles of intonation being broadly and strictly founded in nature, it may not claim to be before them. Controversies on points involving the leading principles of taste, are generally, contentions of the ignorant with artists, or with one another; and rarely to any great degree, of the differences of educated and inteligent artists among themselves. If the lat- ter are unable to extend the authority, and the benefits of their principles, over the presumptuous part of the multitude; it does not prove; some system of principles may not prevail in the arts, or that artists do not enjoy the delightful effects of it; but seems to imply; there is more assuming vanity in the world than fellow- ship in knowledge. Silence, or modest inquiry is the duty of the ignorant; and where neither is performed; Nature appears in their case, to have departed from her plan in animal creation, by not withholding from them the litigious faculty of speech. These differences cannot of themselves, call in question the authority of principles in the arts. Most of the phenomena of cause and effect in Natural Philosophy, are as obvious as proofs of the properties of curves, by the most exact calculus. Still, pretenders in every condition of life are constantly trespassing within the bounds of this science, by the absurdity of their rea- sonings with each other on points of physical knowledge. Knaves exhibit their schemes for producing Perpetual Motion; and the whole host of learned and unlearned credulity cannot change the influence of those principles, which as yet, have determined the mechanical impossibility. There is a wholesome kind of conviction in the mind of fools, which forces them to confess their want of knowledge in mathe- matics, if they have not studied that science. But taste, say they, is 'natural,' therefore every one should have his own. It is true, every one knows what will please himself in his igno- INTRODUCTION. 63 ranee ; the wise alone know what will please the inteligent in their education. In thus advocating the necessity of precepts for the promotion, government, defense, and restoration of taste, I deprecate any inference that, by furnishing available though even conventional rules for an art, these precepts tend to confine it to an unalter- able standard. Established principles are not as the barrier of a flood, which in protecting from inroad, sometimes restrictively prevents the opportunities of further conquestj but as the guide and escort of the arts, to acquisitions of wider glory. With an exception of that often misused principle, Variety^ their influ- ence over the arts has always insured their advancement, and accompanied their exaltation. The ambitious search after Nov- elty, which under another name, too often means Variety in the successions of fashion and of schoolsj has, through the rest- less designs of vanity, and the influence of unguarded patronage, ruined more arts than all the destructive ignorance of the bar- barian. It will perhaps be saidj we learn from experience, that a high advancement in the arts may lead to perversion from their origi- nal purpose. This indeed has sometimes been the case. By in- creasing the difficulties of musical execution, in the voice and on instruments, this art is, through the singularities of mechanical skill, the varied tricks of interest and ambition, and the wayward- ness of undiscerning patronage, frequently exercised to the indif- ference or disgust of those, whose approbation would be durable; and to the thoughtless satisfaction of those, whom the united caprice of ignorance and fashion may urge equally to support or to destroy. A full knowledge of the principles and practice of an art, en- ables an industrious and aspiring votary to approach perfection; while idle followers are contented with the defaults of imitation. With most men, the labor of the mind, equally with that of the body, ceases with the removal of its necessity; and a shameless dependence on the intelectual alms of others, is not less common, than the populous growth of pauperism upon the increasing pro- visions of benevolence. The unbounded distributions of wise originality prompt to excuses for indolence, and to claims for 64 INTRODUCTION. succor, and the empire itself of the art falls at last, under the insurrection and anarchy of its former servile dependents. But it may be asked by those who think, elocution cannot be taughtj What relation do these methodic principles of taste, bear to the spontaneous, and self- directing uses of speech? And why should we seek the assistance of rules, when the instinct of thought and passion unerringly effect all their vocal purposes ? For it is the belief of those who cannot perceve the application of analysis and precept to Elocution, that its power consists in the wonder- working of 'genius,' and in proprieties and 'graces beyond the reach of art.' So seem the plainest services of arithmetic to a savage; and so, to the slave, seem all the ways of music which modern art has so accurately penned, as to time, and tune, and momentary grace. Ignorance knows not what has been done; indolence thinks nothing can be done; and both uniting, borrow from the abused eloquence of poetry, an aphorism to justify supine- ness of inquiry. It is readily admitted of elocution as of the other esthetic arts, that a full analysis of its constituents, together with the establish- ment of a system of principles will not in the present benighted state of the mind, always exempt it from abuse or ruin. But I cannot therefore, refrain from recommending that intelectual, and enlarging cultivation of the instinct of the voice, which must in- sure the highest satisfaction, while the art remains uncorrupted; and which, by the description of its constituents and method, will afford the best means for any needed restoration. Perhaps it is not going too far, to sayj the art of speaking, as ordained by nature, and defended as well as directed by the adop- tion and extension of her ascertained rules, does not consist of those purposes and means, that are liable, through an ambitious love of change, to end in corruption. Some of the fine arts may receve the addition of Ornament, properly so called; which in its excess, is alas, too often the precursor of their ruin; and which, holding but a separate relationship to its subject or principal, leaves a refined and guarded taste to order the degree of its ap- plication, or its total exclusion. The art of speaking is subject to no such conditions. The representation of thought, and the expression of passion by their respective vocal-signs, are fixed in INTRODUCTION. 65 their amenity by an unalterable instinct^ or if this is not granted, by the satisfactory decisions of universal convention. With this ordained constitution or habit of the voice, all addition to the numbered signs of its language is redundancy, and all misplaced utterance is affectation. The following history of the voice is addressed especially to those who pursue science with attention and perseverance^ who prefer its useful accuracy, to its ostentation^ who are satisfied with the 'few, but fit audience/ and who know, from their own happy experience, that exactness of knowledge is the bright fe- licity of intelect. To inquirers of this character, it need not be said, that even the rapid flight of speech may be more easily fol- lowed, when the general principles that direct it have become familiar. The hesitation of the ear will be prompted by the mind, and we shall more readily discern what is, by knowing what ought to be. After the preceding representation of our limited knowledge of the functions of the voice, and upon the promises of a more extended and precise analysis, the Reader must be prepared to find in the following essay, a new, but I hope not a distracting nomenclature. When unnamed additions are made to the system and detail of an art, terms must be invented for them; and even when its known phenomena are exhibited under varied relation- ships, the purpose of description is less perplexed by the novelty of terms, than by an attempt to give another application or meaning to former names. Many of the varieties of pitch being accurately designated and clearly arranged in musicj a part of its nomenclature is, in this essay, transfered to the description of speech; and whenever a language has been purposely framed, I have endeavored to make it, by direct or metaphorical use, purely explanatory of the vocal functions. Although I have gone deeply into the philosophical history of speech, and have spared no pains in ilustrating whatever might from its novelty, be otherwise obscurej I have not pretended to make specific application of all the principles here laid down, to every case of the reading and speaking voice. As the design of this essay is, to promulgate a new Institute of Elocution, I have 66 INTRODUCTION. endeavored to accommodate the full requisitions of the subject, to the limitation of my time, by brief generalities of explanation and of method; which, in holding the light of instruction broadly, yet distinctly, over the whole, may enable others to perceve the relationship of the parts ; and thus with the closer and more par- ticular hand of detail, to unite in purpose for the completion of the work. The full development of an art, in all its practical bearings, can be effected only by the united labor of many, and of their lives. Here is the result of the leisure of about three years, snatched from the daily duty of extensive professional occupation. If in discharging the duties of that profession, I have selected from its physiological department, a subject of in- quiry which gives its ultimate services in another art, I have not therein forgotten that Nature, who never is ungrateful to the eyes that watch her, has still her secrets in the human frame, yet to be told for the instruction, health, or happiness of man ; the future search after which, may not be without success* and will not be, without the satisfaction experienced in conducting these offered scrutinies of the tongue and ear. The reception which may await the following Work, can be of no important interest to me. By taking care to antedate any expected season of its penalties and rewards, I have already found them in the varied perplexity and pleasure of its accom- plishment. I leave it therefore for the service of him, who may in future desire to read the natural history of his voice. The sys- tem here presented will satisfy much of his curiosity; for I feel assured, by the result of the rigid method of observation employed throughout the inquiry, that if science should ever come to one consent on this point, it will not differ essentially from the ensu- ing record. The world has long asked for light on this subject. It may not choose to accept it now; but having idly suffered its own opportunity for observation to go by, it must, under any capricious postponement, at last receve it here. Sir Joshua Reynolds has a pretty thought, on the labors of ambition and the choice of fame. I do not remember his words exactly; but he figures the present age and posterity as rivals, and those who are favored by the one, as being outcasts from the other. This condition, while it allows a full but transient satis- INTRODUCTION. 67 faction to the zeal which works only for a present reward, does not exclude all prospect from those who are contented in the anticipation of defered success. Truth, whose first steps should be always vigorous and alone, is often obliged to lean for support and progress on the arm of Time ; who then only, when supporting her, seems to have laid aside his wings. Philadelphia, January, 1827. THE PHILOSOPHY OF THE HUMAN VOICE, SECTION I. Of the general Divisions of Vocal Sound: with a more particu- lar account of its Pitch. All the constituents of the human voice, may be refered to the five following Modes: VOCALITY, FORCE, TIME, ABRUPTNESS, PITCH. The detail of these five modes, and of the multiplied combina- tion of their several forms, degrees, and varieties, includes the enumeration of all the Articulating and the Expressive powers of speech. The extension of knowledge calls for an additional nomencla- ture; and new facts and principles on the subject of the voice, will require new terms for the description and arrangement of them. It is therefore proper to show, how far common nomen- clature fulfils the purpose of explanation and division ; and to provide the means by which an obvious deficiency may be sup- plied. (69) TO DIVISIONS AND EXPLANATIONS, The terms by which Yocality or the Kind of voice is distin- guished, arej rough, smooth, harsh, full, thin, musical, and some others of the same metaphorical character. They are sufficiently numerous; and as descriptive as possible, without reference to examplar sounds. Vocalists have proposed to distinguish the singing voice, by its resemblance to the sound of the reed, the string, and the musical-glass. The sub-animals afford analogies to the different vocalities in the human voice.* For the specifications of Force, we use the wordsj strong, weak, loud, forcible, and feeble. These are indefinite in their indica- tion, and without a fixed measure in degree. Music has more orderly and numerously distinguished the varieties of force, by its series of terms from Pianissimo to Fortissimo. I shall, in its proper place, make some new distinctions in the manner of em- ploying this mode. Time, in' speaking, is denoted by the terms j long, short, quick, slow, and rapid. Music has a more precise scale of relationship, in its order of signs from semibreve to double-demisemiquaver. The single or unaccompanied sound of speech does not call for that nicety in Time, which the concerting of music requires; yet there is need of more precision in designating its degrees, than the usual terms of prosody afford. Mr. Steele gives examples of an application of the symbols of music, to the variable time of discourse. I shall hereafter make a division of this mode, with reference to English sylables, and to their employment in speech. I use the term Abruptness, to signify the sudden and full dis- charge of sound, as contradistinguished from its more gradual emission. Abruptness is well represented by the explosive notes which may be executed on the bassoon, and by a quick touch on the organ. I have given this mode of the voice, the place and importance of a general head, not only as an expressive agent in speech, but because its characteristic explosion is peculiar, and * In all the previous editions of this Work, the word Quality is used for what is here called Vocalily. But this volume is intended to be the first part of the 'Natural History of the Intelect;' and as the term quality is there applied ex- clusively to certain powers of the mindj to avoid confusion of nomenclature, we shall hereafter always substitute the term vocality for that of quality; and per- haps the former having a less general application than the latter, is more ap- propriate to that audible voice which is distinguished from whisper. DIVISIONS AND EXPLANATIONS. 71 quite distinct from the mode of Force ; with which, from its ad- mitting degrees of intensity, it might seem to be identical. The variations of Pitch in the speaking voice, are denoted by the wordsj rise and fall, high and low, acute and grave. The vague import and the insufficiency of this division were shown in our introduction : and as the following history of the voice makes especial reference to this mode, and gives a minute detail of its numerous forms and varieties, it is necessary to adopt a more ex- tended, and more definite nomenclature. It happened well, for our assistance in developing the phe- nomena of speech, that most of the forms of this mode were long ago observed, analyzed, and named, in the proper science of music. Some of its uses however, in the speaking voice, are not technically known in that science. For these I have made' a language. But most of the constituents of the musical system, though differently employed, are also found in speech. It is ad- visable therefore, to adopt the musical terms for these identical functions: since they are already known to many, and may, through elementary treatises, be easily learned by all; and since the application of different names, to things of essential resem- blance, would counteract one great object of philosophy; which is, to include all similar phenomena under the same verbal classes ; notwithstanding they may happen to be separated, by place and name, in our artificial arrangements. In colecting facts from Nature, who is no respecter of position or title, we must take them where we find them, and class them, just as they agree. I shall therefore give a concise account of the terms by which the forms of Pitch are distinguished in music. In entering upon this elementary and important explanation, wherein a recognition of certain differences of sound is absolutely necessary for properly comprehending the subsequent parts of this Workj I must beg the Reader not to be discouraged by tem- porary difficulty. He who has been taught the principles of in- strumental or of vocal music, and is able to execute accurately what is called the Scale or Gamut, will recognize the following descriptions, without much hesitation. He who is ignorant of the relations of musical sounds, and of the regular scale by which they have been arranged, must on this, as on so many other sub- 72 DIVISIONS AND EXPLANATIONS. jects of instruction ■which need perceptible ilustration, have re- course to a Teacher. He can generally find at hand, instrumental performers, or singing masters, or the clerk of some neighboring church, who will exemplify to his satisfaction all that is merely descriptive here. The Reader is not refered indiscriminately, to musicians and singers, for assistance in his application of the principles of music to the analysis of speech. The system of mechanical formality to which many of them have in a great degree circumscribed their views, together with the wasteful industry of their perpetual prac- tice upon difficulties has, generally speaking, so limited their per- ceptive faculty, that the most striking analogy in other things, to points of their own art, is rarely first observed by them; but they know w T ell their daily practical rotine. To them therefore the Reader is refered, for exemplification of a technical nomenclature, which I have here, only the means of words and diagram to explain. For an elementary account of the mathematical and mechan- ical investigation of the formal causes of Sound, the Reader is refered to writers on Acoustics. By them, the whole of its phe- nomena have been assigned to two general divisions : Noise, formed by Irregularj and Musical or Tunable sound, by Regular, vibra- tions. It is difficult however, to draw an exact line of separation between these divisions; since even noise, when continued, has, however rude and obscure, a certain kind of musical capability, and may have more or less of an awkward variation in pitch. But the obvious differences in the two cases, are sufficient for the purposes of this essay ; though w r e shall hardly refer to the effect of noise, except in designating those remarkable and deafening assaults upon the ear, by the combined vociferations, and instru- mental crashes of a full-assembled Opera-Chorus. Corresponding to the above distinctions, I shall regard sound as Tunable, and Untunable ; and shall consider the former, properly including vocal and instrumento-musical sound. As Speech and Music, when regarded under the Mode of intona- tion, are subdivisions of the General Science of Tunable Sound, the Reader will perceve the necessity of designating and explain- ing those terms which belong alike to both; or are restrictively appropriated to each. DIVISIONS AND EXPLANATIONS. 73 The term Pitch is applied to the variations of tunable sound, between its lowest and its highest appreciable degree. This variation between gravity and acuteness, is represented in the human voice, by the two extremes of hoarseness and screaming. The different degrees of Pitch in music are denoted by what is called the Scale; the formation of which may be thus ilustrated. When the bow is drawn across a string of a Violin, and the finger at the same time gradually moved, with continued pressure on the string, from its lower attachment to any distance upwards, a mewing sound, if I may so call it, is heard. This mewing is caused by the gradual change from gravity to acuteness, through the gradual shortening of the string : and as it thus rises by a succession of uninterrupted momentary changes, each continuous or concreted, as it were, in its increments of time and of motion, I shall call it Concrete sound. This movement of pitch, on the violin, is termed a Slide. The Reader may himself exemplify this concrete sound, by uttering the single sylable aye, as if he were asking a question with the expression of earnest surprise, yet rather deliberately; beginning at the lowest, and ending at the highest limit of his voice. The gradual rising-movement in this case is continuous or concrete : yet as the voice, and any other tunable sound may be continued in one uninterrupted movement upon the same line of pitch, without rising or fallings it is to be remarked that the term Concrete is in this essay applied only to an uninterrupted movement in a rising, and in a falling direction. Now, the sounds of what is called the Scale, in Music, do not rise by a connected or concrete movement; but are made, by drawing the bow, only while the finger is held stationary at cer- tain successive places on the string : thus showing an interruption of the continuous upward slide. These places are seven in num- ber; their distances from each other being determined by a natural law, and rendered precisely measurable by a scientific rule for subdividing the string, which we need not consider here. Other sounds still ascending on the string above the places of these seven, may be made by a similar interrupted progression. But as the second series of seven sounds, though of higher pitch, yet adjusted by the same rulej do each to each in order, 74 DIVISIONS AND EXPLANATIONS. © U 12 © 11 10 so nearly accord in relationship with the first seven, as seem- ingly to be a repetition of them; and the same being true of all the series of seven, formed between the lowest and the highest limit of soundj the whole extent of variation in acuteness and gravity, is regarded as consisting of the simple scale of seven sounds, repeated in dif- ferent series or places of pitch. If we suppose the sound at each place of the scale to be prolonged on the same line of pitch, so to distinguish it from the concrete change, it may be called aievel or protracted line of sound. On the margin, a diagram represents the places where we suppose the string to be pressed, and the level line of pitch to be made, when the bow is drawn: the black disks on the line, at the places of two of the repeated series of seven sounds, being marked numerically: the initials T and S, respectively denoting the terms, Tone and Semitone, which will presently be explained. Upon comparing this picture with the above account of the production of concrete sound, and supposing the concrete progression upon the string to be represented by the continuous vertical line of the diagram, on which these numerical places are marked by the disksj it is obvious, that por- tions of the concrete must be unheard, when the bow is drawn, only while the finger is stationary at the several places. The sounds thus separately produced at these places, with an omission of the intermediate concrete, I shall call Discrete Sounds. These, when heard successively in a given order, as represented by the diagram, constitute a Dis- crete Scale.* The explanation here given of the manner of 6 8 ® 6 6 5 # 4 2 © 1 * This continuity and this disjunction of the line of pitch are known to most musicians, only under the respective names of Slide, and Skip. The terms con- crete and discrete, as here applied, are borrowed from mathematics ; in which science they designate the two great generic divisions of quantity. Magni- DIVISIONS AND EXPLANATIONS. 75 concrete and discrete progressions, in an upward direction ap- plies to those of the downward course, under a reverse move- ment of the gradual slide, and of the interrupted sound, on the string. The variations of pitch on most musical instruments are dis- crete. The violin and its varieties derive much of their expres- sive power, from being susceptible of the concrete movement; and it is one of the great sources, as will be shown hereafter, of Expression in the human voice. The several places at which we suppose the sounds to be made in the discrete progression, are numerically designated in the diagram, and are called the Places, Points, or Degrees of the scale. Any two degrees are, by relative position, called Prox- imate, when they are next to each other ; and Remote, when they include more than proximate degrees between them. The distance between any two points in the scale, either prox- imate or remote, is called an Interval. A musical interval was by the Greeks, defined to be a ' quantity of a certain kind, ter- minated by a graver and an acuter sound.' But for particular application to speech, it is necessary to regard that quantity as either continuous sound, or imaginary space; and to consider the effect of the transit of the voice from one degree of the scale to another, as constituting an interval, whether the voice is con- cretely heard, or discretely omitted between them. The intervals in their proximate order, are measured as follows:* The interval, or the quantity of concrete voice, either heard, tude being the concrete quantity ; for the lines, surfaces, and solids which con- stitute it, have their respective parts, so to speak, concreted or united immediately with each other: whereas Number is the discrete quantity; the distinct suc- cession of its constituent units being altogether different from the above de- scribed continuity. The most familiar ilustration of these terms, applied to the two kinds of quantity in musical sound, is furnished by the form of a lacldev^ihe side rails representing the concrete, and the rounds the discrete. * The well-informed Reader should regard this general view of the scale, and the manner of its ilustration, with a thoughtfulness of my design. I omit the theoretic distinction of greater and lesser tone, of diatonic and chromatic semi- tone, and of the major and minor scale, together with other particulars, both melodial and harmonic^ with an intention to notice only what is preparatory to the description of speech. 76 DIVISIONS AND EXPLANATIONS. or omitted, between the first and the second places, numbered in the diagram, is called a Tone.* That between the second and third is likewise a tone. That between the third and fourth, which appears in the dia- gram as but half the space of a tone, is called a Semitone. The interval between the fourth and fifth, fifth and sixth, sixth and seventh, is each a tone ; and lastly, that between the seventh, and the eighth or first of the next series, a semitone. The intervals between the degrees of the scale, either proxi- mate or remote, are designated numerically; the extreme degrees being inclusively counted. Thus", from the second to the third, or from the sixth to the seventh, is the interval of a second or tone; from the second to the sixth, or from the fourth to the eighth, is the interval of a fifth. And so of the rest; the nume- rical name of any interval being the same, when taken in an upward, or in a downward direction. Though the several discrete sounds of the scale are named according to their ordinal number, yet the first, relatively to its rising series, is generally called the Key-note. Consequently, in two or more series of scales, the eighth sound, or Octave as it is called, of the preceding is always the key-note of the succeeding scale; as in the vertical diagram, the sound at the eighth place is the octave of the first series, and the key-note of the second. The succession of the seven sounds of any one series, to which the octave is usually added, is called the Natural or Diatonic Scale. It consists of five tones and two semitones ; the latter being the intervals between its third and fourth, and its seventh * The Reader must bear in mind, that the word tone in this Essay, designates only a certain interval of pitch; though common language applies it alike to pitch, vocality, force and time; as in the phrases 'high and low tones of the voice,' 'musical, rustic and silver tones;' 'an emphatic or loud tone;' and a 'delib- erate, quick and drawling tone.' Even music, with all its scientific precision, is not free from slight confusion on this point. For while it employs the word tone, for that interval to which we restrict its use, it also designates vocality, in the terms, 'tone of the flute,' and of other instruments, and the 'pure tone' of the vocalist. The French word timbre, corresponding to our vocality, and some- times applied to the voice, would, in common English pronunciation, soon get into downright ship timber. Let us not be 'frightened at the sound ourselves have made,' but call this mode of the voice, by the plain English term vocality; the timid recolecting, it comes from a word used by Cicero and Quinctillian. DIVISIONS AND EXPLANATIONS. 77 and eighth degrees. The scale then contains these several kinds of intervals^ a semitone; a second, or whole tone; a third; fourth; fifth; sixth; seventh; and octave. By the diagram, the interval between the second and fourth degrees is numerically a third, yet contains but one tone and a semitone ; whereas, that between the first and third degrees, still numerically the interval of a third, contains two whole tones. From this difference in constituency, and extent, the former is called a Minor Third, and the latter a Major Third. But the minor third never being used in correct speech, the term Third will in this Work, except where the minor is specified, always refer to the major interval. Having thus far, described the construction of the Musical Scale, I here advise the Reader, who may not be a musician, and who may be ignorant of the effect of the sounds of that scaler to ask, from some qualified master, an audible example of its upward and downward progression, and of its several intervals. This the teacher will give, under that practical exercise on the scale, called in the language of vocal science, Solfaing. Let the Reader studiously imitate this exemplification, and commit it to memory. If destitute of what is called a musical ear, let him not think him- self unable to discriminate those intervals, which he has now learned to be a part of music. In communities where the culti- vation of this art is general, these things are all learned, by thousands who, with their natural ear, would never have caught the simplest phrase of a popular song. And surely there is no one, into whose hands this book will ever fall, who can possibly avoid perceving the several differences of meaning, or expression, in the speaking voices when he is addressed in the language of narrative, surprise, complaint, authority, or interrogation. Now these various expressive effects are perceptible to him, and accu- rately so, only as concrete or discrete movements of the voice through certain appropriate intervals of the scale. His ear there- fore does really recognize these movements^ these intervals of the speaking scale. I only give to his mental perception and his tongue, their musical method and names. When an instructor cannot be met with, the use of a well-tuned Piano-Forte may assist those who have no acquaintance with the 78 DIVISIONS AND EXPLANATIONS. scale. On the key-board of this instrument there is a front row of white keys, as they are called, and a rear row of black ones. A representation of their forms and positions, is given in the fol- lowing diagram; where a portion of the Great Scale?, or as its whole extent is called, the Compass of the instrument; is shown; the white keys being numbered above, in continuation as far as twenty-one; and below, in a repeated series of seven. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 * 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 i in ii in huh 12 3 4 5 6 7.1 2 3 4 5 6 7.1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Any one of the series of seven white keys, of which there are three in the diagramj when struck successively ascending from left to right, gives the seven discrete rising sounds of the diatonic scale. The black keys are set between the white ones, to divide the whole tones into semitones. Hence, the black keys are want- ing at the semitonic intervals of the scale, where their purpose cannot apply. This omission visibly separates the black keys alternately into pairs and triplets. With the foregoing explanation, the Reader can have no diffi- culty in finding a diatonic series on the white keys of a Piano- Forte ; the key-note or beginning of the series always being next below the pair of black keys. Let him then, on that series which suits the pitch of his speaking voice, utter one of the vowels or any of its sylabic combinations, in unison with the instrumental sounds, both in their proximate succession of a tone, and in the wider transitions between remote degrees of the scalej till the whole is familiar to his ear, and at the call of memory. It is true, the Piano-Forte can show him only the discrete movements of pitch; but when these are conizable, and under command, the concrete may readily be measured by them. But to proceed with our explanation. The level, or protracted sound at any of the places of the dis- DIVISIONS AND EXPLANATIONS. 79 Crete scale, is called a Note. This term note, is to be carefully distinguished from that of Tone, which as before stated, signifies not a level line of sound, but a rising or falling interval of pitch ; and in this essay, is applied, either to the concrete transit of the voice between any two adjoining degrees, except those bounding a semitone, or to the amount of space between such degrees, when the transit is discrete. As the term tone is thus used for the interval of a second, under the two conditions of concrete and discrete pitch, so are the terms of other intervals included between remote degrees ; for the voice may move concretely through these intervals, or notes may be made at their bounding degrees, with the omission of the concrete. Let us call the former of these conditions, Con- crete Intervals, and the latter, Discrete Intervals: one being, figuratively, a rising or falling stream of voice, the other a voice- less space. The first, third, and fifth notes of the diatonic scale, to which the octave, as a concording repetition of the first is usually added, differ from the other notes in being more agreeable to the ear when heard in combination, and in immediate succession. The degrees in this order, are ^lso more readily 'hit' by an inex- perienced voice, in an endeavor to execute the several discrete intervals of the scale : and that simple instrument the Jews-harp, and some species of the Horn more readily yield these successive notes, under the faltering attempts of a learner. When there- fore the pupil takes his lesson on the scale, let him familiarize his ear to the succession of its first, third, fifth and octave notes ; omitting the intermediate degrees. Frequent reference will be made hereafter, to his perceptions on this point. I give a representation of the manner in which musicians set their symbols for the diatonic sounds, on that linear Table called the Staff. The staff consists of five horizontal and parallel lines, having four spaces between them. Each space and line represents a degree of the scale; so that from one space or line to the next line or space, is a second; and these degrees are called conjoint or proximate. When the discrete movement is over a wider interval than a second, it is called a Skip ; and the degrees are said to be Remote. The succession of the scale is here marked 80 DIVISIONS AND EXPLANATIONS. by disks, rising from the lowest line to the highest space of the staff; the intervals of the semitones being designated by a brace. ~z: -&- ML I have thus endeavored to describe the continuous or Concrete movement of sound; and its discrete or interrupted progression through the diatonic scale. As there are but two semitones in the scale, it is necessary, for the accommodation of instruments with fixed keys, to subdi- vide the whole tones. The manner of the subdivision may be thus described.* In any series of seven notes, as the first marked in the pre- ceding vertical diagram of the scale, and in that of the white keys of the key-board, let us assume for this subdivision of whole tones, the Fifth, as the first or key-note of a new order. This with its octave, will extend to the place numbered twelve. Six of its places in their rising order of notes, from five to ten, will have right positions ; and thus far, the intervals of tone and semi- tone will exhibit the proper successions of the diatonic scale. But the interval between the tenth and eleventh is a semitone, and that between the eleventh and twelfth a tone; whereas, by the rule for constructing the scale, the order should be reversed. For the tenth, eleventh, and twelfth notes marked in the diagrams, are respectively the sixth, seventh, and eighth of the new order, assumed from the fifth. When therefore the tone, or interval from eleven to twelve, is subdivided into two semitones, as shown * As the Reader has learned above, the form, and places of the semitone, it is not essential that he should strictly attend to the detailed explanation, in the two following paragraphs ; for most of it is not applicable to speech. I say this, only in reference to his finding it difficult. In letting him know, there is a succession of degrees, called the Semitonic Scale, I describe the manner of its construction; for with a knowledge of this, his views of the relations between Music and Speech will be more extended and precise. Let him then learn it, if not too troublesome^ being mindful to read the last two sentences of the second paragraph. DIVISIONS AND EXPLANATIONS. 81 by a cross in the vertical diagram, and by a black key below the star in that of the key-boardj and the transit is then made from the tenth place, to this point of division^ two semitones, making one whole tone, are passed over; the interval from this point of division to the twelfth is a semitone, and thus the constituent in- tervals of the diatonic scale in this new order, are obtained. To continue a subdivision of the whole tones of the scale, by rising a fifth on the previous order, would soon carry us beyond the limit of our diagrams. But we must observe, that the fifth above a key-note, holds the same relative position in a scale, as the fourth below it. If then, for the key-note of a third order, we take the fifth above the key-note of the second order, or the fourth below it, they will be respectively the ninth and the second of the diagrams; and these are considered the same, because they each have the like position of second in the two orders, of the key-board. Thus a subdivision of the whole tone, between the fifteenth and sixteenth, on the key-board, if the fifth above is taken, or between the eighth and ninth if the fourth belowj will, with the subdivision in the preceding order, give the constituent diatonic intervals of this third order. And progressively, by taking the fifth above the key-note of the previous order, or the fourth below itj and using the previous subdivisions, every place of the scale may become the first of an order; and every whole tone may thereby be divided, as shown by the black keys in the diagram of the key-board. This division produces a series of semitones. When therefore the progression is made by them, the order of degrees is called the Semitonic, or more commonly the Chromatic Scale. But it is necessary for the future history of speech, that the succession of discrete sounds should be exhibited under still more reduced divisions. These consist in a discrete transition through the scale, by intervals much smaller than a semitone; each point being as it were, rapidly touched by a momentary and abrupt emission of voice. This description may be ilustrated by the manner of that noise in the throat called gurgling, and by the neighing of a horse. The analogy here regards principally the momentary duration, frequency, and abruptness of sound; for the gurgling is generally made by a quick iteration on one urn- 82 DIVISIONS AND EXPLANATIONS. varying or level line of pitch. But in the scale now under con- sideration, each successive pulse of sound is taken at a Minute Discrete-interval above the last, till the series reaches the octave. We cannot tell the precise extent of this minute interval, nor the number of pulses in given portions of the scale ; since this func- tion is executed in a manner, and with a rapidity that eludes dis- crimination. Nor is this point material now. My purpose requires it to be known, that the voice may rise and fall, with short and abrupt iterations, through the several intervals of pitch, by dis- crete steps, less than a semitone. Whether the discrete space is that fractional part of a tone called a comma, or some division or multiple of it, we leave to be determined by other means than that of the ear alone. Let us then call this species of movement, the Tremulous Scale. We have described four kinds of progression in pitch; and though in speaking of the concrete, its slide was not called a scale, since its unbroken line has no analogy with the inter- rupted steps of a discrete succession; yet with a full comprehen- sion of its construction, there can be no objection to its being so called. There are then Four scales of pitch. The Concrete; in which, from the outset to the termination of the voice, either in rising or falling, there is no appreciable interval, or interruption of con- tinuity. The Diatonic; wherein the discrete transitions are principally by whole tones. The Chromatic; consisting of a discrete succession of semi- tones: and, The Tremulous ; which with its momentary impulses, separated from each other by very minute intervals^ has never, as far as I know, been employed on musical instruments, in an upward and a downward progression; the tremolo being a tremor on a straight line of pitch ; and the Trill or Shake being as will be shown here- after, a totally distinct function. The extent through which the speaking voice is used in any of these four scales, within the limits of distinct articulation, is called the Compass of Speech.* * There is a musical scale, described by the Greeks, but used only at an early period, called the Enharmonic; which however, has no relation to the natural DIVISIONS AND EXPLANATIONS. 83 For the purpose of explanation, the scales have been repre- sented separately, though in the practice of the voice they are system of speech; yet from the term 'Enharmonic voice,' employed without explanation by Dionysius Thrax, a Greek grammarian, who lived shortly before the Christian era^ it seems to have been infered, that the spoken intonation of the Ancients was somehow formed on this scale: and though Mr. Steele suffered his observation to be so far overruled by the vague authority of this inference, as to give the diagram of his proposed scale with what he calls an enharmonic division^ perhaps a short account of this division, may convince the Reader, as we procede, that it could not have been employed in the proper intonation of what we shall consider Natural speech. The Greek musical scale consisted of only three intervals, embraced between four degrees, as marked by the strings of their instruments, and was therefore called the Tetrachord. The moderns have made their scale an Octachord, or Octave, by joining two successive Greek scales, with a tone between them: for in our octave, from C to F, and again from G to C, each of the two sets of four degrees, has the like order of their constituent tones and semitones; showing that the tetrachord scale is just half of ours. Our music employs but one proper scale, the diatonic; for the chromatic is not an independent one, on which a melody can be made with its semitones alone; but is formed, for occa- sional use, by dividing the whole tonesj that the semitones may be employed in other places, than the two which are proper to them, in the natural diatonic succession. Neither in music nor in song, do we technically recognize the Concrete and the Tremulous Scales: and it was the same with the Greeks. The Greek writers describe six different scales ; three chromatic ; two dia- tonic; and one enharmonic, formed respectively, by certain subdivisions of the scale into intervals of different extent. For ilustration however, we will de- scribe only, what they called the Intense diatonic, and the Enharmonic. Sup- pose the Tetrachord to be divided into sixty parts; and let C, D, E and F be the places, or degrees, including its three intervals ; 24 to represent the tone; 12 the semitone; and 6 the quarter-tone, called diesis, or the enharmonic interval. The Intense-diatonic Tetrachord, which is, when doubled, and united by a tone, the same we now employe was arranged as follows: C Tone. D Tone. E Semitone. 21 24 12 The Enharmonic tetrachord thus: C Ditone. D Diesis. E Diesis. F 48 6 6 Now as 48, the double of 24, make two tones; and six, the fourth or quarter of 24, the diesis; the enharmonic arrangement is that of a ditone or major third and two successive quarter-tones. The Greeks themselves state, that the musical use of this scale was vei'y dif- ficult; and in later times was altogether laid aside: neither of which, as cause or consequence, could have occurred if there had been a natural character in it; 84 DIVISIONS AND EXPLANATIONS. variously united; speech making use of them all. The con- crete is always found; and we shall hereafter learn in what manner the diatonic, chromatic, and tremulous scales are con- nected with it. The term 31elody is, in music, applied to a regulated vocal or to an instrumental use of the diatonic and chromatic scales. The full meaning of the term embraces the further relations of time, rythmus, and pause. I here speak of pitch alone. That effect in music called melody, is produced by the use of the seven notes of the scale, in any agreeable order of their possible permuta- tions, either in a Proximate or -Skipping progression. We shall learn hereafter, that the Melody of Speech is founded on a like principle of varied intervals ; yet with peculiarities, arising from for certainly, a continued tune on a succession of its intervals would, to a modern and natural ear, until fashion should recommend it, be altogether inef- fective, or very abominable. Consistently with this view, we shall learn here- after, that speech makes no specifically distinct nor appreciable use of the quar- ter-tone: showing how the history of the human voice has in this as in so many other ways, been falsified and confused. The other four scales seem to have had no more of a natural condition, than the Enharmonic; and this leads to the conclusion, that like ourselves, the Greeks used the diatonic as the only scale for agreeable melody, and for any harmony they may have known and practiced. But why should all the Greek writers have named their other scales, if they never used them ? This we cannot answer: though we might class the ques- tion with the whole design of their metaphysics, which was to dream, write, and wrangle about things, never to be used or even comprehended. But laying aside, for a moment, our prescribed rules for observing, reflecting, and writing, we will offer a passing conjecture and no more, upon it. Since the ear for music, like the eye for Euclid's circle and square, and the tongue for wormwood and honey, is the same now, that it was among the Greeks^ we can account for their being satisfied with their unnatural scales, by supposing^ First; that a few particular phrases of ritual chants, or of choral responses^ formed out of the peculiar succession of the notes of these scales, on some early and imperfect instrument-^ were so closely connected with the Temple Service, the Sacrifice, or the Procession, or with a Popular Obstinacy in some rude vocal habit, as to reconcile the ear to any oddity and dissonance. Or, second ; by supposing, the unnatural melodies or successions on these scales, to be traditions of the canting shouts of barbarian Festivals, originally excited by some wild religious working on the voices after its manner of working on the eye, in making to itself, without a revolting of truth or taste, the graven image of its Gods, in every outrageous contortion of the human form. But these conjectures are apart from the design of this Work. DIVISION'S AND EXPLANATIONS. 85 a systematic use of its concrete, discrete, and tremulous move- ments, and from its not being affected by the doctrine of what in music is called, Key. The term Key is applied to each of the several orders of the diatonic scale, on musical instruments. And as it appears by the diagram of the key-board, that the Semitonic divisions of the whole tones of the scale make twelve places^ from each of which a diatonic succession may be arrangedj so the scale of the piano- forte admits of twelve different keys; and these being subdivided into Flat and Sharp Keys, make twenty-four in all; but these have no regard to speech. The first note of the succession is called as we said formerly, the key-note. The relationship of this to the other notes of the scale is such, that a melody will appear unfinished, if its last sound be not the key-note of the scale, or the octave to it* which is its nearest concord. It is a condition in music, that a melody formed of the varied permutations of the notes of any one key, shall not employ the constituent notes of another. Thus in the vertical diagram, there is the first order, with its key-note at number one; and a second with its key-note at five. To form this second order we divided the tone between the eleventh and twelfth pointsj to obtain the second semitone of the diatonic scale; and it appears that all the notes are common to the two orders, except the seventh of the second, marked eleven in the diagram. But a melody or tune begun on the first order, cannot employ that eleventh, and be agreeable to the ear, except with a design to leave the first order, and afterwards to carry on the tune altogether by the order of the second. This transition from one order to another is called Modulation, or Changing the key. It is employed in vocal and instrumental music, but is not applicable to speech. The term Intonation signifies the act of performing the move- ments of pitch through any interval of the several scales, whether in speech, in song, or in instrumental use. It therefore regards, only the changes of sound between acuteness and gravity. Into- nation is said to be correct or true, when the discrete steps, or concrete slides over the intended interval are made with exact- ness. True intonation in speech means further* the just use of its intervals, for denoting the states of mind in thought and 86 DIVISIONS AND EXPLANATIONS. passion. Deviation from this precision is called, singing, or play- ing, and it may be hereafter, Speaking out of tune.* The term Cadence in music, means, a consummation of the desire for a full close in the melody, by the resting of its last sound in the key-note. It "will be shown hereafter, that the cadence or close of speech is effected in a different manner. I have thus endeavored to prepare the Reader for all that relates to the science and nomenclature of music, in the following description of speech. When a full knowledge of the modes, forms, and uses of the voice will have become familiar, through general instruction and practice, the Art of Speaking will seem to offer less difficulty, by having an admitted system and nomen- clature of its own. Now, we are obliged to study another art, to make an Art of it. In whatever way a pupil may learn or be taught to recognize and to execute the intervals of the scale, let me here again call his attention to the necessity of making himself familiar with a perception of the concrete and discrete movementj when formed not only on simple vowel sounds, but on sylables, the common ground of intonation in speech. Let the pupil then, on any syl- able capable of prolongation, rise concretely, from the first degree of the scale, to the octave; and from this, immediately return concretely to the first degree, while the effect of the extent of the rising octave remains upon the ear. In like manner, let him ascend and descend through the concrete fifth, third, second, and semitone. * Instead of the term Intonation, which embraces in music, the doctrine of intervals, and their exact execution^ the words Inflection and Modulation have been used by writers, to express only a general and obscure perception of some variation of pitch, in the speaking voice. So entirely have they seemed to over- look the analogy between the scale of music, and of speech, that the English term Intonation, which has been used in the former art, at least a century, to denote the precise recognition of intervals^ is not, with this meaning, to be found, as far as I can learn, in any of the numberless books on elocution, published within this period. Mr. Sheridan incidentally employs this term; but with no reference to intervals and their expression, and only in the indefinite meaning of the phrase^ 'tones of the voice.' Baily restricts intonation soley to music. Dr. Johnson limits it to the 'act of thundering.' In application to speech, it is at last finding its way into Dictionaries. I need not say, how often, the descrip- tion of speech, founded on the identity of its intervals with those of music, will hereafter require the use of this term. DIVISIONS AND EXPLANATIONS. 87 For acquiring familiarity with the discrete intervals of speech, the intonation should be performed by means of two sylables. Thus, taking the word gaily, let the pupil begin at the first degree of the scale, with gai, and by a skip, strike the octave with ly: then, in immediate return, while memory of the interval serves him, take gai at the octave, and descend to the first, on ly. In a similar manner, let the voice be exercised on the discrete fifth, third, second, and semitone. Facility in executing the concrete semitonic movement of speech, is to be attained by plaintively repeating the interjection ah, both ascending and descending, between the seventh and eighth degrees of the diatonic scale. The pupil will acquire a ready command over the tremulous intonation, by practicing the characteristic tremor of this scale, through the semitone with a plaintive expression, and with laugh- ter, or exultation, through the other intervals. By frequent practice of these several intonations on single syl- ables, the voice will be prepared for the precise use of intervals, in the sylabic successions of speech. The preceding explanations have been extended rather beyond what is absolutely necessary, for comprehending the proper science of Analytic Elocution, now to be first set-forth. Thus the function of Key and of Modulation in music, has been de- scribed with some care, although speech is not constructed upon the principles of either. It may not however, be uninteresting to some inquirers, to know wherein the differences of the cases consist. The term Elocution is applied throughout this Work to signify the vocal Representation of thought and passion; and properly includes every form of correct Reading, and of Public, and Colo- quial Speech. And yet we shall, by license, often apply the terms Reading and Speaking, each as that of Elocution, to desig- nate the whole of the Art. The words Recitation, Delivery, and Declamation, as well as those designating public Places, and Pro- fessions, are not here technically, if at all, employed in reference to vocal character. Styles of elocution may differ, within the rule for justly denoting passion and thought ; and this rule should direct alike the style of the Advocate, the Witness, and the Judge; 88 THE RADICAL AND of the Pulpit, the Stage and the Senate; of the Stump-orator; and of the varied voices of conversation. Had there been a more abundant and precise knowledge, of how language should be spoken, there would have been much less said of the Person and the Place. If I should employ the term Reading-aloud, it will not be in contradistinction to ocular perusal. To read, as a term of Elocu- tion, always means to read-aloud. I may however use the term Silent Reading, to signify, not ocular perusal^ but the future mental reading of a notation on the staff of speech; in like man- ner as the notes of music are silently read on the staff of song, by the vocalist, and composer; for I shall endeavor hereafter to show, that a knowledge of the constituents and principles of sci- entific speech, is as attainablej and an application of them, as practicable and easyj as in the case of scientific music. I adopt from the old Elocutionist, the term 'Reading- well,' and preserve it, as a memorial of the style even of his school, having generally been so bad, that it became necessary to distinguish an occasional individual from the herd, by his accomplishment in Reading-well. I feel how perplexing it is, I was about to say, it is impossible by description alone, to render the separate parts of a science, so well divided in method yet so closely related in detail, as that of music, clearly inteligible. If what has been said, will enable the Reader to perceve the system and particulars of the Pour Scales, and to execute them, he will not have much difficulty in pursuing our further history of a new and beautiful Physical Science of the Human Voice. SECTION II. Of the Radical and Vanishing movement of the voice; and its different forms in Speech, Song, and Recitative. We have been willing to beleve, on faith alone, that Nature is wise in the ordination of speech. Let us now show by our works VANISHING MOVEMENT. 5y of analysis, in what manner, and with what a perfection of economy, that cannot surpass itself, she manages the simple constituents of the voice, in the production of their unbounded combinations.* When the letter a, as heard in the word day, is pronounced simply as an alphabetic element, without intensity or emotion, and as if it were a continuation, not a close of utterance, two dipthongal sounds are heard continuously successive. The first has the nominal sound of this letter, and issues with a certain degree of fulness. The last is the element e, as heard in eve, gradually diminishing to an attenuated close. During the pro- nunciation, the voice rises continuously by the concrete move- ment through the interval of a tone or second; the beginning of a, and the termination of e, being severally the inferior and supe- rior extremes of that tone. The character of this concrete rise is visibly represented in the first of the following diagrams. But as a curvature of lines seems to afford a more graceful analogy to the peculiar effect of the vocal concrete, it will through this Work appear as in the second. As the above description may not, from the limited extent of the concrete, its delicate structure, and momentary duration, be * As I profess, in this Work, to draw the history of the human voice, alto- gether from observation by the ear, and experiment with the tongue, it will be convenient, and even necessary^ from the constant reference to the combined agencies that make up the system of speech^ to have some brief term to desig- nate what we suppose to be the directive principle, or general agent over these subordinate and perceptible agencies. I have therefore in the text, adopted an abstract sign for all these agencies, and their effects^ in the word Nature; a word often taken in error, and in vain, but not yet obsolete. This Term, this Nature^ I use every where, and always with the same meaning when personified, as the representative of an all-sufficient, and ever-present system of causes; which in the broad wisdom of its ordination, and universal consistency of its effects, is the bright and unchanging example of truth, and right, and goodness, and beauty; and worthy of unceasing study and imitation^ for beginning, with- out delusive hopes, the intelectual, the political, the moral, and esthetic refine- ment of man. 00 THE RADICAL AND at once recognized, I shall endeavor to throw some particular light of explanation upon it. That the sound denoted by the letter a, thus uttered concretely, has the dipthongal character, will be obvious on deliberately drawing out this single element, as a question put with great surprise. For in this case, its commencement is what I have called the nominal a> and its termination in e, at a high pitch, is no less distinguishable. By the same use of an earnest interrogation, the fulness, or greater volume of sound upon a, and the diminishing close in e, will be obvious to an attentive ear. Nor is it improbable^ the feebleness of this last constituent of a, in ordinary pronunciation, is at least one cause, why the dipthongal structure of this element has never, as far as I know, been perceved, or described. That a, uttered simply as the head of the alphabet, without remarkable expression, and as a continuation, not a close of speechj does ascend through the concrete interval of a tone, will be manifest to the Reader, by his ability to intonate the diatonic scale. For let him ascend discretely, by the alternate use of a and e, prolonging each as a note, and making a slight pause be- tween them. This will render him familiar with the relationship of the two elements, when heard on the extremes of a tone: as ilustrated by the following diagram; where from line to line is E- one degree, or a tone of the scale; where the oval figures with their attenuated rising terminations, represent respectively the level or protracted note, with its final, faint, and rapid concrete issue in e; and where the different sizes of the subscribed letters may show the proportional duration and volume of voice, in the different parts of each impulse of pronunciation. Then let him ascend the scale, by a kind of union of the con- crete and discrete progressions; that is, by beginning with a, VANISHING MOVEMENT. 91 slightly prolonged, and proceding to e, in the second place, without breaking the continuity of sound; and thence after slightly prolonging e, passing concretely to a, in the third place, as ilustrated by the following diagram; where full notes are con- nected by slender concretes. This practice will make him familiar with the effect of a concrete rise through a tone, when the upper extreme is rendered remarkable, by the stress and prolongation it receves at the second place of the scale. A- -E- Supposing the concrete interval of a tone to be distinguish- able, when thus uttered with a full volume of sound on the two extremes a and e, or with what may be called a double stress or stress on the two extremes of the concrete^ it may be proved in the following manner, that the simple utterance of a in day, passes through the same interval. Let the a and e be repeatedly pronounced with this double stress, united by the weaker con- crete, till the effect of the interval is for the moment impressed upon the ear. Then let the stress on e be gradually diminished in the repetition; as ilustrated by the series of symbols in the following diagram. The audible effect of the last of the series, -E A — e A— e A- A. even with a total cessation of the upper stress, will in intonation, so resemble, yet faintly, the double stress on the first, that the cases will be admitted as identical. The tone being then plainly conizable as the first interval of the scale, when both extremes receve the stress^ so in returning to the simple pronunciation of 92 THE RADICAL AND a, by gradually diminishing the stress at its upper extremity, the perception of this interval will be kept up through the progress of the change. In the above experiment we have, to suit the order of our history, begun with the limited interval of a tone; but for proof of the concrete function, it will be more obvious when made on the expressive interval of the fifth or octave. If there should be a doubt, as to the extent of the concrete interval, let stress be applied at its summit. When the interval is a tone, the two stressed sounds will form the first two notes of the diatonic scale; for with a little experience, the course of this scale can always be recognized,- in the execution of its first and second degrees. The simple dipthongal sound of a, without the summit-stress, does then, as we have ilustrated it, pass through the concrete in- terval of a tone or second; the movement being divided between the sounds of a and e, the first gliding into the last. But as the distinction here refers to the extent of the interval traversed, to its upward direction, and to its concrete progress^ it is necessary to utter the literal element, without the least expression; for if it be with plaintiveness, surprise, or interrogation or as a positive command, the concrete will be some other interval than the tone; this tone or second, being the manner of uttering simple thought, exclusively of passion. The peculiar structure of the concrete movement led to the division of it by terms, into two parts; and the use of these terms, for explanatory purposes in the following history, will show their propriety. I have called the first part of the concrete, or that of a, in the above instance, the Radical movement; since, with a full be- ginning or opening, the subsequent and diminishing portion of the concrete procedes from it as from a base or root. I have called the last part, or that of e, in the example, the Vanishing movement, from its becoming gradually weaker as it rises, and finally dying away in the upper extreme of the tone. It must strike the Reader, that the above terms can have only a general reference to the two extremes of the concrete^ for the gradual change of the radical into the vanish prevents our assign- ing an exact point of distinction between them. VANISHING MOVEMENT. 93 When a single vowel sound, capable of prolongation, is uttered with propriety and smoothness, and without emotion, it com- mences full and somewhat abruptly, and gradually decreases in its upward movement, until it becomes inaudible; having the in- crements of time and rise, and the decrements of fulness, equably progressive. Or, supposing a gradual diminution of fulness, in the gradual rise through a tone to be effected in a given timej one half or smaller fraction of that rise and diminution will be ef- fected in one half or smaller fraction of that time. Let us call this form of the radical and vanishing movement, the Equable Concrete. The varied forms of the vocal function in Song and Recita- tive, may ilustrate the character of this equability in the into- nation of speech. The long-drawn voice of one continued pitch, heard in song and recitative, is produced in two ways. First ; by giving a greater proportion of time and volume to one continuous and level line of sound, in the radical place; and by subsequently rising concretely, lightly, and rapidly, through the superior portion of the interval. Let us call this, the Pro- tracted Radical. Second; by rising concretely, lightly, and rapidly through the inferior portion of the interval, and then prolonging the voice with greater volume, on a level line at the highest point of the vanish. Let us call this, the Protracted Vanish. Thus far, intonation exhibits three modifications of the radical and vanishing movement: The Equable Concrete of speech; the Protracted Radical, and the Protracted Vanish, both of which are used in song and recitative. We shall learn, as we procede, the various relationships of the concrete to all the simple and compounded intervals, to the alphabetic elements, to time, and to force. I.have spoken of the radical and vanishing movement through a tone, to explain by that interval, the formation of the concrete rise, and its threefold division. But in taking a wider survey of the subject, we learn> the radical and vanish is made on every other interval. Ascending concretely, from the seventh to the eighth degree 94 THE RADICAL AND of the scale, by a and e, in the manner of the second diagram on the ninety-first page, that is, by laying a stress on the two extremes of this interval^ the voice has a plaintive character, very different from that of the tone, or interval between the first and second. The interval from the seventh to the eighth place of the diatonic scale, is a semitone. This plaintive con- crete therefore, when attenuated, and made equable by gradu- ally diminishing the stress at its upper extreme, shown in the successive symbols of that diagram^ is the radical and vanishing or equable concrete movement of a semitone. Again, in ascending concretely upon a and e, from the first to the third place of the scale, with a stress on e, in that third place, the effect of this continuous movement differs from that of the tone, and the semitone; for it resembles a moderate degree of in- terrogation on the element a. This concrete, when attenuated or made equable, by gradually diminishing the stress at its upper extreme, is the radical and vanishing or equable concrete move- ment of a third. By a process analogous to that just proposed, for distinguish- ing the interval of a third, we may ascertain the concrete move- ment of a fifth, and of an octave; for these, with stress at their upper extremes, have earnest interrogative expressions. Then by diminishing the stress, directed in the former cases, we have respectively, the equable radical and vanishing movements of the fifth and octave. In this manner, the ear perceves in their varied characters, the several vocal movements of an equable Rising radical and vanish- ing semitone, of a tone or second, of a major third, a fifth, and an octave. These intervals have their proper significations in the expression of speech, and will be particularly noticed here- after. The above description represents the Concrete rise of the several intervals. But the Discrete scale is likewise used in speech; and its skipping intervals are, perhaps, as readily dis- tinguishable as the gliding intervals of the concrete. When therefore we are able to ascend the discrete steps of the diatonic scale, in proximate succession, and to recognize its wider in- VANISHING MOVEMENT. 95 tervals, we have only to mark, by some vowel-sound, the first and second, and the seventh and eighth degrees of the scale, and thus to form respectively the discrete rising tone or second, and the semitone. In like manner by skipping through the other in- tervals, we shall have a discrete rising third, fifth, and octave. Let us consider another condition of the radical and vanish. We have viewed the concrete of the voice only in its rising pro- gress. There is a similar glide in a doivnward direction respect- ively through all the intervals of the scale. In this downward form of the concrete, we take the scale numerically, as in its up- ward course; the like number of degrees constituting intervals of the same name, in each direction. For this descending progress, music employs the terms, a second, third, fifth, and octave, below ; whereas, for the intonations of speech, I shall generally use the adjective-term downward, or descending, or falling, to denote this direction on the scale. Refering then to our former experiments, if the bow be drawn while the finger is moving continuously, from the eighth place on the string to any distance downward, it will produce a concrete descending sound. In this way, the falling concrete will have the described properties of the rising radical and vanish, with this difference only-; the radical, if it may now be so called, is here at the summit of the interval, while the vanish equably diminishes to its lower extreme. To render the extent of a downward interval perceptible, let the stress be applied to the extremity of its descending vanish, and then in repetition gradu- ally diminished, as ilustrated by the second diagram, on the ninety-first page, when taken in an inverted position, from right to left. Thus exemplified, the movement from a, at the eighth degree of the scale, to e, in the seventh, will give the downward equable-concrete semitone; from the second to the first, the down- ward-equMe-tone ; and in this manner, a descent from the third, fifth, and eighth degree, respectively to the first, will give the downward radical and vanishing or equable-concrete third, fifth, and octave. The downward movement is likewise made in the discrete pro- gression. This may be readily heard on the Piano, and other instruments with a scale of fixed degreesj by striking in succes- 96 THE RADICAL AND sion, the extreme notes of the required interval; and in the voice, by a unison-imitation of these instrumental sounds, upon vowels or sylablesj thereby exemplifying a downward discrete octave, fifth, third, second, and semitone. He who is acquainted with the musical scale, but has not yet considered it with reference to speech, may ascertain the upward course of the tone and of the semitone, on a vowel, by comparing their effects respectively with those of the first and last interval of the rising scale. In like manner, he may know the downward course of the semitone and of the tone, by comparing them re- spectively with the first and the last interval of the descending scale. Every one knows a plaintive expression in speech; it is easy therefore to recognize a semitone. And perhaps there is not too much confidence in asserting, that before the attentive and competent Reader has finished this essay, he will have no more difficulty in discriminating every other important interval of the rising and falling scale. I say nothing here of a concrete radical and vanishing fourth, sixths and seventh; nor of wider ranges than the octave; nor of the discrete movement through these intervals; not that the voice in an upward and a downward course does not use them, but that a reference to the third, fifth, and octave, is sufficiently precise for the purpose of our history. Besides the above-described forms of the concrete and discrete movements, both in an upward and downward direction, there is a continuous course of the rising into the falling concrete^ and reversely, a continuity of the falling into the rising. This form of the radical and vanish will be particularly noticed hereafter under the name of the Wave. We will call it Direct, when the first interval ascends, and the second descends; Inverted, when this order of the intervals is reversed; Equal, when the rising and the falling are in extent the same; and Unequal, when dif- ferent. It is called Single, when two intervals only are thus joined: Double, when another is subjoined to the second of the single form : and Continued, when the number of flexures excede the double. The wave is made through all the intervals of the scale; and its different forms may be variously united with each VANISHING MOVEMENT. 97 other. Thus it may be double-direct, unequal direct, double-un- equal, and in short, its intervals may be in all possible combi- nations. But I have not yet finished the preparatory explanations. The simple radical and vanish may, in its rise and its fall, receve a Fulness or Force, or accentual stress, under the six following forms. First. The radical of the equable movement, as previously shown, is distinguished from the rest of the concrete, by its initial stress. Second. While the proportion of radical to vanish re- mains unaltered, the whole equable concrete may be magnified by unusual force. Third. The voice may be swelled, on a concrete, or on a wave, to an impressive fulness, at the middle of its course. Fourth. There may be an unusual stress at each extremity of the concrete. Fifth. While the radical is reduced in fulness, the vanishing extremity may have a forcible termination. Sixth. The concrete or the wave may have the fulness and force of the radical throughout its whole extent. As there will be frequent occasions to discriminate between these accentual conditions of the radical and vanish, and its equable structure, I shall employ the phrase Simple Concrete, to distinguish the latter from its variations by force or fulness, at its several points or on the whole of its course. I have in the present and the preceding section endeavored to take a general survey of the five modes of Yocality, Time, Force, Abruptness, and Pitchj preparatory to a detail of their respective forms, varieties, and degrees, in denoting the states and purposes of the mind; and shall hereafter make a division of these states and purposes, into that of plain unexcited Thought, and that of the expressive degrees of Passion; particularly describing the vocal sign appropriate to each. The following diagrams may ilustrate the various foregoing descriptions. The lines and spaces denote places of pitch; the proximate succession of line and space being that of a second or tone. These lines and spaces differ from the staff of the musical system ; the latter being founded on the diatonic scale, denotes in certain places, the interval of a semitone; whereas the lines and spaces for the notation of speech signify always, the succession of 98 THE RADICAL AND a tone, except otherwise specified. The full black symbols on these lines and spaces, with their issuing and tapering appendages of various extent, represent the opening fulness, direction, and diminution of the radical and vanishing movement. The distances between the radicals of the concrete seconds, thirds, fifths, and octaves, severally represent the discrete intervals. Time is re- presented as in music: the open elipse signifying the longest: the small head and stem, with its two hooks to denote the dura- tion of the vanish, being in this case, the sixteenth part of the open elipse. Except for the protracted radical, and vanish, the notation of Time will not be here employed. A use of the measur- able relations of Time, with the proportional value of its symbols, is indispensable to the melodial rythmus, and. to the concerted harmonies of music. But speech being a solo of intonation, and requiring no conformity in time with other voices^ the use of Quantity on successive sylables, is left to the thought or passion which directs the appropriate utterance. These diagrams represent three of the five modes of the voicej Pitch, Abruptness, and Time. Vocality has never, to my knowl- edge, had a symbol either in music or speech: yet there is no cause why it might not and should not, when remarkable in its differences, be so represented. Force is vaguely indicated by the usual grammatical marks for accent and emphasis, and by italic type. But should this analysis and system be ever generally adopted; and the purposes of speech require itj appropriate sym- bols for Vocality, Force, and Time, may without much difficulty be connected with the forms of the equable concrete, and the wave. VANISHING MOVEMENT. 99 I have not given symbols for the concrete and discrete minor third, and semitone, since their representation on the staff may he easily made. Concrete Rising Tone. 1 Concrete Tone. Concrete Rising Third. 1 Concrete * Downward Third. Protracted Radical. Protracted Vanish. 1 / i^ 1 1 T I <^A 1 .JO. Concrete || Rising Fifth. Concrete Downward ■ a Fifth. i Concrete Rising Octave. ( Concrete Downward Octave. ^j— s m ( *l ( f i fll V . 1 f or Jk V Equal-single-di- rect wave of the second. Equal-single-in- fifth. Unequal single- direct, of the fifth and third. Unequal-inverted, of the third and . Octave. * Double-equal- direct, of the Third. Double-unequal- inverted, of the third, fifth, and third. 4& i ^ -fey-^^ W J ^ € ^ / " : - fc ^ w ,^/ , Forms of accentual fulness or stress on the Concrete. I I I ! f I 2 3 In the above notation, there is no meaning in the curve of the vanish, except on the wavesj nor in the circular enlargement of the radical. In this, as formerly remarked, the eye only was 100 THE RADICAL AND consulted; though I cannot say, the engraver has, in all cases, done justice to the drawing furnished.* I have here endeavored to describe, under its various forms, an important and delicate function of speech. There is a peculiarity in the human voice which has never been copied by instrumental contrivances. The sounds of the horn, flute, and musical-glass, may severally equal and even surpass in vocality a long-drawn, and level vocal note: still there is something wanting, that dis- tinguishes their intonation from that of speech. It is the want of the equable gliding, the lessening volume, and the soft ex- tinction of the yet inimitable radical and vanishing movement. And further; the simple utterance of the radical and vanish seems to be an instinctive and uncontrolable function of the voice: since to my observation, even the very shortest vocal impulse on a vowel or sylable, is not, so to speak, a mere point of sound with- out dimensions, but is necessarily made upward or downward through some, however rapid movement. This remark is true of the voices of many sub-animals. Does it apply to all? and even to common mechanical noises? In the course of this essay, I shall endeavor to obviate the effect of that repetition of its nomenclature, which the purpose of explanation and the newness of the subject might require^ by the use of various abbreviated but equivalent terms. Thus the Con- crete function will, according to the general or specific purpose in its use, be variously called the radical and vanishing movement ; * On first observing the peculiar character of the radical and vanish^ when my attention was sometimes misled by hasty conclusions, and while doubtfully experimenting on the form of melody^ I drew, partly after the pattern of a musical note, the symbol of the concrete as it still remains. And see, how that deceitful thing the mind with its resemblances, as we are prone to use them, should be watched. Upon the first draft of the ilustrations, the graceful lines of a Greek scroll seemed analogous to the delicate impression of the vocal van- ish; and the form then given to the symbol subsequently so influenced my per- ception, that perhaps I am not yet quite free from the thought that induced it. Although aware from the first, that the figurative representation of the radical and vanish should be by the outline of a spire, still the wedge-like sym- bol, especially if set obliquely on the staff, appeared too awkward a picture of this mastery no, this mistress-principle of the voice. I here offer an apology for my departure from correctness in the ilustration. If I have committed a fault I much regret it ; and thereupon write this note, to prevent a false impression on the mind of the Reader. VANISHING MOVEMENT. 101 the concrete movement, progression, interval, or pitch ; or simply the radical and vanish, or the concrete ; or the radical and van- ishing concrete tone, semitone, third, fifth, and octave. The Discrete function will be called the discrete movement, progression, change, skip, or pitch ; or the radical movement, change, progres- sion, skip, or pitch ; or the discrete tone, semitone, third, fifth, and octave. Each of the above phrases may have the specification of rise or fall, upward or downward, ascent or descent, according to the required purpose, or to any desirable variation of terms. Should the direction of the concrete, or of the radical not be specified or implied, the term is used for either rise or fall. As a general designation of the extent of intervals and wavesj all greater than those of the semitone and second will be called wider, to form a better rythmus than wide, in qualifying those terms of intonation. Let the Reader then not be alarmed at the variety of these terms; for at present he need only regard them for future refer- ence, if he should hereafter find it necessary. When he requires them, he will perhaps perceve, they are phrases connected so necessarily with the subject, that he himself might have made them. Indeed, a future wide companionship in the knowledge of speech, may have a shorter and more convenient nomenclature of its own. Let him however not be discouraged, by his first difficulty in discriminating the intervals of speech. There was muGh to per- plex and to threaten with despair, in the course of observation by which these intervals were first measured and described. Yet even these now palpable phenomena were not perceved at a mo- ment, as perhaps they might be, under a simple and real education of the senses and of thought. For the mirror of the mind ob- scured and distorted in its imagery, by a habitual occupation with little else than Fiction-? and Argument, too often the pro- vocative of fiction^ is not prepared to reflect the realities of nature without dimness or delay. The first perceptions by the author of this essay were full of indistinctness and doubt; far greater perhaps, than the inteligent Reader may experience from the descriptions in this section. Yet after three years familiarity with the dif- ferent intervals of intonation, their various degrees were much 102 ALPHABETIC ELEMENTS. more perceptible to him, than the discrimination of colors without direct comparison; and quite as distinguishable by their effect upon the ear in deliberate utterance, as the vocality, time, and force of sylabic sound. SECTION III. Of the Elementary Sounds of the English Language ; with their Relations to the Radieal and Vanishing Movement. The term Element is applied to the most simple form of the articulate voice; and is not otherwise used in this Essay. The element as a sound addressed to the ear, is to be distinguished from its visible symbol or letter ; though this is sometimes specified as an alphabetic element. The radical and vanishing concrete, under all its forms, is em- ployed on a limited number of these elementary sounds, said by some writers, whom I here follow, to amount in the English language, to thirty-five. It seems useless to raise a distracting question on the subject of the kind and number of the elements. As long as the human mind prefers contention, to practical agree- ment, there will perhaps be refinements and differences on this point. The thirty-five here assumed, afford all the distinctions required for the uses of this Work. And they have been found sufficient for practical purposes, by those who have no time nor fondness for dispute.* * English philologists have, according to their real or affected nicety of ear, differed on the subject of the number of the elements in our language. The differences refer to the character of the sounds, or to the time, or manner of pronouncing them. The broad sound of a in all, and of o in occupy have been enumerated as different. If there is a difference, it may consist in the abrupt utterance of oc, or the suddenness with which the sound breaks from the organs. A like distinction has been made between o in ooze, and u in bull; where the explosive accent seems to give the perceptible difference to the short vowel. Now this abruptness of voice is a generic function, or mode, applicable to all vowels, and therefore not a ground for specific distinction. It is however, of little practical consequence, whether cases like these are decided one way or the other. ALPHABETIC ELEMENTS. 108 An alphabet should consist of a separate symbol for every elementary sound. Under this view, the deficiencies, redun- dancies, and confusion of the system of alphabetic characters in the English language, prevent the adoption of its common grammatical subdivisions here. The sounds of the alphabetic elements are the material, and their combination into significant words, the formal causes of all language. It appears to me however, that a classification, according to their uses in other phenomena of speech, besides that of its articulation, would be practically useful as well as definitively just. But as Intonation is an important mode of speech, the arrangement of the elements if practically regarded, should have some reference to it. In the present section there- fore, these elements will be described and classed, according to their use in intonation.* * I set aside, in this place at least, the sacred division into vowels, conso- nants, mutes and semivowels. The complete history of nature will consist of a full description of all the interchangeable relationships, not of notions after the metaphysical manner, but of perceptible things. We receved the classifi- cation of the elements from Greek and Roman grammarians: and their division, according to organic causes, into labial, lingual, dental, and nasal, is now strictly a part of the physiology of speech. But whatever cause, connected with the vocal habits of another nation, or the etymologies of another tongue, may have justified the division into vowels and consonants according to their definition, it does not exist with us. Without designing to overlook or destroy arrangements, truly representing the relationships of these sounds, it is only intended in this essay to add to their history a division, grounded on their important functions in intonation. The strictness of philosophy should not be so far forgotten, as to suffer the claim of this classification to be exclusive. Let it remain as only a constituent portion, of new and wider prospects, yet to be opened in the art. Passing by other assailahle points of our immemorial system, the contradis- tinction of its two leading divisions is a misrepresentation. Had he an ear who said, and beleved^ a consonant cannot be sounded without the help of a vowel?. Among the thousand mismanagements of literary instruction, there is at the outset in the horn-book, a pretence to represent elementary sounds, by sylables composed of two or more elements, as^ Be, Kay, Zed, double U, and Aitch. These words are used in infancy and through life, as simple elements in the process of synthetic speling. But no error or oversight of the school should ever make us forget the realities of nature. Any pronouncing dictionary shows, that consonants alone may form sylables; and if they have never been appropriated to words which might stand solitary 104 ALPHABETIC ELEMENTS. As the number of elementary sounds in the English language excedes that of the literal symbols, and as some of these symbols, especially those of the vowels, are made to represent various sounds, without a rule for discrimination^ I shall endeavor to supply this want of precision, by using short words of known pronunciation, containing the elementary sounds with the letters that represent them, marked in italics; which the Reader may exemplify to himself. Let him begin to utter the word all; but the moment the sound of a is completed, let him pause ; and that initial sound gives one of the elementary sounds of a. In a like experiment with other initial vowels of selected examples, he will hear the precise sounds of the other vowel elements. Again, for the con- sonants. In the word bee, let him pause after the obscure ' gut- tural murmur ' of its first sound, and he will hear the element represented by the letter b. Or, otherwise: let him, in the instance of both vowel and con- sonant, prolong unusually the first element, before joining it to the next; and the single elementary vowel, and the single ele- mentary consonant will be respectively heard in that prolongation. The thirty-five Elements are now to be considered under their relationships to the radical and vanish. And as the properties of this function are, prolongation of sound, and variation of con- crete pitch, with initial force and final feebleness^ these elements should be regarded in their varied capacity for the display of these properties. With this view, our elements of articulation may be arranged under three general heads. The first division embraces sounds with the radical and vanish in its most perfect form. They are twelve in number ; and are heard in the usual sound of the separated italics, in the following words : A-\\ a-rt, a-n, a-\e, ou-r, i-sle, o-\d, ee-l, oo-ze, e-rr, e-nd, and z'-n. in a sentence, like the vowels a, i, o, a-h, and a-we, it is not because they cannot be so used; but because they have not that full and manageable kind of vocality, which exhibits the quantity, force, and intonation of an unconnected element, with sufficient emphasis and with agreeable effect. ALPHABETIC ELEMENTS. 105 From their being the purest and most manageable means for intonation, I have called them Tonic sounds. They consist of different sorts of Vocality^ or of that kind of voice in which we usually speak, and here contradistinguished from whisper or aspiration. They are produced by the joint functions of the larynx, fauces, and parts of the internal and external mouth. The tonicsj pronouncing the o, as in o-tj are of a more tunable voice than the other elements. They are capable of indefinite prolongation ; admit of the concrete and tremulous rise and fall, through all the intervals of pitch; may be uttered more forcibly than the other elements, as well as with more abruptness; and while these last two characteristics are appropriate to the fulness and stress of the raclicalj the attenuative prolongation, on their pure and controlable vocality, is finely accommodated to the van- ishing movement. Universally, they havej for the purposes of an agreeable intonation^ a eutony, briefly so to call it, beyond the other elements. The second division includes a number of sounds, possessing variously among themselves, a character similar to that of the tonics ; but differing in degree. They amount to fourteen ; and are marked by the sound of the separated italics, in the following words: i?-ow, d-are, #-ive, fl-ile, 2-one, y-e, w-o, th-en, a-3-ure, si-ng, l-ove, m-Skj, w-ot, r-ose. From their inferiority to the tonics, for all the emphatic and elegant purposes of speech, though they admit of being intonated or carried concretely through the intervals of the scale, I have called them Sulfonic sounds. They all have a vocality; in some it is combined with aspiration. B, d, g, ng, I, m, n, r, have an unmixed vocality ; v, z, y, w, th, z7i, have an aspiration joined with theirs. We have learned that the" vocality of the tonics is in each, peculiar. The vocality of some of the subtonics is apparently the same ; and among all, it does not greatly differ; resembling that of certain five of the tonics, to be described presently. Like the vocality of the tonics, it is formed in the larynx; but the sound in its outward course may have a modifying reverberation in the fauces, the mouth, and 8 106 ALPHABETIC ELEMENTS. the cavities of the nose. A few subtonic vocalities are purely nasal, asj m, n, ng, b, d, g. Others are purely oral. The nasal are soon silenced by closing the nostrils ; the rest are not materi- ally affected by it. The vocality of b, d, and g, may not be im- mediately perceved by those who have not, on the separate ele- ments, attained the full command of pronunciation. Writers have spoken of the vocality of these elements, under the name of 'guttural murmur,' and have regarded it as a peculiar sound. It is the vocality, heard in v, th-en, z, zh, and r, modified into the respective articulation of b, d and g. The vocality of b, d and g, in ordinary speech has less duration and intensity, and is conse- quently less perceptible than that of v, th-en, z, zh, and r, but is the same in kind. It is the vocality alone of b, that distinguishes it fromj9. I have enumerated y and w, as the initial sounds of ye and wo; since y is a vocality like that of the other subtonics, mixed with an aspiration over the tongue, when near the roof of the mouthj and io a similar vocality, mixed with a breathing through an aperture in the protruded lips. As b, d, g and zh are made by joining vocalities instead of aspirations, with the organic positions of p, t, 7c, and sh; so y and w are severally the mixture of vocality with the pure aspiration of h, as heard in he, and of wh, in wh-irYd. The substitution of vocality for aspiration changes these words respectively to ye and world. This vocality of the subtonics, either pure or mixed, nasal or oral, is variously modified by the nose, tongue, teeth and lips. An entire or partial obstruction of the current of breath through the mouth, and a subsequent removal of the obstruction, pro- duces the peculiar sound of the subtonics: for, on pronouncing b, d, and g, and it is the same with all, the voice breaks from its obstruction with a short and feeble terminative impulse. It is in the momentary terminative portion of subtonic sound, heard on removing this obstruction, that the character of the vocality, in some of these elements, may be most readily perceved. This voeula or little voice, if it may be so called, has been noticed by writers, as necessary to complete the utterance of the class of Mutes ; but it may be heard more or less conspicuously at the termination of all the subtonics. It is least perceptible in those ALPHABETIC ELEMENTS. 107 having the most aspiration. In ordinary utterance it is short and feeble ; and is most obvious in forcible or in affected pronun- ciation. When the subtonics precede the tonics, they lose this short and feeble termination, and take in its place the full sound of the succeeding tonicj thus producing an abrupt opening of the tonic. I have called this last-vented sound of the subtonics, the VocuUj, pronouncing o, as in o-yj and have been thus particular in noticing and naming it, as both the function and the term will be refered to, in treating on Sylabication, and on Expression. The five tonic sounds, to which the vocalities of the subtonics bear a resemblance, are ee-\, e-nd, z'-n, e-rr, and oo-ze. Y-e and tv-o have respectively something like a nasal echo of ee-\, and oo-ze. B, d, g, v, th-en, z, zli and r resemble e-rr; I, m, and n have something of the sound of e-nd ; and ng, of z'-n. The subtonics are subordinate to the tonics in their character and uses. The kind of sound is less agreeable. Compared with the clear vocal-fulness of the tonics, it is obscured in the purest ; and in others, is destroyed by aspiration. They are severally capable of more or less prolongation, and may be carried through the concrete and tremulous variation of pitch. None admit of much force in their vocality ; nor can initial fulness be given to them without extraordinary effort. These last named insufficien- cies prevent the subtonics from forming, like the tonics, a proper radical abruptness on the concrete. When therefore a subtonic precedes a tonic, as in the sylable vain, the vocality of v, com- pared with the vocality of a, is so feeble, that with only a common effort of utterance, there is an absence of the strong and sudden opening of the radical. The subtonic does indeed make a short initial to the sylable, and then breaks from its vocule into the succeding tonic. When prolonged, its tendency is to continue on one line of pitch until the tonic a opens from the vocality of v, with the true character of the radical. It must not from this, be concluded^ the subtonics can in nowise form the opening of a sylable; for all of them when separately uttered, may be carried concretely through every interval ; and even preceding a tonic, a strenuous effort may somewhat increase their volume, but cannot give them the abruptness of a proper radical. In ordinary pro- 108 ALPHABETIC ELEMENTS. nunciation, they are scarcely appreciated as a part of the initial concrete. This want of force and abruptness in a subtonic, does not pre- vent it from fulfiling the purpose of the vanish, when it succedes a tonic. Thus in the sylable van* after the short and feeble sound of vj the a, as we have said, begins the radical, and after rising through a portion of the interval, glides into the subtonic w, which carries on and completes the vanish. This coalescence seems to be the result of the tonics having no final occlusion, and conse- quently no vocule. The remaining nine elements, forming the third division, are Aspirations, and have not that kind of sound called vocality. They are produced by a current of whispering breath through certain internal and external parts of the mouth. They are heard in the sound of the separated italic, in the wordsj TJ-p, ou-t, ar-&, i-f, ye-s, h-e, wh-e&t, th-irt, pu-sA. From their limited power of variation in pitch, even when uttered singly with the designed effort to produce it, and from their supplying no part of the concrete when breathed among the tonic and subtonic constituents of sylables, I have called them Atonic sounds. On comparing their articulative production with that of some of the subtonics, we find them, respectively, almost identical in all their conditions except that of vocality, which is wanting in the atonies. % B. D. G. V. Z. Y. W. Th. Zh. % L. M. N. K. I I I I I I I II P. T. K. F. S. H.Wh. Th. Sh. Though this whispering imitation is not made on all the sub- tonicsj the five exceptions do not altogether destroy the inference that nature has her 'formative effort' towards a general rule of duplicature in these creations. The m, n, and ng are purely nasal; and when their vocality is dropped, the attempt to utter them by the mere breathing of the atonies, produces in each case similar snuffling aspirations. Yet even this snuffling, though no reputed element of speech, is used before the vocality of n, m, or ALPHABETIC ELEMENTS. 109 ng, as the inarticulate sign of sneer. The two remaining sub- tonics, I and r, are in perfect English speech, unmatched by atonies. But an aspirated copy of Z, produced by a kind of hiss- ing over the moisture of the tongue, is occasionally heard: and a true atonic parallel to r, in what is called the 'Northumbrian burr,' is in Britain, not an uncommon defect of utterance.* The Atonies, from the unfitness for intonation that furnished the etymology of their name, afford no vocal means for the radical and vanish. Most of them have a perceptible vocule, consisting of a short aspiration like the whispering of e-rr. They have no tunable sound; with only a power of prolongation, on a poor material: and though inferior in most of the purposes of speech, to the other elements^ it will be shown in treating of Expression, that the Aspiration is both significative, and emphatic. The enumeration under the preceding divisions includes all the elementary sounds of the English language, that apart from ques- tionable and unimportant refinements, have been noticed by ob- servant authors. Three of the subtonics, 5, d, and g, and three of the atonies, Jc, p, and t, when uttered before a tonic have eminently an explo- sive character; the subtonic bursting from its occlusion into the tonic. They have peculiar purposes in speech, and being distin- guished as a subdivision, may be called Abrupt elements. At the beginning of a sylable they produce a sudden opening of the suc- ceeding tonic; and at the end, they exhibit a final vocule. The effect of these abrupt elements in the art of speaking, will be shown in treating of Expression. The foregoing arrangement of the elementary sounds was devised, to give a general view of their respective relationships to intonation. For a further development of this subject, I now describe particularly, the structure and functions of the Tonics. In ilustrating the character of the radical and vanishing move- ment, it was shown that the tonic a-le, uttered in the manner then directed, rises with its two kinds of sound, through the in- terval of a tone or wider interval; the radical beginning on a, * Bishop Wilkins, in his 'Essay towards a real character,' has enumerated the aspirated I and r, among the provincial vices of speech, and has allotted literal symbols to them. 110 ALPHABETIC ELEMENTS. and the vanish diminishing to a close on e. Now as all the tonic sounds necessarily pass through the radical and vanish, they demand an analysis relatively to it. These seven of the tonic elementsj a-we, a-rt, a-n, a-le, z'-sle, o-ld, ou-y, have respectively, different sounds at their two extremes. The remaining fivej ee-l, oo- ze, e-rr, g-nd, z-n, have each, one unaltered sound throughout their concrete. The tonics may therefore be properly divided into Dipthongs and Monothongs. The dipthong a-we has for its radical the nominal sound of a, in a-we; its vanish is a short and obscure sound of the mono- thong e-Y\\ A-Yt has for its radical the nominal sound of a, in a-rt; its vanish, like that of the preceding, being the short and obscure sound of e-YY. The radical of a-n is the nominal sound of a, in a-n. Its vanish is the same in degree and kind as. the last. The sound of each of these elements has heretofore been con- sidered homogeneous throughout; for their vanish being feeble in ordinary utterance, it has escaped perception. But in earnest and prolonged interrogation, these dipthongs will severally ter- minate at a high pitch, in a faint sound of e-YY. A-le, as shown formerly, has its radical, with the distinct sound of the monothong ee-l for its vanishing movement. J-sle has its radical, followed in like manner by a vanish of the monothong ee-\. The dipthongal character of z, has long been known, and the discovery of it is attributed to Wallis the gram- marian. It is described by Sheridan and others, as consisting of a-we and ee-l; the coalescence of the two producing the peculiar sound of i. In this account, it is admitted that the element is peculiar; there is therefore no need of reference to a-we, in the theory of its causation. A skilful ear will readily perceve^ the radical of z'-sle is a peculiar tonic, and ascribe it to a peculiar mechanism of its own. ALPHABETIC ELEMENTS. Ill O-ld has its radical in the sound of 0, formerly supposed to be homogeneous. Its vanish is the distinctly audible sound of the monothong 00-ze. Ou-r has a radical, followed in like manner by a vanish of the monothong 00-ze. That the first sound of this dipthongal tonic is not a-we, but a radical of its own, may easily be proved to a discriminating ear; for it will be learned by experiment, that «-we does not unite with 00-ze, by the easy gliding transition heard in the junction of the true radical of ou-r with the same 00-ze. I have been at a loss what to say of the sound signified by oi and oy, as in voice and boy. It may be looked upon as a dip- thongal tonic, consisting of the radical a-we, and of the vanish- ing monothong i-n when the quantity of the element is short, and of ee-\ when long. But from the habit of the voice, it is difficult to give a-we without adding its usual vanish e-rr; and this makes the compound a tripthong. If taken as a dipthongal tonic, this is the only instance in which the same radical has two different vanishes. And though this should not be conclusive against its classification, it might make a subject for inquiry. In case this sound should be considered as a true dipthongal tonic, and anal- ogies seem in favor of it, the number of tonics would be thirteen, and the whole of the elements thirty-six. But this point is scarcely worth the time of doubting, much less of dispute. The seven radical sounds with their vanishes thus described, include, as far as I observe, all the elementary dipthongs of the English language. In the common scholastic definition, the terms dipthong and tripthong mean a combination of two or of three visible letters, not a fluent union oi phonetic elements. Ac- cording to the foregoing history, and under our view, the term dipthong denotes the transition of the voice from one tonic sound to another; forming thus the impulse of one sylable, by a con- tinued gliding, without a perceptible change of organic effort, in the transition. By the term elementary, applied to a dipthong, I mean to point out the inseparable bond of its constituents; the ordination or the habit, whichever it may be, of the voice, having so decreed the series of the two sounds, that the first or radical cannot be uttered without terminating in the second or vanish. 112 ALPHABETIC ELEMENTS. The remaining five tonics are monothongs, and have one kind of sound for both the radical and vanishing movements. They arej oo-ze, ee-\, e-rr, e-nd, z-n. The element ee-\ deliberately uttered as a question with earnest surprise, has the same unvaried sound from the radical outset, to the end of its vanish. One of the forms of interrogation will be shown hereafter to be the interval of a radical and vanishing octave; and the same homogeneous course of ee-\ may be heard through the fifth, third, tone, and semitone. This manner of dis- playing the course of the unchanged concrete in ee-1, will show the like uniformity of sound in each of the other monothongs, with the exception of i-n. This element has its distinct and proper sound, only in short sylables; and by prolongation, is changed into ee-\. We leave others to consider it, if they please, as a short and abrupt utterance of ee-\. The difference between these two classes of tonics, as here described, may be otherwise shown. We learned in the last sec- tion, the distinction between the equable concrete of speech, and the protracted radical and protracted vanish of song. When the dipthongs are sung with a protracted vanish, the voice quickly leaves the radical, and dwells in a continued note on the different sound of the vanish. The protracted note, in the vanish of a monothong, is the same in sound as the radical. Another ilustration of the real dipthongal character of seven of the tonics, may be drawn from the phenomena of rhyme. Rhyme is a well known relationship in the sound of sylablesj consisting, in most cases, of a difference between the first ele- mental sound of each of the compared sylables, with an identity between all the subsequent elemental sounds, each to each; the agreeable effect of rhyme depending chiefly on the particular relations of the tonic sounds. The first is the relation of tonics thoroughly identical, asj dame, came. The second, of tonics with a different radical, but the same vanishing movement, asj cars, wars. The third, of tonics differing both in their radicals and vanishes, yet of nearest resemblance in their kind of vocality, asj good, blood. ALPHABETIC ELEMENTS. 113 The use of the second kind of rhyme shows the composition of the dipthongal tonics. In the following lines, the correspondence of oo-ze, in doom, with o-ld, in home; and of a-le, in obey, with ee-\ in tea, is admitted as canonical, from an identity of the van- ishes of a-le and old, respectively with the monothongs ee-\ and oo-ze. Here Britain's statesmen oft the fall foredoom Of foreign tyrants, and of nymphs at home ; Here thou, great Anna ! whom three realms obey, Dost sometimes counsel takej and sometimes tea. The assimilation of the sounds of a-le and ee-\, by the identity of their vanishes, in the four following rhymes^ together with an inflexible prosaic rythmus, in the last couplet, produces the monot- ony and the want of elegance throughout the example. Swift to the Lock a thousand sprites repair, A thousand wings, by turns, blow back the hair; And thrice they twitch'd the diamond in her ear; Thrice she looked back, and thrice the foe drew near. Besides the differences arising from singleness of sound, and from dipthongal combination, the tonics exhibit a variety in time both when uttered separately, and in sylabic connection. Two general divisions may be made. A-we, a-rt, a-n, a-le, ee-\, i-sle, ou-y, oo-ze, may be called long, andj e-YY, e-nd, z-n, short tonics. It is not to be supposed^ the latter may not by designed effort be made as long as the former: they have their places in this arrangement, from their usual time in English syl- ables. By prolongation, i-n changes nearly if not entirely into ee-\: and as it thus seems to owe its character in short pronun- ciation, to its abruptness, it might be merged in ee-l, and rejected as a distinct element. When the long tonics are combined with other elements into sylables, their time is of every distinguishable degree, from a momentary impulse to the longest passionate utter- ance of an interjection, asj from o-tt to a- we, from ou-t to h-ow, from a-t to a-h ! from a-te to h-ay, rj-ea-t to ee-\, f-oo-t to oo-ze, c-a-Yt to a-rms, k-i-te to z'-sle. 114 ALPHABETIC ELEMENTS. The time of the short tonics in combination, has much less variety. But however rapidly any of the tonics may be pro- nounced, they do even in their least duration, still pass through the concrete movement. All the elements except the abrupt atonies 7c, p, t, have a variety in duration. The vocality of the subtonics affords, the means of their time, and its prolongation is next in importance to that of the tonics, for the purposes of correct and elegant speech. Should it be asked^ why the dipthongs are here designated as elementary, when each may be resolved into greater simplicity, it may be answered^ the dipthongs, though compounded of different successive sounds, yet these are inseparable in utterance: and regarding an element as a single impulse of the voice, the dip- thong must be classed with it. I cannot pronounce the radical of a dipthong without in some manner, giving also its vanish. The radical may indeed be indefinitely sustained on its level line of pitch, and we may attempt to cut it off by a sudden occlusion of the voice; still it can be terminated only by a glide through the vanish, which, however quick, or feeble, or varied by aspira- tion or otherwise, from its proper sound, may still be heard. In the equable concrete of speech, the rapid pronunciation of a dip- thong, and the feebleness of its vanish, may lessen the audi- bility of this second soundj yet to an attentive ear it will not be altogether lost. And further, not only does the radical of a dipthong demand its own peculiar vanish, but it cannot be car- ried through a given interval without sliding into that vanish. For in exercising a concrete octave on the dipthong a-we or a-\ej though its radical may by effort be continued up to the seventh of the scalej the final close on the eighth will unavoidably turn respectively to e-rr or ee-\. A similar change takes place on all smaller intervals, in an endeavor to make monothongs of the dipthongal radicals. If an elementary character should be denied to the dipthongs, by regarding them as separable sounds, it would not increase the number of simple tonics beyond twelve ; for the Reader may have already remarked^ the vanishing portions of the dipthongs consist exclusively of the monothongs. It follows, from what has been said on the indivisible sound of ALPHABETIC ELEMENTS. 115 the dipthongs, that radicals cannot be united with any other vanishes, than those already ordained in the practice of the voice : and notwithstanding what has been observed, transcribed, and assumed by writers on the subject of the dipthongal union of the vowels, the instances here enumerated appear to be all belonging to English speech. Other combinations want the smooth transi- tion and singleness of sylabic impulse, characterizing a dipthong, and heard perfectly united, only in the double sound of the above named seven elementary tonics. As the dipthongal tonics are respectively produced by joining a monothong to a radical of different sound, and as all the pos- sible permutations of their union are not employed, we may in- quirej if it is within the power of the voice to make a greater number of dipthongs than here enumerated, by uniting, severally, every monothong with each radical tonic. As there are seven radicals and five monothongs, we might upon this scheme, have thirty-five dipthongs. It appears however, we have only eight, supposing oi to be included : the radical of a-we, as stated above, being by this supposition, severally combinable with two mono- thongs, and each of the rest with one. Other combinations may be made ; but they have not a fluent transition, like those which already belong to the language and have their literal symbols. Would these new combinations call for a management of voice not altogether instinctive, and therefore requiring a practice and skill, not yet reached in English speech? Have any of these supposed dipthongs been admitted among the alphabetic elements of other nations? And are these unused materials of the voice to be classed with those resources destined to afford their benefits upon some new intelectual revolution, and the widening demands of human regeneration^ when the mind, turned from its perversions, and restored to nature's intended rules of intelect, shall, with an exalted choice, prefer sobriety of thought to its intoxication, and cease to love fiction better than truth? In regarding the con- struction of the dipthongs, we may under another view, consider them as proper sylables compounded of a tonic and subtonic ; since the monothongs as vanishes to the radical tonics, have in some degree the character of subtonics; and then they lose the radical fulness they have when uttered alone. The vanish of a-le 116 ON SYLABICATION. is very nearly allied to y-e, if not identical with it; and the vanish of ou-y bears as near a relation to iv-o. It will be evident too on trial, that if a radical character is given to these vanishes, they do not unite with the previous radical into one dipthongal im- pulse of the voice. And may we under this view, askj if the other monothongs, when modified by suhtonic coalescence, might be severally joined with our present radicals, and even with one another, and thus be formed into new dipthoDgal sylables? In a former part of this section it was saidj the true elemental subtonics are independent sounds; utterable without the 'help of a vowel' or tonic; contrary to the common grammatical definition of a consonant; their own obscure vocalities bearing respectively, a resemblance to those of the five monothongs. Hence some sylables may be formed exclusively by subtonics. In the words bidde-n, i-dle, schis-m, ryth-m, rive-n, scru-ple, and words of like construction, the last sylable is either purely subtonic, or a com- bination of subtonic and atonic. And though these final sylables do go through the radical and vanishing movement, they are far inferior in quality, abruptness, eutony and force, to the full dis- play of these properties on the tonics. The reason why words of this construction are necessarily divided into two sylables, will appear in the following section. —»*©©©««.— SECTION IV. Of the influence of the Radical and Vanishing Movement, in the production of the various phenomena of Sylables. The foregoing history of elementary sounds and of the radical and vanishing movement, will enable us to explain some of the phenomena of Sylabication. What are the particular functions of the voice that produce the characteristics of sylables? What determines their length? ON SYLABICATION. 117 Why are sylables limited in length, otherwise than by the term of expiration: and what produces their ordinary length, when there is no obstruction to the further continuation of the sound of tonic and subtonic elements? And finally^ what prescribes the rule that allows but one accent to a sylable ? I shall endeavor to answer these questions by the principles of vocal analysis, showings That an elemental sound, or the order of elemental sounds called a sylable, is a necessary effect, or accompaniment of the radical and vanishing movement; and every sylable consisting of one or more of these sounds, derives its singleness of impulse, and its respective length, from certain relations between this concrete movement and the various tonic, subtonic, and atonic elements. As the Reader cannot have from me, vocal exemplification of this subject; a decision upon the argument contained in the following conditions and inferences is left to his own experimental inquiry. If the radical and vanishing movement of the voice through a tone or other interval, is an essential function of a sylable, it fol- lows that each of the tonics may by itself, form a sylable : since they cannot be pronounced singly, without going through the radical and vanish. Now the tonics are employed for monosylabic words, as in eye, a, awe; for interjective particles, as in oh, ah; and for mono-literal sylables, as in a-corn, ow-rang, o-ver, e-vade. It follows also from the assumed causation of a sylable, that two of the tonics cannot be united into one vocal impulse. For each having its own radical and vanish, they must produce two separate sylables. Consistently with this, whenever two ele- mentary tonics adjoin, they always belong to different sylables in pronunciation, as in a-e-rial, o-a-sis, and i-o-ta,. If the radical and vanish alone of the voice makes a sylable what it isj it follows that the atonies being incapable of that function, cannot make a new and distinct sylabic impulse when joined with the tonics. The word speaks exhibits the meaning of this inference. For the sylabic concrete is here made on a short sound of the tonic ee-l ; while, s, p, Jc and s, add to the time, but do not destroy the monosylabic character of that word. It is true, the s on each extreme is a distinct sound, but having no 118 ON SYLABICATION. radical and vanish, it has no more the character of a sylable than the hissing of a water-jet; and therefore does not interfere with the singleness of impulse. The voice in this word is not indeed so gliding as on a single tonic, which shows a sylable in its purest form ; yet this obstruction is very different from that of the three- fold division, in the word Ohio. For when this is pronounced with a radical and vanish on each of its tonics, they cannot be contracted into one undivided sound. In answer then to the first question^ It is the concrete, modified by the several elements, that produces the characteristics of those impulses called sylables. Sylables are of different lengths. Is this an arbitrary variation, or is it the unavoidable effect of the concrete function, and of the elementary sounds ? This question is not asked in reference to prosodial quanti- ties; nor to those emphatic prolongations of voice, that give force or solemnity to oratorical expression. It regards especially the difference of length in sylables, created by their elementary constituents; for it will be shown that the limit of a sylable is de- termined by the character and arrangement of these, within the concrete. To render this subject perspicuous, let us take a synthetic view of the literal series in words. Several of the tonics, as shown above, individually and alone form words and sylables. These exhibit the sylabic impulse of the radical and vanish in its Simple condition ; and their length may equal that of the time of expiration; thus forming a few ex- ceptions to the limitation of extent, in all other sylables. But elements cannot be combined with a view to lengthen a sylable, by the addition of one tonic to another; for this would produce a new and separate impulse. A combination of elements, with relation to the length of syla- bles, is made under the following circumstances of their character, and position. When to the element a-le the atonic / is prefixed, the sylable fa is formed with the concrete rise on a preceded by the atonic aspiration. If to these the atonic s should be subjoined, the word /as (face) will be longer than the combined elements/ and a; still the triple compound will be one sylable, since it can have only one concrete rise. For though these two atonies may OX STLABICATION. 119 be clearly heard as part of the length of the sylable, yet being incapable of the concrete function, the radical and vanish through the given interval is made altogether on a, as if the word con- sisted of that element alone. The addition of atonies to tonics both prefixed and subjoined is then the first manner of increasing the length of a sylable, without destroying its singleness of im- pulse. Further, when to the tonic a, the subtonic I is prefixed, the sylable la is longer than a, yet has only one radical and vanish. It was said formerly, that with a subtonic before a tonic, the vanish of the subtonic does not occur; for when the subtonic is prolonged, it continues on one level line of pitch, till its vocule opens into the tonic, which then begins the intended interval with its radical, and completes it with its vanish; but in common utter- ance, the vocule of the subtonic breaks at once into the radical of the tonic, which in this case begins as well as completes the interval. In the sylable la, I does then begin the impulse with its vocality, and immediately, without perceptible rise or prolon- gation, joins the vocality of a; a then opening, from the vocule of I, with a full emphatic radical, rises and vanishes on the e of its upper extreme. If to la the subtonic v should be subjoined, the compound lav (lave) will be longer than la; yet its sylabic character will be preserved, by the singleness of its radical and vanish. In the pronunciation of lav, the intonation of I and a will be as before, except that a, with its joint e, still perfect as a dipthong, will. not now rise so high through the concrete; for a subtonic being capable of the gliding concrete, v will in this case unite with the e of the dipthong before it reaches the upper limit of the interval, and thus complete the vanish of the sylable. The junction of subtonic elements with tonics, both in pre and post position is therefore a second manner of adding to the length of a sylable, without destroying the unity of the radical and vanish- ing concrete. Moreover, if the abrupt element t be prefixed to a, the sylable ta will be but a single impulse. If g be subjoined, the word tag will still have only one radical and vanish. In this way, two ab- rupt atonies joined with the short tonics, as in cut, pet, tik, produce the shortest sylables in the language; yet here the concrete 120 ON SYLABICATIOX. movement, however short, is still performedj the radical of the tonic, opening from the first abrupt element, and the vanish being suddenly cut-off, by closing on the last. This prefixing and sub- joining of abrupt elements with tonics is a third manner of pre- serving the singleness of impulse in a sylable, under the variation of its length. The three different sorts of combination described above, pro- duce their various lengths, in the manner represented by the examples under each head. But none of them can be much ex- tended beyond the given instances, while they are restricted to the kind of elements employed in their respective cases. A fourth manner of combining elements is by a union of all the different kinds, in one sylable. To ilustrate this, we have only to consider, that whenever a subtonic is followed by a pause, consequently whenever it is uttered singly, or at the end of a sylablej it unavoidably assumes the concrete movement; and that the same takes place when a subtonic is followed by an atonic, as in this case there is a termination of vocality; which in effect, is equivalent to a pause. In each of the words strange, (properly strandzh) and strength, and the supposed sylable sglivzd, there is but one radical and vanishing movement; and the singleness of impulse is owing to the peculiar arrangement of the different kinds of elements. Each consists of seven sounds, and this is perhaps the greatest number the varied character of the elements allows to a sylable, even with the best contrived combination. The radical and vanish of these several sylables is made on ange, eng and ivzd, and the principle of vocal management of the other elements is the same in each; for r and I being subtonics re- spectively before the tonics a-le, e-nd, and z-le, do not take-on the concrete. T being an abrupt atonic, adds nothing to the vocality of r, and the preceding atonic s, having no concrete function, the three elements s, t, and r, in strange, and strength, and the s, g and I in the supposed sylable, slightly lengthen the beginning of these several words, without destroying the unity of their im- pulses; while the n, d, and zh, the ng, the v, z, and d, which respectively follow the tonics, a, e, and i, take up the concrete movement from these tonics, and severally complete the vanish of the single sylabic impulse. The final atonic ih, in strength, only ON SYLABICATION. 121 adds to the time of that word, without bearing part in the con- crete. The constituents in each of the above words may be com- bined into one sylable, in other series : but in all cases, the atonies must be on the extremes. If otherwise, as in the arrangement rstange, the whole cannot be pronounced as one sylable. For the vocality of r, ceasing on account of the subsequent atonic s, this r must take on the concrete movement, and thus become a sylable. The Reader may remember, it was saidj the subtonics are capable of the radical and vanish when uttered separately ; and the termination of their sound by an atonic, produces this condition. In the above combinations, and in such sylables as marl, lorn, and hold, the subtonics unite smoothly not only with the radical, and with the vanish of a tonic, but they themselves unite, in their concrete movement, smoothly with each other. Nor is it obvious, why the occlusion of the subtonics should not in this last case, interfere with the gliding of the sylabic concrete. I have thus endeavored to show, that the various lengths of sylables depend on the kind and arrangement of their constituent elements, in the execution of the radical and vanish. The following notation may ilustrate the preceding account of the structure of sylables. This scheme represents the movement Q — ^ % M £-jLA..J±J3^£l^fJL.» @ ©*«— SECTION V. Of the Causative Mechanism of the Voice, in relation to its different Qualities, and to its Pitch, A description of the different modes and forms of sound in the human voice, without exemplification by actual utterance, is always insufficient and often uninteligible. With a view to facili- tate instruction, it is desirable to ascertain the conformation of the vocal organs, together with the action of the air upon them ; that a reference to these forms, and to the impulses of the air, may enable an observer to exemplify the description of vocal sounds, by using the known physical means which produce them. The system of parts which effects this peculiar purpose, is called the Mechanism of the voice. The result of physiological inquiry on this subject is not satis- factory. Unfortunately, most physiologists have been public teachers, appointed to stations of profit and influence, and re- quired to instruct without having always the time, or ability, or disposition to investigate. Their condition has obliged them to compile without choice, to define and arrange without reflection, and to affect an originality perhaps forbidden by the character of OF THE VOICE. 131 their minds, or the multiplicity of their duties. From these pro- fessorial instructors, the covered movements of the organs of speech seem to cut off the means of observation; and feigning themselves under a necessity to teach, what they had never learned, they have endeavored to elude the difficulty, by devising some of those works of fiction long ago designed by the Craft of Mastership, for satisfying the cravings of undiscerning youth. The thoughtless wishes of the scholar have been respectfully re- garded by the teacher; and sketches of knowledge from his ac- commodating pencil have frequently been rather a worked-out picture of the pupil's vain conceits and authorities, than of the truth, and nothing but the truth of nature. There are few confirmed opinions among physiologists, on the mechanism of the voice; and by the duties of philosophy we are bound to acknowledge much ignorance and error on this subject. We know that the voice is made by the passage of air through the larynx, and cavities of the mouth and nose. From experi- ments on the human larynx, or on artificial imitations of its structure ; and from observations upon the vocal mechanism, by exposing the organs in living animals^ it is infered with great probability, that voice procedes immediately from the ligaments of the glottis. We have no precise knowledge of the causes of Pitch; its formation having been by authors differently attributed to variations in the aperture of the glottis ; to the difference of length in its chords; their varied degrees of tension; the varying velocity of the current of air through the aperture of the glottis; the rise and fall of the whole larynx, and the consequent varia- tion of length in the vocal avenues, between the glottis and the external limit of the mouth and of the nose; and finally, to the influence of a combination of two or more of these causes. Nor are we acquainted with the mechanisms, respectively producing those varieties of sound called Vocality, Natural voice, Whisper, and Falsette. Each of these varieties has receved some theoretic explanation; and their locality has, without much precision, been severally assigned to the chest, the throat, and the head. These discordant and fictional accounts have been in some measure, the consequence of conceiting a resemblance, between the organs of the voice and common instruments of music; and 182 THE MECHANISM under fluctuations of opinion which have represented the vocal mechanism to be like that of mouthed, or reeded, or stringed in- struments, the wildness of these still incomplete analogies has run into outrage of all similitude, by comparing the avenue of the fauces, mouth, and nose, to the body of a flute; and ascribing false intonation, to an inequality of tension between what are called the ' strings of the glottis.' We are too much disposed to measure the resources of nature, by the limited inventions of art. The forms and other conditions of matter, which jointly with the motion of air may produce sound, must be innumerable; and it certainly is not an enlarged analogical view of the mechanism of the human voice, which regards the functions of those few forms only that have receved the name of ' musical instruments.' The ilustrations these analogies were supposed to afford, have been no more than Theoretic resting places for the mind, in the perplexing pursuit of truth. The physiologists of antiquity thought they explained the mysteries of the voice, when they compared the trachea to a musical pipe; and science reposed from the time of Galen, to that of Dodart and Ferrein in the eighteenth century, on the satisfaction produced by this supposition. The means of ilustration have followed the fashion of instruments, and of late years, the chords of the Eolian harp and the reed of the hautboy have furnished their mechanical pictures of the vocal organs. One cannot say positively^ a resemblance of the mech- anism of the voice, to that of some known instrument of music, may not be proved hereafter; but cautious reflection will guard us against surprise on a future discovery, that in most points, the formative causes in the two cases are totally dissimilar. Before the use of the balloon for the support and progress of man upon the air, no one ever imagined the possibility of his flight, by any other instrumentality than that of wings. The history of the voice records its exact anatomy, and some important physiological experiment, together with inferences from the mechanism of musical instruments, applied without much pre- cision, to the human organs. We seem to have been so entirely convinced of the analogy between these cases, and have relied so implicitly on systems constructed upon it, that we have forgotten the importance of unbiased observation. Presumption in sup- OF THE VOICE. 133 posing the fulness of knowledge already accomplished, and despair in thinking it unattainable, are equally adverse to the efforts of improvement. The panurgic or all-working power of Baconian Science directs us by its productive rules, to record all the phe- nomena of the voice; and requires us in our classifications, to know resemblances and differences, not to invent them. There is no doing without the assistance of Analogies^ as well when look- ing into the co-relation of the arts, as in observing the processes of nature. With peculiar adaptation to a varied office, they are the all-assistant counselors of intelect, in the discovery of that original truth, which they are afterwards to teach and to beautify by ilustration : they should not however be confounded with the truth itself, which they serve only to develope and adorn. In the present inquiry, it might be proper to take into consideration every analogy, in artificial instruments of sound; but when a strict use of the senses cannot prove a similarity of mechanism between them and the vocal organs, it is no benefit to retain as parts of a science, those unfounded means that cannot ilus- trate, after they have been unsuccessfully used to discover its truth.* * After the directive principles of the Novum Organum had accomplished much of the promised work of scientific precision, and before they have been duly applied to rectify the errors of every Theoretic Faithj for which they are all-sufficient, and were prospectively intended^ we are invited to new efforts of inquiry, by the additional method of a ' Positive Philosophy,' to assist the pro- gressive purpose of its all-sufficient prototype. But English and American philosophy has too often been deluded into belief of fiction and falsehood, under the promise of Positive science, for this Word to afford in our common language, a favorable omen of exactness in observation and thought. Nor has the flag that bears it as yet waved over any important 'annexation' of truths beyond the acquisitions of that Commanding Philosophy, which has gone the way ot' victory before it. On the other hand, the Baconian system of observation has long hung its banner of science, across the Newtonian Sky; and is daily bring- ing from- the depths of the earth, the historic leaves of Creation's Stone-and- Fossii Book; has raised its trophies of ingenius art, and national wealth, over the coal fields of Newcastle, the founderies of Wales, the thousand productive engines of Sheffield and Manchester, the wonders of locomotive-agency, on every sea, and civilized landj and over that Electric tongue, which speaks in a moment, the exchanging purposes of commerce, between them all. The power of this philosophy, while it has already furnished those great physical advantages, still holds within itself, the sure but unused means of clearing-up the obscurity of every intelectual and moral mystification. To those great results of the boundless purposes of the Observative System, 134 THE MECHANISM When I speak of our ignorance of the mechanical causes of the different kinds of voice, and of their pitch, let me be clearly com- prehended. To know a thing, as this phrase is applied in most of I presume to join this humble contribution. The success of that system, on our present subject of speech, which has so long resisted all other means of inquiry and which has too incautiously been considered, beyond discrimina- tionj may indeed be only a triumph within the narrow field of Vocal Physiology, and Taste; yet poorly as it may compare with those extended practical achieve- ments, it is equally with them, a triumph in principle and method, of the wise and comprehensive design of the Baconian science; which, like the unlimited circuit of Nature, thus encompasses both the greatest and the least. Although Nature, the just and sole Executrix of Providential Will, knows not, in the agency of her laws, the human prompting of Enthusiasm, yet we may be pardoned if we should feel it, towards that Mighty Method, which by unfolding her works, teaches that for her ceaseless energies she never requires it. Does truth allure thee? Learn befictioned man, At Bacon's word, her dawning light began; Learn how that light's Redeeming ray has shined, With gleams of whole Salvation o'er the mind. And should that Mind to truth's full-light be brought, 'Twill be their task, who Think as Bacon Thought. When the distinguished Poet, and author of the well known and malicious epigram, applied the inconsistent epithets, 'greatest, brightest, and meanest,'' to one and the same Exalted Intelect, he committed as great a solecism in his ad- jectivesj as he did in his verbs, when describing the mules and wagons return- ing from Mount Ida, with wood for the funeral pile of Patroclus^ he has the following unsuccessful attempt to make a prolonged quantity, the verbal sign of a cautious animal pace. , First move the heavy mules securely slow, O'er hills, o'er dales, o'er rocks, o'er crags [headlong of course) they go. The history of the celebrated line of discordant adjectives j, the joint work of Pope and Bolingbrokej is short. The great Benefactor while preparing posterity for a full survey of the truth and beauty of Nature, happened, in his Essays, to make the general remark^ that deformed persons, regarding themselves -as exceptions to the perfect order of her Laws, and as objects of pity or scorn; endeavor to meet with even-hand the hardship of their lot, by a dissatisfied and jealous temper towards the world ; though he kindly allows^ their condition has sometimes been the incentive to great exertion and excelence. It is the malice of the misshapen Poet, ap- parently excited by this remark, that here obliges us to allude unwillingly to his misfortune; for on reading this popular Work of the Philosopher, he may from the fictional habit of his own mind, together with his poetical egotism, have taken the remark as personal to himself, though then unborn; and thus OF THE VOICE. 135 the subjects of human inquiry, is to have that opinion of its char- acter and cause, which authority, analogical argument, and partial observation, prompted by various motives of vanity or interest, may direct. To know, by physical research, we must employ our senses, and contrive experiments, on the subject of inquiry; and admit no belief, which may not in its proper way, be made undeniable by demonstration. Physiology has too long been led by a fictional guide; and no branch more conspicuously than that of the mech- anism of the human voice. One, from the analogy of musical strings, supposes Pitch to be produced by the varied tension of the chords of the glottisj without showing a correspondence of the degrees of tension with the degrees of pitch. Another, that the vibration of these chords performs the same functions as the reed of the hautboyj without showing the manner in which this laryn- geal reed fixes the degrees of intonation. A third ascribes the pitch of the falsette to the agency of the base of the tongue, the fauces, the soft palate, and uvulaj without showing any fixed points of relationship, between the parts of this cavernous struct- ure and the current of expiration, in the production of concrete or discrete pitch. When therefore we seek to know the mechanism of the voice, it should be, to see, or to be truly told by those who have seen, the have joined to his constitutional and peevish irritability, a revengeful disposi- tion towards the Author. Lord Bolingbroke having furnished Pope with his sententious prose reflections, was not by Rank and Title or by Head and Heart, so simply generous towards the 'Brightest and Greatest of mankind^' thus sacrificed by the 'smooth bar- barity' of King and Courtier, for his venial share of the besetting sins of every ambitious public station^ as afterwards to condemn and erase, if he did not direct the vindictive couplet of his versifying amanuensis; but meanly, if with jealousy of a superior intelect, left it for any ignorant and self-righteous pharisee, to quote, and to thank God, on the comparison, that he is not like other men, nor even as the High Chancelor Bacon. If Pope's greediness of praise, that vicious appetite of prideless and limited minds, had led him to turn into heroic measure, the Essays of his great Superior, instead of Bolingbroke's philosophic generalities, which it is said he did not widely comprehend^ he would have had clear, broad, and practical thoughts, with all the pith of poetical maxims, to work upon; and might have induced posterity to overlook some of his own contentious vanity, and annoying caprices, through an odd comparison of his pigmy share of rhyme and reflection, with the greatness of an Immortal fame. 13G THE MECHANISM whole process of the action of the air on the vocal organs, in the production of the vocality, force, pitch, and articulation of speech. This method and this alone, produces permanent knowledge; and elevates our belief above the condition of vulgar opinion, and sectarian dispute. The visibility of most of the parts concerned in Articulation, has long since produced among physiologists, some agreement as to the agency of those parts. Yet after all I have been able to observe and learn, on the subject of Vocality and Pitch, I must in speaking the language of an exact philosophy, fairly confess an entire ignorance of their mechanical causations: and the great difference on this point among authors, should go far towards destroying respect for the most of their opinions.* As this section is addressed principally to physiologists, I omit a description of the organs of the voice, as it may be found in all the manuals of anatomy; and it would be useless to transcribe an account of structures and actions, when we know not with specific reference, what vocal effect those actions produce. The general statement of our problem is, that some part or parts of the breathing passages produce all the modes, forms, varieties, and degrees of the human voice. It is the purpose of anatomy to describe the structure of these partsj and of physiology to ex- plain its actions, that they may be made a subject of permanent science. But observation of the living actions of this structure has almost universally thrown the first light upon its physiological causes and effects. It has been the part of anatomy to confirm or complete our knowledge of them; agreeably to the saying of the Greek philosophy, that what is first to nature in the act of creation, is the last to man in the labor of inquiry. On the subject of the mechanism of the voice, we are yet occupied with the perplexities of analysis ; when that work shall be finished, we may begin again with muscles, cartilages, ligaments, mucous tis- sues, and the os hyoides, and describe their actions with the synthetic steps of successive causation. In the meantime, we should not so far follow the example of * If the Reader cannot now agree with me, on the importance of the purely observative use of the mind, here recommended for every thing, let him wait till he has finished this volume, before he pronounces that it has been therein unproductive. OF THE VOICE. 137 System-makers and Professors, as to furnish an account of the mechanism of the voice, soley because it is desirable and may be looked for. Aiming to serve truth with our senses, we should de- scribe what is distinguishable by the ear in the different kinds of voice, together with the visible structure and movement of the organs ; in the hope, that by an acknowledgment of our present ignorance, and by future observation and experiment, other in- quirers may arrive at the certainty, which through a different method of investigation has never yet been attained. The thirty-five elements of speech may be heard under four dif- ferent kinds of voice; the Natural, the Falsette, the Whispering, and that improved vocality to be presently described under the name of the Orotund. The Natural, or what we call Vocality, is employed in ordinary speaking. Its compass includes a range of pitch from the lowest utterable sound, up to that point at which the voice is said to break. At this place the natural ceases, and the higher parts of the scale are made by a shriler kind called the Falsette. The natural voice is capable of the discrete, the concrete, and the tremulous progression. By the concrete and tremulous move- ment, the natural may be continued into the falsette without a perceptible point of union : for the concrete rise in vehement in- terrogation, sometimes passes above the limit of the natural scale, and thereby avoids that unpleasant break in the transition to the falsette, which in the discrete scale is remarkable both as to sound, and to difficulty in executive effort, except with persons of great vocal skill. The peculiar defect of vocality and of in- tonation at this point of the discrete scale of song, has receved the name of 'false note.' The natural voice is said to be produced by the vibration of the chords of the glottis. This has been infered, from a supposed analogy between the action of the human organ, and that of the dog, in which the vibration has been observed, on exposing the glottis during the cries of the animalj and from the vibration of the chords, by blowing through the human larynx, when removed from the body. The conclusion is therefore probable, but until it is seen in the living function of the part, or until there is suf- 10 13S THE MECHANISM ficient approximation to this proof by other means, it cannot be admitted as a portion of exact physiological science. With regard to the mechanical cause of the Variations of Pitch in the natural voice, different notions, and they are only notions, have been proposed by their respective advocates. They were transiently enumerated above.* On this subject, about which we know so little, but on which * Shortly after the first publication of this Work, in January, eighteen hun- dred and twenty-seven: Mr. Robert Willis, of Caius College, Cambridge, follow- ing up the experiments of Kratzenstein and Kempelen, obtained by means of tubular and other ingenius contrivances, many interesting results, approaching to the satisfactory conclusion, that vocal sound is produced, on the principle of the Reed, by the vibration of the ligamentous chords of the glottis. The arti- ficial contrivances further showed by analogy, that Pitch may be in part pro- duced by certain variations of these chords, as they form the aperture of the glottis; still leaving it undetex-mined, by what other influence this pitch may be partly made or modified, in the proper vocal organ. By another contrivance, he was enabled to produce several of the vowel sounds. The purpose of this Volume does not require a special notice of the interest- ing details of Mr. Willis' inquiry. They do not however, in point of precise and permanent knowledge, extend the subject much beyond what we have stated in the text, to be the opinions of other writers; and it is there said in caution^ we must not suppose, the mechanism of the voice necessarily resem- bles that of certain instruments of music : for to be known perfectly, it must be known in itself. It is but a partial view, to show that vowel sounds may be made by certain kinds of tubes, in connection with a reed, and a bowl with a sliding cover. Con- sonants as well as vowels are only different kinds of sound, that may be classed, according to their causes, as Human, Sub-Animal, and Mechanical. The human are few, the sub-animal, and mechanical, innumerable. Our perception of the human vowels with their alphabetic characters, and with thoughts and passions, when united with consonants into words, seems to represent them as altogether different from sub-animal and mechanical sounds. There is no vowel in the voice of man, that is not to be heard from some speechless brute, or bird, or insect, or in the innumerable sounds, made by the reciprocal action between air, and the varied forms and conditions of solids and fluids. The fauces and larynx offer only the case of a peculiar and moistened structure, forming those sounds, which in the egotism of our education, hardly our constitution, we have so far identified with humanity, as to prevent our immediate notice of similar sub-ani- mal and mechanical sounds. The common words of the world veil the true relationship of things, till phi- losophy draws-aside the curtain; and nine-tenths of mankind, who may think themselves very observant, never perceve in the jet of a fountain, the click of a time-piece, the grating of a saw, and the rapid friction of a cable, some of those prerogative elements, which set them as they suppose, so far above the brute. OF THE VOICE. 139 theorists are ready to fix on any things it is well to begin the in- vestigation of some current opinions, with the process of exclu- sion ; by showing what does not produce pitch, in the visible parts of the vocal apparatus. The Pitch of the natural voice does not appear to be directly produced by the mouth and fauces, for it will be seen on exam- ination, that the rise and fall through the scale, may be severally effected on all the tonic elements; and that during the exclusive intonation of each, the positions of the tongue and fauces remain unaltered^ if we except some slight unsteadiness of the tongue and soft palate, which can have no relation to the definite divisions of pitch. The sound of a-we is made, while the tongue is about on a level with the lower teeth; the mouth being open, for observa- tion, and all the parts of this vocal cavity having the same posi- tion, as in an act of silent respiration. In performing the run of pitch on this element, we must however, have regard to a change of the mechanism of its radical, to that of e-rr, in the articulation of its vanish, which however, has no effect in this case, as it exists equally in the downward pitch. The sound of e-ve is made by approximating the tongue to the roof of the mouth, leaving be- tween them a narrow passage for the air. In one of these instances, the avenue of the mouth and fauces is free; in the other, the tongue almost closes the back of the mouth, and must be nearly in contact with the veil of the palate, and the arch of the fauces. Yet in each case the respective positions remain unaltered, throughout the variations of pitch; and in both, the pitch is made with equal facility and exactness. Among the subtonics, the pitch of ng is made when the cur- rent of air through the mouth is completely obstructed, by con- tact of the base of the tongue with the soft palate. TA-en, on the other hand, may be intonated through the scale, although it is produced by the stream of expiration over the tip of the tongue, in contact with the upper fore-teeth. It is unnecessary to refer to the visible positions of the mouth and fauces in the production of other elements. The identity of pitch, under all their various mechanisms, must lead to the con- clusion, that the Pitch of the natural voice is not produced by the action of these parts. 140 THE MECHANISM As the pitch of the element ng, is made by the stream of air passing directly from the glottis through the nose, without enter- ing into the fauces and the cavity of the mouth, we may inquirej whether the varieties of pitch, if produced above the glottis, are made in the avenue of the nose. But pitch may be made when the air does not pass through the nose. Pitch too is a variable function; the parts within the nose are incapable of motion. The Falsette is a peculiar voice, in the higher degrees of pitch, beginning where the natural voice breaks, or outruns its compass. The piercing cry, the scream, and the yell are various forms of the falsette. It must not however be supposed that the compass of the falsette lies restrictively, between its highest practicable note, and the point where the natural voice ends; for the same kind of falsette-sound may by effort, be formed even below the usual point of separation of the two voices, or the place of what is called the ' false note.' All the elements except the atonies, which are only aspirations, may be made in falsette. It has been already remarked, that the unpleasant effect both of sound and of effort, in the change from natural to falsette intonation, is obviated when the transition is made by the concrete, and by the tremulous scales. The striking difference between the natural and the falsette voices, has given rise to the belief of a difference in the respective mechanisms, not only of their kind of sound, but likewise of their pitch. It has been supposed, the falsette is produced at the 'upper orifice of the larynx, formed by the summits of the arytenoid cartilages and the epiglottis:'* and the difficulty of joining it to the natural voice, which is thought to be made by the inferior ligaments of the glottis, is ascribed to the change of mechanism in the transition. On this I have only to add, that the falsette or a similar voice, but without its acuteness, may be brought downward in pitch, below the highest point of the natural voice; at least I am able so to reduce itj producing what seems to be a unison, or an octave concord of the natural and the falsette : and since the natural voice may by cultivation be carried above the * See a summary of (he discoveries and opinions of M. Dodart, in Rees' Cy- clopedia, under the article, Voice. OF THE VOICE. 141 point it instinctively reaches, it leads to the inquiry, whether these voices may have a different agency of mechanism; regarding these additions to the range of pitch, and the effort in acquiring a command over themj as according rather with the supposition of a difference in the mechanical cause of the two voices, than with that of an extension of the powers of the same organization.* As we are ignorant of the mechanical cause of the falsetto, the cause of its pitch is equally unknown. But fiction is ever ready to supply the wants of ignorance; and the peculiarity of the falsette, leading physiologists to infer a difference between its mechanism and that of the natural voice, they have supposed the pitch of the former is made above the larynx, by the back parts of the mouth. It is unnecessary to give the particulars of this fiction, as there seems to be no other foundation for it, than that of a sort of antithesis in causation; for the natural voice, from which the falsette differs so much, is supposed to be made within the larynx. Whatever may have been the origin of the notion, we have had from somebody, a full theoretic explanation, when there is scarcely fact enough to warrant a plausible conjecture. In our ignorance of the cause of the variations of pitch in falsette, we may perhaps lessen the opportunities for being led into fiction, in showing what it is not. * The character of this reduced falsette, if I may so call it, consisting of an apparent combination of its peculiar sound -with the natural voices and pro- ducing a kind of resonant vocality, may, in a manner, be ilustrated on the flageo- let, by singing or rather by what is called 'humming,' while blowing it. A similar sound is made by joining a vocal murmur with the shrill aspiration of whistling. Both these cases however, have more of a buzzing vibration, than is heard in the reduced or hoarse falsette. There is occasionally heard in women, an attractive and conciliating sweet- ness of voices with the natural Pitch of the sex tempered by fulness into dignity ; and that seems to be a resonant union of the Soprano, and the Contralto, deli- cately similar to the ruder resonance of the reduced Falsette; a voice, when trained to the truth and grace of elocution-; delightful in social life, in the Read- ing-Circle, and in the easier feminine efforts of the Stage: but wanting the Matron-power of intonation for that gravity of passionless thought, and vigor of thoughtful passion which exalts the style of Intelectual Tragedy. I leave every one, to describe for himself, the effect of this voice, when it is the instru- ment of a mind with discretion, good temper, refined familiarity, and with knowledge enough for the important discovery, that it was made, not to be self- willed, but to think for itself. 142 THE MECHANISM If the cavity of the mouth be observed during the exercise of the falsette on the element a-we, very little alteration will be perceved in the positions of the surrounding parts; except some slight contractile movement in the uvula as the pitch rises, and when this is strained to its highest degree, an almost total disap- pearance of the uvula within the veil of the palate. That the contraction of the uvula, in the higher notes of falsette, is not the sole cause of its pitchj and that it is not produced by parts of the vocal passage situated above the glottis, seems conclusive from the following considerations. The elements n and m} both being made by the passage of air from the glottis, soley through the nosej can be precisely intonated in the falsette scale. In this case the current of expiration does not pass-by the soft palate, uvula, sides of the fauces and base of the tongue; parts of the mouth supposed to be the cause of pitch in this voice. All the tonic and subtonic elements can be made in the falsette. But it is not in accordance with the laws of sound, that the iden- tical falsette, and its pitch, should be made under a mechanism so varied, that the formative cause of some of the elements, as of a-we and a-n, give a clear passage to expiration through the mouth, and that of others, as e-ve, I, and r, nearly obstruct it. As the falsette may be made by inspiration through the nose with a closed mouth, the air cannot come into contact with the parts of the mouth which have been assigned as the mechanism of the falsette. If we inhale through a tube, with one end reaching beyond the soft palate, the falsette may be carried through its pitch, thus formed by inspiration ; though the current of air in this case does not impress the soft parts at the back of the mouth, but passes from the tube directly into the glottis. And the same is true of expiration, where the current passes directly from the glottis into the tube. I have at this time a case under professional treatment, in which the tonsils are so enlarged by disease, that their near ap- proach to each other, allows only space for the uvula to hang be- tween them; thus obstructing the passage of air through the mouth, except by an eifort; and presenting a structure altogether different from the common condition, assigned as the mechanical OF THE VOICE. 143 cause of the falsette. And yet this individual is able to make the falsette intonation. I had lately an opportunity of seeing an instance of malforma- tion, where the whole soft palate is wanting. The passage to the throat being a single arch, curving along the edge of the palate bone, instead of the low double arch, formed by the soft palate and depending uvula in the perfect fauces. Adhering to each side of the arch, just above the tonsil, there is a small tuber or fleshy dropj seemingly formed by the curtain of the soft palate, being divided vertically through the uvula to the palate bone; and each portion of the curtain being then drawn within the soft parts on its respective side, except the drops, or lower parts of the semi-uvulas, which project in the manner and place above de- scribed. This is the state, at rest. In straining the highest notes of the falsette, the two projecting uvular- drops, by some peculiar muscularity, make an effort to approach each other horizontally across the mouth, and thereby convert the semicircular arch into the form of a horse-shoe^ by drawing inwards, each about half an inch, along the diameter of the arch. Here then, the principal part of the apparatus, said to produce the falsette, is wanting; yet this voice and its degrees of pitch are accurately executed by the individual, notwithstanding her deformity. The back parts of the mouth are in their function, too varia- ble under the accidental influence of muscular eflbrt, to be the mechanical cause of the fixed and accurate degrees of the scale. For when any one point of pitch is maintained, the soft palate and its appendage the uvula, may be seen to undergo involuntary movements, that do not appear to have any effect on the voice. I am able to make twenty-four distinct notes with accurate intona- tion ; fifteen are natural and nine falsette. In running through this compass on the dipthong a-we, in which the articulative mechanism of an open mouth and embedded tongue, allows the isthmus or opening of the fauces to be distinctly seenj I perceve no alteration of position in executing the natural notes, except that of the articulative change, when the voice rises into e-rr, the obscure vanish of this dipthong. There is indeed an unsteadiness in the positions, but none of that definite gradation in organic changes, implied in the ascription of the variations of pitch to the 144 THE MECHANISM motions of the back part of the mouth. In intonating the falsette discretely, on the dipthong a- we, I perceve some change in the palate, but little or none in the tongue, if the vanish e-rr is avoided. The change in the palate consists of a convulsive action of the uvula, which starts-up, as the radical of a-we opens on each degree of the scale, and the next moment descends. This convulsive action is not apparent when the voice ascends by the concrete; though under the use of both scales, the uvula at the highest rise of the falsette is contracted almost to disappearance. That this extreme contraction is not productive of pitch in the falsette, I have endeavored to show; but am not able to say, whether it arises from some connection in muscular action, or from some change of the articulative mechanism in its higher notes. I have offered these few remarks, in acknowledging my igno- rance of the mechanical cause of the peculiar sound and the pitch of the falsette. The Whispering voice is well known. It is an aspiration^ and makes the short impulse, and the final Vocule, of the atonic elements. These then are necessarily a whisper. All the other elements though properly vocal, may be likewise made by aspira- tion. The whisper of b, d, and g, though considered by Holder and his followers as identical with the atonies p, t, and &, is to my ear at least, faintly distinguishable from them, by having a less easy outset, and by a slight initial effort of articulation. We are not acquainted with the mechanical cause of whisper, as distinguished from that of vocality in the natural voice. It has been ascribed to the operation of the current of air on the sides of the glottis, when its chords are at rest ; whereas vocality is said to procede from the agitation of the air by the vibration of those chords. This however is merely an inference from analogy, and has a claim to possibility, but no more. The whispering voice has its variation of pitchj though it is effected in a very different manner from that of the natural and the falsette. The intonation of these voices, as shown above, is not connected with the visible movements of the mouth, tongue, and fauces, which produce articulation. But if there has been no error in my observation, the transit through the scale of whisper OF THE VOICE. 145 is somehow made within the vocal organs, by taking different elements for the successive steps of the discrete movement ; each whispered element being itself incapable of variation in pitch, while its true articulation remains unchanged. For the explanation of this subject, let us designate three forms of the whispering voice. The Articulated, consisting in the pro- nunciation of the alphabetic elements; the Whistled, having the well-known shrilness of this function ; and the Sufflated, a husky breath, partaking of the character of the two former, without having the shrilness of one, or the articulation of the other. When in Articulated Whisper, the tonics are distinctly pro- nounced, without running into Sufflation, the changes of pitch are made upon changes of the elements. In the order of articu- lated intonation, oo-ze is the lowest in the scale, and e-ve the highest: the succession by the first, third, and fifth, through two octaves, being upon the seven following elements. First Octave. Second Octave. 1 3 5 81 3 5 8 oo-ze a-we a-rt e-rv e-\l a-le e-ve This scale of articulated whisper is of so peculiar a character that I do not presume to speak without doubt upon it; for even a seeming anomaly in intonation, leads me, under a strong belief in the uniformity of the laws of nature, to question my own ob- servation ; and to call for the assistance of others. If however, this is the real construction of the scale, for so it appears to mej each intermediate note must consist of sounds that resemble those contiguous to it. Thus when we require a second note in the progression between oo-ze and a-we, the first, and third in the scale, it must partake of the articulation of both these elements. And of the two sounds for the sixth and the seventh, between a-rt and e-rr, one will partake more of the articulation of a-rt and the other of e-rr. But as these intermediate sounds are not used as whispered elements in our language, they cannot be made without great difficulty, and only after long and careful effort. Hence the intonation of articulated whisper is rarely executed with precision, except at the points numbered in the preceding 146 THE MECHANISM scries ; for we have only the whispered elements which are em- ployed at those points. In the above exemplification, I have given only seven tonics; but we formerly enumerated twelve, and if c-oy is admitted as a dipthong, there are six more to which I have not allotted separate places, in the whispered scale. Of these, o-ld takes its place with oo-ze ; z'-sle, and ow-r.with a-we ; i-i with e-ve ; and a-n comes next before e-rr. This appears to me to be the position of these six tonics. Yet I cannot offer the observations, as altogether satis- factory to my ear, and therefore leave the subject for others.* * It is necessary to remark, that a delicate ear, and a practical knowledge of the scale are required for measuring these degrees of whispered articulation. The extent of the series of elements given in the text being through two octaves, the series must begin on the gravest degree of pitch. I cannot on this subject draw from the experience of others; but in executing the rising order of these elements, I take oo-ze at the very lowest point at which the articulation, freed from whistle and sufflation, can be madej to bring the highest place of e-ve, within the reach of intonation; my voice being just able to compass these two octaves in articulated whisper. As a matter for further investigation, it may not be irrelevant to remark, the coincidence in my own case, of the number of degrees in the scale of whispered articulation with that of the natural voice ; both being about fifteen. Let me here add a thought, on the ground that the intonation of articulated whisper is as I have observed it. The mechanism of the whispered, and of the vocal elements being the same; and the places of the several whispered elements being fixed points of the scale; a record of the order of these intonated articula- tions might perhaps lead to a recovery, if lost, of the sounds of the vowel-sym- bols of the natural voice. For example, suppose the fixed place and order of the whispered elements, together with the parts of the vocal organs and their actions, to be described. By assuming the known position and action of those parts in producing an ele- ment, and expiring at the same time, the designed articulation would be effected. Thus any one whispered element being found, its place on the scale is also found; and the fixed place of this element being known, the rest, by their order of up- ward and downward discrete intonation, must necessarily be found; and the pronunciation of the seven whispered tonics may be ascertained. But the whis- pered and the vocal tonics have respectively the same mechanism. It would therefore be required, only to direct the stream of vocality through this mechan- ism, and thus to convert the whisper into vocality^ in order to have the recovered knowledge of the tonics, as they were used in a language, of which the phonetic means of recognition had been lost. The interesting discoveries by Young, and his coadjutors, of the vocal ele- ments of the old Egyptians, hidden so long under their peculiar symbols^ were the happy result of the record of a few proper names: and the subsequent de- OF THE VOICE. 147 The pitch of the sufflated whisper appears to he made in the same manner as that of the articulated. For in rising through the scale, this sufflation has a husky resemblance to the whispered elements; oo-ze being the lowest, and e-ve the highest. The suf- flated whisper is employed to form the tune of the Jews-harp. As the peculiar vibration of air which constitutes the pitch of the sufflated element, passes over the tongue of the instrument, this tongue, it would seem, vibrates in unison with it. It is owing to the difficulty of articulating the intermediate artificial elements so to call them, and of fixing their exact place, and consequently of intonating the full discrete scale of sufflation, that even a good musical ear, is rarely able on first trials, to hit accurately, more than the third, fifth, and octave, on the scale of this simple in- strument. The pitch of whistling is also produced by the same mechan- ism : for in this case as well as in that of sufflation and of artic- ulation, a thin rod passed into the corner of the mouth by depress- ing the tongue, destroys the power both of articulation, and of ascending the scale. And further, there is in the lowest and the highest note of whistling, as well as in those of sufflation, a kind of sound however obscure, resembling respectively the articulated oo-ze and e-ve. Closing the mouth destroys the articulation of whisper and of the natural voice, together with the pitch of the three forms of whisper ; with the mouth closed, the whole scale may be accurately hummed in the natural voice. The shrilness of whistling seems to be made by the aperture between the lips. On this subject we might inquire if the intonation of the scale of wind instruments is not in some cases produced altogether by the velopments by the sagacious and indefatigable Champollion, could not have been effected without the aid of the verbal sounds of the old Egyptian language, still represented in Coptic writing. We here offer a passing hint, for the recovery of lost vowel sounds in any lan- guage, founded on the unalterable character, and the instinctive uses of the human voice: and if the above account of the pitch of whisper, is given upon correct observation^ it shows a curious anomaly on the subject of the mechanism of the vocal scale; and intimates, that we are not yet full masters of the physi- ology of speech. With regard to the consonants, we must keep in mindj their obvious and de- scribable mechanism in the natural voice, would if recorded, allow a recovery of their phonetic character. 148 THE MECHANISM pitch of sufllated whisper; in others, by its combination with the effect of a varied position of the lipsj of a varied force of breathy and of the varied ventages or stops. It is well known, that the first seven notes of the key of D on the flute, and their corres- ponding octaves are severally note and octave, made by the same stop. The difference of pitch between a note and its octave in this case is produced, not perhaps, by the position of the lips, nor by the force of breath, but by a difference in pitch of the sufflated whisper. It is perhaps, the same with the notes of the flageolet and clarionet.* The Subtonic elements when whispered, are individually inca- pable of the variations of pitch. Have they like the whispered tonics, relatively to each other, different places in the scale ? In order to perceve clearly the peculiar character of pitch above described, we must, in executing the articulated whisper, be careful to make the elements as it were, at the back of the mouth ; thereby to avoid falling into the sufflation, and the whistle, that have their formative causes nearer the lips. The Atonies have singly, no variation of pitch; and if they have relations to each other on the scale, they are of no import- ance in speech. The voice now to be described, is not perhaps in its mechanism, different from the natural; but is rather to be regarded as an eminent degree of fulness, clearness, and smoothness in its kind of vocality, and this may be either native or acquired. The limited analysis, and vague history of speech by the an- cients, and the further confusion of the subject by commentators upon them, leave us in doubt whether the Latin phrase, ' os ro- tundumj' used more to our purpose in its ablative, ' ore rotundo,' by Horace, in complimenting Grecian eloquencej refered to the construction of periods, the predominance or position of vowels, or to some peculiar vocality. Whatever may have been the original signification of the phrase, the English term ' roundness of tone,' specifying as we may suppose, a smooth fulness, seems to have been derived from it. * It might be inquired, whether the facility in executing the third, fifth, and octave, on all mouthed instruments, as well as in the voice, is not connected with the use of the peculiar scale of articulated whisper. OF THE VOICE. 149 He who, by observing merely the sound of the voice, has learned, for he must learn to admire its grave and impressive fulnessj may remember how slowly he came to the perception of its delib- erate dignity. Nor will he deny, that its peculiar character would have earlier attracted his attention, had it been distinguished by a proper oratorical name. On the basis of the Latin phrase, I have constructed the term Orotundj to designate that assemblage of attributes which constitutes the highest vocal character of the speaking voice. By the Orotund, or adjectively the Orotund voice, I mean a natural, or improved manner of uttering the elements with a fulness, clearness, strength, smoothness, and if I may make the word, a sub-sonorous vocality ; rarely heard in ordinary speech, and never found in its highest excelence, except through long and careful cultivation. By Fulness of voice, I mean a grave and hollow volume, re- sembling the hoarseness of a common Cold. By Clearness, a freedom from aspiration, nasality, and vocal murmur.* By Strength, a satisfactory loudness or audibility. By Smoothness, a freedom from all reedy or guttural harsh- ness. By a Sub-sonorous vocality, its muffled resemblance to the resonance of certain musical instruments. I know how difficult it is to make such descriptions definite, without audible ilustration. Perhaps the best means for instruc- tion is to excite attention by terms: to convey the subject of these terms as nearly as possible, in figurative language; and to leave the recognition of the thing described, to the subsequent observation of the learner. The same audible relationships that furnished the metaphor, may in due time lead others to acknowl- edge the aptness of the ilustation.f * By this last term, I mean an obscuring accompaniment of sound, as if the whole of the voice had not been made-up into articulation. It is not an unfre- quent cause of indistinctness in speakers. f Certain reverberations resemble two constituents of the orotund voice. Thus vaulted ceilings and coved recesses often give a sub-sonorous echo; and speaking with the mouth within an empty vessel produces a hollow fulness. One of the best instances I ever heard, of a modification of the human voice 150 THE MECHANISM The mechanical structure and action that produce the orotund are to me, after much inquiry, unknown. During its utterance, we may perceve a motion and contraction of the back parts of the mouth, different from the action of those parts under the coloquial voice. But these indications of a cause are so slight and so indefinite, that they do not at present appear to justify more than this general notice. In our ignorance of the mech- anism of speech we are not even able to decide, whether the orotund is only an improved quality of the natural voice, or the effect of its own peculiar cause. It was said abovej the falsette, or something hoarsely like it, is practicable within the range of the natural voice, below the place of the ' false note.' Is the cause of the orotund the same as that of the reduced, or as it may be called, the Basso-falsette ? for this has somewhat of the full, hollow, and sub-sonorous effect, ascribed to the acquired orotund. Connected with the subject of that improved vocality of the singing-voice, called by vocalists, 'Pure Tone,' there are several terms used to describe the mechanical causes of its different char- acters. Among these, the causations implied by the phrases 'voce di testa,' and 'voce di petto,' or the voice from the head, and from the chest, must be considered as not yet manifest in physiology; and the notions conveyed by them must be hung up beside those metaphorical pictures, which with their characteristic dimness or misrepresentation, have been in all ages, substituted for the unattainable delineations of the real processes of nature. There is a harsh kind of voice called Gutturalj produced by a vibratory current of air, between the sides of the pharynx and the into a full, hollow, and sub-sonorous, character, "was from a boy who had sportfully got into a large copper alembic. It may be worth thinking upon, whether the brazen and the earthen vases, which were somehow formed, and then somehow set, within the masonry of the seats of (J reek theaters, but of which we know so little^ were not designed, with perhaps (lie co-operation of the Mask, to modify the voice, to the sub-sonorous and hollow fulness of the orotund; as well as to increase its force, and to return a concord to its pitch. The speaking-trumpet affords though not agreeably, a resemblance to what we would here describe: and could the bugle, or the organ diapason be made to articulate, it would give the highest measure of that ful- and sub-sonorous effect, which in distant similarity constitute the char- acter of the orotund voice. OF THE VOICE. 151 base of the tongue, when apparently brought into contact above the glottis. If then the term ' voice from the throat' which has been one of the unmeaning or indefinite designations of vocal science, were applied to this guttural sound, it would precisely assign a locality to the mechanism. Although I have not hesitated to acknowledge my ignorance of the mechanism of the orotund, I know that its function wherever performed, may yet be improved by studious exercise. And as the best and only pure instances of this voice are the result of cultivation, I here propose some elementary means by which it may be acquired. It might seem to be sufficient for a teacher of elocution to exemplify the orotundj that his pupil might imitate it. "Vocalists in their lessons on Pure Tone do little more. But singing has long been an Art; and its many votaries have rendered the public familiar with its leading terms and principles, and ac- customed the ear to the peculiarities of its practice. Whereas elocution appears to be with the vast majority, no more than a sub-animal instinct ; by which, some only low, bleat, bark, mew, chatter, whinny and bray a little better than others. In describ- ing therefore, without the opportunity of ilustrating, it becomes necessary to address the pupil, as if he had no principles to help his intelect, nor exemplified sounds to satisfy his ear. In this case, it is desirable to let him teach himself, by refering to func- tions of the voice, familiar to him both by daily exercise, and name. When the scholastic world shall comprehend our history of the speaking voice, and apply it to practice^ the Educated Class, in their community of knowledge, will learn the good things of elocution from one another; children will catch the proprieties of speech from well-taught parents; and many a topic of this Work, which I have labored perhaps in vain, to make at this time perspicuous, may hereafter, from the unsought en- lightening of surrounding knowledge, seem to be perspicuous in itself. With studious attention, we perceve two different forms of res- piration; one being a continued stream of air throughout the whole time of expiration; the other consisting in the issue of breath by short iterated jets. The first is that of ordinary breath- 152 THE MECHANISM ing, panting, sighing, groaning, and sneezing. The second is employed in laughter, crying, and speech.* By a command over the muscles of respiration, the speaking- breath is frugally dealt out to successive sylables, in limited por- tions appropriate to the time and force of each: thereby guarding against the necessity of frequent inspirations: while these mo- mentary pauses between sylables as well as words, allow an opening of the radical for articulation, and instant opportunities for recovering the breath. The act of coughing is either a series of short abrupt efforts, in expiration ; or of one continued impulse which yields-up the whole of the breath. This last forms one of the means for acquiring the Orotund. The single impulse of coughing is an abrupt utter- ance of one of the short tonic vocalities, followed by a contin- uation of the atonic breathing A, till the expiration is exhausted. Let this compound function, consisting of the exploded tonic vocality and the aspiration, be changed to an entire vocality, by omitting the sharp abruptness of the cough, and continuing the tonic in place of the aspiration. The sound thus produced, will with proper cultivation, lead to that full and sub-sonorous char- acter, here denominated the orotund. This contrived effort of coughing when freed from abruptness, is like the voice of Gaping; for this has a hollow and sub-sonor- ous vocality, very different from the coloquial utterance of tonic sounds. It may be exemplified by giving the tonic a-we, with the mouth widely extended ; and by speaking, as far as it is pos- sible, in a gaping articulation. When the pupil can effect this entire vocality of the artificial cough, if it may be distinguished from the usual coughj which, with its quick explosion, is in part vocality and part aspiration^ let him practice it sufficiently, yet avoiding the initial abruptness, and he will not only acquire facility in executing it, but its clear- * Laughter and Crying will be particularly noticed hereafter. Sighing and Groaning are expirations of similar time; one being an atonic or whispered element, the other a tonic vocality. Sneezing is a rapid expiration abruptly begun; and generally producing one of the elements. I say nothing here of the various forms of inspiration connected with these acts. OF THE VOICE. 153 ness and smoothness will be thereby improved. Let the voice be herein exercised by rising and falling through the concrete scale, on each of the tonic elements^ drawing out the vocality to the utmost extent of expiration. Then let trials be made on the syl- abic combinations.* Being able to execute the tonic elements and single sylables in the orotund, the pupil is not therefore fully prepared to speak continuously in it: and on attempting to utter a sentence in this voice, his coloquial manner returns. The cause of this will be obvious, by recolecting the distinction between the two kinds of expiration. For though he may be able to execute the orotund on single sylables, in the continuous stream of vocality, he has yet to learn the use of that voice, with those interrupted jets of expiration, which are essential to easy and agreeable speech. Con- tinued practice however, with a gradual increase in the number of sylables, will bring his interrupted expiration of the orotund, under available command. Although he may then be able to utter any number of succes- sive sylables, by interrupted jets of this voice, yet, from having therein, no ability to vary the intervals, the manner of their suc- cession will be monotonous: he will have no power of expressive intonation, and will be unable to make the proper close at the end of a sentence. Repeated practice will give correctness and variety on these points, and the management of the orotund, for the impressive and elegant purposes of speech will in time, be no more difficult than that of the coloquial voice. The method of gradually acquiring the orotund is similar to our instinctive progress through the successive periods of speech. The cries of infants are made on the continued stream of vocality. It is a long time before they employ the interrupted expiration. The first utterance of the child is by an apportionment of a sin- gle sylable to a breath. By a preparatory exercise in the inter- rupted jets of laughter and crying, the command over expiration, and the habit of perfect speech is acquired. The same kind of * This process of forcing out the breath to the seeming exhaustion of the lungs, is apt to produce giddiness of the head. Care should therefore be taken, to avoid continuing the exercise of the voice too long in this manner; and to desist for the time, when that affection comes on. 11 154 THE MECHANISM monosylabic breath, employed in infant articulation, and in ac- quiring the orotund, occurs in the debility of age, in pulmonary oppression, and in cases of prostration from disease; for here the utterance frequently consists of but one, or at most two sylables to an act of expiration. The condition is similar in panting from violent exercise; the voluntary command over the interrupted jets of expiration being therein lost. The orotund is possessed in various degrees of excelence by eminent Actors; yet being a muscular function, not necessarily connected either with mind or ear, we often perceve it, in those of a humble class. The state of mere animal instinct in which Actors have chosen to keep themselves, with regard to the uses of the voice, must convince usj they can have no systematic purpose, nor indeed any successful means for improving it. There is, how- ever, one circumstance in theatrical speech, that may undesign- edly produce in time, the full volume of the sub-sonorous orotund. I mean the practice of vociferating, seemingly required by the extent of the House, by the deaf taste of the audience, and by the poetical rant and bombast of what are called 'stock acting tragedies.' In addition, therefore, to the previously described means for acquiring the orotund, I shall, in a few words, point out another method derived from the vehement efforts of histrionic speech. Let the Reader make an expiration on the interjection hah, in the voice of whisper, with a widely extended mouth, and with a duration sufficient to press all the air from the lungs. Then let the whisper in this process be changed to vocality. This vocality, like that of gaping, will have the hoarse fulness and sub-sonorous volume of the orotund. The forcible exertion of this kind of voice constitutes Vociferation; for vociferation is the utmost effort of the natural voice, as the shriek or yell is of the falsette. Actors who affect the first rank in their art, are often by energy of passion urged to a degree of force, which produces the mixture of vocality and aspiration, in the interjection hah; and it will be shown in a future section, that the junction of a certain degree of aspiration with the tonic elements, is one of the means of earnest and forcible expression. The frequent occurrence of exaggerated passion and language in the drama, joined to the effort required OF THE VOICE. 155 by the dimensions of a Theater, induces the habit of interjective expiration, which exerted through a wide extension of the mouth, leads the speaker to the attainment of the orotund, if his voice is capable of it. It must not be supposed that the full, hollow, and sub-sonorous orotund is always of the same purity. It varies in its degrees of force and fulness; and is sometimes slightly infected with aspi- ration, nasality, vocal murmur, or guttural harshness. If it should be askedj what advantage is gained by the care and labor here enjoined, for acquiring this improved condition of the speaking voice, it may be answeredj First. The mere sound is more tunable than that of the com- mon voice. Compared with the full and sub-sonorous character of a well-timed orotund, some voices have as little even of a hint of music in them, as the noise of a hammer on a block. This vocality, so impressive with its dignity of volume, often catches the ear and approbation of those who are quite insensible to the agency of pause, quantity, and intonation. I have known the single influence of an orotund voice give extensive fame to an actor, who in more essential points of good reading, was even be- low mediocrity. It is this vocality which dignifies the other excelencies of speech. In the voice of women it is most obvious and delightful. I refer to their speech only, not to the lower notes of their contralto in song. Second. The orotund is fuler in volume, and purer in vocality than the common voice; and as the latter gives a delicate atten- uation to the vanishing movement, the former with no less appro- priate effect, displays the stronger body of the radical. Third. Its pure and impressive vocality gives distinctness to pronunciation ; and when completely formed is free from the dul- ness created by nasality or aspiration; the characteristic offen- siveness of which is shown by their union in Snoring. Fourth. It exerts a greater degree of articulative and expres- sive power than the common voice. In this respect it has the character of things perfect in their kind. The ear seems filled with its volume, and asks for no more. There is too, on the part of the speaker himself, that satisfaction which accompanies the full energizing of a function; for here Nature herself seems to 1«3G THE MECHANISM acknowledge; the voice has done its whole duty. Those who by cultivation of the singing-voice, have brought its tone to the utmost extent of fulness and purity, will admit the importance of practice and perseverance, in preparing the voice for the purposes of speech. Compared with the power and facility of an endowed and high-taught Vocalist, common instinctive eiforts in song seem to be not much removed from the imbecility of paralysis. Fifth. The orotund, from the discipline of cultivation, is more under command than the common voice; and is consequently more efficient and precise in the production of long quantity; in varying the degrees of force; in executing the tremulous scale; and in fulfiling all the other purposes of expressive intonation. Sixth. It is the only kind of voice appropriate to the master- style of epic and dramatic reading. Through it alone, the actor consummates an outward sign of the grandeur and energy of his thought and passion. Employed in what will presently be de- scribed as the Diatonic Melody, the impressive authority and dignified elegance of this voice, excede as measurably the meaner sounds of ordinary discourse, as the superlative pictures of the poet, and the broad wisdom of the sage, respectively transcend the poor originals of life and all their wretched policies. It is the only voice capable of fulfiling the solemnity of the Church- service, and the majesty of Shakespeare and Milton. Finally, as the orotund does not destroy the ability to use the common voice, it may be perceved how their contrasted employ- ment may add the resource of vocal light and shade, if we may so speak, to the means of oratorical coloring and design. The Mechanism of the Tremulous movement does not appear to be connected with the visible parts of the fauces; although there is a gurgling noise somewhat resembling it, produced by a vibration of the uvula, when brought into contact with the base of the tongue, in the expiration of the elements e-ve and e-rr. I leave it for future observers to ascertain; whether the tremulous rise and fall may not be refered to the organic cause of the varia- tions of pitch, in the natural and falsette voices. I have thus endeavored to set-forth what we do not know of the mechanism of speech. The subject of the voice is divided into two branches. Anatomy and Physiology. The first embraces a OF THE VOICE. 157 description of the vocal organs. The second, a history of the functions performed by that organization. The anatomical struct- ure is recorded to the utmost visible and microscopic minuteness. The history of those audible functions which it is the design of this Work to developej and which, by the strictest meaning of the term, constitute the vocal physiology^ has in a great measure been disregarded, under a belief that these functions are altogether beyond the power of analytic perception. In disregarding the physiological analysis of vocality, force, and pitch of vocal sound, writers have endeavored to ascertain only what parts of the organization produce these several phe- nomena; and seem to have almost restricted the name of physi- ology to their vain and contradictory notions about these mechan- ical causations. Hence in the Elocutional physiology, if we may so call it, of the organs of speech, there is little of that rooted opinion, which in most cultivated sciences contends with an origi- nal inquirer, in every attempt to sacrifice ignorance and error to the cause of truth. Whereas the subject of mechanical causation, like all other matters of theory, has become doctrinal and di- vided ; and the inquirer has here not only to strive at reaching the secrecy of nature, but harder still, has to encounter the obstinacy of sectaries whose opinions have grown into pride, by their un- yielding contentions with each other. When the observative Reader has finished this volume, he will perceve that in part of this fifth section, and occasionally else- where, I was unavoidably occupied with the contestable opinions of men; but generally, with an endeavor to extend our views of the human voice, by consulting and recording the Oracular voice of Nature : a contrast that may well induce a lover of truth and brevity to exclaimj Happy is he, who desiring to enlarge the circle of knowledge, comes to a subject which the fictional finger of the school has never touched. 158 THE EXPRESSION OF SPEECH. SECTION VI. Of the Expression of Speech. Is the preceding sections we have explained the terms of the five modes of speech, with many of their forms and varieties; have described these modes and forms, as they appear in the radical and vanish, the alphabetic elements, and in the construc- tion of sylables; and far as accurately ascertained, have shown how the Organs of the Voice mechanically produce the phe- nomena of these modes and forms. These explanations and de- scriptions give a preparatory view of the functions of speech; and embrace all the generalities required by an inteligent and attentive Reader, in pursuing the subsequent details of this Work. Speech is employed to declare the States and Purposes of the mind. These are first known to us as Perceptions; and Per- ceptions may be divided into Thoughts, and Passions. According to this view, the design of speech is to declare our thoughts and passions. If we acknowledge this distinction in the states of mindj the voice must, by a like ordination, have distinct means or signs for declaring them. It is therefore of great importance to ascer- tain, what are the different means in the voice, for declaring in one case, the plain and simple condition of thought; and in the other, the excited mental condition of passion : for these will form the leading divisions of our present subject. Schoolmen make a vague distinction between thoughts and passions, and common usage has adopted their language. This is not a place for controversy; nor is it necessary to inquire deliberately, whether the above distinction refers to the essential character of the states of mind, or to their degrees. Some may be disposed to consider thought and passion as varied degrees only, of intensity of perceptions; since the function, noted as a plain unexcited thought in one, has in another, from its urgency, and without apparent specific difference, the active power of a THE EXPRESSION OF SPEECH. 159 passion; and in the same person at different times, like circum- stances produce, according to the varied susceptibility of excite- ment, the mental condition of either a passion or a thought. Perhaps it might not be difficult to show, that these states of the mind have many points in common; and that no definite line of demarkation can be drawn between them. But however insepa- rably involved in their mingling affinity^ the states of mind in thought, and in passion, are in their more remote relationships, either in kind or degree distinguishably different. Corresponding to this difference between thought and passion, the vocal means for declaring their extreme distinctions are, as we shall learn hereafter, no less strongly marked : yet their assim- ilating forms prevent a strict line of separation between them. In uttering, as a polite or merely thoughtful request, the phrasej give me that book, we use quite a different intonation and force, from that employed on the same words, as a passionate and rude imperative. Gradually add earnestness to the request, and gradu- ally moderate the command: and as the states of mind become identical, so will the voices, if properly representing those changes. Notwithstanding this manifest difference of meaning in the terms Thought and Passionj we have not, in our ignorance of the ana- lytic history of speech, perceved the want of a discriminative nomenclature, and consequently have no brief corresponding terms, for the vocal signs that severally represent them. Books on elocution have indeed vaguely employed the word Expression, to signify the voice of passion. But they furnish us with no single or appropriate term for the plain declaration of simple or passionless thought; which as we procede in our history, will be essentially required. Until physical science shall direct a penetrating and diffusive light upon the reciprocal influence between the mind and the voice, all will be desultory and confused. Thus the term Ex- pression, though sufficient for the indefinite elocution of the Orator and the Player-* is not restrictive; for it is as common to speak of the expression of an unexcited thought, or meaning in language, as of the expression of its passion. This want of precise distinction between the states of thought and passion, 160 THE EXPRESSION OF SPEECH. has been one cause why we have no precise terms for vocal signs to denote this distinction. Metaphysics, which has been in a great measure, the art of searching for the useless, and seeming to find the impossible re- lationships of things^ has unfortunately been suffered, for it is a disaster, to spread its 'insane root,' within and throughout the subject of the mind; and has been so blindly groping in its ab- surd attempt to distinguish between Matter and Spirit? that it has not regarded the manifest difference between the mental states of thought and passion, and consequently between the vocal signs which denote the difference. The Natural Science of speech requires the convenience and precision of a proper nomenclature, for the assignable distinctions of both the mind and the voice. New terms for these distinctions might be taken from other languages ; yet as the plain-English spoken facts of this volume may to the calm philosopher, who should 'wonder at nothing,' be so repulsively strange^ I am not disposed to strengthen the repulsion if avoidable, by adding the further strangeness, of words adopted from a classic or a foreign tongue. Our divisions will therefore be marked by familiar Eng- lish words, with prefixed or terminative additions. Most of the inquiries into the subject of the human mind have produced little else than partizan contention in the schools^ and delusive self-conceit, about their own faculties, among the vulgar. This has kept the nomenclature of the conditions and uses of the mind, so indefinite or erroneous, as to confound every attempt, by strict observation, severally to arrange under its vague and vari- able terms, the directly related subjects of the mind and the voice. Should I then fail, or not do my best in this purpose, the Reader, if not able to do his better best, may perhaps acknowl- edge the difficulty of the task. The states of mind, indefinitely called 'idea, perception, thought, sentiment, emotion, feeling, and passionj' whatever their different characters or degrees, having never been reduced to order, and to clear definition^ we will until a time of more accurate observation, endeavor to embrace the imperfect design of those terms, within a nomenclature of greater compass and precision. THE EXPRESSION OF SPEECH. 161 On a broad survey of these 'ideas, perceptions, thoughts, sen- timents, and passions,' we perceve in their conditions and agencies, the distinctions of a Plain and Quiet State of Mind; a state of Excitement; and a state Between these extremes. We may then call the first of these states, that of Thought ; the middle state, Inter-thought; the third, Passion: and for the relationships of these states to Language, make a corresponding division of the vocal signs, ordained by Nature severally to represent them. In the detail of this arrangement, it may be necessary to refer to some of the topics of future sections, yet we shall use no term, without a present or previous explanation. The First state or condition of the mind is its simple percep- tion of things, their actions, and other relationships^ with no reference to the exciting interests of human life. We apply to both this state of plain thought, and to the vocal sign that de- notes it, the term Thoughtive. Its vocal sign consists in the sim- ple rise and fall and shorter wave of the interval of the second; of an unobtrusive vocality ; with a moderate degree of Force; and short sylabic Time or Quantity. The Second, or intermediate condition has that relation to human life, which excites moderately self-interesting reflections in the mindj and embraces dignity, pathos, awe, serious admira- tion, reverence, and other states congenial in character and de- gree with these. We call this condition of the mind, and its vocal signs, the Inter-tTiouglitive, but preferably the Admirative or Reverentive. , Its signs are variously the interval of the semitone, the second, occasionally the third and fifth, with their waves; an extended time; a full orotund vocality; with a moderate but dig- nified force. The Third condition has a more immediate and vivid reference to human life, its reflective interests, and actions, throughout the impressive forms, degrees, and varieties of passion. We call this state of mind, and the signs which denote it, the Passionative. Its signs are the semitone, and wider rising and falling intervals, with their waves; either a short, or an extended time; a striking and varied vocality ; abruptness ; with high degrees, and impres- sive forms of force. 162 THE EXPRESSION OF SPEECH. I have in these divisions, used the terms Inter-thought, and Inter-thoughtive, briefly to denote, the intermediate condition between thought and passion; but as these words are at first startling, and are not altogether exact, I will generally designate the forms of this division of the mental state and its vocal signs, as Admirative, or Reverentive, and use the term Inter-thought, merely for brevity of phrase. These terms for the three divisions, do not as it appears, be- long to our language; and conveying no other meaning than here ascribed to them, cannot be confounded or mistaken: and their final particle including the idea of agency, properly designates the influence of the state of mind on the vocal sign, and that of the vocal sign on the ear. Thus, the thoughtive state produces the thoughtive signj and the thoughtive sign produces a thoughtive state of mind in the hearer. The case is similar, in the influence of the inter-thoughtive and the passionative states respectively on their vocal signs j and of their signs, on the hearer. The effect of the signs of the inter-thoughtive^ or as I would call it, the admirative or the reverentivej and of the passionative divisions, constitutes, in its varieties and degrees, what we have named, at the head of this section, the Expression of Speech. We have thus far considered only the single or individual sign, and the single or momentary state of mind that directs it. This state of mind may be continued, and with its sign, extended throughout the current of discourse. The continuation of the same state of mind and of its appropriate vocal sign forms a Current manner or Style. Of this we make three divisions. Each consists of a succession of its own peculiar constituents of mental state, and vocal sign; and may be severally called, the Thoughtive, Inter-thoughtive, and Passionative Style of reading and speech. The motive for taking a separate view of the in- dividual instance of the state of mind, and of its vocal signj and of their continued stylej and for applying the same nomen- clature in each casej is, that we shall sometimes refer separately to a single state of mind, and its sighj and sometimes to a con- tinued current style: and as the style is only a continuation of this single state and sign, it is proper to apply the same terms to identical constituents in the two cases. THE EXPEESSION OF SPEECH. 163 In here dividing the subject of the states of mind from their vocal signs; and in denoting the individuality of these states and their signs, as well as their succession in a current style, by the same termsj we offer a simple, and for present practical purposes, a sufficient outline of a classification of the relationships between the mind and the voice. And were we describing Nature, to those only who can throw-aside the habit of an old, limited, and dis- tracting nomenclature, for one more recent and precise, we would not at this time, encumber her simplicity. But the attempts of the metaphysical schools to discriminate the states of the mind, and the vocal signs, are in greater part, so visionary, variable, indefinite, and erroneous^ and their nomenclature, both of state and of sign, so vague and superficial^ that I shall endeavor to give their dim gropings after both mind and voice, more meaning and precision, by connecting some of their terms for state and sign, as synonyms with the threefold analytic divisions here de- scribed. The term Narrative, is in common language, but with no refer- ence to our proposed distinctions-; employed for the plain state- ment, declaration, or affirmation of a fact, and of its causes and consequences; or for describing the course of an event. These purposes not requiring force, or other passionative expression, denote, the state of mind, we call thoughtive; and thus direct the thoughtive vocal sign. The narrative then, together with the simply declarative, affirmative, descriptive, inexpressive, and un- impassioned may all be classed with our thoughtive division, both as individual state and signj and as a continued style. That is, there may be, an individual narrative state of mind, and an indi- vidual narrative signj and a continued narrative state of mind, and a continued narrative signj and in like manner of the other terms. Several terms in common language, indefinitely signifying states of mind, might when slightly altered, be classed with our admirative and reverentive. These are the sentimental, if this word has a meaning, the gravely pathetic, the dignified, the respectful, the supplicative, and the penitential; for these have conventional meanings, which seem to correspond in character 164 THE EXPRESSION OF SPEECH. " and degree, to the state of mind we have ascribed to our second division ; and which may if required, be used synonymously with its term, Inter-thoughtive, in both its individual designation and its current style: making a dignitive state and sign, and a cogni- tive continued style; and in like manner of the other terms. For synonymous classification with the Passionative division, common language furnishes the words, impassioned, expressive, the earn- estly interrogative, exclamatory, derisive, contemptuous, and others of the same vehement family; together with the numer- ous terms for the passions. All these severally employ the im- pressive forms of vocality, time, force, abruptness, and intonation. The terms Rhetorical and Declamatory are sometimes used with reference to an expressive state of mind, and to energy of voice. If they were classed with our passionative division, it might per- haps render their meaning less indefinite. The passionative states of mind, as just remarked, are also designated by the conventional terms for human passion of every kind. Some of these will in a future section, 'on the signs of thought and passion,' be refered to their appropriate modes and forms, among the named and measurable constituents of Ex- pressive speech. I have not refered those two common terms for an indefinite state of minclj Emotion and Feelingj to a place in our arrange- ment, since the former is not assignable by me at least, to either of the expressive divisions ; nor to the thoughtive ; and the latter will be hereafter applied to the state of mind connected with the vocal expression of song. With this outline of the relations be- tween mind and language, we leave future observation, to class under our threefold division, if approved or corrected, whatever common terms, we may have overlooked^ but which broader and more accurate investigation of the states of mind and of the Voice, may assign to their proper places. From this view we percevej the full and effective philosophy of elocution embraces two leading considerations. The first, that every individual vocal sign may convey a single state of thought, inter-thought, or passion. The second, that the several states of mind, with their signs, when successively continued, form a cur- THE EXPRESSION OF SPEECH. 165 rent style of discourse j or what will be described more particularly, in a future section, as the Drift of the voice. With all our definitions and divisions, it will be perceved in the course of this Work, how difficult it is to draw a definite line of separation between the thoughtive, the reverentive, and the pas- sionative states of mindj and between the signs which severally represent them; and how the mental as well as the vocal dif- ferences pass, by indistinguishable shades, into each other. It is not therefore to be supposed^ these several drifts of Thought, Inter-thought, and Passion, with their respective signs,"* are used separately, and kept distinct from each other ; by which the ear might become familiar with their several peculiar char- acters^ and thus perceve their details, through a comparative observation of the general contrasts, and particular differences between their various styles. Were this the case, the marked vocal effect of the different drifts, each with its peculiar character both in reading and speechj would have early drawn philosophic, if not vulgar attention to the striking differences between their general currents^ then to the differences of the individual signs that constitute the different currentsj and finally to a full analysis of speech. Yet even in the natural ordination of the voice, and more con- spicuously in its corruptions, the course of a drift is not strictly continuous and identical with itself; other individual states of mind, with their vocal signs, and other drifts being occasionally and variously interspersed in all oratorical and common discourse; and this by confounding irresolute observation, has been a princi- pal cause why the particulars of the true relationships between mind and the voice were not long ago clearly perceved and named. We have in the course of what our vain-glorious, yet disputable assumption calls Civilization, so disorderly mixed up our thoughts with our passions, and our passions with each other, that Nature, disturbed perhaps by human error, in the design and fulfilment of her final causesj has to the transient observer, pre- sented an apparent confusion, in the connection between the mind and the voice. And yet true in part to the law of adapting speech to thought and passion, she still shows occasional and 166 THE EXPRESSION OF SPEECH. striking examples of her ordinations ; which should have enabled others, and which have directed the Author, to make, however imperfectly, the divisions, and nomenclature here proposed. Let us under another view, recapitulate our account of the character, applications, and transitions of the different vocal cur- rents of discourse. When one or more sentences describe an object or a piece of machinery, or narrate the course of an event, it forms the purely Thoughtive, narrative, simply affirmative, or descriptive style. •'A current of similar extent, on some dignified, plaintive, rever- ential, or solemn declaration, in the Church Service^ in epic, dramatic, and other elevated yet calmly expressive composition^ would be a pure instance of the inter-thoughtive, or reverentive and admirativej and the voice of vehement appeals in the Forum, of an excited scene on the Stage, of the furious liberty of temper at a universal-suffrage Election, and of the uproar of a Volunteer Fireman's Law-permitted fight, would give both refined and vulgar examples of the passionative. These several styles or drifts, gen- erally occur only in short sections of various extent, in the greater part of discourse. We may therefore have a drift of clauses, members, and whole sentences; but rarely is half a page, and never a chapter, to be found exclusively in one continuous style. For an ilustration of the manner of transition from one drift to another, through the intermingled use of their several constitu- entsj suppose the thoughtive or narrative with its simple second or tone, to have here and there, a word distinguished from the rest, by a more impressive interval, an extended time on the wave of the second, the full quality of the orotund, if available^ and you pass to the admirative and reverentive. Again, suppose the semitone and wider intervals, various waves, added force, pro- longed time, peculiar quality, and abruptness] to be brought into the reverentive, or to distinguish all its emphatic words; and you rise to the highest forms of expression in the passionative style or drift. As the art of elocution is essentially founded on the state of the mind and its indication by the voices the necessity of frequent reference to these agencies, requiring the frequent use of their THE EXPRESSION OF SPEECH. 167 termsj I shall, to avoid too near a repetition of them, variously employ "with the same meaning, the termsj state of mind; mental and intelectual state or condition; perhaps the new word Men- tivity, if allowed; and when admissible, the word, state, alone. For the indication by the voice, I shall variously employ the termsj vocal, verbal, thoughtive, and expressive sign; and when admissible the word, sign, alone. From the confused and distracted attempts, throughout scho- lastic ages, to make something out of the almost nothing of com- mon knowledge on the voicej and from those fruitless attempts having produced a nearly universal opinion, that a discriminative perception of the ' tones' of the voice is unattainable^ I have soley by means of a different method of inquiry, been enabled to offer many important facts, and to propose for them a classifica- tion and nomenclature, which may lead Elocutionists to listen and hear for themselves; and by this more extended observa- tion, to propose divisions and terms, more comprehensive and exact. Nature is always at work among us ; and though from indolence we may not choose to scrutinize her ordinations, and may not through fear of encountering a frowning difficulty, be willing to look her labors in the facej still the numberless unsuc- cessful endeavors to name, without perceving, the wise adaptation of the various conditions of the mind to the various expressive modes of the voicej seem instinctively to show that her purposes, if even mistaken or perverted, have not been entirely lost sight-of nor forgotten. I have therefore from the indefinite and groping nomenclature of the careless world, and of its equally careless metaphysicians, endeavored to gather what seemed to me might be taken, as approximate vulgar-synonyms to the terms of our views on the subject of the relationships between the mind and the voice. I here propose to assist the Reader's attention and memory, by reducing the several preceding divisions of the individual states and signs of the current styles of Expression, to the fol- lowing^ 108 THE EXPRESSION OF SPEECH. TABULAR VIEW. Condition or States of mind. Thoughtive or Unexcited state. Inter-though- tive or Admirative and Reverentive state. Passionative or Excited state. Vocal Signs of those States. r The simple rise and fall and shorter wave of the interval of the second ; an unobtrusive vocality; a -j moderate degree of force; and a short sylabic quan- L <%■ The semitone, the second, occasionally the third and fifth with their waves; an extended time; a full oro- tund vocality ; and a mod- erate but dignified force. The semitone, and wider rising and falling intervals, with their waves ; either a short or extended time; a striking and varied vocal- ity; abruptness; with high degrees and expressive _ forms of force. Synonyms of old conven- tional terms vaguely applied to state, and style, and sign. Narrative, simply declara- tory or affirmative ; descrip- tive; dispassionate; inexpres- sive ; unimpassioned ; emo- tionless ; plain and even tone of voice. Sentimental; gravely pa- thetic; reverential; dignified; respectful; supplicative; pen- itential; and expressive of awe and admiration. Impassioned ; expressive ; earnestly interrogative ; de- clamatory; rhetorical; con- temptuous; derisive; and the conventional terms for every vehement passion. I shall not indeed be always able to entirely satisfy myself, in the use of every term of the preceding divisions with their synonyms. But having given a new and far-reaching analysisj a new arrangement and nomenclature became necessary; and imperfect as it may be, the leading lines of the methodic survey will afford others, an example at least of a failure ; which by the negative assistance of a rejected error, may help to remove some of the difficulty that might otherwise delay success. Let me however, caution my Readers, not to rely so implicitly on the sus- picions of an author against himself, as hastily to confirm his concessive and due distrust, of what wiser and assuring time may at length show to be worthy of adoption. Of all this essay, the arrangement I have been obliged to offer on the subject of expression, has delayed if not perplexed me the THE EXPRESSION OF SPEECH. 169 most, and satisfied me least: since it aims to divide for the pur- pose of instruction, what Nature in her purposed agency, seems to have joined by the chain, or as we may here call it, the con- crete connection of all her creative transitions. In other parts of this Work, I had, where happily no language existed, to make one for untold phenomena: in this, to encounter a desperate con- fusion in the language of the scholastic world, formed before it knew distinctly what it had to name. The classifications of science were instituted in part, to assist the working powers of the intelect; yet in fulfiling the purpose of communicating and preserving knowledge, they unfortunately sometimes produce the undesigned hindrance of its alteration or advancement, by creating a belief of its systematic completion. Though the numberless revolutions in scientific arrangement are full of admonitions^ we forget how often the fictitious affinities, and the distinctions of system have on the one hand, presump- tuously united the intended divisions of Nature, and on the other, broken the beautiful connection of her circle of truth. In submission to the necessities of instruction, I have attempted, by an arrangement, however imperfect, to distinguish the several states of mindj and the several vocal signs that represent them ; with the hope that future inquiry may determine their real re- lationships, by a full and accurate history of the Mind, and of the Voice. For we may as well suppose, all those works of use- fulness are already accomplished, which are foretold by the just and extended powers of human observation, and the calculated promises of Science^ as that those Delightful Arts, which em- ploy while they regulate the refined purposes of perception, have yet disclosed their coming grandeurs and graces, prefigured, under the future extension of knowledge and precept, in the Prophetic Book of Taste. Let us leave the seventh day of rest, to the holiday rejoicing of physicians, lawyers, priests, and politicians, who look upon their disastrous creations, and cunning schemes for human misery, and pronounce them original, and finished, and good. Let them build strongly around the vaunted perfec- tion of their Theories, Codes, Councils, and Constitutions. Let them guard the ark of a forefather's wisdom, and proclaim its unalterable holiness to the people, for the safety, honor and 12 170 THE EXPRESSION OF SPEECH. emolument of the keeper. The great Contributions to Knowl- edge, like the great and progressive Creations of Nature herself, have never yet found and perhaps never will find, their day of rest; and the renowned forefathers of many a work of usefulness as well as glory are, by the like merit or ambition which raised their own temporary greatness, transmuted to corrigible children, in the eye of the advancing labor of a later age. It has been alleged of the expression of speech, that a dis- crimination of its concealed and delicate agency, is beyond the scrutiny of the human ear. If the term human ear is sarcastically used for that fruitlessly busy and slavish organ, which has so long listened for the clear voice of nature, amid the conflicting tumult of opinion and authority, we must admit and regret the truth of the assertion. But it is not true of a keen, industrious, and in- dependent exercise of the senses; nor can it be affirmed without profanity, of that supreme power of observation, deputed among the final causes of creation, for the effective gathering of truth, and the progressive improvement of mankind. Our conquests in knowledge must be the joint achievement of cautious, but free-minded and industrious Numbers, and of de- liberate, patient, and unwasted Time. Leaving then to populous futurity the gradual completion of the Work, I looked around for present assistance: and having, with more need than hope, yet with an untold purpose, consulted the views of others on the analytic means for delineating the voice of expression-; I generally receved some query like this: Is it possible to recognize and measure all those delicate variations of sound, that have passed so long without detection, and that seem scarcely more amenable to sense than the atoms of air on which they are made? It is possible to do all this: and if we cannot 'Find the way' for a victorious development of nature, 'let usj' with the maxim, and in the contriving thought, and resolution of the great Cartha- genian Captain 3 'let us Make one.' It will not be denied, that vocality, force, time, and intonation, under all their forms, constituting the expression of speech, may be distinctly heard; nor will it be maintained^ there is the least liability, even in the common ear, to misapprehend, or to con- found the varied states of mind, they respectively convey. No: THE EXPRESSION OF SPEECH. 171 still it is objected, that the peculiar kind, the measurable degree, and the commingling variety of those forms cannot be distin- guished. But as the vocal movements thus distinctly audible, include all these conditions; and the states and purposes of the mind are so readily recognized under all their kinds, degrees, and combinations, I leave it to those who make the objection, to ask themselvesj if a full and clear discrimination of the vocal signs is not implied in that recognition. In truth, even the most delicate voices of thought and expression, though supposed to be imper- ceptible, are always distinctly heard; and if the ready compre- hension of their mental purpose may decide the question, are always recognized and measured, in the strictest meaning of the words: but tliey have never been analytically perceved, and defi- nitely named. For even those who have pretended to observe, and to teach on the subject of the voice have as yet, no language for the discriminations, absolutely necessary in the explanation of speech, and every day instinctively made, even by the popu- lar ear. I propose to give a precise history of the vocal means for representing the various states of thought and of passion; to point out their modes, forms, and varieties, and to assign a defi- nite nomenclature to them. There is perhaps no vain confidence, in supposing the Reader to be now well acquainted with the character of the radical and vanishing movement. This wide-reaching function of the voice, has been represented under its different forms, in speech and song. We have traced it in the literal elements, and seen its influence in directing the phenomena of sylables. I have yet to show its instrumentality in the various and delicate uses of ex- pression: and if I shall be able thereby to unfold the principles of this marvelous mystery of Nature, it will be, by developing some of the particulars of that greater marvel of agency, in which a wise simplicity of means is employed throughout her profuse and never-wasteful creations. Five general divisions of the modes of vocal sound were made in the first section of this essay. In summary repetition, they arej Vocality, or kind of voice ; Time, or the measure of its dura- tion ; Force, or the variations of strength and weakness ; Abrupt- ness, or an explosive utterance; and Pitch, or the variations of 172 THE PITCH acuteness and gravity. It will be shown, that each of these gen- eral modes is inclusive of many forms and varieties, with their different degrees; and that the now measurably thoughtive and passionative signs of speech, consist of the unmysterious use of the different forms and varieties of these modes, and of their different combinations with each other. SECTION VII. Of the Pitch of the Voice. The mode of the voice we have now T to consider, although not more essential than the others, in the constituency of speech, has nevertheless, from our ignorance of its particular forms and uses, been a subject of wonder; and from our childish love of wonder has become especially a subject of interesting inquiry. To this mode of Pitch belong the many forms and varieties of Intona- tion, or as they have been called in the schools of Rhetoric and Prosody, by a sort of prescriptive determination, the 'undiscover- able or unassignable Tones or accents of the voice.' The Greeks in their fondness for definition and division, were always disposed to go to the root of whatever knowledge they be- leved to have a root, and at the same time to be worthy of in- quiry. They seem therefore, as we might infer from their want of thoughtful curiosity^ setting aside their neglect of observation^ to have considered a full analysis of speech, as impracticable, or as useless. Either from these or other causes, the subject so feebly attracted their attention, that we might be disposed to think they derived their knowledge of the Sliding or concrete function, from Egypt or from some earlier Eastern source. Had it been discovered in the school of Pythagoras, or of Aristoxenus, it does not seem probable, that having found this key to the entrance of speech, they would have closed their hearing to what yet re- mained within the secrecy of nature: for, with a moderate degree OF THE VOICE. 173 of curiosity, and a very little further observation of the simple concrete, they would have perceved that important subdivision of its structure, which we have described as the Radical and Vanish. However this may have been, neither the Greeks nor the Romans, apparently writing all they knew on the practical uses of the concrete accent; have left the least record of their opinions, their expectations, or their hopes on this subject, beyond the re- stricted limit of what they already knew. Yet indispensable as their discovery of the concrete was to the development of speech^ it is certain, they never added to the first and simple perception of this accentual slide, the smallest item of discriminative anal- ysis. The grammarians and commentators of the Alexandrian, Byzantine, and of subsequent schools, in discussing the subject of Greek accent, never extended their inquiry beyond the indefinite opinions of more ancient writers; while still later authors and teachers, with the determined faith and worship of classical schol- arship, beleving it tvas not done by the Greeks, because it really could not be done at all, have at last united in a general per- suasion, nay conviction, that any further discovery is impossible.* * As Dionysius of Halicarnassus, in his treatise 'On the Arrangement of Words,' has described more particularly, the character and practical uses of this accent or inflection, than any other Greek or Roman writer^ I shall, to show how limited and indefinite he is, give from his eleventh section, an ex- tract of all he says on this point; and shall insert in its course some explana- tory parenthetic remarks. 'There is in oratorical discourse, a kind of tune, differing from that of Song, and (from the melody) of Music, only in degree, but not in kind or quality.' (We suppose he means that each employs intervals, but speech fewer, and those of less extent.) Immediately following-up the thought, he adds: 'There is in oratorical discourse, (and in music,) the like tune, that charms the ear; the like rythmus, that sustains the voice; (by the easy and graceful step of accent and quantity ;) the like variety that excites attention; and a like conformity of the whole to its purpose; the only difference being in the more and the less.' (In the number and extent of the intervals.) 'In oratorical discourse, the tune of the voice is re- stricted to the interval of a Fifth, or thereabouts. That is, it does not vary beyond three tones and a half, (these being the constituents of a Fifth,) either in an upward or downward direction. It is not to be supposed^ all the words of discourse are to be pronounced with the same accent; (inflection or concrete ;) for one is to have an acute, (rising,) another a grave (falling) accent, and another to have both, (the acute, joined in continuation ivith the grave, on the same sy table.) which is called the Circumflex.' Again, 'some words have the acute and the grave separately heard on different sylables. In disylables, there is no 12* 174 THE PITCH If then we have come to a describable perception of the con- stituents of the voice, let us learn to apply it. There is in our first section, a compendious view of the various forms of Pitch-; from the minute interval of the tremulous scale, to the octave, and beyond it, both in their upward and downward direction, together with their union into various forms of the wave. The greater part of these forms, like those of Vocality, Time, and Force, are employed in the expression of passion: and only a few for denoting simple thought. It is my design to show how these different forms of pitch are used for the several conditions and purposes of the mind. Man, notwithstanding the vain-glorious boast of his moral destiny, his religion, and his progressive civilization^ is now as middle place for applying an acute or grave. (A truism; for where there is no middle sylable there can be no middle accent.) In poly sylables of every kind, one of the sylables has the acute accent and the rest the grave.' ' The tune (say into- nation) of instruments and of song, is by no means limited as in speech, to this interval of the Fifth; but runs through the octave, Fifth, fourth, second, semi- tone, and according to some, the quarter tone.' Here is all that Dionysius says, on what we have been taught to think the profound knowledge and skill of the Greeks, in the philosophy and practice of this singing, or as we must now call it intonation, in speech. Nor is this to be taken as a mere summary of a fuler detail of knowledge; as the description contains more particulars than all the still-remaining rhetorical and musical writings of the ancients. But we find-; this only attempt to describe in detail, the melody of Grecian discourse, refers especially to that equally obscure, and disputed question^ the Accentual stress on sylables ; which certainly would not have been the case, could any of the numerous authors on this subject have had the least thought of a natural and comprehensive system of intonation. Indeed the account of the 'tune' of speech, by Dionysius, and by all the writers on rhetoric and music, seems to have been given only under some vague, and as we must now consider it, absurd notion of the acute, grave, and circumflex accent or inflection, being invariably applied to certain sylables^ both when pro- nounced alone, and in the current of discourse. AVe must therefore conclude^ from this belief of the Greeks, that all their sylabic accents were unchangeable^ it could never have entered their minds, to conceve a measurable and varied melody on successive sylables in speech. It would be wrong, to say^ Dionysius and his Grecians did not know their own opinions about the voice; but I must think, a strict observer in this case will say, they knew almost nothing of its reality. When a false perception is measured by itself, as happens in systems raised upon authority or conceit, all that is defective, distorted, or superfluous, comes out in perfect accord with its own rule, and blinds us to the error. It is a comparison with the rule of observation, which is found only in nature, that shows its deformity. OF THE VOICE. 175 he has been, so generally, an Animal of fierce desires or passions, and so rarely a being of observation and reflection^ that we must not be surprised to find the greater number of his vocal signs, expressive of this ardent and predominating complexion of his character. Of all these upward and downward intervals of the scalej and all the waves in their direct and inverted, equal and unequal, single and double forms, there is but one which is not so employed. The simple rise and fall of the second, with its wave, when used for narrative, or for the plain statement of an unexcited thought; is the only intonated voice of man that does not spring from a passionative, or in some degree, an earnest con- dition of his mind. If we listen to his ignorance, his fears, super- stition, selfishness, arrogance, and injustice, we hear them under the forms of vivid vocal expression. We have the rising intervals of the third, fifth, and octave, for interrogatives, not of kindness, but of the fierce and persecuting Catechists of our life and faith; the downward third, fifth, and octave, for dogmatic, or tyrannical command; waves for the wonder of ignorance, the snarling of ill-humor, and the curling voice of contempt; the piercing hight of the falsette, for the scream of terror, the brawls of intemper- ance, and the shouts of the fanatic around the stake of the martyr; the semitone, for the peevish whine of discontent, and for the puling cant of the hypocrite and knave, who thus strive in vain to conceal their crafty designs. Then listen to him on those rare occasions, when he forgets himself and his passions, and has to utter a useful thought, or plainly to narrate^ and you will hear the second, the unobtrusive interval of the scale, in the admirable adaptation of Nature, made the simple sign of the dispassionate perception of her wisdom and truth. In short, man as an Indi- vidual, is in his forms of intonation, only the type of an eternal National Character; always prone to be vividly expressive of its vain-glory, and its emulative contempt of others; emphatic in self-will; vociferous in cupidity; and unjustly aggressive in its high-toned assumptions and imperative threats; with the piercing and prevailing cry of war, from within and from without, and only occasionally resting in the quiet intonation of moral and intelectual peace, with the Temple of the passionative vocal Janus shut. 176 THE PITCH OF THE VOICE. Iii describing the radical and vanish, the simple interval of the inexpressive second was represented as an individual function, under its form of the equable concrete, on a single tonic element. We will consider in the next section, its application to successive sylables and words, in sentences of continuous speech. This con- tinuous style or drift of speech, formed by the simple thoughtive second, cannot from the character of that second, have what we call expression. It may therefore seem that continuous speech in the second, is designed to be a plain and colorless ground, for the contrasted display of the vivid voice of wider or passionative intervals, applied to occasional sylables in its course. And here the Reader may perceve one motive for our proposed distinction between the non-expressive, so to call it, and the expressive char- acter of the constituents of speech. It was formerly stated that the notes of the musical scale, under a certain order of succession, constitute the melody of song; and we now have to show in what manner a succession of concrete and discrete intervals in the speaking scale constitutes, under some peculiarity of structure, the Melody of Speech. Since I am about to represent that continuous melody of a second, or tone, as the ground upon which other intervals, and other constituents of speech are to be distributed, I must beg the student to give his deliberate attention to the subject. The succession of sylables in plain narrative or descriptive style, being through the intervals of a concrete and discrete tone, the melody is specified as Diatonic. ••»>© © THE DIATONIC MELODY OF SPEECH. 177 SECTION VIII. Of the Diatonic Melody of Speech; together with an inquiry, how far the Musical terms, Key and Modulation, are applicable to it. When the radical and vanishing movement was described, it was regarded individually or as applied to a single sylable. But as speech consists for the most part of a series of sylables, on each of which some form of the concrete instinctively occurs, it is necessary to consider the use and relationships of the radical and vanish, in its repeated application to the successive sylables of discourse. In plain Narrative or Description, or as we called it, Thoughtive discourse, the concrete of each sylable moves through the interval of a tone: and the successive concretes have a difference in the place of their pitch, relatively to each other. The application of these concretes to sylables, and the manner of varying the suc- cession of the places of their pitch, are exemplified on the follow- ing altered sentence of the Soothsayer, in Antony and Cleopatra, He reads in na ture's in fi nite book of se — — ere cy. rr -r «r - * * ~ If we suppose these lines and the included spaces to denote, each in proximate order, the difference of a tone, the succession of the several radicals with their issuing vanish, will show the places of the sylables of the superscribed words, in easy and un- ITS THE DIATONIC impassioned utterance. The perception of the effect of the con- cretes, and of their successions here exemplified, is called the Melody of Speech. A strict definition of the term, melody of speech, embraces the modes of pitch, force, and time, together with the pause; and regards likewise, intervals of the scale wider than above exem- plified, as well as intervals with a downward movement ; for all these are employed in the course of melody : yet as each of them consistently with their place and purpose, will be separately de- scribed hereafter, the present section is limited to the subject of pitch, when the progression is made exclusively through the rising concrete, and the rising and falling discrete interval of a tone; constituting the proper Diatonic Melody. The difference of pitch in this progression is at first to be perceved only by close observation, and by well-directed experi- ment. The pupil being able to intonate the scale, let him prac- tice the interval of a second on sylables, instead of on the simple tonic element; using a different syl able for each degree. Thus prepared, let him read the line of the preceding diagram, and try to recognize its intonation by slowly pronouncing, or rather hack- ing-out only the tonic element of each sylable; and giving those elements so short and abrupt a sound, that the reading being inarticulate may resemble the successions of a short cough. This method will make the variations of pitch more distinguishable, than when the other elements of the sylable are uttered together with the tonic. If this contrived utterance should not afford a clear perception, that the radical of a given sylable rises or falls a tone, from the place of the preceding one, let the pupil measure the questionable relation of the two sounds, by the rule of the scale, in the follow- ing manner. While he pronounces the two sylables as if he were reading, let him notice their pitch, as degrees of the scale. When the second is above the first, those two sylabic sounds will form the first two degrees of the rising scale; and continuing to rise by an alternate use of these sylables, he will complete that scale. When the second sylable is below the first, he will, on adding one or more sylables below the second, recognize the peculiar effect heard at the close of the scale, and on a fall of the voice at a MELODY OF SPEECH. 179 period of discourse ; for this last effect is produced only by down- ward degrees. In the use of the means here proposed, the ear must with divided -attention, be directed, apparently at the same time to the progress of the equable concrete in the spoken melody, and to the succession of notes on the musical scale. To explain the system of melody, we must consider the succes- sion of concretes both in the course of a sentence, and at its close. These divisions may be respectively termed, the Current melody, and the melody of the Cadence. The current melody, or the succession of rise and fall, em- ployed on all the sylables of a sentence, except the last three, may be thus described. In simple thoughtive or narrative language, having no expres- sion, every sylable consists of the rising equable-concrete of a tone. The succession of these concretes has a variation of pitch, in which the radicals of any two never differ from each other more than the interval of a tone. To distinguish these two forms of melodial progression by short and referable terms, let us call the concrete rise of each sylablej the Concrete Pitch of melody ; and the place assumed by the radical of each concrete, above or below that of the preceding^ the Radical Pitch. In the foregoing notation, every one of the sylables has the concrete pitch of a tone, passing from line to space, or from space to line. The two, respectively composing the words nature, and booh of, differ a discrete tone from each other in their radical pitch; the radical pitch of the three sylables in infinite is the same. It will be shown, in its proper place, that the melody employed at some of the pauses in discourse requires a certain order of radical pitch, for justly and agreeably denoting both its meaning, and the different degrees of connection between its divisions. The parts within the divisions made by these pauses, have in general, no fixed succession: for the effect will be both proper and agreeable, if the melody of these parts is made by avoid- ing a continuation of the same radical pitch, or of an alter- nate rising and falling, or any other course of too remarkable a regularity. I offer three different notations of the same sen- tence; where the order of radical pitch in each reading is 180 THE DIATONIC varied; the above caution observed; and where the melody has a simple construction. He ne ver drinks, but, Ti mon's sil ver !"# — ~i — ^~ e£ 4 B treads up on his lip. 4 Jf ^ • " 4 . He ne ver . drinks, but Ti mon's sil ver i $d- d d w 4 • 4 ^ 4 | treads up on his lip. jf _«£ _^0[_ He ne ver drinks, but Ti mon's sil ver 4 4 treads up on his lip. 4^4—4 Other arrangements of a proper and agreeable melody might be made for this sentence, on the principles of the varied suc- cession of radical pitch here exemplified. But, however varied the succession, its forms are all reducible to a limited number of MELODY OF SPEECH. 181 aggregates of the radical and vanish. These may be called the Phrases of Melody. They are shown in the notation of the fol- lowing lines; where the current is constructed in a manner not unsuitable to the simple narrative of the couplet; though here, as in some other instances of this essay, the melody is designed to ilustrate description, rather than to furnish examples of appro- priate elocution. That quar — tev most the skil — ful Greeks of an — — noy, d mf t/ *© © &*~- — SECTION XL Of the Time of the Voice. Two of the cherished relationships of man to man are selfish- ness and emulation. Accustomed therefore to regard himself in the light of personal importance, and of relative position, he is prone to look for consequence and rank in natural things. But Nature affects neither egotism nor precedence, When the five modes of the voice are brought before us, we have that aristo- cratic bias in human curiosity, to discover which is the most im- portant. Yet all are essential and equal in the self-satisfied, and unjealous purposes of Creation; where alone, the Republican pretension does, and until man shall be as wise, and modest, and unenvious as Naturej ever can present itself. Considering vocal- ity, or its occult Substratum, as notional metaphysicians would call it, to be the material of the voice, we see the necessity of its universality: and we shall find that Time, the mode we are now about to consider, is an equally pervading constituent of speech. 200 THE TIME OF THE VOICE. The degrees in duration or in the time of the voice, are repre- sented though indefinitely, by the terms, long, short, quick, and slow; and are variously used, both for simple narrative, and for expression. To be precise^ let long and short designate the time of sylables relatively to each other ; quick and slow, the utterance of any series or aggregate of words. A sylable has a long or short time, or Quantity, as it is called in this case; a phrase, an entire sen- tence, or a continued current of discourse is pronounced in quick or slow time. The occasions for employing these last divisions of time are well known. The state of dignity, deliberation, doubt, and grief affect a slow time; that of gayety, anger, and eager argument, together with parenthetic phrases, assume the quick time in utterance. It is necessary -however, to be more particular on the time of individual sylables, comparatively considered; and to regard them otherwise than under their ordinary prosodial distinctions. The time of sylables varies from the shortest utterable, to their utmost prolongation in oratorical expression. To reduce this in- definite view to available divisions, for future reference, we will arrange sylables under three classes. Let the First embrace those restricted to the shortest quantity : the Second, those limited to a quantity somewhat greater than that of the first : the Third, those of a quantity, varying from the shortest, to even an indefi- nite prolongation. To the First class belong many of those sylables terminated by an abrupt element; and containing a tonic, or an additional sub- tonic, or the further addition of an atonic, such as at, ap, eh, hap-less, j^Y-fall, ac-cep-tance. It is not the short quantity alone of a sylable that gives the character to this class ; for many, with the construction of the third may be, and sometimes are in com- mon usage, equally short. Those now under consideration have this essential characteristic^ they cannot be prolonged, without deforming pronunciation. The word convict, when accented on the first sylable as a noun, and on the last as a verb has, in sim- ple utterance, a certain quantity allotted to the accented sylable. If, for the purpose of rhetorical expression on the noun, the time of the first is indefinitely prolonged, the identical character of the THE TIME OF THE VOICE. 201 word still remains, notwithstanding that extension. With a simi- lar time on the last sylable of the verb, to convict, its drawling pronunciation is remarkable. The sylables assigned to this first class, not admitting an alteration in quantity, may be called Im- mutable. I shall hereafter show their relations to the movements of pitch, and to the functions of accent and emphasis. To the Second class belong most of those sylables terminated by an abrupt element, and containing one or more subtonics or atonies, with a short tonic. The subtonic in this case allows an additional time, greater than that of sylables in the preceding class ; still the abrupt element and the short tonic limit even this moderate extension. Of this class are yet, what, lip, grat-itu^e, des-frwe-tion. In these instances the sylables are longer than those of the immutable class; and for the purpose of expression, the subtonics may be slightly extended beyond their length, in simple utterance. But with undue prolongation, they have the like offensive drawl and deformity perceved in the forced exten- sion of the immutable class. As those included under the present head admit of a slight change in quantity, they may be called Mutable sylables. To the Third class belong all those sylables terminated by a tonic element, or a subtonic, except b, d, and g. Of this kind are go, thee, for, day, man, de-lay, he-guile, ex-treme, care-less, and xe-volve. If the speaker can give full audibility to the essen- tial guttural murmur of the subtonics, b, d, and g, their position, at the end of a sylable, allows a limited prolongation, without obscuring the character of the sylable: as in the words deed, plague, babe, res-tored. But the effect in these cases, is by no means to be compared with that of an extension of time upon other subtonics, and on tonics. In the above pure examples of this class, the quantity may be prolonged, without the disagree- able effect, produced by an increase of time, under the preceding classes. It is the peculiar character of these sylables, that they preserve their identical sylabic sound, through every degree of prolongation ; whereas the immutable and mutable, in some cases can scarcely be recognized under a forced extension. From their allowable variety, the sylables of this class may be said to have an indefinite quantity; and may be called Indefinite sylables. U 202 THE TIME OF THE VOICE. They furnish important means for the expression of speech; some of its most passionative forms, being made on sylables, with this power of indefinite prolongation. The Reader is to receve the foregoing classification, as one adapted to our view of the expressive uses of time. The inves- tigation of the causes of expression, soon showed the importance of other distinctions of quantity, than those of long and short; which, after a thousand years and more, of pretending observa- tion, we continue to transcribe from the meager record of Greek and Latin prosody. The phenomena of expression first directed the division here made ; and however it may be otherwise applied, it will be necessary for the, ready explanation of future parts of this essay. Whatever may be thought of its sufficiency, I must still belevej it is high-time for the superannuated sages of classical literature, to turn-aside the old grammatical ear, in their prosodial researches ; and try if some modern vocal analysis, may not effect upon them, one of those renovations of sense, which it is said, have now and then resuscitated the torpid perceptions of extreme longevity. The power of giving indefinite prolongation to sylables, is not commonly possessed by speakers. It is truej the daily use of the voice frequently calls for extended quantity; but daily discourse is often simple narrative, or if directed by an excited state of mind, is that of active argument, or of contending interests, which employ for the most part, the short time of sylables and the rapid course of utterance. Still, the assertion that a long quantity is not easily practicable, may seem to be questionable: since persons who sing can readily extend their time to an indefi- nite length ; and all utter cries in the same manner. But these voices are generally made on protracted notes ; the difficulty to which we here allude, is in the execution of the equable concrete of speech. We have shown that different forms of the radical and vanish are respectively employed in speech, and song. With- out attention to the use of these forms, it is not always easy to restrict them to their appropriate places. A reader who has not by practice, a facility in executing the long quantities of speech, will be liable, in extending his sylables, to fall into the protracted radical or protracted vanish of song. On the other hand, when THE TIME OF THE VOICE. 203 persons without a musical ear and a singing-voice, imperfectly remember and endeavor to imitate, the melodial successions of song, they are apt to change many of its notes, into the equable concrete of speech. Prolonged cries, and interjections which are only more moderate cries, are always made either by the pro- tracted notes of song, or by movements through the wider inter- vals and their waves ; and though these intervals and waves are both proper to speech, yet the prolonged cry and interjection are the forced effect of occasional passion; and this not often occur- ring in ordinary utterance, the cause is not continued, and the vocal practice not confirmed. The foregoing notice of the exclusion of the peculiar intona- tions of song from speech, furnishes one cause why persons of great accomplishment as singers, are nevertheless indifferent readers or commonplace actors. Other causes will hereafter be assigned for the general want of interchangeable facility in the exercise of the arts of song, and speech. That arising from the different structures of the radical and vanish in the two cases, is not the least influential. The endowed singer may have at command all the means of expression, employed in song: but these means, as we shall learn, are peculiar to song, and are not transferable to speech; and though he is able to clothe every feeling of the Composer, with the melodious succession of his long-drawn notes, his disqualified attempts at speaking intona- tion, strip off or tear to pieces, every expression, to be spread by the equable concrete, over the language of the Poet. To return from this account of different forms of the concrete, to the consideration of the uses of its varied quantity. An im- mutable, mutable, and indefinite time, has each its appropriate manner of fulfiling the purposes of expression. It is however, upon indefinite sylables that the most graceful and dignified effect of intonation is accomplished; as we shall learn in future parts of this essay. Readers who are ignorant of the principles of quan- tity, do yet perceve the necessity of a deliberate movement, for a grave and admirative expression. They therefore, endeavor to supply the want of a long sylabic time, by slight pauses after words, and even between sylables. Propriety and taste however, allow here no compensation : they require most of the prolonged 204 THE TIME OF THE VOICE. time in dignified utterance, to be spent on the sylable itself, and reject the other means, as offensive monotony or affectation. Eminent instances of the essential importance of long quantity may be shown, by considering the sylabic construction of sen- tences with reference to expression: for as the vocal signs of certain states of mind require the prolonged time of indefinite sylables-; it may happen that such states are to be expressed on the limited duration of a mutable, or the mere moment of an im- mutable time. This may be ilustrated by a passage from the fourth book of Paradise Lost, where Satan is brought before Gabriel. In the dialogue between them, one of the replications of Satan is as follows. Not that I less 'endure,' or shrink from pain, In-sirtt-\ng angel! well thou know'st I stood Thy^erc-est, when in battle to thy aid, The blasting vollied thunder made all speed, And seconded thy else not dread-ed spear. But still thy words at random, as before, Argue thy inexperience what behoves From hard assays and ill successes past A faithful leader, not to hazard ' all ' Through ways of danger by himself untried: 'I,' therefore, 'I' 'alone' first undertook To wing the desolate abyss, and spy This new created world, whereof in Hell Fame is not silent, here in hope to find Better abode, and my afflicted powers To settle here on earth, or in mid air; Though for possession put to try once more What thou and thy gay legions 'dare' against: Whose easier business were to 'serve' their 'Lord' High up in Heaven, with songs to hymn his throne, And practis'd distances to 'cringe,' not fight. The language of this extract variously embraces argument, narrative, and passion. We here refer to the last. I have marked in italics, some of the sylables representing that state, but which are incapable of prolongation. The sylables, less, shrink, suit, fierce, else, and dread, belong to our class of muta- bles, yet they cannot be extended, without making in the several cases, the prolonged radical on I, e, and r; and this would change THE TIME OF THE VOICE. 205 pronunciation to a drawl. We suppose less, taken with endure, to embrace the mental conditions of suffering and resignation^ shrink, those of taunt and exultation^ suit, those of complaint, pride and reproachj fierce, that of scornful defiance^ else, a con- tingency of self-confidence and contemptj and dread, when in- terpreted by the preceding exceptive, else, a similar contingency of self-relying courage. The expression of all these conditions, as we shall learn hereafter, calls for a prolonged quantity, on the wider intervals of pitch, and on the wave ; which the shortness of the elemental sounds, in the above emphatic sylables, does not allow. The emphasis of stress might indeed be laid upon them, but this would not express their purpose. The last line however, affords a more marked ilustration of the subject before us: for of the words not fight, the former is only mutable ; and the latter being strictly immutable, they cannot be extended, without a dis- agreeable departure from correct pronunciation. This phrase re- presenting a mental state of strong contempt and exultation, its expressive intonation should be made upon indefinite sylables. A reader of delicate perception can never satisfy his ear on these restricted quantities. I have throughout the extract, marked with inverted commas, a few words, embracing states of mind that call for wide intervals on an extended time; and these words by their power of indefinite prolongation allow the required expression. I add here another exemplification of this subject, from the generic, brief, and magnificent description of Satan's Imperial Presence in Pandemonium, at the opening of the second book of Paradise Lost. High on a throne of royal state, which far Outshone the wealth of Ormus and of Ind, Or, where the gorgeous East with richest hand Showers on her Kings barbaric pearl and gold, Satan exalted sat. In these lines, Milton, with a just instinct of versification, has employed long quantities, in happy adaptation to the admirative dignity of the description. I use here, rather remarkably, the term, instinct of versifica- tion, not in oversight of the inteligence with which this Extra- 206 THE TIME OF THE VOICE. ordinary Man executed every high design and every tittle of his work; but because it is clearly seen he did not intend to con- struct the measure of his poem by the rules of quantity alone. The development of the full resources of an accentual versification by Milton, was a new and absorbing labor. Had this advance-step preceded him, the originality and restless enterprise of his inte- lect, would most probably have added to the many available principles of Greek and Roman composition, so happily trans- fered to his own language^ the accomplishment of the supposed impossibility of adopting the rules of their prosody. In most of the words of the above example, where the majesty of his thought so secured the homage of quantity, some of the sylables suddenly arrest the perception of extended movement and deliberate dig- nity, produced by the indefinite time of those words. The syla- bles, state, rich) and sat, are too short for the otherwise good iambic temporal measure: and the word barbaric occasions some irregular contrariety in the impressions of quantity and accent. In the simple pronunciation of this word, the first sylable, bar, is somewhat longer than the second, which will not, in this case, bear unusual extension. And as the longer sylable is here in the place of the weak sylable of iambic accent, the impressiveness of exceding length reverses the succession of the prevailing measure. Nor does the simple meaning of the epithet barbaric, allow a suf- ficient degree of accentual stress on the second sylable, to over- rule the impressiveness of greater length in the first. If the Reader, excusing the rhetorical change, will substitute the ad- jective orient, for barbaric, he will perceve by comparison, the difference between the accentual and the temporal impression. Showers on | her kings | her or | ient pearl | and gold. Whether the first and the fourth section of this line are con- sidered respectively in order, a trochee and an iambus, as here marked, or as a dactyl and an anapest, as they may be read, by license in our iambic measurej the admissible prolongation of the indefinite sylable or-e, produces an admirative dignity of utter- ance that cannot be effected on the short time of the accented sylable of barbaric. And it may be added further, that this line THE TIME OF THE VOICE. 207 does fulfil the conditions of poetic quantity, as completely as any line ever constructed with Greek or Roman words.* To a bad reader, nearly all sentences are alike, however im- properly constructed for vocal expression. He who looks abroad for excelence, through all the ways of the voice, must often find the tendencies and demands of his utterance restricted, by the unyielding character of an immutable phraseology. A limited discernment, and the common uses of quantity often suffice to set forth the thoughts of an author ; but an admirative or a passion- ative expression will in many cases be imperfect, or lost, if tried on the immutable time of sylables. A reader who can assume the mental state of the poet, will not be able to give the prompted expression to part of the last line of the following example. It is taken from Gabriel's answer to Satan's apology for his flight from Hell, just quoted, and is a comment on the title of faithful leader, vaunted by Satan. name, sacred name of faithfulness profan'd! Faithful to whom? to thy rebellious crew? Army of Fiends, jit body to jit head. The six sylables of this last phrase are short, and all the em- phatic ones are immutable. They contain a degree of admiration at the well marked fellowship, between a ringleader and his crew, mingled with scorn at the wicked faithfulness of the rebellious outcast: and these states of mind, we shall learn hereafter, can- * If the Reader would know how certain words may be pronounced as a foot or prosodial' section, either of two or of three sylables, let him recur to our principles of sylabication. The word showers is one sylable, when the e is omitted; the dipthongal tonic ou, vanishing directly into the subtonic r, as in showrs. If the sound of e is retained, that element requires its radical and vanish, and the word becomes thereby of two sylables, as in show-ers. The trisylable orient, is reduced to a disylable, by withholding a radical from the sound represented by i, and thereby dropping that sound as a distinct sylable. In the trisylable, i represents the sound of ee-l, and ee-\ by readily changing into the subtonic y-e, coalesces with the succeding tonic e-nd ; thus y taking the place of ee-l, joins itself to the subtonic n, to form the contracted sylable yent. The word orient, in correct pronunciation, is a true dactyl in quantity. I have set it as an iambus, not intending to defend the propriety of the change, but to form thereby, a regular iambic line, and to ilustrate one of the principles of English pronunciation. 208 THE TIME OF THE VOICE. not be eminently shown on the abrupt shortness of the sylabic time here employed. With an accomplished speaker, the man- agement of this phrase would resemble the efforts of a musician of feeling and skill, on a limited instrument; and the different effect of his voice, on the above short sylables, and on indefinite quantities embracing the same states, would be like that of the inexpressive chattering of the harp or piano-forte, compared with the gliding resources and swayful concrete of intonation, from an Andante movement on the violoncello. The harsh and unyielding character of the short sylables in the above example, would be striking to a good reader, by its contrast with the preceding phraseology ; in which, the two inter je dives, the words name, profaned, whom, thy, creiv, army, fiends, and perhaps faitlr/Wj being all of indefinite time, and some of them emphaticj afford the most ample means, for a true and elegant intonation of the admirative and partly passionative states of mind they convey. Although abrupt and atonic elements produce many instances of short sylabic construction, that do not admit the extended forms of intonated expression^ yet most sentences contain the amount of prolongable sylables, which the state of mind may require. For it is not necessary, that every word should bear the full expression, conveyed by an extended intonation. One or two emphatic long-quantities, assisted by an accordant, though faint intonation, on the short and unemphatic sylablesj in a man- ner to be described hereafter^ will sufficiently convey the thought and passion embraced by the sentence. The indefinite sylable par in the following line has a variable quantity, which, without impropriety, may be doubled or more, in expressive utterance; and the same may be said of bleed. Pardon me thou bleeding piece of earth, That I am meek and gentle 'with these butchers. The circumstances of the scene in Julius Csesar, from which this is taken, inform us that Mark Antony's mental states, ex- pressed in the first line, are those of love, grief, and contrition; his revenge does not appear until the second. The former, it will be shown hereafter, call particularly for an extension of syl- abic time; and we here regard the words pardon and bleeding as THE TIME OF THE VOICE. 209 emphatic, since they respectively picture the special object of the suppliant, and the disastrous assassination, that with self-reproach, he had delayed to punish. The accented sylables of these words freely receve the temporal prolongation ; and the employment of the required expression on their indefinite quantity, together with the assistance of the fainter intonation on the short and unac- cented sylables, directs the stream of that expression every where throughout the line. In the preceding frustrations, the Reader may now perceve some ground for our arrangement of sylables, according to their time, and in reference to the subject of expressive intonation; and may thereupon, admit the usefulness of its nomenclature, for the purposes of criticism and instruction. Yet there is another view to be taken of the effects of sylabic quantity. From the limited resources, and the necessarily generic character of lan- guage, the same word may in different sentences have a variation, so to speak, in its thouyhtive meaning. It is still more common to find the same word with a different reverentive or passionative expression, in its changeable combinations with other words. Some states of mind being only properly represented by a short and abrupt utterance; it follows that the shortness of a word or sylable, which on one occasion cannot denote the state of mind that requires a prolonged intonation* may on another, fulfil the purpose of forceful expression with its immutable quantity. It was shown in a former example, that the word fight was incapa- ble of the extension, there necessary for the full display of scorn. When Hamlet in the violent scene with Laertes saysj Why, I wiH fight with him upon this theme, Until my eyelids will no longer wagj the quick time of the whole sentence, is generically inclusive of the short time of its constituent sylables; and the immutable quantity of the word fight, admitting of abruptness and force, may fully denote the resolute rage of the Prince. The interjection is the only Part of Speech, employed exclu- sively for expression. Those common to all languages, consist of tonics, that freely admit of indefinite prolongation. Inter- jections are the instincts of the animal voice; and universally 210 THE TIME OF THE VOICE. h^ve an extendible quantity required for passionative expression. Other parts of speech are sometimes the picture of thought, and sometimes of passion; and accommodated to this, there is a dif- ference in the time of sylables. Had words been invented as signs of interjective expression only, most of them would have been made with an extended voice. Yet as the tonic elements may be uttered either as long or as short quantities, and the ab- rupt and atonic, in certain positions, inconveniently produce a short quantity, it might be infered, that a language consisting entirely of tonic sounds, manageable both for longer and for shorter time, would better fulfil all the purposes of speech, than a language containing in part, elements of immutable quantity. But some states of mind are well represented by a short quan- tity, and a sudden issue of voice; and the abrupt elements are in certain positions, the best contrived means for producing that suddenness with the greatest variety and force.* And further, the atonies, with the exception of k, p, and £, though not prop- erly explosive, yet arrest the concrete progress of vocality, and allow a succeding tonic readily to take on the explosive open- ing. A language made up of sounds, having the varied char- acter of our tonic, subtonic, atonic, and abrupt elements, is there- fore well accommodated to the system of those expressive signs, ordained throughout all vocal creation. f * Those who delight in searching for undiscoverable things, may institute an inquiry; whether the abrupt elements derive their existence in speech, from the sudden utterance which anger and other animal passions instinctively assumed, at that nonentity of date, the origin of language. The only origin of language we know, is that of a new term, invented for a new thought, or for an unnamed physical fact. f This remark will scarcely be acceptable, to those who have always thought-; the greater the proportion of vowels to other elements, the greater the harmony, as it is called, of a language. And hence the sneer of Grecian scholarship at our barbarian cacophony ; if I may with a repugnant ear, thus lay an example of classical harmony on an English page. A language that would give to a, e, i, o, u, oi, and ou, an over- share of speech, would be very monotonous, and might perhaps remind us of its vowel-roots among the sub-animals: but in sound alone, it would interrupt fluency by an increase of hiatus, and be far from the harmonious. The term harmony, taken from other arts, has not a very descriptive meaning, when applied to language. Architecture, Music, Painting, and the Landscape, require, respectively, a unity in their varied dis- tribution of sound, color, form, and surface, and a variety in the unitizing power THE TIME OF THE VOICE. 211 The employment of prolonged time, in the emphatic places of discourse, with a view to expressive intonation, seems never to have been thought of by ordinary writers; and has been so far overlooked in the schools, that it has never receved formal notice either in Rhetoric or Elocution. Dramatists, to whose taste and duty this remark is especially applicable, frequently neglect that proper adaptation of time and accent, which would afford an Actor the means of adding the finishing touches of his voice, to the vivid and forcible picture of thought and passion: for a ryth- mic style is more easily read and more forcibly declaimed than a loose and unjointed construction. The judicious use of the variations of quantity is the very life of elocution, and the right hand of dignity in the measure of poetry and prose. The human ear has conizance of two kinds of Proportion in the successions of sound: one embracing the relationship of its forces; the other of its duration. The First consists in the perception of unequal forces alter- nately successive. Of this we have many species, derived from the order of succession, or the number of the varied impulses; as exhibited in the following ilustration: where the first species shows a heavy impulse followed by a lighter one; the second, one heavy followed by two lighter; the third and fourth being re- spectively the reversed order of the other two. #© ®9 H© | @@© |@0 | ©@ ©# | ©@# @®@ The Second kind of proportion consists in the different dura- tion of two or more sounds. Of these the species are formed of contrast, to make up the engaging effects of their harmony: and each has its peculiar manner, if I may so speak, of Preparing, and Striking, and Resolv- ing its discords. What the literary critic calls harmony of language, is in reality a perception, not of consonant, but of different, impressions on the ear, and consists in the varied and agreeable successions and contrasts, of the forms of Force, Vocality and Time, with the intersections of pause; shown in English Composition, by a due apportionment of tonic, subtonic, and atonic elements, to mutable, immutable, and indefinite sylables, under the name of Rythmus. 212 THE TIME OF THE VOICE. upon the relations of long and short, and from the direct or re- verse order of their differences, ilustrated in the following dia- gram; -where the first section is meant to represent a sound of given length, succeded by one of half or lesser fraction of its time ; the second shows a given length followed by two of shorter time ; the third and fourth being respectively the reverse in order, of the times of the first and second. The Reader can audibly ilustrate these schemes, by tonic sounds respectively, of different force, and duration. We can at present, reach no further in the investigation of this subject, than to knowj the measurement of these proportions is an agreeable exercise of the cultivated ear: and that we are more pleased with varied percussions, and varied durations of any mechanical sounds, of these or other symmetrical arrangements, than with one unvaried order of percussions and durations, ex- cept regular pauses are interposed between any given order of them ; as in the following diagram : where the space of a pause is represented between a series of two, and of three similar sounds. #© mm mm i mmm m^o ##@ As the voice has the power of this momentary percussion, and sylables have different degrees of duration, both of the above pro- portional forms of force and time may be applied to speech. The perception of the former is called Accent; that of the latter, Quantity. To one who has equally exercised his ear in these two kinds of measurement, the alternation of quantity is by far the most agreeable. For in the case of accent, no momentary sound or 'ictus' can be tunable; whereas a prolonged quantity is the essential of this agreeable tune. If then the perception of equal momentary accents, with pauses between the given aggre- gates, or of unequal momentary accents, alternately continued, is THE TIME OF THE VOICE. 213 agreeable, the perception of a similar order of differing tunable quantities must be more so. Since the accentual function may be conjoined with quantity, by giving the abrupt ictus to the be- ginning of a prolonged sylable; and pauses may be interposed between aggregates that make up the succession of quantity. The above view regards only the accentual stress, or the time of sound, considered in itself. When quantity carries the in- tonation of the concrete, and thus becomes susceptible of vocal expression, its claims over accent are incalculable. The preceding remarks refer especially to the measure of verse : and a principal cause of the difference between a good and a bad reader therein, lies in a varied ability to attain an effective and elegant command over accent and quantity. The effect upon the ear, and the silent perception in the mind, of an agreeable variety in the successions of force and time, toge- ther with the division by pause, both in prose and verse, is called the Rythmus of Speech. It may be supposed, I allude to the Latin and Greek languages, when speaking of the quantity of verse. No-> it is to the English language, and to the partial though unsought use of quantity, at present prevailing in its measure : and I wish further to intimate a possibility of the future construction of its rythmus, on the sole basis of quantityj if the scholastic formalists of literature can be made to belevej the subject of ancient prosody has, for ages past, been exhausted; that the labors of wrangling compilation are inferior to the works of inventive improvement ; and that the in- vestigation of their own respective languages may assure to them the first births of originality^ and to their productions, if am- bitious of such things, the consequent undivided heritage of fame. About the time we are taught to measure the sylables of Homer and Virgil, by the relations of long and short, we are toldj our own tongue does not admit of the rythmus of quantity ; and that the prosody of the English as well as of other modern languages, is restricted to the use of the alternately strong and weak percus- sive accent. For the sake of the general principle in some im- portant matters, we do well, perhaps, in the present make-shift state of the human mind, to rely implicitly, for a time, on the authority of our teachers; but many find cause to regret the 214 THE TIME OF THE VOICE. necessity of this confidence in particular instances. From the finely governed and varied quantities of Mrs. Siddons, I first learned, by beautiful and impressive demonstration, that the Eng- lish language possesses similar, if not equal resources, with the Greek and the Latin, in this department of the luxury of speech: and I found myself indebted to the Stage, for the opening of a source of poetical and oratorical pleasure, which the more virtu- ous pretences, and the hack-instruction of a College, either knew not or disregarded. While listening to the intonations of this surpassing Actress, I first felt a want of that elementary knowl- edge which would have enabled me to trace the ways of all her excelence. I could not however, avoid learning from her instinc- tive example, what the appointed elders over my education should have taught me; that one of the most important means of ex- pressive intonation, both in poetry and prose, consists in the extended time of sylabic utterance.* I do not here mean to sayj the quantity of English sylables has not been recognized by prosodians; or its beauty not been perceved by a good ear, wherever it has been well used by design, or accidentally, in English versification, and in the well adjusted sylabic arrangement of prose. I mean to convey a regret that its powers have been undervalued; that its elegant and dignified rythmic combination with accent and pause, have been overlooked in the modern affectation of the unftuent plainness of a coloquial style; and that it has been excluded from its place in elementary rhetorical instruction; thereby depriving the ear of one of its highest prerogatives of perception, in poetry and speech. We may very properly askj whether a classical scholar is gravely in earnest, or only vain of a college-livery, in declaring * I had the good fortune to hear this accomplished Actress, both in Edinburgh and London, while pursuing my medical studies, from eighteen hundred and nine, till eighteen hundred and eleven. On the first publication of this Work, in eighteen hundred and twenty-seven, it came into my mind^ though perhaps scarcely warranted, even by my admiration both here, and subsequently ex- pressed^ to send her a Copy: not however without sufficient warning, from some floating anticipation, that the book itself would be regarded by that pe- culiar Actor-ism of Actors, as an unwelcome, if not a presumptuous offering on the Theatric Altar of Anti-docility and Self-sufficient 'Genius.' I think it was then, and now after seven and twenty years, when I add this note, I more than think it is still so regarded. THE TIME OF THE VOICE. 215 his enjoyment of Greek and Latin temporal rythums, while igno- rant of similar resources of neglected quantity in his own lan- guage. The Greeks and the Latins have left us their grammar, their written words, sylables, and elements; but our uncertainty of the true voice of these elements both individually and com- bined, has given rise, among modern scholars, to a difference in the pronunciation of them. Assuming the English mannerj the subject of Greek and Latin prosody may be resolved into its simple principles, and briefly described. Long sylables, or their temporal effects, are made in two ways: First, by the absolute duration of sylables, constituted like those we called indefinite : •Second, by the short time of those we called immutable and mutable, followed by a pause; the time of pronunciation added to the time of the pause, being equal to that of a long sylable. Short sylables are made by the short-timed pronunciation of in- definite sylables; or by immutable ones; and there is nothing in this account of Ancient quantity, not true of the English lan- guage. And further, not only are these general principles of sylabic construction the same in Greek, Latin, and English, but the very sylables themselves are common to these three languages ; nay, it may be said, to all languages. For we must bear in mindj there is in all languages, severally about the same number, both of vowels and consonants; that most of these elements them- selves are common to all; and that universally, no sylable ever includes more than one tonic, or vowel. The average number of audible consonants in every sylable being about three to one vowel, the law of permutation in this case would not furnish sylables enough to allow a different set, respectively to all the languages of past and present time : and it appears on com- parison, not sufficient to make a discoverable difference even be- tween two. For if the Reader will try every line of Homer, and Horace, he will find scarcely a sylable that does not form the whole, or part of some word in his own tongue; both as re- gards the elemental sounds, and the most exact coincidence of quantity. But it is on sylables alone, the rules of quantity are founded in every language. When therefore we deny that the English tongue admits of the temporal measure, we must come 216 THE TIME OF THE VOICE. to the absurd conclusion, that identical sounds have in Greek type the most finished fitness for sylabic quantity, and in English have none at all.* These remarks refer principally to the time of sylables sepa- rately considered. There may be some differences in the several words of these languages, that render it easier to construct a rythmus of quantity in one than in another: we however, here speak of the admission of the system of quantity into English, and not of the comparative ease of its execution when adopted. There may be some facilities in the Greek for certain kinds of measure, arising out of the greater length of the generality of words in this language. The Greek may possess an advantage* over the English in some of the purposes of vocal expression and poetic quantity, by having a greater number of indefinite sylables, and by making less use of the abrupt elements, in positions that produce an immutable time. Greek sylables have, in general, fewer letters than English; and they more frequently end with a tonic element. The employment of quantity in English prose composition, sometimes accidentally produces the regular measure of Greek and Latin lines. If these occasional passages of temporal ryth- mus are well accommodated to the 'genius' of the English lan- * That this may not be regarded as an exaggerated conclusion, I add, from among a thousand authorities that might be quoted for the same purpose, the following substantial support to it. In the chapter on versification, in an English translation of Baron Bielfeld's ' Elements of Universal Erudition^' after many- remarks on the subject of ancient quantity and modern accent, which in nowise qualify the following extraordinary assertion, the author saysj 'Properly speak- ing, there are not, therefore, in modern languages, any sensible distinctions of long and short sylables, but many that are to be lightly passed over, and others on which a strong accent, or inflection of the voice, is to be placed.' This was written towards the close of the last century, by the 'Preceptor to a European Prince, and the Chancelor of all the Universities in the Prussian dominions.' Even before his time, some prosodians were not without the sense of hearing ; and though the existence of long and short sylables in modern languages has, since the epoch of his deep deafness, been generally admitted, yet it is still held to be impossible to make agreeable measure out of their relations. In candor, it should be statedj the Baron was a compiler; but such writers generally represent current opinions, and they always know more of indexes, popular books, and other men's notions, than is either known or coveted by those who 'observe, and read, and think, for themselves.' THE TIME OF THE VOICE. 217 guage, it does not appear, why the studied contrivance of a poet mio-ht not use those existing quantities, in the continued course of verse. The following sentence has not the accentual form of any of our established meters, and is therefore, in its rythmus, purely English prose: Rome, in her downfall, blazoned the fame of bar- barian conquests. This sentence, independently of its impressive tonic sounds, with stress and time upon them, derives its char- acter, from the relative position of its long and short quantities ; which is exactly that of a Latin and of a Greek hexameter line, here shown by comparison. Dactyl Spondee Dactyl Dactyl Dactyl Spondee. Ev dsTte | ffs £wff | TTjpc a | prjporc \ Tztxpoq o | laroq. SI nihil | ex tant | a supe | ris placet | iirbe re | Hnqui. Rome in her | downfall | blazon' d the | fame of bar | barian | conquests. When this last sentence is read with its proper pauses, and with deliberate pronunciation, it corresponds in measure with the long and short times of the superscribed Latin and the Greek. Let us not however think it strange, for anticipation takes off the edge of surprise^ if a classic scholar should deny the identity of its temporal impression, with that of the colated lines. We are so little accustomed to regard English sylables in reference to their quantity, that it is difficult at first, to make it even a sub- ject of perception. Eor he who, according to vulgar persuasion belevesj there is an openness of the senses to first physical im- pressions, greater than that of the mind to new subjects of thought, plainly indicates that he has overlooked the ways and powers of both the senses and the mind; the senses having equally their ignorance, obstinacy, and prejudice; equally perceving what is familiar, and for a long time perceving no more. And perhaps when the powers of observation, and experimental reflection shall be directed to the mind, exclusively as a physical phenomenon the now contradistinguished functions of the senses and the mind will appear to be one and the same, in most of their ways and means. A cultivated and searching eye and ear are as rarely found, as a well disciplined and self-dependent mindj the latter 15 218 THE TIME OF THE VOICE. being produced by the former ; and a wise master, in human policy and morals, would not have more difficulty, where interest is not inimical, in effecting his designs of melioration, than an original observer in physical science would experience from the mass^ I was about to say of the Philosophic worldj upon solicit- ing an immediate assent to the reality of a manifest development of nature, or of some useful invention of art. It is a passive and an easy thing to look and to listen; but, with a purpose of inteli- gent inquiry, it is a labor of wisdom to see and to hear. In speaking of the indefinite sylables of the English language, it was saidj their time might be varied without deforming pro- nunciation; and we must recolect, that the abrupt elements, which generally terminate immutable sylables, have necessarily after the occlusion, a pause which allows them, with the addition of the time of that pause, to hold the place, and fulfil the function of a long one. With these materials for the construction of a temporal rythmus in English versification, nothing but deafness or prejudice prevents our perceving that its institution has been strongly prompted by nature, and is already half established in our poetry. We allow a reader full liberty over the quantity of sylables, for the sake of expression in speech; and song employs the widest ranges of time on tonic sounds; why should we refuse to the measure of verse, a less striking departure from the rules of common pronunciation. Mr. Sheridan, who does not overlook the existence of quantity in the English language, and its use in the expression of speech, but who nevertheless, maintains that the 'genius' of our tongue is exclusively disposed to the accentual measurej seems to ground his opinion on the special rules of Greek and Latin prosody, not being applicable to the cases of varying time in English pronun- ciation. He might as fairly have concluded, that the good Eng- lish style of his own lectures could not be as perspicuous as a Latin construction, because its arrangement is different from the appropriate inversions of the latter tongue. On this subject we have briefly to inquirej Has the English language long and short sylables ; and can these varying quanti- ties be arranged, to produce an agreeable rythmus? The answer is as brief. We have, equally with the Greeks and Romans, the THE TIME OF THE VOICE. 219 long and short sylabic variation; and it requires some other argu- ment against the design of employing it in meter, than that de- rived from its having never yet been done. I would not choose to contend with him, who doubts that quantity necessarily belongs to every spoken language. The ancients not only recognized it in theirs, but availed themselves of its use in the creations of literary taste: and had Greek and Roman grammarians, in re- cording their special rules for the quantity of particular words, furnished us with a little of that philosophy of elemental and syl- abic sounds, which authorized, or produced the prosodial meters of their several languages, the moderns would in all probability, have seen its application to their own. If the Greeks did not derive the Knowledge and use of Quan- tity from Egypt and the East, there is some ground for the opinion, though this part of history is not altogether clear, that the restricted melodial character of their musicj its relation to songj the care therein taken to adjust the temporal correspondence of sylables to notesj together with its forming, as it is said, part of the liberal education of their orators, poets, and philosophers^ may have led to the close investigation of quantity, and to its employment by the later Greeks in their rythmic composition. We are not however justified in assuming its early use, at the date assigned to the Iliad; for the fabulous accounts of that Poem leave its original condition altogether unknown. We cannot therefore avoid beleving in its countless alterations through Hel- lenic vanity and pride; and that its first mingled measure of quantity and accent was subsequently changed to its present prosodial form. The modern extension of the science of music, to the principles and resources of the ingenius system of har- mony, has rendered it independent of the support of words; and the nice measurement of their time has been neglected, since the separation of the formerly united duties of the composer and the poet. I here offer the conjecture, but leave others to determine its truthj that the establishment of Greek rythmus on the relations of quantity did contribute, with other causes, to refine the char- acter of that language. We know what changes rhyme, and the accentual measure have made in the pronunciation of English; 220 THE TIME OF THE VOICE. and even with the maturity of this language, there is cause to be- leve, that one means for enlarging the resources of its rythmus would be, to found its versification on the proportions of quan- tity. The occasional wants of poets would prompt them to change by license, many of our immutable sylables to indefinites; would lead to the elision of atonic or abrupt elements, from the end of sylables; and, by those broad excursions into thought which the common poet, together with the professional critic seems not to contemplate, is rarely disposed to encourage, and certainly never has accomplished;* our language might be invited towards that condition of sylabication which constitutes in part, the proso- dial superiority of the Greek. We know that the diaeresis and other licenses of Greek measure^ to say nothing of the dialects, which must have been widely diffused by their literature^ were constantly used for facilities in the arrangement of poetic quan- tity; and we might inquire whether the addition to its alphabet, of the Heta and Omega, was not a contribution to the demands of the temporal rythmus. Those who are in the habit of poetical composition, in the common accentual method, know how readily words of suitable accents are at the call of versification. Nay, the ready gather- ing, or fluency of the ear, if we may so call it, is in this matter so unfailing, that if the purpose of words be disregarded, there will be no hesitation in sorting such unmeaning discourse into any assumed accentual measure. I mean, that a person with a quick poetic ear and a free command of language, will find no difficulty in carrying on, for any duration, an extempore stressful rythmus of incoherent words or phrases : while he who is not in the prac- tice of metrical composition, even if aware of the required suc- cession of accents, would show as much delay in gathering words to fulfil his accentual purposes, as the former would, under the present state of the English ear, in aptly furnishing sylables for a temporal rythmus. Habit must have given to the Extemporiz- ing poets of Greece, if there could be or ever were such persons worth hearings the same elective affinity of ear, for the appro- priate quantity of their verses, as the similar class of Improvisa- tori in later Italy had for their required accents. At least two- thirds of the accented sylables of English words are indefinite in THE TIME OF THE VOICE. 221 their timej and being allowably made either long or short, may be employed for a temporal rythmus. Until therefore, we have a larger experience in the use of quantity for modern versification, and until the English ear knows more of the effect of sylabic time than it does at present, we may be justified in considering any belief that a temporal measure is not applicable to modern languages, as altogether without foundation. It is true, the number of monosylables and disylables in our language excedes that of the Greek; and this may possibly render the former less fit than the latter, for the construction of certain systems of measure. On this ground it has been asserted that English words cannot be arranged in an agreeable dactylic suc- cession. This may be the case; yet we have too little sleight in the management of quantity, to justify a positive opinion on this point ; and the trials already made are not quite decisive. Habit is a forestalled and obstinate judge over existing institutions, and often pronounces unwisely upon their better substitutes. For we know that an anapestic measure, founded on a mixture of accent and quantity, and nearly identical in effect with the ancient full dactylic linej is well suited to the sylabic and verbal condition of our language; and that a very agreeable rythmus is produced by it. Admitting the above objection, it will not overrule the design to establish the forms of Iambic and Trochaic measure, now in use, on the basis of quantity alone.* Although English versification is avowedly founded on the accentual rythmus, entire lines are occasionally found, so satis- factorily fulfiling all the conditions of the temporal measure, that * Let us subjoin a word here, for our delusions and prejudices. The dactylic foot, and the anapestic fall with a similar effect upon the ear. The ancients used the former, occasionally, through whole lines, in themes of the highest dignity; and school-boys are taught that it richly and gravely fulfils its pur- pose. We use the anapestic foot for doggerel and burlesque, and beleve too, there is something in its light skip especially adapted to the familiar gayety of its modern poetic use. Let a deaf worshiper of antiquity and an English pro- sodist settle this matter between them; for, to serve a purpose, even the ex- tremes of contradiction are sometimes brought together. But on this, as on some other articles of the classical creed, they may be reduced to say, in the sole words by which the Yezedi of Persia who worship the devil, briefly ex- plained their faith, and pertinaciously defended it against a Christian mission- ary-; 'Thus it is.' 000 THE TIME OF THE VOICE. they might be judged by the revived poetical ear of a Greek. Such lines are however always preceded and followed by others, founded on the mingled relations of both quantity and accent. One who is skilled in the art of measuring the time of sylables, will, over this irregular rythmus, be shocked by the unexpected variation of its dissimilar impressions. An ear of delicate pro- sodial instinct, which yet makes no inquiry into its perceptions, often suffers this violence from English verse, but is ignorant of its cause. The poet of high endowment, who has at the same time a ready discrimination of quantity, with copious thought and language at command, instinctively avoids in composition, much of the evil of these conflicting systems. And one of the merits of a good reader of verse, consists in changing our metri- cal accents into conspicuous quantities, by extending the voice on all those sylables that have a stress in the measure, and will bear prolongation. From all that has been said on the comparative character of quantity and accent, and from the slow progress of modern nations in distinguishing the relations of the former, it would seemj of these two metrical impressions, accent is more easily recognized. Nor is it unwarrantable to infer, from the greater facility in ar- ranging an accentual measure, that the first rythmic essays of all nations were in this form of versification; and that the Greeks themselves passed through this rattling amusement of poetical infancy. There is no fact opposed to this inference; and I could as soon be persuadedj the first instrumental music of Otaheite, was not the clattering of shells, as that the earliest songs of Greece were measured by the nice relationships of time. Our language, though neither young nor heedless in all the ways of thought, is yet within its unformed childhood, for the graceful steps of quantity: and many of those who with earnest wishes, but ineffectual means, may have designed to advance and refine it; and who by taste and authority, were qualified to listen to living voices, with progressively meliorating influence upon themj have only wandered off with an unavailing ear, among the silent graves of language in the remote realms of antiquity. We all experience an august delight over the yet enduring works of the distant dead. There is scarcely a page of the poetic rythmus of THE TIME OF THE VOICE. 223 the Greeks and the Romans, or a remaining trace of their plum- met and chisel, that might not make me forget, through intense contemplation, the mere seclusion of a prison. Yet I could as soon admit, that the modern zeal in freighting our homeward ships with the fragments of their templesj and the covetousness of nations, for the very purloined possession of their statuary, ought to preclude the future use of the marble of their ancient, or of yet unopened quarries, for the accomplishment of equal or transcending works of artj as that a just admiration of classic rythmus should prevent the endeavor to transfer to our own lan- guage, the admissible principles of Greek and Roman poetry. These remarks apply equally to the rythmus of Prose; for the agreeable arrangement of words, by accent and quantity is, as the Ancients interwove it with purity, propriety, and precision, one of the most elegant characteristics of the Fine or Esthetic art of Writing. But we now educate the ear and intelect away from all these good things, and down to the People; in the delusive expectation of a final Golden Age of morality and taste; and as a Public-School protection against trading and political dishonesty. I have offered the last few pages of this section, as no more than digressive and desultory remarks on a subject, intimately connected with the time of the voice, and with the cultivation of an important but neglected Mode of speech. The English language has an unbounded prospect before it. The unequaled millions of a great continent^ into whatever forms of Anarchy, or Despotism, they may be hereafter led by a be- sotting, a be- slaving, and for this world at least, a be-damning love of the Tyrannic Wrongs of Vested Rights, of State-bred jeal- osies, of Official ignorance and fraud, of paper credit, debt, rest- lessness, and popularity-* must, I say, through every national Up- heaving, and Engulfing, by the rage of avarice and ambition, still hold community in the wide and astonishing diffusion of one culti- vated and identical speech. Nor should we so far undervalue the emulative efforts of its future Scholars, as to suppose they will all merely regard with retrospective vanity, what has been done, and not extend their views to other and deeper resources of their art. But in looking forward to the establishment of English versifica- tion, on the basis of quantity, we must allow a limitation of the '224: THE INTONATION AT PAUSES. poet's abundance, for the substituted excelence of his few but finished lines. Our measure is now drawn from the two different sources of accent and quantity. To construct a rythmus by quan- tity alone, will require more rejections, and a wider search in composition; more copiousness in the command of appropriate words; greater readiness and accuracy of ear, in measuring the relationships of time; and longer labor for the accomplishment of a shorter work. I am here speaking of the great results of the pen. Of these, as of all enduring human productions, labor joined with time, must be the efficient means; and must deservedly divide the merit of the achievement, with the wisdom that invoked their aid. Let him who could patiently devote a life, to laying-up store of 'goodly thoughts' for Paradise Lost, unravel the idler's fable about that 'inspiration,' of the so-called immortal works of man. Let them, who to energy and intelect have joined the strong body of laborious care, say, wherein consists the true life, and the em- balming of fame : let them touch the sleeve of early and volumin- ous authorship, and whisper one of the useful secrets, for accom- plishing more that may wisely instruct and endure, and less that with ambitious haste, may only teach itself to sadly failj and perish. ■■ »> a q ©«««<«— SECTION XII. Of the Intonation at Pauses. The term Pause in elocution, is applied to an occasional silence in discourse, greater than the momentary rest between sylables. Pauses are used for the clearer, and more emphatic display of thought and passion, by separating certain words or aggregates of words from each other. The philosophy of grammar consistently with those two great Categories, Matter and Motion, has reduced all the words of uni- versal language to two corresponding classes: the Substantive, denoting Things that exist; and the Verb, denoting the various THE INTONATION AT PAUSES. 225 conditions of their Actions: all the other Parts of Speech being only specifications of the attributes of these things; and the predication of their actions, with regard to time, place, degree, manner, and all their possible relationships. Pauses divide into sections, the continued line of words which severally describe these existences and agencies, with their relationships: the re- stricted utterance, within these pauses, giving a sectional unity to the impression on the ear, and a clear perception to the mind, by their temporary limitation to a single subject of attention. The division of discourse, by means of this occasional rest, pre- vents the feebleness or confusion of impression, resulting from an unbroken movement of speech-; no less remarkably than the skilful disposition of color, and light, and space, significantly distinguish the pictured objects and figures of the canvas, from the unmeaning positions and actions of a chaos and a crowd. The sections of discourse thus separated by pauses, vary in extent from a single word, to a full member of a sentence. There may be some purposes of expression which require a slight pause even between sylables. It was shown that a full opening of the radical, must be preceded by an occlusion of the voice. Thus the accented sylable of the word at-taek being an immutable quantity, can receve a marked emphatic distinction, only by an abrupt explosion of the radical after a momentary pause. The times of the several pauses of discourse vary in duration, from the slight inter-sylabic rest, to the full separation of succes- sive paragraphs; the degrees being accommodated to the requisi- tions of the greater or less connection of thought, and to the peculiar demands of expression. All the parts of a connected discourse should both in subject and in structure bear some relation to each other. But these relations being severally nearer, or more remotej grammatical Points were invented to mark their varying degrees. The com- mon points however, very indefinitely effect their purposes in the art of reading. They are described in books of elementary in- struction, principally with reference to the time of pausing; and are addressed to the eye, as indications of grammatical structure. It is true, the symbols of interrogation, and exclamation are said to denote peculiarity of 'tone.' But as there is in these cases, 226 THE INTONATION AT PAUSES. no notice of the character, or degree of the vocal movements, the extreme generality of the statement affords neither preceptive nor practical guide to the ear. The full efficacy of Points should consist in directing the appropriate intonation at pauses, no less than in marking their temporal rests; and a just definition of the term Punctuation would perhaps, be as properly founded on the variety of effect, produced by the phrases of melody, as by a dif- ference in duration. Before Mr. Walker, no writer, far as I can ascertain, had formally taught the necessity of regarding the inflections of the voice, in the history of pauses. It is important with regard to an agreeable effect upon the ear, as well as to thought and expression, to apply the proper intonation at pauses. The phrases of melody have here a defi- nite meaning, and often mark a continuation or a completion of the thought, when the style and the temporal rest alone, would not to an auditor, be decisive. At the same time, the purpose of the pause being various, an appropriate intonation must by its corresponding changes, prevent the monotony, so common with most readers, at the grammatical divisions of discourse. The effect of Pause, in separating parts of discourse, by a sus- pension of the voice, will be ilustrated in the next section, on Grouping: and I now describe the successions of the various melody at the different places of rest. The triad of the cadence denotes a completion of the preceding thought, and is therefore inadmissible, except at a proper gram- matical period. It does not however follow that it must always be there applied; for in those forms of composition called loose sentences, and inverted periods, there are members with this com- plete and insulated meaning, to which an additional and related clause may be subjoined^ that consequently do not admit the downward terminating phrase. The rising tritone, by a movement directly contrary to that of the downward triad of the cadence, indicates the most immediate connection of thought or expression between parts of a sentence, separated by the time of the pause. The rising ditone carries on the thought in a diminished degree. The phrase of the monotone denotes a less connection between divided members; the falling ditone still less; and the downward tritone with rising concretes, THE INTONATION AT PAUSES. 227 and the downward concrete of the feeble cadence, produce a sus- pension of thought, without positively limiting its further contin- uation. As the triad of the cadence gives a maximum of distinc- tion^ among the parts of discourse, and utterly closes a sentence; the comparison of its downward intonation with the respective characters of the other phrases, may explain the causes of the effect of each, by showing their departure from the form and course of this terminative cadence. The degrees of connection between the members of a sentence are so various, and the opin- ions of readers may be so different, that I do not here pretend to assign the species of phrase to every kind of rhetorical pause. From present knowledge on this subject, I would say generally^ the intonation at some pauses may be varied, without exception- ably affecting either thought or expression; yet there are cases in which the species of phrase, from its exclusive adaptation to the character of the pause, is absolutely unalterable.* The foregoing remarks on the use of the phrases of melody, have not been made strictly in allusion to common grammatical punctuation. Writers on elocution have long since ascribed the faults of readers, in part, to the vague indication of these points, and to the distracting effect of the caprice of editors in using them. In the notation of the following lines, which describe the high- est thoughtful sublimity, and stedfast independencej the phrases of melody are applied with reference to only my own acceptation * Let us here suppose the intonative and the pausal character of Punctuation to be united. Then with six pausal symbols, each of its proper duration of rest, a comma might denote the phrase of the rising tritone ; a double or dicomma, the rising ditone or the monotone; a dash, if used, the monotone; a semicolon, the falling ditone; a colon, the falling tritone; and a period, the triad of the cadence. For mere system-making this might seem to be a pretty adaptation, to be taught in the schools; and through ages there might be no Observer to ?mteach it. For this is a picture of theory. But the fixed correspondence occurs only in the case of the full stop, and the triad of the cadence; the others as far as I observe, being under a vague rule^ that the falling phrases more generally go with the semicolon and colon; the rising with the comma and dicomma; and the monotone commonly with these. I therefore offer this note as a passing thought, hinting only at an inquiry into the practical use of this, or other similar proposal. 228 THE INTONATION AT PAUSES. of the purpose of the Author ; and to its distinct and appropriate vocal representation. I have presumed to differ, in the second and in the fifth line, from the punctuation of the London edition of Todd's Milton, from which the passage is taken. So spake the Seraph Abdiel, faithful found Among the faithless, faithful only he ; Among innumerable false, unmoved, Unshaken, unseduced, unterrified, His loyalty he kept, his love, his zeal; Nor number, nor example, Avith him wrought To swerve from truth, or change his constant mind, Though single. When the Reader looks upon the change of pauses I have made in the following notation, he must bear in mind, that whether his decision is favorable to it or otherwise, it may still ilustrate my view of the power and place of the phrases of melody. If this is accomplished, we need not dispute about the free-will variety, as it always will be, of tastes, in the particular application of these phrases. My purpose in this essay is to explain some of the un- told functions of the voice; not to contend with those who may on other points, know more than myself. In the use of the phrases of melody, at the pauses of dis- course, the phrase is to be applied to the last sylables preceding the pause. Nevertheless, for particular purposes of expression, the monotone may be continued on the succeding sylable. As this notation is designed to represent only the use of the phrases of melody at pauses, I have marked the whole current melody with the simple concrete; omitting waves of the second, and some moderate signs of expression, on the long quantities, which would be its proper intonation, as an example of that in- termediate and dignified style, between the thoughtive and the passionative, which we called the admirative, or reverentive. So spake the Se raph Ab diel; faith — ful found 4^4-JL^. Wk_ THE INTONATION AT PAUSES. 229 A — mong the faith less. Faith ful on ly he. \*4 4 4~ 4 -4 * A « 1 I * v ^ 1 A mong in — nu— — me ra- ble false ^ un— -moved, 4-4 4 4 4 * 4 Un sha — ken, un se — duced, un ter — ri — — fied; £ 4 d 4 4 4 -r 4 w ^r His loy — al ty he kept^ his love, his zeal. ^444^4 4 4- 4 H t~ Nor num her, nor ex am pie, with him wrought] V& 44 414 4 4 To swerve from truth ; or change his con- -stant mind, 4 4-4- ^pr 4 4 «r «r «Br Though sin gle. The first pause at Abdiel is marked with a semicolon and a feeble cadence; for the preceding words, though here a complete sentence, do not necessarily produce the expectation of additional and connected meaning; for that expectation would require the monotone, or a rising phrase; and although the feeble cadence weakens for the moment, it does not dissolve the grammatical concord, between the members it separates. I have set the triad 230 THE INTONATION AT PAUSES. of the cadence and a period at faithless, not exclusively upon the right to assume the thought as here completed ; but with a view to prepare for the eminent display of the state of mind embraced in the remainder of the line. The editor has marked this place with a comma, and thus made the three succeding words, faithful only he, a dependent clause. I regard this clause, and on gram- matical ground, as an eliptical sentence^ and have given it the full close of the falling triad; thereby to promote the admirative ex- pression. These words elegantly reiterate the previous attribu- tion of faithfulness to Abdiel, with the further affirmation of his singleness in virtue. This definite and emphatic restriction of the individuality of the subject, is made with deep regret, over the rebellious rejection of truth, mingled with exultation that Abdiel alone has the undivided merit of defending it. There is a touch of expression in these words, that even with all other due means for an appropriate utterance, cannot, as it seems, be answera'bly displayedj unless they are separated from preceding and succeding clauses, by the marked distinctions of the limitary cadences, and their punctuative periods. If the word faithless should be read with what is called in the schools, a suspension of the voices which in their indefinite language means, avoiding a fallj the designed expression, as I regard it, of the succeding clause will be perverted or lost. Milton's fine ear, his vivid, and discriminating intelect, qualified him, under Nature's system of elocution, to be a good reader; and though he may not have been one by practice, I would with difficulty belevej he silently thought the passage Ave are here considering, with the close sequence, im- plied by the editor's comma and semicolon. The next pause at false, is preceded by the rising ditone. The structure of this member evidently creates expectancy, and the species of intonation indicates a continuative thought. I have here placed the dicomma to obviate a momentary, though possi- ble misapprehension of the noun-adjective, false, applied to the Faithlessj but here joined to the train of epithets distinguishing the Loyal Seraph. Of the four succeding pauses, each rests on a single word. The first three are noted with the monotone, to foretell the con- tinued progression of the eulogy: the fourth, at terrified, has the THE INTONATION AT PAUSES. 231 falling ditone, to denote a change, but not a close of thought. I have here placed a semicolon, though not perhaps according to its common use. In ordering these four pauses, it would vary the intonation, without affecting the meaning, to give the last two sylables of unseduced with a rising phrase, by putting se on the same radical line with un. The phrase at kept, is the rising ditone, with the dicomma, and is expectant ; for love and zeal being equally with loyalty, the objectives of kept, are thus held within the prospective eye of the grammatical meaning. For the three objectives being separated by the construction, the rising ditone at kept, prepares the expectant attention to bring them back into company on the ear, at a form of the cadence on zeal; and thus impresses on the auditor, the true syntax of the sentence. At zeal, marked by the editor with a semicolon, I have applied a period, and the second or Duad form of the cadence; for this, as just stated, throwing back love and zeal, as objectives to the verb kept, prevents their bearing forward, as if nominatives to some expected verb; which might not be avoided, by employing a semicolon at this place, with one of the continuative phrases of melody. We may account for the semicolon at zeal, by sup- posing the editor considered the following word nor, as a con- nective. Yet it certainly begins a new thought; and in regard both to its place and its immediate repetition, may be looked upon as only a poetical inversion, and a redundancy of negative. The remaining part of the notation contains examples of the principles just elucidated, and therefore needs no explanation. I have thus endeavored to fill up in part, a blank in elocution, by giving a definite description of the intonation to be joined with pauses ; and by ilustrating the manner of framing principles to direct the use of the several phrases of melody. Those who desire knowledge of the structure of sentences, for applying these principles, may consult books of rhetoric. Mr. Sheridan writes with his usual ability, on the subject of pause, and gives numer- ous exemplifications of its proper usej yet makes no analysis of that intonation which he may perhaps have joined with it, in the ac- complished practice of his own voice. Mr. Walker has also given a masterly treatise on this subject, in his Rhetorical Grammar. He wisely saw the practical utility of uniting with his view of the 232 THE INTONATION AT PAUSES. temporal purpose of pause, an inquiry into the applicable forms of his inflections. In a philosophical view of the subject, his treatise contains no description of the functions of pitch, beyond the ancient general distinctions into rise, and fall, and turn. Not having the materials, for a specific discrimination and use of the phrases of melody, he was under the necessity of regarding his four general heads, as ultimate species, capable of no further sub- division: and hence, the limited, the indefinite, and the erroneous application of his. whole doctrine of Inflection at Pauses. Mr. Walker undertook the investigation of the subject of speech, without possessing a discriminating ear; without sufficient, if in- deed any familiarity with certain distinctions of sound, long established in music; and without seeming to keep in mind the means and end of philosophical inquiry. The example of the highest masters in natural science had taught, that all he should aim to accomplish would be, to separate by ear, the individual and intermingled constituents of speech; to name these indi- viduals; and to class them with known facts in the history of sound. But the most precise nomenclature, if not the most com- prehensive history of tunable sounds or, sound distinguished from the endless kinds of noise, is contained in the science of music: and Mr. Walker appears to have had too feeble or too limited a perception, or no perception at all, of its clear and abundant dis- tinctions, to enable him to recognize an identity, or analogy between the speaking voice, and the familiar phenomena of musi- cal sounds. Even though we might despair that future inquiry will teach us the structural cause of the vanishing movement, and of the orotund, and falsette voices^ it is certainly now within the ability of a disciplined and attentive ear, to percevej certain forms of sound supposed to be peculiar to the human voice, are similar to others which have been accurately measured and definitely named in the classifications of music; and consequently, that they might be designated by the same nomenclature, as far as the terms of music are applicable to the phenomena of speech. Such a method of investigation, with its satisfactory results, being the whole means and gains of a true and useful philosophy, we might as well belevej the Newtonian discoveries in optics, could have been THE GROUPING OF SPEECH. 233 effected, without a previous acquaintance with the laws of motion, the variety of colors, and the relations of mathematical quantityj as look for a description, and an available arrangement of the phenomena of the human voice, from one who is ignorant of the known distinctions of sound. SECTION XIII. Of the G-rouping of Speech. I have adopted a term from the art of painting, to designate the effect of pauses, and of certain uses of the voice, in uniting the related thoughts of discourse, and separating those which are unrelated to each other. The inversions of style, the intersections of expletives, and the wide separation of antecedents and relatives, allowed in poetry, may be sufficiently perspicuous, through the circumspection of the mind, and the advancing span of the eye, in the deliberate perusal of a sentence. But in listening to reading, or to speech, we can employ no scrutinizing hesitation: and though the instant memory may retrace to a certain limit, the intricacies of construction, the best discernment cannot always anticipate the meaning of a suc- ceding member, nor the character and position of its pause. Our higher poetry, in the contriving purpose of its eloquence, gives many instances of extreme involution of style : and the reader of English, is frequently obliged to employ other means, for exhibit- ing the true relationship of words, besides the simple current of utterance, that may be sufficient for the obvious syntax of a more familiar idiom. The following are some of the means, by which deviations from the simple construction of sentences maybe rendered, perspicuous in speech. v 16 234 THE GROUPING OF SPEECH. The Clausal Limitation. Here the limitation is produced by pauses, only as divisional agents. The Phrases of melody ; already in part explained. A reduction of the pitch and the force of the voice; for which I use the term Abatement. A quickness of utterance ; here called the Flight of the voice. The Punctuative Reference : which by noticeable pauses, directs, or recalls attention to the syntax. And A means of indicating grammatical connection, that may be named the Emphatic Tie. I have summed up the several means here enumerated, under the generic term, Grouping; and have given each a specific namej to invite attention to the subject, by the proposal of a definite nomenclature. The most common form of grouping the connected parts or clauses of a sentence, under a given condition of the voice, is by its unbroken line, within the boundary of Pauses. The subject of this Clausal Limitation, though not thus named, is so exten- sively treated in the Art of Elocution, that I give here but a single instance of the power of the pause, in separating to a cer- tain degree, the thoughts of a sentence, and in giving the proper independency to each. Let us take, from the second book of Paradise Lost, the description of Death's advancing to meet Satan, on his arrival at the gates of Hell. Satan was now at hand and from his seat The monster moving onward came as fast With horrid strides. I have omitted the punctuation of these lines; and if read without a pause, they would not be absolutely destitute of mean- ing; for the auditor would perceve the general course of the action described. But in this case, there could be no expressive picture of the whole, through the connected individuality of its parts. Here are four clauses, or separate groups of thought, which should be indicated by three momentary rests. Satan was now at handj and from his seat The monster moving; onward came as fast^ With horrid strides. THE GROUPING OF SPEECH. 235 The first division, ending with at hand, gives notice of the rapid approach of Satan. The second represents the monster Death rising from his seat, and is insulated by a pause at moving. This division is properly separated from the third, onward came -as fast; for though the third describes the further movement of Death, and in this view might seem to forbid the separation, yet its principal aim is to show the speed of his progress, by compar- ing it with that of Satan; and this justifies the distinction, here made. The last division, with horrid strides, must be separated from the preceding ; for if read, onward came as fast with horrid strides, the immediate connection of the manner of movement with the declaration of the likeness between the time of it, in the two characters, might authorize the conclusion that Death was strid- ing, as fast as Satan was striding. Whereas the pause at fast, refers that manner of moving-onward to Death alonej agreeably to a previous part of the context, where Satan is described as moving on 'swift wings.' Some of the uses of the Phrases of melody were stated in the preceding section. I here offer one or two examples of the effect of an appropriate melody, in carrying on the thought, and in pro- ducing an immediate perception of grammatical relationship. On the other side, Incensed with indignation, Satan stood Unterrified, and like a Comet burned, That fires the length of Ophiuchus huge, In the arctic sky. Should the phrase of the falling ditone be used at the neces- sary comma-pause after burned, it will, to the ear, destroy the grammatical concord between the relative that and the antece- dent, comet. By applying a monotone to the two words in italics, the concord will be properly marked, notwithstanding the inter- vening pause at burned; the grouping power of the melody, in this case, counteracting the dividing agency of the pause. A similar instance of the power of the monotone, in effecting a close connection of the antecedent with the relative, is shown at the pause after unheard, in the following lines: 236 THE GROUPING OF SPEECH. First, Moloch, horrid king, besmeared with blood Of human sacrifice, and parents' tears; Though, for the noise of drums and timbrels loud, Their children's cries unheard, that passed through fire To his grim idol. Let us take one more example of this principle of a grouping intonation : Art thou that traitor-angel, art thou he Who first broke peace in heaven, and faith' till then Unbroken ? In this passage the phrase, in heaven, is interposed between peace and faith, the two objectives of broke. That the syntactic connection between these words may be impressively shown, the slightest pause only is admissible after heaven; and a more con- spicuous one must be placed after faith. But the further expletive, till then unbroken, is immediately connected with faith; and the only means for representing this close relationship, in contraven- tion to the delay of the pause j so necessary, after faith, for another point of perspicuityj is by using the phrase of the rising ditone, or the monotone, on and faith. Thus the pause at this word, represents clearly the full government of the verb broken while the continuative phrase, either of a monotone or rising di- tone, at that pause, prevents its dissolving the connection of the previous meaning with the succeding expletive clause, till then unbroken. The pages of poetry are full of instances of phrase- ology that require the management of the voice here described. Milton and Shakspeare cannot be read well, without strict atten- tion to the apparent opposition between the purposes of the pause and of the thought, and to the Reconciling Power of the phrases of melody. A reduction of the Pitch, and Force of the voice being gen- erally combined in reading, I have, in this section, designated them colectively, by a single term, Abatement; which is in most cases, to be read in the diatonic melody. Its power of grouping together the related parts of a sentence, is exemplified by the well known utterance, in a parenthesis. I come now to speak of the perspicuity, to be given to a sen- THE GROUPING OF SPEECH. 237 tence, by the Flight of the voice. There is a familiar rule in elocution, which directs us to use a quickened utterance on com- mon expletive clauses. This function may be extended to other grammatical constructions. I give it here the importance of a name and an ilustration, from its affording assistant means for representing the meaning of some of those instances of close- trimmed phraseology and extreme inversion, occasionally found in the higher poetical composition. In the following example, the part requiring the flight of the voice is marked in italics. You and I have heard our fathers say^ There was a Brutus once, that would have brook'd The eternal Devil to keep his state in Rome As easily, as a king. The word easily, here qualifies the verb brook'd; and one of the means for impressing this on the auditor, is by the rapid flight here directed. A London edition of Reed's Shakspeare, from which this passage is quoted, has a pause after Rome. As the purpose of the flight consists in allowing the shortest time between the utterance of related words, it would supply the omis- sion of this pause, to make a slight one after easily. This tends to prevent the adverb from passing as a qualification of keeping his state, which certainly cannot be the meaning of the author; but which on instant hearing, might otherwise, be mistaken for it, without the aid of the altered pause and the flight. This is not the place to speak of the nice points of emphasis and of melody, to be employed with the flight in this passage^ to give clearness and strength to its effect. Say first, for Heaven, hides nothing from thy view Nor the deep tract of Hell. To make it appear at once in speech, that the deep tract of hell is equally with heaven, a nominative to hides* the phrase of the monotone must be applied at view, with the flight of the voice on the portion marked in italics; and a pause set after heaven, and removed from view, where the editor has marked it. If the grammarian should raise objections to any of these pro- 238 THE GROUPING OF SPEECH. posed changes of punctuation, he must recur to the design of this section. We speak now of the means of addressing the ear; and its jealous demands sometimes require a separation of close gram- matical relations; and sometimes justify a neglect of the usual temporal rests, from the thought and expression in these cases being more obvious without them. The art of reading-well may compensate for voluntary faults on some points, by the accom- plishment of eminent effects on others. What we call the Punctuative Reference, or grouping, is an- other means for bringing together words, or clauses, separated by grammatical construction; as in the following example: Having the wisdom to foresee^ he took measures to prevent^ the disaster. Here the fact of the disaster should be immediately connected with the thought both of foreseeing, and preventing: yet by con- struction, foresee is separated from disaster; and thus, without a pause at prevent, the momentary attention to the immediate agency of this verb on disaster, might obscure the relation be- tween foresee and disaster. In this case, foresee might pass for an intransitive verb. But with the dicommas, the similar pauses at foresee, and prevent, by making them emphatic words, assign the former to its objective casej and connecting these words as fellow transitives, throw, by punctuative reference, their action together on disaster. Take another example, from Thomson's charming episode, of Lavinia. By solitude, and deep surrounding shades^ But more, by bashful modesty^ concealed. Here, without the directive grouping of the dicomma at shades, and at modesty, the picture of Thought might be obscured^ and we should perhaps overlook the beautiful contrast between the unconscious and closer self- concealment, and that of the pre- viously described humble and retired cottage in the vale. The following, from Cowper's picture of the Empress of Rus- sia's Palace of Ice, in his 'Winter Morning Walk,' may be taken as an instance under this head. THE GROUPING OF SPEECH. 239 Less worthy of applause^ though more admired, Because a novelty, the work of man, Imperial Mistress of the fur- clad E-uss^ Thy most magnificent and mighty freak, The wonder of the North. The four parenthetic phrases in these lines, between applause and Muss, produce a slight intricacyj which requires the dicomma and its rest at these words, to bring together, on the field of attention, the clause that precedes the former, and follows the lat- ter; and thus to make the impressive comparison between the works of nature, previously described, and this fantastic effort, in the works of art. I here remind the Reader that the use of the dicomma, in punctuative grouping is pointed out under the fourth head of our explanation of the purposes of this symboij in bounding a paren- thesis, and thus directing attention to the extremes of the in- cluded member; for the punctuative referencej as well as the emphatic tie to be presently explained, is one of the applications of the principle of parenthetic elocution. In the following sentence, the punctuative grouping may give clearness to the reading; but this cannot reconcile us to the awk- wardness of its disjointed syntax. After he was so fortunate as to save himself fromj he took especial care, never to fall again into^ the polluted stream of ambition. Much more might here be properly said on the classification of sentences, and on the time of pausing; but with the Principle here exemplified, further inquiry is left to the discrimination and taste of others. Both reading and speech abound with occasions for the use of this punctuative reference ; but care must be taken to avoid the affectation of its use, in grammatical arrangements, where the style may be rendered perspicuous without it. We have made a distinction between the Clausal limitation within the boundary of pauses, and this Punctuative grouping. The former keeps together sectional groups of connected thoughts; the latter brings together separated clauses and words, with their thoughts ; and both unite their influence, for the just and expres- 240 THE GROUPING OF SPEECH. sive elocution of those parentheses, usually bounded by the linear Dash. We have therefore dispensed with the use of this symbol; its purpose being effected, both in silent perusal and in speech, quite as efficaciously, and with greater neatness to the eye, by the dicomma; thus forming the punctuative reference; by which the meaning of the member preceding the first pause, is held over, or suspended for continuation, after the second. By the grouping of Emphasis or what is here called the Em- phatic Tie, I mean the application of stress, and perhaps in some cases, of vocality, quantity, and intonationj to words, not other- wise requiring distinction^ for the purpose of joining those words and thoughts which cannot, by any other means of vocal syntax, if we may so speak, be brought together or exhibited in their true grammatical connection. The agency of this form of group- ing, like that of the last, which we may now call the Punctuative Tie, is easily perceved, for related words however separated, are at once brought together in their real relationships, within the field of hearing, whenever they are raised into attractive import- ance, by pause, or by force or any other kind of emphasis. The following lines, from Collins' ' Ode on the Passions,' em- brace a construction, requiring the emphatic tie. When Cheerfulness, a Nymph of healthiest hue, Her bow across her shoulder flung, Her buskins gemni'd with morning dew, Blew an inspiring air^ that dale and thicket rung^ The hunter's call, to Faun and Dryad known. The last two lines have an embarrassing construction. The phrases inspiring air, and hunter s call are in apposition; but there intervenes a clause, that might make rung pass for an active verb, and thereby render call the objective to it. To show therefore, that by hunter s call the author means the inspiring air, previously mentioned, the words marked in italics should re- ceive emphatic stress. This is the best means for clearly impress- ing on the ear, that close relationship which is interrupted by the construction. This emphatic tie is often employed in combination with other means of grouping. In the several examples ilustrating the use THE GROUPING OF SPEECH. 241 of the phrases of melody, their influence will be assisted by apply- ing this connecting emphasis to comet and fires ; children s and passed ; peace and faith. In the examples of the flight, the re- lationships between the words brook' d and easily ; and between heaven hides nothing, and nor the deep tract of hell; and in the punctuative grouping, the reference of disaster to \>ot\\ foresee and prevent* of concealment to shades and modesty* and of mighty freak, to applause*, will be more manifest, by the additional use of the emphatic tie. It is sometimes necessary to employ all the means of grouping upon a single sentence, for connecting an irregular syntax, and supplying an elipsis to the ear. The extreme distortion of Eng- lish idiom in the following lines, must be excedingly perplexing to a reader; and, far as I perceve the meaning and the grammar, can be rendered somewhat less embarrassing, only by the use of all these means. The example is taken from the fourth book of Paradise Lost, at the end of Satan's address to the sun. Thus while he spake, each passion^ dimm'd his face Thrice chang'd with pale^ ire, envy, and despair; "Which marr'd his borrow'd visage, and betray'd Him counterfeit, if any eye beheld. Milton uses the word pale, here, and again near the close of his tenth book, as a substantive. Its common adjective-meaning tends to throw some confusion into the sentence. Ire, envy, and despair, are in apposition with passion, and are severally concordant with the distributive pronoun each. The only manner in which I can approximate towards a clear representation of this blamable piece of latinity, is by making a quick flight over the portion, dimm'd his face thrice changed with pale, and by an abatement thereon; by laying a strong emphasis on each passion, and on ire, envy, and despair, to mark the concord, by the emphatic tie ; by using the punctuative reference at passion and pale ; and by applying the dicomma, with the monotone or the rising ditone, to both these words. After all, it is a hard picture to paint, for a taste that will have true colors, well laid-on. Perhaps another hand, under the direction of our principles, may effect its expression by some more appropriate touch. 242 THE GROUPING OF SPEECH. In this and the preceding section, we have been more occupied with the audible means of marking the thoughtive meaning of dis- course, than with the signs of expression. But some meaning in language must always be embraced by what we distinctively called the passionative style. I would here point out to the classical scholar, a resemblance in the process and purpose of the punctuative reference, and of the emphatic tie, to that of the circumspect attention, always ex- ercised in construing a Latin sentence. The English language has few variable terminations of noun, pronoun, verb and adjec- tivej by which their concord and government might be instantly perceved, however the parts of speech might be in position dis- joined from each other. In English therefore, as in some other languages, the construction is indicated, principally by the proxi- mate, or what is called the natural, succession of words. The Latin language has in its varied grammatical forms, the means for instant connection of all its related parts: hence, the mind is able to make at once, a clear and exact picture of the meaning of discourse^ by arranging its proper order, how widely soever the words may be separated. The case of the adjective immediately joining itself to the case of the nounj the verb point- ing out its agent and its objectj the preposition, its subject^ thereby grammatically unite or group the individual parts of speech, how- ever scattered throughout the sentence. This dispersed position of related and self-uniting words, which is conspicuously used in the Latin language, is called in rhetoric, the figure of Hyperba- ton ; and the choice of arrangement allowed in the appropriate use of its various species, is a principal source of the impressive rythmus, vividness, and strength, in Latin construction. The at- tention of the Roman orator, and of his educated or even of his iliterate audience, must have been closely, but from habit almost unpercevedly, occupied in gathering, by grammatical relations alone, every word to its significant place on the field of the sen- tence. And this may be a cause, why punctuation, at least like ours, was unnecessary or disregarded both in Greek and Roman composition. The English language has not the adjusting con- cordance and government of the Ancient, grammar; and we are therefore, under its loosely connected verbal relations, obliged to THE GROUPING OF SPEECH. 243 employ, among other means for perspicuity, beyond its common pointsj that of the emphatic tie, the flight, the pause, and the punctuative grouping, to draw the attention of the hearer to separated, though related words and clauses, where the syntax, without this construing by time and stress, might be intricate or uninteligible. I have thus endeavored to show a similarity, in principle, be- tween the Latin grammatical, and the English vocal methods of obviating any error or obscurity, incident to a hyperbatic syntax : the whole meaning of the sentence, being in one case, signified by the verbal signs of concord and government; and of some par- ticular meaning in the other, by vocally notifying the ear of those displaced relationships, not otherwise restorable, than through an impressive agency, respectively of the accent and the pause. In the present section, and in other parts of this essay, the exemplifications are chiefly extracted from two ilustrious Poetsj and from some of those who, directed by the same great Principles of their Art, are next to them in the bright brevity of the truth- ful and expressive Practice of it; since the boundless range of their expressive reflectionsj the arresting, but resolvable intricacy of their stylej the thoughtful bearing of their emphasisj together with the insignificance of scarcely a wordj afford every variety of thoughtive and passionative construction, for exercising the full- sufficient, and iluminating powers of the voice. And as the greater includes the less, I am persuaded, that should the princi- ples therein established be adopted by the Reader, he will have no great difficulty in applying them, to more simple styles of con- versation, of narrative, and of impassioned discourse, both in poetry and prose. Yet when drawn aside, from the perfection of Nature in the human voice, to eulogize the admirable things of intelect, which it is intended and ready to display; let me again repeat^ I have taken upon me, not the part of the Rheto- rician, but merely of a Physiologist of Speech. 244 THE RISING OCTAVE. SECTION XIV. Of the Interval of the Rising Octave. In the foregoing sections, the effect of Pitch was described, only as it is heard in the radical and vanishing movement through the interval of a single tone. It was shown, under the head of the melody of simple Narra- tive style, that the vanish never rises above the interval of a tone ; and that changes of radical pitch, either upward or down- ward never excede the limits of this same interval. Now, such plain melody as then supposed is rarely found of long continu- ance ; but to avoid confusing the subject, I defer ed the notice of those variations of concrete and of discrete interval, which are occasionally interspersed throughout its current. The wider in- tervals of pitch used for Expression in the course of a diatonic melody, are now to be described. By the term rising Octave, whether concrete or discrete, ap- plied to speech, is meant the movement of the voice, from any assumed radical place, through higher parts of the scale, until it terminates in the eighth degree above that radical place. This interval is employed for interrogative expression; and for sur- prise, astonishment, and admiration, when they imply a degree of doubt or inquiry. It is further used, for the emphatic distinction of words. Nor is it limited to phrases, having the common gram- matical forms of a question; for even declaratory sentences are made interrogative by the use of this interval. Although the pitch in interrogation, and emphasis, may some- times rise both concretely and discretely, above the octave of the natural voice, and even into the falsettej still the octave is the widest interval of the speaking scale, technically regarded in this Work. It expresses therefore the most forcible degree of inter- rogation, and of emphasis; and is the passionative interval for questions accompanied with sneer, contempt, mirth, raillery, and the temper or triumph of peevish or indignant argument. THE RISING OCTAVE. 245 From the time required in drawing-out the concrete interval of an octave, this form of interrogation can be executed conspicu- ously, only on a sylable of extended quantity. How then can the interrogative expression be given to a short and immutable sylable ? The means for effecting this, will be described hereafter, with particular reference to interrogative sentences. It may be here transiently ilustrated by the following notation : %^m In this diagram, after the first concrete rise of an octave, on a long sylablej a discrete change or skip is made from the line of its radical, to a line along the hight of its vanish. Now immuta- ble sylables, in an interrogative sentence, are transfered by this discrete or radical change, to a line of pitch at the summit of the concrete interrogative interval^ and discretely produce the expres- sive effect of that interval, though less remarkably than the in- definite sylables which pass through the same extent of the scale by the concrete rise. As there are more short and unaccented than long and accented sylables in discourse, the radical change here described contributes largely to the character of an inter- rogative intonation. The diagram shows, that after the radical pitch of a short quantity has assumed the summit-line of the octave, it procedes in the diatonic succession on that line, until the occurrence of an indefinite sylablej when the radical pitch descends, to form a new concrete rise of the octave. It appearsj the rule of intonation, laid down when describing the diatonic melody of simple narration, does not apply to the melody of in- terrogative sentences ; for these employ a more extended concrete interval, and a wider discrete transition in their changes of radical pitch. When an octave is used for the purpose of emphasis, the voice, after its concrete rise on the emphatic word, immediately descends to the original line of radical pitch, as in the following notation: 246 THE RISING FIFTH. ( * 4 * & 4 J 4 4*4* But this subject of emphasis will be considered particularly, hereafter. The concrete rising octave and its radical change being em- ployed for very earnest interrogation, and for a high degree of expressive emphasis^ are of less frequent occurrence in speech, than the intervals of the fifth and the third. •►►© © &*** SECTION XV. Of the Interval of the Rising Fifth. The rising radical and vanishing Fifth, like that of the octave, is interrogative; and emphatically expresses wonder, admiration, and congenial states of mind, when they embrace a slight degree of inquiry or doubt. It has however, less of the smart inquisi- tiveness of this last interval; is the most common form of inter- rogative intonation; and without having the piercing force of the octave, may be equally energetic, and is always more dignified in its expression. The explanatory remarks in the last section, on the subject of the change of radical pitch in interrogation and emphasis, apply to the like uses of the fifth. For after the voice, in adapting itself to short quantities, has made a discrete change by radical pitch through the interval of a fifth, the succeding melody continues at its elevation, till again brought down for the purpose of a new concrete rise. And in like manner, after the use of the fifth for emphatic distinction on a single word, the pitch immediately returns to the original line of the current melody. From the preceding account of the intonation of the octave THE RISING THIRD. 247 and of the fifth, we learn^ their effects are conizable under two different formsj the Concrete rise, and the Radical change; that the octave is impressed more remarkably on the ear; and that the distinction between the interrogative, and the emphatic use of these intervals, consists generally in the difference of the number of sylables, to which they are respectively applied. It was saidj the intonation of the octave, either by concrete or by radical pitch, is rarely employed; as a rise of eight degrees above the ordinary line of utterance carries most speakers into the falsette. And even with those in whom the rise might not excede the natural voicej the sudden ascent of radical pitch would in some cases be ludicrous, from its contrast with the current melody; would be liable to break into the falsette, if varied at its higher pitch; or would be beyond the limit of the speaker's skil- ful execution. These objections do not apply to an occasional skip of radical pitch through the ascent of the fifth; the varia- tion being less striking in contrast; and the interval of a fifth above the current melody, being generally within the range of the natural voice. Besides the above described uses of the octave and fifth, some canting forms of exclamation, and other familiar voices in com- mon life, are made on these intervals. They require no further notice. SECTION XVI. Of the Interval of the Rising Third. The rising Third, in both its concrete and discrete forms, like the two last named intervals, is used for interrogative expression, and for emphasis. But its degree in both these cases is less than that of the fifth. It is the sign of interrogation in its most moderate form; and conveys none of those states of mind which, jointly with the question, were allotted to those other movements. Besides the exceptions to the rule of the plain diatonic melody, 248 THE RISING THIRD. by an occasional use of the octave and fifth, it must now be added, that the general current of the tone is further varied, by the in- troduction of the concrete third, and its radical change. It occurs more frequently than the two former; for, although more rarely than the fifth, as an interrogative, it is a common form of moderate emphatic intonation. In describing the phrases of melody, it was said, the rising tritone or upward succession of three radicals on as many sylables, is occasionally employed. On the scale, three radical places contain the interval of a third; it is therefore the space or interval occupied by the constituents of a tritone, rejecting the vanish of the last, that makes the proper rising concrete third: yet this concrete interrogative is more im- pressive than the discrete rise of the successive radicals of the tritone; for if the words, Gro you therej in grammar, equally a command and a questionj be uttered in the phrase of the rising tritone, with a downward vanish on each of its sylables, it will have the character of an imperative sentence. Should the first word rise concretely a third, through the space embraced by the radicals of the tritone, and the last two be continued in their rising radical succession; the effect will be interrogative, even if the last two should bear the downward vanish. The same will be the effect when the second word has the concrete, and the last the radical change; or, when the first and second have the common diatonic melody, and the last alone, the concrete rise; showing the marked difference in effect between the concrete rise of a third, and a rise through three proximate radicals of the same extent. There is a form of replication in common speech especially used by the Scots, consisting of a repetition of the affirmative yes or aye, in the rising third; and while the words seem to pay the courtesy of assent, the interrogative character of the intona- tion still insinuates the hesitation of doubt or surprise. Should the interrogative assent, implied by these words be of unusual energy, the expression will assume the form of the fifth, or octave. When the Reader has acquired the prefatory knowledge, ne- cessary for the full comprehension of the subject of Emphasis^ it will be definitely explained, in what manner, and on what THE RISING THIRD. 249 occasions the octave, fifth, and third, are employed in this im- portant function of correct and impressive speech. But as the emphasis given to prominent words of concessive, conditional, and hypothetical sentences, carries with it, the latent character of an interrogatory, its application may properly be ilustrated here. The following examples of conditionality and concession call for one of the wider rising intervals, on the words marked in italics: Then when I am thy captive talk of chains, Proud limitary Cherub ! but ere then, \ Far heavier load thyself expect to feel From my prevailing arm, though Heaven's king Ride on thy wings. So in the hypothesis of the following sentence: If I must contend, said he, i Best with the best, the sender, not the sent. And the same with the exceptive phrase marked in these lines: The undaunted fiend what this might be, admired; Admired, not fear'd. God and his Son except, Created thing naught valued he, nor shunned. It is unnecessary to say, which of the wider intervals is to be set respectively, on the strong words of these examples. The citations were made, to show that the rising third, fifth, or octave, may be used on the emphatic sylables of such sentences. The interval of the minor third, as we learned in the first sec- tion, consists of one tone and a half. It has a plaintive expres- sion, but is not, as far as I have observed, employed in speech for any of those purposes of interrogation, conditionality, or conces- sion, which are here ascribed to the major third. It may perhaps be useful in this place, for the Reader to take a retrospect over the subject of melody, as it has so far been de- scribed ; and to look upon it as consisting of the diatonic phrases formerly enumeratedj varied for the purposes of interrogation, and of emphasis, by the occasional introduction of the wider rising in- tervals of the octave, fifth, and third. In speaking of the melody of simple narrative, the radical changes of that style were reduced 11 250 THE INTONATION to seven elementary phrases. It may be thought; the further use of these wider intervals, in the transitions of radical pitch, justifies an additional nomenclature, for the phrases employed in expres- sion. It does; and the Phrases of the Eighth, the Fifth, and the Third, when the transition is made by radical skip, either in an upward or downward direction, are the terms for designating, if necessary, these new forms of melodial progression in speech. SECTION XVII. Of the Intonation of Interrogative Sentences. Having assigned an interrogative expression to the rising- octave, fifth, and third, I defer for a moment, the history of the re- maining forms of pitch, to describe the manner of employing those intervals in the course of an interrogative sentence ; and thereby to learn, how they are related both to its current melody, and to its cadence. With a view to exhibit the striking effect of the interrogative intervals, let us take the following declaratory or assertive sen- tence, as contradistinguished from the grammatical constructions that generally indicate a question: Give Brutus a statue with his ancestors. This sentence denotes an intention to honor the patriot; is im- perative in its purpose ; and this purpose is expressed by a down- ward movement on every sylable. But if the versatile plebean should the next moment have a new light of discernment or ca- price, he might affect to refuse the honorary tribute, by repeating the very words of the decree, with the sneering intonation of a question : Give Brutus a statue with his ancestors? The difference of the state of mind or the meaning, in these two instances would be perceptible to every hearer: nor could OF INTERROGATIVE SENTENCES. 251 the altered intention of the speaker, in the last case be mistaken. The ironical character or effect of the line when thus read, pro- cedes from each of its sylables having the rising interval of a fifth, or octave, or the inverted waves of these intervals, according to the energy of the sneer; and it shows the power of that rise, in changing an imperative into an interrogative sentence. In this way only, by the concrete rise or the radical skip of a fifth or octave, or their inverted wave, on every sylable, will the ques- tion be fully expressed; for should the movement be employed upon every word except the last, and this be uttered with the diatonic triad, the interrogation will be lost. If the interroga- tive interval be given only to the last word, it will in some de- gree, denote an inquiry; but much less forcibly than when the intonation is applied to every sylable. Besides ilustrating the interrogative intonation, the preceding example likwise shows the effect of the wider intervals, when compared with that of the simple concrete of the tone or second, in a diatonic melody. The manner of applying these wider intervals, for interrogation, will be presently described. Before we enter on this subject, the purposes of elementary in- struction call for a notice of the varied extent of the use of inter- rogative expression; since some sentences require it on every sylable; others fully convey the question by partial application. To be more definite: By Thorough Interrogative Expression, I meanj a use of the intended interval on every sylable. By Partial Interrogative Expression^ a use of the interval on one, or on a few; others, particularly those at the close, having the melody of plain declarative discourse. For brevity, and for substitutive terms, these distinctions may be called, the thorough and the partial interrogation, or intonation, or expression. The proper reading of the questions, in the following examples, may ilustrate the meaning of the above named divisions. When Clarence enters guarded, at the end of the opening soliloquy of King Richard III, Gloster thus addresses him-; Brother, good day ! what means this armed guard That waits upon your Grace? 252 THE INTONATION Here the interrogative intonation is heard only on the clause, what means this armed guard ; the rest of the sentence has both the current and cadence of the diatonic melody. When the Queen, in the third scene of the first act, says', By Heaven, I will acquaint, his Majesty Of those gross taunts I often have endured : Gloster retortsj Threat you me with telling of the King? This proud and angry question must bear the interrogative intonation throughout its current, with the rising interval at the close, or it will not have the required expression. As the characteristic intonation in each of these questions cannot be interchangeably transfered, and as every question makes a thorough, or a restricted use of the interrogative inter- valj it would seem, there must be some instinctive principles to direct a good reader, in designating the places and the limits of its application. I propose in the present section to treat of inter- rogative sentences; and to set-forth some of the principles that appear to govern their intonation. To state and arrange clearly, the causes that seem to direct the Thorough and the Partial use of interrogative expression we must consider both the Grammatical Structure of the question, and the state of Mind, or the Meaning or Purpose which it conveys. Sentences are employed interrogatively, under five grammatical forms. First. They are constructed assertively, but are made inter- rogative by Intonation. You say, a People is only Sovereign, when freed from the restraints of Morals and Law? Let us call thesej Assertive or Declaratory questions. They sometimes have an ironical turn, for their intonation 'speaks otherwise than what the words declare.' Second. They are formed by reversing the declaratory posi- tion of the nominative, with regard to the verb and its auxiliary. OF INTERROGATIVE SENTENCES. 253 Can a Sovereign People exist without Morals and Law ? Let these be called Common questions. Third. By joining a pronoun to the common question. What Morals and Law can control its Sovereign Will ? Theses we call Pronominal. Fourth. By joining an adverb to the common question. Where shall this question be determined ? Theses Adverbial. Fifth., By joining a negative severally to the common, the pronominal, and the adverbial. Have not the United States of America begun the experiment? These j Negative questions. Of the Purpose or Meaning, conveyed in a question, we make also five divisions, which will be ilustrated as we procede. First. A question may be made with an uncertainty, or with an entire ignorance in the interrogator on the subject of the question. This is a question of Real Inquiry. Second. The interrogator may from colateral circumstances, either intimated or declared, have some knowledge, or a reserva- tion of belief, on what is verbally the point of the question. Call this a question of Assumed Belief. Both these questions may be made in either the second, third, or fourth grammatical forms. Third. But a question with the negative construction, is made as a demand for an according answer; and when furnished with colateral grounds of belief, is sometimes put with the confidence of a triumphant assertion. We may call this the Triumphant Inquiry, or Belief. Fourth. Questions may be addressed with various degrees of Force; of which we make three kindsj the moderate,, the earnest, and the vehement: but as curious, and wayward ignorance is always subject to the excited sway of self-willj questions may em- 254 THE INTONATION brace surprise, anger, scorn, contempt, with every kind and degree of passion. Fifth. In connection with claims to truth and justice, a ques- tion is sometimes an appeal to the candor of an opponent, or to the favor of an audience. This is an Appealing question. To it may be added the Argumentative or Conclusive, the Exclamatory, and the Imperative. As these require a downward intonation, they will be arranged and described under a future section, on Exclamatory sentences. Questions vary in extent, from the fulness of the common sen- tence, to the eliptical brevity of a monosylabic word; as shown in the last section on the interrogative use of even the affirmative, yes. A similar question may be made of no: for notwithstand- ing this declaratory negative is in verbal meaning, always the same, yet the rising intonation, by changing that negative to a question, overrules its meaning or throws it into doubt. Upon the subject of Thorough, and Partial intonation, in the various Grammatical forms of questions and their meanings, above mentioned, I here offer some general rules; or furnish approxima- tions towards them, for the assistance of future research. It may be laid down as a rule, almost without exception, that where an interrogative sentence has the Assertive construction, it requires the Thorough expression. In addition to an example of this case given in a preceding page, let us take an instance from Coriolanus, where the same words are used as a declaratory, and as an interrogative phrase. In the fifth scene of the fourth act, the servant of Aufidius says to Coriolanusj Where dwellest thou? Cor. Under the canopy. Ser. Under the canopy? Cor. Ay. Ser. Where's that? Cor. In the city of kites and crows. Ser. In the city of kites and crows? The replications here set in italics should be read with an inter- rogative interval on every sylable; and the cause seems to be this. All assertive sentences when put as questions are eliptical; since OF INTERROGATIVE SENTENCES. 255 they imply and should properly include some grammatical phrase of interrogation. Thus the speaker here means, either with in- quisitive doubt as to the wordsj did you say, under the canopy? or with real inquiry as to the placej where is, under the canopy? And so of the other instance. But the grammatical phrase of the question being omitted, it is necessary to supply the defect of the elipsis, by the use of a thorough interrogative intonation. For when the interrogative interval is applied exclusively to one word or sylable except the last, it constitutes only a declaration, with an intonated emphasis on the word so marked. When set on many sylables, or on all except one, it does produce a degree of interrogation, yet quite unsatisfactory to the demands of the mind, and of the ear. Should the interrogative interval be on the last, with the other words in the diatonic melody, the intona- tion will fall short of the meaning of the phrase, if it would not really misrepresent it; as the unexpected rise at the close, in- stead of the consistent termination by the diatonic cadence, would produce an anomaly of utterance irreducible, by me at least, to any definite character of expression. A declarative question is then an eliptical sentence, from which the grammatical phrase having been omitted, the question must be signified by an interrogative intonation on every w r ord. There is however, a kind of assertive sentence, which affirms by the word, yet questions with such a slight insinuation of doubt, that it calls for only the partial intonation ; as in the following of Hamlet to the Player : You could, for a need, study a speech of some dozen or sixteen lines, which I would set down and insert in't? Here the words are declaratory; and even affirm the power of the subject.; yet with moderately rising intervals on only the phrase, you could for a need* its declaratory meaning is over- ruled, and the rest of the sentence, though properly diatonic, takes the interrogative character from this partial intonation. Such cases deserve a name for themselves, and are not to be classed with declarative questions, which are purely thorough interrogatives. In a sentence constructed by the nominative placed after the 256 THE INTONATION verb, or between the verb and auxiliary, forming what we call a Common question;; either the Partial or the Thorough interro- gative is employed. I need not ilustrate the varieties of this case; the Reader can readily recur to examples under it, in which the intonation must be determined by the meaning and force of the question, and by the sentence, whether short and simple, or ex- tended and complex. A sentence constructed with the interrogative pronouns or adverbs, constituting what we call Pronominal and Adverbial questionsj and embracing none of those conditions which require the Thorough expression, commonly appears under the Partial form ; as in the following examples : Who hath descried the number of the traitors ? How came these things to pass ? What sum owes he the Jew ? These lines do not severally require a thorough expression; for the question is here sufficiently marked, when the interro- gative interval is applied on portions only of the sentence, par- ticularly on its emphatic words. The ground of the partial application may be this. In adverbial and pronominal construc- tions, there is no question about the existence or the agency of the subject of inquiry; and thus its part in the sentence does not call for an interrogative expression. The uncertainty is in the relation of that existence, to person, time, place, manner, num- ber, and degree; and on these only, the interrogative intervals are required. In the first example the existence of the traitors is admitted; the question refering only to their number, and to the person who had seen them. In the second, the existence of the things, and their agency in the event, is admitted ; the ques- tion beingj in what manner, or how they came to pass. The third admits the debt; and questions only its amount. Some of the exceptions to the generality of this rule will be mentioned, in speaking of the varying state of mind or purpose in an interro- gative phrase, and of its final emphatic sylable. Common, pronominal, and adverbial questions are made directly to the point of inquiry, or indirectly by a negative, to its oppo- site; as in the following common question^ Will he — come? OF INTERROGATIVE SENTENCES. 257 And in the negativej Will he — not come? The dash being merely to mark the difference to the eye. Here the first ques- tion is directly to the point of his coming. The second is indi- rect, or to the point of his not coming. The condition is there- fore not the same in the two cases. One is a real inquiry, made in ignorance whether or not, he will come ; and without hope or fear that he may. The other is prompted by the assumed hope, that he will come; and thereupon, anxiously regarding, and fear- ing the negative side of the condition only, asks, if this negative is the fact. Is it — that he will not come? or by elipsis, and by transposition, Will he — not come? If we take adverbial and pronominal questions^ the principle of an assumed belief, under their negative form, will be perhaps more apparent. What did he — not dare? How did he — not deceve? Who is — not covetous? These cases clearly indicate on the part of the interrogator, the belief that the subjects of the first two did severally dare, and deceve in all things; and in the last, that all men are covetous. Should these questions be made directly to their interrogative points, asj What did he dare? their several real inquiries would call for a thorough interroga- tion; but as negatives, and made indirectly to these points, they may take the partial expression, or even the downward interval and the direct wave. A Negative question has the Thorough or the Partial intona- tion, according to its meaning and force ; and it will be presently shownj the negative question sometimes carries the assumed be- lief to that positive degree which requires the downward into- nation. When a sentence, besides the Point of the question, has addi- tional members or clauses which contain an address, or assertions, or expletives, or reference to causes^ the expression assumes the partial form; as in the following instances Of address: Why with some little train, my lord of Buckingham ? Of assertion: Why did you laugh then, when I said, Man delights not me ? 258 THE INTONATION Of expletive: Of cause: What's Hecuba to him, or he to Hecubc That he should weep for her? What of his heart perceve you in his face, By any likelihood he show'd to day ? The right of the rule seems to be, that the additional clauses, though modifying the leading point of the question, yet do not, in their separable membership, include an interrogation; which the portion of the sentence marked in italics, and here called the point of the question, does grammatically convey. When questions of a moderate degree are connected by con- junctions, or follow in series, without this connection^ it is not necessary that each question should severally have the extent of interrogative expression, required in its solitary use. Give me thy hand. Thus high, by thy advice, And thy assistance, is king Richard seated: But shall we wear these glories for a day ? Or shall they last, and we rejoice in them? Are you call'd forth from out a world of men, To slay the innocent? What is my offence? Where is the evidence that doth accuse me? What lawful quest have given their verdict up Unto the frowning judge? or who pronounced The bitter sentence of poor Clarence's death? Should this rule not be contravened by conditions requiring the thorough expression^ the question in such instances as the above, is sometimes sufficiently marked, if each of the several members of the series has an interrogative interval only on a sin- gle word; and this reduces the case, in point of expression, to an ordinary sentence, having an emphatic word, so marked by the given interval. Perhaps the ground of the rule is, that the mind or ear of the auditor being, so to speak, in the humor of the question, the interrogation is sufficiently indicated by the gram- matical structure. OF INTERROGATIVE SENTENCES. 259 With regard to the State of mind, Meaning, or Purpose con- veyed by a question, some notable circumstances govern the use of intonation. If a question is prompted by the ignorance or uncertainty of the speaker, and contains a Real inquiry, it generally calls for the thorough expression ; which must consequently in many in- stances, overrule the partial intonation otherwise appropriate to pronominal, adverbial, and common questions; to questions in conjunction, and in series; and should they embrace surprise, even to those of negative construction; as in the following exam- ples, where the lines in italics, including questions of real in- quiryj the last being prompted by surprise^ call for the thorough interrogation. Hamlet. Dost thou hear me, old friend? Can you play the murder of Gonzago ? Hamlet. Have you a daughter? Polonius. I have, my lord. Prospero. Thy father was the Duke of Milan, and A Prince of power. Miranda. Sir, are not you my father ? Although in the stated form of this rule, only a general effect is ascribed to it, yet when the question has much earnestness, its bearing is almost without exception. Those questions, in which the interrogator intimates some knowl- edge on the subject of his inquiry, and which were termed ques- tions of assumed belief, take, according to the degree of force, either the partial or the thorough intonation. Under this head, even some declarative questions contain so much of an absolute assertion, that they require the slightest degree of interrogative expression; as in the following, of Hamlet to Polonius: My lord, you play' d once in the University, you say? As there is some doubt in this sentence, it is properly marked as a question ; yet the colateral phrase, you say, refers to an event known before to the interrogator, and makes it one of be- lief: this state of mind therefore, requires an interrogation only on the words in italics. 2C0 THE INTONATION Of the Negative question, which under its assumed belief, seems to anticipate, or at least to hope for, an according answerj we find an ilustration in Shylock's noted parallel between the Jew and the Christian, with his earnest resolve upon revenge. He hath disgraced me, and hindered me of half a million ; laughed at my losses, mocked at my gains, scorned my nation, thwarted my bargains, cooled my friends, heated mine enemies; and what's his reason? I am a Jew: Hath not a Jew eyes ? Hath not a Jew hands ? Organs ? Dimensions ? Senses ? Affec- tions ? Passions? Fed with the same food, hurt with the same weapons, subject to the same diseases, healed by the same means, warmed and cooled by the same winter and summer, as a Christian is? If you prick us, do we not bleed? If you tickle us, do we not laugh ? If you poison us, do we not die? And if you wrong us, shall we not revenge ? If we are like you in the rest, we will resem- ble you in that. If a Jew wrong a Christian, what is his humility ? Revenge. If a Christian wrong a Jew, what should his sufferance be by Christian example ? Why, revenge. The villainy you teach me, I will execute; and it shall go hard, but I will better the instruction. Here the questions begin withj What's Ms reason f As the answer is made by the inquirer himself, the question is to him rather one of belief, or of appeal, than a real inquiry ; and is to be made by rising intervals, on the first three sylables, with a downward interval on son; thus constituting a partial interroga- tion. The answer is a full sentence, and serves to ilustrate the expression of the triad of the cadence. This triad is always set at a full period. When therefore Shylock, to his own question responds, and assigns the reason, I am a Jew* giving a downward interval to 7, and the falling triad of the cadence to the three re- maining sylablesj he joins to the close of the meaning by words, a positive closing intonation, which emphatically declares, this alone to be the motive, and implies by the close, that no more is to be said : thereby affording a beautiful instance both of the grammatical, and the intonated effect of the cadence. Add to this, the contrasted variety of the rising intervals on the question, and the downward intervals on the answer: much preferable I would say, for its truth, dignity, and force, to the answer when made by the sneering in- tonation of rising intervals or of waves, sometimes applied to it. The next two questions, Hath not a Jew eyes? Hath not a Jew hands? are similar in argumentative meaning, and should have a like intonation. They are both negative : and having in a preced- OF INTERROGATIVE SENTENCES. 261 ing page given some examples, showing that the negative question includes in a greater or less degree the mental condition of belief; I here offer a further explanation of the manner in which that belief is grammatically conveyed. Let us take the following as a Common question of Real In- quiry ; Hath a Jew eyes ? Then the negative proposition A Jew hath not eyes. If we join a question to the negative declaration, we have this form of questioning a negative: Is it so? {that) a Jew hath not eyes. Which, with an identical meaning, may be thus traced through its various constructions. Is it true? — a Jew hath not eyes: orj is it true of a Jew? — he hath not eyes: or* a Jew, hath he not eyes? And from this, rejecting the pronoun and putting the noun in its place, we have: Hath a Jew not eyes? or connecting the negative with the verbj Hath not a Jew eyes ? which is the most simple form of questioning a negative. Now to doubt or question a negative, is in a certain degree, to intimate an affirmative ; and to question his not having eyes, at least carries with it, the assumed belief that he has. Hence negative questions may be considered as questions of Belief, under the form of an appeal. If this explanation is correct, Shylock does not look for an answer from Salanio ; but implies in the nega- tive appealing question^ his conviction, that the same physical and moral constitution in the Jew, and in the Christian, en- titles each equally to the rights of truth and justice. Under this view, the question put by Shylock, though one of assumed belief and of appeal, has its claims to the partial, or the downward intonation, overruled by its vehemence; and therefore demands the thorough interrogative expression. I do not say, that as an appeal taken with the negative construction, the two questions might not be given altogether in the downward intonation ; or at least with a direct wave on Jew, in the first, and a downward concrete on hands in the second. Yet to my ear, the keenness of the thorough interrogation is more appropriate to the energy of the case. Next follow in succession, five words, each being an eliptical declaratory question; and they are here so marked; having dropped the grammatical phrase, Hath not a Jew f These ques- tions then, severally call for the rising interrogative interval, on 262 THE INTONATION each of their sylables. Lst there be no fear of monotony in this case ; the variety of elemental sound, and of meaning in the words, enable the ear to bear the repeated identity of a truthful intonation. We next have a sentence beginning &tfed, consist- ing of five clauses. This is still a declaratory question: but the elipsis that makes it so, does not avoid a solecism; for the inter- rogative verb must be changed, and the question if complete should be, notj Hath not, but* Is not a Jew fed with the same food, as a Christian is? Under its declaratory form in the text, its supposed negative embraces, like the preceding questions, a degree of belief and appeal. But the vehemence has somewhat subsided, and the intonation may therefore be partial; particularly at the end, where the diatonic cadence may be applied. The next four clauses are similar; and each is made-up of a condition, and of a negative question. If you prick us, do we not bleed ? This union of the condition and the negative, puts the question of belief and of appeal in so strong a light, that its meaning takes the lead, in the intonation of the several questions. All the interrogative phrases should therefore have the downward intervals; for these, we shall learn hereafter, form the intonation of appealing ques- tions; while the conditional phrases should have the partial, or the thorough expression, as the meaning, or as variety may re- quire. The next two clauses are alike in structure, and contain, severally, a condition, together with a pronominal question; If a Jew wrong a Christian, what is his humility? Here the interro- gator returning his own answer, the question may be taken as an appeal, and thus receve the downward intonation. But as the question conveys a slight degree of sneer, the emphatic sylable of humility may receve a wider unequal direct wave of the fifth, which we shall learn hereafter is its proper vocal sign: at the same time, the rise of the first constituent of this wave, forms a striking and elegant contrast to the emphatic downward intona- tion of the answer^ Revenge. The other answer^ why, revenge, should have the triad of the cadence, on its three sylables, forci- bly declared by its downward vanishes; meaning, as it would seem; there is an end of the subject, let no more be said. For the higher Elocution, this argument of Shylock has great strength and beauty. The vehemence with which the rising intonation OF INTERROGATIVE SENTENCES. 263 begins, moderates as it procedes; till it gradually declines to the downward, but still impressive intonation of an appeal. If the several questions seem to have too close a succession of the same rising intervals; let it be remembered, this is not monotony. It is the truth of intonation : and in the purposes of an ordained and expressive use of the voice, truth and fitness can never be monotonous to a scientific and cultivated ear. For a further ilustration of the negative interrogatory, under that degree of belief called the Triumphant question^ I give here an example, showing at the same time, the difference between the negative and the common form. When St. Paul, before the Judgment Seat, asks, in a com- mon question^ King Agrippa, belevest thou the Prophets ? he addresses a real inquiry, and cannot, therefore, with propriety, return the answer himself. And unless Agrippa had remained silent after the question, of which we are not informed, we see no cause why Paul should so confidently affirm the belief of Agrippa: for a hesitating or evasive answer on the part of Agrippa might have been taken as a colateral ground of belief, on the part of the interrogator. Paul's personal narrative, and his very prop- erly ascribing to Agrippa, a knowledge of Jewish affairs, even if grounds at all, are not implied in his real inquiry. Refering to the principle of assumed belief, that directs a negative question, let us apply it to a like construction here. King Agrippa, be- levest thou not the Prophets? or, Dost thou not, King Agrippa, beleve the Prophets? For the meaning in both cases is identical; since they each alike question a negative, and ask Agrippa, if he does not beleve, or if he disheleves the Prophets. And, if I am not misled both in the analysis, and inference^ to doubt or ques- tion a disbelief, is, to a certain degree, to suppose a belief. Let then the phrase of real inquiry, as the case is recorded, be made negative; and upon this doubt or question of Agrippa's disbe- lief Paul, in the confirming zeal of his argument, might, after his appealing interrogative, fairly make his conclusive declara- tion. Dost thou not, King Agrippa, beleve the Prophets? I know that thou belevest. For the intonation of this altered form of the question, apply rising interrogative intervals to the wordsj Dost thou not, King 204 THE INTONATION Agrippa; making the first three strongly and deliberately em- phatic, with a slight pause after Agrippa: then reduce the octave or fifth, whichever may be used on the sentence, down to a third on the sylable grip, and to a second on pa ; and terminate the question, by positive falling intervals onj beleve the Prophets. Give an emphatic downward intonation to the declaration^ I know that thou belevestj with an exulting tremor on know ; and the question, by its earnestness, and the implied belief of its negative structure, will be a forcible figure of speech, and a striking ex- ample of the Triumphant inquiry.* There is, in the Eleventh chapter of the Second Corinthians, a series of questions and answers, by St. Paul; each somewhat resembling in structure that addressed to Agrippa, but far more irregular. Of these however I take one only, as an example of the other four. Are they Hebrews? So am I. * We are told in the 'Acts of the Apostles,' that Paul addressed Agrippa, in what we have called a common question of Real inquiry. But Paul, from his own account of his persecuting the Christians^ was a choleric, and a violent man: and was besides, an Enthusiast in the Platonic Philosophy; that scholas- tic source of the fanatical delusions of the 'real presence of Spiritualism;' and of political craft, in the prophecies of 'Manifest Destiny.' Urged and sustained by the overbearing energy, and the self-confidence of his character, he was necessarily fearless before his accusers, and eloquent in the honesty, and de- claration of bis belief. In the fervor of that belief, he put his question, as if his own conviction had reached his judge. Now as I maintain, either nature or convention, has appointed the form of a Negative question, to express this hopeful reliance of the interrogator, on the yielding assent of the respondent. But this is not the form recorded in the case before us. If Paul's friends or foes in the crowd, reported the Address, we cannot be surprised at a mistake. If it was written out byTaul, or repeated by him to others, the language must then have wanted the purpose and ardor which directed the appropriate gram- mar of his impressive vocal question. We may then be allowed, with some probability, to doubt that the question was written down in the very words of the speaker. The philosophical critic must pardon the merely ilustrating remark of this Note. And if this, my pastime of commentary, should disturb the nervous Orthodoxy of those who do not like to be called 'Lovers of Wisdom;' they will please to observe, that the proposed emendation of St. Luke, who though a Physician, may not have been an Elocutionist, is drawn from a law of Nature herself" who, among the countless, so called orthodoxies of men, has never yet found one in thorough likeness of her own. OF INTERROGATIVE SENTENCES. 265 Here, in addition to the unsatisfactory use of the common question of real inquiry, in place of a negative of assumed be- lief; and to the incongruity between the number and person, of Hebrews and Ij the peculiar construction, in thus making the • interrogator the respondent, commits a violent solecism ; as a question cannot be the premis to an unconditional conclusion. For, so {in like manner to what f) am I, has not the least con- nection with the foregoing question; which affirms no existence as the antecedent to so. The purpose of speech is to represent, by sound and syntax, severally both thought and passion ; and no Art of Elocution, not ours at least, can by the modes of the voice, properly convey either thought or expression, upon the in- consistent clauses of this example. We may guess, that Paul meant to tell the Corinthians^ he addressed them as a Hebrew; but he does not say so, by strict, nor even by clear eliptical grammar. Are they Hebrews? is a question of real inquiry; and until answered in the affirmative, cannot have the least grammatical or mental correspondence with the declaration^ so am I. When the question is negative^ Are they not Hebrews ? it becomes one of belief; and so far as the declaration may be thereupon infered, its relationship to that assertive interrogatory, if I may so call it, is somewhat clearer. Now according to the meaning and power of a negative question* are they not Hebrews? the interrogator figuratively assumes, that they unconditionally are; and there- fore conclusively declares^ so am I. Yet this strong negative appeal, with its assumed assent, even when assisted by emphatic force, and a thorough downward intonation; as in, Are they not Hebrews? So am Ij has not a strictly grammatical nor mental construction; and it might be subject to the consequent; so am I not Hebrews, or a Hebrew. There is a discrepancy between the meaning of the question of belief in the former, and of the strict conclusion in the latter phrase. Nor can its awkwardness be en- tirely avoided, and the assumed belief be justifiable, without put- ting both phrases into the same form of negative interrogation. Are they not Hebrews ? and, am not I a Hebrew ? or again, am I not one ? The extent of interrogative intonation appropriate to questions 18 266 THE INTONATION put Argumentatively, and to those embracing a confident appeal; varies from the partial and the thorough rising, to the very re- verse condition of a downward intonation. But of the argu- mentative, and appealing interrogation, I shall speak, in a future section. When a question is vehemently made, under any grammatical structure, and with any number of such questions, either in con- junction or in series; the rule very generally assigns to the expres- sion, the thorough extent. Show me what thou'lt do. Woo't weep? woo't fight? woo't fast? woo't tear thyself? Woo't drink up Esil? eat a crocodile? I'll do't. Dost thou come here to whine? To outface me with leaping in her grave? The passionative state that directs the voice in these several questions, has an excess of vehemence, and its purpose is inter- rogative. The interrogation therefore, must be vehemently marked by its rising intervals on every word, or there will be no correspondence between the passionative state of mind, and the vocal expression. It may perhaps be said; this repetition of the same interval, would be monotonous. If so, the charge is made against Nature; and it is always hopeful to defend her. Let him who would try it for variety; give the several questions, alternately with a rising and a falling octave or fifth; and hear then, their meaning quite destroyed, by this see-saw of real monotony. Again, let him otherwise contrast these intervals, for some must rise; and try every succession that may seem to promise variety; then we shall have, together with a striking oddity, a far worse monotony of affectation. After these trials, let him give each question with its proper rising interval; and we can say whether the passionative state is not as deeply im- pressed on us, as it is forcibly expressed by him. He is only telling the truth of utterance, with emphatic repetition; and we, if fit for sympathy, cannot perceve a monotony, which not being in his thought or passion, he does not vocally express. Yet see the elocution, in the Poet's mind and pen! He put eight ques- tions within these lines, and thought then, as we may therefore OF INTERROGATIVE SENTENCES. 267 say now, that all should have the rising intonation. He paid this tribute to expression, in the first six ; and with a mind uncon- scious of monotony in truths and only to give it variety, by an- other phrase with the downward interval, and its vehement assent, he thought, and in passionative contrast wrotej Til do it. Say, thou All-Observant, and All-Reflective power of Shak- speare ! do I not thus speak the truth of thy discrimination, as thy All-Reaching language, so often speaks to me the everlasting truth, and truthful analogies of nature and of life ! But to return. Should a question be addressed with a moderate form of inquiry, it generally takes the partial form of expression. When Hamlet says to Guildensternj Will you play upon this pipe ? the composure of mind and the rank of the Prince mingle in the question, the mild authority of a request, with the doubt of an in- quiry; and this is perhaps properly represented by the use of a moderate interrogative intonation on the first part of the sen- tence, with a subsequent reposing descent of the diatonic cadence. It would appear, the instrument is brought into the scene, and the question thereupon put, with a view to the consequent quibble; and on this ground, perhaps, the word pipe might be regarded as emphatic. Still the emphasis may be made by moderate stress or force, on the last constituent of the triad, without the necessity in this case, of a rising interrogative interval. Should this moderate degree of the question be earnestly increased, it would take the thorough interrogative, unless overruled by a negative construc- tion, to the downward expression. When a question is asked with surprise, indignation, scorn, and other similar states, it generally receves the thorough expression. Let us take some examples from the scene, in the first act of Hamlet, between Hamlet, Horatio, and the two officers; where, from the moment Horatio informs Hamlet of his having seen his father, there follows, on the part of the Prince, a succession of questions, with both the declaratory and interrogative construc- tion, requiring with one or two exceptions, a marked use of the thorough expression. There are thirteen questions in this dialogue. In applying 268 THE INTONATION our principles of intonation to them, the Novelty of the matter in this Work, and the required peculiarity of its arrangement, make it necessary to anticipate some points of our subject, that will be fully explained hereafter. It is found by the experience of those who gain knowledge from books, that what is worth reading at all, should be read more than once; different parts of a system being the best expositors of each other. The Student of Nature is always, again and again, going over the Pandect of her self- explaining Volume. After some words about the late King, our extract from the dialogue begins herej Ilor. My lord, I think I saw him yester-night. Ham. Saw? who? There seems to be here, two separate questions. The First is eliptical; either for the declaratory interrogative phrase, you saw ? or for the common question, did you see ? and refers soley to the fact of an apparition: since Hamlet's thought is, for •the moment exclusively directed to the impossibility of the King, his father, having been seen. The Second is ungrammatically eliptical either for, saw whom? or for, whom did you see? and refers to the person of the apparition. By taking these as two separate questions, we are enabled to give more force and variety to their intonated expression. They each express astonishment and inquiry, the former predominating; and this, we shall learn hereafter, calls for a wide downward^ and the question, for a wide rising interval. These different expressions in the first question are therefore connected and reconciled by the falling continued into the rising octave; thus forming what we call the inverted wave. The astonished interrogation of this wave, is then to be applied to the first question saw? The second question, who? by an error in case, is eliptical for, Who did you see? It is not however, properly a declaratory word, requiring a rising interval ; as an interrogative pronoun, it does even when alone, always convey the meaning of a condition or question. But the question has al- ready been emphatically made on saw ? With a moderate pause after this word, the astonishment may therefore be expressed by an emphatic downward octave on who ; forming what will be de- OF INTERROGATIVE SENTENCES. 269 scribed hereafter, as the Exclamatory question. In this way, the expression of these two words, both forcible and true, is effected with more variety, than if the same intonation were used on each. Hor. My lord, the King, your father. Ham. The King, my father ? This being a declaratory question, under a state of astonish- ment, calls for an impressive thorough interrogation ; which may be made, as in the last case, by the inverted wave of the octave on King ; and as the short quantity of the sylable fa, will not bear the prolongation of the wave, and perhaps, not even the simple rise of an emphatic octave, without deforming its pro- nunciation the interrogative expression might be effected, by taking fa, at the current level of the voice, and then rising with ther, by an upward skip of radical pitch, to the hight of an octave, as exemplified in the fourteenth section. Horatio having then detailed the circumstances of the Ghost's visitation, Hamlet asksj But where was this ? What was said, in ilustrating the intonation of sentences con- structed with the adverb and pronoun, applies here : for as the question emphatically regards the placej where must have either a simple interrogative rise of an octave, or fifth, or a union of these respective intervals, in the form of an inverted wavej and, was this assumes the first duad form of the cadence. Mar. My lord, upon the platform where we watch' d. Ham. Did you not speak to it? This is a negative question. All that was said formerly of the examplej Hath not a Jew eyes, and of the other like cases, may be refered to, and applied here; with the exception however, that the present question is less vehement, and therefore less con- fident in its assumed belief, and in the hope of an according answer. The greater energy in the former case required the thorough ex- pression; here, the interrogative may be either thorough or par- tial, as Hamlet's assumed degree of belief may direct. If however, 270 THE INTONATION as it appears to me, there is, in the thought that Horatio should, yet might not have spoken to it, some passing disposition to reproof on the part of Hamletj the intonation should be partial, to express the reproof, perhaps on the word not, by a positive downward interval. Ilor. My lord, I did ; but answer made it none. Ham. 'Tis very strange. Hot. As I do live, my honored lord, 'tis true. Ham. Indeed, indeed sirs, but this troubles me. Hold you the watch, to night? This is a question of real inquiry, which by our general rule, calls for the thorough intonation. Still there may be another cause for it here. Thinking men in their purposes, either good or badj if indeed, that exalted agent real thinking ever stoops, as fictional thought often does, to an unworthy purpose^ always have a motive for them. When therefore, Shakspeare makes the whole company at once, answer this question, we must suppose it is to show, the question is not addressed to any one, but to all. Con- sequently, the interrogative expression should be thrown over the whole sentence, with a slight emphasis on, to night; the time being the unknown; as holding the watch, and the sentinels to be set, are the given quantities, so to speak, in the mind of Hamlet. All. We do, my lord. Ham. Arm'd, say you ? This is not strictly, a question of real inquiry. For Horatio having formerly described the king, 'arm'd at point, exactly, cap-a-pe,' Hamlet is aware of his having so appeared. Still, in cases where the mind is unprepared for a new impression, and hardly receves it> Hamlet recurs, by the phrasej say you, to the former report by Horatio, and asks for a confirmation of it. This, from the colateral inference, being then a question of belief, might seem to call for the partial intonation. Yet as the thought comes back to Hamlet, with some surprise; as an earnestness is implied in the desire to have the former statement repeated; and as the question consists of only three words, and those, important to the point, each should receve the interrogative expression. OF INTERROGATIVE SENTENCES. 271 Hor. Arm'd, my lord. Ham. From top to toe? This is a declaratory question, and requires the thorough interrogation. Hor. My lord, from head to foot. Ham. Then saw you not his face ? This is a negative question, with its assumed degree of belief; yet as its temper is earnest; as the last word is emphatic, and thus requires an interrogative interval, the whole question calls for the thorough expression. Hor. 0, yes, my lord; he wore his beaver up. Ham. What! Look'd he frowningly ? I cannot at once determine the grammatical character of the first word of this question : though inclined to take it for an ex- clamation, rather than an interrogative. In each case it must be considered an elipsis ; in the former, perhaps for what a wonder; in the latter for what zoas his appearance? As a pro- nominal interrogatory, it requires a wide rising interval ; and the following phrase, looked he frowningly, being a question of real inquiry, with the thorough expression, we have unnecessarily, and with seeming levity of voice, two consecutive interrogations. In the other case, taking the pronoun as an eliptical exclamation, with a downward fifth or octave, and a subsequent pause, the gravity of this interval would contrast agreeably with the thor- ough rising interrogation, and give greater dignity to the whole expression. Hor. A countenance more in sorrow than in anger. Ham. Pale, or red? This is a declaratory eliptical question, and should receve a thorough interrogative. But perhaps we may find an overruling cause why it should take the partial. These words make an emphatic contradistinction; and as that contradistinction must be shown by intonation, we would give to pale, a rising interro- gativej and to red, a downward positive intonation. Were the 272 THE INTONATION quantity of this last word greater, it might receve, with more propriety, the direct wave ; its first or rising interval, moderating by its interrogative effect, the positiveness of its downward ter- mination. Yet even with the single intervals above proposed, the question is marked, and the words are contradistinguished, by an emphatic and varied intonation. This example forms one of the exceptions to the very general rule, that declarative ques- tions should receve the thorough interrogative expression. Though it is to be remarked, that in this case the doubting disjunctive or, overrules, in a degree, its declaratory character. Hor. Nay, very pale. Earn. And fixed his eyes on you? This, if a question, is a declarative one ; and requires the in- terrogative intervals throughout. There seems nevertheless, to be an indication of belief in this sentence, which should make it an affirmative remark, requiring a downward intonation. If so, perhaps the question, as noted by the editor, is annulled, upon this colateral inferencej that a ghost appearing to a person, would very probably fix his eyes on him. Hor. Most constantly. Ham. I would I had been there. Hor. It would have much amazed you. Ham. Very like, very like. Staid it long? The last three words, are here the question; and containing a real inquiry, call for the thorough expression. Hor. While one with moderate haste might tell a hundred. Mar. Ber. Longer, longer. Hor. Not when I saw it. Ham. His beard was grizzl'd? No? Hor. It was, as I have seen it in his life, a sable silvered. There seems to be some difficulty in this last question. If the phraseology were completed thus: His beard was grizzl'd, was it not? the case would be quite clear. For, taking the first phrase under this form, as a declaratory question, it would receve a thorough interrogative intonation: the second, being a proper grammatical question, with its rising intervals, and following the OF INTERROGATIVE SENTENCES. 273 first, would have the propriety and force of an emphatic repeti- tion of the question, under a negative and appealing form. But ■when, as in the dialogue, the construction of the last phrase is reduced by elipsis, to the monosylable no, and both the phrases are then made intonated questions, it renders in some degree, the elocution awkward, and the meaning obscure. Every edition of Shakspeare I have examined, makes each of these phrases, a separate interrogation. If they are so, the first is a declarative question, and therefore must have the rising interval on every word; No, being always declarative must have that meaning an- nulled by its rising interval. The question having however, been distinctly expressed by the first phrase, an endeavor to enforce it, under this brief monosylabic construction, would produce only an ineffectual vocal repetition. For a single interrogative inter- val on the word no, that in meaning and grammar never conveys a doubt, does not here, give the impression of the question, which is effected, by a like interrogative intonation, on the above pro- posed and full grammatical question, was it not? If the Reader will give a thorough expression to these two different forms of the sentence;* His beard was grizzl'd? no? and^ His beard was grizzl'd? was it not? he will perceve in the lattery the inquiry is clearly enforced, by its repetition under the different form of a negative appeal ; in the former, there is some verbal confusion and consequently an undetermined character in the elocution. For in this case it might seem, without due reflection, that Hamlet having first inquired whether the beard was grizzled, immediately answers his own question, by a declaration that it was not. But taking this single word according to the text, as a question, even a wide interrogative interval on no, has not the power to destroy entirely, the usual and strongly declarative meaning of this nega- tive monosylable. And this produces, a confusion, which the full grammatical question^ was it not, would entirely obviate. There is another view to be taken of this example; for Elo- cution is a current of divided, and sometimes diverging rills. Thus the phrase, His beard was grizzl'd, may be taken as a posi- tive affirmation by Hamlet, from a full recolection of its living color, and used as additional means of identifying the apparition with his father. In this case, it should have the downward into- 274 THE INTONATION nation of a common assertion. The phrase being so regarded, Hamlet seems, for a moment, to question his own conviction; and thereupon, by the declaratory question, no, here an elipsis forj was it not grizzl'd? asks Horatio, by a rising fifth or octave, on this negative monosylable, if it was not so. My own ear and reflection incline me to this manner of treating the example. But under ignorance of the full verbal and mental analysis of the subject, the two parts of the sentence, being universally marked as real and separate questions, I did, on that condition, in the first case, propose for them, what seemed to me a suitable into- nation. To the scientific and practical Artist-Reader of another age, skilled in the principles, and if we may so speak, in the design, light and shade, color, and perspective, of Elocution, we may predict* that without some further discernment, or a change of language, in his day, the structure of this sentence will never allow a quite satisfactory intonation. As however, Hamlet must speak from recolection, I would propose, according to the man- ner just described, to make the first clause a simple assertion, with a downward intonation; and no, with a wide interrogative interval. Yet this, from the influence of the usually uncondi- tional meaning of no, does not satisfy me; and perhaps it is only a poor apology for my own inability, to sayj the sentence, how- ever it might be vocally Thought, should never have been written, to be read aloud, or spoken; and though awake to a conventional expression, yet here, Shakspeare, the Actor, slept. I have said little on the emphatic words, and other points in these questions ; and have only occasionally noted the extent of the intervals; the object being, to describe some of the forms of partial and thorough interrogation, and the general character of their expression; though it may here be remarked, that nearly all Horatio's answers should have throughout, the downward in- terval of a third or fifth, according to the degree of expression required: the intonation being appropriate to the solemnity of the scene, the confidence of the answers, and to the seriousness with which Horatio sympathizes with the wonder of Hamlet. Add to the propriety of this downward movement, the contrast with the earnestness of the rising intervals of Hamlet's common and OF INTERKOGATIVE SENTENCES. 275 declaratory questions. Perhaps in the last example, the several answers of Horatio and the two officers, having taken an argu- mentative and more familiar turn, the intonation should be en- livened by a mingling use of proper rising intervals. Among the purposes of this Work, the title-page announces, its design to render criticism in elocution, inteligible, through the study, and promulgation of its system and principles. I have therefore endeavored to show, by the preceding explanatory criti- cisms, how these principles may be applied; leaving others, with competent knowledge, and an observant industry to make par- ticular applications for themselves. Personal Authority has al- ways laid such a stupefying weight on the human mind, that it is hoped this book may be consulted, only for those submitted prin- ciples which observation, experiment, and well-watched thinking, may hereafter confirm; and not as critical opinions intended by the author, only to ilustrate his subject; an ilustration being often, no more than an analogy to the meaning of a proposition, not an examplary proof of it. We have another instance of the thorough intonation, pro- duced by an excited state of mind, in the retort of Cleopatra, to Proculeius, the friend of Caesar. Know, sir, that I Will not wait pinioned at your master's court; Nor once be chastised with the sober eye Of dull Octavia. Shall they hoist me up, And show me to the shouting varletry Of censuring Rome? Eather a ditch in iEgypt Be gentle grave unto me. The repulsive indignation of this question cannot be fairly represented, without an earnest degree of interrogation. As there seems however, to be some implied appeal, in the word, shallj it might be supposed, the question is one for partial into- nation. But under this, or any other exceptive condition, the passionative state of mind would overrule it. Should the last sylable of a question be emphatic, and its in- tonation not directed to the partial expression by the preceding rules, particularly that, regarding the seriesj the last sylable bears the interrogative interval. Should the sentence be short, 276 THE INTONATION or consist of a single member, the expression will have a thor- ough application. In the dialogue between the murderers of Clarence, the second speaker exclaims and asksj What, shall we stab him as he sleeps? From the answer of his companion it is plainj the question points at the act of sleeping, and this produces an interrogative emphasis on the last word. Had the inquiry been whether the victim should be stabbed, or otherwise put to death, the word stab would carry the emphatic intonation, and the sentence might end with a diatonic cadence. It will be shown in a future section on Exclamatory sentences, that a phrase, with the grammatical form of a question, yet having the interrogative purpose overruled by colateral influ- ences, is not properly expressed by rising intervals, but by a contrary movement of pitch. Having brought the subject of thorough and of partial inter- rogative intonation, into something like a describable form, I leave the correction of its errors, and the amplifying of its ap- proved hints, as a work for the better ear, and closer attention of others. Let us analyze more particularly, the manner of employing the interrogative intervals on individual sylables. Prefatory to this investigation, it is necessary to consider the radical and vanishing movement, when applied to short and im- mutable sylables. In the second section I described the means by which the various concretes may be exemplified on long quan- tities ; and there asserted, that no sylable however short, can be uttered without passing through the radical and vanish, under some form of intonation. Perhaps the Reader is now prepared to reccve proof, that the concrete does rapidly pass through the wider intervals, on immutable sylables. We will suppose, he is familiar with the interrogative expres- sion of a slow concrete rise through a third, fifth, and octave, on prolonged sylables. Then let him pronounce the immutable syl- able top, without meaning or passion; and again, as an earnest question. He will perceve, in the last case, that however quickly uttered, it will still have the peculiar interrogative expression. OF INTERROGATIVE SENTENCES. 277 This interrogative expression, on the slow time of an indefinite sylable, is audibly and measurably made by the wider interval of the fifth or octave; and as there is no other means for producing concretely this interrogative effect j the inference is fair, that the voice in producing that same effect on a short sylable, must have passed, however rapidly through one of those wider intervals. For it cannot in this case, procede from a peculiar vocality ; nor from an impressive degree of force; and that it is not produced soley by a radical skip of the sylable to a high place of pitch, may be heard in the following experiment. Let the Reader rise step by step through the musical scale, on the word topj taking care to give it no more than the concrete of a second at each degree: yet with this discrete rise through successive degrees to any hight, there will be no interrogative effect. To what then is the interrogative effect, on an immutable sylable to be ascribed, if not to a momentary concrete flight of the voice, through an interrogative interval? The audible effect justifies the conclu- sion; though the increments of time and space on the scale, so distinctly perceptible in the slower concrete, are on the immuta- ble sylable, altogether beyond the power of measurement. From this view of the difference in time of the radical and vanish, on indefinite and on immutable syiables; and with refer- ence to the uses of their different times in the intonation of inter- rogative sentences^ let us call the measurable movement of the voice through an indefinite sylable, the Slow Concrete: and its momentary flight through a short and an immutable one, the Rapid Concrete. It appears by the trials above proposed, that the interrogative effect is producible on the shortest syiables ; and similar experi- ments warrant the general conclusion, that every interval of the scale in whatever time, is practicable on every sylabic quantity of speech. It is however to be remarked that the rapid flight of the wider intervals through short syiables, compared with their slow movement through the indefinite, has a feebleness of interroga- tive expression, directly proportional to its rapidity; and conse- quently, that the slow and distinctly measurable concrete on indefinite syiables produces a more marked impression on the ear. Yet it is desirable that the thorough expression should be equally 278 THE INTONATION diffused over the sentence ; and as all sylables have not sufficient length, to bear the slow and most impressive interrogative con- crete, it follows that other means besides those already described, must be employed on short sylables, for effecting with uniformity, the intonation of a question. The means for strengthening the comparative feebleness of interrogative expression on short syl- ables, consists in raising them, by change of radical pitch, through the interrogative interval, to the line at the summit of the slow concretes on indefinite quantities; as the following notation of an instance of thorough expression will exemplify. Givo Bru tus a stat ue with his an ces tors? j=^-f=s-f== s=t- m—J. — it In this case the interrogative intonation is made by the fifth on every sylable. On the first two, which are indefinite and emphatic, the slow and measurable concrete is used. The third being immutable, cannot bear the slow concrete; the pitch is therefore suddenly transfered by radical change to the hight of the preceding vanish; w T here, at the same moment, the sylable takes on the rapid concrete of the fifth as represented by the diminished symbol. The melody continues at this hight, on all the following unemphatic sylables, or which, if emphatic as may be said % of stat, are of immutable quantity. From his, the radi- cal pitch descends to the indefinite sylable an, for the purpose of rising on this sylable by the slow concrete; and the two final short quantities terminate the melody, by radical change and the rapid concrete. It is by this method then, the union of a radical change with the rapid concrete, that a full and forcible interrogative intona- tion is given to those sylables, which are too short to admit of the slower and measurable movement. The Header may observe the effect of this radical change, by deliberately pronouncing the noun convict, as an earnest ques- tion. The sylable con being an indefinite quantity, and emphatic, will be distinctly heard to rise concretely from a given point of OF INTERROGATIVE SENTENCES. 279 pitch, to tHe place of the fifth or octave, according to the earnest- ness of the expression ; and the immutable sylable vict, with its discrete skip and rapid concrete, will be heard at the hight of that previous vanish. If vict, after the slower rise of con, is kept down at the level of the radical of con, and there uttered with a rapid concrete rise, carefully guarding against the descent to a close, the interrogative intonation is still perceptible, but in a degree far inferior to the keen questioning of the radical skip, combined with the rapid concrete. It is not difficult to assign the cause why the interrogative effect of the rapid concrete is enforced, by its being taken on the higher places of the scale. For the rise by the slow concrete is after all, but a gradual change from a low to a high pitch; and though that gradual, or continuous change is plainly distinguish- able, in its degree of expression, from a discrete sJcip to the same hight, still an essential yet not the exclusive agency of the gradual movement, is its designating that higher place by term- inating there. This designation is the sole efficient in the radical skip ; and like that of two discrete notes on a musical instrument, when heard successively, as the extremes of a wide interval of the scale, it does in effect closely resemble a concrete transition be- tween the same extremes. When to this effect of the radical change, the co-operating expression of the rapid concrete is added, the combined effects become equivalent to the interrogative ex- pression, produced by the slow concrete on an indefinite sylable. As the rapid concrete of a short sylable, even if emphatic, pro- duces however moderately, an interrogative expression, it may be used without the radical change, in cases not requiring a strongly marked intonation of the question. In other words, all the inter- rogative sylables of sentences bearing the partial expression, for a thorough expression is generally forcible, may be kept at about the same line of radical pitch. But the short sylables so assigned, must still perform their rapid concrete in the appropriate interro- gative interval : and it will generally be found, that the moderate temper of such questions has the abated expression, ascribed to the Third, in the history of that interval. Besides that succession of radical change above noted and ex- plained, there is another method of applying the general principle 280 THE INTONATION of its formation and use. When the first part of a sentence con- sists of short quantities, the interrogative expression may be made, by the voice setting out at once with a rapid concrete, on the high pitch, and descending afterwards at the first emphatic sylable of long quantity. By taking-away from the preceding example, the first two slow concretes, and setting over the remaining symbols, the following phrase, as an earnest question; Pitt a statue with his ancestors? it will have the just interrogative expression. Perhaps the Reader is now prepared for this general statement ; That the current melody of interrogation, in sentences requiring the Thorough expression, is made by the slow concrete interval of the third or fifth or octave, on long and emphatic sylables; and by a change of radical pitch, together with the rapid concrete, on the short and unemphatic, and the unaccented; that in sentences, restricted to the Partial expression, the intonation is made by a similar use of the above named interrogative intervals, in connec- tion with the phrases of the common diatonic melody ; and that in each separate case of a Thorough, or Partial expression, the inter- rogation may in the same sentence, be formed soley by the Third, or Fifth, or Octave, or these several intervals may be used together in the same sentence^ as the words require, on the one hand, the same degree of expression, and on the other, an application of the different intervals to the varying demands of those words. Having shown, with regard to interrogative intonation, that all the rising intervals are practicable on the shortest sylabic timej their expression, however moderate, being by what we have called the Rapid concrete^ it should here be added, that univers- ally, the characteristic effects of all the intervals, both upward and downward, are perceptible on short and unaccented sylables. With this principle of intonation in view, the Reader is refered to the eleventh section, where the use of the rapid concrete is tran- siently alluded to, in application to an exemplified instance of the co-operation of the character of a short, with that of the full ex- pression of an extended sylable. It is there said of the linej Pardon me, thou bleeding piece of earth. OF INTERROGATIVE SENTENCES. 281 That, by the slow concrete on par, and on bleed, together with a certain co-operation 'by the other sylables, the due expression is spread effectively over the whole line. And it now appears, that the same plaintive interval of the same time, which is slowly em- ployed on those two prolongable quantities, is, though faintly, perceved in its rapid flight through the short and unaccented syla- bles ; each form of intonation contributing a different portion and degree of the intended expression. Let us now learn the means for constructing the Cadence of interrogative sentences: or, as most of these sentences have not the peculiar close or descent of the cadence, strictly so calledj let us to be more precise^ learn the manner of intonation on their three final sylables. The close of a sentence with the Thorough expression, is made in one of the following forms. And let the Reader remember, that when applied to proper interrogative sentences, the terms slow and rapid concrete, mean always, the rise of the interval; for there is a distinction to be made between these sentences, and others, with the grammatical construction of a question, which require the downward intervals. In the First, if the three sylables are unemphatic, or immuta- ble if emphatic, or are the unaccented sylables of an emphatic wordj the interrogative effect is produced by a radical change, and a rapid concrete of these final sylables: these sylables at their elevated pitch, being carried on in the phrase of the monotone, or of the rising ditone. For the interrogative expression always im- plying a continuation of the voice, as distinguished from the close of the Triad;* the above named phrases do add their peculiar character to that of the rapid concrete, and thus effect the re- quired continuation, at the end of the sentence. This species of close is here exemplified. He said you were in com pa ra — ble? 19 282 THE INTONATION In the Second; the same thorough expression being still sup- posedj if the antepenult sylable is emphatic, and of indefinite quantity, it assumes the slow concrete, and the last two take on the radical change and the rapid concrete^ shown by the notation of the word ancestors in a preceding example. In the Third ; if the penult is a long quantity, it will rise by the slow concrete; and the last will have the rapid concrete with the radical change. This form of intonation may be obvious without a diagram; and from what has been already shown, it will be unnecessary to give an ilustration by the staff, to all the succeding descriptions within the present subject. In the Fourth ; if the last sylable of a sentence requiring the thorough expression, is emphatic and capable of bearing the slow concrete, it assumes that form of intonation. Under this con- dition, the radical pitch of the three sylables may go through the downward tritone, as here represented. Give Fab ius a tri mnph for his de — lay? ^ffl^, In this instance, the concrete rise of the octave, fifth, or third, as the* case may be, will create a perception of continuity, and thus counteract the tendency of the radical descent, through three successive tones, to produce a close: for it is a condition of the terminative cadence, that the vanish of its last sylable should be in a downward direction. When a sentence has the Partial expression, and the last words do not require the interrogative intervals, the cadence should be diatonic, and therefore terminate with the appropriate triad. But questions with the partial expression sometimes have one of the last three sylables emphatic, which then calls for an interrogative interval. Under this condition, the following will be the struc- ture of the cadence. First. When the antepenult sylable is emphatic, and of indefi- nite quantity, it will take the slow interrogative interval; and OF INTERROGATIVE SENTENCES. 283 the last two will successively descend from the point below the radical of that concrete, and form with it, a proper diatonic triad. Second. Should the penult be emphatic, and bear the slow concrete, the last sylable will have its radical pitch a tone below that of the preceding, and by its downward vanish will produce the close of the triad ; the emphatic sylable with its interrogative intonation, being in radical pitch, a tone below the antepenult. This construction however, is not common; for if the emphatic interrogative expression on the concrete interval comes so near the close, it is generally continued, by the last sylable rising with the radical change. Third. When the final sylable is emphatic, and of indefinite time, the cadence is made like that of the last diagram, in the preceding account of thorough expression. The history here given of interrogative intonation, embraces a few leading observations on its forms and effects: and the whole subject offers some interesting views on the philosophy of the human mind, as well as that of speech. It shows how far, the demands of thought and passion outrun the significant powers of the voice at present in use; how counter-currents of expression meet without confusion; and how varied states of mind, under the same forms of intonation, are distinguished by the conven- tional specifications of language. I leave the discovery and bet- ter arrangement, of other phenomena, and of the rule of their variety, for the observation of the Reader. Upon some future extension of the principles of this essay to the universal practice of speech, the subject of interrogative intonation will form a full chapter of methodic detail. I see, perhaps dimly, some of its abundant and unsorted materials ; but have not time, if even the ability, to light-up, to gather-in, to disentangle, to specify, com- bine, and complete. What is here done, may seem to be too much. For "the present age, I beleve it is. But this is a con- cession altogether foreign to our anticipations of the progress of knowledge, and to the pleasure we may derive from our attempt to unfold it. A history of the desirable and welcome truth of Nature, in the dignified confidence of even its humble contribu- tions, no more asks the favor and applause of those who read, than Nature herself asks the gratitude and worship of those who '284: THE RISING SECOND. enjoy her bounties. She gives what she gives, in her own pride less wisdom, without distracting her self-energized dispensations, by the subordinate schemes of hopeful ambition. A record of her admirable things should be, in all, the image of her; and perhaps he would both do and enjoy more, in the work of dis- covering and describing her, who could catch a portion of the unostentatious liberality with which she bestows, and who could put on some of her indifference, to the too often thoughtless praise or blame of those who receve. SECTION XVIII. Of the Interval of the Rising Second. We return from the foregoing account of the use of the wider intervals of pitch, in the construction of interrogative melody, to the enumeration and description of other intervals of more limited extent, yet of no less essential efficacy in the scale of intonation. The rising interval of the second or tone, both in its concrete, and in its discrete form, has in previous parts of this essay been attentively considered, with regard to its character and its posi- tion in speech. In continuing our orderly notice of all the inter- vals of the scale, we here resume the subject of this Second, with some further remarks on its important uses. It is the basis of the diatonic melody; and is appropriate to those thoughtive parts of discourse which convey the plain meaning of the speaker, as distinguished from those passionative states of mind, that call for wider intervals, and other signs of Expression. Although the Tone, in its simplest state, is excluded from among the especial agents of expression, we shall hereafter learnj it may be made impressive by stress on different parts of its concrete; and that an extension of the voice into the wave of this interval, gives an admirative or reverentive dignity to the diatonic melody, without destroying the plain and unobtrusive character of its intonation. THE RISING SECOND. 285 The radical and vanish is a necessary function of utterance; for no sylabic impulse can be made, without passing through some one form of the concrete. In thus asserting, that immutable sylables in a diatonic melody do pass instantaneously through the second or tone, I confess, my ear cannot measure the progress of the transition. Yet I am led to the conclusion, by the following considerations. Every equable concrete utterance of a tone, with its measur- able increments of time and motion, has manifestly the radical and vanishing progression. When therefore the time of this slow and manifest concrete, is gradually shortened, in repeated pro- nunciation, till it becomes, seemingly a point of sounds the into- native effect of this instant-impulse on the ear, does not differ materially from that of the concrete, in which the increments of time and the progress of pitch are measurable. And further, it has been shown, that the concrete interrogative intervals of the third, fifth, and octave, may be passed through on an immutable sylable. This was proved by the peculiar ef- fect of the interrogative voice being thereon distinctly conizable ; and we shall learn in the next section, that the semitone, which by its peculiar expression cannot be mistaken, does likewise pass through the concrete, on the shortest sylables. We can then scarcely suppose^ the Tone has not the same concrete movement on momentary sylables, as all the other intervals of the scale when uttered with the same momentary impulse. There is how- ever a plain but characteristic effect in the thoughtive moment- ary flight of immutable sylables, clearly distinguishable from that of their prolonged and passionative utterance through the con- crete space of a semitone, third, and other wider intervals. This may be only an instant-point of voice; but under the above in- ference, we are scarcely allowed to doubt, its being a rapid con- crete passage through the second or tone. We learned, in the seventeenth section, that the wider intervals are heard through both the slow and the rapid concrete, in interrogative sentences. Finding here that the like times of movement are used in the simple second; and as intimated above, it is the same with the semitone; we may state this general law of intonation^ that all intervals, whether thoughtive or expressive, are employed both 286 THE RISING SECOND. in the upward and downward direction, under the two forms of slow and of rapid concrete, respectively on the long and short quantity of sylables. Perhaps the Reader may desire to know particularly, what portions of discourse receve the tone or second; and with what continuity the diatonic melody is employed. In describing and ilustrating this melody, it was, according to the plan of gradually unfolding our subject, represented as continuing through succes- sive sentences. The diatonic movement is however, rarely found of long continuation; the current of the Tone being occasionally interrupted by some expressive form of upward and downward concrete, and of radical pitch. We have already learned in what manner the wider rising intervals are employed in this melody, both for emphasis, and interrogation. Other intonative means are introduced for the same purpose. As occasions for using em- phatic or passionative intervals occur in discourse, the diatonic melody generally exists only in limited portions; its continuity in the tone or second being broken by these impressive intervals, more or less frequently, as the various forms of their intonation may require. A gazette advertisement, a legal instrument, and the purely communicative style of plain narrative and description, may generally be read in the thorough diatonic melody. Yet even these must have emphatic words that call for some expres- sive vocal sign ; and rarely, compositions addressed to taste, are without their melody being occasionally varied, by the more or less frequent occurrence of other intervals than the second. Ac- cording to the line I have endeavored to draw between thought and passion, and consistently with their appropriate intonation, it might be supposed, the propositions of Euclid should be read in the continuous diatonic melody ; but even these are often varied by wider intervals, introduced upon illative, absolute, conditional or exceptive phrases. The fragments of this melody, occurring in prose declamation, in poetry, and in the drama, are generally of limited extentj and common speech when- not plainly didactic nor designedly solemn, nor unavoidably dullj in the heedless cur rent of its intonations, almost effaces the simple lines of the thoughtive second, by the vivid coloring of its widely-varied intervals. THE RISING SECOND. 287 The diatonic melodyj far as practicable with our intermingling divisions^ is assigned restrictively, to a character of discourse called narrative; and it being desirable^ this melody should be executed with the greatest propriety and elegance, we must care- fully regard the uses of the interval of the second for the attain- ment of these ends. This proper second of the diatonic melody, not having the vocal expression of other intervals, is limited in its effective char- acter, to the means of time, and stress, on its own simple con- crete, and wave. The different forms of stress applicable to a simple concrete rise of the second, will be described in a future section. The other principal means for adding dignity and grace to this plain melody, is that of a long quantity; by continuing the upward into the downward tone, in the form of a Wave. It is not however, prolongation alone, that produces a clear and agreeable effect, in a dignified form of diatonic speech. That length should be made in the equable concrete movement; and further, the wave, as well as the simple rise, should have the initial fulness, and gradual termination, except otherwise varied by the purposes of stress. He who has not cultivated his voice in these particulars, will find it difficult to give extended length to an indefinite sylable, with its coexistent equability and vanish ; and will, on trial, be very apt to carry out a long quantity, with the intonation of song. But if he will throw away some of his conventional thought, about a ' Natural Turn' for things; and all his vain conceit about self-sufficient 'Genius,' and 'promptings of the heart;' cease to beleve, that a good elocution is coeval with the first cries of infancy; and then set himself to learn the rudi- ments, and overcome the difficulties of this elegant art; the light and guidance of knowledge and principles may lead him to an unerring command over the equable concrete, and to the attain- ment of every propriety of speech. Facility in managing long quantities on indefinite sylables, with a precision of interval, and a smoothness and nicety of vanish in the execution of this equable movement, is one of the most effective resources of a speaker. The skilful performance of this concrete function, in the impressive fulness and dignity of the Orotund, gives that ear-felt satisfaction, when an accomplished 288 THE CHROMATIC Actor, as I have heard it, with his masterly command of voice, first takes part in the dialogue, even on a solitary sylable: while the Young 'Genius of Inspiration,' stooping for help to Green Room traditions; and distracted perhaps by a buzz in the audi- ence, or a mistake of his Costumer, is obliged to work through a whole act, before he is able to feel himself, as he calls it, up to the full power of his voice. But science, with time, is always ready to prevent, though it can rarely cure, the obstinacy of ignorance and conceit. SECTION XIX. Of the Interval of the Rising Semitone; and of the Chromatic Melody founded thereon. The smallest but not the least important division of the scale, through which the radical and vanish may be heard and measured, is the interval of a Semitone. In the second section of this essay, we learned the means for acquiring a distinct perception of this concrete interval. It was there saidj if, in ascending the scale, the effect of the transition from the seventh to the eighth place is compared with the sylabic utterance of a plaintive state of mind, their identity will be acknowledged. This interval from the seventh to the eighth, in the diatonic scale, is a semitone. It is used in speech for the expression of complaint, pity, grief, plain- tive supplication, and other states allied to these. In ascending through the diatonic scale, by a repetition of the word fire, subdivided into two sylables, with a prefix of the sub- tonic y-e to the last, so that fi and yer shall be alternately set on successive points of the scalej the transition from the seventh to the eighth place, when the word is contracted to its single sylabic state of fire, gives by its radical i, passing into its vanish rj the same plaintive expression it has through the streets, in the outcry of alarm. Intonation by the concrete semitone is universally, the sign of MELODY OF SPEECH. 289 animal distress; and when exemplified by the scale, the effect is very different from that of the concrete passage of the word as a single sylable, through the space of a whole tone, between its first and second degrees. Among a multitude of voices where the alarm of fire is given by public cry, this utterance through the second is occasionally heard; and perhaps some of my Readers may be able to call to mind the defect of its unsympathizing dif- ference from the plaintive intonation of the great majority. It cannot be exemplified by the pen; but when the uncommon im- pression of a particular cry, among a number, is not produced by vocality or by shrilness, it generally arises from this misapplied form of pitch. Without the means of close acquaintance with men, they may be estimated by certain characteristics of their classes; and though our judgments in the case may sometimes be erroneous, there is often truth, and always caution in this method of opinion. Be this as it may, I never hear the phlegmatic cry of fire, through a whole tone, particularly in the Thorough stress, without a persuasion of the general impotence or deformity of the voice or the ear, that in this particular, can so far transgress the ordination of nature.* The semitone is employed for moderate degrees of expression ; * Since the first publication of this Work, in eighteen hundred and twenty- seven, the practice of outcry in the streets of Philadelphia, has in eighteen hun- dred and fifty-five^ the date of this Note^ entirely passed away. Instead therefore of being as formerly, arouzed in the stilness of midnight, by the Watchman's hollow Orotund, to the plaintive interests and solemn contrasts of near and distant solitary cries, awakening our safety, to sympathy with the perils of a conflagration; hear what we have now, under the prosperous onward-ism of our great political, moral, and esthetic 'mission:' the Alarm-bells of a whole city at once; the jangling clappers of Hose-carriages without number; the ceaseless roar of inarticulate trumpets ; the screams of boys ; the yells of men ; the wrangling preparations for a street-fight ; the owd-shouting shouts, upon the first volley of' stones ; the discharge of revolvers ; the uproar of a thousand brutal throats; and the cautious absence of a ' non-committal' republican police. After the Imperial Roman had robbed-out every Treasury, every Temple, and every private purse, within reach of his quarrelsome and ruthless sword, his avaricious courage failed; and the Barbarian came back, and down upon him in righteous revenge. We, by rapacious Treaties, and Civilized Craft, are pur- suing and exterminating the Native Indian from his Land. But Hah! with retributive justice, he seems, in the forced submission of his retreat, to have thrown to the winds, his gross and unlawed temper ; which now, like a national malaria, is spreading an avenging savagism among his conquerors. 200 THE CHROMATIC and rarely for great energy, harshness, or violence of passion. It affects generally a sIoav time and long quantity. The inter- jective exclamations of pain, grief, love, and compassion, are prolongations of the tonic elements on this interval. But the effect of its rapid concrete is distinctly perceptible, on the short time of immutable sylables. For it will be found by experiment, that the word cup, with other immutables, can be uttered with a plaintive intonation, even in its shortest time. As this plaintive- ness, so distinctly measurable on short quantity, is always pro- duced by the concrete semitone, and not by any other known intervalj it may be fairly concluded, that when heard on an im- mutable s}^able, the semitone is rapidly performed, even though the gradual course of its time and motion is imperceptible ; show- ing the plaintive use of the semitone, to be within the general law of intonationj and that every interval is heard, in both the slow and the rapid concrete, as the different times of sylables direct. In the next section, we shall learn the uses of the downward vanishing movement. It is necessary however, to consider here transiently, the downward vanish of the semitone; this being one of the constituents of the chromatic melody of speech, now to be described. The downward radical and vanishing semitone may be exem- plified on the scale, by passing from the eighth to the seventh on the word fire, as one sylable^ and descending, alternately by the subdivisions fi and yer to the second, where the single sylable is again to be used. The concrete movement on the single sylable fire, from the eighth degree to the seventh has a plaintive expres- sion ; whereas the movement on the same sylable, from the second to the first, has quite a different character. When therefore the voice rises on the single sylable, concretely through the semitone, at the summit of the scale, and immediately in continuation de- scends through it, this repetition of the interval must prolong the plaintive impression. As the pathetic state which dictates the semitone usually affects a slow time, and, an extension of sylabic quantity, the expression is generally made by continuing its up- ward into its downward concrete, in the form of a Wave. This answers two important purposes. It denotes more impressively the state of mind, by a repetition of the interval, and in extend- MELODY OF SPEECH. 291 ing the equable concrete in the line of contrary flexure, allows a prolongation of voice, without its liability to pass into the pro- tracted radical or protracted vanish of song. The expressive effect of this doubled semitone may be exemplified on the word fire, as a single sylable, by making an immediate return in the downward direction, on the subtonic r, after ascending to the top of the scale on the tonic i of that word: for this exactly resem- bles the plaintive utterance of a prolonged sylabic time in speech. The states of mind expressed by the semitone, are sometimes re- stricted to individual words; sometimes they extend over phrases and sentences, and even throughout discourse. These last occa- sions, requiring the semitone on every sylable, necessarily pro- duce a melody consisting of a continued succession of that in- terval. We learned in the eighth section, that the current of the Diatonic melody is formed by successions of sylabic pitch through the interval of a whole tone. The current movement we are now describing, being through the sylabic pitch of a semi- tone, may be called the Semitonic or, by a term taken from the scale of -music, the Chromatic Melody. Like the former, it is subdivided into the current melody, and the melody of the cadence. Its course may be resolved into seven Phrases, similar to those' in the diatonic progress. Yet the change by radical pitch in the chromatic current, as it appears to me, being through the interval of a tone, only when it descends, and not when it ascendsj the use of the nomenclature must be pardoned, when I denote the several semitonic phrases by the terms assigned to those of the diatonic melody. There is in the Chromatic Melody of speech, as in the Diatonic, neither Key, nor Modulation. A similar use of the seven phrases at the punctuative rest, for continuing, suspending, or closing the thought, is made in each ; and the same rule applied for varying the phrases of the current melody. But the expression of the chromatic, being generally more grave, or subdued than that of the diatonic, the former more frequently affects the phrase of the monotone. In describing the diatonic melody, its essential movements were subdivided into the concrete, and the radical pitch. The same distinctions occur in the course of the chromatic melody. 292 THE CHROMATIC Its concrete pitch is always the interval of a semitone. Its radi- cal pitch, if I have not erred in observation, is conducted in the following manner. When the current melody descends, the radi- cal change is downward, over the space of a whole tone ; in as- cending, the radical change is upward over the space of a semi- tone. This change of a tone in descending, will be perceved on executing the downward ditone of a chromatic melody, and com- paring its effect with that of the first two constituents of the triad of the diatonic cadence: for if the downward radical pitch of a chromatic melody be followed by another downward radical, similar to the first ; or in other words, if we attempt to make a downward tritone in a plaintive intonation, the triad of the cadence will be thereby so nearly accomplished, that it requires for its consummation, only the faint downward vanish of that triad on its last constituent. Now the radical pitch of the triad of the cadence is formed of the successive descent of whole tones. The following considerations lead to the conclusion that a radical change in the upward direction, is in some cases made by the step of a semitone. By intonating the scale in the manner directed at the beginning of. this section, it will be perceved that after rising through the first semitone, on ft, the next sylable yer seems to begin at the top of that preceding concrete; making the radical change of the ascent in this case a semitone; and as every concrete of a chromatic melody is a semitone, it would fol- low, by the rule of the scale, that each successive sylable of a chromatic progression, when the radical pitch rises only one de- gree, must be at the distance of a semitone above the preceding. But it has been shown that the concrete pitch of this melody is, in slow utterance, generally continued into the returning down- ward vanish of the semitone, in the form of a wave; here then, the above cause for the radical change taking the interval of a semitone in its upward progress does not perhaps, apply. Whether in this case the subsequent upward radical change is by the semi- tone or the tone, I am not prepared to decide, with the confidence I have felt in the result of other observations recorded in this Work. In general, there is not much change of radical pitch in this melody; the monotone being its prevalent phrase. The question MELODY OP SPEECH. 293 is however, left to the plain, and unargued observation of others ; not to be a subject for useless refinement and dispute; as such, it can be of no importance in the Practical Philosophy of Speech. It was said in a previous section, that the diatonic melody admits occasionally into its current the third, the fifth, and the octave. It may be asked^ in what manner these intervals, when required in the course of a chromatic melody, are engrafted upon it. They have a place in it, for the purpose both of plaintive in- terrogation and of emphasis; and are applied in the following manner. Plaintiveness being the characteristic of this melody^ when an interrogative word requires the rise of either the octave, fifth, or third, it is conclusive^ the expression both of the semitone, and of that wider interval should be conjoined. By a direct rise of the interval, beyond the limit of the semitone, the plaintive ex- pression would be lost. These two apparently incompatible effects therefore can be united on one sylable, for the purpose of chromatic interrogation or for emphasisj only by leading the voice in the form of a wave, through the upward into the down- ward semitone on the appointed sylable ; and from the extremity of this downward vanish, continuing the upward concrete of the octave, fifth, or third, as the intended interrogation, or the em- phasis may require; thus forming what we called in the second section, a double-unequal wave. When the peculiar keenness ascribed to the octave is recolected, it must at once be supposed^ it is rarely found among the signs of semitonic interrogation ; the less impressive third or fifth being commonly used for this pur- pose. Perhaps the Reader may not here require an ilustration of the chromatic melody, by the staff. The precision I have endeavored to give to the terms of this subject will it is hoped, enable him to comprehend it without delineation, or to mark the tablature for himself.* * I here give place to the Reader; for surely, by a knowledge of our manner of ilustration, he can easily draw the appropriate symbols. It is the great recommendation of a System of Elocution, derived from the pure and living Fountain of investigated Nature, whence every clear and use- ful stream of knowledge flowsj that its effective ways and means may be re- corded, and its available benefit diffused and perpetuated. But it is worthy of notice on this subject, as on most others, that exactness of science, either from 204 THE CHROMATIC The cadence of a chromatic melody is made by a peculiar con- struction of the triad. The Reader on experiment will find, there is no other means for reaching the full and satisfactory pause of discourse, on three dis- tinct sylables, than that of the diatonic cadence, formed by the radical descent of three whole tones, as noted in the first and second diagrams of the cadence, in the eighth section. Conse- quently the chromatic triad must be made by a similar radical descent; for a downward triad of three semitones would make no more than a tone and a half. But in the chromatic melody, the concrete pitch or vanish of these radicals* which descend by three whole tonesj is made through the space of a semitone; and the plaintive character of the melody is thereby communicated to its close. It is to be remarked here, that a sentence requiring the chro- matic intonation, may sometimes be terminated by the plain dia- tonic triad, whether the close is made on separate, or on con- joined constituents ; and further, that unimportant words and short quantities in a chromatic sentence, may receve a radical and vanishing whole tone, without destroying the plaintive ex- pression ; provided the semitone is heard on all accented, and long quantities : though more commonly the short and unaccented sylables bear the rapid semitonic concrete. The forms of the Diatonic cadence, which may be occasion- ally applied to a chromatic melody, are described in the eighth section. I here consider the cadence that bears a plaintive ex- pression. The chromatic cadence may be made on a single long sylable ; the confident quietude of its progress, or its freedom from ill-tempered con- troversy, has always been the least sought, if not the last desired, where they cannot see their personal interest in it, by the mass of even the so-called wiser part of mankind. And certainly, it is not a little remarkable, in regarding all the Five Modes of the voicej that Pitch, with its exact intervals of vocal Into- nation, ever unalterable in nature, and the only one'precisely describable under definite forms and degrees^ should be that particular Mode, of the Five, which has been, and still is declared net only to be unknown, but to be beyond the reach of future discovery. And all this, because somebody first said so; and then ovcry following individual of the earless and unthinking Flock said so, after him. MELODY OF SPEECH. 295 or it may be allotted to two sylables ; or the space of its descent may be divided between three. When the three vocal constituents are joined severally to three separate sylables, the close is made by taking the radicals, at the interval of a whole tone successively in descent; and by giving to each of the constituents, except the last, the rising vanish of a semitone; for it has the feeble downward vanish of the diatonic close. This is exemplified by the following diagram ; where the vanish, and the upward change of radical pitch in the current melody, are both to be taken as a semitone; and the downward radical, either as a whole tone or a semitone ; for I leave this as a questionable point. Pit tj the sor rows of a poor old man. | 4 4 4 Single, » - h o © je (3 Octave, 3 c hfi 0) bo Fifth, o bfl o o3 Inverted, .9^ - Third, Second, © o a OO =*-H Semitone, Equal, w - ^l "5 © 00 a o DQ © Direct, 1 f Octave, 53 bb I Fifth, rt.S -! Third, 02 CI 1 *s •£ Second, © 00 o o O bD a o 00 w » .£ Semitone, E=H I 00 "> Double, q - * f Octave, © bo Fifth, © > hD Inverted, .2 ^ J Third, +a ^j Second, .^ Semitone, © • *> * . <4— 1 i a o Octave, o . <3 a * hp Fifth, OO o3 0) 3 Direct, .2-S ■ Third, 5 -+j "to "^ Second, 03 09 d O £* S Semitone, J- © Single, ^ ■— i .s ■+3 > Octave, "3 ho © bD Fifth, S3 Inverted, 3|- Third, a © a s c3 OO «t-i Second, Semitone, 3 !»H s 00 a - o © OO Unequal, ° - a » ► f Octave, s 3 | hi | Fifth, «a oo o © © 00 £3 Direct, ,S -2 J Third, += •£ Second, .£ Semitone, Eh I 00 < hD O .2 Double, gj -j V 05 ,3 > 1 Octave, © M Fifth, Inverted, ."§ ^ J Third, c3 IS 3 1 Second, H .fcj Semitone, &h L J THE WAVE OP THE VOICE. 319 In the preceding view, only the first constituent of the Unequal wave is given. Another tabular scheme is subjoined of its second and third constituents; the intervals in each of the three being different. And I must here repeat; these tables represent what may be performed by the voice, in the multiplicity of its combi- nations; a limited number only of which are to be regarded with reference to their practical purposes in speech. In thus penetrating the recesses of Nature, we must be allowed to describe her most minute phenomena, however presently useless it may be. Nearly all the forms of the wave here noticed, might be made designedly by a skilful effort of intonation ; and perhaps are made in daily -discourse, by the instinctive efforts of speech. Yet the unequal wave, far as I can perceve, has no particular ex- pression allotted to each of its several forms; most of the varieties here given, being only permutations of constituents, answering the same purpose. Whether these waves not specially significant with us, have ever been used to denote states of mind, or ever will be, is yet to be told. We have heard, but belief should keep a skeptic watch on hearing, that the Chinese vary the meaning of the same elemental or sylabic sound, eight or ten times, by changes of intonation. Do they draw upon the forms of the following table of the unequal wave? Under any answer to this question, the analysis of speech, contained in this Work, will enable the Pho- netic Ethnologist to investigate the subject of his inquiry, with precision, and with an inteligible result. 320 TABULAR VIEW OF THE WAVE. Single. ■{ Double. ■< The first consti- The second con- tuent beiug stituent being either a an Octave. Direct j or V a Fifth. Inverted, J Direct ^ or V a Third. Inverted, J Inverted, j Direct or Inverted, a Second. a Semitone. an Octave. Fifth. a Third. a Second. a Semitone. Semitone second third or fifth. Semitone second third or octave. Semitone second fifth or octave. Semitone third fifth or octave. Second third fifth or octave. Semitone second third or fifth. Semitone second third or octave. Semitone second fifth or octave. Semitone third fifth or octave. Second third fifth or octave. The third con- stituent being either a 2d 3d or 5th. Sem. 3d or 5th. Sem. 2d or 5th. Sem. 2d or 3d. 2d 3d or 8th. Sem. 3d or 8th. Sem. 2d or 8th. Sem. 2d or 3d. 2d 5th or 8th. Sem. 5th or 8th. Sem. 2d or 8th. Sem. 2d or 5th. 3d 5th or 8th. Sem. 5th or 8th. Sem. 3d or 8th. Sem. 3d or 5th. 3d 5th or 8th. 2d 5th or 8th. 2d 3d or 8th. 2d 3d or 5th. THE WAVE OF THE VOICE. 321 From a comprehensive view of this table it is manifest; there might be other methods of arranging its details. Each of the distinctions given above might be taken as the generic heads of the wave; and the others might be included as species. We might take the five intervals, for heads of as many divisions, and under each, for instance the octave, consider, First; the equal form of this interval, and its combination with other intervals into the unequal form ; Second ; its direct and inverted, and Third, its single and double forms. Or we might take the dis- tinction into single and double for the two generic heads, and under each of these, enumerate the species, as being equal or un- equal, direct or inverted: and so of any other assumed order of these distinctions. I shall, according to the arrangement in the table, divide the phenomena of the wave into two great classes, the Equal and Unequal, and subdividing each of these by the terms of the five intervals of the scale, shall under the heads of these intervals, consider the direct and inverted, the single and double forms. The pains taken to define the technical terms of this essay, together with the exemplification by diagram, in the second sec- tion must have rendered all the movements through the scale, quite familiar to those who really desire to learn. The descrip- tion of the wave may therefore be so easily comprehended, that without a further notation, the Reader can readily picture its various forms, as we shall hereafter apply them. To learn the purpose, and expression of the wave, let us re- colect that it is compounded of a rising and a falling interval, the several characteristics of which have already been described. It will therefore be found, that the wave partakes respectively of the expression of its various constituents: and further, that its continuous line of contrary flexures enables the voice to carry on a long quantity, without the risk of falling into the protracted intonation of song. The expression of the wave in all its forms, is modified by the application of stress to different parts of its course; at the begin- ning, or at the end, or at the place of junction of its constituents. —■>►»© @ ©«*— 322 THE EQUAL WAVE OF THE OCTAVE. SECTION XXVI. Of the Equal Wave of the Octave. The Equal Wave of the Octave is made by a movement of the voice, through its upward, and continuously into its downward interval. It may be either single, consisting of two constituents; or double, consisting of three; though this double form is scarcely used. It may also be differently constructed, by the first con- stituent ascending, and the second descending, forming the directj and by a reversed succession, forming the inverted wave. The equal wave of the octave in its single form is rarely em- ployed in serious discourse. If used in the lower range of pitch, to avoid the sharpness of the falsette, it gives an appropriate ex- pression to the highest state of astonishment, admiration and command. When it assumes the higher range, as it is apt to do, it loses its dignity as an impressive sign. Children sometimes employ it for mockery in their contentions and jests. Its double form has the same expression, under a more continued quantity. The reverse order of its constituents gives a different character, respectively to its single-direct, and to its single-inverted turns; for the latter by ending in an upward concrete, has the intona- tion of a question, through what we called the Interrogative Wave; the former, by a downward final movement, has the posi- tiveness and surprise of the simple falling intervals. When the direct and the inverted wave of the octave is respectively double, the rule of final expression will be reversed; for the double-direct will then end with the rising or interrogative movement. The double form of the wave, particularly of the octave, claims attention rather as a part of our physiological history, than as a subject of oratorical propriety and taste; and may, in point of use and expression, be rather classed with theatrical outrages, and vulgar mouthings. THE EQUAL WAVE OF THE FIFTH. 323 SECTION XXVII. Of the Equal Wave of the Fifth. Enough has been said of intervals, to explain the Equal Wave of the Fifth. Its name is descriptive of its structure. Nor need it be shown particularly of this, nor indeed of the succeding sec- tional heads of the wave, in what manner the single and double, the direct and inverted forms are made. The equal wave of the fifth, is used as one of the means of emphatic distinction ; and has therein an expression varying with its form. The equal- single- direct wave of the fifth consists of an ascending and a descending concrete; the first expressive of in- terrogation, and the last of positiveness and surprise. But a junction of these opposite constituents takes in a great degree, from the rising, its indication of a question; and leaves to the falling, the full character of its positiveness and surprise. There is however, another effect of this junction, besides the overruling of interrogation. When a state of mind requiring the simple downward fifth is grave or dignified, it is expressed by pre- joining the rising fifthj to form a direct wave; and this direct wave is used instead of the simple fall, to give time to the syl- able that bears it ; for should the emphatic sylable require a prolonged quantity, the wave takes the place of the simple inter- val, which under unskilful intonation might, in the effort to ex- tend it, pass into the protracted radical, or vanish of song. The inverted wave of the fifth has the compound expression of surprised interrogation, produced by the termination of its last constituent in the upward vanish. And it appears^ the direct wave of this, as well as of other wider intervals, retains a degree of interrogation; and the inverted, a degree of positiveness and surprise. There is not much difference between the expression of the single, and of the double wave of the fifth, except what arises from a change of structure by the addition of a third constituent. 324 THE EQUAL WAVE OF THE THIRD. The double-direct here assumes an interrogative expression, from the vanishing rise of its last constituent; and the double-inverted has the meaning of surprise from its downward termination. Perhaps there is a little scorn conveyed by the double form of the equal wave of the fifth. This is certainly the case when the last constituent receves greater stress than the others. On the whole however, this double form is not very frequently used as a sign of expression. SECTION XXVIII. Of the Equal Wave of the Third. The Equal Wave of the Third, in the degree of its expression, bears such a relation to the equal wave of the fifth, as the simple rise of the third bears to the simple rise of that interval. In all its forms, whether single or double, direct or inverted, the expression resembles respectively, but in a more moderate degree, that of the different species of the equal wave of the fifth. From its less impressive character, it is more frequently employed for emphasis in the admirative and reverentive style, than the fifth and the octave, which are especially appropriate to the earnestness of coloquial dialogue, and to the passionative into- nations of the drama. It also serves, like the other waves, to extend the quantity of sylables in deliberate and dignified dis- course; and to preserve, at the same time, the characteristic equable-concrete of speech. The equal wave of the Minor third, we have said is not ad- missible into speech; but if improperly introduced, as it often is, the effect of its inverted form does not" differ much from that of its direct. THE EQUAL WAVE OF THE SECOND. 325 SECTION XXIX. Of the Equal Wave of the Second. We have now to consider the equal wave of the second, which, if ever the time for a Natural, and thereupon a Scientific System of Elocution shall come to pass, will be regarded as a very im- portant and interesting part of intonation. The difficulty of perspicuously defining and dividing the details of a subject, altogether as new to the author himself, as to his Reader; and of giving a full description of parts that are ele- mentary and closely related, and that must be successively ex- plained, obliged him to procede in the manner of gradual and partial development^ of changeful arrangement* and of frequent reconsideration, which produced this first, and so far, only full and instructive method of Analytic Elocution. In improving, or completing many of those successive systems of Science, which through years or centuries, have been progressively extended, retrenched, and simplifiedj method after method has been adopted, altered, and rejected; and every subsequent observer, knowing the attempts and failure of his predecessors, has been enabled to supply the deficiencies, and correct the errors of former classifica- tions. But for plan and purpose, in this offered system of into- nation, there was no preceding outline either of fiction or of truth; no instructive sketches of corrected errors, to save the author from his own; and as yet, even no friendly-enmity of criticism to ' pluck ' them from his pages and ' throw them in his face.' He. was therefore at first, and has been, in preparing suc- ceding editions, obliged to ask the arduous, but willing assistance of his own endeavors, to supply his oversights, and correct his faults: too often a vain and fruitless labor. * In accordance with * What is here said of the kindly slaps of criticism is no longer literally true ; thanks to the friendship of enmity ; for it has corrected our over-estimate of the intelectual capacity of the old elocutionist. I may indeed differ from some of my Readers, who beleve that truth and justice can never lose their dignity, 326 THE EQUAL WAVE OF THE SECOND. the manner of Dividing and Instructing here employed, our ac- count of the diatonic melody, regarded only the radical and con- crete pitch of the second, and its successions^ thereby, to avoid confusing the Reader. Other functions and uses of the concrete were therefore kept out of view. It has since been shown, that , the downward vanish of a second is introduced, for the purpose of varying the current; and that for interrogative, and for emphatic* expression, other intervals both rising and falling, and these united into the wave, contribute to form the full and proper ex- pressive melody of speech. We procede to show further, that the Diatonic Melody, this Groundwork of all the other intervals, em- ploys the wave of the second as an important, or an essential constituent of its deliberate and dignified character. The Reader has already learned that long quantity is necessary for executing the wider intervals and waves. When therefore the interthough- tive and passionative styles are occasionally required on the dia- tonic Ground, they can be applied only to prolonged sylables. But as the plain narrative melody does not, along with its digni- fied character, convey any remarkable expression, there should be some means, for denoting this character, different both from the wider intervals and waves, which are passionative signsj and from the simple rise and fall of the second, which are suitable only to short quantities, in a quick and 'tripping' speech. These means are a prolonged quantity, on the wave of the second, in its direct and inverted, and sometimes its double form. In a previous section, there is an ilustration, from Paradise Lost, of the want of sufficient length, in certain accented and emphatic sylables. I here use that instance for exemplifying the wave of the second; however they may descend to the commonality of persons and things; yet I am willing, under the privilege of a Note at least, to make, if it so seems, a sacrifice of dignity and taste to a humorous thought, reminding me that in eighteen hundred and fifty-five, an English Reviewer, of limited learning, perhaps some journalized influence, and very near to total deafness, fell at last, not upon the errors of our Work, but upon what he took to be'its incomprehensibility; and disappointing our expectations about 'fault and facej' threw the whole Work itself Mo the dogs;' not considering^ how quick an ear these animals have for the high and low, long and short, strong and weak, harsh and gentle, and par- ticularly for the barking abruptness in the human voice. We wait to see whether trusty Ponto can make more of the subject than his distrusted Master. THE EQUAL WAVE OF THE SECOND. 327 where the simple rise and fall of this interval is set on all the short and unaccented sylables; the direct or inverted wave, on all that are at the same time of long quantity, either accented or emphatic : and where the principle of the faint rapid concrete, on short and unaccented sylables is applied even to the interval of the second. High on a throne of roy al state, which far f^4 4 \7 ^ would just look into our un- valued work, of which there is a copy in the British Museum, he might perhaps agree with us in the conclusion, that by the division of a tone into one hundred parts, the iteration of the tittles, by immediate rise or fall, being so close, they could only be heard, as a continuous or concrete sound. The greater tone of the scale is theoretically divided into nine parts, called commas; and as even this ninth part, in our belief, as well as in the words of Rousseau 'is to ears like ours, useless except in (theoretic) calculation:' what ear was it, perceved the fraction of a hundredth, and numerically followed it up or down in tremulous progression through a single tone? Perhaps the present Note may in part, ilustrate what is said in the fifth sec- tion, on the groundless authorities, and careless conclusions, so common in vocal Physiology. 366 THE TREMOR OF THE VOICE. tremor, however momentary, have each an issuing rapid concrete interval, may be proved by trial; for the plaintive effect of the concrete semitone may be heard on every part of the course of the tremor, through the whole compass of the voice. And in like manner the plain effect of the tonej and the interrogative expression of the third, or fifth, or octave, may be given to this rising tremor. Now as the tittelar interval is not a semitone, tone, or wider interval, but a very minute space, without any known expression, the expressive effect cannot be produced by this mi- nute skip, but must be from a rapid transit of the concrete of the tittles through those greater intervals respectively. It was in reference to this peculiar progression, so different from the concrete movements from the discrete steps of the dia- tonic scalej and from the purely semitonic succession of the chro- matic, that I ventured, in the first section, to call this discrete and chattering variation of pitch, the Tremulous scale. It is scarcely necessary to add that the rapid concrete of the tremor, from its momentary duration, is restricted to its simple rise, and fall : but the tittelar skip, besides the simple rise and fall by its minute interval, takes, in its progress, the course of contrary flexure into the wave. This wave of the tittelar course by the tremor has all the forms of the smooth concrete wave; while the rapid concrete still accompanies the tittles throughout their wind- ing progress. To those who think, we have unnecessarily distinguished Ab- ruptness from Force, in our general arrangement; we must remark, that in the comparatively feeble, but instantaneous explosion of the tittle, there is, to me at least, an example of Abruptness, as an independent Mode; and its peculiar voice gives here the essential and sole characteristic of this apparently explosive radi- cal function; which does no more resemble the common percep- tion of force and its uses, than an immutable sylable resembles the perception of long quantity, or a mathematical point, that of the continuation of a line. However it may be arranged, we practically maintain^ that Abruptness is an important function of speech, and elocutionists who have used it instinctively, will best fulfil their purposes, when assisted by analysis, nomenclature, and rule. THE TREMOR OF THE VOICE. 367 The expressive power of the tremor, is shown in the functions of Laughter and Crying. The pure and imarticulated act of Laughter consists in the use of the tremulous scale, both in its tittelar skips, and in its rapid concrete. Its rapid concrete may be any of the intervals of the scale, except the semitone and minor third; its tittelar skip may pass either by the step of the diatonic scale, or directly upward or downward, or in the chattering turn of the wave, through the whole compass of the voice. In speaking of the intonation of immutable sylables, it was shown, that the rapid concrete, though immeasurable directly, as an interval of the scale, is yet recog- nized by its characteristic effect: and the Reader may practi- cally apply the principle, in discriminating the intervals used in laughter. When the concrete pitch is a tone, and the iteration is con- tinued on a level line, especially if that line is in the lower range of pitch, the function may indeed bear the name of laughter^ yet it will be only a phlegmatic chuckling in the throat. When the concrete is still in the tone, if the line of tittelar skips contin- uously rises and falls through a second or a third, thus forming what may be called a tittelar wave, the expression of the laugh will become more varied and sprightly. When the third or fifth is used in the concrete pitch, and the tittelar skips are carried upward and downward, as a wave through the wider intervals of the scale, it produces the gayest, and most vivid expression. Laughter is generally on one of the tonic elements; but it may be executed on the subtonics, and even on the atonies in a whis- pering breath. On the atonies, its tittelar skip if I do not mis- take, rises and falls, through the scale of whisper, described in the fifth section. It is made on all parts of the scale, within the compass of the voice, though it generally affects the falsette. Supposing the vocality of voice to be givenj laughter will be most agreeable, and varied, when it consists of a moderate tremor of well accented tittles, distinctly separated from each other; and passing, by tittelar skip, through simple intervals and the wave; with a concrete pitch, moving in succession, by simple rise and fall, through every interval except the semitone, and minor third ; the expression being still further varied by a swelling, or 368 THE TREMOR OF THE VOICE. medium force, on the tittelar skips, as they pass through their waves. Crying is an ^articulated movement through the simple rise and fall of the semitone, and perhaps the minor third, or through the direct or inverted wave of these intervals. The act of cry- ing has two forms : it may be in the concrete, or in the tremulous scale. Infants, when they do not use the protracted note, cry in the first manner, with a prolonged semitonic wave, on some tonic element. It is a long time before the tremor is heard in their voice. The first step towards it, is in the convulsive catch of sobbing. By degrees this increases in frequency, and the cry becomes thereby, at last composed of the iteration of the tremor. The tremulous function of crying, like that of laughter, con- sists of an iteration and a concrete. The tittles, each with its issuing, and rapid concrete-semitone, or perhaps minor third, may successively ascend or descend through the whole compass of the voice, by the same kind of movement used in laughter; for the plaintive expression in crying procedes from the rapid concrete of the semitone, not from any succession of the iterations; which, in the act of crying, may take their course through the wider in- tervals and waves. It sometimes happens that children while crying in the tremu- lous movement, do from some mometary turn of perception, and without a cessation of the tremor, pass into laughter. Here a cheerful state necessarily produces a change of the concrete, from the semitone, or perhaps minor third, to the second, or other wider interval. And in a paroxysm of hysteria, the transition between these different means of gay and of plaintive expression, is so frequent and rapid, that the hearer is sometimes at a moment- ary loss, to say which function is in operation. In this case, a person may properly be said to laugh and cry in the same breath. The ordained connection of the semitone and perhaps the minor third, either in a simple-prolonged or in a tremulous form, with the state of distress is so close, that though the act of crying may have ceased, yet with a continuation of the distress, there will be a kind of mental hiatus in the attempt to return even to the dia- THE TREMOR OE THE VOICE. 369 tonic intonation of speech.* Some persons, for the sake of sport or fraud, play the part of crying. If they are habitual mimics, and have flexible voices, they may perhaps succede. But nature is always honest, when humanity, her intended, but too often false representative, is ever ready to deceve. Diplomatic Craft is so well aware, his lips may mar the underplots of his purpose, that he is obliged to guard the ruling passion by circumspection, or brevity, or silence. When mirth or sorrow is within us, it is hard to restrain its instinctive expression. He who would be to the inteligent observer, an unsuspected hypocrite in his voice, must mask even his thoughts and passions to himself. After the preceding account of the use of the tremor upon single elements, in the functions of laughter and crying, it is not difficult to fore-hear the effect of its application to sylabic utter- ance in the current of discourse. When the semitone, in the chromatic melody of speech, is given under the form of tremor, it increases the plaintive effect of the simple concrete. For as crying expresses the highest degree of distress, its tremulous characteristic is employed in speech, to denote an excess of complaint and grief, and the ardor of tender supplication. Tremulous semitonic speech is the ut- most practicable crying upon words. To engraft the tremor on a sylable, let the Reader pronounce the word name, in a tremulous movement through the simple rise, or fall, or wave of the semitone. He will hear, the tremor equally on the tonic a, and on each of the two subtonic elements. The tremor on the semitone may give a plaintive expression to a single word: or that expression may be continued on occasional, yet limited portions of discourse. If this restricted application deserves a name, it may be called the Tremulous -chromatic melody. The following stanza, in which the tremor of age is supposed to be joined with that of supplicating distress, may, when read with the coloring of dramatic action, afford a proper example of this melody. * Perhaps, some of my Readers may recolect such a case having occurred to themselves, in childhood. I make the remark from my own experience, at that uncorrupted period, when instinct, as yet, had kept us all alike. 370 THE TREMOR OF THE VOICE. Pity the sorrows of a poor old man, Whose trembling limbs have borne him to your door, Whose days are dwindled to the shortest span; give relief and heaven will bless your store. Here the tremor of the semitone may be applied to every em- phatic sylable capable of prolongation, which is the case with all except those of pity and shortest: but even these may in a limited degree, receve it: for, it was shown formerly^ particular purposes of expression sometimes allow a slight extension of quantity on immutable sylables, and unemphatic and unaccented words, that in dispassionate utterance, bear only the shortest time. The occasional use of the tremulous semitone upon individual words, will be noticed in the future section on Emphasis. When the tremor passes by its tittelar course, through the rising or falling second, third, fifth, or octave, or through their respective waves, it joins the mental state of derision, mirth, joy, or exultation to that of interrogation, surprise, command;, or scorn, respectively conveyed by the smooth concrete of these intervals. It applies to speech, what is transferable from the function of laughter; and it adds thereto all the meaning and force of its satisfaction. The tremor on wider intervals, and on the waves, is used prin- cipally for emphasis; though in playful discourse, it is sometimes heard in continuation on more than one sylable, and occasionally even on short sentences. There is a use of this laughing tremor, as we may call its un- articulated execution on the second, third, fifth, and octave. I mean its employment in that hysterical exclamation, heard in exaggerated scenes of the drama. In this case, the laughing tremor seems to be strangely subservient to every species of ex- pression : for there is scarcely an excessive degree of passion, whether of joy or suffering, in which it is not naturally, and may not with caution, be dramatically used. One can readily perceve why this vehement expression by the wider intervals, should de- note the excess of those states of mind, instinctively connected with laughter; but it is not at once manifest why the signs of expression should be so misapplied, as to give the concrete tremor of the second or of wider intervals, to states that in cases of less THE TREMOR OF THE VOICE. 371 excitement, properly receve the plaintive tremor of the semitone. Let us try to explain this seeming anomaly. The occasions on which this hysteric laugh is employed, are those of the highest possible intensity of distress. By the rule of plaintive expression, the tittelar iteration, and the rapid con- crete semitone should be used; and with this the expression does generally begin. But as the passion increases in vehemence, the voice is so far affected by its excess, as to dissever the instinctive connection; and, giving way to the habit of employing the wider intervals in keen and forcible expression, leaves the hampering concrete of the semitone, for the free expansion and piercing energy of the third or frfth, octave, double octave or more, in its concrete and tremulous forms. This is the cause why in hysteria, which is usually brought on by distress, or other congenial states of mind, the ordinary course of plaintive expression is overruled ; and as the more moderate forms of this nervous excitement are signified by the semitonic intonation, it sends forth its higher gusts, in the concrete scream and yell of the widest intervals and waves, mingled with a like exaggeration of its tremulous energy, in the wildness of an idiotic laugh : idiotic, because a motiveless and imbecile confounding of the laws of vocal expression. Al- though this hysteric expression may, when judiciously applied, be both proper and effective, in an extraordinary scene of the drama ; yet as it is generally accompanied with considerable grimace, is strongly impressive, and can be well heard in the re- mote corners of the Gallery, it is apt to be employed on the Stage, as a vocal trick; especially by the Actress, who without perceving its appropriate occasion, which rarely occurs, has yet, by ambitious practice, or nervous habit, a skilful command over its mechanical execution. It requires more than common facility of voice to perform the tremor with precision and elegance. Its full efficacy and grace- ful finish is accomplished, by giving it the greatest number of tittles of which the assumed interval is susceptible ; by making these tittles in fluent skips, with a distinct accent, with a ready progression through the simple interval and the wave, and with a median stress on the waves of these tittelar skips. It may be 372 FORCE OF VOICE. added, that the tittelar movement on long quantity, generally in speech, and always in continued laughter, employs the wave. As this tittelar movement of the tremor is applied to all inter- vals both ascending and descending, and to the wavej it has under these applications, the degree and variety of their several char- acters. On a downward interval of the fifth, the expression will be of a graver cast than on a rise of the same extent; and on the rising second it will have less gayety than on the rising fifth or octave, or their waves. After the preceding view of the simple intervals, and of the tremor, the Reader will perhaps be able to recognize, and with the anticipative resources of science, even to fore-hear the effect of their detailed combinations. If with all I have said, he will not do this for himself, it would be to no purpose to do it for him. It is an agreeable office to stand prompter to a pausing, yet a ready comprehension : but it is an irksome duty, to be obliged to push an unwilling intelect on to the last sylable of its part. SECTION XXXIV. Of Force of Voice. This Mocle of the voice is subdivided into forms and degrees. These degrees, without much precision, are denoted in common language by the words, loud, soft, strong, and weak. Indefinite as the rule may be, yet taking common conversation as a dividing line between the strong and the weak, in speech, we might apply the terms Forte and Piano, as relative degrees severally above and below it. Force may be applied to phrases, or to one or more sentences, for the purposes of energetic expression; or to single words, and to sylables; or to certain Parts of the concrete movement^ to dis- tinguish them from other words and sylables, and from other Parts of the concrete. FORCE OF VOICE. 373 Writers on elocution, and school books on the art of reading, give general rules for enforcing, and reducing the voice, in con- tinued speech. It is not necessary to swell the bulk of this volume, by transcribing them. We may however inquire, on what prin- ciple various degrees of force are connected with the circum stances of the speaker, or with the state of his mind. From the wide reach of an intense exertion of the voice, there is an obvious propriety in its employment, when distance is pic- tured in discourse. The indication of nearness, on the contrary, is well expressed by an abatement of that force. Secrecy muffles itself against discovery by a whisper; and doubt, while leaning towards a positive declaration, cunningly subdues his voice, that the impression of his possible error may be least exciting and durable. Certainty, on the other hand, in the confident desire to be heard, is positive, distinct, and forcible. Anger declares itself with energy, because its charges and denials are made with a wide appeal, and in its own sincerity of conviction. A like degree of force is employed for passions con- genial with anger ; as hate, ferocity and revenge. All thoughts and passions unbecoming or disgraceful, smother the voices with a desire to conceal even the voluntary utterance of them. Joy is loud, in calling for companionship through the overflow- ing charity of its satisfaction. Bodily pain, fear, and terror, are also forcible in their expres- sion; with the double intention, of summoning relief, and repell- ing the offending cause when it is a sentient being. For the sharpness and vehemence of the full-strained and piercing cry are universally painful or appalling to the animal ear. In supposing why certain degrees of force are connected with certain states of mind, we have perhaps ventured too far towards the presumptuous notion of Final Causes. And though we may have therein transiently strayed, let us not forget the duties of Philosophy. It is her office, first to inquire how things exist; the knowledge of why they so exist, must be the last act of favor which time and toil will bestow. Our steps over the works of man, may go hand in hand with the comprehension of their final 374 FORCE OF VOICE. causes; for the author can tell us the narrow purpose of their parts. But the great circle of accommodated final causes in Nature, will be unfolded, only in the last recapitulating chapter of her infinite revelation. In the section on Accent and on Emphasis, we shall speak of Force or stress on single words. Here we consider the remarka- ble application of stress, to different parts of the concrete sylable itself, as described and ilustrated in the second section. By ex- periment we learn, that the varied effects of stress are severally perceptible, on the beginning, the middle, and the end of the con- crete movement, and when heard in immediate succession at its two extremes; that the same force may be so continued through- out the concrete, as to alter the characteristic feebleness of the vanish ; and that while the relative structure of the simple radical and vanish remains the same, force may magnify proportionally the whole of the concrete. These stresses we severally name, the Radical, the Loud con- crete, the Median, the Compound, the Vanishing, and the Thor- ough stress; as in the following diagram^ a 12 &j3 •* ^ -£ ■© @ ©*«— SECTION XXXIX. Of the Thorough Stress. This form of force on the concrete is produced by a continua- tion of the same full body of voice throughout its whole course. It may be applied to all the rising and falling intervals, and in continuation to the several constituents of the wave. The character of this stress may be perceved, by continuing an THE THOROUGH STRESS. 387 octave, with the same volume of voice, through its whole course, as represented by the last symbol in the foregoing diagram^ and comparing its effect with that of the simple radical and vanishing octave, shown by the first. The peculiar character of this con- tinued volume, will not only be obvious, but the interrogative effect of the octave will be greatly obscured by it; for the true interrogative interval is, through habit, known to the ear by its attenuated vanish, as well as by its extent. The thorough stress may perhaps be occasionally used for some especial emphasis, on short indefinite, on immutable, and on mu- table sylables; though it is then not distinguishable from the radical stress. Its peculiar character on long quantities, in phrases and sentences, is that of uncouth and rustic coarseness; and if I may so speak, its blunt impression on the ear, seems alike related to the delicate effect of the equable concrete, as a rude sketch on the canvas, to the graceful lines, tinted color, and blended light and shadow of the finished picture. With an ex- ception of the occasions for its use, on shorter quantities, just stated, it is to be employed only for the comic personation of those, with whom, as a coarse deformity of speech it is instinctive; or on occasions, when through those insufficiencies, Public-School- ing, Morals, Law, and the Pulpit, it may be sadly necessary to meet the brutal tongue, upon the field of its own vocal degrada- tion. Without raising here, the blinding dust of argument, on the moral question of returning good for evilj the rule is less dis- putable, that civility of voice is not always to be returned to its rudeness. For those, who by accident ever come into contact with the savage in civilization, know that a hard-voiced word of retort, to a rough address, has sometimes saved much subsequent verbal, if not worse contention. Just as a well-presented posture of defense to a menaced attack has, from some lurking calculation in a seeming courage, often prevented serious consequences of personal as well as national strife.* * Testimony might be brought to the fact, that nothing on occasions, more moderates the incipient insolence of a blackguard -with all his boldness, than the ready return of an assumed phrase of thorough-stressed and peace-making profanity, from a modest individual, -with clean and delicate hands and face, who did not seem to hold in readiness, a warning oath as preface to a blow. 388 THE THOROUGH STRESS. From time almost immemorial, every man, and every class of men has tried in vain, to satisfy the anxious inquirer, as to the exact sign, and comprehensible character of the true Christian, the honest Patriot, and the real Gentleman. In the last case, Aristocracy and Democracy, those eternal combatants, have al- ways been the most remote from agreement. The latter how- ever, particularly in Our Country of Equal Rights, Overbearing Corporations, and Despotic Majorities, having come to a una- nimity, has at last with a popular 'logic,' given the acceptable definition; and terminated all invidious distinctions, by making every Man a Gentleman, and every Woman a Lady. Leaving others to review the Census of this vast and novel Genus, on those points that may have fallen under their discriminating ob- servationj it is only our part, to perceve among all the generic similarities, some specific differences of Intonation. For if that affable address, that refined reply, that vocal invitation to a well- bred sociability, that delicate vanish which gently passes from the ear to the heart ; if in short, the kindly meaning of the Equable Concrete, is different from that clownish answer which figura- tively repels us with a vocal frown, and from that coldness of thought, and death of every complacency embraced within the rudeness of the Thorough Stress^ then is he who has the gracious intonation which seems to turn the stranger at once into the friend, a world-wide different from that laconic Dog in office, with his surly No; that fool-wealthy Ignoramus, with his bluff com- mand; and in mind as well as in voice, from the coarse and vicious vulgarity of that hitherto unknown species, in progressive creation, the American Rowdy.* *I say, hitherto unknown; yet Ethnologists, skilled in tracing the wafted seeds, and the offsets of nationality, have hinted at the 'habitat' of this 'pre- morse root' of the voices in the pasture of our gruffy ancestor John Bull: or in the hunting and cricket grounds, and in the 'wassail braying-out' on the Estate of the English country Gentleman, ' all of the olden time.' With this Rowdy, of whatever origin, who practically personifies a compliment to our astonishing advancement in Morality, Refinement, Legislative Energy, Law, and in States- man-Supervisionj the rudeness of the stressful concrete, is an inborn vice. Gipsies and thieves of the Old World have a conventional slang, for mislead- ing the fearless search of justice. But the surpassing Rowdy of the New, know- ing himself to be above the law, boldly writes his threatening titles on our walls, and openly proclaims the watchword of his conspiring Crew. Among THE THOROUGH STRESS. 389 I do not say, though it may be often true, that the man who has no vanish in his voice, is fit for 'stratagems and spoils:' But I do belevej if Shakspeare had chosen to look as far into speech, as he did into thought, passion, and language^ he would have seen that Nature has, in the human voice, her especial sign of the Boorish and Unruly, as well as of the Unmusical 'soul;' and would, in some of his own fine analytic metaphors, if not with a mentivity aptly turned to explanatory science, clearly have de- scribed it. Nor is this beyond a just estimate of the natural power of his Panoramic Observation. In closing this section, we may once more contrast the rude intonation of the thorough stress, with the craving voice of the these words, so called from some low conceit or other, are Boy, and Sir. Both of these allow a delicate execution of the vanish. This however is not suited to the Rowdy's character: and Nature, true to her signs of the good and the bad, directs him, by another instinct, to give these words, in the warning into- nation of the thorough stress. This coming to the mouths of the populace, they have made an awkward imitation of the thorough, by changing it to something like the compound stress. And this leading to a division of the words into two sylables, has given us the vulgar slang of the streets, as we every where hear it, in Bo-hoy and Sir-ree. The full, and the hair-stroke lines of the graceful old copper plate letter, and some of the deformities of modern type, afford symbols for these different states of the concrete. A love of variety among Conventual Scribes, once perverted and distorted the Roman alphabet almost beyond recognition. The same effort to overwhelm taste with novelty, is now in progress by the Sign-painter, and the Printer of placards. Among a thousand awkward oddities of the Type- founder, we can find something just to our purpose. The well finished form of Roman capitals, and punctuation, with their full, and their vanishing lines, contrast remarkably, as in the following diagram, with their rowdy-looking coun- terparts; designed under that Widely-Destructive Principle, recognized in Pop- ular Taste^ of 'Something New.' It is I must say, a notion; but the Roman C elegantly pictures to me the equable concrete: the rowdy Type-founder's modern improvement reminds me of the coarseness of the thorough stress. Al- together, the contrast brings to mind, the difference between the reported ease of hand in that graceful and celebrated linear scroll by Appelles, and the twist- ing turns of a crooked billet. 390 THE LOUD CONCRETE. Hypocrite and the Sycophant, insinuating their several ways to authority and favor. The Rowdy, more true to his violence, uses the heavy stress, to alarm the unwary, and is then ready to break through all opposition. The subtilty of the others, without a warning rattle to the unsuspecting victim, abuses the delicate, kind, and honorable purpose of the social vanish, by its servile excess, and its puling application to every variety of sinister thought, with nothing so far from it as honesty and natural passion. SECTION XL. Of the Loud Concrete. By the Loud Concrete, I mean that impressive stress which distinguishes a given sylable from adjacent ones; the parts of the concrete still retaining the proportional structure of the radi- cal and vanish. It is only what was called the simple concrete, magnified, if we may so speak, in similarity throughout its course, by emphatic stress. It is not obvious on a very short quantity ; the radical stress being there, the proper form of force. Although it has no peculiar character of expression, it will be refered to, in a future section, on Accent. All the forms of stress, here enumerated, may be applied to the tittelar course of the tremor, in the simple intervals, and in the wave; thereby giving a more marked expression to the gayety of laughter; to the plaintiveness of crying; to the exulta- tion of tremulous emphasis, whether in rising or falling; and to interrogation. THE TIME OF THE CONCRETE. 391 SECTION XLI. Of the Time of the Concrete. The radical and vanishing movement was represented as having an equable continuation of time throughout its progress^ and thereby distinguished from the protracted radical and pro- tracted vanish of Song. The purposes of expression sometimes demand a change of this equability of the concrete, to a quicker utterance of its be- ginning, or middle, or end. This condition of time is closely connected with an application of the different forms of stress; for it is difficult to give stress without running into quickness of time; and as difficult to give quickness to time without marking the rapid part of the concrete with stress. The relation of these functions is most conspicuous in the radical stress; for its sudden burst is necessarily a momentary quickness of utterance. The median and the vanishing stress, when strongly emphatic, like- wise carry with them a run of time ; for there is in these cases, an endeavor, however fruitless, to effect, on an unbroken con- crete, something like the explosion of the radical. These fitful gusts of breath through the radical, median, and vanishing places, necessarily occur along with their respective stresses, on all the intervals of the scale, and at those points of the wave where the stress is applied. There may also be a compound quick time of the concrete, attendant on the compound stress, in the prolonged movements of speech. But perhaps this is only a refinement in observation. On the whole, regarding the time of the concrete separately from stress, it is not of any practical importance, in expression. It was my purpose to give a history of speech. This quickness was perceved, and it is therefore transiently noticed. ►92 THE ASPIRATION. SECTION XLII. Of the Aspiration. We have hitherto learned, how the five modes of the voice, Vocality, Time, Pitch, Abruptness, and Force, together with the absence of all impression in the Pause, do by their separate and their mingled influence produce the varied effects of speech already described. The works of nature are inexhaustible patterns of permutation; and the function now to be considered, will show additional means for diversifying the effect of those signs of expression, heretofore described. The subject of this section does properly belong to the Mode of vocality ; but having receved a place and name among the alphabetic elements, and having peculiar properties, it deserves a separate notice here. I shall therefore endeavor to show that the element denoted by the letter h, or, as it is called, the Aspira- tion, has eminent powers of expression. By calling h a mere breathing, some authors have assumed the right to reject this element from the alphabet. It may be said in truth, that aspiration, as a separate and unemphatic element, is feeble, and has not the tunable and flexile vocality of the tonics: yet while harrow and arrow owe the difference in their meanings respectively to the presence and absence of the element^ that breathing must fulfil the purpose of articulation, without con- forming to the exact definition of it. Notwithstanding, the de- fects of aspiration cannot be denied, under the cold measurement of the grammarian, it is still pre-eminently entitled to notice, as a powerful agent in oratorical expression. The element h is slightly susceptible of pitch in the whispered scale; of abruptness, in a whispered cough; and freely admits of extended quantity. In this form, it furnishes the expressive in- terjection of Sighing. It has, to a certain degree, the variations of force; and under the calls of emphasis, is remarkably dis- played on the median stress. Its force may be more effectually THE ASPIRATION. 393 exerted on the beginning of words; especially those having uni- versally an energetic meaning, as havoc, horror, and huzza. It is combined with most of the interjections, in all languages. Besides the above mentioned instances of its expression, where common orthography has given it a literal place, it is in certain cases of emphasis, engrafted on the several tonics and subtonics. For though aspiration is with its literal symbol, sometimes a dis- tinct constituent of sylablesj it may as a mere sufflation, be severally united with other elements having a vocality, without destroying their individual characters. The vocality of the tonic is impaired by the union; for the purity of a tonic element was negatively defined, by declaring its freedom from aspiration; but the expressive effect in this case compensates for the loss of purity. There is some unknown mechanism of speech, by which the strenuous pronunciation of a tonic element becomes semi- aspirated. If the word horrible be deprived of its aspirate, it will be impossi- ble to give orrible, in prolonged and energetic exclamation, with- out restoring in a great degree, the initial aspiration. The ques- tion how far this unavoidable combination operated to introduce the aspirated element, for the forcible expression of mere animal energy, at the date of what is called the origin of languagej we leave to the everlasting disputes of those who look for truth in conjecture, and who teaze themselves by the notional pursuit of undiscoverable things. Efforts of vociferation on sylables which do not contain the letter h, nevertheless assume the aspiration, and corrupt thereby the pure character of the tonics. Nay, in the excessive force of such efforts, the voice is sometimes lost, as it is called, from the atonic aspiration overruling the tonic vocality. The character of these united functions, when forcibly uttered, may be ilustrated by the subtonics y-e, and w-o, respectively a compound of aspi- ration with the monothongs ee-l, and oo-zq. The other three monothongs e-rr, e-nd, z-n, when united with aspiration, become obscurely the basis of the several other subtonics. And although the subtonics are formed by the mingling of vocalities with aspi- ration, they may yet bear further aspiration, for the purpose of energetic expression. 26 394 THE ASPIRATION. The dipthongal tonics do not receve the aspiration with the same effect as the monothongs; there being something in the character of the former that prevents as great a change upon them, as takes place on the monothongs, bj the union. It was shown formerly that whispering, which is only the articulated form of aspiration, has its pitch, upon a succession of different alphabetic elements; yet whatever may be the difficulties of this articulated intonationj the simple sufflation, when engrafted on the tonics, passes concretely through all the intervals of the scale, and unites itself with every form of stress. To show how far this function assists in the expression of speech, let us keep in mind what was said above, on the instinc- tive union of a vehement exertion of the voice, with its aspira- tion; and consider further, two forms under which the simple aspiration is employed. One is a sort of facetious comment of surprise and incredulity, in common use, consisting of an effort of aspiration modified by the tongue and lips, into what is called, in the fifth section, the sufflated whisper. The movement of this sufflated interjection is that of an unequal direct wave; the first constituent being a tone or wider interval, according to the required expression^ and the second, a descent to the lowest audible pitch.* The other effort of aspiration, is made by the larynx alone, and constitutes the function of Sighing. It consists of a simple inspi- ration, followed by an expiration, more or less prolonged through * The Elocutionist has certainly not talked without his books. And although he seems never to have been concerned at not coming to his hearing, among their number and confusion^ yet he has been, and still is, sorely afraid of admitting a full and precise nomenclature into them. Our analysis now en- ables us to point out the form of intonation in the prolonged and derisive interjection, Whew, of the grammarian; though neither grammar nor elocution has taken the trouble to find it out, and to tell us, what it is. When the Reader utters this suffiated interjection, by a descent from a very high to a very low pitch, he will have an ilustration of what was said in the fifth section, on the scale of Whisper-; for this sufflation, having e-ve at its upper extreme, and oo- ze at its lower, will prove, by the position of these elements on the scale, that it passes through two octaves; the rapidity of the concrete movement, as it seems to me, preventing the clear perception of the intermediate elements. In this case, the interjection differs from that described in the textj and is the sufflation of whew through a double downward octave. THE ASPIRATION. 395 a falling second or wider interval, or a semitonic wave, according to the character and intensity of the expression. A sigh is the well known out-pouring of distress, grief, and anxiety, and of fatigue and exhaustion, both of body and mind. As these dif- ferent cases include the general powers of expression, in simple and natural aspiration, we can inferj what will be the effect when this aspiration is joined with the vocality of speech. It may seem, but can only seem, to be an exception to the con- sistency of nature, that a voice, which can assume the quiet form of whisper, should with changeful purpose, be found united with vocality in the most forcible exertion of speech. Yet aspiration conjoined with the vehement forms of stress, becomes one of the signs of the greatest vocal energy. Its union therefore with a rising or falling interval of the scale in the Natural voice, in- creases the expressive power of that interval; and perhaps adds the effect of sneer to intonations, that in their purely vocal form severally convey surprise, interrogation, irony, and command. Should this union of aspiration and vocality be given with an abatement of voice, approximating towards a whisper or a sigh, it becomes the sign of earnestness in various states of mind. The following lines, when uttered in a pure vocality, will not have their proper expression. Hah! dost thou not see, by the moon's trembling light, Directing his steps, where advances a Knight, His eye big with vengeance and fate? Nor would their purpose be effected by an aspirated vocifera- tion. But when subdued to a kind of union of the natural with the whispered voice, the earnestness of the appealing interrogation is at once, obvious and expressive. Should an abated voice be aspirated on the Tremulous move- ment of a second or wider interval, it may denote apprehension or fear. When this abatement is aspirated on a simple rise or fall, or on a wave of the semitone, it is an approximation to the sigh; and adds intensity to the plaintiveness or distress of the semitone on a pure vacality. When a tremor is superadded to the aspirated semitone, the voice exerts its ultimate means, for 396 THE EMPHATIC VOCULE. denoting the deepest sadness, without the assistance of crying and tears. Aspiration when combined with different forms of stress, and with the guttural voice, to be described presently, severally de- notes sneer, contempt, and scorn: hence the means of joining with nearly every interval of intonation the expression of these various states of mind. Even the simple rising and falling move- ments, indicating inquiry, surprise, and emphatic affirmation, may thus be made contemptuous; the effect being more strongly marked by aspiration on the wave in its unequal form. ~*©@©«4~— SECTION XLIII. Of the Emphatic Vocule. We learned, on the subject of the alphabetic elements, that when the articulative occlusion is removed from the atonies and subtonics, there is a slight and momentary but sudden issue of voice which completes their vocality, and is the only sound of the aspirated abrupt elements. This was called the Vocule. It is a moderate degree of Abruptness. Like all other voices, it is sus- ceptible of force; and constitutes the function named at the head of this section. The emphatic vocule denotes great energy; and necessarily follows a word, terminated by one of the abrupt elements. The vocules of b, d, and g, are vocal. Those of k, p, and t, are aspirated^ yet under a forcible emphasis, are sometimes changed to vocality. The use of this unarticulated explosion, at the end of an emphatic word is justified only under a ve- hement state of mind; and cautious management is necessary to prevent its forcible utterance from passing into rant or af- fectation. When an abrupt element precedes a tonic, the vocule is lost in THE EMPHATIC VOCULE. 397 the tonic, which then seems to issue directly from the abrupt element. In the word light, the vocule is distinctly heard at its termination ; but if t immediately precedes the tonic »', as in tile, the vocule is lost, and t is then only a peculiar radical opening of i. This is a proper coalescence, except the abrupt element terminates a word. For in this case, a junction of the vocule with the tonic of a following word, may confuse pronunciation by destroying that clear limit which should give a separated indi- viduality to every word of a sentence. This fault is sometimes even purposely assumed^ to remedy a want of physical energy in utterance. Persons who attempt to give unusual force to their radical stress, and who cannot readily explode the voice on a tonic, avail themselves of the facility of bursting-out from the final abrupt element of a word into a succeding tonic. If the phrase bad angels, should require force, either for emphasis, or for a distant auditory* the explosion of d into an would produce the coalescence bad dang els, or ba- dang els. But as the arrangement of elements is a casual thing, it must happen that the same word will occur in discourse, both with and without a preceding abrupt element; and besides, the common exertion of force does not require the coa- lescence. These circumstances will prevent the effect of the junc- tion becoming familar to the ear, and passing for a proper and constant character of the word. A forcible pronunciation accord- ing to this method, will therefore sometimes create confusion in the perception of words; and lead in most instances, to that momentary hesitation on the part of an audience, which prevents a ready comprehension of oral discourse. Let the phrase music sweet art, be pronounced in this manner, and the combination will present an image both ludicrous and contradictory. If what has been said, on the means for effecting distinct artic- ulation, by a full and clearly formed radical stress, is strictly applied;* the designed purpose of this junction of tonic with abrupt elements may be accomplished without interfering with the per- ception of a clear outline in the boundary of words; for this demarkation is necessary for distinct and dignified utterance, in the thoughtful purpose of an exalted elocution. In the rapid energy of coloquial speech, and of the passionate 398 THE GUTTURAL VIBRATION. haste of emphatic discourse, this coalescence of the elements is more liable to occur; nor in these instances can it always be avoided. SECTION XLIV. Of the Guttural Vibration. In our section on the mechanism of the voice, it was shown that the retraction of the root of the tongue, together with a closure of the pharynx, produces what seems to be a contact of the sides of the vocal canal above the glottis, and giving rise to a harsh vibrationj from the gush of air through the straitened passage. This peculiar sound may be made on both tonic and subtonic elements; nor is their articulation much affected, by union with this Grating noise. I have called this function the Guttural Vibration, on account of its apparent formal cause. This guttural function is practicable on all the intervals of the scale ; and it adds to their respective characters, its own peculiar expression. This expression consists in the strongest degree of contempt, disgust, aversion, or execration; and these states are most strongly marked on the intonation of the waves. When the guttural vibration is given with an exploded radical stress, it makes the speaker himself feel, in its disruption, that the effect must spread widely around him; and by this combined percussive influence must, with the fulest power of expression, break through the ear, and so to speak, into the very heart of an audience. Having thus described the peculiar forms and degrees of Vo- cality, Time, Force, Abruptness, and Pitch, and having shown the application of force to the different parts of the concrete^ we are now prepared to consider their various uses on single words and sylables, comprehended under the terms Accent, and Em- phasis. This detail will form respectively the subjects of the two following sections. OF ACCENT. 399 SECTION XLV. Of Accent. Accent is defined in philology to bej the Distinguishing of one sylable of a word from others, by the application of greater vocal force upon it. This is a true, but limited account of accentj for it will be found that the accentual characteristic consists in a syl- able being brought under the special notice of the ear. This may be done by force ; but it may be likewise effected through other audible means. In a mature language, no word uttered singly, except as an eliptical proposition, conveys any inteligible relationship or mean- ing. Accent, as we use the term, is an attribute only of indi- vidual words, and cannot therefore embrace what is properly called expression. When a word, either through force or other cause, denotes a remarkable meaning, it constitutes what is called Emphasis. If we have here accurately stated the difference between accent and emphasis^ Accent may be described in general terms, to be the fixed, but inthoughtive, and inexpressive distinction between the sylables of a word; and forming in every word of more than one, that essential and striking feature, by which thought or pas- sion is, when required, emphatically conveyed. This simple audible-prominence of accent may be effected by radical stressj the loud concrete^ and a longer quantity on the noted sylable. And First. Radical stress is the appropriate accent of immu- table sylables. The word iterated has four short sylables, with the accent on the first. Its brevity not admitting the distinction of a prolonged quantity, or even of the loud concrete, the accent must be made by a sudden burst of the Radical, into a momentary stress. The accent may be readily transfered to each of the other sylables, by giving the necessary degree of radical abruptness respectively to them. Second. Sylables of sufficient length to render the radical and 26* 400 OF ACCENT. vanishing movement conizable, admit of accentual distinction by the Loud concrete. In the word Partington, the three sylables are of moderate length, and about equal. As the first has quan- tity sufficient to prevent the necessity of adopting the explosive radical stress, its high accentual relief can be brought outj and readily transfered to each of the others, by the loud concrete alone. Sylables adapted to the loud concrete may receve at the same time, an addition of the radical stress; the former however being adequate to the inexpressive purpose of accent, radical ab- ruptness is unnecessary. As the Thorough stress may sometimes be applied on a moder- ately short sylable, it might be assigned, as one of the means of accent; but it is scarcely to be distinguished from the radical stress and from the loud concrete, on these short quantities^ and therefore does not here deserve a separate consideration. Third. When the time or quantity of one sylable excedes the time of another, that quantity, according to our definition, may give an attractive or accentual distinction; and though unas- sisted by loudness or abruptness, sometimes necessarily assumes it. The word victory, pronounced with the usual degree of radi- cal stress on the first sylable, and the second subsequently pro- longed, as if written vic-toe-ry, has the impressive distinction^ which in this case may be called the Temporal accentj postponed to that second, even though it should be uttered with comparative feebleness, and with all possible omission of abruptness. Words which consist of sylables of equal time, such as needful, empire, farewell, sincere, and amen, easily undergo a change of accent to either sylable, by a slight addition to its length. The word heaven, pronounced as one sylable, heavn, has the accent in its long quan- tity: divided into two sylables of equal time, as in heav-en, the place of the accent is doubtful, or the word may be said to have two equal accents. These are the three means for accentual distinction; accent being the prominent and fixed feature that identifies a word, independently of any peculiar thought or expression. And as they are sufficient to give importance to sylables, without denoting at the same time thought or passion, which is the purpose of emphasisj we may perceve the line of separation between these OF ACCENT. 401 functions. It is true, emphasis cannot exist without accent, for the emphatic is always the accented sylable; and the expressive power of intonation, time, and stress must give the emphatic syl- able that attractive influence which constitutes the essential agency of accent. I have pointed out only the radical stress^ the thorough con- ditionally on shorter quantitiesj and the loud concrete^ as the causes of accent, derived from force ; for the median, the van- ishing, and the compound, are more commonly used as the means of expression: and in the plain pronunciation of a single word, surely no one does employ these last named forms of stress. Notwithstanding all the kinds of accent here enumerated, are represented independently of pitch, still they are necessarily applied on one or other of its intervals. In plain narrative or description, the radical stress, and loud concrete, and perhaps the thorough stress, are joined with the tone; and the temporal accent, when not unduly prolonged, may take-on the direct and inverted wave of the same interval. For this gives dignity to utterance by means of its deliberate movement, without convey- ing any peculiar expression incompatible with the simple pur- pose of accent. This remark (loes not refer to accent on single words, which has no character either of dignity or of expression. The use of the three kinds of accent, being in a considerable degree governed by the time of sylables, it is desirable to know the circumstances which render them severally applicable^ make them easily changeable^ and give them a predominant and con- troling influence. Sylables, with regard to their time, were arranged under three classes, The Immutable, Mutable, and Indefinite. Radical stress is the means for distinguishing immutable sylables. The loud concrete may be given to the mutable; as they have sufficient length for the display of force, without the necessity of an abrupt explosion. Indefinite sylables admit of the attractive distinction of the temporal accent; and yet they are sometimes pronounced equally short with the immutable. Thus lo in loquacity, and lo, as an emphatic interjection, exemplify the extremes of duration. 402 OF ACCENT. Hence, the radical stress may sometimes be used on an indefinite sylable, in its shortest time; as it is in the accent of the words, idleness and orderly. Some words, consisting of a long and a short sylable, allow the accents of stress and quantity readily to exchange with each other. In the noun perfume, the length of the last sylable yields to the stress, with a slight extension of quantity, on the first: in the verb perfume, the stress as easily gives way to the temporal accent on fume. Of all the means by which one accented sylable of a single word is embossed upon the ear, if I may so speak, in higher relief than others, the most common is that of the temporal im- pression. In English words the accented sylable is generally the longest; and the excess of length alone^ without radical abrupt- ness, or an increase of force on the whole concrete, above the neighboring sylablesj is sufficient to answer the purposes of ac- centual distinction. The majority of writers, without sufficient examination, have resolved all accents into excess of force. Inasmuch as the radical is the principal form of stress for short sylables; and as the loud concrete may be applied on all but the immutable, it may be inquired, whether stress, or quantity has the greater influence in pronunciation, by its controling or ex- cluding power. In most words, this predominant influence is readily changeable; as in Albano, Cordova, Ontario, commemo- ration, and purlieu; the accent, of whatever kind, being in these instances as easily practicable on one sylable as on another. But in words with the arrangement, and the habitual pronunciation, of beguile, indeed, delay, and revenge, the temporal accent cannot be deprived of its supremacy, by a radical stress on the first syla- ble, except through an effort in exploding the first, and abbreviat- ing the last. For it is sometimes necessary to reduce the quantity of one sylable, that the radical stress may take the lead on an- other. The accent of the word Emanuel, lies in the extended time of the second sylable. Scarcely any degree of abruptness can transfer the accent to U, while man retains its quantity. When this is shortened, the first sylable E, may, under a strong radical stress, be made the leading accent; but the word will hardly be recognized in the change. OF ACCENT. 403 In regarding the subject of accent, it ought to be borne in mind that a difference in the vocality of the elementary sounds, may in some cases, be mistaken for a difference in stress ; for to many an ear, ee-\ and ale might seem to be surpassed by ou-t and a-we. If however, there is that predominance, then vocality may sometimes be a cause of accent, or may assist its influence. The elements have different degrees of susceptibility, in re- ceving the accent. The tonics more easily and conspicuously take-on each of its three forms. The abrupt elements are heard in the vanishing stress, and assist the radical explosion on the tonics; but are utterly incapable of the loud concrete, and the temporal accent. The subtonics have little or no power, under the radical stress; yet they fulfil all the purposes of quantity; the atonies, though heard in the emphatic vocule, never, in proper and unaffected speech, receve accentual distinction. The impressive agency of accent upon the ear, is fixed in the pronunciation of the English language, on one or two sylables of all words, with more than one. It is an abundant source of variety in speech ; forms in part, the measure of our versifica- tion; and when skilfully disposed, by the adjustment of a delicate ear, produces with the assistance of quantity and pause, the varied rythmic measure of prose. Some grammarians and rhetoricians, with whom the inteligent Mr. Sheridan is to be ranked, have set-forth a rule, that when the accent falls on a consonant, the sylable is short; and long when on a vowel. At school, I did not regard this great pro- sodial principle: now, I perceve it has no foundation. For if accent is variously produced by radical stress, the loud concrete, and by quantity^ a distinction of literal place cannot make the supposed difference. The abrupt stress will always be made on a tonic, (or vowel,) notwithstanding the sylable may be opened on a preceding subtonic, or an abrupt element. The loud concrete must be applied on all the elements without distinction; and an accentual impression by quantity must consist of the united time of tonics and subtonics, when the sylable is constructed with these different elements. All this however, is only a denial of the truth of the rule, on the ground of our own history of accent. 404 OF EMPHASIS. Let us hear how the rule agrees with the fact of pronunciation. In the word ac-tion, the abrupt stress is on the vowel (tonic) a; for e (k) in this case, having no bocty of sound, is but the oc- cluded termination of ajyet the sylable is short; and in re-venge y the accent or the greatest impression on the ear, is from the quantity of the subtonics (consonants) n, and zh* and yet the sylable is long. Language is full of like examples; and from the ilustration they furnish, we may learn that the time of syla- bles bears no fixed relation to stress, nor to other means of ac- centual agency. The prevalent error on this subject must be ascribed to the general cause of all errors; a want of observation at first, and the assumption of notions, to prevent observation ever after, by those who adopt them. Mr. Walker has given a theory of accent; making it dependent on the rising and falling inflection, as indefinitely described by him. If the preceding history of intonation is true, and if it has been clearly comprehended, the Reader must conclude, that accent can have no fixed relationship to a rise of the voice, or to its descent; for it is effected with every essential characteristic, under either of these opposite movements^ their junction into the wavej and under all the changeable phrases of melody. Much has been said by authors, on the application of accent. But with the sole means of the Tongue and the Ear, yet with scholastic authority all around me, I began this history of the voice, with a resolution to speak from Nature; and not after men, too blind or too proud to consult Her ever-open, and Re- vealing Book of Speech. SECTION XLVI. Of Emphasis. Emphasis is defined to be a stress of voice on one or more words of a sentence, thereby to forcibly impress the hearer with their peculiarity of meaning. Most writers, .without seeming to OF EMPHASIS. 405 consider the subject of much importance, indefinitely attribute to emphasis, a characteristic 'tone;' and Mr. Walker beleved he specified this function throughout all its conditions, in his general, and vague account of the upward and downward inflection. But authority aside; let us try to do something to the purpose, by observing and recording. It was stated, that Accent is the fixed, but inihoughtive and inexpressive distinction of sylables, by quantity and stress; alike both in place and character, whether the words are pronounced singly from the columns of a vocabulary, or connectedly in the series of discourse. Emphasis is either the tlwugJitive or expressive, yet only the occasional distinction of a sylable, and thereby of the whole word, or of several successive words, by one or more of the vari- ous forms and degrees of Time, Vocality, Force, Abruptness, and Pitch. As this notable function represents the various states of mind, it is applied occasionally on the current of discourse; but it may be employed on solitary interjections, and on one or two words, forming an eliptical sentence. It will appear hereafter, that em- phasis is no more than a generic term, including specifications of the use of every mode of the voice, for enforcing thought and passion. The stated means of quantity and stress which constitute Ac- cent, being included among the enumerated causes of Emphatic distinction, it might be infered, that in these particulars, accent and emphasis cannot differ from each other. Quantity, radical stress, and the loud concrete, are the same in both cases; but their purpose and power in the latter, invest them with the attrac- tive influence of thought or expression. For a detailed account of the particular occasions requiring emphasis when restricted to the means of stress, the Reader is refered to libraries. They contain rhetorical, and critical works, setting-forth this part of elocution, with comprehensiveness, per- spicuity and taste. It is our aim, to point-out and to measure the vocal means of this important function. Emphasis produces its effect upon the ear, by means of the vocality, force, time, and abruptness of voice, and the varied in- 406 THE EMPHASIS OF YOCALITY. tervals of intonation. The particular enumeration of these means will be given under the following heads. Of the Emphasis of Vocality. The different forms of the mode of Vocality were enumerated in the ninth section. They are variously, thoughtive or expres- sive, and some of them strongly affect the ear. Besides their use in the general current of speech, they may be occasionally applied as emphasis on single words. I do not say, we are to include under this head, those questionable cases of what may be called, the Phonology of Style, in which sound is said to be 'an echo to the sense.' The Reader may, on this point, consult Mr. Sheridan, and other writers 3 and judge for himself, how far any individual sound of the alphabetic elements, may be considered as vocality, and applied as emphasis. The following line from Milton's Ly- cidas, is said to be an example of this kind of expression. Their lean and flashy songs, Grate on their scrannel pipes of wretched straw. If the r, here repeated, be roughened by vibration of the tongue, it may be thought to represent vocally the harshness of the Shep- herd's pipe; but to me, the expression, if expression at all, would be lost in its affectation. And generally, when cases of this kind do not consist in a resemblance of the sound of the word to the sound signified, or in an influence of the thought or expression on the sound, they are often a false or a puerile figure of speech.* * Buzz, hiss, and a few others, may be identical in sound with what they ver- bally represent; but let not the Virgilian Scholar, impressed with the rythmus of that apologetic maxim, in Roman robbery, of beating down the Proud, ' de- bellare superbos,' be misled into the notion, that the mere sylabic sound of superb, is, in itself, an echo, as the poor metaphor calls it, to the thought of magnificence, or grandeur; for by the transposition of sylables, which cannot vary the expressive effect of the mere sound, we might have the superb percep- tion of a Royal Banquet, changed^ if we may make the disenchanting and un- seemly contrast^ to that of the homely table of Poverty, with nothing but its Herb Soup and the convenience of a pewter spoon. THE RADICAL EMPHASIS. 407 The guttural vibration as a vocality, is expressive of scorn and execration. The falsette may be emphatic, in the scream of terror. Of the Emphasis of Force. Under the Time-honored, we cannot call it a Satisfactory Sys- tem of Elocution^ Force or Stress seems to have been regarded as the principal, and if we except the vague pretensions of ancient Accent and of modern Inflection, as the only means of emphatic distinction. Our system ascribes to it an influential but not an overbearing agency among the Modes of the voice. In the first section, Abruptness is described as a peculiar function, and al- though apparently a form of Force, is classed as a separate Mode. The influence however, of its character and occasion is limited; for it has no varied forms, and only a difference in degree. It might be arranged apart, and termed, the Abrupt-radical stress ; as at the opening alone of the concrete^ its effect as a peculiar function, and an independent Mode of speech is recognized. Still as the Radical stress bears a congenial, or at least a classified relationship to the use of force on other parts of the concrete, I have thought, with this prefatory remarkj the term abrupt stress, even under its claims to a separate arrangement, might here be included within the subject of Radical Emphasis. Of the Radical Emphasis. When an immutable sylable bears the accent, in a word re- markable by thought, passion, or antithesis^ the audible distinc- tion can be made only in three ways; by vocality; a wide radical change in the phrase of melody ; and an abrupt enforcement of the radical stress. The two former will be noticed in their proper places. The last is here ilustrated. 408 THE RADICAL EMPHASIS. And with perpetual inroads to alarm, Though inaccessible, his fatal throne; Which, if not victory, is yet revenge. If the strongly contrasted meaning of the word victory, is not represented by guttural vibration, by aspiration, or some other available vocality; or by a change of radical pitch upward or downward through the skip of a third, fifth, or octave, the syl- able vie must be raised into importance by means of the abrupt radical stress : at least no other form can be effective while the sylable is limited to its usual or conventional quantity. Let us not pass unnoticed the impressive succession of sylabic quantity and pause in this closing line; a rythmus, though pro- saic, yet remarkable for the skilful comparison of the rapid time, and abruptness of vie, with the long-drawn and gliding voice on venge; the rest between the contrasted clauses, gradually pre- paring the ear, for repose on the indefinite quantity of the termi- native cadence. It is true, even an immutable sylable may be carried rapidly through any interval of the scale ; still this rapid movement when not joined with the radical change, is of no emphatic importance. Although the radical emphasis is here allotted to immutable sylables, it may be laid also on those of indefinite time. But these admitting of more agreeable forms, derived from quantity and intonation, they less frequently require the strong explosion of the radical. This emphasis is the sign of anger, positive affirmation, com- mand, and energetic mental states of all kinds. It is also the common means of enforcement, whatever the time of the sylable, when discourse requires a rapid utterance. THE MEDIAN EMPHASIS. 409 Of the Median Emphasis. The prominent display of the thought or expression of a word, by a gradual increase and subsequent diminution of voice, can be effected only on sylables of indefinite time. It has an importance equal to that of the radical stress, under a form of greater smooth- ness, dignity and grace. In the following sentence, the word sole conveys the mental state of warm and serious admiration, which this emphasis finely expresses. Wonder not, sov'reign Mistress, if perhaps Thou canst, who art sole wonder! Though the median stress might possibly be executed on the simple rise and fall of the fifth, and octave, when slowly pro- longed, yet it is more frequently, and more effectively made on the wave. In the present case, the emphatic intonation of the word sole is through the equal wave of the second or third; the swell being at the junction of its two constituents. The Header must observe, that in assigning the form of stress in this, and the preceding examples, I have been governed by the principles of speech, laid down in this volume; and that I shall continue to apply them, in ilustrating the other forms of emphasis, included under this section; for if these examples be read in any of those various ways, resulting from vulgar attempts in elocution, or from scholastic authority^ my meaning will not, in all probability, be receved. According to our rule, the lines above quoted should have a plain but deeply admirative character, on the long quantities of its diatonic melody; giving to the em- phatic word the importance of greater time, either in the wave of the second, or third, or even fifth, and smoothly impressing it by the swell of the median stress. It is not within our present pur- posej but it might be added, that thou should have the wave of the second or third, to connect it both by quantity and intona- tion, under the emphatic tie, with sole; and that canst should be set at a ditone above thou, to assist the emphatic tie, in carrying 21 410 THE VANISHING EMPHASIS. on the voice, and with it, the meaning of the line. The intonation here proposed, may be taken as an example of the reverentive or admirative style. Of the Vanishing Emphasis. This form of stress is characterized by a degree of force, nearly equal to that of the radical emphasis. Why then are they distinguished from each other by name? The radical is appropriate to immutable sylables; the vanishing cannot be re- cognized on them, as it requires some extent of quantity; and though the hasty energy that prompts it, generally assigns it to a simple concrete, with just sufficient time for its execution, still it is sometimes effectively made on a prolonged quantity, and on the wave. In the following examples, this inversion of the simple form of the concrete may be employed for the expression of angry im- patience in one case, and of threatening vengeance in the other. Oh ye Gods! ye Gods! must I endure all this! Oh! that I had him, With six Aufidiuses, or more, his tribe. To use my lawful sword. The words here marked in italics, when pronounced with the vanishing stress, have that Irish provincialism which characterizes in a degree, this species of force; the final abrupt element in these cases contributing to the effect, by its occlusion. The vanishing stress is often used for an energetic, a peevish, or an angry question: in this way, the extent of the interroga- tive interval, with its emphatic boundary, is more forcibly im- pressed on the ear. A cause of the peculiar expression of the vanishing emphasis, may be this. From the ordinary habit of the voice in the simple concrete, it is difficult to produce a final fulness and force, with- THE COMPOUND EMPHASIS. 411 out giving rapidity of time to its execution: and this adapts it to the active state of mind represented by the vanishing stress. But we leave the remark to the observation and reflection of others. Of the Compound Emphasis. A degree of emphatic distinction by force, stronger than that of the preceding forms, may be applied to sylables of indefinite time; for these, under the direction of a vehement state of mind, may receve their force from a union of both the radical and vanishing stress ; as in the following urgent call. Arm, warriors, arm for fight; the foe at hand, Whom fled we thought, will save us long pursuit This day. The imperative words here marked in italics, may receve this double form of stress, either on a wide downward interval, or on an unequal-direct wave, with a wide downward constituent. The vanishing stress being here, on the subtonic m, requires more effort to produce its fulness, than when the final element is abrupt. The compound stress is however, more particularly appropriate to the forcible emphasis of an interrogation: and I here cite an ex- ample, from the scene of Hamlet's violence towards Laertes, at the grave of Ophelia. Dost thou come here to whine? To outface me by leaping in her grave ? The great earnestness of these questions, calls for the Thorough interrogative intonation; and the emphatic importance of the word whine, requires, or will admit the rising octave with the compound stress upon it. The radical abruptness on t, sets-forth the threatening rage of the Prince; and the vanishing stress on ?*, conspicuously denotes the inquiry, by marking the extent of the interrogative interval. 41l! THOROUGH EMPHASIS, AND THE LOUD CONCRETE. We do not here regard the aspiration, to be joined with the compound stress, for the expression of whatever contempt or scorn, the question may contain. It must be confessed however^ the discrimination of this species of emphasis, in the current of pronunciation, is not so easy, as that of the preceding. Still it is heard in the voice. Its effect is peculiar; and by deliberate analysis is clearly resolvable into the double form of stress. Of the Emphasis of the Thorough Stress, and the Loud Concrete, In detailing the assignable forms and degrees of force, those of the Thorough stress, and the Loud concrete, were described as different from the rest, and from each other. But I am not disposed to insist upon the importance of these distinctions, for the practical purposes of elocution. They exist however as forms of stress, and are perhaps used as emphatic signs of thought or expression. Yet they are not, either in char- acter or degree, when employed on short quantities, so distin- guishable from the radical, and the compound stress, and from each other, as to require special exemplification. The peculiarity of these forms of stress, is relative to the time of sylables; for when this is not so short as to require the radical stress, nor of sufficient length to admit of a prolonged application of force, the required distinction may be effected on such moderate quantities by the loud concrete, or the thorough stress, as in the marked sylables of the following example; where the first may receve the former, and the second, the latter species of emphasis. This knows my Punisher: therefore as far From granting he, as I from beggmg peace. On this subject, let it be kept in mind, that although the thor- ough stress may be applied, under the limitation of emphasis, to short, and occasionally to longer quantities; yet when unusually THE ASPIRATED EMPHASIS. 413 extended, in a current melody, it has that rustic coarseness, described in the thirty-ninth section. Of the Aspirated Emphasis. The earnestness and other expressive effects of aspiration, may be spread over a whole sentence. The same expression is some- times restricted to a single word; constituting the aspirated em- phasis. Many words claim this emphasis from the essential energy of their meaning; and these, in some cases have the literal sym- bol of aspiration, as havoc, horror, huzza, A similar remark may be made on some of the interjections. I need not quote instances of aspirated utterance in the exclamations of passion, and in the pure breathing of a sigh; the pages of the drama are full of examples. In the following dialogue from Julius Csesar, the effect of aspiration in marking an earnest state of mind, is sufficiently ob- vious on the words ay, and fear, set in italics. Brutus. What means this shouting ? I do fear the people Choose Caesar for their king. Gassius. Ay, do you fear it ? Then must I think you would not have it so. And again, in the Tent scene, the earnest repugnance of Cassius is manifested by an aspiration on the word chastisement. Brutus. The name of Cassius honors this corruption, And chastisement does therefore hide his head. Cassius. Chas tis em ent ? When aspiration is combined with the vanishing stress on a simple concrete, or on the various forms of the wave, it conveys an expression of sneer, or contempt, or scorn. Aspiration may be applied to sylables of every variety of time, to all forms of force, and all intervals of intonation. 414 THE EMPHATIC VOCULE. THE GUTTURAL EMPHASIS. Of the Emphatic Vocule. When a word emphatic by force, terminates with an abrupt element, followed by a pause, that slight issue of sound called the Vocule, generally receves a continuation of the force; and this, by its explosive effort, becomes the sign of passionative excitement. On some occasions, this vocule may be used, with a view to press into a sylable all the power of emphasis. But it comes so close to affectation, that I hesitated about its classification, as a fault, or as an assistant enforcement of speech. I will not say absolutely, it should be forcibly employed in the following linej from the close of the third scene, in the third act of Othello: but when the word hate, is pronounced with the stress required by the passionative state of the Moor, the emphatic vocule almost necessarily bursts from the t, in the organic open- ing of the atonic abrupt element. Yield up, love, thy crown, and hearted throne, To tyrannous hate! swell, bosom, with thy fraught. Of the Guttural JEmphasis. The excited mental states of disgust, aversion, execration, and horror, give their expression to an emphatic word, by joining the guttural vibration to other means of vocal distinction. It is heard on the daily occasions for revolting interjectives; and sometimes on the common current of sylabic utterance. It might be prop- erly used on the word detestable, in the following lines, from that dreadful malediction upon Athens^ at the opening of the fourth act of Shakspeare's Timon; taking care to accent the second sylable, which does not bear a stress, in the measure of the line. Nothing I'll bear from thee But nakedness, thou detestable town! THE TEMPORAL EMPHASIS. 415 When this guttural vibration is combined with the highest powers of stress and aspiration, it produces the most impulsive blast of speech. Of the Temporal Emphasis. When the quantity of an emphatic sylable is long, and admits of indefinite extension^ when the word has only an antithetic, or a thoughtive meaning, without the force of passionj or when the distinction has the sole purpose of an emphatic tiej the impres- sion may be made by the influence of time alone, as on co, in the following address. Hail holy Light, offspring of Heaven first-born, Or of the Eternal, coeternal beam, May I express thee unblamed? Or more conspicuously, in Abdiel's warning to Satan. For soon expect to feel, His thunder on thy head, devouring fire. Then, who created thee lamenting learn, When who can ^recreate thee thou shalt know. In this constelation of temporal emphases, the impressive long quantity of the accented sylable of thunder, and of devouring, is given as an instance of the emphatic tie ; in which the relation of two subjects separated by a clause, is shown in its true vocal syn- tax ; and by which any ludicrous image, from too ready a verbal connection between head and devouring fire, may be obviated. Perhaps it will be saidj these words, together with the others marked in italics as emphatic by quantity alone, might receve the additional distinction of a forceful, or of an intonated em- phasis. But it may be learned from the speech at large, that Abdiel is no longer the 'fervent angel' contending with the apos- tate. He is now the herald of an Almighty Decree. The earn- est persuasion, with the alternate hopes and fears of argument, has given place to thoughtive admonitions, and to the solemn 416 THE EMPHASIS OF PITCH. declarations of retributive justice; and the unimpassioned but conspicuous distinction by temporal emphasis appears well accom- modated to the utterance of the 'unmoved, unshaken, unseduced, unterrified,' and prophetic Seraph. The Reader must have observed the close connection between the various vocal constituents ; and that with every attempt, it is impossible to represent each separately, in the necessary ilustra- tions. We here speak of the simple extension of quantity as the means of emphasis, when in reality that quantity is in part effec- tive, through the influence of some form of intonation. Extended time on interrogative sylablesj on those of positiveness and com- mand, or of a feeble cadencej has an intonation, respectively, through the simple course of the upward or downward third, fifth, or octave. But in plain temporal emphasis, like that of the above examples, and in a dignified diatonic melody, an ex- tension of indefinite sylables is always through the direct or inverted wave of the unimpassioned second. Of the Emphasis of Pitch. It was stated generally, in speaking of the pitch of the voice, that its several forms are used as the means of emphasis. We should now procede to the ilustration of this subject; but as the rising third, fifth, and octave are signs of interrogation, and as they have this character even when applied to a single word of a sentence, we may inquire^ how the Interrogative effect in dis- course is to be distinguished from the Emphatic. There must be even to the common ear, something like an unwritten rule, to which reference is instinctively made; for notwithstanding the frequent employment of these signs in their different meanings, these meanings are rarely confounded. Yet our discriminations on this subject have in time past been fourfooted instincts; let us try to ennoble them, by giving them the support and the exalted step of knowledge and principles. The various interrogative sentences were named in the seven- THE EMPHASIS OF PITCH. 417 teenth section; and on that division, the discriminations are here made. In the first case. As the emphatic use of pitch is on a single word, or at most on two or three, there is no liability to mistake emphasis, for declarative questions with the thorough intonation. In the second. It was shown, that the partial interrogative is generally applied to common, pronominal, and adverbial ques- tions. These, even with only a solitary third, or fifth, or octave, cannot possibly be confounded with cases of emphasis on these same intervals, in sentences without the grammatical structure of a question. How far it might be proper to consider a partial interrogation, made with a single interrogative interval, as con- joining the conditions of interrogation and of emphasis, thereby justifying the term Interrogative Emphasisj may be left for future inquiry and arrangement. In the third case. Many phrases having the form of a question, seem nevertheless to hang doubtfully between an interrogative and an assertive meaning. When such phrases can be fairly resolved into an interjective appeal, or a negative question, or one of belief* the positive state of mind generally calls for an intonation in the downward con- crete, as shown in the thirty-second section. With these ques- tions emphasis by a rising interval cannot be confounded. The following examples are by editorial punctuation marked as ques- tions; but the conditions above stated seem to apply so clearly to them, that I would exclude the interrogative intervals, and express these virtual affirmations by a positive downward intonation. Cassius. What should be in that Csesar? Why should that name he sounded more than yours? Casca. What night is this? Cassius. A very pleasing night to honest men. Casca. Who ever knew the heavens menace so ? Shylock. Ay, his breast: So says the bond; Doth it not, noble judge? Xearest his heart, those are the very words. In the first of these instances, Cassius does positively mean, 418 EMPHASIS OF THE RISING OCTAVE. There is nothing in Caesar, nor in his name. In the second, Casca would say, It is a dreadful night; the heavens were never known to menace so. And in the last, Shylock, by his negative question, does triumphantly declare, You know it, noble judge. If then instead of the positive, the interrogative intonation should be applied either thoroughly or in part, to these phrases, their meaning would be obscured, or lost. Consequently, no case of rising emphasis can be mistaken for such interrogative construc- tions. When figurative questionsj those of grammatical con- struction, with a downward intonationj and when real exclama- tory sentences, carry their expression on one or two downward intervals, it may be made a subject for future inquiry, whether this case might be called the Exclamatory Emphasis. We go on to enumerate the intervals of pitch, employed in emphasis. Of the Emphasis of the Rising Octave. The concrete rise of the Octave on a single sylable in a current diatonic melody, remarkably distinguishes it from others bearing the interval of a tone ; and its effect has the true character of emphasis, even without the excessive stress, heretofore considered almost the single essential, in the definition of that term. The Reader has been told more than oncej the intervals of the scale are appreciable, even in the momentary flight of an immuta- ble sylable; and that the expression of the octave on these syla- bles is generally effected by the skip of a radical, from the level of current speech to the hight of that interval above it. The em- phasis of the octave appears then, under the form both of Slow Concrete, and of Radical Change; and let it be remembered that one of these different forms of pitch is always implied, when we speak of the emphasis of other wider intervals of the scale. The rising octave is employed emphatically, for astonishment and admiration, embracing inquiry or doubt; and for the especial enforcing of one word above others, in an interrogative sentence: but this rarely; for there is a kind of mewl in its long-drawn EMPHASIS OF THE RISING OCTAVE. 419 concrete, that excludes it from those elevated purposes of speech which it is the design of science to investigate, and of taste to approve. The octave sometimes expresses a quick, a taunting, or a mirth- ful interrogative; and is rarely used in a calm, serious, and dig- nified question. It would perhaps be admissible in the following sneering exultation of Shylock over Antonio. Monies is your suit. What should I say to you? should I not say? Hath a dog money? Is it possible A cur can lend three thousand ducats ? From the temper of the two last questions, they will bear a thorough interrogative intonation ; but the words dog, and cur, by an emphatic allusion to the previous rating of Shylock by Antonio, convey the exultation of revenge^ as well as an imme- diate antithesis to their former contemptuous application, by being run up to the keenness of the octave. Some readers might probably be disposed to set a more dignified form of intonation on these questions, by considering them as Appealing; and em- ploying a general current of downward thirds, with a downward octave on dog, and cur. I only say, they will bear the assigned intonation, without making preference the subject of argument; though the manifest sneer seems to claim the rising intervals. The readings proposed throughout this essay are for ilustration ; and their purpose may be fulfiled, although they may not ex- actly accord with common opinion. There is a best in the works of every art; but the latitude of admissible variation, within the reach of principles, makes an ample and a liberal grant, that sometimes generously admits even cases of unsuccessful search after the highest excelence. Over such failures, the inteligent critic of another age will be neither quarrelsome nor severe. The emphasis of the octave by a change of radical pitch, is exemplified in the following lines. 'Zounds, show me what thou'lt do: Woo't weep? woo't fight? woo't fast? woo't tear thyself? The exasperated energy of Hamlet, in his encounter with 420 EMPHASIS OF THE RISING FIFTH. Laertes, calls for the highest pitch of interrogation on the words here marked; but these words do not admit of the slow concrete. To fulfil the purposes of expression, they are to be immediately transfered by radical change to an octave above the word woo't, which in its several places, is at the common level of the melody. The emphatic sylable, when thus raised, is still further indued with the character of an interrogative interval, by the rapid flight of the concrete octave, described in .the seventeenth sec- tion. In the first seven words of the second line the voice does skip, alternately ascending and descending, between the extremes of an octave. While these lines are before us, we may notice the contrast between the two movements of pitch in the octave ; for the word tear, having an indefinite quantity, admits freely of the slow concrete; and the voice after being restrained to the discrete skip, on the preceding immutable sylables, more freely, and with graceful contrast assumes on this word, the intonation of a con- crete or continuous rise. Of the Emphasis of the Rising Fifth. The relation of the concrete fifth to the octave, in their inter- rogative character, was formerly shown. As a sign of emphatic thought or of passion, the fifth is less impressive than the octavej from not having its piercing influence. There is however, more dignity in the importance it gives to a sylable. In the following lines, from Satan's address to the sun, the emphasis on thee-m&y be made by the concrete rising fifth, for the expression of its exultation. Evil be thou my good: by thee at least Divided empire with Heaven's king I hold. It is said here, and we allow the same cautious latitude in other cases, that a certain form of emphatic expression may be em- ployed; for occasionally, the emphasis may be varied; as in the present example, thee might be in the wave of the fifth, or third, EMPHASIS OF THE RISING FIFTH. 421 or even the second; in the last case however, a want of the ex- pressive effect of the fifth, must be supplied by a long quantity, and by the use of the radical, or median, or vanishing stress, on the wave of the second so employed. Nay, we will go further with the liberal construction allowed by every broad and self-con- fiding system; and under the principles of this Work, are ready to accord with the free-choice of any enlightened taste, which in the above example might prefer even the positive emphasis of a downward interval. And this, not inconsistently; for by the rules of a well ordered system, such variations will always be made according to the discretion that liberally allows them. In the following lines, the emphasis of the fifth on the word beauty, is perhaps not absolutely unchangeable; but it certainly produces a brightness of picture, well adapted to the admirative character, and which cannot perhaps be so well effected in any other way. Tears like the rain-drops may fall without measure, But rapture and beauty they cannot recall. The effect in this case will be more finished, if after the con- crete rise of the sylable beau, through the fifthj ty be discretely brought down to the line of the current melody. It may be added, that from the transposed order of sylabic quantity, a re- versed order of intonation may be set on rapture; for a discrete rising skip of the fifth may be made with rap, and a concrete return to the current melody on ture. The emphasis of the fifth, by a skip of radical pitch, is further exemplified in the line, formerly quoted to show the radical stress. Which, if not w'ctory, is yet revenge. Here the abrupt stress on vie, requires and receves assistance from intonation, by setting that short sylable at a discrete fifth above the place of not: for this gives expressive emphasis; and a downward return to the current melody on to, closes the line with the effect, though not with the full form, of a prepared cadence. 422 EMPHASIS OF THE RISING THIRD. Of the Emphasis of the Rising Third. The striking intonation of the octave and the fifth is suited to the earnest interests and replications of coloquial speech, and to the forcible thoughts and passions of the drama. The rise of the third, though still denoting severally, both interrogation and em- phasis, produces a less intense, but a more dignified impression. The rise of the third may be set on the word he, in the follow- ing lines. Who first seduced them to that foul revolt? The infernal Serpent ; he it was, whose guile. Stirred up with envy and revenge. And we may add, that the words infernal serpent, being a posi- tive answer to the question, should have the downward intonation, both for contrast to the rising third, on /103 and for emphatic wonder at the revengeful guile of the seducer. Some phrases however are simply interrogative, and unaccom- panied by those states of mind usually producing the octave and the fifth. The emphatic distinction in these cases, is made with the moderately attractive influence of the third. Dost thou think Alexander looked 0' this fashion, i' the earth ? If in this example, Alexander, this fashion, and earth, be taken as emphatic, the distinction will be appropriately made by the third. Should the intonation on these words be in the wider interval of the fifth or octave, it would imply an eagerness of in- quiry, and a light familiarity of address, not embraced, by the meaning of the question, nor consistent with the temper of Ham- let's moralizing reflections. It is scarcely necessary to ilustrate the radical skip of the third, in relation to emphasis. The word victory, in a preceding example, may be executed on this discrete interval, if the Header should think the fifth, there employed, too wide; for it will ex- emplify either case, according to the degree of energy ascribed to it. EMPHASIS OF THE RISING SEMITONE. 423 The third, as shown in the sixteenth section, is employed on the emphatic words of conditional, concessive, and hypothetical phrases. The minor third, together with the rest of the minor scale, is the essential means of plaintiveness in song; but it is not to be used in the system of speaking-intonation, set-forth in this Work; and this system regarding it as a fault in speech, we cannot give it a place, in the history of emphasis. Of the Emphasis of the Rising Semitone. I omit here, a notice of the tone or second. The Reader must now be too well acquainted with the character of the diatonic melody, not to perceve, that the simple rise of a second, having no attractive or peculiar expression, cannot, by pitch alone, be em- phatic. The more impressive intervals, when not compared among themselves, are emphatic only by their contrast with the thoughtive current of the second. It is true, a sylable is made emphatic by quantity; and that quantity in plain and dignified utterance, is commonly effected through the doubling of the second into the form of a wave. But the impressiveness is here an effect of time, not of intonation. As the semitone has a peculiar expression, it can fulfil the condition of emphasis, when laid upon a single word in the course of a diatonic melody. We have an instance of this, in the first line of Hamlet's soliloquy. 0, that this too, too solid flesh would melt, Thaw, and resolve itself into a dew! These words are prompted by three different states of mind. 0, that this solid flesh would melt, is wishful ; this too solid flesh, is declarative that it cannot change; and the second too, here taking-on the degree of an adjective, is plaintive under the re- peated declaration. In these states, Hamlet implores with be- coming seriousness, that his living frame may be dissolved; yet 424 EMPHASIS OF THE DOWNWARD CONCRETE. by the first adverb too, repeated more forcibly as an adjective, expresses his conviction of its impossibility. Under the hard fate of this conviction, he repeats the word too, with a pathetic de- spondency, which requires and beautifully sad, receves a slowly extended and slightly tremulous wave of the semitone. It rarely happens however, that this semitonic expression is found so insulated: for the plaintiveness which directs a single word, generally spreads its effect over the whole phrase or sen- tence ; constituting the chromatic melody, and thereby-destroying the solitary importance, or proper emphasis of the semitone. It will then be askedj how emphasis when required, can be effected in a chromatic melody. It may be by stress in its vari- ous forms ; and by time ; for the semitone is set on sylables of every quantity. It may likewise be effected by intonation, in the following manner. When a sylable calls for the emphasis of a wider pitch in a chromatic melody, it cannot- be a simple concrete rise or fall through the second, third, fifth, or eighth ; for these movements, by over-sliding the measure of a semitone, would destroy the plaintiveness, which by the conditions of the case should be heard. Yet, when a sylable of the chromatic melody is elevated by a discrete radical change, from the level of the current, to a third, fifth, or octave above it; and when thus raised, is there uttered however rapidly, through the interval of a semitone, the plaintive or chromatic character will be preserved; and as the sylable, by a transfer of the radical pitch, is advanced to a higher point of the scale, its semitone by the additional means of this acuteness in position is more forcibly impressed on the ear, and fully con- forms to the definition of emphasis. Of the Emphasis of the Downward Concrete. The downward movement of the voice expresses positiveness and surprise, and on a single long sylable, forms the feeble ca- dence. We are now to consider the manner of employing this EMPHASIS OF THE DOWNWARD CONCRETE. 425 concrete, for the purpose of emphasis, on one or more words, in a current melody. The wider downward concrete is a very common form of em- phatic distinction, and exerts a powerful attraction over the ear. It cannot however, be used in sentences of thorough interroga- tive intonation; nor is it, in its simple forms employed in the chromatic melody. When necessary in this latter case, for de- noting surprise or positiveness, it may be introduced as a con- stituent of the unequal wave; for the rise of a semitone as the first constituent, will preserve the plaintiveness; and a subse- quent continuation downward through the eighth, or fifth, or third, will join to this plaintiveness, the required emphasis of the falling concrete. When we had occasion in its proper place, to speak of the descent of the voice both by concrete and by radical pitch-* that descent was represented, as taking place, only from the line of the current melody. It is now necessary to describe the par- ticular manner of its movement in emphasis. In the twenty- second section, a notation is given of the following line. Seems, madam, nay, it is! I know not seems. In that notation, one of its emphatic sylables is marked with a downward fifth; the concrete appearing on the staff, with its radical the whole extent of that interval above the current melody. I then merely pointed out the peculiarity; not wish- ing, in that view of the downward concrete, to anticipate the history of its application to the especial subject of the present section. Should the word is, in the above line, be uttered as a feeble cadence, by the descent of a third from the line of the current melody, as if it were the close of a sentence, it would not have the impressive effect, required by the meaning. It cannot then, be a simple descent of the voice from the line of a current melody, which gives an emphatic character to this downward movement. The full effect of the concrete, in this case, is produced by commencing its radical, on a line of pitch above the current 28 42(> EMPHASIS OF THE DOWNWARD CONCRETE. melody, and descending to that line or below it, according to the force of expression. The hight at which the outset or radical of the descending concrete is to be taken, depends on the degree of positiveness or surprise, designed in the emphasis. That the ex- pressive effect of the downward concrete procedes from its affinity in form with the cadence, I will not assert. There seems how- ever, to be something like an ultimate affirmation implied in a very positive emphasisj as if it meant, this affirmation is beyond doubt, then let the subject here be closed. It may perhaps be askedj why the downward vanish, emphat- ically used in the current melody, does not produce the effect of a cadence, and interrupt the continuous thought or expression of discourse. Let it be recolectedj the feeblest form of the cadence consists in the concrete descent through the third; consequently the downward emphasis can at* most, amount but to this feeble form. Again, the proper cadence is continued downward from the line of the current melody; whereas the emphatic downward concrete, begins on a degree of the scale above the line of the melody, and does not always descend below it. And further: speech has two means for conveying the mental states of thought and passion. One, by a conventional language, which to the ear, can describe them all. The other, by the vari- ous Modes and forms of the voice, that instinctively express many of these thoughts, and passions, when engrafted on words. A spoken cadence is denoted, both by the vocal sign, in its three descending radicals, with the final falling concrete; and by lan- guage describing the meaning of the words that terminate the sentence; for the intonation of the cadence, together with the meaning and structure of the phrase, and the pause, always marks the close. Consequently, an emphatic downward vanish in the course of the melody, can never be confounded with its termination. The downward emphasis by discrete radical pitch, has the same character as the downward concrete, and is employed for a skip on an immutable sylable. The cause of a downward emphasis taking its radical pitch, so far above the line of the current melody, must be obvious on con- sidering, that by a descent merely from the line of that current, EMPHASIS OF THE DOWNWARD OCTAVE. 427 the octave, the fifth, and perhaps the third would in some cases be inaudible^ and always too feeble for the demands of these impressive downward intervals. Of the Emphasis of the Downward Octave. After what has been said generally of the downward em- phasis, it is scarcely necessary to state, that the octave on a long sylable gives the strongest degree of this species of emphasis. The word hell, in the following lines, requires the octave. So frown'd the mighty combatants, that Hell Grew darker at their frown. This is taken from that fine picture of threatful hostility be- tween Satan and Death, in the second book of Paradise Lost. And whoever would give this part with a forcible and somewhat dramatic effect, will find it difficult to bring out the full meaning of the poet, except by the above directed intonation. The mean- ing, if we may interpret it, is not to represent simply, without marking its degree, an increase of darkness produced by the figurative gloom of the brows of the combatants. Such a picture would be too tame and trite for this dreadful edge of battle. The thought becomes worthy of the occasion, when the frowns are said to be able to blacken the deep darkness even of Hell. It is not to our purpose to remark here, that a strong downward emphasis on darker, completes the expressive meaning of the Poet. The above forcible intonation is produced by the concrete pitch of the downward octave: and as the downward concrete emphasis always commences at a higher pitch than that of the current melody, so with the downward emphasis on immutable sylables, the change of radical pitch is likewise from an assumed point above the current melody. This may be ilustrated by the follow- ing example from the second book of Milton. 428 EMPHASIS OF THE DOWNWARD OCTAVE. Far less abhor'd than these Vcx'd Sc3'lla, bathing in the sea that parts Calabria from the hoarse Trinacrian shore. Others may please themselves, with their own vocal expression of this first line; I can satisfy my ear, only by a concrete rising octave denoting an exaggerated surprise, on far ; then a descent by the radical pitch of an octave, to less, for the emphatic expres- sion of the degree of abhorrence, on that comparative word, by returning to the level of the radical of far, in the line of the cur- rent melody. It is not the place, but I may remark, that ah is to be raised an octave by radical pitch; and hord returned by a downward concrete, of that same interval; thereby completing the forcible expression, by a falling and a rising discrete skip, on less and ah, between a rising and a falling concrete, on far and hord. A similar intonation is appropriate to the line that follows in the text of the poem. Nor uglier follow the night-hag. Here, nor rises by a concrete octave; ug descends discretely by that same interval ; li, from the expression not being so strong as in the preceding case, may either rise by the discrete third, or fifth, and then descend by its concrete, on er to the level of nor, in the current melody ; or Her, slurred as it were into one sylable, may receve the direct wave of one of these intervals. In these examples, nothing is said of the stress, or aspiration, necessary for the full vocal display of their expression. We here regard only the downward movement. If it may be asked;* why this emphasis of downward radical pitch has not the effect of a cadencial close; it may be answered^ it has somewhat the effect of a cadence; but it is still an imper- fect one, and not sufficient for a full termination of discourse. For the descent is from a point assumed above the current line, and its downward reach is to about the level of that line; whereas the true and final cadence is made by a descent of two radicals below the current melody. Add to this, the cause assigned in a preceding page, why the emphasis of the downward concrete is EMPHASIS OF THE DOWNWARD FIFTH. 429 not liable to be confounded with the cadence; as like it, the down- ward discrete emphasis is readily distinguishable from the cadence, by the words, and meaning, and pause, that denote the proper close. Of the Emphasis of the Downward Fifth. The similarity of this interval to the octave, the difference con- sisting in degree only, renders it unnecessary to do more, than quote a phrase in which the less energetic emphasis of the down- ward fifth may be employed. The word well, in the following lines, from that brief and beautiful address to the City of London, at the close of the third book of Cowper's Task, may receve the emphatic downward concrete of the fifth. Ten righteous would have saved a city once, And thou hast many righteous. Well for thee, That salt preserves thee; more corrupted else, And therefore more obnoxious at this hour, Than Sodom in her day had power to be, For whom God heard his Abraham plead in vain. The radical change of the downward fifth may be made on the word subject, in the following lines, from the first act of Julius Cwsar. In the second scene, Cassius after exciting Brutus to a proud declaration of his love of honor, continues^ I know that virtue to be in you, Brutus, As well as I do know your outward favor. Well, honor is the subject of my story. If this is. allowed to be the emphatic word, the meaning here conveyed, that honor is positively, the very matter he desires to speak of, must be expressed by a downward intonation on the word subject. But the accented sylable of this word is too short to bear the prolonged and slower concrete. The effect is there- fore to be accomplished through a discrete descent, by assuming the first sylable sub, at a fifth above the current melody, and re- turning to the line of that melody, on jeet, by the radical skip of 430 EMPHASIS OF THE DOWNWARD THIRD. a fifth. Some other form of emphasis on this word may, in a manner, mark a kind of apposition in the terms, honor and sub- ject; yet to an ear of discriminative taste, perhaps none will give so striking a picture of the identity, as the intonation, here pro- posed. Of the Emphasis of the Downward Third, The downward Third expresses a more moderate degree of the state of mind, conveyed by the octave, and fifth. In the follow- ing reply of Hamlet, the word Queen does not seem to require a stronger emphatic distinction, than that of a falling third. Queen. Have you forgot me? Ham. No, by the rood, not so: You are the Queen, your husband's brother's wife. Here we may again notice the striking difference above refered to, in the effect of the downward third, when employed as a cadence, and as emphasis. In the former case, if the word Queen should descend concretely, from the line of the current melody to a third below it, the sentence might seem to be terminated at that point by the feeble cadence. In the latter, when this word skips to a third above the current line, and then descends concretely to that line, in the manner of emphasis, it does not even with a subsequent pause, produce the like effect of a close, but rather implies a continuation of the sentence. The emphasis of the downward radical change of the third, may be made by a transition from that to too, in the following phrase. Cassias. They shouted thrice; what was the last cry for? Caeca. Why, for that too. Of these last words that is to be taken a third above the line of the current melody; and too, at the level of its line. It was said formerly^ the prepared cadence is produced by the radical descent of a third below the current melody, on a short EMPHASIS OF THE DOWNWARD THIRD. 431 sylable, or by a descending concrete third, on a long one, preced- ing the triad. Still this descent alone is not terminative. For after descending through this discrete third, the last sylable does not necessarily end with the downward tone required at a close ; and it will be recolected, that even this downward discrete skip of a third was called a false cadence, from its not having the satisfactory effect of a period; and in the concrete preparation for the cadence, the descent of the third can have, at most, the effect of only a feeble cadence. Consider further^ the structure and meaning of the phraseology have a share of influence, in denoting the end of a sentence. This downward radical skip of the prepared cadence, has in part the effect of emphasis, by for- cibly impressing on the ear the most complete termination of discourse.* The downward Second, whether concrete or discrete, being a constituent of the diatonic melody, has no emphatic power. It gives variety to the current, by occasionally taking the place of the rising interval; and by its concrete on the last constituent of a falling tritone, makes the triad of the cadence. The downward Semitone has peculiarity, sufficient for a strong emphatic distinction: but I am not aware of its being ever intro- duced alone, into the diatonic melody; and in the chromatic, it serves only the purpose of variety, similar to that of the down- ward second in the diatonic current. * Let not the Reader, on this hint, unnecessarily multiply terms, and call this the Emphatic cadence, or the Cadencial emphasis. 432 EMPHASIS OF THE WAVE. Of the Emphasis of the Wave. The junction of opposite concretes by its positive effect upon the ear, gives emphatic distinction to sylables and words. If a history of the voice should be written, from the practice of the mass of readers, and not from cultivated and rare exam- ples of excelence, it would be necessary to add a Melody of the Wave to that of the diatonic and chromatic; as many, and some of the world's great readers and actors too, apply the intonation of wider waves, to every long and emphatic sylable. This, to say the least of it as a fault, gives the impressive effect of the wave to a whole sentence, and prevents its employment as the means of emphasis on a single word. The wave, according to its form, expresses admiration, surprise, inquiry, mirthful wonder, sneer and scorn; and is emphatically used on long quantities, embracing these states of mind. The dignified diatonic melody is made by the wave of the second; and this is only a method of adding the gravity of its last constituent, the downward second, to the lighter effect of the previous ascent of that interval; and of producing at the same time the length of sylable, so essential to solemn utterance, with- out the risk of falling into the protracted note of song. But the wave of the second never performs the part of emphasis, by its intonation alone. Waves of wider intervals, to give time and dignity to utterance, double the concrete of which they are re- spectively composed, and have besides, a striking peculiarity when used for emphatic distinction, in the diatonic melody. Emphatic words of scorn in dignified discourse are denoted by the vanishing stress, or by aspiration, joined with either the sim- ple rise or fall of a wider concrete, or with the direct or inverted form of its single wave. For there is a degree of levity and familiarity in the double wave, unsuitable to dignity of style. In considering the emphasis of the wave, it is not my intention to ilustrate all its forms. If the Reader calls to mind our history of this expressive sign, he may be able to do it for himself: and EMPHASIS OF THE EQUAL WAVE. 433 the varieties of the wave are so numerous as to prevent an entire enumeration of them. I shall name a few of its forms. Of the Emphasis of the Equal-single- direct Wave of the Octave. The Equal-single-direct wave of the octave actively expresses admiration and surprise; and when hightened by aspiration, the vanishing stress, or guttural grating, has the additional meaning of sneer and scorn. There is a difference in the effect of this sign on a low and on a higher pitch. In the latter case, it has more of the character of railery, or mirthful comment than of wonder, positiveness, or admiration. It was saidj the wave of the octave, restricted to the lower range of pitch, might be used in grave discourse. Under this view, the first sylable of the following well-known line, from Hamlet, might receve the emphasis of this expressive intonation. Angels and ministers of grace defend us ! This sentence embraces astonishment, and the purpose of in- vocation. The positiveness of the latter requires the downward movement; astonishment, which in this case, implies something of inquiry or doubt, assumes the upward. But the invocation appears to be the engrossing interest; and for their respective expression, the sylable, An should have the intonation of the direct wave; for this, by its rising interval gives the doubtful astonishment, and by its subsequent fall, the final and more pow- erful impression of the invocation. In the following notation of this exclamatory sentence, I have set the direct wave of the octave on the first sylable An, which on its indefinite quantity, beautifully receves it. On grace an emphatic radical skip is made to a fifth above the current melody, with a subsequent rapid concrete of the downward fifth ; for the time of this word will not bear the slow concrete of that interval. The other sylables have, in the diagram, the concrete, and the 434 EMPHASIS OF THE EQUAL WAVE. radical pitch of a tone; and the Triad of the cadence, with a downward concrete to each constituent: yet for a full expression of the state of mind they may take-on, and perhaps, do require a radical transfer to the upper line, with a rapid concrete of some wider falling intervals, as we described this form of intonation, in the seventeenth section^ thereby to contribute their positive, but fainter influence, to that of the two emphatic words; the whole, with the exception of the rise on the first sylable, being expres- sive of the earnestness of the invocation.* An gels and min — is — ters of grace de — fend us! I 1 1 * • « [....* J * t T e 408 VOCAL SIGNS OF THOUGHT AND PASSION. "We have learned that the means of expression are always applied in combination. There must be at least two conjoined, signs than any one species, but perhaps fewer than all; the principal difference consisting in his power over the structure and chain of the literal and sylabic function. Upon the ground of this identity, and with the assistance of an exact measure- ment, and definite nomenclature of the human voice, afforded by this essays What is (here to prevent the voices of animals being taken as one of the designations of species, in the systematic arrangement of Zoology? Naturalists have sometimes attempted this in a rude way, by a reference to alphabetic sounds, and to the modes of time and stress in words and phrases. When boys without the least attention to the difference of vocality in the cases, find a resemblance in the shrill summer-whistle of the American partridge, to the words 'bo-bob-white;' and think they pronounce the short repeated phrase of the 'whip-poor-will;' in its name, which some of the native Indians with closer imitation, call muc-ha-tvis; the similarity lies between the impression of the accentual stress and the time of utterance in the two cases; for the whistle and the phrase, as well as many mechanical noises, resemble, at the whim of the listener, any words with an equal number of sylable-like impulses, and the same condition of quantity and accent. Birds in the endowment of voice, have First; A single Chirp, including sev- erally, every variation of vocality, time, and force, with every form of intona- tion, from the feeblest effort in the simple interval, to movements of wider con- cretes and waves, in the cry, the shriek and scream; and in some cases, even the note of song. Second; A phrase, of two, three, or four constituents, sev- erally of every vocality, time, force, and every form of intonation. Third; A Medley, composed of a heterogeneous succession of chirps, and phrases. Fourth; A Melody, such as it is, of rapid concretes, of the singer's 'pure tone^' in 'liquid,' smooth, and brilliant vocality^ of varied force, and intonation; but without bar, cadence, or key. This melody is distinguished by its continuous course of greater or less duration, without the disjointed interruptions that occur in the medley. Some birds; I omit their systematic namt 1 ^ have only the chirp; as our sparrow, king-bird, swalloAV, the woodpecker tribe, the blue- jay, and various hawks. Others, as our yellow-bird, robin, red-bird, partridge, blue-bird and whipperwill, have the chirp and phrase. Others again, the chirp and melody, as our thrush, cat-bird, wren, and perhaps the oriole, meadow- lark, and black-bird. The mocking-bird, and the canary, have the chirp, and the medley, as a remarkable case: and a few others properly called singing birds; but of which I cannot, speak from observation; may have the chirp, the phrase and the melody, under the most agreeable character. The exact and broad observer; for the peering Naturalists do not yet seem to know, what comparative phonology means, nor that the subject of the voice is part of natural history -5 will kindly excuse the errors of this description. It is offered only as a faint and broken light, obscurely showing one of the outer doors of this interesting department of knowledge: and now held-up, with the assistance of our present analysis, from memory of rural and pastime observa- VOCAL SIGNS OF THOUGHT AND PASSION. 469 and there may be more. Thus guttural grating, aspiration, and the different forms of stress are necessarily applied to some tion made at school on the borders of the Susquehanna before my thirteenth year. And would I could forget how often in thoughtless pleasure, I may have given disquietude or pang to those innocent lives, that afforded the means of my present contented occupation; and that still bring up so many juvenile memorials of time and place, in recording the forms of their intonation. After what is here said, on the general character of the voices of Birds, and with the light, of classification and description contained in this essay, a culti- vated car would not have much difficulty in ascertaining, whether the chirp of a bird is in the concrete or the radical pitch of a semitone, second, or other interval: of how many constituents the phrase consists; what, in the medley, are the places of pitch; with the kind and order of its phrases; and what, the concrete and discrete in the melody. As far as observation extends, we know^ the voice of birds is unchangeable in the species; it is therefore as well entitled to nomenclature, provided it can be assigned definitely, as the feathers, beak, and claws. If language had never furnished discriminative names for color and form, even these characteristics, like those of the voice, would never have been known in the descriptions of ornithology : or rather, ornithology as a classifica- tion, would be unknown. Without extending our observation to the whole range of animals, within which we might severally find all the varieties of the human voice, even to the protracted note of song, in the frog; I here give an outline of the vocal func- tions of the Mocking-bird^ ilustrative of the powers which generally belong to its class. The Mocking-bird has every variety and degree in Yocality. from the delicate chirp of the sparrow, and harsh scream of the jay, to the guttural bass of the clucking of the hen. He uses every variation of Time, from a mere point of sound, to the quantity of our most passionate interjections. He has command over all the intervals of the scale, both ascending and descending, in the discrete as well as the concrete pitch. His simple concrete exhibits the proper structure of the radical and vanish. He executes the wave in its equal and unequal, its direct and inverted forms; yet I cannot say, he uses its double movement. He exhibits all the forms of Stress on the concrete: the compound constitutes his shake. It is the diatonic shake, and consists, on its different occasions, of from five or six to ten or twelve iterations. It is not so rapid as the human shake, and consequently wants its liquidity ; nor does it ever end in a ; turn,' but passes carelessly to any effort that follows. This shake is sometimes made on a wider interval than the second: but it is a sluggish movement, and consists of only two or three repetitions, as we sometimes hear it in singers, of great execution. And it is worthy of remark, that in this slowness, the compound stress is plainly distinguishable. He uses the tremor, both on a continuous line, and with its rising and falling tittelar skips. All this comprehensive exercise of the throat, has individually the form of either chirp or phrase. The continued rounds of voice, which at night, sometimes last for hours, form therefore a medley of chirps and phrases, without successive similarity in the relation of time, vo- 470 VOCAL SIGNS OF THOUGHT AND PASSION. interval of pitch. The interval of pitch must be united with time, whether the quantity is long or short. The natural sign cality, force or pitch; and altogether without rythmus, cadencial close, or key. In this medley the phrases excede the chirps in number; but I cannot say, how many of each are used. Perhaps twenty kinds would include them all: and supposing these to be differenced by time and vocality, there would be more. Each set of the chirps and phrases, as it returns through the medley, may vary in the number of its repetitions. A chirp may be single, or may be repeated two or three times, or oftener. A phrase of two constituents may in the re- turns of the medley have three, four, or more repetitions of these two ; or as sometimes happens in the shake, ten or twelve: and it is the Same with a phrase of the tremor. The phrase of three or four constituents, which last is rarely heard, has fewer repetitions than the more simple ones; the chirp is most frequently heard only once. The whole medley then, has no regularity in the return of its several voices, nor in the number of their repetitions, to con- stitute it a Melody. It was first said by Somebody^ perhaps himself a parrot in human character-; though this bird mocks all others, he has no 'notes' of his own: and then Everybody, mocking somebody's say, Nobody thought of doubting it. Yet upon this very notion of exclusive property in the voice, he has more 'Notes' of his own than any other bird: and having within his compass, almost the whole constituency of song, whether human, or Volucrab, for Ornithology wants this adjective^ it would not be surprising, if other birds should recognize some of their supposed property, in his. When frequenting farms, with pigeons, hens, turkeys, and guinea-fowls, all around him; and when in the fields of Virginia, all day pierced by the whistle of the partridge^ with his own 'notes' almost stifled at night, by the panting voices of a whole settlement of whipperwills, he has never, within my knowledge, been heard to mock their phrases; though master perhaps of all the simple sounds that severally compose them. And certainly no Indian Farrinelli ever gave him an exarapleof the shake. Mimic then, as with his own natural voice, they would make him, it would have been a kindly restraint on those who have slandered him, to have had a natural ear of their own to prevent it. We have learned-; the vocal constituents of the song of the Mocking-bird, like the vocal signs in speech, are few in number; but in each case, our igno- rance of the individual signs, leaving us to regard only their numerous combina- tions, has created a belief that they are infinite. A certain vocality, or an interval maybe heard under a variation in time; and the same concrete, or tremor, or shake may differ in vocality, and in its places of pitch. The rule for the signs of passion, in speech, is strictly applicable to the voices of sub-animals, as regards those sounds which are purely vocal and separate from words. The repeated chirp, which seems to be the idle and unmeaning diatonic voice of birds, is generally a short quantity, on a single rising or falling concrete second, or third, and rarely, as far as I have observed, on the wider intervals. A prolongation of the chirp is usually expressive of their passions and appetites. Pain, love, and fear, are always exhibited in the move- VOCAL SIGNS OF THOUGHT AND PASSION. 471 may be heard joined to the words of the artificial; and of the natural, there must be two simultaneous, and there may be more. Not one form of expression can exist separately; and we may have under a single sylabic impulse, a long quantity, a wide interval, aspiration, and stress, all simultaneous in effecting a particular purpose in speech. The following is a summary of the instinctive or vocal signs, denoting the states of mind, we have called reverentive, and passionative. In the thirty-fourth section, it was proposed to employ the terms Piano, and Forte, for the degrees of force, respectively above and below the distinct and becoming audibility of that well-bred conversation, which equally avoids an overbearing loud- ness on one side, and a fashionable mincing, or a faint-mouthed and perplexing affectation, on the other. And first ; The Piano of the Voice. Some states of mind, together with merit of the semitone. But I am agreeably led on towards an arrangement, when I designed only to propose the scheme to others. The limited and perhaps imperfect manner in which, from a neglect of full observation, I have described this single instance of volucral intonation, may however show, that as there is now a system and nomenclature for the voices both of the garrulous, and mis- chievous Demagogue of American Assemblies, and of this harmless Polyglot of the American grove, there would be no great difficulty in classifjnng with pre- cision, more manageable individualities of sound, in the other departments of vocal Zoology. This subject is at least curious, if not useful; yet it lies out of my way, The sciences have large volumes of compilation: let us have from some Naturalist with a good ear, a little book of original truth, on the inquiry here proposed. Let it be done by pure and personal observation. Let the author not lose his strong breath of usefulness and fame, by a puerile precipitancy after reputation; nor hasten with his unripeness, in the market-like fear of being forestalled. Patient, enthusiastic, and unostentatious study.* independent observation and thought* and a disinterested love of truths with their sure and great results in science, are always solitary in an age, and cannot therefore be forestalled ; and on this point, as in promises under another name, it will be with those who seek the unaltered, and unalterable truths of nature, that the last in its proper season, shall be First. I add at the time of this sixth Edition, that forty years ago, the preceding Note was offered to the attention of the Naturalist; who with a prying and industrious ambition to have a new Bug, or an Old Fossil-bone named after himself, so narrows the scope of his duty, as to render him indifferent to the fact, that the sub-animal voice is embraced by Natural History, and is an in- teresting, if not a distinguishing part of Zoological classification. 472 VOCAL SIGNS OF THOUGHT AND PASSION. certain conditions of the body that may be combined with them, are properly expressed by a piano, or moderated voice, in cur- rent discourse. These states, and conditions are those of hu- mility, modesty, shame, doubt, irresolution, apathy, caution, repose, fatigue, and prostration from disease. They generally employ the simple diatonic melody : some however, with a piano or a feeble utterance, use the semitone, and the wave of the second. Of this kind are pity, grief, and awe. The Forte of the Voice. This sign, as the reverse of the last, is appropriate to states of mind directing muscular energy, and vivid degrees of passion. Some of these states are signified by a : high degree of force ; for in addition to those which employ it as a leading characteristic, such as rage, wrath, fear, and horror, some that depend for their expression, chiefly on intonation or accentual stress, do at the same time assume the character of forte or loudness. Of this class are astonishment, exultation, and laughter. Quickness of Voice. Inasmuch as quickness of the current melody generally goes with Short Quantity, in individual syla- bles, we do not make separate heads for these two subjects. Some states of mind, under this division, are likewise expressed by other signs, particularly by Loudness; as anger, rage, mirth, raillery and impatience. Many states having their principal signs in forms of intonation and stress, are joined also with quickness of voice. Slowness of Voice. Speakers who have no command over quantity, affect to be deliberate, by momentary rest between their words. But slow time in discourse, if not made by extended sylabic quantity, would from its frequent pauses, be monotonous and formal. Slow time and long quantity are an essential cause of dignified utterance, and are effected on the wave; this being the continuous return of an interval into itself? one of the means for producing an extension of time, without destroying the equa- ble concrete of speech. Slowness of time, with its constituent long quantity, is properly employed for many states of mind; as sorrow, grief, respect, veneration, dignity, apathy, contrition, and all others embracing refinement, and moderation. Vocality. It is unnecessary to repeat here all the terms denot- VOCAL SIGNS OF THOUGHT AND PASSION. 473 ■ ing the forms of this Mode. The following are some of them, with their respective states of mind annexed. Harshness is directed by anger and imperative authority : gentleness by grief, modesty and commiseration: the whisper, which is an aspirated voice, by secrecy. The falsette is heard in the whine of peevishness, in the high tremulous pitch of mirth, and in the piercing scream of terror. The full body of the orotund, in a cultivated speaker, gives satisfactory expression to solemnity and grandeur. The Rising and the Falling Semitone. The simple rise of the semitone is not a frequent form of expression, as most plaintive intonations call for long quantity, and are therefore properly represented by the wave of this interval. Still complaint, grief, and other states of like import, may sometimes be made with an earnestness, requiring a short sylabic time. In this case the voice cannot bear the delay of the wave, and effects all the purposes of semitonic intonation, by the simple rise or fall through the concrete, with the addition when necessary, of the radical or vanishing stress. The Rising and the Falling Second or Tone. Those states of mind, called thoughts, in contradistinction to passions^ those nar- ratives or descriptions, which denote things as they are in them- selves, without reference to our relation to them, on the point of pleasure or pain, desire or aversion, interest or injury, are all re- presented by the plain unobtrusive interval of the second, either in its upward or downward course. The various uses of the voice, properly called Expression, have something so striking in their character, that the attentive observer may easily recognize them. When there is an absence of this expression, he may conclude^ the current of speech is in the diatonic melody. The Rising Third, Fifth and Octave. These intervals severally express different degrees of the same state of mind: the distinc- tions between the states themselves are designated by the verbal signs that describe them. In their varying extent, they represent interrogation, as moderate, dignified, or earnest. Combined with other vocal means they add to the question, particularly on the octave, the character of quaintness, sneer, and derision. With aspiration they have the effect of the downward intervals, and in- 31 474 VOCAL SIGNS OF THOUGHT AND PASSION. dicate serious surprise and its congenial states. They express a conditional meaning, on emphatic words. Guttural vibration adds scorn to a question on the wider of these intervals; and joins to their character in emphasis^ haughtiness, disdain, re- proach, indignation, and contempt. As the deliberate execution of these intervals requires long quantity, they have not the ex- tended time, and consequently, not the solemn and dignified character, they assume when doubled into the wave. The Downward Third, Fifth and Octave. These severally ex- press, both different degrees of the same state of mind, and states of mind different among themselves. They are emphatically the signs of surprise, astonishment, wonder, and amazement; and although these states are not identical, still, each in its pecu- liarity, is represented upon these falling intervals: the specific difference being marked, either by their varied extent, or by the conventional phrase to which they are applied. These intervals also denote a positiveness, and a settled conviction on the part of the speaker; hence they are given to phrases of authority, com- mand, confidence, and satisfaction. A downward movement, we have learned, also produces the terminative repose of a cadence; and consequently when not joined with force, is well suited to express the state of quietude^ in resignation, despair, and the condition of mind which attends fatigue. And yet any difference, under all these cases, of a similar intonation, is distinguished by their respective conventional language. The Wave of the Semitone. The expression of the simple rise and the fall of the semitone was noticed above; but its return or contrary flexure into the wave, is the most common form of this expressive interval. There is scarcely a vocal sign which repre- sents so many and such various states of mind; the specific dis- tinction of the cases, being made by the descriptive phrase. The wave of the semitone differs from the simple interval, in the dig- nity derived from its extended quantity, and in its continued expression, from a repetition of the interval by its contrary flexure. Sorrow, grief, vexation, chagrin, repining, contrition, impatience, peevishness, compassion, commiseration, condolence, pity, love, fondness, supplication, fatigue, and pain, with what- ever varieties may exist among them, are still, through the differ- VOCAL SIGNS OF THOUGHT AND PASSION. 475 ence of the conventional sign, all expressed by the wave of the semitone. The Wave of the Second. The interval of the second, either in a rising or falling direction, being the voice of plain unimpas- sioned thought, is purely a diatonic sign, and not a means of expression. Still as the downward return of this interval into the form of the wave, produces a long quantity, it necessarily adds to the second, the peculiar effect of that quantity-* and when duly extended, gives to thoughtive discourse its full character of dignity, and grandeur; to the exclusion of the intrusive, and therefore inappropriate use of force, quality, abruptness, and the wider intervals of intonation. The Waves of the Third, Fifth and Octave. The forms of the wave are so various, that it would far excede the design of this Work to enumerate them-; and to assort them with the passions. The principles that govern their expression were unfolded, in the twenty-fifth, and six following sections. The character of the constituent intervals of these waves has great influence in determining their respective expressions. The upward vanish of the last constituent of the inverted form has the effect of inter- rogation; and the downward course of the last constituent of the direct, that of surprise. If then these two contrary forms of the wave have, respectively, through their final constituent, the same character as the separate and simple rise and fall of the interval, there might seem to be no necessity for their use. Yet supposing the effects to be identical, which however, may not always be the casej the wave affords besides, important means for extending the quantity of sylables, and consequently for expressing certain states of mind, with deliberate dignity. In the double form, the wave denotes sneer, mockery, petulance, contempt, and scorn; still these last two are more conspicuously exhibited by conjoin- ing aspiration with the single wave. The Radical Stress. From the forcible character of this stress, it is employed for increasing the impressiveness of the other vocal signs of the passions, capable of receving it. Although it is more particularly applicable to immutable sylables, yet when we read rapidly, it is used even on those of indefinite quantity: but rapid reading necessarily weakens its force. Mirth, impatience, anger, 470) VOCAL SIGNS OF THOUGHT AND PASSION. and rage, are generally uttered with haste, and therefore take on this stress, in emphatic places. It is employed on imperative words; for it has a degree of positiveness, similar to that ex- pressed by the downward intervals of intonation. The Median Stress. The radical stress is used for abruptly enforcing expression on short sylables. The median gradually and smoothly swells the voicej and this requires a long quantity, together with a deliberate and graceful utterance. I say, to- gether with deliberation; as long quantities do sometimes assume the abrupt opening of the radical, or the final jerk, of the vanish- ing stress. The states of mind, calling for median forcej par- ticularly on the dignity of the second, and the plaintiveness of the semitone^ are those represented by waves of the various inter- vals. Of these kinds are awe, respect, solemnity, reverence, and supplication, that make our division of inter-thoughtive expres- sion. This median stress may perhaps, be executed on an ex- tended rise or fall of the simple fifth and octave; or the wide downward vanish of surprise, and wide upward vanish of inter- rogation, may sometimes be invested with this graceful form of force. The Vanishing Stress. This stress, and its expression have been so particularly noticed, in a former section, that it is un- necessary here to repeat the detail. Although far inferior in dignity, to the median, it is sometimes highly expressive of the state represented by the semitone and wider intervalsj in grief, surprise, and interrogation. By impressing the extremes of these intervals on the ear, it points out their several ranges more dis- tinctly than they are marked by the attenuated vanish. It may seem to be a nice distinction, but it is nevertheless true and prac- tical, that care must be taken, not to let this stress run into the thorough form ; for this, as before remarked, rather obscures the interrogative expression. Compound Stress. So much was said, on this subject, in the thirty-eighth section, that the Reader is refered to it. The com- pound, like the median, vanishing, and thorough stress, and the loud concrete, cannot be made on short sylables. On prolonged quantity, it is the sign of energy or violence, in the passion repre- sented by it. VOCAL SIGNS OF THOUGHT AND PASSION. 477 The Thorough Stress. We refer to the thirty-ninth section, for an account of this sign of rudeness, and vulgarity, when ap- plied to long sylabic quantity, in current discourse. By the 4 hardness of its touch,' it destroys the graceful outline of the equable concrete; and heavily overlays that delicacy of grada- tion in the tinted vanish, so essential to the refine.d picture of thought and passion, in the wonderful design and coloring of true and natural speech. On the subject of the Loud Concrete, as a sign of expression, I have nothing to add worthy of record, beyond what has been previously said. The Tremor of the Second and of Wider Intervals. The tremu- lous movement of these intervals designates a number of states of mind widely different from each other. And here again we have an instance of a principle widely influential in the expression of the passions ; for these states, though set within the same gen- eral-frame of intonation, have their specific divisions marked by the conventional terms which describe them. The tremor of the second and of wider intervals, is employed for exultation, mirth, pride, haughtiness, sneer, derision, and contempt; and in effect- ing these expressions, the tittles may move through the simple rise or fall, or through the wave. The Tremor of the Semitone. The tremulous movement through the semitone, on a tonic element, is a form of the crying-voice. Used in sylabic intonation, it implies a deeper distress than that of the simple semitone; and expresses in a greater or less de- gree, the condition of suffering, grief, tenderness, and supplica- tion; yet widely as they may differ from each other, they alike fall, when carried to excess, into the tremulous intonation ; their difference being marked by the conventional phrase. The Aspiration. The pure vocality of the tonics and subtonics, when partly obscured by its union with aspiration, denotes many and widely different states of mind; yet with the aid of the con- ventional signs, it can clearly express them all. It accompanies the force of vociferation; is the faint sign of secrecy; and is joined with energetic utterance, when this is not strained into the falsette. It also indicates earnestness, curiosity, surprise, and horror. On a former occasion, contempt, sneer, and scorn, were 478 VOCAL SIGNS OF THOUGHT AND PASSION. assigned to the wave, particularly in its unequal form. Yet even this does not carry the full measure of their expression, if not conjoined with aspiration : and further, the union of aspiration even with simple upward and downward wider intervals, may represent these several states of mind. The Guttural Vibration. This is a harsh and grating vocal sign; and denotes all those states of mind classed under ill-humor; including dissatisfaction, peevishness, and discontent. But it likewise appears in the strained ferocity of rage, and revenge, and is the common sign to children and others of an emphatic rebuke. It also has an import of sneer, contempt, and scorn; all of which, under the same natural or vocal sign, are distin- guished by the conventional word or phrase. Of the Emphatic Vocule. This is exclusively an indication of force, and in the final abrupt elements of particular words is the sign of anger and rage, and of vehemence in any passion. It is however of rare occurrence; and being almost needless in culti- vated elocution, ought perhaps to be even more rare than it is. The Broken- Melody. The Current melody of Narrative style has been represented as a succession of diatonic intonations; yet employing occasionally, for dignified expression, a longer time, a fuler quantity, and a wider appropriate interval, both of concrete and of discrete pitch ; and intersected by pauses, applied as often as the thought, or expression may require. Sometimes, particular states of mind overrule the occasions, and grammatical proprie- ties of pausing, thereby producing notable rests after very short phrases, and even after every word, without reference to the con- nections of syntax. I use the term Broken-Melody, to signify the interruptions, sometimes produced by the excess of certain passions. The effect of this function will be perceved in the physiological explanation of it. In the section on the mechanism of the voice, two kinds of expiration were described; one resembling the act of sighing, whereby all the breath is sent forth, in a single impulse of greater or less duration; within which, scarcely more than one or two words can be articulated with ease. The other is used in com- mon speech. Within it, we are able to utter whole sentences, by VOCAL SIGNS OF THOUGHT AND PASSION. 479 a frugal use of the breath, in giving out small portions at a time, to successive sylables. From the former manner of expiration, seeming to draw-off all the contents of the lungs, it may be called the Exhausting-breath: and the latter, from its being held-back, to be dealt out in such portions as sylables require, may be called, for want of a better name, the Holding-breath. It was said formerlyj an infant begins to speak in the ex- hausting-expiration. It occurs likewise when we are 'out of breath, '.from exercise; and in the extreme debility of disease. Hence in these cases, there is often only one sylable heard in a single act of expiration. The breath of the tremulous movement of laughter and crying, is of this kind. The tremor does here create a slight difference; but if the Reader will for a moment make the experiment, he will percevej he quickly laughs and cries himself, so to speak, to the bottom of his breathj which is one cause of the distress, and even pain felt in excessive laughter ; nor can he, without an inhaling pause, continue the tremulous function, for that extended time, of expiration, which is so easily effected on the breath of common speech. Young children, in violent crying, sometimes so exhaust the lungs, that a considerable pause occurs between the ebb and flow of respiration, much to the alarm of inexperienced mothers. This exhausting-breath may be produced by a high degree of passionative excitement. Deep distress involuntarily creates it, in the form of a sigh. Hence, in the excess of mental suffering, or bodily pain, the holding-power is lost, and we speak in the exhausting-breath;* with but one, or at most, two or three words within a single act of expiration: and by these repeated inter- sections of the inhaling pauses, the Broken-melody is produced. The case will be the same, should an excess of excitement blend the tremor of laughter or of crying, with the current of discourse; for by the exhausting-power of these functions, the melody must be interrupted, through the frequent necessity for inspiration. It may be asked, why the breath cannot be rapidly recovered, as in the momentary rests of speech that are sometimes scarcely perceptible. The cause is thisj In the holding-expiration of common discourse, all the breath is not discharged from the lungs; such a quantity only is gradually spent upon the words, 480 VOCAL SIGNS OF THOUGHT ANp PASSION. as may be imperceptibly and instantly restored. But in speak- ing with the exhausting-expiration, there if 3 a discharge of nearly all the breath by an extreme contraction of tne chest; and the subsequent act of re-filing the lungs requires a degree of expan- sion and a depth of draught, that cannot be imperceptibly per- formed, and that occupy the time of the remarkable pauses in the Broken-melody. It is not necessary to speak of the phra ses of intonation, em- ployed in this peculiar melody. They may be of ever J species ; though, from the many interruptions of th£ current, the relation- ships of the phrases are not so perceptibl e nor so important in practical effect, as in the more connected s Pq uenc es of a common melody. I have here endeavored to open the way f° r a ^ u " an( * more precise description of the vocal signs of th< )u g nfc and passion, and for a systematic arrangement of them, w* tn the states of mind they severally express. They have been regarded as individuals, although not one is ever heard alone; in some instances many are united in a single act of expression, anc * they ma y De em ~ ployed in every manner of compatible c( )mDma tion. A feeble and a forcible sound cannot exist in the g am e impulse of utter- ance; yet either of these conditions may be conjoined severally with all the forms of pitch, or vocality, or time. No one in- terval of pitch can, during the same sylab 10 impulse, be another interval; but any interval may as occasi ons require, be simul- taneous in execution with any form of \^c&htj, time, or force. So in the wave, the intervals may be consecutive in all possible ways; and these ways, either in interval, or arrangement, may be conjoined with every exercise of the v °ice, not at variance with their definition. By the use then of the comparatively lifted number of Vocal signs here enumerated, together with the a ssistant means of Con- ventional language, the apparently infinite forms of expression in speech are produced. The preceding det a ^ °f these signs, and the numerical limitation of the terms of fheir nomenclature, at VOCAL SIGNS OF THOUGHT AND PASSION. 481 once afford an observer the means to survey, through the com- posure of a classifying reflection, the whole extent of this sup- posed infinity; and thereby, to change a vulgar and distracting wonder at immensity, into an inteligent admiration of the obvious union and intermutable variety of a few distinguishable con- stituents. The Reader may now perceve why I have considered the forms of expression, in their separate state; or have regarded only a few of their combinations. To give an extended detail of their possible groups, would be beyond my design in setting forth the broad Philosophy of speech. Nor is it necessary under a prac- tical view; for having analytically resolved the apparent com- plexity of speech into its assignable constituents, we cannot be at a loss to synthetically combine them, when necessary, for every purpose of expression. From a review of our history of the Instinctive signs of thought and passion, and a reference to the limited amount of their modes and forms, compared with the unlimited variety of mental condi- tions to be expressed, we are struck with the disproportion be- tween their respective numbers: and learn, how the deficiencies in the instinctive signs are supplied. For in the First place. The same vocal sign is used for more than one state of mind: as in the numerous class, respectively denoted by the semitone, and by the downward intervals. Second. Some of those states, generically represented by the same natural sign, have yet their specific difference marked by the artificial sign, or conventional language that describes them. The downward octave expresses equally, command, and astonish- ment; their difference, under the same intonation, being signified by the imperative word, and by the phrase that declares the astonishment. Third. A great number of the mental states have no instinc- tive or vocal sign, but depend, for their expression, altogether on descriptive language. There is no vocal sign by which a speaker can inform us, even if he would, of his avarice, his vanity, or his remorse. They must be shown in personal action, or be confessed by his verbal declaration. The possible combinations of all the modes, forms, degrees, and varieties of the voice, may furnish a 482 VOCAL SIGNS OF THOUGHT AND PASSION. sign for every thought and passion ; but this estimate and classi- fication having never yet been made, the subject must lay-over, for an age of the Physical Philosophy of the mind, as well as of the voice. Having throughout the preceding sections particularly described the constituents of speech, which in their various and respective uses, denote the mental states of thought and passionj I must offer a few remarks on the subject of that difficulty which a long habit of ignorance and error, in the old school of Elocution, may create in acquiring a practical command over the true and Natural System of the voice. When the meaning of our terms for the states of mind, and for their corresponding vocal signs is known, there will be no great hesitation in recognizing their exemplified distinctions, nor in acquiring a facility in executing them; and it will then be found, that the use of all the apparently novel modes and forms of the voice, in the manner proposed by our Scientific System, which has raised the alarm of difficulty, is only a return^ after ages on ages of conventional theory and delusion^ to the in- stinctive and truthful purpose and practice of what must have been the natural Archetype of Speech. For the developments of this volume have brought me to the conviction, that the system of plain diatonic melody, as a ground for the expressive intervals, is the true ordination of the speaking voice: and a reference to the universal wisdom of Nature, even under the vicious habits of man, shows, that as in the benevolence of her final causes, she is prone to good and not to evilj so, to give a particular instance, the voice is prone, 'as the sparks fly upwards,' to this ordination for denot- ing the two leading conditions of the mind. Under this view, it would appear, that when the design of Nature has not been per- verted or overruled, we should occasionally find examples of greater or less accordance with her adjusted system: and I must say, in support of this inference, that although I have never found a Speaker, conforming in all points to our proposed rulesj yet I have met with some instances, in which a natural tendency has so far prevailed, that its purposes have in a great measure been ac- complished; and others, in which it has not been so much con- founded or thwarted by corrupt example, as to prevent our scientific method, from developing the latent resources for proper VOCAL SIGNS OF THOUGHT AND PASSION. 483 and elegant speech. I here refer to science, as universally, a true picture of the things and laws of Nature; and, in our present case, as the means of preventing the influence of bad education and example, on the instinctive tendencies of the voice. He who has a knowledge of the constituents of speech, and of their powers and uses, is the potential master of the science of Elocution; and he must then derive from his ear, his perception of propriety, and his taste, the means of actually applying it with success. When this is accomplished, it will be foundj the performance of Scientific speech, is no more difficult to the Actor, than the performance of music is to thousands of little girls when- ever they are taught it: and that with a proper notation of the vocal signs of the former, one will be as easily read and executed at sight as the other. I have read somewhere, that the Ancients practiced what they called Silent Reading. It is possible, they meant, going over in mental perception, the forms of intonation, and of the other modes of the voice; for we knowj this unuttered reading is practica- ble, and may be employed, both on our own peculiar manner, w T hen we think of it, and on that of others, when we have the memorial power of silently imitating them. This is the process of the Mimic ; for his memory of any peculiarity in the vocal sign of those he imitates, must silently precede his audible utter- ance of it. But the faculty of Silent Reading can be effectively exercised, for pleasure and improvement, only under a clear men- tal picturing of a scientific system of the voice, and of its precise nomenclature. By our present analytic knowledge of the states of mind, and of the vocal signs of thought and passion; and a conventional notation of those signs, we may with a perception of our own manner of speaking, and a memory of the speech of others, be able to silently practice the proprieties of elocution, and to correct its errors, by the silent use of an instructed intel- ect. We know that the perceptions of the several senses are represented in the memory; that the images on the eye and vi- brations on the ear, are clearer and more readily revived, than through the others; and that we may memorially think of any peculiarity in the voice. In intonation, the different intervals; in force, the different stresses; in time, the different quantities; 484 THE MEANS OF INSTRUCTION IN ELOCUTION. and the various vocalities and pauses^ when once perceved and named, have their respective characters so impressed on the memory, that we can think-them, in its silent reading. This process of memorial perception with audible, is like its process with visible signs. The Painter has on his memory the ocular image of a real, or of an invented subject; and lays on his tablet the visible copy of his memorial lines and colors. The musical Composer has in his memory, impressions of all the constituents of song; and silently arranging them by his mind's ear, notes down his melody and harmony, for others either silently or audi- bly to read. There is no difference then, between the method in a silent reading of music, and that of a silent reading of speech. Indeed, from the less complex structure of its melody, the read- ing of speech should be the easier of the two. I have near me at this moment, notations from scenes in Mam- let, and in Lear; sent to me by one, who acquired a full knowl- edge of the Scientific system, and its practical application, from an unassisted study of this Volume; as the volume itself was written from the study of Nature alone. Whether these notations, and my opinion of them, are correct or otherwise, I can both silently and audibly read them ; and thereby have the means of ilustrating to others, the truth and the practical application of the subject before us. SECTION XLIX. Of the Means of Instruction in ^Elocution. I have endeavored to set before the Reader, a copy of the all- perfect Design of Nature, in the construction of Speech. It is necessary, if we may still carry on the figure, to furnish at the same time, a 'Working plan,' to him who may wish to build up for himself, a delightful Home of Philosophy and taste, or a popular Temple of Fame, in Elocution. If the Header is one of those, who from disappointment in THE MEANS OF INSTRUCTION IN ELOCUTION. 485 higher hopes, have at last resolved to receve their Station in life, through the approbation of ignorance; and who in their accom- plishments are careless of rising above the discernment of their unthinking Admirers, let him pass by this section. A little will serve his purposes; and the instinct of his ambition, without the wise designs of human assiduity, will enable him to be easily the file-leader of his herd. But if he beleves in that fine induction of the Greeks, that 'good things are difficult;' if he sees the suc- cessful pretender, still restless and dissatisfied, in having made captives only of the Ignorant; if he desires to work for high and hard masters, and to take his ultimate repose by the side of their ever- during approbation, he may receve from the following pages, some assistance towards the accomplishment of his resolution to acquire the art of Reading- Well. Can Elocution be taught? This question has heretofore been asked through ignorance. It shall in another age, or I mistake the prevailing power of science, be asked only through folly. The skeptics on the subject of the practicability of teaching elocution, appear under three classes. To the First belong those, who knowing the ways of the voice have never been broadly and distinctly traced, beleve they never can be reduced to assignable rules. This opinion is grounded on the thought that the ex- pressive effects of speech procede from some 'occult quality,' or metaphysical working of the 'spirit;' which however, is neither high nor low, loud nor soft; nor any of the physical and ap- preciable modes of vocal sound. They who carelessly overlook the due revelation, which Nature never withholds from the close and fervent observer, seem to have that notion of vocal expres- sion, which poetical school-girls have of the smiles, and 'side-long glances' of their interesting young admirers^ that they are not a palpable effect of the physical form of the face, in its state of rest, and in its various motions; but a kind of immaterialism, which darts from the eye and breathes from the lips; a 'soul,' as it were in the countenance, which is yet, in the words of the song, 'neither shape nor feature.' The skepticism of the Second class assumes that accomplish- ments in elocution are the result of certain indescribable powers of 'genius,' and that the happy possessor of them is the produc- 486 THE MEANS OF INSTRUCTION IN ELOCUTION. tion of one of 'Nature's moments of enthusiasm.' Such sleight of tongue, to hide the plain agency of natural causes, is not dis- dained by many who possess powers, sufficient to set them far above the stale-grown tricks for reputation. He who has the truth and modesty of a master in his art, knows that he is dis- tinguished from the thousands who surround him, not more by a superiority over their vulgar notions on the subject of ambition, and the chances of success, than by a singleness in purpose and zeal, and the accumulative power of a self-gathering docility: nor does he withhold instruction, in the fear of rivalship; for with justified confidence in a well-tried knowledge, he persuades himself, that if any useful purpose should make it necessary, he can afterwards, always keep pace with a competitor, and then surpass himself. Those who constitute the Third class are too inteligent to be- leve in this mystical doctrine of the 'Inspiration of genius;' yet they hold, that the art of reading-well can be taught only by im- itation. Elocution may unfortunately too often have satisfied its faith with the creed of Imitation ; and thereupon, set-up its different Idols, for public worship. But when has the world, on a single subject of inquiry, ever found, in that faith or fiction which sees evidence in what is not to be seen alike by all, any other result than that of sophistical labor, without product, and illiberal quarrels, without end. Hence the vain conceit of form- ing a school of Imitative Elocution: for the several partizans of different favorites will never agree to raise any one individual, to examplary superiority. An example to be useful and permanent in art, must be set-up with the consent of all: and that consent can be drawn only from a common and accessible source of in- struction and knowledge, not from individual or party admiration. It was therefore, under ignorance of there being a common source of knowledge in the few and classified constituents of speech, that such a wavering notion as Imitation became the deceptive Ignis Fatuus of Elocution, in absence of that yet imleading Cynosure to every eye alikej the steclfast unity of Principles in the Art. It is the design of this essay, to furnish from Nature, and not from variable examples of human authority, those describable truths, on which all may begin their agreement; and by extend- THE MEANS OF INSTRUCTION IN ELOCUTION. 487 ing this consent, may at last raise an observative and universal school of Elocution. I must here notice the objection, often made to teaching Elocu- tion by systematic rulesj that it will necessarily produce a formal, and affected, or as it is called without foundation, a theatric style of speech. This charge is made either by those who do not, in all cases, know the meaning and power of instructive principles, which are only the exponents of a classified knowledge in the arts; or by those who have had the experience of some very loose and narrow rules for their own narrow and unsuccessful schemes.* * An especial form, and the fulest force of this objection has lately been embodied into a so-called system of Elocution, carelessly woven out of common learning, and fair-faced 'reasonings,' first published under the Article, Rhetoric, in the Encyclopedia Metropolitana ; and subsequently under the name of a pro- found, as all obscure writers are thought to be, and accomplished Archbishop; thus* adding an authority of high official and personal character, to the out- spread influence, and confirmatory support of a sworn brotherhood of British Contributors, of the foremost reputed inteligence, learning, taste, and Scientific Hank, in the United Kingdom. In one of our prefaces, we recorded the magisterial decision of the President of the American Philosophical Society, that any analysis of the expression of the human voice is impossible. And I have now to quote from a high dignitary of the Church, the equally dogmatic declaration, that the employment of a suc- cessful analysis, far from leading to a proper, energetic, and elegant use of the voice, would entirely pervert and corrupt it. In the Fourth Part of his Rhetoric, the first chapter, and fourth section, he says: 'But there is one principle run- ning through all their precepts,' [the precepts of those who would Leach elocution by precept,) 'which being, according to my views, radically erroneous, must, if those views be correct, vitiate every system founded upon it. The principle I mean is, that in order to acquire the best style of Delivery, it is requisite to study analytically the emphases, tones, pauses, degrees of loudness, which give the proper effect to each passage that is well delivered; to frame rules founded on the observation of these ; and then, in practice, deliberately and carefully to conform the utterance to these rules, so as to form a complete artificial system of Elocution.' ( Whether the writer had ever seen the 'Philosophy of the Human Voice,' does not appear; and the case is the stronger if he had not^for, had he read it through, the objection could not have been more directly pointed at its analysis and rules.) ' That such a plan not only directs us into a circuitous and difficult path, to- wards an object which may be reached by a shorter and straighter, but also, in most instances, completely fail? of that very object, and even produces, oftener than not, effects the very reverse of what it designed, is a doctrine for which it will be necessary to offer some reasons.' 488 THE MEANS OF INSTRUCTION IN ELOCUTION. This objection is grounded on some method, supposed to be free from this analytic formality, and preceptive affectation; and called, the 'Natural Manner.' But this manner having no de- scribable standard of its own truth, propriety and taste, is vaguely refered to an 'occult' animal instinct, under that boastful term of human vanity, Prerogative 'Genius:' which, through its untrained and wayward ignorance, would, with an impudent claim to an in- born privilege, reject the wise and prevailing efforts of educated art. Yet instinct even when thus nominally dignified into 'Genius,' seems to be nothing more than the result of an organ- ization prepared by nature to receve the impression of directive causes, which thereupon act necessarily, to excite the organic power, limited as it may be, and to exercise it to its end. As this organization of instinct begins to work itself into mind, the knowledge thereby acquiredj for we perceve mind, only through knowdedgej creates by slow degrees, another state, or another more complicated and effective mental organization, so to speak; Now, the good Prelate's 'reasons' are employed, on the one hand, against an analytical method^ which,, from not comprehending, as it seems, the purpose of resolving the voice into its constituents, he thinks would produce an Artificial manner of speech, and on the other, in favor of his notion of what he calls the Natural manner; not drawn, as it should be, from the ordination of God and Nature, but founded on the following w??founded remark, by Adam Smith-; to- wards the close of his reflections on 'the Imitative Arts,' already refered-to at the end of our nineteenth section. 'Though in speaking, a person may show a very agreeable tone of voice, yet if he seems to intend to show it-; if he appears to listen to the sound of his own voice, and as it were to tune it into a pleas- ing modulation, he never fails to offend, as guilty of a most disagreeable affec- tation.' To show the general bearing of this 'reasoning,' we here make an analogical application of Adam Smith's and the Prelate's thought to another related esthetic art. Thoujjh a Painter might please us in executing a well invented subject of a picture^ yet if he seems to intend to show his skill, or to look at his own com- position, and as it were, to approve of the principles of his art, in their accom- plishment of his design, his coloring, and shaded light, thereby to bring his purpose to a finished effect-; he never fails to offend, as guilty of a most dis- agreeable iifr'cctation. It has been one of the objects of our Work to answer 'reasoning' by fact: and though we here notice the Prelate's adopted, and unsifted faith and notions, the serious argument against them, which we do not require, others will here- after draw, for their satisfaction, from the demonstrative answer of Observation and Time. THE MEANS OF INSTRUCTION IN ELOCUTION. 489 on which the objects or facts of an art act more broadly as direc- tive causes, to excite the no less necessary and unerring purposes, and practical ends of science. The practical ends of Elocution, as an elegant art, are, to denote our thoughts, and passions, with truth, propriety, and taste, and consequently without the error and deformity of awkwardness, or affectation. When therefore, by analytic knowledge of the constituents of an artj principles, or classifications of its facts, for some effective purpose are framed, these principles become, as it were, the scientific instinct of the new and more complicated organization of the mind, in its state of acquired knowledge: just as in its own way, the original and more simple organization of nature, exercises its limited and merely animal instinct. And as this instinct, or call it 'genius,' of the Old Elocution produces what the objectors to the use of Analytic Rules, assume to be the propriety and grace of its 'Natural Manner;' so the regeneration of the mind, as we de- scribed it, to a new life of accumulated knowledge, has neces- sarily a tendency, in its scientific instinct, towards the natural manner of a more comprehensive, refined, and effective Elocu- tion. It is then the limited animal instinct of the Old School, and its ignorance of the wide resources of the scientific instinct of the New with its analytic, more exact, and exalted natural mannerj that does really produce in itself the formality, and the theatric affectation, which it deprecates and blindly charges on a better system. For it must be borne in mind, that the important vocal Mode of Intonation, outlawed as it is from all inquiry, has with its power of expression, been heretofore employed, whether by those who adopt, or who reject the rulesj for there is little difference in the event of their failuresj only with the intonative, and limited resources of the brute.* * This charge of a Theatric manner on any pompous or affected speaker, is one of the innumerable instances of the inconsistent and muddled human mind. The world of Taste goes to the Theater to hear the purest style of Elocution. and thinks it so, or it would not continue its approbation. Dignitaries of the Church and their plebean followers, who do not go to this Wicked Place, would depreciate the character of an elegant amusement they dare not, with worldly motives, enjoys and therefore condemn it. From some of their metaphysical notions, or from Shakspeare's caricature of a particular 'robustious fellow tear- ing a passion to ragsj' they speak of any ostentatious manner, whether in school - 32 490 THE MEANS OF INSTRUCTION IN ELOCUTION. It has been the oversight and misfortune of the Old school of Imitation, that even with the striking analogies of Rhetoric, Music, Painting and the Landscape, severally founded on the relations of these Arts, to capacities and principles in the human mindj they never perceved, though they obscurely used without perceving, the equally elegant, and for human purposes, the more essential relations of the modes and forms of the voice, to the mental states of thought and passion ; and therefore remained deaf to the cries of sister-principles of propriety and taste, crav- ing to be admitted into the Esthetic family, as the New-born art of Elocution. From what is here said, we may offer three remarks on this ob- jection to the use of Rules in the Art of Reading. First. An attempt to teach by rules, under a partial knowledge of the con- stituents of speech, could never in the old school, except by chance, have been elegantly right; and must have been often formally and affectedly wrong. Second. It was from the want of the Universal Rules of Speech, drawn from a full analysis of its constituents, that led the old school, to conclude^ there could be none. And it was this want, that led its .followers, in groping after an indefinable excelence, whether natural or artificial, to fall into their inherent constraint and affectation; the real causes of which they had not a sufficient light of analysis and rule, to enable them to avoid. Third. The effect of our proposed system of analysis and principles for teaching the art of reading, and for insuring its freedom from formality and affectation, will be the same in every other art, whether useful or esthetic. In all, it is necessary to know what is to be done, and what means are to be thoughtfully employed, to do it well; to practice its rules, at first perhaps awkwardly, in closely and slowly thinking of their application^ and by this frequent repetition, to enable the act, so far to wean itself from the directive thought, as to become an effi- cacious habit; and finally, to use a full knowledge of the art, boys, or the Pulpit, as theatric. And according to the objector in the present casej instruction on the principles of vocal Time and Intonation must neces- sarily produce this Theatric affectation. I cannot, by the scale of our analysis, positively decide on the Archbishop's exemplification of his 'reasoning and argument,' from never having had the opportunity of hearing him read. THE MEANS OF INSTRUCTION IN ELOCUTION. 491 with almost the unperceved power of what we have metaphorically called a scientific instinct. The purely acquired human art of Swimming, unassisted by instinct, though learned with tedious effort^ directed by earnest thoughtj and only mastered at last by careful attention to every imitative and embarrassing niotionj is afterwards, from that attention fading into habit, successfully employed in danger* with the thought only of the shore to be reached, and the life to be saved: and in like manner, the purity, propriety, energy and elegance of rhetorical composition which though slowly perceved, and only thoroughly learned, by close attention to their particulars and to the rules that should govern them, as our unfriendly Prelate must have known by self-expe- rience^ are afterwards, without a perception of those particulars, applied in public oratory to the broad purposes of a well instructed and successful eloquence. I have often been led to consider the opposite characters of propriety in the style of Composition, and of impropriety in the Vocal habits of speakers. Our Western World is overrun by itinerant lecturers, and ubiquitous speech-makers of every sort; the same in class with the Older Sophistsj but without their careful Rhetoric, and the candid warning of their Name: yet however humble their subject-matter and their taste, the most insignificant and illiterate so to call them, are often as connected in their words and sentences as the orator of higher power and scholarship ; while in their respective intonations, and other modes of the voice, they are sometimes both-alike, often no more than negatively agreeable and correct, and generally, in various degrees indistinct, affected, monotonous, outrageous, or false, to a cultivated ear. Two causes at least may be assigned for this difference. Onej that the crowd of the world is too often satisfied with a careless manner in its affairs; and as the greater part of what is called Oratory, compared with the permanent words and works of Wis- dom, relates only to the events and opinions of the dayj it is looked upon as unnecessary to waste attention on the voice; especially under the belief, that Nature spontaneously directs what is here required. This is exemplified by the many in- 492 THE MEANS OF INSTRUCTION IN ELOCUTION. stances of deformed elocution, among the renowned dialectic speakers of the Senate, the Pulpit, and the Bar; with whom the vocal part of education, being considered as not essential, the Orator in his ambitious contentions, and delusions, thinks or finds, he does not need its assistance. Hence with a Slavery- agitator in the American Congress, and an Abolition-preacher about the streets, there is equally an ignorant disregard to the proper, and certainly to the elegant uses of the voice. The other cause shows why speakers are equally correct, or nearly so, in the grammatical character of their discourse. For having by truth or sophistry, to convince or to persuade their hearers, it must be with a connected order of thought, however defective or false the intonation. To render their language com- prehensible, they are obliged in childhood to learn the right per- ceptions of words; afterwards to acquire by book or imitation the proprieties of grammar, with the meaning of phrases and punctuation ; and finally to follow examples of a proper arrange- ment of words and sentences. In this case the speaker is com- pelled to acknowledge his ignorance and his obligation to learn. And as neither the Speaker nor the Audienceperceve a difference between the right and the wrong in the voicej ignorance with both being their defense against knowledge^ neither thinks it necessary to learn, and the speaker, like our Learned Prelate, regards the power of properly using his voice as a natural gift, which would be forfeited by the interference of systematic in- struction. We can here perceve the causes why respectively, Parlimentary Burkesj and itinerant Fanatics with other Demagogues, follow the same rules of grammar and composition in their style; and follow no rule at all, in the corrupted instinct of their intonation. This is our view of some of the objections, made against an attempt to teach the Esthetic uses of the voice, by systematic and communicable principles. We will not confer importance on them by special refutation. In so doing, we should only record some vain opinions of this age, which a future one need not know. At the present time, let us not be concerned if the history of the voice contained in this essay, and the Plan of instruction founded THE MEANS OF INSTRUCTION IN ELOCUTION. 493 upon it, should be 'either stumbling-block or foolishness,' to the groping school of mystagogues and imitators.* * In addition to the impossibility of influencing those, who in the present age pass for Philosophers and Thinking men, and who assert that Elocution cannot be taught by analysis and rule; it is no less hopeless to persuade those to learn, who, not quite so impenetrable as the former, only maintain^ it would give no return for the trouble. Why should we labor, they ask, to acquire an art which when needed will be no more than the spontaneous result of thought and passion : or why improve that which some visionary and interested re- former tells us, is not well done already? This question is so broadly answered by the record of facts in this volume, that I shall here merely ilustrate its erroneous supposition, by comparing our humble subject of Elocution with the transcending subject of Government: the principles of which, equally with those of speech, every one thinks he compre- hends by intuition. Unlike as these subjects may seem when thus presented together, they have through ages, each in its own misguided efforts, shown the same proportion of grave pretensions, of unfounded or ill-applied facts, of erudite discussions, of indefinite precept, of contradictory practice, and of deplorable failure in its boasted promises. Each has had a thousand different and contending schools; more than thousands of examples of individual authority; with schools, and authorities variously overthrowing one another, and neither able to furnish a general principle, or instance, for universal approbation: no Speaker, whether by his 'Genius' or his 'Imitation' able to answer the accurate demands of the mind and ear: no sovereign Despot or Democratic sovereign, able to satisfy the wishes and the wants of the subject or the citizen: and each from a similar cause. One has no uniform rule of expression, drawn from nature, for direct- ing his speech; the other no uniform or consistent rule of Law, Morality, or Religion, to control his conduct. The speaker, ignorant of what is proper or elegant in the voice, falls into his 'natural manner,' and disputes himself into enmity with the 'natural manner' of another; the Governed, not finding what is wise and just, falls into the selfishness of his passions, and brings his differ- ence with others to a civil war. The Statesman narrows-down the great pro- blem, on the causes and cure of the anti-social vices of pride, vanity, avarice, ignorance and ambition, to the futile question of the comparative wisdom and the rights of the Many, and of the Few: just as the Elocutionist has narrowed the great purpose of the vocal means in nature, by a paltry classification of the disciples of the Art, into those of 'Genius' and 'Imitation.' But, in artful transformation, the Few in government through pride and wealth, assume the power of the Many: and the Many, by falsehood and fraud, assume the cunning of the Few. The many in government, are then made to beleve, that man is incapable of any other perception, than that of being a slave to the Prime management of a Royal Minister, or to the Prime Knavery of a self-serving Demagogue. The Many in Elocution are made to beleve, they can speak-well, only through the 'Inspiration of Identity,' or the 'natural manner' of the School. And bad readers, under the restrictive authority of 404 THE MEANS OF INSTRUCTION IN ELOCUTION. The preceding history furnishes materials, for raising elocution to the condition of a Regular Art, if not of a Science; and we must look to the comparisons, and conclusions of taste, for pre- cepts to direct the use of these materials. Our history will not only afford the means for reducing the arbitrary fashion of the voice, to something like that method and rule, to which the other fine arts have been already brought, among their educated and reflecting votariesj but it opens a new field on the subject of in- struction. All arts when reduced to their elements, have been recomposed into systematic order for teaching by the Primary School of those elements; and it now becomes us to try what time may be saved, what old views may be cleared from obscurity, and what wider knowledge obtained, by a rudimental plan in de- scribing the several modes of the voice, conveying the mental states of thought and passion. Language was long ago resolved into its alphabetic elements, and its Parts of speech. Wherever that analysis is known, the art of grammar is with the best success, conducted upon this method. If then the thoughtive and expressive uses of the voice should be taught by a similar analysis, the advantage would be no less, than from the alphabetic and grammatical resolution. In this way we teach a child its letters and their union into words: surely then, there is no cause why a clear perception of the varieties of stress, of time, and of intonation, and the power of knowingly employing them in current utterance, should not be acquired in a similar elementary manner. The art of reading- well consists in having all the constituents of speech, both alphabetic and expressive, under complete com- mand; to be through Nature's directive instinct, properly ap- the Old Elocution; and miserable sufferers, under make shift Monarchies and - Republics, are alike led to comfort themselves, respectively in their bad taste, and unhappiness, by these similar questions of passive submission : Why should we raise the ire of the Old School, with trying to read by the new analysis? and why should we disturb a Government by trving to reform it? when the Masters of vocal instruction and Imperial and Mass-meeting legislators, them- selves so incorrigible, cannot admit, that the art of Speech in one case, and of human happiness in the other, is not as perfect under the present order of things, as the purposes of knowledge and taste, and the rights of man can ever possibly require? THE MEANS OF INSTRUCTION IN ELOCUTION. 495 plied, for the impressive and elegant representation of every state of the mind. I shall not however in this section, consider the modes of the voice as expressive of thought or passion: but shall describe the means for providing the manageable material of speech, whenever thought or passion may require its use. If I were a teacher of elocution, I would frame a didactic system of elementary exercises, similar to that which taught me, whatever the well-read critic may find to be new, in this volume ; and would assign my pupil a task under the following heads: Of Practice on the Alphabetic Elements. Notwithstanding we are all taught the alphabet, we are not taught the true elements of speech : I would therefore require the pupil, to exercise his voice on the elements, as they are sounded in a strict analysis of words. In the present school-system of the alphabet, many vowels have no peculiar symbol, and nearly all the consonants when separately pronounced, are heard as sylables, not as ele- ments. If b and k and I, be sounded as respectively heard in b-aj, and Jc-mg, and l-ovej or, if we pause after these, several initial sounds have escaped the organs, we have the real element, instead of the compounds be, bay, and ell, as they are universally taught: and the like is true of all the consonants. Let the first lesson consist of a separate, an exact, and a re- peated pronunciation of each of the thirty-five elements, thereby to insure a true and easy execution of their unmingled sounds: the pupil being careful to pronounce, not the alphabetic sylable of the school, but the pure and indivisible vocal element; however unusual and uncouth that sound may in some cases, be to his ear. It may be asked^ if a careful pronunciation of words, in which these elements, though combined with others, must still be heard, would not give the necessary exactness and facility? I beleve it would not. When the elements are pronounced singly, they may receve an undivided energy of the organic effort, and therewith a clearness of sound, and a definite outline, that make a fine pre- parative for distinct and forcible pronunciation in the compounds of speech. And perhaps ho one who has neglected this elementary practice, is able to effect the vocality of b, d, and g, with the force, fulness, and duration, required on occasions, for the higher 496 THE MEANS OF INSTRUCTION IN ELOCUTION. powers and graces of elocution. The efficacy of this separate practice, in giving a command over the alphabetic sounds, is most remarkable in the r. The element r is a modification of the vocality of the subtonics, and denotes two different articulations. One is made by a quiet application of the tongue to the roof of the mouth; the other by its quick percussion against that part. The r produced by the first organic position, differs very little from the short tonic e-rr, and may be called the Quiet r. That made by percussion, the Percussive r. The latter has a distinctness of character and a body of sound, not possessed by the former-* and if the metaphor can be appreciated, the parts concerned in its formation seem to have a firmer grasp of the breath. Yet this Percussive r, even with its vigor, and satisfactory fulness, will be agreeable only when it consists of one, or at most, two or three strokes and re- bounds of the tongue : for should it be a continued vibration, the effect will be offensively harsh, if not expressly designed for a rough or energetic utterance; but even this should be avoided. The perfect r, for the purposes of distinct and impressive speech, should consist of a single slap and retraction : and it can be made in this manner, by diligent practice, on the solitary element. Besides the difficulty of acquiring strength and accuracy in this separate pronunciation^ certain combinations of the r, with other elements can be effected in an agreeable manner, only by assiduity. A subtonic or atonic that employs the tongue in one position, will not readily unite with an element, requir- ing a quick remove of the tongue to another part of the mouthy even when the element is produced, as in the quiet r, by a simple pressure of the tongue ; but the difficulty of transition is much increased, by the velocity necessary for the percussive r. Let us for instance, take the sylabic step from d to r, in the word dread. As the formation of d requires the tip of the tongue to be applied to the upper fore-teethj should r be taken quietly, the confluence of these elements may be easily made, by retracting the tongue to the contiguous place for forming the r. When however we roughen the word by the percussive r, the tongue is brought down from the teeth, towards its bed, in a kind of draw- ing-off, for making thereby, a sudden impulse against the roof of THE MEANS OF INSTRUCTION IN ELOCUTION. 497 the mouth; and it calls for both effort and skill, to accomplish these successive movements with that quickness, which sylabic coalescence requires. There is also considerable difficulty in uniting the percussive r with some of the tonics; and the cause is analogous to that above described. When the percussive r is set before the tonics, the coalescence is easy, as in rude, reed : but it is not so when it follows certain of these elements. If the tonics are of long quantity, there is in some cases, only the slightest difficulty; as in glare, war, far, peer, mire, our, your. Should the short-tonics e-rr, e-nd and i-n, and most of the other tonics when pronounced short, precede the percussive r, there will be the unpleasant effort of a hiatus, to- gether with that peculiar effect of a union of tonic and aspiration, which forms one of the characteristics of speech in the natives of Ireland. This will be perceved, upon pronouncing the following words with the percussive r ; interpreter, world, irritate, inter- course. The cause of the hiatus and of this inevitable Irishism appears in the following explanation. The tonic sounds, though in greater part laryngeal, are in some cases modified by the agency of the tongue and lips. The tongue is employed in varying positions, from the deepest depres- sion in its bed, till nearly in contact with the roof of the mouth. Its place in the utterance of a-we is the lowest; and the highest in ee-\, #-nd and i-n. If these short tonics precede the percussive r, there is a hiatus in the utterance, from a difficulty in making the percussion ; and this changes the tonic into a semi-aspiration. When a-we precedes r, the tongue being in its bed is in the pro- per position for making the impulse, and the combination of this a-we with the r, is easily effected, and is free from aspiration, as in aurelia and reward. In the case then, of the short tonics preceding the percussive r, it is necessary to bring down the tongue from its short-tonic position at the roof of the mouth, to its bedj to give it starting- way, so to speak, for gaining its percussive velocity. The aim to effect this in the quickest time, produces the hiatus or strained effort of pronunciation. Yet with every endeavor, there is still a perceptible interval between the change in the position of the 498 THE MEANS OF INSTRUCTION IN ELOCUTION. tongue, from its short-tonic place down to its bed, and subse- quently up to the roof of the mouth, the place of the percussive r. And as there is no cessation of vocality during the time of the change, the depression of the tongue, or some other cause, gives that vocality its aspirated character. This mingling of aspi- ration with the short tonic, and the percussive r, produces the disagreeable effect perceved in the utterance of these conjoined elements; nor can it be altogether avoided, except by using the quiet r, where this effect would otherwise occur. The difficulty of executing the r, under the circumstances above-mentioned, will I fear, be insurmountable to those who are not all persuaded^ the perfection of their accomplishments must at last be due to their own habits, their knowledge, and their in- dustry. Those who know how necessarily a fruitful desire of improvement is the result of wise docility of mind and heartfelt resolution, have only to learn that it is within the capabilities of time and exertion. How long it may take to overcome the dif- ficulties here alluded to, must depend on instinctive facility of utterance: nor need it be told to those who deserve instruction, and will have success. To such persons^ it is enough that it may be done. An exact pronunciation of the elements according to the rule of the clay, is a matter of importance, not with reference alone to the law of fashion. It has a claim of greater dignity. When thoughts are to be communicated with precision and force, it should be by well-known words, not peculiar in sound, nor striking by length, nor by difficult utterance. There should be no remarkable contrast between them ; no attractive and dis- turbing similarity; nor anything in the language, to allure atten- tion from the thought conveyed by it. A writer, who frequently employs uncommon words, except in technical instruction, never has vividness or strength of style. For the accomplishment of these objects, sounds should slip effectively into the mind, almost without the notice of the ear. And what is here said, on the dis- tractions produced by novelty and peculiarity of words, applies equally to the pronunciation of alphabetic elements; as the least deviation from the assumed standard, converts the listener into a critic: and it is perhaps speaking within bounds to say, that for THE MEANS OF INSTRUCTION IN ELOCUTION. 499 every miscalled element in discourse, ten succeding words, if not more, are lost to the critical and reflective part of an audience. I have therefore recommended a long-continued practice on the separate elements-* for acquiring that command over them, which not only contributes to the elegance of speech, but at the same time, may help to remove all obscurity from the vocal picture of thought and passion. Of Practice on the Time of Elements. Enough has been said in former pages, on the necessity of a full command over the time of utterancej for effecting the important purposes of elocution. When the pupil has acquired a true pronunciation of the ele- ments, he should not, according to the usage of the primer, pass at once to combine them into words. They are employed in speech under different degrees of duration; and an exercise of the voice, through these degrees, on individual elements, creates a habit of skilful management, not so well nor so easily acquired by practice on the common current of discourse. Let the pupil then consider the alphabetic elements as a kind of Time-table, on which he is to learn all their varieties of quantity. The power of giving well measured length to sylables is so rare among speak- ers, that I have been induced to draw especial attention to this elementary method of instruction. Although a prolongation of the atonies is of little consequence^ let the pupil reiterate his practice on the tonics and subtonics, until he finds himself possessed of such a command over them, that he may at will, give the quantity to their sylabic combina- tions. The elements 5, d, and g, admitting of only a slight variation of quantity, through the prolongation of their feeble vocalityj a strenuous practice on their individual sounds is necessary to render them applicable to the purposes of oratorical time. When r is to be prolonged, and the rapid iteration would be inappropriate, the quiet form of the element should be employed ; the percussive r, made by a single stroke and rebound of the tongue, being necessarily short. The element s, when alone and prolonged, is a sign of con- tempt. In sylabic combination it is offensive if much extended in quantity; under its shortest time, it still performs its part in 500 THE MEANS OF INSTRUCTION IN ELOCUTION. speech, and loses much of the character of the hiss. Let the pupil therefore practice the shortest quantity on this element, by abruptly terminating the breath, or by separating the teeth at the moment its sound is heard; for this at once cuts it short. Here is not the place to remark how carefully a repetition of this element in succeding words, particularly if emphatic, is to be avoided. Of Practice on the Vanishing Movement. This subject should perhaps, have been considered under the last head; for an at- tempt to prolong the elements without reference to the equable concrete of speech, is very apt to produce the note of song. The difference between these two forms of intonation even on a single tonic, will be perceptible to an experimental ear, by keeping in mind at the moment of trial, the well known and peculiar effect both of speech and of song. The pupil then, without confusing his ear by other particulars, should exercise his voice on the simple form of the radical and vanish, through all extendible elements. An unerring power in executing this function, how- ever long the quantity may be, will always insure to speech, an entire exemption from the protracted radical. In this elementary intonation of the equable concrete, atten- tion should be paid to the structure, of the vanish. The pupil must therefore endeavor to give it that delicate expiration which may render the point of its limit almost imperceptible: for this is its proper form, except some purpose of expression should require a more obvious demarkation. We often lean the ear in delight, over this smooth breathing of sound into silence, by singers; and the master in elocution shall hereafter know, that one of those 4 graces' which he could never name, and even thought 'beyond the reach of artj' but which Art conjoined with Science, is now ready to teach him^ consists in this attenuation and close of the sylabic impulse, here recommended as a lesson for the school- boy. Of Practice on Force. It is scarcely necessary to say how loudness of voice, or the forte, is to be acquired. It is not es- sential to our discipline, that the elements should be uttered separately with regard to force. When the other constituents of expressive speech are brought under command, exercise on this mode may be effected during the current of discourse. Still the THE MEANS OF INSTRUCTION IN ELOCUTION. 501 ends of instruction would be somewhat easier attained by the elementary process in this particular. Few persons perceve the influence that loud speaking or vociferation has on vocality. We have already learnedj.it is one of the means for acquiring the orotund. It takes the voice apparently, from its meager mincing about the lips, and transfers it, at least in semblance, to the back of the mouth, or to the throat. It imparts a grave fulness to its character; and by creating a strength of organ, gives confidence to the speaker in his more forcible efforts; and an unhesitating facility in all the moderate exertions of speech. Of Practice on Stress. Although the elementary exercise on force as a general rule, may not be necessary, I must urge its im- portance, in particular sylabic stress. There is a nicety in this matter, that will be definitely recognized, and consequently can become familiar, only through the deliberate practice and un- embarrassed observation, afforded by trials on the separate ele- ments. It was said formerly, that radical stress is made with emphatic strength only on the tonics; still, an attempt to apply it to the subtonics is not to be entirely neglected. The full power of radical abruptness in the tonics is effected, by opening the ele- ments into utterance, with a sort of coughing explosion. The pupil cannot be too strongly urged to a careful practice, on this subject; that he may thereby acquire the habit of giving abrupt- ness, instantly and with moderated force. In this, its peculiar character as a Mode of the voice is apparent, and its classification defensiblej in making a satisfactory impulse on the ear, without the hammering strokes of an uncultivated pronunciation. For this fault of reading lies not only in the repetition or current of a sharp and loud radical stress on every word, but that stress is sometimes carried into the concrete, if not through it, on accented sylables of moderate quantity. For the median stress or swell, no particular direction is re- quired under this head. It is generally employed on the wave, and its practice may therefore be connected with exercise on pitch. The vanishing stress may be practiced, by assuming in speech something like the effort of hiccup for the wider intervals of the 502 THE MEANS OF INSTRUCTION IN ELOCUTION. scale; and something like sobbing, for the minor third and semi- tone. We do not recommend practice on the minor third, with reference to its allowable use in speech; but to render it so familiar to the ear, that it may be avoided as a fault. Elementary exercise on Compound stress, and the Loud Concrete, will give facility in the command of these forms of Force. Practice on Thorough stress, with a strict comparison of its effect, on long quantity, with the effect of the equable concrete, is here recom- mended, that the pupil may by his own knowledge, perception of propriety, and taste, rather than by any authority of mine, be guarded against this vocal sign of phlegmatic rudeness. Of Practice on Pitch. The several scales used in speech were described in the first section. The order of proximate intervals in the diatonic, and the skip of its wider transitions, must be learned from an instrument, or the voice. With a few days' at- tention to the effect of the various rising and falling movements, on the keys of a piano-forte, or in the voice of a master, a pupil who has the least musical ear, will be able to execute the same successions in his voice, and to recognize the concrete pitch, and change of radical, on elemental and sylabic utterance. After this first lesson, let every interval of pitch, both by con- crete movement and by radical change, be practiced on every tonic and subtonic element. The semitone is easily recognized in a plaintive intonation : and when exercised on all the elements will readily become obedient to the states of mind requiring its expression. The effect of the simple and uncolored interval of the second must be negatively described by sayingj it is not the semitone, with its plaintive character; nor the rising third, or fifth, or octave, also well known as the sign of interrogation; nor the downward movements of positive declaration and command; nor the wave, with its admiration, surprise, mockery and sneer. If then, in sylabic utterance, none of these effects are produced, it may be concludedj the voice has passed through the simple second of the diatonic melody. By practice on this interval, through all the tonics and subtonics, the pupil will attain a com- mand over the constituent of this plain intonation; nor will he be in danger of destroying its appropriate character by the THE MEANS OF INSTRUCTION IN ELOCUTION. 503 whine of the semitone, the sharp inquisitiveness of the fifth or octave, or with the more offensive affectation of the wider forms of the wave. The pupil will be able to recognize a downward interval, by familiarizing his ear to the effect of the last constituent of the triad of the cadence. This will teach him the character of the falling second ; and by studiously repeating the tonic and sub- tonic elements in this movement, he will have nearly as clear a perception of the peculiarity of the interval, as of the sounds of the elements themselves. When prepared with this downward vanish, he may contrast it with the rising second, and thereby become familiar with the audible character of each. Upon know- ing the second, the wider falling intervals will be perceved by continuing the doivnward progress, till the intonation assumes the expression of command; the extent of the downward movement through a third, or fifth, or octave, being proportional to the less or greater degree of that expression. Let these wider in- tervals be compared with those of a rising direction, and the difference between the intonation of a question, and a command, will be strikingly manifest. When the pupil has gone through the elements, on the simple rising and falling intervals, let him turn to their combination, in the wave. Here his practice must be governed by his perception of the simple intervals which variously compose its different kinds. The wave of the second is of great importance, in the grave and dignified character of the diatonic melody. I cannot by direct description, bring it before the ear; but in giving pro- longed quantity to indefinite sylables, if the effect of the upward or downward wider intervals is not recognizedj nor the peculiar note of songj nor the marked impression of the wider wavesj nor that of the. plaintive semitone^ it may be concluded, the voice is moving in the wave of the second. Of Practice on Melody. One difficult point regarding intona- tion is the perception of the radical changes of the second, in the progression of the current melody. If the pupil has a musical ear, he may easily acquire the habit of varying the several phrases in the manner formerly proposed. Should he not have a nice perception of sound, nor ingenuity in experiment, he must 504 THE MEANS OF INSTRUCTION IN ELOCUTION. learn the diatonic progression from the voice of a previously- instructed master. Melody is a continuous function; practice under this head must therefore be made on successive sylables. The best method is to select a portion of discourse, to keep in mind the diatonic man- ner in which it should be read, and at the same time, to utter only the tonic element of each sylable; and by a sort of vocal short-hand, or instant hackings of a momentary cough, to go through this dotted outline as it were, of the melody. In this case, the ear not being embarrassed by the subtonics, the differ- ence between rise and fall in radical pitch, will be more apparent, and consequently the power of avoiding monotony, and of min- gling all the phrases in an agreeable variety, more easily attained. Of Practice on the Cadence. The cadence is an important- part of the melody of speech; and readers being therein liable to frequent and striking faults, the subject requires discrimina- tive attention. Here particularly the elementary practice is to be employed; the pupil bearing in mind the different forms of intonation for terminating a sentence, and exercising his voice separately on one, two, or three elements or sylables, considered as a close. By elementary practice on the various species of the cadencej command over their intonation will be exercised, with a percep- tible accuracy, never yet within the incoherent purpose of any ancient or modern system of Imitative discipline; for many of these purposes were only dreams. After the proper time devoted to the plan here recommended, the pupil will be provided with an ample fund for every variety in his periods; nor will he then find himself at the end of his sentence, with a sylable that seems to have got out-of-joint with its intonation. Of Practice on the Tremor. The tremulous movement should be practiced on individual elements. "With a knowledge of its various forms, the pupil may correct himself in his task, and finally acquire the accuracy, so essential to this remarkable ex- pression. And although the habit of laughing and crying does here furnish a wide field of practice, it is to be recolectedj we laugh and cry instinctively, upon our own delight and suffering. When the tremulous expression is employed to affect an audience, THE MEANS OF INSTRUCTION IN ELOCUTION. 505 governed in its tastej as it may come to pass hereafter, by the knowledge and principles we are here unfolding^ it should be done, not only according to the dictates of Nature, and within the iluminated circle of her truth, but with that refinement, and finish of execution, which her incipient instinct may not have had the purpose to accomplish; while yet ready to acknowledge their entire consistency with her prospective and progressive laws. Of Practice on Vocality. Vocality is capable of improvement ; and the practice in this case may be either on the elements, or on the current of discourse. Yet as this mode of the voice is most perceptible on the tonic sound, perhaps the elementary les- son is the best for instruction. In whatever manner the improv- ing exercise is conducted^ by it, harshness may be somewhat softened^ a husky voice be brought nearer to pure vocalityj the piercing treble reduced in pitchj and the thin and meager voice indued with greater fulness and strength. There is, however, a misconception on this subject, which may be noticed here. The characteristic Vocalities, or, as confounded with Pitch, and vaguely called, the distinguishing 'tones,' of the voice, are said to be unlimited, and like the face, peculiar to each individual. We do not often forget or confound the known voices of indi- viduals, however numerous they may be; a popular proof, that we all have an instinctive and discriminative ear, for the things of Speech, without having names for them. But the distinct re- cognition is here made upon combinations of the specific degrees, and 'forms of force, pitch, and time, rather than on the single mode of vocality. One speaker is characterized by a constant use of the vanishing stress ; another by that of the radical; one employs the interval of a third in the current melody instead of a second; some a long, and others a short quantity on every emphatic word. By a varied permutation of these features, a countless number of different, yet distinguishable faces, is given to the body of speech. And here, as a comment on the prevalent notion, that speech with its 'occult qualities,' is too subtle, imma- terial, or, to use the Platonic 'slang' of the nineteenth century, too 'spiritual,' to be made a subject of physical investigation^ 33 506 THE MEANS OF INSTRUCTION IN ELOCUTION. let us remark, that all th^se faces, features, aye, and delicate expressions of speech are practically conizable by common per- ception. There is as great a variety in vocality, as in any one mode of the voice; and more than of some ; the amount however, falls far short of the almost endless combinations of the various forms of the Modes with each other. We may learn that vocality is not always its distinguishing mark; by attending to the prolonged note of song; for this makes it more obvious. In perceving a prolonged note, exclusive of any peculiarity of stress, time, or intonation, it is not easy to distinguish voices, that widely differ when heard under the mingling modes of speech, in only a single sentence. Of the speaking voices of a thousand persons, each would be distin- guishable, by its peculiar manner of using the various permuted forms of pitch, time, and stress. If the same voices were sev- erally to be indicated by a single prolonged note of song, the differences in vocality might be reduced to a few classes. There would be forte and piano voices heard among them, shrill and hoarse, clear, aspirated, harsh, full, meager, dull, and sub-so- norous: and to these a few others might be added. Yet even these would, in some cases, be perceptible only to a cultivated ear; and of the whole thousand, above supposed, perhaps not more than twenty classes of vocality, as subjects of recognition could be found, to constitute twenty different kinds. Of the Orotund as a kind of voice, we spoke in a former sec- tion; and there described the means by which the fulness, power, and graver character of this voice may be attained. It might per- haps assist the Reader in using the proper means for acquiring the orotund, to know, that the vocality in this case, is apt to change into what we formerly called the basso-falsette; producing that 'double-lung' kind of speech, of mingled bass and treble. Of Practice in Rapidity of Speech. Extreme rapidity of speech may be employed for attaining command over the voice. The difficulty, of making transitions from one position of the organs of articulation to another, requires an exertion which tends to increase their strength and activity; and this enables them to execute the usual time of speech, without hesitation. I would THE MEANS OF INSTRUCTION IN ELOCUTION. 507 recommend the utmost possible precipitancy of utterance; taking care not to outrun the complete .articulation of every element; and this makes it advisable to set the lesson on some discourse, long fixed in the memory, that no embarrassment may arise from the distracting effort of recolection. There is not much advantage to be derived from elementary practice on Aspiration, the Emphatic vocule, and Guttural vibra- tion. The exact and forcible execution of these functions, does not require the exclusive attention, directed by the rudimental system of practice; nor is anything to be effected thereby, that may not perhaps, for all practical and tasteful purposes, be ac- complished in the current of discourse. This is a brief enumeration of the articulative, the thoughtive, and the expressive constituents of the whole assemblage of speech. An interesting inquiry isj whether we should aim to acquire a full power over these constituents, by exercising the voice on their combinations, in current discourse, or by separate and repeated practice on their individual forms. * * Perhaps the analogy would be too remote, to draw an example of the ele- mentary and synthetic method of instruction, from the gradual process of in- fant speech. But I cannot, while the subject is before me, avoid a few remarks, on what appears to be the order of that process. Although we should reject every, fictional date, and they are all fictional^ for the origin of language; and every supposition of one or of many parts of the earth as well as of the manner, in*which it did begins still the succession in the instinctive efforts of present infant speech is freely open to investigation. In a Note to our section on Time, there is a passing question^ Whether the abrupt elements were not prompted by sudden instinctive impulses, at that almost inconceivable event, the beginning of speech. Since the date of our fourth edition in eighteen hundred and fifty- five, I have read in the Introduc- tion to Mr. Charles Richardson's Etymological Dictionary, the clear exempli- fication of his analytically tracing many of the full-formed words of cultivated language, to roots of a primary meaning in the individual elements: and not- withstanding the philological Ethnologist, and the writers on the Mind have not had the curiosity or time, to learn how far our history of the voice might assist their researches, I will still endeavor to draw their attention, by apply- 508 THE MEANS OF INSTRUCTION IN ELOCUTION. It is needless to offer arguments in favor of an elementary- didactic system to those, who, from experience in acquiring the ing some of the principles of nature to the present fashionable inquiry into the origin ami language of man. It is known, that, in the full-established system of the vocal signs, the states of mind variously employ the modes of yocality, force, time, abruptness and intonation; and that the first audible efforts of infant-expression are purely vowel sounds, under the forms of cry, scream, and of fainter vocalities called humming and cooing; together with a varied time, force, and intonation of these sounds, and even of their sudden break into abruptness. These vowel signs, as well as Ave observe, denote the first perception of pleasure or pain or of physical wants. So far then, these individual elements have a meaning, and are the real and simple roots of language, in the signs of infant perception^ for we cannot give the then state of mind the name of thought or passion. The consonants next follow, in the progress of speech ; and still to found the origin of language in nature, certain instinctive muscular functions prepare the vocal mechanism for the production of. these elements. The early act of drawing nourishment strongly exercises the muscles that close and open the lips; and furnishes the organic means, which with the accompaniment of vocality, or aspiration^ already prepared by instinctive effort^ produce in the former case, the elements B, M, and V, and in the latter, F, and P. In the same act the application of the tongue to the palate, and to the upper and the lower gums, constitutes the mechanism, that with vocality, or with aspiration, severally forms G, K, D, T, N, R, Th-in, and Th-en. The next instinctive-elemental and significant sign would perhaps be the in- cipient tremor on the interval of the tone or second, or wider interval, for the expression of infantile satisfaction; and sobbing, with the tremor on the semi- tone for distress. Coughing would early give a command over abruptness, and prepare for the radical stress, and distinct articulation of perfect speech. We do not assume that single consonants are at first, mental signs; nor afterwards, except in the expressive aspirations of s, and h; and as it would be stepping aside from the caution of philosophy to suppose, that in some infantile efforts they may be so, we leave this subject for those who think it deserves stricter investigation. The instinctive vowels with their intonations are the first signs of the pleasures, pains, and wants of the child: and observation teaches^ they denote these perceptions, as certainly as they can be denoted by the full-formed words of conventional language. There is a further addition to primary speech, when the consonants are acci- dentally combined with vowels, into the sylabic impulse; as in Ap and Am, or reversely, Pa and Ma. The sense of hearing then becomes observant: imita- tion follows, and monosylabic language with its capacity for endless combina- tion into words of varied extent begins. It may therefore seem, that by Mr. Richardson's observations, the ultimate roots of languages are the significant elements. Under this view, the roots of all languages must have a common origin; displaying the unity of nature, not only in the prevalence of the same principles of articulation and of vocal ex- THE MEANS OF INSTRUCTION IN ELOCUTION. 509 sciences, have formed for themselves economical and effective plans of study. Let all others be toldj that one, and perhaps the only cause why elocutionists have never employed such a sys- tem, is, that they have overlooked the analytic means of inquiry into the subject of vocal expression; and have therefore wanted both the knowledge and nomenclature for an elementary method of instruction. Science and art have too many proofs of the success of this rudimental method, to allow us to suppose, the same means would not have been adopted in elocution, if they had been known to the master. Not to cite instances from those graver studies which procede by the synthetic steps of elementary principles; and with no in- tention to shame the 'genius' of an elocutionist and his grammar of imitation, let us go to the Ring, and see the Science of mus- cular attack and defense, an over-match for flhe best efforts of strength and passion, when undirected by gymnastic skill. The 'Fancy' have really made no slang-like or degrading application of the word. Science, as we usefully regard it, does no more than lay-down for art, those general principles, and efficacious rules which sagacity has drawn from observation and trial: and though it may not always ennoble the subject it touches, it does 'keep from it, that characteristic of brutality* the instinctive ex- ecution of what, in its causes and effects, is not perceved by the agent, Yes, even the Pugilistic Art, low in purpose yet skilful as it is, has for the time, outstripped the philosophic efforts of Elocution; and claimed for its method and precepts, the justifi- able name of Science. And beleve me, Reader^ the elementary training in its positions and motions, carries not more superiority over the untaught arm, than the definite rules of elocution, founded on a knowledge of the constituents of the voice, will have over the best spontaneous achievements of passion. pression, in every age and nation, as we have after close analysis, represented it^ but in the origin of that articulation, and expression, in whatever part or parts of the earthy or in whatever age or ages it may once or oftener, have occurred. Should future observation confirm Mr. Richardson's view, and the few remarks we have added to it, it will be learned, that the five modes of the voice, which combine to make the vast variety of mature and expressive lan- guage^ are found in limited use, to constitute what on like principle we may call ihe incipient expression of infant wants, and pleasure or pain. 510 THE MEANS OF INSTRUCTION IN ELOCUTION. Let me not be mistaken on this point. Although I do not say, the method of instruction here proposed, can create the essential powers of a speaker; futurity will probably show, that some such system alone can direct, enlarge, and perfect them. 'Passion,' says a writer, 'knows more than art.' It may, in its own way, know more than the Old Elocutionary art; but the Art of Science, so to speak, in its own way, like prudence in human affairs, sometimes knows better than passion. A display of the passions in speech, is not always addressed to persons under the sympathetic influence of those passions. When it is, or when at moments, the speaker can raise that sympathy, and passion becomes the selfigh party-Tyrant of the mind, all is right, however wrong, that passion does. When passion is no longer the despot either of words oy will, and we are called upon to make some proper use of its active 'perception, without its way- wardness and partizan excesses, such comparisons arise between our own state, on occasions of excitement, and what w r e perceve in othersj that we are obliged to call upon observation and taste for some educational rule, of Things as they Should be> to settle an uncertainty of opinion. Passion as we know it, is only the Enacting of a certain character of expression; and being with none, except fools and madmen, an Outlaw of the Mind, is still amenable to its purposed and directive, though excited authority. We need not go far, for the true history of what is called the Natural Manner in Speech, prompted by spontaneous and un- educated passion; for passion is a wise instinct of nature, but is always perverted, if never improvingly taught. The everyday vulgar triumphs of popular eloquence, in which the demagogue, and the sectary, lead away an audience, eager to pursue the same selfish schemes of profit, or vanity, or fanatical delusion, are proof of what this oratorical sympathy is; and what a wild and artful passion alone can sometimes do, without the aid of truth, or honesty or taste: for in these as in other popular relations, the more an orator influences the passions of others, the more those passions make a slave of himself. We look for no more, from a well devised practical system of elocution, than we are every day receving from established arts. All men speak and 'reason,' in the common way, for these acts THE MEANS OF INSTRUCTION IN ELOCUTION. 511 are as natural as passion ; but the arts of grammar, rhetoric, and thinking teach us to do these things in the best manner, or rather, doing them in the best manner is signified by the name of these arts. The subject of elementary instruction may be otherwise re- garded. The human muscles are, at the daily call of exercise, obedient to the will. There is scarcely a boy of physical activity or enterprise, who on seeing a circus-rider, does not desire, in some way to imitate him ; to catch and keep the center of gravity through the varieties of balance and motion. Yet this will not prevent failure in his first attempts, however close the connection between his will and his muscles may be. For without trial, he knows imperfectly what is to be done; and even with that knowl- edge, is unable, without long practice, to effect it. Many persons, with both thought and passion, have a free command of the voice, on the common occasions of life, who yet utterly fail, when they attempt to imitate the varied power of the habitual speaker. When the voice is prepared by elementary practice^ thoughts and passions find the confirmed and pliant means, ready to effect a satisfactory and elegant accomplishment of their purposes. The organs of speech are capable of a certain range of exer- tion; and to fulfil all the demands of a finished elocution, they should be carried to the extent of that capability. Actors with both strong and delicate perceptions, and who earnestly express them in speech, are always approximating toward this power in the voice ; and with no more than the assistance of a habitual exercise which enlarges their instinct, do in time, acquire a com- mand over the forms and degrees of pitch, and stress, and time; without the Actor himself being at all aware of the hoiv, and the ivhat, of his vocal attainments, or having perhaps, one inteligent, or inteligible perception of the ways, means, and effects of their application. The elementary method of instruction here pro- posed, being founded on the analysis of speechj at once points out to the Actor what is to be desired and attained; and how every vocal purpose of thought, and passion should be fulfiled. It was not until long after the invention of the Bow for the gliding touch of chorded instruments, that its use was subjected to accurate attention. A few belonging to that class of man- 512 THE MEANS OF INSTRUCTION IN ELOCUTION. kind who through precise and enlarged observation, with its steady aim, find out for themselves, the best way to effect their object, may have exhibited rare instances of skill in its manage- ment. As soon however as the celebrated Tartini had made an analysis of their dexterity, the master was able to point out to the pupil the muscular sleight of wrist and arm which its hand- ling requires; their combined and successive motions; together with that full perception of the will as it seems, present in the muscle, which insures undeviating steadiness in every sweep, and gives the power of a sort of voluntary spasm for the purpose of a momentary touch. When these points were ascertained, instruc- tion began to adopt the economy of elementary rules; and con- fidence, rapidity, precision, smoothness, and variety of execution, became common accomplishments in the art of Bowing. When an attempt is made to teach an art, without commencing with its simple elements, combinations of elements pass with the pupil for the elements themselves, and holding them to be almost infinite, he abandons his hopeless task. An education by the method we here recommend, reverses this disheartening duty. It reduces the seeming infinity to computable numbers; and I have supposed^ one of the first comments on the foregoing analysis, may refer to the unexpected simplicity of means, employed to produce the unbounded permutations of speech. Nay, this essay itself will fare better than other similar efforts in science, if some of the perishing criticism of the day should not find sufficient motive with itself, for overlooking the difficulty, of penetrating the mysterious thicket of speech, and of tracing its interwoven branches to their palpable roots, by being told how few and how accessible they are. In our proposed method of instruction, we have in view the strictest propriety, and the highest finish of the voice. An ordi- nary and even vicious use of Speech, as we all know, may serve for Buying and Selling, either in the common course of Trade, or in Election-Frauds, and Legislative Bribery. When the powers and beauties of the voice are the subject of reflection and taste, it is necessary to employ the most comprehensive and precise means for its cultivation. It would be possible, even without regard to the alphabet, to teach a savage to read, by directing him, word THE MEANS OF INSTRUCTION IN ELOCUTION. 513 by word, to follow a master. And it has been proposed to teach elocution, by a similar process of imitative instruction. But the attentive Reader must now know with me, and others may know among themselves hereafter, that the analysis of words into their alphabetic elements, and the rudimental method of teaching in- stituted thereupon, do not give more facility, in the discrimina- tions of the eye on a written page, than the means here proposed will afford to the student of elocution, who wishes to excel in all the useful and elegant purposes of speech. The master having now at command a knowledge of the vocal constituents^ which already foretells, and by future application will furnish a precise and universal system of mus'ic in speech-; let him adopt that ele- mentary method of instruction which has made another music familiar to the minds of children, and spread its refined and heart-felt pleasure throughout the civilized world. To begin this elementary, and only successful method of teach- ing the otherwise unteachable esthetic art of speechj let the master and his pupil, or his whole school, meet at first, without their little text-books; the master having already the great Book of Nature by heart. Let the master then exemplify the five constituent modes of the voice; the formation of the musical scale, with the explanation of its divisions and uses; the four scales of speech; the concrete and discrete pitch in all its forms; the graceful gliding of the vanish, with the effect of the second and of other intervals. Let him make the pupil sensible of the difference of these intervals by separate and by compared utter- ance; of the peculiarities of a rising and of a falling movement; of the waves; of the diatonic, and the chromatic melodies; of the cadences; and of the ^tresses; making the lessons an exemplifi- cation of every constituent function of speech. Let the pupil practice all this when he retires; and on returning, let it not be to hear his master read, and vainly try to imitate himj but to re- peat his elementary task, through all the available modes, forms, and varieties of the voice. When he is completely familiar with these rudiments, then and not before, let him begin to read. Should high accomplishment in elocution be an object of am- bition, the system of instruction offered in this section, may until 514 THE MEANS OF INSTRUCTION IN ELOCUTION. a better method is proposed, furnish the easiest and shortest means for success. With all these rules however, the best contrived scheme will be of little avail, without the utmost zeal and perseverance on the part of the learner. It is an impressive saying by an elegant 'genius' of the Augustan age, who drew his maxim from the Greek Tragedy, and ilustrated it by his own life and fame, that 'nothing is given to mortals without indefatigable labor;' meanings that works of surpassing merit, and supposed to procede from a peculiar en- dowment by Heaven, are in reality, the product of hard and unremitting industry. It is pitiable to witness the hop'es and conceits of ambition, when unassisted by its required exertions. The art of reading- well is an accomplishment; all desire to possess, many think they have already, and a few undertake to acquire. These, beleving their power is altogether in their 'Genius,' are, after a few les- sons from an Elocutionist, disappointed at not becoming them- selves at once masters of the art; and with the restless vanity of their belief, abandon the study, for some new subject of trial and failure. Such cases of infirmity result in part from the wavering character of the human Tribe; but chiefly, from defects in the usual course of instruction. Go to some, may we say all of our Colleges and Universities, and observe how the art of speaking, is not taught there. See a boy of but fifteen years, with no want of youthful diffidence, and not without a craving desire to learn; sent upon a Stage, pale and choking with apprehension; being forced into an attempt to do that, without instruction, which he came purposely to learn; and furnishing amusement to his class- mates, by a pardonable awkwardness, that should be punished, in the person of his pretending but neglectful preceptor, with little less than scourging. Then visit a Conservatorio of music; ob- serve there, the elementary outset, the orderly task, the masterly discipline, the unwearied superintendence, and the incessant toil to reach the utmost accomplishment in the Singing-Voice; and afterwards do not be surprised that the pulpit, the senate, the bar, and the chair of medical professorship, are filled with such abominable drawlers, mouthers, mumblers, clutterers, squeakers, chanters, and mongers in monotony: nor that the schools of THE MEANS OP INSTRUCTION IN ELOCUTION. 515 Singing are constantly sending abroad those great instances of vocal wonder, who triumph along the crowded resorts of the world; who contribute to the halls of fashion and wealth, their most refined source of gratification ; who sometimes quell the pride of rank, by a momentary sensation of envy; and who .draw forth the admiration, and receve the crowning applause of the Prince and the Stage.* * It is remarkable of the Science of the Voice, that the successful cultivation of the department of Song, through the close and beautiful analysis of melody, and harmony, should never have extended the ambition of its inquiry and suc- cess, into the more important, and equally esthetic department of speech. Having, after a long and active search, colected quite a library of good, bad, and indifferent works on elocution; and, with the exception of Mr. Steele, Mr. Odel, and Mr. Walker, finding them all, both ancient and modern, to be com- posed of the same common materials of the art, arranged and detailed with a varied ability: I had some curiosity to know the practical method of eminent Vocal Institutions. During my residence in Paris, through the winter of eighteen hundred and forty-five — six, I sought by every due effort, to obtain from direct, and personal observation, a knowledge of the instructive Course of Declamation employed in the Conservatorio. I learned however, through a friend of some influence in this matter, that by a general rule, admission could not be ob- tained. Upon information derived from a Vocalist, at that time under tuition, for his appearance in the Opera^ who described to me, the directive, and examplary means of the master, the imitative practice of the pupil, and the detailed rotine of the task; I was led to conclude^ they had no knowledge, out of the common way, on the construction, and intonative meaning, either of Declamation or Recitative; nor one spark of a Philosophy of Speech, to throw the least light of explanation upon them: and though the exclusion of visitors, might be no de- privation to the studious observer^ the duties of the Institution would by this precaution, be saved from the vexatious intrusion of the tens of thousands idle, restless, and ennui'd Sojourners in the great Metropolis. That the French, like the rest of the world, have not the least perception of a system of the voice, founded on the ordination of nature, and denoting the different states of mind in thought and passion, must appear from their Histri- onic Elocution. If the Glory, Wisdom and Taste of France, strangely con- centered, as it is thought to be in Paris, should ever acknowledge the possibility of there being any imperfection in its state; and cease to think, it has already reached ' the highest degree of civilization;' it will perhaps, perceve the peculiar and bombastic system of its intonation ; and then attempt to correct it, by some other means, than that of the rule of its own exaggerated and habitual expres- sion. The English, phlegmatic as they are supposed to be, are prone to employ an over-proportion of vivid constituents in that current which should be a plain diatonic melody. But the French, far exceding them in this use of the wider 516 RYTHMUS OF SPEECH. SECTION L. Of the Rythmus of Speech. In the section on Time, some allusion was made to the subject of Rythmus. I there endeavored to describe the circumstances under which stress and time, or as they are otherwise called, accent and quantity, produce by their alternations the agreeable intervals and waves, do not employ the diatonic melody, or only occasionally, in their oratorical and dramatic speech. We have learned how rarely the plain and dignified forms of the second and its waves are heard even in the speech of the English stage; and that, without an adjusted intermingling of the expressive and the inexpressive con- stituents of speech, no Actor can attain tragic distinction, or long maintain it, with an audience of educated perception and taste. In this improper use of wider intervals and waves, the English, from the construction of their Language, have less apology than the French, for the excesses of their intona- tion. It is well known, that the accentual character of the English language consists in a forcible stress on certain sylables, with a feeble stress on others^ the latter being more numerous; and the difference in degree of the stresses being so fixed and remarkable, as to furnish a rythmus of accent or quantity for the construction of its Blank-verse; which serves the further purpose of re- leving the monotony of its rhyme, by the variety of a strong and attractive accent, successively falling on a different s,ylabic sound, and by the cesural pause, in the course of the line. With the French language the case is different. It has a perceptible variation, in the force of its accents, and the duration of its quantities: but not suffici- ently marked, nor of such a systematic character, as to make an available pro- sodial meter. The French Epic and Dramatic lines, for they cannot be called prosodial measures, properly consist each of twelve sylables; though they have sometimes ten or eleven. Among them is occasionally found, a succession of accent and quantity resembling the various structures of English verse. There is an example of our anapestic measure, in the first Canto and second line of Voltaire's llenriade, Et par droit de conqudte et par droit de naissance. Allowing for the manner of the French, in prolonging their sylables, many like correspondencies to the usual English measures may be gathered from what they call their heroic rhyme. But all such cases are accidental in French versification, and do not accord with the general character of its irregular succession: a succession, shocking RYTHMUS OF SPEECH. 517 impressions of verse. I now offer a more formal account of this matter, with the design to speak of the Rythmus of. prose ; and to notice in as few words as possible, the original and practical to the English ear, and utterly without a flowing rythmus either as poetry or prose. We pronounce the word accommodation with a strong accent on the second and fourth sylables, and a contrasted feeble one, on the third and fifth: whereas the French, with whom it has six sylables, as ac-com-mo-da-ci-on, make but a slight variation in the degree of stress among them. Hence, if the word be moderately caricatured by a full stress on every sylable, it will resemble French pronunciation. And in general, to mimic that pronunciation, in English words, it is only necessary to substitute de, for the ; to give, to the English ear at least, an affected prolongation to certain sylables, and a like degree of accent on all. It may be perceved that the French language, in its accent and quantity, does not admit of Blank-verse ; as no proper prosodial meter can be given to its lines. Under this condition, instead of altogether rejecting the vain attempt at measure, and employing plain but dignified prose, in their Epic and Dramatic composition^ they endeavor to supply the want of a regular temporal and ac- centual rythmus, by the poor regularity of an equal number of sylables in each of their lines, and by terminating them with rhyme: and on this ground alone to raise the verbal structure of their poetry. May we not therefore admire the esthetic choice of the 'amiable' Fenelon, who tells the graceful and instructive story of Tclemachus, in the unembarrassed dignity of Prose, by excluding the puerile counting of sylables, and chime of words, in French heroic versification ? I would submissively propose as a subject of future inquiry among the French, who^ whenever they look at themselves, by the light of an analytic speech, will be the best judges in the casej whether this peculiar construction led to their use of the florid and exaggerated form of their Histrionic intonation: and whether, in the desire to withdraw the ear from the palling effect of the equal count of sylables ; and to lessen the monotony of the rhymes, they did not pur- posely endeavor to produce, throughout the current, and particularly at the close of proximate lines, a contrast of striking intervals and waves ; such as that of a rising interval, or an indirect wave, at the end of one line, and a reverse movement on the next; without those intonations having the least regard to a natural propriety of expression. For we must remember^ the monotony of French rhymes which under English law is not always canonical^ and of its equal num- ber of sylables, is not relevable by the attractive rythmus, of the English man- ner of accentual or temporal measure. And finally, whether by this attempt to avoid monotony, they did not substitute, that equally striking and more erroneous monotony, which is always produced. by impressive intervals im- properly applied. This is the view, which our 'Philosophy' of speech offers of the universal prevalence of the remarkable intonation in French Tragedy: a philosophy, drawn from the ordination of nature in the human voice, and that should make no allowance for national self-deception, and its self-solacing vanity. Be this view admissible or not, my observation ventures to affirm this excessive use of 518 RYTIIMUS OF SPEECH. system of Mr. Steele, on the subject of accentuation and pause: this being among the first results, in modern times, of an inquiry into the philosophy of spoken language. Speech would not be suited to the interchange of thought and passion, if every sylable of every word were successively and equally accented. For by this uniform accentuation, it would want that vocal light and shade, and that pronounced relief, re- quired for a distinct picture of mental and audible perception^ consequently thoughts would not be easily distinguished from each other; and speech would be inconveniently slow. Whether this slowness would result from the hiatus, in passing from one accent to another, each with a full radical upon it, we need not here inquire. It is enough to know, that if the following, or any other sentence be read with every sylable accented, the delay will be unavoidable. The Eight of suf-frage in a Re-pub-lic, will, through the suc-ces-sive Oli-gar-chy of weak and am-bi-tious Knaves, al-ways end in the Wrongs of the Peo-ple. Although this political axiom should be deliberately read as well as closely laid to heart; still, with an impressive accent on every sylable, the pronunciation of this eternal truth would far ex- cede in time, even what its solemn utterance deserves. Let us take another example, to be read with forcible and proximate accent. The dif-fer-ence be-tween the two great An-tag-o-nists a-mong na- tions, is this: In a Des-pot-ism, the gov-ern-ment preys up-on the peo- ple. In a De-moc-ra-cy, the peo-ple prey up-on the gov-ern-ment. The life-blood is drawn a-like by each. In one case by the Ea-gle; in the oth-er by the R.ats. It is from this alternation of strong and weak accent, with the variations of long and short quantity, that the graceful flow of style, and much of the power and beauty of speech are derived. Horid intervals, in all the French Tragedians I have heard, including an Actress of the day, whom the Critics of Paris, with unbounded eulogy, but without the least vocal discrimination, present to the world as the paragon of Tragic Art. I say nothing here, of gesture and other accompaniments of this vivid and false RYTHMUS OF SPEECH. 519' This being the character of the accentual function, Mr. Steele,, by an original view of the relations between accent, quantity, and pause, made divisions of the line of speech, analogous to the Bars of musical notation. These may be called Accentual Sections.* We will attempt to explain part of the system of Mr. Steele,. by the following sentence ; using italics in place of his symbol for the accented sylable ; the numeral seven for the pause; and marking the sections, merely for reference. 12 3 4 5 6 | 7 In the | sec ond | cent u-ry | 7 of the | christ ian | e ra | 7 8 9 10 11 12 I 7 the | em pire of | Rome | 7 com-pre | hend ed the ] fair est j 13 14 15 16 17 18 j part of the | earth 7 | 7 and the j most 7 | civ i-lized \ por tion J 19 20 j 7 of man | kind, j Mr. Steele first assumes the time of the several bars to be equal, like that of the bars in music ; the term bar, meaning, not the vertical lines, but the space between them. He next sub- divides a sentence into bars, each of equal time; that time con- sisting, either altogether of verbal sound, or of a verbal sound and of a silent time or pause. Supposing then a bar, or ac- centual section, to contain, in its verbal time, one, and never more than one, accented sylable, or heavy Poize, as he calls it ; and one or more unaccented, which he calls the light Poize; the intonation: nor of Comedy and Vaudeville, which though employing a some- what exaggerated form of coloquial speech are altogether most admirable. Could I have had the opportunity of personally observing the method of teaching Declamation in the Conservatorio, I might have spoken with more ful- ness, and accuracy on this subject. * The Greek Rhetoricians gave the name of Prosodial Feet, to certain ar- rangements of long and short sylables^ these being identical in place however, respectively with the accented and unaccented; metaphorically implying the regular progression of poetical lines, by the measured steps of quantity and accent. A foot with its first sylable short and its second long, or its first lightly and its second strongly accented, was called an Iambus, as consume. When this order of quantity and accent is reversed, a Trochee, as mdrn-ing. A foot of three sylables, with the first long and the other two short, or the first strongly and the others lightly accented, a Dactyl, as grdce-ful-ly . Mr. Steele's purpose was to apply to prose-reading, a rythmus founded on these principles of poetic construction. 520 RYTHMUS OF SPEECH. beginning of the bar is always occupied by the heavy accent, and the end by the light, or in their absence, by a respectively equivalent silent time or pause. In the first bar of the above example, there is no heavy accent, for the sentence begins with two light sylables, but its time is indicated by the symbol of a silent pause: the two light are set at the end of the accentual section. The word second, in the next bar, has a heavy sylable followed by a light one, and thus makes a full and audible time. In the third bar, the word century has a heavy, followed by two light sylables. The fourth has the same time in sylable and pause, as the first. The fifth and sixth are of the same con- struction as the second. The seventh has one light accent, and a pause in place of the heavy. The eighth is like the third. The ninth and twentieth have each one heavy accent ; for each syla- ble being a prolongable quantity, the time may be extended to an equality with that of the other bars. The fourteenth and six- teenth have each, like the last-named, a heavy; but wanting the light, its time is supplied by a pause: for the short quantity of these words does not allow their prolongation to the full time of a bar. The other bars are only respectively, repetitions of those already described. If we suppose so many sylables within a bar, as to require an improper precipitancy of utterance, to make the time of the sections equal, it becomes necessary to add a new bar, for the redundant light sylables, and to set them at the end of the new bar, and the symbol of a pause, at the beginning, in place of the heavy or accented sylable. In the example, we might put | century of the | into one section ; but when the sentence is read deliberately, this section is too long. It is better ordered in the example, by a subdivision, and by a pause in the place of an accented sylable. An immediate succession of long quantities may allow a change of the rythmus. In the eighth bar of the example, em has the first place, as the accented syl- able ; and it may be emphatically prolonged to the time of an entire bar; but pire is so impressive by its quantity that it also may form the first part of a bar, and the division may bej | em j | pire of | Rome | . It is the same with the seventeenth ; where though civ is the accented, lized is the longer sylable, and we may have the divisionsj | civ i | lized | ; the last long sylable, RYTHMUS OF SPEECH. 521 from its quantity supplying the time of an entire bar. With this general explanation, the Reader is refered to Mr. Steele's work, for a more particular account of the system. Perhaps I have not properly marked the bars of this sentence. My purpose however, being only to ilustratej others may with an ear of taste, improve the reading for themselves. Yet it is worthy of remark, that if this sentence is read without its linear divisionsj the voice of a good reader is disposed to make its pauses in those very places, and of that duration, visibly indicated by the symbol of the pause, both in the light and heavy parts of the bar; showing the instinct of the voice; with the powers of analysis, and the originality of Mr. Steele. It will perhaps be asked here^ What is the meaning of these divisions? And what useful purpose they serve in instruction? All works on elocution before the time of Mr. Steele, recom- mend the accurate accentuation of words, and a strict attention to their separation at the proper places for pausing. And although Mr. Sheridan gives particular examples of notation for rhetorical emphasis, and for pause, he lays-down no formal rule, to direct a pupil on these points, as Mr. Steele has done, by his divisional bars placed before the heavy accent. The importance of the subject in our early schools, may be learned from the manner in which children begin to read; for their hesitating utterance, and their close attention to the single word, lead them to lay an equal stress on every sylable, or at least on every word. This habit continues a long time after the eye has acquired a facility in following up discourse ; and in some cases infects pronunciation throughout subsequent life : as it is not till the tongue goes trip- ping, or rather halting, with its firm and its tender step on words, that the ear becomes sensible of the use and beauty of accent. Mr. Steele's notation having a symbol for the degrees of stress, here marked by an italic sylable, presents a visible analogy to the light and heavy impression, and furnishes a child with the picture of his lesson on accent, and with a monitor to his ear. I do not sayj this object would not be attained in a degree, by em- ploying the common mark of stress on all accented sylables : yet even this is never done ; and if it were, it would not have the 34 522 RYTHMUS OF SPEECH. generality of a precept, nor be as definite for elementary instruc- tion, as the conspicuous division by bars; nor would it include the indication of pause, together with other points embraced by the system of Mr. Steele. One of the objects of a scientific institute is, to point out what is necessary in an art, even though it should not be able to direct the exact manner of executing it; and perhaps no one who has attentively looked into Mr. Steele's notation will hesitate to ac- knowledgej it has set the subjects of accentuation and pause in an entirely new light before him. This notation is founded on a knowledge of the conventional accents of English words, and though it would not inform a child what sylables are of long quantity, or emphatic ; nor, where the pauses are to be placed ; it will enable a master, who knows how to order all these things in speech, to furnish his scholar with a visible ilustration of his task, and a rule for subsequent use. If a boy is taught by this method, he acquires a habit of attention to the subjects of accentuation and pause, that may be readily applied, without the notation, in ordinary discourse. I have gladly embraced an opportunity to notice the ingenius originality of Mr. Steelej who was among the first to shriek-out at the incubus of ancient prosody, which had crouched so close on the bosom of his own, and of every modern language. The ryth- mical portion of his work is observative, though neither full nor systematic; and his distinction of what he calls Poize, from the effect of quantity and stress, appears to me to be altogether no- tional and cloudy. Notwithstanding his philosophic turn for really hearing speech, he seems, on the subject of his light and heavy Poize, to have fallen almost into the mysticism of ' Occult causes.' Still I have taken a short and perhaps unsatisfactory view of this part of his essay, as prefatory to the few following remarks on the subject of rythmus.* The Rythmus of language is produced by a certain order of * Mr. Steele first published his views, under the title cited in the introduc- tion to this essay. A few years afterwards he gave a second edition of his work, with the phrase of 'Prosodia Rationalis.' This last has very little addi- tion to the former print: and its Latin words serve only to obscure the simple explanation of his early English title. RYTHMUS OF SPEECH. 523 accent, quantity, and pause. Or in other words, a certain suc- cession of sylables, having different degrees of stress, or of quan- tity; and this succession being divided into portions by pauses, constitutes the agreeable impression of the current of speech, called Rythmus. And further, certain perceptible relations, be- tween the various sounds of the elements and of sylables joined with the flow of that rythmus, serve both in prose and verse, to extend and to highten its esthetic character. These relations regard an interesting branch of Rhetorical inquiry; embracing those delicate audible perceptions, either agreeable or otherwise, of the similarity and contrast of elemental and sylabic sounds, which cannot have escaped the notice of a cultivated ear; and which may have been instinctively observed, and practiced, in Greek and Roman Elocution, yet never described or reduced to system. And though what is here said may not be perceptible to every Reader ; some perhaps, may follow-up this hint on the sub- ject of those graceful accompaniments of rythmus, which I am not at this time prepared to pursue. Two methods of applying the alternate force and remission of stress, and the variations of quantity are employed in the con- struction of rythmus. One procedes by a regular repetition of the same order of impressions, in Versification. The other, in Prose, has no formal arrangement of its strong and weak, or its long and short sylables. The system of the order of sylables in verse constitutes what is called Prosody. This subject having been ably treated by authors, and being beyond the design of this essay, we here pass it by, with the remark, that if English prosodists would listen to their own language, when they under- take to regulate it, and would scrutinize what the older gram- marians have said upon the subject of Time^ which, we have some causes for beleving, they themselves did not thoroughly analyzej their science would be more inteligible, and their rules of practice more useful to the student. Though the broad distinction between prose and verse consists in the more irregular sequence of accent and quantity in the former: still they seem to compromise their differences to a cer- tain degree, in their respective attempts at excelence. For the best poetic rythmus is that which admits occasional, and well- 524 RTTHMUS OF SPEECH. ordered deviations from the current of accentuation; these devi- ations however, not continuing long enough to destroy the general character of regularity; the order returning before the ear has forgotten its previous impression. Prose, on the other hand, is constantly showing the beginning of a regular rythmus: but before any order of accent or quantity has time to impress- the ear with its measures the cross-purpose of a new series destroys the order of incipient versification. The sources of variety, beauty, and force, in rythmus may be learned from the following general view of its construction. In ordinary pronunciation there may be several successive monosylabic-words marked by the abrupt accentj the abruptness necessarily producing a momentary pause between them : or there may be an accented sylable followed by one or more, and not exceeding five unaccented ; the average proportion being about one accented, to two or three unaccented. From this it appears that the divisions, included between tbe vertical lines of Mr. Steele's notation, called here, accentual sections, may con- sist of from one to five sylables, and with peculiar arrangement, and care in pronunciation, perhaps of six. Consequently, if a rythmus were formed on the function of accent alone, a series of these differently constituted sections, would furnish the ground- work for considerable variety. In the above example, the sec- tions consist of from one to five sylables, for the third and fourth may be thrown together by omitting the bar and the pause, with- out offending the ear ; and these sections being arranged in varied succession, is one of the causes of the agreeable rythmus of that sentence. Perhaps the Reader will now admitj the ear is as strongly attracted by quantity, as by stress. When, therefore, these two functions are combined, the means of variety are multiplied. In the following sentence, slightly altered from Gibbon, I have marked in italics those sylables which make an impression by their quantity, and add dignity to the varied accentual rythmus. The masters of the fairest and most wealthy climates of the globe, turrCd with contempt from gloomy hills, assaifd by the wintery tempest, from lakes QonceaVd in mist, and from cold and lonely heaths, over which the deer of the forest were chased by a troop of naked barbarians. RYTHMUS OF SPEECH. 525 Besides the variety and impressiveness arising from stress and quantity, the rythmic effect may be further diversified by includ- ing one or more accentual sections within the boundary of pauses. If the useful economy of the term may be allowed, let us call the portions of discourse so formed, Pausal sections. They may con- sist of a single word; and the structure of style, and ease of utterance, rarely admit of their containing more than twenty syl- ables. In the following example the pausal sections are included between the upright lines, that the order and variety of the suc- cession may be surveyed by the eye. The lines designate only the place of the pause in clear and impressive reading, without denoting its several durations. It is gone | that sensibility of principle | that chastity of honor | which felt a stain j like a wound j which inspired courage | whilst it mitigated ferocity | which ennobled whatever it touched | and under which | vice it- self | lost J half its evil | by losing all its grossness. | * * The agreeable effect of variety in the pausal sections will per- haps be more remarkable, by contrasting it with the monotony of the antithetic style. The following sentence exhibits, not the art. but the artifice of rhetorical construction. When I took the first survey of my undertaking | I found our speech j copious j without order | and energetic j without rules | wherever I turned my view | there was perplexity | to be disentangled [ and confusion to be regulated | choice was to be made [ out of boundless variety | without any established principle of selection | adulterations were to be detected | with- out any settled test of purity | and modes of expression | to be rejected or receved | without the suffrages of any writers of classical reputation | or acknowledged authority. | Such measured divisions used occasionally may give variety to discourse; but as a characteristic of style, they become tiresome to the earj and aiming to be forcible merely by verbal contrasts, often weaken the more important force of thought. There seems * The manner in which lost, here forms by itself, a pausal section, is ex- emplified in Mr. Steele's method of notation: | Vice it | selfl \ lost 7 | half its i | e vil. ] A good reader would pronounce this clause, with emphasis on lost, and a pause before and after it: thus according with Mr. Steele's principles of Accentual division. 526 RYTHMUS OF SPEECH. too, to be a want of dignity in this kind of rythmus; and those who affect it, scarcely perceve how nearly they approach to the principle of the ludicrous: for when its features are slightly sur- charged by caricature, it really becomes so. The principle is that of a resemblance in sound, with a difference in meaning. The similarity in the number of words, together with the like places of their accents, and the equal count of sylables, under which it has sometimes been the literary practice to set-forth the strongest antithesis in thought or passion, has not exactly the contrasted imagery of a pun, but it reminds me of it. The monotonous effect of a series of similar pausal sections, is conspicuous in the following example from the poems of Ossian. It is however, fair to remark, that as the extract has only two trisylabic words, and not one polysylable, this peculiarity must be taken into account, with the other defects of its composition. And is the son of Semo fallen ? | mournful are Tura's walls. | Sorrow dwells at Dunscai. | Thy spouse is left alone in her youth. | The son of thy love is alone! | He shall come to Bragela, | and ask why she weeps? | He shall lift his eyes to the wall, | and see his father's sword. | Whose sword is that? ] he will say. | The soul of his mother is sad. | Who is that, | like the hart of the desert, | in the murmur of his course? | His eyes look wildly round | in search of his friend. | Conal | son of Colgar | where hast thou been J when the mighty fell? | Did the seas of Cogorma roll round thee? | Was the wind of the south in thy sails? | The mighty have fallen in battle, | and thou wast not there. | Let none tell it in Selma, | nor in Morven's woody land. | Fingal will be sad, | and the sons of the desert | mourn. The pausal sections are nearly all of equal length, and this cause, together with the frequent occurrence of the cadence, produces the wearisome character of its very common language, for it does not deserve the name of rythmus. Doctor Johnson once said; many men, and women, and children in Britain, could write such poems as those ascribed to Ossian. I have too many agreeable and grateful recolections of Scotland, to quarrel with her partiality, if she has any, on this point: but surely, there is not a Roscius, who can read them. We have a vast fund for variety, in the constituents of speech; but we may doubt their sufficiency to meet the demands of this composition, without transgressing the rules of a just and expressive intonation. In- RYTHMUS OF SPEECH. 527 deed, the passage, like many others by better poets, cannot be read with satisfaction to the perception of a discerning ear. Let us compare the preceding extract, with the first few lines of Burke's episode on the Queen of France; which in elegance, variety, and impressiveness of mere rythmus, and exclusive of some hyperbole, and rhetorical ostentation, is not surpassed in the English language. That both the accentual and the pausal sections may be graph- ically made, they are here presented under Mr. Steele's notation, omitting the symbols for the light and heavy accent. The ac- centual sections are marked by upright bars, the pausal, by the numeral seven. | 7 It is | now | sixteen or | seventeen J years | 7 since I | saw the queen of | France, 7 | then the | Dauphiness, | 7 at Ver | sailles: | 7 7 | 7 and | surely | never | lighted on this | orb, | 7 which she | hardly | seemed to | touch, 7 | 7 a | more de | lightful | vision. | 7 7 | 7 7 | 7 I | saw her | just a | bore the ho | rizon, | 7 7 j decorating and | cheering | 7 the | elevated [ sphere | 7 she j just be j gan to { move in: [ 7 7 | | glittering j 7 like the | morning j star; J 7 7 j full of | life, 7 | 7 and splendor, j 7 and j joy. | | Oh! j what a [ revo J lution! | 7 7 j 7 and j what a | heart 7 | must I j have, j 7 to con j template j 7 with J out e | motion, j that j 7 ele j vation | 7 and [ that 7 [ fall. 1 The agreeable effect of this rythmus may be traced to the following causes. First. The alphabetic elements are varied throughout: and except the similarity of sound in teen and Queen, and in the words lighted and delightful, cheering and sphere, they do not press upon each other. Second. The words have from one to four sylables; and these are finely alternated with each other. The accentual sections vary from one to five sylables in extent. Third. The Pausal sections consist of from two sylables to ten; and their different lengths are intermingled in succession. Fourth. The effect is still further varied, by an occasional coincidence of the temporal accent with that of stress: and the dignity and force of the phraseology is hightened, by the occur- rence of these long sylabic quantities, at the several pauses, in 528 RYTHMUS OF SPEECH. the wordsj years, Versailles, orb, hon'zon, sphere, move, star, joy, and fall. Fifth. The order of the rythmus has just enough regularity to produce the smooth effect of verse, without allowing the reader to anticipate a systematic prosodial-measure. The only exception to be made to the commendation of this extract, is produced by the consecutive accents at its termina- tion. A cadence, with its last two sylables strongly accented, if not designed for some extraordinary case of expression, or for variety in a series of short sentences, or if its harshness is not modified by some long-drawn intonation on an indefinite quantity, is always, to me at least, both awkward and unman- ageable. Dionysius of Halicarnassus, in a summary of the constituents of an elegant Elocution, quoted in a Note to our seventh section, describes Rythmus, as supporting or 'sustaining the voice;' and the metaphor is just. For a well-marked arrangement of the varying stress and quantity of sylables, does sustain the voice, by keeping it from that careless staggering of speech, if I may so call it, and from that running of words against each other, which by crossing, and arresting the easy step of language, confuses and thwarts the expectation of both the ear and the mind. The Ancients., with whom Writing was an Esthetic Art, considered^ without rythmus, there could be no grace and dignity of style, whether in its lighter or its graver construction: and we learn, that at the earliest period, Poetry in embodying the mental per- ceptions of beauty and of grandeur, assumed to itself a corre- sponding expression, on the flowing and graceful measure of Verse. All this rare work however, was done by those, who if they did not, from the patience and thought with which they wrote, always beg their bread, did very often little more than earn it. Too many, who now use the hasty and profitable tongue and pen, have not time to measure for the intelect, and ear, what they manufacture for the market. The regular order of Meter that can be counted on the fingers, may for common purposes seem to require but little instruction. The Rythmus of Prose must be studied by the rules of a flowing and effective variety, as the Ancients studied it. It is therefore, at present, neglected: and FAULTS OF READERS. 529 we are not without Critics, of such indolent or untunable ear, as to suppose^ we ought to write, even in the brief and simple words of scientific description, with the disjointed plainness of common speech; and that to satisfy a cultivated taste and reflection, by the varied accentual force, quantity, and pause of a well-adjusted rythmus, is to be stilted and ostentatious: as the old Elocution- ists say, that to read by the principles and rules of analytic knowledge, is to be Theatric, and formal. The preceding examples of rythmus ilustrate its structure and effects in prose composition of elevated character. But there is no saying to what inferior level of popular idiom, language may descend with dignified safety, when supported by the confident wings of a gliding accent and quantity, and the upholding energy of passion and of thought. From the pen of a person of fine rythmic perception, even a letter of business, with its enumeration of particulars, may flow with graceful variety, and terminate with decisive satisfaction to the ear; for the Grecian principle of rythmus sustaining the voice in discourse, applies not more to maintaining a rhetorical dignity, than to preserving common language from a loose and unmeasured rudeness. It is unnecessary to go into a further detail on the subject of rythmus. Much might be said in ilustration of its powers and beauties, as existing both in the current of discourse and in the conspicuous place of the pause. But we leave this to the Rhe- toricians. SECTION LI. Of the Faults of Headers. It is a prevailing opinion, that persons who speak their own states of mind, in social intercourse, always speak properly ; and that transfering this 'natural manner' as it is called, to formal reading, must insure this required natural-propriety. 530 FAULTS OP READERS. This rule has arisen from ignorance of the functions which constitute the beauties and deformities of speech. Without a knowledge of causes and effects, on these points, teachers have been obliged to refer to the spontaneous efforts of the voice, as the only assistant means of instruction. Setting aside here, what we might insist on, that no one should pretend to say, what the right or natural manner is, before he knows the principles that make it so; we will admit? the natural manner, or any body's manner, or rather no manner at allj from our being accustomed to it, and having, it may be, a fellow-feeling with its faults, is less exceptionable than the first attempts of the pupil in reading; still the faults of ordinary conversation are similar to those of reading, though they are less apparent. Perhaps the common opinion is grounded on a belief, that a just execution must neces- sarily follow a full perception of the thought, and passion of dis- course ; for these are supposed to accompany coloquial speech. . No one can read correctly or with elegance, if he does not both perceve and 'feel,' as it is called, what he utters; but these are not exclusively the means of success. There must be knowledge, derived from peeping behind the curtain of actual vocal deformity still hanging before the just and beautiful laws of speech; and there must be an organic faculty, well prepared in the school of those laws, for the representation of thought and passion. Were it truej this pretended natural manner represents the proper system of vocal expression, we would no more require an art of elocution, than an Art of Breath- ing: and the whole world, in Reading and Speaking, as in the act of respiration, would always accomplish its purposes, with a like instinctive perfection. Yet far from uniformity, we find wide and innumerable differences, in what, with individuals and schools, pass for the proprieties, as well as in what are acknowledged faults of speech. The Elocutionist's natural manner is not therefore, the original ordination of the voice. It would seem, that in the early and unknown history of progressive man, he must, from the perversity attendant on his ignorance, have learned to Think, Speak, Act, Govern, and to be Governed viciously, before he had learned to think, speak, act, govern, and to be governed wisely and well. Man's whole executive purposes are directed by his FAULTS OF READERS. 531 thoughts and passions^ the same agents that direct his speech: and, far as history, and well-grounded conclusions inform us, the just designs of Nature, in his moral, religious, political, and vocal condition, were found to be already crossed, or perverted, when he first began to look into her laws, and to turn an eye of philo- sophic inquiry and comparison, on himself. The self-prompted efforts of speech do exhibit in some instances, proprieties of emphasis and intonation ; but these proprieties, like every purposed act without its rule, being but the occasional re- sult of a narrow design, cannot have a generality necessary for a directive system of elocution ; and will be very far from satisfac- tory to the ear of a refined and educated taste. There may likewise be a wide difference, between the capability of a voice in its coloquial use, and of the same voice when exerted in a formal attempt to read. Mr. Rice, in his 'Introduction to the Art of Reading,' refers to a person, who had been known to speak with great energy and propriety, as it was presumed, those very words, which, being shown to him in writing or print, he was able, only after repeated endeavors, to pronounce in the pre- cise ' tone ' and manner in which he had previously uttered them. Supposing he did speak with propriety, which the art has never yet furnished the proper means for knowingj there seems, in the case, to have been no want of a thoughtive and passionative state of mind, nor of flexibility in the voice; and it must have been among those exceptions, in which the natural laws of expression prevail. But when discourse, denoting either of these states, is read, even by its author, the occupation of the eye distracts his attention from his state of mindj or permits it to be fully per- ceved, only when directed to a single point. If the meaning is to be gathered from several words, or a whole sentence, the neces- sary forerunning and retrospection of the eye, render the proper management of the voice impracticable to those who have not, by long exercise in the art of reading, acquired a facility in catching the thought and passion of discourse, and an almost involuntary habit of connecting with them, the proper form of vocal expres- sion. If this is true of one who reads what he has before spoken wellj more remarkably must it apply, in reading without prepa- ration the discourse of another. 532 FAULTS OF READERS. Whatever may be the cause of the difficulty of reading-well; faults of all degrees and kinds do prevail in the art. Having therefore prepared the way for a history of these faults, by de- scribing what appears to be a precise and elegant use of the con- stituents of speech, I shall endeavor to point out the most common deviations from the principles, on which. I have presumed to found our system of Propriety and Taste. If we undertake to measure an art by its rules, and it is fool- ish to attempt it without them, we must carry with our censure, some knowledge of the ways and means of its perfection. Er- rors are in all cases, contrasts to truth; and in elocution, they are only the misemployment of those vocal constituents, which in their proper forms and uses, produce both the instinctive and conventional method of just and elegant speech: for some of the finest colors of the art, though well and truly laid-on, are dipped from the same sources as its faults. Whoever, with pretensions to taste, declares his perception of blemishes in an art, without having at the same time, some rule for its beauty, speaks as the dupe of authority, or with ignorance both of his subject and of himself. Let us then try to perform these inseparable duties, by giving the outline of a just and elegant elocution, with a particu- lar enumeration of its faults. While investigating the phenomena, and regarding the uses of speech, I have always endeavored to keep in view the purest and most elevated designs of taste. It will be little more than re- capitulation therefore to sayj the faultless reader should have at command the various forms of vocality from the full laryngeal bass of the orotund, to the lighter and lip-issuing sound of daily conversation. He should give distinctly that pronunciation of single elements and their aggregates, both as to quantity and accent, which accords with the habitual perceptions of his audi- ence. His plain melody should be diatonic, and varied in radical pitch beyond discoverable monotony. His simple concrete should be equable in the rise, and diminution of its vanish. His tremor should be under full command for occasions of grief and exulta- tion. Knowledge and taste must have fixed the places of empha- sis, and its various forms and degrees have afforded the means for a varied and expressive application of them. He should be FAULTS OF EEADERS. 533 able to prolong his voice through every extent of quantity in the wave, and in every concrete interval of the rising and the falling scale. He must have learned to put off from the dignified occa- sions of reading, everything like that canting or affected intona- tion, which the artful courtesies and sacrificing servilities of life too often confirm into habit ; and to avoid in his interrogates the keenness and excesses of the vulgar tongue. He should have for this, as for every other Esthetic Art, a delicate sense of the Sublime, the Graceful, and the Ridiculous. A quick perception of the last is absolutely necessary, to guard the exalted works of taste, from an accidental occurrence of its causes. It may perhaps be considered presumptuous, to propose rules of taste and criticism in the Art of speaking. Before the ana- lytic development of speech, this could not have been done; and the attempt would have been equally the act of ignorance, and folly, the very causes of presumption. We have now ascertained the constituents of vocal expression, sufficiently at least, to ad- vance some steps towards a system; and it seemed to be no undue anticipation of what must hereafter form a great purpose in the schools of elocution, to have pointed-out a use of these constitu- ents, that may satisfy the cultivated ear. If however, any ascribed presumption should require apology, or justification, let me here say a word on the system I have offered;* and on the manner and means of its production. In embracing the opportunity of investigating the subject of the human voice, which others equally, and perhaps better quali- fied had suffered to pass-by, I brought to the inquiry some in- stinctive facility of ear, and some acquired knowledge of the science and practice of music. On taking-up the subject of the concrete movement, where the Ancients had left itj and there- upon tracing an identity between certain constituent functions of speech, and of musicj the train of investigation soon led to a dis- covery, that the individual vocal constituents of speech, like those of music, are comparatively few. This at once unfolded the cause of the mystery; for the delusions of that mystery were the result of a belief either in the inscrutable character of the constituents of intonation, or in the unresolvable complication of their aggre- gates; and this unquestioned belief had deafened all perception 534 FAULTS OF READERS. of their individuality. On resolving these complicated aggregates into distinguishable species and individuals^ it brought their as- signable number and forms within the discriminative power of observation. The greatest, difficulty was now overcome; for by an unobscured perception of the disentangled individual, it was easy to make out the relationship between a state of mind, and its vocal sign. With this knowledge, obtained through my own experimental ilustration, I turned to the uncorrupted vocal in- stincts of children and of sub-animalsj to observe the particular constituents of passionate expression ; and then to common life, as well as to the eminent elocution of the Stages to compare the ordained constituents of both thought and passion with their conventional usages in speech. The power of tracing the indi- vidual constituents, and of recognizing their single and combined effects, brought me to the belief, that the system here proposed has its Origin and its Confirmation in Nature; and is therefore well adapted, by its analysis, to gratify the lover of truthj and by the practical uses founded upon it, to contribute to the pleasures of an enlightened taste. In developing this system of Efficient causation, I was led to perceve a wise conformity of the vocal means, to the expressive ends of speech; and to remark therein, at least the consistency of the system, if I did not dare to draw from the supposition of such Final causation, any confirmative evidence of its truth. In our preceding history, a broad and important distinction is made between the vocal functions, representing simple thought, and those expressive of passion. To one division, we allotted the second and its plain diatonic melody. To the other, the semi- tone, with the wider intervals and waves: manifest differences in the vocal means, being definitely accommodated to manifest dif- ferences between the thoughtive and passionative states of mind. On the ground of this appropriation of different means to a differ- ent end, it is conclusive, that the rule of rules, nowhere, and never forgotten by Nature^ this Rule of Fitness^ being unknown, or disregarded, or only rarely perceved in the use of intonation, must be constantly violated by speakers : that a current melody of thirds, or fifths, or wider waves, must counteract the Final Cause of Nature, in allotting a different vocal expression respec- FAULTS OF READERS. 535 lively to passion and to thought; confound her intended contra- distinctions; prevent the repose of the ear on the unimpassioned diatonic; and wear out its excitability to the emphatic power of wider intervals, when required for occasional purposes of vivid expression. There is another consideration, to justify the establishment of a system of some kind, if it should not plead for the one which is offered here. When the several voices of thought and of passion are individually distinguishable, the precision of their use must become an object of attention and criticism with an audience; and under an admitted rule, their employment will be more uni- form, and therefore more clear and impressive. If we vary and confound the appropriate meaning of the vocal signs, even when they are joined with conventional language, we may come in time to destroy, and must always weaken, the character and force of those signs. If we constantly whine in the chromatic melody, or cry out emphatically in the wider intervals and waves, to no pur- pose of complaint or surprise, we shall in vain seek for sympathy, when the wolf of expression in reality seizes upon us. In looking for a Rule of excelence in the art of elocution, we are always refered, as in the other fine arts, to Nature. But Nature with her laws concealed from the whole mass of Mysta- gogues and Imitators, is when shut-out from the light of analysis, an unassignable pattern; and seems here, as in so many other cases, to be no more than the omniform parent of sectarian opin- ion; and like the changeable features of Liberty with the patriot, of Experience with the physician, Right with the moralist, and of Orthodoxy with the bigot-? shows as many faces as there are self- deceving tongues that take her name in vain. If nature, the de- formed instinct of human nature, I mean, is to be the rule, it can be only by the individual instances of excelence she produces : if her excelencies are scattered throughout the species, it is Art that must ordain this canon, by colecting them into one faultless example. And where is the instance in this corrupted nature, worthy of imitation? Is it to be found in the drawl of the sloth- ful? In the snappish stress of the petulant? The short quantity and precipitate time of the frivolous? In the continued diatonic of the saturnine? Or the eternal whine of the unhappy? Is it 536 FAULTS OF READERS. in the canting drift of the passion-masking hypocrite; or in the voice of those morbid superlatives which live upon exaggeration? Shall we look for it in the daily-changing and mincing affectations of the Fashionable-Foolish ; or in the thousand contrarieties of National accent, quantity, and intonation, yet each in pride and ignorance, self-aright? Shall we find this nature's paragon, in the chatterings of the great market of life, that hurries through its melody, denies itself the repose of the cadence, and in uproar after rank and power, and bidding for its bargains of office or notoriety, strains itself to its hoarsest note? These are the individual instances of vocal deformity presented by Nature, with sacrilege so called, and daily suffered to pass without remark, because we are engaged at the moment with other thoughts and designsj and which we perceve only when the voice itself as a subject of taste, is the exclusive object of reflec- tive and discriminating attention. Although a Compensating Nature, still holding her regards over the wayward errors of the human voice, may not, under its corruptions, deign to show us a single instance of the fitness and beauty of her laws^ she has, as an indication of her means for perfecting the vocal powers of the individual, diffused throughout the species, all the constituents of that perfection. A description of the true character and wise design of these constituents, and the gathering-in of their scattered proprieties and beauties, fur- nish the full and choicest pattern of Imitable-Nature ; which, re- duced to an orderly system of precept and example, must hereaf- ter constitute the proper and elegant Art of Elocution. The Canon, so called, of statuary in Greece, which represented no singly-existing form, but which was said to contain within the Rule of its Design, all the master-principles of the Artj was the deliberate work of Observation, Time, and careful Experiment on the Eye, in the very method of reflective and discriminating Selection, we here claim for Elocution; and was finished at last, by Polycletus, only after previous ages of successive improve- ment. If an individual of nature might be taken as a model in the arts, we should not at this late day be so often obliged to listen to bad readers; nor to hear such clashing opinions, upon those who pass for the best. The productions of taste would FAULTS OF READERS. 537 have forerun a present needed cultivation; and in reverse of the tedious growth of centuries, would like those goodly trees in the garden of Eden, have been ripe at their planting. The masters in Elocution, not perceving, that Speaking-well is One, in the beautiful Sisterhood of the Esthetic Arts, and not drawing from a common fund of colected principles, the precepts that might be applicable to their ownj have sometimes varied their old and imperfect rule of teaching by Imitation, to some- thing like the system of nature, as they think, by requiring their pupil, not to imitate another, but figuratively as it were, to imi- tate himself. Suppose yourself, says the Master, to be delivering the meaning of an author as if it is your own. Such a direction, in assuming to be the rule for a just and effective elocution, only requires a pupil to speak as he pleases, or as his own particular mind prompts him ; for by the direction, he is to make the author's meaning his own; but having, as im- plied by the necessity of the direction, no previous rule, he is left to utter them only as he pleases by an assumed rule of his own. At best then, under this direction, a class of a thousand pupils, in seeking a precept for the supposed exact meaning, would dis- covery there must be a thousand different precepts ; since each must speak by his own. It is then an unnecessary direction of an unthinking master. For no one can read well, except he does spontaneously read as if the meaning were his own : showing the superfluity at least of directing him to make it his own, in order to read well. And again, the pupil who cannot so far know an author's mind, as to be able to represent it from written descrip- tion, would be very likely to mistake it under his master's vague direction, that he must try to make it his own. Let us however, suppose^ this rule of Self-Imitation might serve for commonplace thought, on everyday occasions. On the other hand, suppose the art of reading to be employed in representing the strictest truth and propriety of dramatic char- acter, or the most delicate picturing by the higher poetry. How, with the great Crowd of mankind, will the rule of substitution meet this case? I have more than once, seen among Aspirants of the Stage, the pitiable result of what was supposed to be a repre- 35 538 FAULTS OF READERS. sentation of the Truth of Nature, by this affecting to become identical with their enacted Character, in assuming the thought of another as their own; a representation of Nature, without a knowledge of her constitution and laws; a constitution, coeval with the period of human progress into speech. All the Fine Arts are essentially ArU$ each the offspring of a fruitful alliance between Knowledge and intelectual facility: the high accomplishment of the work by the Artist, and the re- flective enjoyment of its truth and beauty by the Votary, being purely the result of scrutinizing perception, extensive compar- ison, enlightened choice, and a harmonized use of the scattered facts and rules of propriety, unity, expression, grandeur and grace. Many of the faults of speakers arise from their being taught by imitation alone. As long as there has been a history of the Stage, so long, Actors have been classed in the school of some Preceding, or Cotemporary master. But as there is always one, who by chance or by merit is the Leader of the ' lustrum/ and even five years is a long life for fashionable famej it generally happens that his faults may for the time, be recognized through- out a crowd of pupils and imitators. From the want of some definite corrective, the bad reading of a Pulpit sometimes infects a whole class of students^ who circumscribe the active benefits of their master's solemn example by taking-up his sinful elo- cution. It may be saidj If we establish a system of principles, all readers must be of one school, and this will be equivalent to imi- tation. There would be one school; a school of acknowledged and permanent precept, with a likeness in its excelence, not in its defects. Many actors who differ from each other in their faults, yet give occasional short sentences with similar propriety, without exciting a remark on that similarity; for propriety is here, the fitness of truth. It is only upon some imitated outrage of utterance, that in a moment, the whispered name of a proto- type is heard in twenty parts of a theater. Serious imitations of distinguished Actors and Speakers, like gay mimicries of them, are generally made on peculiar pronunciation, monotony, un- pleasant quality of voice, peculiar forms of melody, whining, FAULTS OF READERS. 539 false cadence, or no cadence at all, and precipitate and unac- countable transitions.* But, enough of unsatisfactory argument on this subject. The art of Elocution has never yet, by system or rule, reached that consummation, which might be called, the Canonical Beauty of Speech. The corrupted instinct of individuals, has been for each, the universal guide; and the best management of the voice has, under so poor a master, fallen-short of an effective means for the highest oral excelence of an ordained Elocution: while the com- mon herd of pretenders afford both shocking and endless examples of deformity and error. It is not the intention here, to speak of the constitutional de- formities of the voice. It is difficult however, to draw a line of distinction on this subject. Too many of the wilful vices of life, through self-delusion, pass for misfortunes: and it can scarcely be made a question, whether the impudent display of even na- tural failings should not shut-out the subject from indulgent commiseration. Three points are of leading importance to a speaker: and if deficiencies therein are not to be called misfortunes, we may rank * Strange, indeed! that such faults should be found among distinguished Actors and Speakers. But I write from observation; having heard them all. The celebrated -> who had a grating and untunable vocality, and whose elocution as I recolect it, was affected and monotonous, in a formal melody of wider intervals and waves, with an occasional minor third in em- phatic places^ would, after some of the Older Poets, pronounce when nobody else did, the plural of ache (ach-es) as two sylables, to the unseasonable merri- ment of those who heard him. The use of the jpinor third however, was not peculiar to him, for it seems to be a vocal tradition, still kept up among the English. The Quakers, particularly their women, in public preaching, employ it to an extravagant degree; and, from the incorrigible character of all sectari- anism, probably had it in the time of Fox ; whose followers may have derived it through the earlier Protestants, from some awkward imitation of chanting, in the Catholic-service. Be this as it may, it is not uncommon, in private life, even with women of the higher classes, in England; and very common on the Stage. We often hear it in Actors as well as Actresses who come over to us. We had some years ago, one of the latter, whose intonation was almost a melody of minor thirds. As long as she lasted, it was thought very fine; and was imi- tated by many American theatric Misses. Its affectation was so remarkable, that it was a subject of mimicry for every shop-girl with a good ear, who heard it. 540 FAULTS OF READERS. them as great and generic faults. I mean the defects of the Mind, of the Ear, and of Industry. Speech is intended to be the sign of every variety of thought and passion. If therefore the mind of a scholar be not raised to that generality of condition, which can assume all the characters of expression, he will in vain aspire to great eminence in the art. If his mind is endued only with the diplomatic virtue of unruffled caution; if it is of that character which compliments its own dulness.by calling energy, violence^ and drawls-out in reprobation at the vivid language of truth; if all its busy goings are just around the little circle of its own selfish schemes; if it has yet to know itself, as only a compound of thought, and passion; and to hear, without being convinced, that success in every art is not more indebted to the plans of sagacious thought, than to the per- severance of thoughtful passion; if the mind, I repeat it, is of such a cast, its possessor may with the resources of elementary knowledge, and methodj attain a certain proficiency in the art, may save himself from its striking faults, and probably satisfy his own uncircumspect perception; but he can never reach the highest accomplishment in elocution. In speaking of the mental requisites for good reading, we must not overlook our frequent neglect to discriminate between a merely forceful, and a delicate state of mind. The latter makes the full and finished Actor; and it is unfortunate for his art, that en- dowments, which under proper cultivation insure success, are generally united with a modesty that retires from the places and "occasions for displaying its merits: the former in reaching no more than the coarse energy of the passions, is able to figure on the Stage, only as the outrageous Herod, the brazen Beatrice, and the Buffoon. The mind, with its comprehensive and refined discriminations, must furnish the design of elocution; the ear must watch over the lines and coloring of its expression. The ability to measure nicely the time, force, and pitch of sounds, is indispensable to the higher excelencies of speech. It is impossible to say how much of the musical ear, properly so called, is the result of cultivation. There is however a wide dif- ference even in the earliest aptitudes of this sense; and though FAULTS OF READERS. 541 the means of improvement derived from analysis will hereafter greatly increase the proportional number of good readers, and produce something like an equality among themj still the pos- session of a musical ear must, with other requisites, always give a superiority. I have more than once in this essay, urged the importance of Industry, the third general means for success. Neglect on this point may be considered as an egregious fault in a speaker; and it certainly is the most culpable. It is here placed on high ground, along with mental susceptibility and delicacy of ear, those essentials which have been designated by the indefinite term 'genius.' In vain will the mind furnish its finest percep- tions, or the ear be ready with its measurements, if the tongue should not contribute its persevering industry. By a figure of speech that took a part for the whole of the senses, a happy penalty upon mankind, as it was early written, doomed the taste to be gratified by the sweat of the brow: the ear can receve its full delight in Elocution, only through the long labor of the voice. The faults of speakers are of endless variety: but if I have told the whole truth, they embrace no mode or form of voice, here unnamed. It seems as if Nature had assumed, in her adjusted system of speech, all its available signs. The worldly tongue, with his corrupting habit, in deforming this all-perfect endowment, makes no addition to its constituents, but performs his part in human error, by misplacing them. In the present history of the faults of speech, we may therefore pursue something like the order, more than once, given to our subject. The five general heads, under which we considered the Modes of the voice, are Vocality, Time, Force, Abruptness, and Pitch. Of Faults in Vocality. This subject is so well known, both in the Art, and in common criticism, that it is unnecessary to be particular upon it. Harshness or roughness is one of the dis- agreeable forms of the voice. The nasal is still more offensive. Shrilness may rather be called a Vocality than a state of Pitch. It wants dignity, seems like a mockery of the voice, and though heard remotely, and drawing attention, it is with the attraction of a caricature. The huskiness of aspiration is more apt to be 542 FAULTS OF READERS. united with the orotund. It may not diminish the gravity and sober grandeur of this voice, but it obscures the clearness of its vocality. The falsette is sometimes used in the current of speech. We hear persons on the stage, in the senate, the fervent pulpit, and on the scaffold of the demagogue, who offend with the falsette only occasionally, by the melody breaking from the natural voice, on a single sylable. Every speaker has a falsette; and the skil- ful can always guard against its improper use. As a fault, it results either from the limited compass of the natural voice, or from a defect of ear in the speaker; for not having an accurate perception of his approach to it, he is unable to avoid the evil, by a ready descent of intonation. The falsette is common in the voices of women. It has with them a plaintive character; and the melody at this high pitch is apt to be monotonous. Of Faults in Time. It is not meant to treat here, of what is called reading too fast or too slow. There is nothing new to be said on this point. But we who speak English are said, by the report of the compilers of Greek and of Latin grammars, to know nothing of Quantity, and to have none in our language That bad readers, and persons who will not learn their own tongue may know nothing of its quantity, is readily granted; still, that it is an essential part of every language, and the neglect of it, a source of many faults in ours, must be admitted by those who know the effect of sylabic time, and the proper use of the voice. Quantity, as a fault, may be too long or too short. When states of mind requiring short time, such as gayety and anger, are expressed by long quantity, it produces the vice of Drawling. This drawling may go through its excessive quantity, either as a wave of the second, or an equal or unequal wave of wider inter- vals, or as the note of Song. When deliberate or solemn discourse is hurried over in a short sylabic quantity, the fault is no less apparent and offensive. This defect in reading is by far the most common; and it has been said, more than once, in this essay, because it is well to rouze the English ear to this subject, that the command over time in the pure and equable concrete of speech, is found only in speakers FAULTS OF READERS. 543 of fervent temperament and long experience. Such persons in- stinctively acquire the use of extended quantity: as through long sylables, most of their earnest expression is effected. It is from ignorance of this fact, that some speakers, neglecting the variety and smoothness of the temporal emphasis, give prominence to important words only by the hammering of accent. Of Faults in Force. The misapplication of the degrees of the piano and the forte, in the general current of discourse is suffi- ciently obvious. But the forms of stress, on different parts of the concrete, have never been observed, and consequently, have never been noted as a fault. Many speakers, from a difficulty in commanding the variations in quantity, execute most of their emphasis in the form of force ; yet even in this apparently simple effort, they are not free from faults. Some persons, after the manner of the Irish, employ the vanishing stress on all emphatic sylables. This has its meaning in expression, but it is misplaced, except on the occasions formerly pointed out. A want of the sharp and abrupt character of the radical is not an uncommon fault. It occurs generally in the dull and indolent: for nothing shows so clearly an elastic temper in the voice, as the ability to suddenly explode this initial stress. On the. other hand it is a more frequent fault 5 to over-stress the accented sylable, by that hammering of the voice, which destroys the dignity of deliberate intonation. This over-stress does most violence to the solemn expression, appropriate to many parts of the Church-service: for here the waves of the second, on indefi- nite quantities, whether accented or notj including by license, even a slight extension of the shortest sylablesj should with cau- tious management, and not unlike the 'leaning note' of song, be carried by a blending quantity from concrete to concrete, in a reverentive drift of deliberate dignity; the necessary emphasis being made by a comparative excess of quantity, with the impres- sive and graceful gliding of the median stress. It is not my intention to notice the faults of emphatic stress, in the common meaning of the term. They all resolve into a want of true apprehension on the part of the reader. Through ignorance of other constituents of an enlarged and definite elo- cution, which our present inquiry has taught us to appreciate and 544 FAULTS OF READERS. to recommend, this well known subject of stress-laying emphasis, has always been considered of the first importance in the art ; and unfortunately in the school of imitation, it has under the cri- tical term Reading, restrictively assumed, at least a nominal superiority over the other modes of speech. 'How admirably she reads,' said a thoughtless critic, of an actress, who, with per- haps a proper emphasis of Force, was nevertheless, deforming her utterance, by every fault of Time and Intonation. The critic was one of those who having neither knowledge nor docility, de- served neither argument nor correction. Emphasis of stress, being almost the only branch of elocution in which there is an approach towards a practical rule, this single function, under an ignorance of other modes of emphatic distinction, has, by a figure of speech grounded on its real importance, been assumed in the limited nomenclature of criticism, as almost the sole essential of the art. Even Mr. Kemble, whose eulogy should have been founded on whatever other merits he may have possessed, made, if we have not been misinformed, the first stir of his fame, by a new * reading,' or a new discriminative stress, in a particular scene of Hamlet. Under this view, it would follow, that he who properly applies the emphasis of force, in the Art of Reading, accomplishes all its purpose; he reads, or he accentuates well. We have awarded to the emphasis of force its due, but not its undue degree of consequence ; and it may be hereafter admitted, that much of the contention about certain unimportant points of this stress-laying emphasis, and of pause, has arisen from critics finding very little else of the vast compass of speech, on which they were able to form for themselves a determinate opinion. When, under a scientific institute of elocution, there will be more important matters to study, and delight in, it may perhaps be foundj much of this trifling lore of italic notation, now serving to keep up commonplace contention in a daily gazette, will be quite overlooked, in the high court of philosophic criticism.* * Some one, of those who like to make business in an art, rather than to do it, has raised a question whether the following lines from Macbeth, should be read with an accent and a pause at banners or at walls : Mac. Hang out our banners on the outward walls The cry is still, They come. FAULTS OF READERS. 545 We do not speak of the faults of pronunciation, depending on misplaced verbal or grammatical accents. Propriety in this mat- ter is set-forth in the dictionary, and the errors of speech may be measured by its conventional rules. Nor is it within the purpose of this essay to notice faults in the pronunciation of the alpha- betic elements. Criticism should be modest on this pointj till it has the mental independence to give to the literal symbols of those elements, and to their redundant, and defective uses, more of the character of a work of wisdom, than they have ever receved in any written language; till the pardonable variety of pronuncia- tion, and the ear-directed speling by the vulgar, have satirized into reformation, that scholastic pencraft which keeps up the difficulties of orthography, with no other purpose, it would seem, To those whose elocution consists in such riddles, we propose the following, from Goldsmith : A man he was, to all the country dear, And passing rich with forty pounds a year. Let them guess variously, or sharply dispute, upon the question of applying an emphasis on passing, or on rich; thereby to determine -jeither that the good Village Parson was passing or superlatively rich, with his forty pounds; or that he passed among his parishioners, as only very well-off in the world. I some time ago noticed the following punctuation, in one of those wandering Actors known as Stars. I'll call thee Hamlet, King, Father ; Royal Dane answer me. Perhaps, after writing the words King and Father, the Poet's choiceful ear was deluded into the repetition Royal Dane, by the fine variety of elemental sound, and rythmic accent and quantity in the Title. The ambitious reading of the Star was worse than careless, without an apology^ by imploring emphati- cally of the Royal Dane what he would not of Hamlet, King, and Father. I heard another erratic Star of critical ilumination, read thus : How fares our Cousin Hamlet? Ham. Excelent, i' faith, of the chamelion's dish I eat; the air promise- crammed. Leaving it to a brighter star-light to show, whether Hamlet, or the air was inconsiderately crammed. Many persons who might be profitably hired to Square Timber, make-show of doing something, by idly whittling sticks. 546 FAULTS OF READERS. than to pride itself in the use of a troublesome and awkward sys- tem, as a criterion of education^ and with the tyranny of habit, to oppose every promising attempt to correct it. Of Faults in Pitch. Speech has been especially, one of those many subjects, in which we often pronounce upon the right and the wrong, without being able to say why they are so. If we have resolved the obscurity in respect to the proprieties of in- tonation; it will not be difficult on similar principles, to give some explanation of its faults. Of Faults in the Concrete Movement. I have more than once spoken of that peculiar characteristic of speech, the full opening, the gradual decrease, and the delicate termination of the con- crete. As this structure is destroyed by the use both of the vanishing, and the thorough stress, the misapplication of either must be regarded as a fault. The vanishing stress, exemplified by the upward jerk in some of the Irish people, produces a pecu- liar monotony, when continued throughout discourse; and the thorough stress, if not used for especial emphasis, or designed incivility, is a striking and a vulgar fault. Every one must be familiar with what is called a coarse and unmannerly tone. This, as regards the structure of the concrete, was formerly shown to be the effect of the thorough stress. Some readers seem incapa- ble of carrying on a long quantity through the equable concrete; substituting in place of it, the note of song. The most remark- able instance of this speech-singing, is that of the public preach- ing of the Friends, to be particularly described among the faults in melody. Of Faults in the Semitone. Who has not heard of whining? It is the misplaced use of the semitone. The semitone is the vocal sign of tenderness, petition, complaint, and doubtful sup- plication: but never of manly confidence, and the authoritative self-reliance of truth. It is this which betrays the sycophant, and even the crafty hypocrite himself. They assume a plaintive persuasion, or a tuneful cant, not merely to implyj they are prompted by a kindly and affectionate state of mind, but some- times because they distrust or despise themselves, and are there- fore influenced by the mental state of servility. Suspicion should therefore be awake, when the show of truth or benevolence is FAULTS OF READERS. 547 proffered under the cringing whine of this expressive interval; and in general, whenever the semitone is used for a state of mind that does not call for it. A beggar should, by the instinct of his voice, plaintively implore; and it is equally a law of nature, which abhors hypocrisy no less than a vacuum, that he should give the truth of his narrative in a more confident intona- tion. The chromatic melody is common among women. Actresses are prone to this fault; and it is one of the causes which fre- quently prevent their assuming the matron-rofe of tragedy, and the dignified severity of epic, and dramatic elocution. Women sometimes intercede, threaten, complain, smile, and call the foot- man, all in the minor third or the semitone. They can vow, and love, and burst into agony in Belvidera; but rarely by masculine personation and diatonic energy, 'chastise with the [orotund) valor of their tongue,' and gravely order the scheme of murder in Lady Macbeth. We have described the states of mind signified by the semitone. Whenever it supplants the proper diatonic melody, it becomes a fault, and begins to be monotonous; for when appropriate it never is so. I once heard the part of Dr. Cantwell, in the Hypo- crite, played in the chromatic melody throughout. Perhaps it suited the pretensions of the pious villain, but it certainly was a palling monotony to the ear; and the want of transition, when he threw off the mask, in addressing his patron's wife, was remarka- able. He was the righteous knave and the passionate lover, all in the same intonation. On the whole, the effect would have been more agreeable, if an abated, slow, and monotonous drift of the second had prevailed^ with the use of the chromatic melody, when required by the passion. Of Faults in the Second. The ear has its green as well as the eye; and the plain interval of the second in current and elegant speech, like the verdure of the earth, is wisely designed, to re- leve its respective sense from the fatiguing stimulus of undue, and more vivid impressions. Though the diatonic melody, in a well composed elocution, is simple and unobtrusive, and thereby affords a ground-hue for bringing-out the contrasted color of ex- pressive intervals; yet it does, when continued into the place of 548 FAULTS OF READERS. this wider intonation, assume a positive character, under the form of a fault. A striking instance of misapplication of the second, is its em- ployment for that state of mind which properly requires the semitone. I formerly spoke of its false expression, occasionally heard in the public cry of Fire. Some persons are of such a frigid temperament, or have such inflexible organs, even when a degree of warmth does not appear to be wanting, as to ap- pear incapable under ordinary motives, of executing the chro- matic melody. Pain, or a selfish instinct may force it on the voice; yet it seems, in them, to be so slightly connected with tenderness, or so little under command, that the most pathetic passages are given in the comparatively phlegmatic intonation of the diatonic melody. We sometimes see an Actor of this un- changing drift of temper, cast, on the emergencies of a night, to the part of a lover: and may occasionally hear from the pulpit, fervent appeals of the Litany, and humble petitions of extem- porary prayer, under an intonation, more appropriate to the task of repeatiDg the multiplication table. Some speakers make an over-use of the second ; for even this plain and inexpressive interval when misplaced, so far de- feats the purposes of speech that we are sometimes more indebted to grammatical construction, than to the voice, for a perception of their interrogatives. It is the same too with their emphasis, in- those conditional and positive sentences which, for impressive and varied effect, respectively require the rising, and the falling interval of the third, or fifth, or octave. The most important function of the second, consists in the successions of the diatonic melody. The character of these suc- cessions, as w T e learned in the eighth section, is produced by a varied composition of the seven phrases. We have now to learn how far the common practice of readers, deviates from the de- scribed, but perhaps as yet only described, perfection of a pure diatonic melody. Of Faults in the Melody of Speech. If the rule laid down in this essay for constructing an agreeable succession of diatonic phrases, is founded in propriety and taste, I must declare, I have never yet heard its conditions strictly fulfiled, in a well arranged, FAULTS OF READERS. 549 and satisfactory melody. Players spend their time before mirrors, till grace of person is studied into mannerism, and expression of feature distorted into grimace. Emphasis of stress too, is teazed in experiment, through every word of a sentence, and tested in authority, by all the traditions of the Green-Room: but who has ever thought of any assignable rules for the successions of sylabic pitch in a current melody, or supposed therein, the existence of describable faults ! The First fault to be noticed, is the continued use of the mono- tone, on the same line of radical pitch ; the vanish of the second or of wider intervals, being properly performed. I do not here mean the drawl of the parish-clerk, nor the monotony of the reading-clerk of most public assemblies; for these are sometimes the note of song, and will be spoken-of presently. The unvaried line of radical pitch, now under consideration, is not so glaring as this old conventicle-tune, nor has it at all the character of song. If the Reader were near me, I would ilustrate the peculiarity of this fault ; and I can only describe it, as preventing the agreea- ble effect, arising from the contrast of pitch ; the transition in the case of a continued monotone, with a rising concrete, being from a feeble vanish to a full radical, only one tone below the summit of that vanish ; in the falling-ditone succession of a varied melody, the distance is two tones below the summit of the pre- ceding vanish. One of the causes of this fault in public speakers, deserves to be noticed here. I spoke of vociferation as a means for imparting vigor and fulness to the voice ; but this exercise being generally on a higher current, tends to prevent a proper variation of the melody of speech. Speakers who address large assemblies, and who have not that clear vocality and distinct articulation which would insure the required reach of voice, generally attempt to remedy the defect, by rising to the utmost limit of the natural compass, and continuing their current just below the falsette. For fear of breaking into this, they avoid the rising phrases of melody; while the purpose to be distantly heard through an ele- vated pitch, prevents their descending by radical change. They consequently continue on one monotonous line near the falsette, and vitiate their taste by the partial pleas of their own example; 550 FAULTS OF READERS. restrain their melodial flexibility; and blunt their perception of the variety of movement in a more reduced current of pitch.* Second. Melody is deformed by a predominance of the phrase of the monotone, together with a full cadence at every pause. This perhaps is only found in the first attempts at reading by children and rustics. Third. By a proper use of the phrases of melody within a limited extent, but with a formal return of the same successions. In this case, the whole discourse is subdivided into sections, re- sembling each other in the order of pitch; the sections consisting of entire sentences, or of their members. This habit of the voice and ear, in dividing the melody into sections, as well as in form- ing accentual and pausal divisions, seems to be connected with one of the characters of style: for there is a tendency in some persons to give a like construction, and often an equal length to their sentences. All Actors, except those of the first class, and they are not as finished on this point as they may be hereafterj are prone to this bird-like kind of intonation. They have a short run of melody, which if not forcibly interrupted by some peculiar expression, is constantly recurring. The return forms a kind of melodial meas- ure: and I now call to mind an Actress of great repute, whose intonation was filled with emphasis of thirds, fifths, octaves, and waves; and whose sections of melody could be anticipated, with something like the forerunning of the mind over the rythmus of a common stanza of alternate versification. Those who commit this fault, will have no difficulty in recognizing and correcting it, if desirable, when the mirror of full and exact description is held before them. The monotonous effect of a repetition of these similar melodial sections, constitutes one of the signs by which the smart ap- prentices of the Pit, and some of their better-dressed peers in * This cause operates on the enthusiasts of the Pulpit; on many of the speakers, and always on the clerk of the Lower House of the American Con- gress ; where the scrambling cries to be first heard, with the uproar of titular Honorabtes, overrule the gentlemanly rights, and duties of the voice ; but it is most remarkable in the mouth of the stump and scaffold Demagogue, whose own political designs lead him to address great crowds in the open air. FAULTS OF READERS. " 551 the Boxes, distinguish the voices of famous Actors, and think they represent their real points of excelence, when they mimic only the mannerism of their faults. This recurring section of a similar melody may in itself, consist of a proper succession of phrases : but being unvaried, you hear it too often and remember it too well. The whole current in this case, figuratively resembles the old Roman Festoon, which however well adapted to an in- sulated tablet, was in abasement of Greek architectural taste, joined in monotonous repetition around the frieze; instead of representing, as a just melody might, that succession of sculpt- ure, which in severe simplicity and expressive design adorned the varied metopes of the Parthenon. Fourth. I have known more than one speaker with this fault. Sentences are begun aloud on a high, and ended almost inaudibly on a low degree of pitch; and so continued throughout a whole discourse; producing a monotony, similar in effect, to that last described. It would be difficult to find out the meaning of this fault, or to discover such a shadow of apology for it, as many worse offenses in life might claim for themselves. One speaker whom I knew, with this striking affectation^ for no instinctive, nor conventional motive could ever have directed it> was, first by himself it is presumed, and then by the associates of his long since departed day of popularity, called ' a fine reader.' Such instances of fame may serve to convince us, that with all our blind conceitsj and who among us is without themj there is no art, except that of Thinking, in which self-imposition is more conspicuous than in Elocution. Without an acknowledged rule of excelence, every individual, cultivated or not, makes his own individual taste the standard. Having learned that it is the part of a good reader to represent the thought and passion of discourse, and as each in his attempt, fulfils his own conception of an author, he is self- persuaded, that he possesses the full power of the art. This is one cause why we find so much delusion on this subject. For, reputed 'good readers' are often not merely negatively deficient; they are often positively bad : and perverse as it may seem, to the overbearing applauses of a majority, I have frequently gone to observe the faults of speakers, when called to hear some 'star' of elocution, even though that star was himself a Teacher of the 552 FAULTS OF READERS. Art. Loud whoops and veils have always been the vocal delight of savages; and noise of every kind is the pastime substitute for reflection in ignorant civilization: so an exaggerated and conse- quently striking character of the constituents of speech, is always most agreeable to the uninstructed ear. Fifth. The manner of changing the pitch from one degree to another, above or below it, in the diatonic melody, was shown in the eighth section. An inability to command the radical change, not only prevents variety of intonation, but embarrasses a reader in passing from a very high or very low pitch, when he has im- properly set out in either. Speakers sometimes descend so far, as to leave no voice below the line of current melody, to allow an audible execution of the last constituent of the cadence. In this case, they perceve the feeble and unsatisfactory effect of their intonation, without knowing the cause of it, and being able to apply the remedy. By the rules of a proper melodial progres- sion, and of the manner in which the cadence descends, the fault here pointed out may be avoided. We noticed formerly, that a reader, with a good ear, has a sort of ^recursive perception of the falsette, which enables him to turn from it, when his melody is moving near the summit of his natural voice. A similar anticipation of the lowest note, warns him to keep his cadence within the limit of distinct articulation. Sixth. The use of the protracted radical, or protracted vanish, instead of the equable concrete, is one of the widest deviations from the characteristic of speech. For, a proper diatonic melody consists of an equable movement through the interval of a second, with an agreeably varied radical change through the same space; the current being occasionally broken by wider equable intervals, and by different forms of stress, as the subject may require these additions upon individual words. Inasmuch as this fault includes that of long quantity, it is not often heard in the hasty utterances of common life. I have how- ever, met with a slight degree of it in a phlegmatic drawler. Public speakers overwrought by excitement, and straining their throats to be heardj I say, straining their throats, instead of energizing their voices , are most liable to this error of intonation. FAULTS OF READERS. 553 Some cases of this fault are connected with a monotonous current melody, and a very defective management of the cadence. I heard it under the form of the protracted radical, along with other hein- ous offenses against good elocution, in one of the public's 'great Actors.' It was most remarkable in his endeavor to give long quantity to short sylables ; as in the following words of Macbeth : Canst thou not m — inister to a m — ind diseased; PI — uck from the m — emory. I have here set a dash after the letters on which he continued the protracted radical, until it suddenly vanished in the termina- tion of the sylable. The Actor's fault was the erring exercise of a vocal instinct. He perceved obscurely, the need of long quantity for the purpose of expression; but being one of those, who having some animal excitability, no education, little intelect, and an in- verse proportion of vanity^ are always looking upon themselves as the center of applausej it did not occur to him, that the pro- longation of a mutable sylable, might be deformed by an undue quantity; and that a subtonic at the beginning of a sylable, makes no part of the equable concrete ; two points of knowledge that would long ago have been prepared for his ear and tonguej if there had been in the Histrionic art, more observation, and reflection j with less reliance on the dream of 'Identity,' and the fatal delusion of 'Inborn Genius.' Seventh. The fault of melody we are now about to consider, is somewhat related to the last described misuse of the protracted notes. It includes some other forms of intonation, proper to song: the whole being confused in such a manner with the equa- ble concrete, as to destroy every design of speech, and to furnish, even beyond Recitative, the ultra example of vocal deformity. In the history of man, nothing is more indefinite than de- scriptions of the voice: still there is ground to belevej this ex- travagant melody is the same as the Puritanical whine, affected so generally in religious worship by the English Church, above two hundred years ago, and which has been changed to other faults scarcely less censurable, in the pulpit of the present day. The Society of Friends alone have retained it as a general prac- tice: and it will not be regarded as either idle or invidious, to 30 554 FAULTS OF READERS. look into the structure of this most remarkable intonation, by the light of our preceding analysis. I first give the notation of this melody, and will afterwards particularly explain it. I heard a voice from heav'n saying, write, jP t oS Q | cJ^ ** °^ bless — ed are the dead who die in the Lord. I have spoken of the Minor Third as belonging to the plaintive scale of song. A melody founded on a current, even of the equa- ble concrete of a minor third, has that peculiar character which forbids its use in speech. The above notation is, with a few ex- ceptions, a melody of minor thirds, not in the equable concrete, but in the note of song; and its monotonous whine is produced by the drift of that offensive intonation. Upon this staff, let the third be minor. Then the first and second sylables are protracted vanishes upon a concrete minor third. A, and voice, are protracted radicals to a concrete de- scent of the same interval. From, is a protracted radical to the rising interval of a minor third. Heav'n, is a minor third of the same form with voice. The two sylables of saying, are equable concretes of speech, respectively, of an upward and downward tone. The rest severally resemble those already described; ex- cept ivlw, which begins with a protracted radical to a direct wave of the minor third, and terminates in a protracted vanish, on its downward constituent. In the execution of this melody, there is besides the general effect of a disagreeable and monotonous songj a peculiar and striking contrast, from the various changes among these different forms of intonation. The most extraordinary liberties are taken FAULTS OF READERS. 555 with quantity. The long however, as necessary for the note of song, predominates. No distinction is here made between im- mutable, and indefinite sylables: the short are prolonged to any extent; and both the long and the short are divided; one portion is given to the protracted radical or vanish, the other to the con- crete: as in fro-m and die. I have introduced the equable concrete of speech among the protracted notes, and have em- ployed the diatonic cadence to exemplify those abrupt and rouz- ing changes of intonation, sometimes made in the course, and at the close of this fantastic and singing melody. I do not further describe its varieties, in the use of the above named constituents, together with the tremor, and the wider intervals that may be combined with them; having shown enough to furnish a plan for self-examination and amendment. Should those who are accustomed to this melody askj why it may not be employed, if by habit agreeable, and reverenced in the serious occasions of its use; I answer^ that, throwing aside taste, as arbitrary, and regarding usefulness alone, it has no fitness for its intended purpose, and does not accomplish the attainable ends of speech. By speech we communicate our thoughts and passions; and in the duties of religion, there should be motives and zeal, to do it with the most forcible means of per- suasion and argument. So far as the voice is concerned, these means lie principally in the energy and expression of intonated emphasis; but in this remarkable melody, the designs of a just and varying intonation are counteracted by the almost continued impression of a plaintive song; or are crossed in purpose by the unmeaning obtrusion of unexpected changes. How can the states of mind which direct a dignified fulness of voice, for the encourag- ing descriptions of blessedness and glory, be represented by the trembling voice of distress? How can the positive conclusions of truth, and the wonder at almighty power, requiring the down- ward concrete, be enforced by the shrilness of a perpetual cry? How can we particularize the mental state of supplication, by the semitone, if we equally employ it in the threats of vengeance? And with what force can we represent interrogation, if the wider intervals instinctively allotted to it, are so often unmeaningly heard in the voice? 556 FAULTS OF READERS. Whoever regards the words of ordinary song, knows how em- phasis is there confounded. It is still less clear and correct in the kind of melody we are now considering. I have endeavored to make the strongest representation of this fault. It is sometimes heard in a more moderate degree, especi- ally in the voices of women; consisting of a slight protraction of the vanish, on all the long quantities of discourse. This singing melody, delivered in the public Meeting-house, by men, as well as women, is generally of a high or piercing pitch; this being the means of audibility usually employed by persons of uncultivated voice. Of Faults in the Cadence. Speech is particularly liable to faults in the successions of the radical pitch of melody, and of the cadence. Even the best readers do not seem to have acci- dentally reached an attainable variety, in the execution of the current, and the close of discourse. Faults in the cadence are however the most striking. We can assign a cause for the frequent failures upon this point. Whoever closely observes the character of speech, in common dialogue, must perceve that the earnest interests which govern it, the sharp replications and interruptions of argument, and the piercing pitch of mirth and anger, exclude in a great measure, the terminating repose of the cadence. This is particularly the case with children and the ignorant, who having no motive either of action or speech, except interested curiosity and selfish pas- sion, rarely employ any other than the wider and more expressive intervals of intonation. When therefore a person first undertakes to read, with the serious purpose of a dignified elocution, the im- passioned habit is too inveterate to be at once laid asidej and a disposition to keep up the coloquial characteristic of speech, ex- tending itself to the place of the cadence, defers for a long time, the ability to give with propriety and taste, the more composed and the graver purpose of the terminative phrase. Faults in the execution of the cadence are various. The most remarkable instance within my memory, is that of a clergyman, who in an address of nearly ten minutes' duration, never, to my observation, made a cadence^ not even at his final period. The FAULTS OF READERS. 557 audience were suddenly notified to sit down, by his terminative Amen, not through the proper indication of the close by his voice. Even those who have the ability to make a cadence are infected by the next fault to be mentioned. I described the various forms of the cadence. This was done to point out all the distinctions that may be critically made by an accurate ear, and may perhaps be regarded in some future school of elocution. For present purposes, we may particularize the Feeble, the Duad, the Triad, and the Prepared cadences. These are quite sufficient for the ordinary purposes of reading-: and vocal skill can always effect an interchangeable variety of them, in the succession of periods. The next fault then consists in a repetition at every pause, of the same kind of cadence, and that generally the full or second form of the Triad. This fault is increased by common punctuation, which often sets a period at places, where the voice should be only suspended by the phrase of the downward ditone. A want of nicety too in varying the cadence according to the indication of the close, is a very general fault: for there is great clearness given to discourse, bj the just dis- cernment, that assigns a less reposing, or the feeble cadence, to loose sentences, or doubtful periods, and the full and prepared, to the end of a paragraph or chapter. I once heard an Actor of high character use, and not unfre- quently, what we formerly called a false cadence ; or a descent of the third by radical changej the second constituent of the Triad being altogether omitted. This false cadence is sometimes made on a wider discrete interval; the voice suddenly falling a fifth or even an octave, if the pitch has been high enough to allow these descents. Some persons are in the habit of making the cadence in a low and almost inaudible pitch. In this case the want of an anti- cipative ear, prevents a reader from hitting the precise place for his cadence. One who has not this skill, may know the period- pause is at hand, and that the voice should descend ; but ignorant at what point he ought to begin, and under fear of falling pre- cipitately upon the close, he prepares for it too soon. A down- ward second or ditone is first made, and some instinct preventing •358 FAULTS OF READERS. him from adding the next tone below, by which the cadence would be completed before its time, he adds a monotone, and again tries a downward ditone. In this manner he descends, till with an en- feebled voice, the cadence is made on the three final sylables. The process here described is not continued through many words; most readers would in that case soon exhaust their pitch. Yet this does sometimes happen; for the voice by this shelving course, is at last brought down to a husky quality, and sometimes becomes inaudible. Of Faults in the Intonation at Pauses. Under the preceding head, we described the forms and effect of false intonation, at the close of a period. Besides these, certain sub-pauses within the limits of a sentence, variously dividing it into members or por- tions, were called in our account of rythmus, pausal sections. To the eye, these are separated by the common punctuative marks, representing the duration of the pause. Yet this temporal rest alone is not sufficient in all cases, to prevent obscurity or mistake in the meaning of discourse. The comma and the period denote respectively, the least and the greatest degree of separation; and these with the intermediate sectional divisions, constitute the whole purpose of the temporal pause. Intonation however, per- forms an important part at these subdivisions. For the several pausal sections are variously related to each other; and these re- lations, in their various forms and degrees, are shown by the united means of the temporal rest, and the phrases of melody. In the twelfth section, we learned what phrases are proper for connecting, and separating the subdivided meaning of a sentence. Those who, with the light of our principles, may hereafter look into this subject, will perceve the fitness of the appropriation there made; and will moreover be struck by the violations of grammar, and of the rule of variety, so commonly heard among speakers; some of whom set a rising third or fifth at most of the sub-pauses, and even at the period itself. These improprieties must necessarily be frequent, from the character of the phrases of melody^ and consequently from the manner of applying them, being unknown. The Reader, I would fain beleve, can now fore- hear the several faults that might occur under this head; for cer- tainly the purpose of speech will be obscured, if a falling ditone FAULTS OF READERS. 559 or tritone should be applied to that pause, where a continuative syntax calls for the monotone or the very reverse of these down- ward phrases. Of Faults in the Third. The third is properly employed in the moderate forms of interrogation, and on conditional phrases. Some readers however, execute the whole current melody in the rise of this interval. To those who recognize the uncolored dig- nity of the diatonic melody, this current of the third has the striking effect of a continued interrogative interval, which renders it unfit to be the ground for expressive speech. As a Drift it would be monotonous, and its similarity to the wider emphatic intervals weakens their effect, when required in its course. It is sharper in pitch than the diatonic melody, and consequently wants its dignity of character. I have heard persons with this fault try to read Milton, and Shakspeare, and the declaratory parts of the Church-service, and always, as appeared to me, without success. The current of dignified utterance must always consist of the wave of the second, on long quantities. No simple upward con- crete can effect it; though the rise of a wide interval may be occasionally employed for emphasis, in the gravest drift of the diatonic wave. It is a fault in the third, even when the whole current is not made by that interval^ to form all the emphases with it. This likewise gives a sharpness and monotony to speech ; for one of its proprieties as well as beauties, consists in a variation of em- phasis: and we pointed out, in its proper place, the abundant means for this variety. A current melody of the third in place of the second, is prin- cipally offensive by its monotony ; for the wider intervals, as we learned in the section on Drift, will not bear continued repetition. Of Faults in the Fifth. The interval of the fifth is sometimes improperly made the current concrete of melody. It is a less frequent fault than the last, and is more commonly heard in wo- men. Its monotony is still more impressive than that of the third; the whole melody having to a critical ear, the effect of an interrogative sentence. It is not so remarkable, when the emphases of a diatonic melody are made only by the fifth. This too has its sharpness 560 FAULTS OF READERS. and monotony; and I am sure the Reader will be sufficiently guarded against this fault, by keeping in mind the ample re- sources of the voice, for a varied emphasis. Those who misplace the third, and fifth, are apt to carry them into the cadence. Such readers end many of their plain declara- tive sentences with the characteristic of a question. I might point out a similar error of place in the octave; though it is of rare occurrence, and only heard in the piercing treble of women. Some persons cannot put a question in the subdued and dignified form of the third or fifth, but always give it in the sharp- ness of the octave. Of Faults in the Downward Movement. Faults of the down- ward concrete, consist in not giving the emphasis of downward intervals in their just extent; in not applying them properly or at all, to exclamatory sentences, and to certain grammatical ques- tions that require a downward intonation. An improper use of the downward intervals is sometimes characteristic of a morose and saturnine temper, in persons who having no grace within themselves, have no voice of complaisance for others. Of Faults in the Discrete Movement. Of defects in the man- agement of the radical change of the second, in the diatonic melody, we have already spoken. Precipitate falls of the third, fifth, and octave, sometimes occur in the cadence of children and others, while learning to read. Some again are unable to make those upward and downward radical changes, by which accom- plished readers may hereafter accurately effect all the discrete transitions required for emphasis. Of Faults in the Wave. The wave of the second, both in its direct and inverted form, is plain and dignified in character, and therefore admissible into the diatonic melody as a drift. It is not so with the waves of wider intervals. They have their proper occasions as solitary emphasis; whereas the continued repetition of them becomes a disgusting fault. The wave, commonly af- fected by a certain puling class of readers, is the inverted-un- equalj the voice descending through the second, and rising through the third, or fifth. This fault is most remarkable in reading metrical composition; arising perhaps from our famili- arity with the union of song and versej and from a connection of FAULTS OF READERS. 561 the art of reading, with the effect of the impressive intervals of its tune. Persons who read in this way, give a set melody to their lines; certain parts of each line, as far as the emphatic words permit, having a prominent intonation of the wave. Much of every form of the wave prevails in conversation ; and the general character of daily dialogue often makes it appropriate there. I have heard the coloquial twirl, even exaggerated by an Actress of great temporary reputation. Her style consisted of a continual recurrence of identical sections of melody, composed principally of the wider forms of the equal and unequal wave ; showing a vocal pertness, and a sort of vivid familiarity^ but wanting the brilliant propriety of execution, due from a performer of High Comedy to the Author. Some actors, and readers are prone to the use of the double wave. They make it the vocal twirl for every state of mind, thereby denoting their want of a varied and just intonation. It is an impressive agent, and is therefore, with an erroneous notion both of its purpose and place, often introduced to give prominent effect to melody. It has restrictively, its proper occasions; and let it be rememberedj there is a sneering petulance in its char- acter, totally inconsistent with dignity. Nothing is better calculated to show the propriety of the plain ground of the diatonic melody, than the repeated use of the wider waves. It includes the effects of faults in the third, and fifth, and consequently gives a florid and monotonous char- acter to speech. When such striking intonation is set on every important sylablej how shall we mark emphatic words, except by an excess in vocality, time, or force?* * The distinction, so often refered to in this essay, between the diatonic ground-work of melody, and the occasional expression of wider intervals judi- ciously employed upon it, is a great essential of effective and elegant elocution. According to our system, this difference was an ordination, to meet the re- spective demands of thought and passion. Without regard to it, no one can ever succede in tragedy, or in other dignified uses of speech; the diatonic melody alone, having the character appropriate to awe, solemnity, reverence, and grave deliberation. And although the Art of Speech, almost stone-deaf to the causa- tive agency, though not to the effects of intonation, has never yet been aware of this difference; still the purposes of truth and beauty in the voice, have herein never been without a witness. For he who advocates the principles of this Work, may, by now finding occasional instances of the use of the diatonic 562 FAULTS OF READERS. Of Faults in Drift. The purposes both of truth and variety, in the art of Reading-Well, are effected by a delicate regard to melody, admit, that being founded on the thoughtive state of the mind, it must have been heard in every age of cultivated speech. Its rarity in the voices of women, is one cause why so few among them, are able to rise to the tragic dignity of the stage; although a pretty face, and other pretty attractions, may for a time serve them well enough, yet not over-well, in Comedy without it. They have so accustomed an undiscerning audience, and so habituated them- selves, to a puling affectation, which consists in a current melody of the wider intervals and waves, the semitone, and minor third; and are so ignorant or careless of their vocal duty, that they do not perceve, and therefore "will not be told, this is one among other causes of their frequent failure. For as the ob- scurity of histrionic description and criticism allows the inference, it is not im- probable that Mrs. Siddons, in the early part of her career, may, to an impres- sive degree^ though ignorant of its construction, and its rules; have instinctively employed the diatonic melody. An incident related by her biographer, Boaden, will perhaps, if elucidated by our analysis, lead to this conclusion. On her first interview with Garrick, Mrs. Siddons, then Miss Kemble, ' re- peated some of the speeches of Jane Shore before him. Garrick seemed highly pleased with her utterance, and her deportment;' and 'wondered how she had got rid of the Old Song, and the provincial Ti-tum-ti.'' All former criticism on intonation being, we may say uninteligible, we are left to discover, by the light of our analysis, what these terms, Old Song, and Ti-tum-ti, mean-. As the construction and the plain yet peculiar effect of the diatonic melody of speech, are widely different from the construction and the more vivid effect of song; and as a too frequent and improper use of the wave, the wider concrete and discrete intervals, the semitone and minor third, with their impressive intonations, when employed in speech, although far from being song, do yet more nearly resemble it than the diatonic melody does ; and further, as the term and notion of the trisylabic foot Ti-tum-ti, seems to be a rythmical perception of the ear, produced by a sort of regular return of florid and misap- plied intervals, described in the text, under the present head of faults of the wavej I cannot avoid thinking that Mrs. Siddons did, at this early period^ as I personally remember she did in after-life^ either in part if not altogether, in- stinctively execute the just diatonic melody: and that Garrick, though aware of its peculiar effect, yet as ignorant of its analysis as his Call-boy, had no other means for describing his perception of its dignity than that of giving to a con- trasted and strongly offensive style of utterance, the names of Ti-tum-ti, and Song. Nor can I avoid beleving, that Garrick, who could thus perceve the peculiar character of the plain or diatonic melody in others, must himself, without being aware of its structure and principles, have employed a well-marked expression of wider intervals, on the simple ground of a diatonic intonation; though never with its finished propriety and grace, under his then limited and imperfect, knowledge of the resources of the Art. Looking then to the two eminent instances now before us, I would be loth to regard them under that condition, which Guido so satirically assigned to FAULTS OF READERS. 563 the correspondence between the states of mind, and their vocal signs, in individual words; and to the Drift, or continuation of a given state of mind, and character of voice, through one or more sentences; whereas a neglect of this adjustment will, according to its degree^ weaken the impression of speech, or shock the ear and taste of an auditor. Some readers continue the same vocal drift through every change of thought and passion ; others vary the character of the utterance, without adapting it strictly to these changes. We have learned that the most complete close of a paragraph or chapter, is made by the prepared cadence ; and that certain vocal means, and changes in the phrases of melody, formerly described, may be employed to prepare an audience for the be- ginning of a new subject, and to indicate the full consummation of the previous sectional or paragraphic pause. The neglect of a speaker on this point, may be considered a fault in partial Drift. As the reverse of this fault, we have the unexpected transitions from one style of utterance to another, without a corresponding singers, unenlightened by Science; but which may with truth be assigned, though not unkindly, to many a Roscius, even with all his so-called 'profound' and unwearied study and practice in his art^ 'Nam qui facit quod non sapit, definitur bestia.' ' For he who acts without a plan, Resembles more the brute than man.' It may perhaps be asked 3 how I could well discriminate the diatonic melody, at the time I was ignorant of its constituents and construction. I did not at that date know it by analysis, as it may now be known; yet its peculiar character and dignity, in the personations of Mrs. Siddons, so caught my ear, that after more than half a century, the effect of what I then heard, is still a sub- ject of my memory. And now that the Baconian system has, in its own words, warned us, not to raise experiments soley upon experiments, nor works soley upon works; but upon the '■forms' or general principles of works, to lay-down a broad foundation for progressive experiments; and by further showing the proper use of the senses, it has taught, and enabled me to unfold some of the principles of speech ; I find the effect on my memory, of the intonation of this remarkable Actress, is altogether similar to that of the now known, and named Diatonic Melody. This is by no means, an after-thought of conceit; for by a like remembrance, of an Interlude of Dancing-; Avhich followed her evening appearance in Volum- nia, or in Lady Macbeth, at Covent-Gardenj I still retain at command, the just time and intonation of a simple Gavot-Melody, though heard only there, and only once. 56-4 FAULTS OF READERS. change of subject. I once heard an actor set the whole House into a hum of merriment, by making that answer of Jaffier to the conspirators;' Nay by Heaven I'll do this, in the curling quaintness of the wave. The character of Jaffier, the solemnity of the occasion, and the purpose of his entrance among the conspirators, are all at variance with the levity, conveyed by this sneering intonation. Severity of resolution is the ruling state of mind in Jaffier; and this calls for the energy of stress, together with the positiveness of a downward emphatic interval. And it seems to have been a perception of the ludicrous, from a contrast between the seriousness of the Character, and the pert- ness of the player, that caused the merriment: for the case, when duly considered, produces an impression of the instinctive pro- priety and taste of the Audience, and of the absence of both in the Player. They, although unaware of the principle, laughed at what was laughable. He, in the conceit of 'genius,' could not be serious at what was grave; and perhaps satisfied himself, that their laughter at the ridiculous, was to him, a complacent tribute of applause. I have tried in vain to find a term for the extraordinary transi- tions, sometimes heard on the Stage. They belong to the head of the faults of Drift: but we must speak of them as vocal pranks, without a name. I mean to designate, those abrupt changes from high to lowj from a roar to a whisperj from quick to slowj harsh to gentle^ from the diatonic melody to the chromatics from the gravity of long quantity, to the levity of sneer, to the quick stress of anger and mirth, or to the rapid mutterings of a madman. We had here, some years ago, a celebrated foreign Player from whom I draw this picture; though for impressive ilustration, per- haps slightly caricatured. His imitators, who have already dis- appeared, called themselves the school of ; a blank now to be well filled up, as the school of Ignorance and Outrage, with benches crowded by vociferating, I had nearly said 'Rowdy J admirers. A system of elocution may be defended, on either of two differ- ent grounds. The one, that it is a copy from nature : the other, FAULTS OF HEADERS. 565 that it does artificially best answer the ends of speech. No apology for such flagitious transitions can be derived from either of these sources. I have seen persons under the highest excite- ment of natural not theatric passion, and changing from one de- gree and kind to another; but I have never heard anything even distantly like the harlequin-transformations of voice, above al- luded to, as applauded on the Stagej except in a paroxysm of womanish hysteria. On the other hand, supposing the practice to be founded on an artificial system^ we would make no objection, provided it could accomplish by conventional agreement, all the expressive purposes of speech. But what plea can that system urge, which perverts all the beauty and frugality of rule; which destroys, by its anomaly and abruptness, all the pleasures of habit, 'and anticipation; and takes from the fine arts, a delight in the boundless images, arising from the busy exercise of well- established knowledge. Where this fault of exaggeration does not arise from blunder- ing ignorance, or from slavish imitation, it is purposely assumed with the view to produce what the small vocabulary of dramatic criticism, calls 'Effect.' The Actor being deficient in the means of that truth and variety of expression, which only a knowledge of the resources of the voice, not the practice of the Stage, can afford, tries to help-out his uninstructed 'Genius' by breaking through the even tenor of an appropriate Drift, with some ear- starting stimulus or some unexpected collapse. .We should however, do some Actors the justice to beleve, that with a proper estimate both of nature and art, they must secretly disapprove of such things. Yet how shall we absolve them from the charge of submitting to what they must know to be only a blind conformity to the capricious fashion of applause; and of being 'willing to deceve the people because they will be deceved?' the easy art and resource of weakness, with cunning; and the wretched apology of ambition and knavery. It is the part of elevated intelect to undeceve the world, even by unwelcome truth ; to make all men at last bow down; and to be the master of de- monstration, instead of the slave of popular conceit. Faults in the Grouping of Speech. The Intonation at Pauses denotes the degrees of connection between the succeding sections 56(3 FAULTS OF READERS. of discourse^ and between related words, within the limit of each. The Grouping of speech is variously intended to keep these sec- tions in a measure, independent of each other; to unite the train of thought within these sections, when broken by expletives, or by grammatical inversion: and to bring together on the ear, separated words, even from different sections. In this way the Temporal rest makes a distinct group of a section by dividing it from others. The Phrases of melodyj by the monotone, the rising ditone, and tritonej connect grammatical concords, when separated by intervening constructions. The Abatement groups as it were, within brackets of the voice and keeps together, what is heard under a reduced, or piano form of force. The Flight limits to itself, the meaning of what is embraced in a hurried utterance. The Emphatic-tie and the Punctuative-reference respectively, by stress and pause, group within the field of hearing, words and phrases, separated in construction, from each other. Faults in grouping arise from not applying these several forms as their purposes require; and ignorance of their design, and appropriate use, cannot fail to mar the perspicuity of oral dis- course. He who has a full knowledge of the means and efficacy of grouping, will, on this subject, be able with just principles, to criticise and correct the faults of others. Fault of Mimicry. In a previous page of this section, it was remarked, that imitations of speech, either serious, or for mirth, are generally copies of its faults. I am here to speak of the effect of Mimicry in corrupting the principles and practice of vocal expression. Under the prevalent creed of the Old elocution, this purpose may need explanation. The creed is, that all who speak with a perception of the thought and passion of their subject, speak with propriety. Nearly all persons both read and speak so differently from each other, that we plainly distinguish the intonations, joined with the other modes of the voice, in each individual. It is into- nation, with other modes, which constitutes the expression of speech: and we must allow that individuals universally utter their own thoughts and passions. This creed then carries with it the conclusion, that speech is not directed by a universal system of correspondence between the state of mind and the vocal signj but FAULTS OF READERS. 567 that each individual must have for his states of mind, a peculiar system of signs, producing that distinguishable difference from all others, which we perceve in both his reading and his speaking voice. It would therefore follow, from the pretensions of this creed, that mimicry, by amusing itself with the peculiarities of all, so far from being injurious to the powers of speech, must on the contrary, tend to support and improve them. For, by this belief, all being supposed to speak their respective states of mind cor- rectly, while all speak differently, the mimic, who can assume the proprieties of each, must possess the faculty of acquiring the ex- celencies of all. It is well known, that the effects of mimicry depend on contrast^ and the contrast in this case, must be made, with some standard in the human voice. By the condition however, or consequence of the creed, the standard of each individual is his own individuality; and thus the standard is destroyed by its endless variations. Mimicry then, though able to assume the vocal ability of all, cannot, from the want of a standard, assign to any one a comparative excelence, or superiority: and though it may, by universal imitation, add to its powers a superfluous flexibility, it cannot, from the want of this measure of excelence, improve or exalt itself. And as it must necessarily, from the vast amount of worldly falsehood and bad taste, be more frequently employed on vulgarity and exaggera- tion, than on truth and refinement, its constant tendency must be to error and degradation. Mimicry in speech is the exact, or caricatured imitation of its faults. It must therefore be founded on a perverted, or extrava- gant employment of the various forms of Vocality, Time, Force, Abruptness and Pitch. Mimicry is the result of the ignorance and error of man, in the uses of his voice. With all his imita- tionsj except they remind him of his own defects of body or mind, or of his want of dignity in the imitation^ he cannot turn into ridicule, the unviolated law of nature within the whole range of the sub-animal voice. In the deformities, and errors of his own, he is the fit subject of his own contempt. Had the true and ex- pressive system of that voice, been developed and taught, there would have been, as in grammar, few faults, except upon the vul- 568 FAULTS OF READERS. gar tongue; and perhaps no mimicry, worthy of an inteligent smile, in speech. The order of Nature, with all things aright except untoward Man, has by its fitness, its self-accordance, its serious truth, and its beauty, excluded every cause of the Ridicu- lous from her works: and an elocution that elegantly obeys her laws, cannot be mimicked for the amusement of a discerning and respectful ear. Mimicry is not only founded on faults, but it contributes to multiply and to confirm them. It multiplies faults, by confound- ing those just perceptions, that might discern and prevent, or correct them; and it confirms them in the mimic, by giving to a habit of distortion, the force of second nature in his voice. Mim- icry weakens and perverts the powers of expression, by confusing its signs, in representing the same state of mind, as differently expressed by different individuals: when in common consistency it should always have the same appropriate vocal sign. One cause of our not readily perceving the true system of speech is, that the ordained connection of sign and state of mind, is in the corrupt practice of the greater part of mankind, confounded, by the same state being expressed in so many different ways. How much then, must the mimic be at fault, and the whole purpose of his speech perverted, by the endless variety and exaggerated de- gree of false expression, constantly upon his ear? Few mimics are able to rise to the character of dignified utterance ; and when they even seriously imitate accomplished speakers, it is always in their accidental defects; for these only give the amusing charac- teristics. Some of the better class of Actors possess a power of mimicry: but as I have known them, they have wanted a high refinement and finish, in the truthful representation of thought and passion. And so it ought to be: and so it will be regarded hereafter, if in our present history of Nature there is a true repre- sentation of the system of her wise and efficient laws. And here let me not unmindfully say, that if observation had not, by accident, afforded me the light, and the defense of this natural ordination of the voice, I would not have dared, nor even thought, to touch the mantle of renown, that wraps the Histrionic character of the Immortal Garrick. But when I see him, in that Emblematic Portrait of his fame, equally affected to the Comic, FAULTS OF READERS. 569 and the Tragic Muse; and hear, that he could both by taste and habit, mask the expressive features of his elocution, by an ex- aggerated and distorted mimicry, I grieve to think that my memorial perception must lose a single ray, from the bright and welcome vision of his canonized Perfection. Such, from its very character, must, to a greater or less ex- tent, be the effect of mimicry, even on the finest mould of nature in the unenlightened human voice. How far a full and accurate knowledge and use of all the means, ordained for truth and ele- gance of expression, with a perfect discrimination between the right and the wrong in speech, may enable an accomplished Actor habitually to practice the deformities, without infecting the graces of utterance, must be determined by the opportunities of future experience. At present, it is well to keep the tongue away from the contaminating company of its own infectious faults. -For it- is with our voices, as with our morals; the habit of doing only right, most effectually preserves us from wrong: and it is no less dangerous, to play with mischief in the one, than to amuse our- selves with mockery in the other.* An inquiry into the subject of mimicry, will afford a further view of the consistency of the whole science of expression, set- forth in this essay. For if correct and elegant speech requires the employment of the vocal constituents, in their proper places, in their proper successions, and in due proportion to each other, it will furnish, if the Reader yet doubtsj some support to this recorded system, to findj the violation of its rules, by a mis- placed, or over-proportioned, or exclusive use of certain of these constituents is productive of a palling monotony, or a grotesk caricature. * In the early period of life. I had to a certain degree the power of mimicry: and the ability to imitate the human and sub-animal voice, has assisted me in discriminating by contrast, the graces of utterance, in recording many of its faults. Since the development of the vocal constituents, with a habitual prac- tice of the means, and experience of the effects, of a true, appropriate, and ele- gant speech, the readiness and precision of that mimicry is much impaired: and partially lost: without however, the least diminution of acuteness, in the measurement of time and tune, when now in my eighty-second year, enlarging the sixth edition of this Work. I cannot say how it would have been, had mimicry been a purpose of business or ambition. 37 570 FAULTS OF READERS. Of Monotony of Voice. This is an old term in elocution; but it is here used with a more extensive signification than formerly. It means in general, the undue continuation of any function of the voice. One can scarcely point-out an occasion, on which the simple rise of the second, or the diatonic wave, has this effect; for ac- cording to our system, these are properly the most frequent of the continuous styles of discourse. The use of the second, in place of another interval, may sometimes be an error in expres- sion, but we do not call it monotony. The chromatic melody, though a continuation of the impressive interval of the semitone, is not monotonous, if its plaintiveness is suited to the state of mind: but many other constituents, when spread over discourse, offend by this fault. A repeated succession of the same phrases in the current ; the same kind of cadence, particularly if it fre- quently occurs ; a melody formed on the third, or fifth; a restric- tion of emphasis to the third, or fifth, or octave; a constant use of the accent and emphasis of the radical, the vanishing, or the thorough stressj of the, tremor 3 and of the downward wider inter- vals; too free a use of remote skips in the radical change, both in the current, and the cadencej of the wider and unequal wavesj with the protracted notes of song, may each become the cause of monotony. And it may be again remarked, that all constituents severally allotted to the rare occasions of emphasis, seem to be protected against the fault of undue repetition, not only by their violating the vocal rules for thought and expression, but by pro- ducing at the same time, an offensive monotony. Of Ranting in Speech. This fault consists in the excess of certain functions. These are loudness; violence in the radical, and the vanishing stresses ; and in general, an over-doing of just expression, when united with unnecessary force. Of Affectation in Speech. This consists in an imbecile perver- sion of the proper use of articulation, and of the intervals of pitch, with a mincing awkwardness, that always attends the ac- tions of personal conceit. Of Mouthing in Speech. This belongs properly to the head of the faults of articulation ; and refers to deviations from stand- ard pronunciation ; of which it is not my intention to speak par- ticularly. FAULTS OF READERS. 571 Mouthing consists in the improper employment of the lips in utterance. Some of the tonic elements, and one of the subtonics are made by the assistance of the lips. They are o-we, oo-ze, ou-r, and m. When these abound it may, without precaution on the part of the speaker, lead to mouthing. All the other subtonics may be to a degree, infected with this fault. It slightly infuses the sound of the o-we or oo-ze into their vocality; for the protrusion of the lips, gives something of this character even to a lingual element. Mouthing may be called a form of affectation. I might here give a particular description of the voices of Childhood and of Age: for these may be looked upon as faults, when compared with the full-formed, vigorous, and varied utter- ance of intermediate periods. Our analysis will enable an ob- servant Reader to discover their respective characters. He will find the voice of childhood to be high in pitch, vividly monotonous in melody, and defective in cadence, with nothing, except parental doting to reconcile the ear to its screeching intonation; which in its piercing and untunable noise from mingling hundreds 'just let loose from school ' is a nuisance well deserving the rod of a Cor- rectional Police, in every community that vainly hopes, by a lit- tle reading, writing, and arithmetic, to banish ignorance, raise up a commonwealth of industrious, wise, and virtuous citizens, and to quiet the disorderly passions of mankind. He will find old age to be slow, with frequent pauses, feeble radical stress, tremulous, occasionally breaking into the falsette, and piping the childish treble in his voice. The faults here enumerated, are more or less common among those who pass for good, and often the best Readers and Actors. When instruction shall be derived from the Natural Philosophy of speech, and not from the egotism of untaught 'genius,' nor the varying and contradictory examples it pretends to set-up for Imitation^ the defects and deformities of utterance from these sources, now equally prevalent in the higher and the humble class of readers, will like the faults of grammar, be confined to the uneducated and the careless. I have described the faults of speakers under general heads, and in their separate forms. They are heard in bad speakers, blZ FAULTS OF READERS. under all possible combinations: but the permutations would defy every attempt towards a useful arrangement. The contemplation of the subject is therefore left as a task for the Reader. Should the principles of this Work ever prevail, and Speech hereafter become a Liberal and Elegant Art, it may be foundj the faults described in this section, as infecting the whole world of elocution, will have so far passed away, that the picture here ex- hibited, will seem to have been overdrawn. But when were the excelencies of Art, or Wisdom, or Worth, ever universal or even common? There will always remain in this motly world, pos- terity enough of those who now defeat the designs of Nature, and mar the mind-directed music and expression of speech, to show to another age, that I may not unfairly have recorded, the almost universal prevalence of this deafness and deformity, throughout the great family of their vocal ancestors.* * Having endeavored to show, that the descriptions offered in this essay, are drawn from Nature^ to furnish the sure foundation of a system for all times, and for all cultivated nations; and having further, shown that faults, being a misapplication of the constituents of a just and elegant speech, must of necessity, be universally of a similar character, among those who disregard the principles of that just and elegant speech : I have only to add here, as it might perhaps be required, some support to this conclusion. During my residence at Rome, in the winter of eighteen hundred and forty- six — seven, I was present at an annual exhibition of the scholars of the Propa- ganda. From pencil-notes taken at the time, on the margin of a programme of the exercises, and briefly recording my perception of the character of the elocu- tion, I make the following summary. The speakers numbered from fifty to sixty, men and boys; apparently from the age of twelve to five and twenty; of various colors, visages, and languages; and from countries of different degrees of ignorance, and of civilization, between the longitude of eastern China, and that of the Allegany mountains. As each and all of these individuals must have had the respective forms of their intonation, and of the other modes of the voice, determined and fixed by early habit in their native country^ they could have undergone no material change in the Roman school. Yet the proprieties of speech, if any, and all its faults, whether in form, degree, or misapplied expression, were the same as those we have enumerated in the English voice. No matter, to what sylabic sound, or structure of language they had been born, there was colectively among them, the same vicious variety in the uses of time, force, vocality, abruptness and intonation, as with ourselves; and as with us of the Saxon, Celtic, Gaulish, and Teutonic tongues^ one vast predominance of faults. Still, when closely listening to the right, the wrong, and the peculiar, I heard nothing in form, or even in queerness or exaggeration, that I had not seemingly heard before. FAULTS OF READERS. 573 In describing the faults of readers, and on other occasions in this essay, I have refered to eminent, as well as to exceptionable examples, in the vocal practice of the Stage. The Actor holds both for purpose and opportunity, the first and most observed position in the Art of Elocution-; and should long have been our best and all-sufficient Master in its School. The Senate, the Pulpit, and the Bar, with the verbal means of argument or per- suasion almost exclusively before them, have so earnestly, or art- fully pursued these leading interests, that they have not observed, nor apparently, wished to observe, how far the cultivated powers of the voice might have assisted the honest or the ambitious pur- pose of their oratory. But with the Stage, speech is in itself, the means and the end of Histrionic distinction; for however the Actor may be unduly influenced by applause, this applause is supposed to be attainable, only through the expressive powers of his voice. It has therefore been towards the Stage alone, that criticism has shown a disposition, formally to direct its vague and limited rules of vocal propriety and taste. The Stage however has not fulfiled the duties of its position ; for though holding the highest place of influential example in the art, and enjoying the im- mediate rewards of popularity, it has done little more than keep- up the tradition of its business and rotine$ and tediously record the personalities, engagements, retirement, and every sort of anec- dote of its renowned Performers; without one serious thought of turning a discriminative ear to their vocal excelence, and thereby affording available instruction, on the means of their success; its distinguished Performers themselves, through all generations, ap- pearing more culpably, in the condition of too many others in exalted stations, who have not so much desired to fulfil the trusts of their Stewardship, as to acquire wealth and influence and dis- tinction for themselves.* In short, the destined swarthy wanderer of the Propaganda, with his aimless and chaotic efforts in speech, and the accomplished Queens of song from the Conservatorio, with their desecration, so to speak, of expression in Recitative, are more nearly assimilated, in these vices of intonation, than their difference in complexion and in glory will allow the pride of the Opera to acknowledge. * Shortly after the publication of this Work, I was asked by a friendly Judges how I came to write it; for he had supposed it would have been written by some Public Speaker. But Judges deliver opinions; and the whole line of historical 574 FAULTS OF READERS. For this particular state of Histrionic Art. there must be a causej and as the preceding analysis has enabled us to explain some faults universally infecting the voice, we may here properly inquire^ why elocution has not been able to assume an inteligent, systematic, and respected authority on the Stage. Speech is the audible sign of the thoughtive and passionative character of man; it will appear then, the peculiar faults of the Stage procede from a limited and a mystic state of mind in the Actor. I there- fore devote a few remaining pages to the subject-; Of the Faults of Stage- Per donation. The most general and in- fluential cause from which many of the faults of the Actor seem to arise, and under which, knowledge in his art has never been either* communicable or progressive^ is the delusive assumption, so fatal to a clear and practical use of the mind, that his pur- poses are effected by certain ' innate powers ' or ' spiritual gifts ' independently of all instruction ; that so far from being the result of the plain and universal rule of successful physical thought and actionj the expression of his Enacted Character, like that vulgar notion of the 'fine madness' of poetical invention, is the effect of a peculiar histrionic 'phrensy' of passion, with the 'inspired em- bodiment' of its signs in the countenance and the voice. This mysticism of the school of Acting has divided its eminent disciples into two Classes. The First has a sort of double exist- ence, consisting, at one time, of its common animal attributes of motion, sensation and thought; at another, of the 'spiritual' re- k Reports' furnishes only a single Case-in -point, to my friend's supposition: for of all the Orators, Demosthenes alone is said to have tried vocal instruction; in teaching himself to pronounce the elements, by holding pebbles in his mouth. The invention and the belief of this silly story show the ignorance and the credulity, on the subject of the voice, among the Ancients. Yet the 'theory' of the process seems to have been no less impracticable then than it is now; for it appears, he never had a second scholar in the same pebble-way. And gen- erally, it would be strange for an Orator to teach elocution, when he beleves it to be a heaven-bom gift, that cannot be taught. Though I have heard and heard- of, Great Speakers who have won 'golden opinions' by their 'silver tonesj' I have always found, it was what they said, not how they said it, that set their party whi^ers-in, beneath 'Hotel-windows,' and around 'the table,' in a roar. True however it is, that Orators with the exception of Quinctilian, if he was one, neither write books on Elocution for others^ nor read books on Elocution to instruct themselves. FAULTS OF READERS. 575 presentation of the language of the poet. In one of these lives, the actor prepares for his part, according to his own conception of it, or to the traditionary rules of the Green Room-> and for his scenic relationships to the rest of the Company, goes to Re- hearsal, with his everyday mind, speech, and apparel. This is the personal life of the actor. In the other life he is before the audience, and has entered into a 'spiritual existence' with the poet. Here, all self^perception is lost; he is sensuous to nothing, and has only an indescribable notion of the commingling of his own enacting 'soul,' with the rhetorical 'soul' of his author; thus entering with him into one co-efficient expression of gesture, countenance, and voice. This state of an actor, in losing his 'consciousness,' in the metaphysical 'ideality' of the character, is called Identity. And as I can comprehend his bodily and mental condition, the actor seems to think, move, and speak in a peculiar kind of Trance.* * An Actor, or Personator on the Stage, whatever his fictional school may teach, can no more, intelectually and passionately, beleve or feel himself to be the character he represents, than -he can, in physical perception feel the pain of his friend, or taste the food that gratifies him. If he should in mind, for he cannot in person, be or appear to himself to be another, he must, in mind, cease to be himself: and therefore cannot, in thought and passion, become another, except, if even that is possible, in delirium or a dream. Nor is there the least necessity that he should in acting, appear to himself to be another, in order to Act well. Wicked and foolish as man is in most of his affairs, it would be appalling to think what he might be, if human nature had not been made, in all things and everywhere alike. We are therefore, by birth and education, identical with one another; without its being a peculiar effort of 'genius' in a Player to feign himself so, and this is the opinion of the world; as we all know, what a social, moral, political, and religious commotion is produced by a single individual of name and station, who questions conformity, and observes and thinks for himself. He is marked as a dangerous character. Difference from the rest of the world in observation and thought, which are the charm of life, is rare; but in passion, which is almost the whole life itself of man, it is impossi- ble. If by internal motive, or external impression, thoughts are excited into pas- sion, we must show or enact it, in like manner with others. For although with some variation of degree and manner, the passion itself, in mental perception and outward action, is similar in all. It is not necessary then, to 'enter into' or 'feel' the passion of another; we are already in it, by a similar constitution; and have only to perceve and ex- press it, as properly our own, when excited within us either by the voice of the orator, or the written language of the historian and the poet. In ilustration, let us suppose an Actor to have the education, thought, pas- 576 FAULTS OF READERS. The Second Class, though altogether different in its character from that of Identity, is no less mystical in its account of itself. But as I do not comprehend the account of that unthinking and sion and physical means for expression, like the best of his class; and to enact the part of Hamlet, before the Ghost of his Father. He has then in his mind, the thoughts of doubt, disbelief, inquiry, and of the present supernatural event. The passions or vivid perceptions that affect and absorb, not entrance him, are horror, astonishment, reverence, affection, and revenge. These common thoughts and passions are, either from Nature or from habit, so at command, 'that a man might play them^' as Shakspeare analytically and truly describes itj by 'forcing his soul to its own conceit,'' not into Identity with the thought or conceit of another: for so far as they have been experienced, and no farther, can they be mentally known, and expressed. No one has felt them, in the case before us, with the vividness of life, but the supposed once-existing Hamlet: and therefore the Actor may raise within himself a certain form and degree of those thoughts and passions, but cannot become identical with Hamlet, even if good acting should require it. He is then only identical, so to speak, with himself, upon the experienced forms and degrees of his own passion and thought. The Actor's perception of Identity, compared with the plain phenomena of the mind and the voice, would seem to have arisen from one of these visionary views of Stage-personation^ either that the state of mind ascribed to a Character, is to be represented by the Actor being really excited to the exact state of mind ascribed to that character, which is but a metaphysical notion; or by his trying to forget himself, and in thought and passion, to become, as if absolutely another, which is a hopeless metaphysical task. How far, iu the case before us, the Actor is to become identical with the Poet, is another subject for consideration: and this leads to the inquiry, how far Shakspeare designed to identify himself in thought and passion with the thinking and suffering of the once-existing Hamlet. If a Poet should become identical as he thinks, with some pre-existing model, and upon that identity, should draw the character from himself; the Actor, in identifying himself with the character, would necessarily become identical, so to call it, with the poet. I have nothing to say here, on what a poet might think of him- self; for he may have his delusions, as well as the actor. With all respect however for the poet, even one in truth and greatness of thought, we maintain, that he, in no case becomes identical with the character he describes. How it may be with a character he altogether creates, if a poet ever did so create, I leave for poets, who work with 'transcendental spiritualities' to decide. When the costume, together with the language of thought and passion of a Character, is assumed by the Actor; and he has to move and to speak like that character, he might possibly seem to himself to have some slight cause for beleving, against his senses, that he is the very character: like Christopher Sly in the Play, who, with so many persuaders towards his delusion, exclaims at last, ' Upon rny life, I am a Lord indeed.' But how can the poet find a point of ap- proach to similarity, much less enter into Identity with his character, either FAULTS OF RBADEES. 577 inexpressive histrionic machinery, by which an Actor affects an audience, I shall, in noticing the subject, be obliged to quote the words of the initiated, who pretend to describe it. It has long been a question among Actors and Stage- critics^ whether he who excites most passion in his audience, is neces- sarily excited and directed by passion within himself. This Platonic, or soul-dealing, and therefore disputatious and inter- minable question, seems so clearly, to have arisen from a belief in the 'Spirituality' of Expression, supported by a determined ignorance of the describable forms of the speaking voice, and of their physical power in representing thought and passion, that I need not show, by our present light of analysis, in what manner it has contributed to prevent a progressive observation of the exact and beautiful co-relation between the mind and the voice. The maxim of Horace^ 'if you wish me to weep, you must your- self first l feeV your woes,' has so far either convinced, or misled his readers, that, under either of these two influences, I would not have here introduced the subject of this confounding ques- tion, if I had not met with the following confounding attempt to announce it. 'The actor of an opposite school,' says the Autobiography of an Actress, chapter thirteen, ' if he be a thorough artist, is more sure of producing startling effects. He stands unmoved amidst the boisterous seas, the whirlwinds of passion swelling around him. He exercises perfect command over the emotions of the audience; seems to hold their heart-strings in his hands, to play upon their sympathies, as on an instrument; to electrify or sub- historical or created;* when spreading his memorial perception for his task, he gradually and line by line, selects from its amplitude ; and roaming, in his ex- cursions after everything, returns with a gathered choice of thoughts, char- acters, manners, imagery, and language: and all this effected in time, and suc- cession, by a Shakspearej only a high example here^ identical with his own classifying power, and the grace and grandeur of its taste. What has he, in drawing the character of Hamlet, to do with contracting himself into a fixed and momentary identity with such a passing and everyday personage as a former Prince of Denmark? Leaving Identity then to its own Notional fate, the case seems to be^ that the Poet should, or does add what he pleases, to the original traits of a character furnished by history ; and the Actor adds what he has learned, to be the proper vocal-representation of a character furnished by the poet. 578 FAULTS OF READERS. due his hearers by an effort of volition; but not a pulse in his own frame, beats more rapidly than its wont. His personifica- tions are cut out of marble; they are grand, sublime, but no heart throbs within the life-like sculpture. Such was the school of the great Talma. This absolute power over others, combined with perfect self-command, is pronounced by a certain class of critics, the perfection of dramatic Art.' And then, to show the differ- ence between the actor who draws from the depth of his identical ' soul,' and him who only appears to do so, we have the following fact. 'I have acted with distinguished tragedians, who after some significant bursts of pathos, which seemed wrung from the utmost depths of the soul, while the audience were deafening themselves, and us, with their frantic applause, quietly turned to their breth- ren, with a comical grimace, and a few muttered words of satiri- cal humor, that caused an irresistible burst of laughter.' The reader, if he looks for meaning and precision in language, must find out if he can, and then say for himself, what all this account of Great Acting means, whether in the school of Identity, or of Talma. In me, it produces not a single definite perception of the kinds, degrees, purposes, and effects of thought and passion, nor of the character and management of the personal and vocal signs that express them.* * In addition to this visionary attempt to describe the manner of an accom- plished Actor, by transforming him into a 'stoic' of the Stage, 'a man without a tear;' and still further to justify our opinion of elocutionary discrimination, I select from a fashionable authority of the day, the following attempt, of a some- what different character, but quite as uninteligible ; and showing that delusion of the mind which at times, overcomes us all when with words alone, we make a picture to ourselves, wherein no one else can recognize a clear representation of things. Madame de Stael, whom I quote at second hand, from an English writer, somewhere speaks of Talma in these words: 'There is in the voice of this man a magic which I cannot describe; which from the first moment, when its ac- cent is heard, awakens all the sympathies of the heart ; all the charms of music, of painting, of sculpture, and of poetry; but above all, of the language of the soul.' It is always of great importance, to distinguish between a particular expla- nation of an object or action, and the self-absorbed writer's description of his own thoughts and feelings upon it: a point neglected in nine cases out of ten, in all past and present histrionic criticism. If a writer, in the selfish agonies of his own delights, and in the vagueness, of his 'transcendental abstractions,' FAULTS OF READERS. 579 In seeking instruction from others, not only in philosophy, but in the higher poetry^ for this has taught me much even of physi- cal nature, and more of the human mindj I have so accustomed myself to regard the simple truth-prints of traceable description, that my comprehension is often at fault, in the trackless pursuit of a metaphysical meaning; whether in the mischievous visions of Plato, with his 'arithmetic mediums,' and his 'procreations of the soul;' in the equally incomprehensible, yet far less rhetorical and methodic dreams of his later pupils, Jacob Behmen and Emanuel Kant ; or in the unassignable notions of histrionic prin- ciples and criticism. And although we may be unable to follow the mystic visions of the schools of Actings it is not so difficult, with a little patience on the part of the Reader, to inform, or remind him whence they are derived. The Greeks, unfortunately in some things our teachers, re- ceved so much of their Philosophical Fiction from Egypt and the East, that it is impossible to say, to what extent they invented, or how far they only altered and dressed- up the fable: it is how- declares that the manner of an Actor, 'cannot be described/ the reader who is obliged to rely altogether on description, is not to be reprehended, especially when there is ' soul and magic' in the case, if he can have no perception of it. In general, as an appendage to such a rhapsody as the preceding^ a writer, after acknowledging his inability to explain the thing itself, should at least, attempt to describe what he means by his own metaphysical notion of it; a task perhaps still more difficult. It is my misfortune never to have heard the celebrated Talma. Nor has that loss been otherwise supplied: for with due respect to the memory of an Actor whom I did not know, I would fain not ascribe to him a florid and outrageous intonation of wider intervals and waves, that I once heard from a declaimer, who was said to be his pupil and imitator: and all the descriptive terms I have met with, in critical eulogies on his elocution, have given me only an indefinite account of his knowledge and management of the voice, whatever that may have been: and the egregious misperceptions among the few as well as the many, on subjects like this^ together with what I know by our principles, to be the exag- gerated intonation of French Tragedy-; would leave me equally open to belief, or to doubt-j were a question on this point to be raised on the reality of the merit universally ascribed to him. If this declaration should shock the partiality, I do not say impeach the dis- crimination, of an admirer, it may perhaps moderate his revolting astonish- ment, when he has studiously read this volume, and compared it with the leaves whence it was copied, in the great Biblos of Nature, always open for reference, before him. 580 FAULTS OF READERS. ever certain, that having contrived, or adopted the imposition, they afterwards blindly went along with it. It was according to the vain and groping purposes of the Greek philosophers, that when they desired to know the truth, they could not find a meta- physical, and would not take the plain and physical way, to learn it. Observing how much time and labor were necessary for ac- quiring a knowledge of the frame and laws of nature, by what appeared to them a tedious use of the senses, they resolved to accomplish it more easily by a 'pure intelection of the soul.' In this fictional process, assuming, according to the human method of Design and Construction, that the world was made from an 'ideal design,' or what they called a Pattern-Form of the world previously existing in the mind of the Creator; and that the mind of man, made in the image of the Creative-Mind, was a humble finite offspring of its all-glorious infinity. And further, observing*, for they did add an allowed mite of experience to their fictions^ really observing, I say, the human mind to be capable of unlimited improvement, they thereupon conceited that in abstracting itself from the uninstructive and contaminating company of the senses, as well as from all other disturbing influences of this mortal life, it might, by a long and contemplative exercise of its own powers on its uncorrupted self, hopefully ascend towards the Creative Mind, and reach at last, its Parent-state of intelectual perfection, and immortality: that the Mind then purified, returning to its omnicient Father, and being made partaker of his knowledge, might come at last, though still residing within an earthly form, to behold his pattern of creation, and by access to the construc- tive designs, be able to comprehend the plan, the purpose, and the workmanship of all things. This process of Contemplation, was a product, and part of what the Greeks termed the sublime Abstraction of their First Philosophy; now indeed to us, first and greatest in fictional pretension, but last and least, in use- fulness and truth ; and which, if not originally designed to impose on ignorance, did subsequently pervert the mind to that state of metaphysical credulity, by which it still imposes on itself. It was this, together with other distracting fictions of the First Philosophy, that so early and so fatally confused and corrupted the now, alas ! irrestorable simplicity of the Christian Religion ; FAULTS OF READERS. 581 a religion intended by its Author to be practically a general moral blessing; andj in discarding the quarrelsome notions, and verbosity of the Grecian Schoolj to embrace an uncontentious system, with its decisive meaning of Tea, or Nay, for those who have 'ears to hear' unworried truth: not a religion of Platonic figments, and Aristotelian quibbles, for those who deafen their perceptions to the unarguing brevity of these two short verdict- words of Belief or Denial; and who by rejecting this unsophistic, this all-sufficient, this conclusive, this practical, and this peaceful purpose of the Original Christianity, have, with a heavy respon- sibility for their evil-doing, given themselves up, universally and world-without-end, to doctrinize, to wrangle, and to hate. This, which withdrew the Platonic Pietist from the visible world, to contemplate with inward but with filmy eyes, his own fanatic selfishness; thereby to raise himself to a communion with angels and saints, at the right hand of his Maker; and to pro- claim, with audacious triumph, his accomplished Beatitude. This, which led the Hermit and the Monk, to Platonic war against the senses; to retreat to the savage wilderness, and the Cell, before the overpowering civilization of their truth; and to seek a refuge at last, by trying to think, and to mortify themselves into Hea- ven. The Greeks began their philosophical but foolish method, with only disregarding the Truth of the Senses. The religious Anchorite, following up his Platonic creed, ended with the Impi- ous attempt to thwart the purpose of his God, in ordaining its supremacy. It is this irreligious sundering of heaven from the universe of material things, that ' God has joined together,' which still haunts the narrow-minded Bigot ; who under the venerable authority of his Pagan philosophy, continues to separate the senses from con- templation: but which, in the fulness of wisdom, and of works, the beneficent Bacon, in mental saviorship, has taught us to re- unite. It is this Contemplation, still uncontroled by physical perception, and falling into visions, that enables every new Sec- tarian Leader, to conceit his own way to the will of his Maker, and to bring back from his own egotistical invention, another, and still another message of grace, to overfill the world with dis' cord and with dreams. 582 FAULTS OF READERS. A modification of this system, still makes the Physician o Every School, pretend to see with his mind's eye, and that a blind one, those fictions of invisible causation in the human body, which produce the infinite succession of quarrelsome Speculations, the ever-varied Nomenclature, and the never-satisfying Practice of his Dogmatic Art ; yet so inseparable from the weakness and indecision, always co-existent in the mind, with fictional and fashionable changes in opinion. It is to the universality of this vice of thinking and beleving without the Mastership of the senses, that, according to our igno ranee, or our ill use of knowledge, we owe the wildness of Grecian ♦Spiritualism, still imposed upon usj in the dates and postpone ments of Millennial Prophets; in conjuring-down the Rapping Phantoms of the dead; and in the Epicurean doctrine of atoms, revived in modern chemistry, with no other prospect than that of giving way in time, to some new supposition. And finally, a view of this Vice will discover the source of that absurd 'idealism' of the Actor, and of his self-sufficient metaphy sical 'genius' in his attempt to describe his own conception of his characters, and of himself. If there is no cause for a work, the cause being here, only the adaptation of means to an end, there can properly be neither be- ginning nor end to the work ; and if not eminent causes, there can be no excelence. Nature certainly has wise purposes in her work, and although she never tells them, except by her spon- taneous actions, she does not always prevent our finding them out through experimental inquiry. An Actor may have purposes for all his ends; and some system for self-instruction ; but as he never has satisfactorily told them, we must, as in the case of Nature, be contented, if he does not prevent our efforts to ascertain them. Without therefore positively asserting^ he has no means of in- structing himself, or of being instructed, beyond his common school of Imitation, we may, if unable to discover his intentions or rules, particularly on the subject of the voicej be allowed to state our view of the causes why, with an exception of some local rotine, and the business of the stage, he has none, above the in- stincts of gesture, countenance, and voice, common to him and the rest of his company. FAULTS OF READERS. 583 One influential cause, affecting at large, the whole power and purpose of the Actor, though not chargeable on him alone, and which encourages this mediocrity, if it does not really produce itj is the too frequent absence, from a public audience, of those watchful Masters, Knowledge and Taste; masters who make greatness, wherever they rule, because they will have nothing else; and who in deciding on the faults and merits of an actor, teach him at the same time, to know himself. This however, is a general cause, arising from a neglect of instruction, common to the Actor and his audience. But leaving this point for the con- sideration of others, we will here briefly endeavor to show par- ticularly, not only why he has not a deep and thorough knowledge of very important requisites in this art, but why the circumstances which affect him, render it almost necessary that it should be so. In the First place, then, the vocation itself of an actor is apt to over-occupy, and thereby thwart any broader purpose of his mind, with memorial efforts upon wordsj and with a perpetual and varied succession of thought and passion, strongly excited for the moment, but too fugitive to become mentally familiar, or directively useful in the higher designs of expression; and there- fore not calculated to lead his attention, or inquiry, beyond the common topics of his art. Second. The whole mind of an Actor, with all its jealous hopes, is involved in the disturbing interest of his success. His success is measured by public applause; and public applause, though the very life and support of Egotism, rarely assists or enlarges the intelect, even on the subject of its ambition; but is apt to weaken its power, and prevent its advancement in every- thing else. Third. The actor, by that necessary law of a wholesome and a happy life, which directs us all to some physical or intelectual industry, goes to the stage, in nearly every instance, as a means of support; and too often without the preparatory education to give power to his purpose, and dignity to its effect; allured in the unreflective period of youth, by a dream of prospects and hope, rather than by a view of the influential realities and im- portant consequences of his choice; and beset by an early and restless ambition to be known, necessarily most urgent with him 584 FAULTS OF READERS. ■who, being unknown to others, is at the same time very probably unknown to himself; of a temperament, not always sedate and steady, nor extended and permanent enough to form the habit of looking into things as they are, and of fairly estimating the dif- ficulties of a task. c O I never think so nicely as that,' said an actress-? the spoilt-child of the populace of two Hemispheres;? to one, who remarked, that singing might be as articulate as speech. As it is much easier, gradually to change a vague perception into positive error, than to work-up exact and comprehensive ob- servation into systematic truthj it is almost conclusive, that minds born, or fashioned by circumstances, to the condition we have just described, would turn from the labor of cultivating the united powers of observation and reflection, to the amusement of indulg- ing in wavering opinions; and become a prey to the sophistry of Platonic fiction, or as it is now called, 'Ideality,' or 'Transcend- ental thought.' And such appears to be the state of mind, as far as they have explained it, of that class of actors, who sur- rounding .themselves with visions of more than enthusiastic pas- sion, perform their part by the mystic means of Identity. I can say nothing of the state of mind of the second Class, that electrifies its hearers, by 'volition;' by 'grand and sublime personations cut out of marble;' and though without a 'heart- throb of its own within its life-like sculpture,' yet stirs up its audience, to 'deafening themselves with their frantic applause.' Its power, in its own estimation, is most wonderful; but its ways, and means are beyond my comprehension: for to me, the account of these so-thought Frigidists, equally with that of the former Class, taken from their own dreams about themselves, contains not one assignable image in description, not one useful word of instruction, and nothing but words, in the purposes of histrionic criticism.* * It appears, from the preceding description, that as the Actor of the second class holds no extatic Identity with his Author, and returns no grateful 'feel- ing' to the 'frantic applause' of his audience, he must have under his 'sculpt- ured suit of marble,' some very peculiar extacy within himself. As I vaguely look upon this strange affair, and would write it down, in something like its own fantastic figures; the Actor's 'soul' sits all-secluded, a self-sufficient Monocrat, without a single minister of passion near the throne. FAULTS OF READERS. 585 Supposing then, the difficulty or impossibility of our compre- hending the above description of the two great classes of Acting-; to be as strict a consequence of its obscurity, as if it was de- signed to be uninteligible : how are we to correct the actor-ism of Actors, in being either through ignorance, or self-will, incom- prehensible in their notions of themselves^ which the ' Genius of the Lamp' of innate and self-sufficient light, has strongly en- couraged, if indeed, he did not originally introduce it into the stroling Company of Thespis ? Simply by removing their delu- sions about personated 'Identity,' and Frigid personation; by inviting them down from 'the realms of cloud-land, where they dwell with the ideal creations of the poet;' and by clearly teach- ing them the physical and measurable signs of thought, and pas- sionj their own natural and inteligible state of mind if repre- sentable by countenance, gesture, and voice, can be distinctly conveyed to others. Since then the Observative Philosophy^ the Real Author- power of this Work, under my humble namej has for the benefit of the Actor, furnished the materials for a better condition of his Art, let the Actor listen for a moment, to the Observative Philosophy. All that has been gropingly sought through the 'spirituality' of Plato, and the Actor-ism of the Stage, may be here set down in the clear Baconian language of the Senses. An actor, in his personations, is not a 'disembodied being of cloud-land' 'kindled by Promethean fire' and 'taking the audience by storm;' with 'an upward gaze,' and in contempt of sensuous things, 'treading external circumstances beneath his feet.' He is like the rest of usj though he may not admit this 'identity/ an earthly animal, of flesh and blood; with the means of moving, and of plainly or passionately thinking, and speakingj which he is visibly and audibly to apply with inteligence and taste. The thoughts to be declared, are set down in his Part, and are communicable, by grammatical and appropriate speech. The passions to be ex- pressed, are described or implied in the words of his author. These thoughts and passions, at least all that can, and ought to be represented, are common to mankind, and are therefore readily excited in an audience, by their well-known physical signs. 38 586 FAULTS OF READERS. The actor being thus kept down to the level of humanity, on the points of thought and passion ; the Baconian method of work- ing-out the practice through the principle, procedes to the manner of expressing them. This is shown in the person, the counte- nance, and the voice. Spiritualism has never gone so far, as to assume the mystical direction of personal Gesture. The exalted, the downcast, the averted, the assenting, and dissenting head; the hasty, the digni- fied, and the starting step; the fixed, and the 'supplosive' foot; with the 'chironoiny' of the arm, in its unnumbered motions and meanings, are all, in their consonance of character and expres- sion with the countenance and voice, no more than obvious mus- cular movements, prompted by nature, confirmed in their uses by habit, and exercised with propriety and taste. In the countenance, the Baconian eye of observation sees no- thing in character and expression, but physical form, outline, and movement, together with the smooth and the wrinkled, the white and the red; all variously combined, and yet so plainly connected with their respective thought and passion, that your dog, happily freed from Platonic notions, in a moment perceves them in your face. But here the actor begins to raise his 'Perturbing Spirit;' and not contented with nature's own physical sufficiency for his thoughtive and passionative signs, and which, if left to itself, would accomplish all his face is fit for; only forces it to the distortion of 'electrifying looks,' by 'throwing his soul' into his eyes, and nose, and mouth, and brow; and perhaps, in violence to the just expression of well-closed lips, even into the grinning of his very teeth. And what does the Baconian observer find in the Actor's voice? He hears that some of his words are of longer quantity than others; some more forcibly pronounced; some are harsh, others smooth; some acute, others grave; hears, not in his soul's ear, but physically hears, the Modes of vocality, force, time, abruptness and pitch, with their various forms, degrees, and practical distinctions, detailed throughout this Workj by a pupil of only a lower Form, in the Baconian school, who is yet happy in his present, and looks with hopeful patience to his future tasks. But with all these phenomena within hearing, and FAULTS OF READERS. 587 only unrecognized because unnamed, the Platonic Thinker, seek- ing something above vulgar observation, has by notional ' move- ments of the spirit' and figments of 'occult causes,' not only prevented his own spontaneous perception of the vocal phe- nomena, but worse still, has so far contributed to obtund, as fictional habits generally doj both the senses and the intelect, as not to let him listen, much less attempt to comprehend, when told by others, that the Expression of Speech is only one part of measurable and describable physical nature. Upon all that has been said, perhaps some of those who would degrade the Fine-art of Acting, to a level with the visionary Sychology of our poetic young ladies, may ask if we have not given a too prosaic, or 'matter of fact,' account of the material and formal causes of the Art? What, says the ' cloud- capt' transcendentalist, is to become of the actor's grandeur, pathos, and grace, if they are to be deduced from physical, and not from 'spiritual' causes? We answer, that with those states of mind, the proper use of the physical means for vocal and per- sonal expression, will, under the observative system, display those states with more uniformity, and consequently with more force: for the expression not depending on the individual caprice of visionary personation, will have a more invariable character, and therefore be more clearly and generally perceved. To me however, the cause is not apparent, why the mystical 'soul' under the fiction of Identity, should be brought into Stage-Personation, more than into any other art. Why should not the Sculptor, Painter and Architect, when they studiously, and choicely com- plete their designs, and then practically execute them with pro- priety and tastej claim to have this mysterious light of esthetic- inspiration? We once heard of a Frenchman, who, having made a certain Miniature Shoe* ascribed his success soley to the influ- ence of 'a moment of enthusiasm.' And it has long been a by- word of the concentrative and transmuting influence of a Sheffield work-shop, that a button-maker, as a 'glaring instance' of Iden- tity, does in time become a very Button. Nor are such jocose notions less absurd, when applied to an Actor or when assumed by himself. The Fine arts are figuratively represented as sisters; and they 588 FAULTS OF READERS. are a closely related family, so far as the elegant work of their hands is directed by a unity of the general principles of beauty in the esthetic mind. When these principles have perceptibly and practically taken-on their separate sister-forms^ any attempt, marriage-like, to join two of them by a metaphysical rite, into one, would defeat the design of varied departments in taste; and be repugnant to the thought of a confederate-independence among themselves. From a few elements of matter and motion, or per- haps from single matter and its motion, Nature produces her countless differences of function and form. The same radical and governing principles of fitness and beauty in the arts, that create the delightful imagery of the poet, direct the just vocal expression of the actor. But when the principle embodies itself into perception, the unity of the principle is divided, and passes, if I may so speak, into the varied differences of its exemplified forms. The principle with the poet, is a train of directive per- ceptions, conizable to others only by its effect in his written im- agery and sign. The principle w T ith the actor, is the train of directive perception conizable to others only by the effect in the proper audible-sounds of his voice; and strange as it may seem, until further explained, we have a unity in the mental root and stock of those principles, but cannot have a direct resemblance between the several branches of the arts, w T hich those principles produce. Somebody once made a doubtful metaphor, in calling Dancing, the 'poetry of motion.' It wants just as much, the clear picturing of a true and consistent tropej and it is altogether out of place, in serious discourse, to speak of the Poetry of the Stage. It has had too, the effect on unthinking Actors, and on Critics who should think, to turn their attention from the assign- able merits of the art, to its vague and wandering mysticism; and to encourage the weak-minded, to gossip with others, as well as to enter into their own reveries, about the ' magical and dreamy influence of passion.' If poetry^ flimsy, spirit-woven, merely self- inteligible poetry I meanj belongs to the Action of the Stage, then with the reciprocity of a metaphor, we might sayj the Action of the stage belongs to poetical soaring, even in its transcendental flights; which is absurd. Let me ask one question of the dramatic Mystagogue, both as FAULTS OF READERS. 589 critic and actor; for if not of one notional school, they would soon go their way from each other; whence does the poet; yes, emphatically for this case, the Poet; who being a participant- ' spirit' in stage Identity, should in his own art be a bright ex- ample-; whence does he draw this grandeur, pathos, and grace, which the Actor in his cloud of idealism, has only at second hand, to express? Ask the Homers, the Virgils, the Shakspeare, the Milton, the Thomsons, the Popes, and the Cowpers, in their vari- ous powers; and from their unraystified delineation of nature and of life, their analogies, all drawn at last, from that physical nature alone, not poetically sung, but clearly spoken to the ear in vivid representation of the objects of every other senses and learn how they have become to us, through the recognized exact- ness of their bright and exalted pictures, the Baconian philoso- phers of fiction, and the great 'Secretaries' of nature and art; recording with iluminated faithfulness, the history of existing, and of possible, but not of pretending truths. They copied, each in his own hand, what was, and what had been: and set down even what might be, with the clearness of a waking and a written thought. Let then the infatuated aspirant of Stage-Personation, who thinks we have been too prosaic, about his ' Genius of Iden- tity,' learn through his dramatic Masters j from whose language he must draw the audible material of his art, or it would only be the pantomimic 'spirit' of his vocal expressionj how they per- formed their high poetic part of grandeur, pathos, and grace, through all the breadth and depth of passion: without any real 'nightly visits of the muse;' with- no 'extacies' of the Delphian Tripod ; no ' stirring the waters of the soul ' to a state of poetic- Identity; but on a humble seat perhaps, and without enchant- ment, drawing their 'goodly thoughts' in the truth and strength of simplicity, from life and books, and things unwritten; with the" privilege of descriptively exalting the physical realities of nature to perfectional degrees of the beautiful, and the sublime. 590 CONCLUSION. CONCLUSION. Here I finish the history of the speaking voice: having therein designed to record no anecdotal wonders; no magnifying tradi- tions of how far Whitfield could be heard; no prodigies of earliesx infant speech ; no ultra case of a stammerer, who could not be even heard at all ; no echo past counting ; nor ventriloquism past belief. On a subject worthy in itself of serious inquiry, I was reminded to pay more respect to the Reader who might value this Work, than contrivingly to entice him on to principles, by a dis- tracting detail of 'startling' facts; having endeavored to set be- fore him an instructive story told by Nature ; whose wisdom being the broadest principle and power of all generality, is,'if it admits the term, a single Wonder, Uncompared. It has been my design throughout this Work to subject the voice to a studious examination; and by the simple but sufficient direction of the Ear, to unfold its supposed mysteries with philo- sophic precision. How far this has been accomplished, the intel- igent Reader must determine, with that allowance for minor errors, which the historian of Nature has perhaps, in an arduous task like this, a right to claim, and which the liberal and reflec- tive critic, who may have been told of the inscrutable intonations of speech, will not refuse. Those to whom the subject of Elocution, in its higher meaning, is new, will receve this history without prejudice; and though they may not have occasion for, its practical rules, will still admire the beautiful economy of nature, in the ordination of speech. Those who have spent a life of labor, 1 by the dim and scattered light as yet reflected from the art, and who are too proud or care- less to take-on a new mind, with the advancement of knowledge^ will at least learn from this essay, the deficiencies of the old scheme of instruction, even though they may not admit the deficiencies are here supplied. If the development now offered, were only an addition to the artj persons of the latter class might discover traces of their former opinions, and thereby have some preface to admitting it. But finding here, the history of what may seem to be a new and therefore a revolting creation in science, they CONCLUSION. 591 may reject it altogether, because they cannot recognize the defi- nitions, divisions, rules, a-nd ilustrations of their familiar school- books on elocution. However Philosophy and Taste may admire the Wisdom and Beauty in the Natural system of the voice, which we have en- deavored to describej it is to be regarded as a curiosity only, if it does not lead to some Practical application. I have therefore attempted, on the unalterable foundation of our physiological history, to establish a method of directive precepts, and of ele- mentary instruction. If we infer from prevalent opinions, we must beleve, the dis- tinct methods of a good elocution are endless ; for every one with self-satisfaction thinks he reads wellj yet all read differently. There is however, under a varied application of just principles, but one method of reading-well; and we are now enabled, from a knowledge and nomenclature of the constituents of the voice, to furnish from Nature herself, and not from the endless fashions of the ignorant tongue, the effective means of that only-method. Without some system of generalized facts and principles in Elocu- tion, drawn from the pervading unity of Nature, there can be none of that fellowship which so essentially contributes to the advancement of an art. Yet even with an instructive ordination of certain vocal signs to certain states of mindj conventional differ- ences, unrectified by rule, tend to confound that ordination and weaken its authority. If some uniform system of the voice be instituted, similarity of knowledge will insure greater accuracy in the use of its signs; for intonations, like words, will have more precision and force, when not varied from their fixed and appro- priate meaning. In colecting and framing the precepts of Elocution, I have taken into view the strength, the propriety, and the beauty of expression. The system represents an inteligible, and dignified method of the voice, under that form of severe but efficacious simplicity, which is not at first alluring to him who is unac- customed to regard the exalted purpose, and effect of an endur- ing taste. With the art of reading thus established, its excelence must grow into sure and irreversible favor, whenever it receves that studious attention, which raises the pursuits of the wise 592 CONCLUSION. above those of the vulgar. I might, from another art, relate the story of the great Painter, who with his mind filled with anticipa- tive reflections on the merits of Raflaelle, was disappointed at his first sight of the walls of the Vatican, and disconsolate after his last. The florid style of elocution, formed by wider intervals than are proper to the diatonic melody, is the result of a sway of ex- aggerative passion like that which prevails with the child and the savage. The thoughtless excitability of noise-loving ignorance, which delights in the florid intervals of speech, demands a per- petual change to faults of a like vivid character; and capricious alteration takes the place of enduring improvement. The system of plain diatonic melody, with the occasional contrast of expres- sive intervals, for which, as the Advocate of Nature, I would plead, has in the charm of its simplicity, an impressive influence on the educated mind, which the studious use of observation and reflection in an art, must always insure. If this oifered system of Elocution should, on the grounds of propriety or taste, be objectionable, let another be formed by him who is better qualified for the task. Only, let a consistent, though even a conventional, system be formed. And as in the other esthetic arts, we can turn to an 'Apollo,' a 'Parthenon,' and a 'Transfiguration'; to the Rules of the Oratoria; the Land- scape of Whately, and of Price; the 'Institutes' of Quinctilian, and the Precepts of Horace,' and of Pope; let Elocution be able hereafter, not only to bring forward the name of a Roscius, a Garrick, a Siddons, a Talma, and a Boothj let it at the same time lay-up in the Cabinet of the arts, a history of the available ways and means of their vocal superiority ; thereby investing the art of speaking-well, through its methodic description, with that cor- porate capacity, by the preservative succession of which the practical influence of its highest masters shall never die. A kindly fellowship among the votaries of the arts, and the bad temper of disagreement, turn so entirely on a harmony in opinion, that whoever has examined this subject would, for social sympathy if not for truth and taste, prefer a factitious system, if well-ordered and consistent with itself, as a substitute for the varying and contradictory rules, constantly proposed by ever- CONCLUSION. 593 changing authority, in individual cases, of what may be called common or unenlightened speech. The Philologist, in the study and eolation of languages, esti- mates those which have receved their classified and concordant method from the arbitrary institutions of grammar and prosody, above those which arise with less connection or analogy, from the wants and passions of a barbarous people. Where shall we find the natural prototype of that elegant and precise science of Heraldry, which makes the enthusiast, over his armorial ensigns, delight in the purely invented, system of the Escutcheon and its Charges, and read their artificial but methodic disposition, by the brief and luminous rules of Blazonry? What book of Botany can designate the fluted stem and sheathing leaf of the free-handed floral volutej the symmetric lotus^ the scrolled acanthus^ the varied cupj the indented leafing, with its delicate tracery-; which altogether constitute the beautiful and endless combination of ornament, in the contrasted and harmonious grouping of Greek and Roman Ideal or Esthetic Foliage ? These three subjects are all the systematic yet conventional creations of art; and it would seem, that objects of intelectual taste, as well as of sensuous perception, are sometimes more satisfactory when enjoyed, in the latter, through the impressive habit of acquired appetite; and in the former through artificial and therefore to the dogmatic mind, less changeable arrange- ments and rules: and we know that what is called acquired ap- petite, is always governed by the influence of some habitual principles, however arbitrary these principles may be. Without a system founded either on Nature, or on general Convention, I am at a loss to know by what authority criticism in Elocution is to be directed. Its rules have too frequently been drawn from the very instances which are the questionable subject of investigation. Garrick is to be tried; and by the Common Law, for there is no Statute here, the former case of Garrick is the rule of critical justice. Happy for an art, when such authority can be cited ! But what is to be said when pre- sumption pushes itself into the front ranks of elocution, and thoughtless friends undertake to support it? The fraud must go 594 CONCLUSION. on, till presumption quarrels, as often happens, with its own friends or with itself, and finally dissolves the spell of its fic- titious character and merits. The preceding history develops many principles of instruc- tion, and criticism, and makes some effort towards their applica- tion. Pronunciation, pause, and stressful emphasis are the only points of elocution which have been reduced to the precision of particulars: and on these only have critics been able to show anything like definite censure or applause. By directing their inquiry to the details of Intonation, they will learn how far em- phasis depends upon it: and when a perception of its universal influence in speech is awakened by exact description, and nomen- clature, they will then first preceve how the comprehensive de- signs of emphasis, in the fulest purpose of thought and passion, may be marred by defects in the delicate schemes of melody, and intonated expression. Read over a review of dramatic performance. It may have words enough for its thoughts^ and very good grammar. You cannot however, avoid observing a strong disposition on the part of the writer, to say something, when he has nothing to say: hence, with some transcendental notion, and some uninteligible analogy to explain it; together with a parrot-vocabulary of un- meaning terms, generally misapplied, and always mawkish to an instructed and delicate taste, such as 'chasteness,' 'by-play,' ' undertone,' 'freshness,' 'harmony,' 'effect,' and 'keepings the writer soon makes his way to surer ground, in noting the number and dress of the audience; the comfort of the seats in the or- chestra, with thanks to the manager, for recent alterations in the rules of the housej the habit of slamming doors, and the noise of iron-shod boots: the whole accompanied with copious extracts from some well-known dramatic scenes, and perhaps a reprint of one of Cumberland's criticisms. But how can I withhold an ex- ample of the 'fine phrensy' of one of those 'brilliant hits' of histrionic criticism? 'To hear **** 5 ' said and seriously too, not an ilustrious, but a madly ilustrating and modern English Poetj 'to hear **** act, is like reading Shakspeare by a flash of lightning.' A meteoric lesson on Elocution, gesture, and the countenance, worthy of the transcendental teacher; and quite CONCLUSION. 595 satisfactory to those who thought themselves thus brightly in- structed.* * To exemplify the uninteligible generalities of the greater part of histrionic criticism, under the indefinite verbiage of the old Elocutional select the follow- ing article from a Charleston newspaper of the seventh of February, eighteen hundred and thirty-eight. It is a 'cloud-land' analysis of the manner of a foreign Stroling- Actor, Starring at that time, through the United States^ whose real excelence on many points could not however, under the old system, guard him against that transcendental fog of rapsody, which destroys every percep- tion not only of an identity with his enacted character, but even of any likeness in the description to the character of the Actor himself. After stating that the Theater was crowded, which we do comprehend, he goes on with what we do not: 'His reputation rests upon a charm that gathers strength with time — his ex- celence is not particular, not resting upon starts, marvelous eccentricities, miraculous shreds, that like diamonds in rubbish astonish us by mere contrast with neighboring dulness — his excelence is general, it interests and absorbs you, not by the finish of a movement, the richness of a smfle, the complication of a sneer or the preternatural power of a tone, but sweeps you on in the broad, bright stream of the profoundly estimated and distinctly developed character. You live in his personation — you feel your own blood sensibly coursing in the veins of his Hamlet, your own soul rocking with his indecisive will, your own brain gathering in the dim and awful musings that swell in his. It so dawns upon you, ever casting a light before its approach, that you receve it as the realization of your own ideal, rather than start at it as an unhoped for wonder. You are not reminded that you had never thought of such, or such a conception before, and therefore you are never compelled to remember that the scene is without, foreign to you, on the stage and not in your own soul. You go with the personation, in it, a part of it, and not like parasites, bowing in mock astonishment at the heels of the show. This may be a little mystical, (0! clouds and darkness, not a little,) but it is as near as we can arrive to a correct ac- count of the impression which Mr. has made upon our own minds. He is evidently a scholar, a man of thought, who has worked out his ideal with all the careful labor and intense dreaming that it costs the sculptor to perfect his. The consequence of this is, that he is always the character, always Hamlet — for instance, acting, feeling, imagining, suffering, like — no, not like, for that de- notes a comparison of two things where there is not only resemblance but dif- ference—it is rather Hamlet himself, Shakspeare's Hamlet, bursting the cere- ments of his blackletter sleep and walking out from the volume upon the stage. There is a freshness, a reality in it that would give it all the charm of novelty on repetition. It could no more grow tame than the eternal truth of the poet : s own creation.' Again, at the close we have something that we do comprehend. 'The play was witnessed with earnest interest. We have not time to make a record of cheering, &c, but in the course of the evening Mr. was called out, and amidst loud and long applause, tendered his acknowledgments to the House.' 596 CONCLUSION. The preceding Essay furnishes principles and definite terms, by which the specific merits and defects of an actor, or a speaker may be distinctly represented; by which the indescribable mys- teries of speech, as they are called, may be inteligibty told to other ages than those that hear them; by which arrogance and imposture in this art, may be wrested from their hold on the bet- ter part of mankind, and their corrupting influence left undis- turbed over that great majority, always ready to support the small, and too often the greater frauds of lifej and which, in its way, does receve a sort of pleasure from the changing pictures of its credulity. The same close and comprehensive observation which makes an interpreter of nature, makes a Prophet in the arts. He can tell us, that in the future history of elocution, as it now is with song, the masters of its Practice must always be masters of the Science; that they will, with the confident aim of principles, ad- dress themselves to the elect of inteligence and taste, by whom their merits will be rated and their authority fixed. And if in acquiring fame or fortune by their voice, they should receve assistance from this essay, I shall be contented to think it may be even a humble contribution to the means, by which the works of Esthetic Art have in all ages, delighted the inteligent and educated portion of mankind. Finally, I would recommend this analysis, and the practical inference which may be drawn from it, to those who declare that elocution cannot be taught; that the just and ele,gant adaptation of the voice, to thought and passion, cannot be an act of self-per- ception, and must therefore be the work of earless, eyeless, and thoughtless ' Genius ' alone. Such persons look upon this sup- posed peculiar-power of the mind, as a kind of sleight ; the ways and means of which are unknown and immeasurable. But 'genius ' as it appears from its productions, is only an unusual aptitude for that broad, reflective, combining, and persevering observation which perceves and readily accomplishes more than is done with- out it; and is therefore in its purposes and uses, not altogether removed beyond a submission to knowledge and rulej though in its course of instruction, 'genius' is oftenest the pupil of itself. Let those who are deluded by this vulgar notion of 'genius,' CONCLUSION. 597 turn themselves from mystics, who wrap-up only to misrepresent the simple agency of the mind, and who cannot define its high productive power, which through their own veil they do not com- prehend; let them ask the great Sachems of Science, the encom- passing, and far-seeing Chiefs of Thought, and learn from the real possessors of it, how much of its manner may be described. They will tell us that 'genius,' if we must use this loose and oft- perverted term, is in its high meaning always earnest, sometimes enthusiastic, but never fanatical; always characterized by steady perseverance; by the love of an object in its means as well as its end; by that unshaken self-confidence in its unobtrusive powers, which converts the evil of discouragement into the benefit of success ; which cares not to be alone, and is too much engrossed with its own truths, to be disturbed by the opinions of others: with a disentangling purpose to see things as they might be; and the energetic means to execute them as they ought to be; soar- ing above that musty policy which, in its 'wary tact' of the ex- pedient, would with a world serving quietude preserve them always as they are: having the power to accomplish great and useful works, only because it wastes no time on small and selfish ones; and passing a life of warfare in detecting the impostures and follies of its own age, that the unenvious verdict of the next, like the celebrated response by the Oracle of Delphi, may pro- nounce it the chief in wisdom and in virtue. BRIEF ANALYSIS OF SONG AND RECITATIVE When the phenomena of Speech, Song, and Recitative, are regarded independently of verbal distinctions, they display a nearer resemblance than is discoverable by a general view of their effects and names. It is the Disclosing duty of Philosophy to show us the real existences of things; to remove many of those lines of subdivision which the poor conveniences of classification have adopted, and to exhibit, as far as available with finite re- sources, that clear and comprehensive picture of Kature, sur- veyed at once and always, by the Discernment of her own self- present, and self-percipient eye. To the common ear, speech and song are totally different. Let us examine their relationships by a comparison of their several constituents. In taking up this subject, I have no new vocal function to describe. Song and Recitative are respectively only certain combinations of the five modes of sound, and their forms, de- grees, and varieties, including the protracted radical, and vanish^ enumerated in the preceding history of speech. It is my design to point out briefly, the manner of these combinations; thus to complete the survey of vocal science; and if the expressive use of the voice does at all admit the Pretensions of Recitativej to show the relationsh : p between its three leading divisions. (599) GOO A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF SONG. OF SONG. TnE art of Vocal Music has long been studiously cultivated; and although it has never yet receved a full elementary analysis, either of its structure or its effects, its investigators have accu- mulated a mass of observation, and framed a bod}^ of rules for governing the great and brilliant results of its practical execution. It is at this time, beyond both my design and ability to offer a detailed consideration of the topic before us. The opportunities for inquiry on the subject of Song, as well as on that of all the Fine Arts, are too limited in this country, to afford useful com- panionship in knowledgej the broader rules of taste^ and eminent examples of inteligence joined with executive skillj to furnish a record of facts and principles, in that order and with that clear- ness which always characterize a direct transcript from nature. It becomes the American, in considering this subject, to offer only his own observation; leaving a further description of the singing-voice, to the ample means of European experience, educa- tion, and exact inquiry. I propose to give a general account of the functions of song; leaving it to those whom it may profes- sionally concern, to make a practical application of the facts and principles here developed, or to regard them only as a pastime of knowledge, in natural history. As song consists in certain combinations of the five modes of the voice employed in speech, the proposed analysis will be given under the same general heads: and firsts Of the Pitch or Intonation of Song, Song has every direction and extent of intonation ascribed to speech; together with two forms, which do not belong to the latter. In the second section of the analysis of speech, I described those peculiar modifications of the concrete^ the Protracted Radi- cal, and Vanish. In their most simple form they consist respec- tively of a faint and rapid concrete through the interval of a tone, joined to a level line of pitch. Let us call the former of these constituent movements, the Quick-concrete; and the latter A BRIEF ANALYSIS OP SONG. 601 the Note. Of the quick-concrete and prolonged note, there are two conditions. In the First* the quick-concrete rises and terminates in the note at the summit of the interval; constituting the Protracted Vanish. The ascent by this continuation of quick-concrete and note, through the seven places of the musical scale is ilustrated by the following notation of time and pitch. w^ i^=f? pS In the Second condition, the prolonged Note begins on the radical line. At its termination, the quick-concrete rises to the summit of the interval; constituting the Protracted Radical. In ascending the scale, by this combination of note and concrete, the progression is made according to the following notation. sr^- r o4 od g ^pss^i: By these two conditions, we learn that the note always has the quick-concrete, before or after it. Song variously employs both these movements; the protracted radical less frequently perhaps than the protracted vanish: the voice in its instinctive intonation, appearing to fall more readily into the latter. Not having however sufficiently examined this point, I leave it for future inquirers. Regarding the vocal effect or expression in these two forms of the protracted note, there seems to be no difference between them; and should no better cause be found for the singer's choice in taking one or the other, it might perhaps, in some cases, be decided by the character of the elements on which it is executed. The radicals of the dip- thongs, a-we, a-h, and ou-t, having more volume than their re- spective vanishes g-rr and oo-ze, would be chosen for the protracted 39 602 A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF SONG. note. When a subtonic begins, and a tonic ends a sylable, the protracted vanish would be taken. When a subtonic both begins and ends a sylable, there may be a motive for a choice between them. Hence a singer, with reference to the more agreeable sound, and more impressive effect of a long-drawn note, would use the protracted radical, or protracted vanish, as the construc- tion of the sylable might allow. The time of the concrete-rise in the foregoing scales, is repre- sented by a semiquaver, and that of the note, by a semibreve, two comparative terms in music, expressing the proportion of one to sixteen; yet the proportion may vary. In the great System of Song, there is a Simple, and a more Complex structurej formed respectively, by the discrete, and by the concrete movements of the voice. The successions of pitch in song, represented by the preceding scales, being made with a discrete skip to proximate degrees, without a continuous slide from one note into another^ a vocal melody founded on these scales, forms the Plainest kind of song, resembling the discrete music of a flute. In this kind of melody, the length of the note, when compared with the concrete, is different, according to the time of the musi- cal composition. Its longest quantity may excede the proportion represented in the above scales. In its shortest, the note is dropped; and the double form, of note and quick-concrete, there- by changed to a single equable concrete. This occurs in quick- timed songsj which therefore strongly resemble speech; and were it not for an occasional prolonged note with wide skips of radical pitch, and a barred rythmus, they would pass for it. Much skill is therefore not required to sing a comic song, the greater part of its intonation being in the equable concrete. The foregoing diagrams of the tone, represent the most simple form of the united quick-concrete and protracted-note of song. But other scales of wider concretes may be constructed. The following diagram represents the protracted vanishj with a concrete, varying from a second to an eighth; and a wider range of the concrete might be exhibited, for song occasionally uses it. Having given above, a full scale of the concrete of a second with its protracted vanish, it is unnecessary to show a particular one, A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF SONG. 603 for each of the other intervals. The Reader can from the follow- ing summary, do this on paper for himself, by drawing a full scale, with the concrete of a thirds another full scale, with the concrete of a fourth; and to the octave. And here, as the in- terval of the concrete widens, the disproportion, both in extent and time, between the note and concrete diminishes, and the latter loses its relative distinction of Quick. Taking this diagram, with the page inverted, it will exhibit the notation of a Protracted Radical with an issuing concrete of the several intervals of the scale; observing, that here we begin with the octave* a difference of no account in the explanation. Of this form, the Reader can also draw the several full scales, with a differing concrete; giving thereby a representation of all the elementary forms of the protracted radical and protracted vanish, with their rising concretes of every extent, used in song. Again, song employs the downward concrete in connection with the Protracted notes ; and of these movements there are two conditions. The First descends by the concrete, and terminates in the protracted note. The Second, on the contrary, begins with the protracted note, and then descends by the concrete, as in the following ilustration* where only the third, fifth, and octave are represented; but the Reader can make for himself a full scale for each of the other intervals, under both conditions. First Condition. Second Condition. £ \ _XI ^j, 604 A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF SONG. There is another form of the junction of note and concrete, used in song, consisting of the above two conditions united. The first condition may have a note at the beginning of its concrete, and the second a note at its end ; the concrete in each case being between two notes. Of this the Reader can for himself, draw a full scale for each different concrete, with its protracted note. Song then has two conditions of the rising and two of the falling movement; severally formed by a union of the concrete of every interval, respectively with the beginning or the end of the protracted note: and a third, in which the protracted note is at both the beginning, and the end of the concrete. What was remarked concerning the length of the note, in the scale of the concrete second, may be said of the other scales, with their different intervals^ that the proportion between the note and the concrete may vary till the former disappears altogether, and the movement becomes like the equable concrete of the several rising and falling intervals of speech: and further, that as the concrete is widened, there may be an equality between the two. All which cases occur in the execution of the Elaborate or Florid Song. Let us suppose the forms of the concrete, without the ap- pendage of the note, to be united into one continuous line of contrary flexure. This produces, with or without an abrupt radical, the wave of song; and inasmuch as we have concretes of every interval and in every direction, so they may be com- bined into every form of the wave. But besides this simple form, which is that of speech, the wave may either begin with a pro- tracted note, or end with one; or both begin and end with one. And these conditions, like the others, are heard only for dif- ficulty's sake, in the twists and turns of the Florid Song. Song likewise employs the Tremulous movement on the pro tracted note, the concrete, and the wave. These are the several constituents of intonation in song; and from the simple and limited, or complex and extended use of their two elements, the protracted note and the concrete^ song may be regarded under two divisions. First, as Discrete-Song; or the progression of a melody, formed soley of the protracted radical, or of the protracted vanish, with the A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF SONG. 605 concrete of a second or tone, or of its wave, and a discrete change of radical pitch through any interval. And second, as Concrete-Song; consisting of a continuous movement through the wider intervals, both in an upward and downward direction; mingled with protracted notesj with a wider radical pitch-* with the various forms of the wavej and with every variety and degree of stress. In Discrete song, the formality of the voice resembles that of an instrument with fixed notes: and in the Concrete^ that endless interchange among all the forms and varieties of vocality, force, time, and pitch, resembles the unmeaning permutations, in the voice of the mocking-bird. I here in passing, allude to the subject of articulation in song^ as it is the management of pitch which secures the distinctness of this function. It was shown, that one of the requisites for distinct pronuncia- tion in speech, is a just apportionment of the concrete, to the literal elements. The audibility of the words in song depends in part upon the same principle; for though the peculiar intonation of the protracted note, destroys the general character of speech, it does not alter the rule of sylabication. The correct articula- tion of song however, requires a further attention to the accent- uation of words, and to their sylabic quantity. The management of these matters lies with the composer and the poet. I have only to remark, that when the accent and quantity of sylables are adjusted to the accent and time of musical composition, with a full knowledge of the voice, and the required diligence 3 a quali- fied person may learn to sing, in the plain melody, or discrete song, with as distinct an articulation as he speaks. I say in plain melody; for the wonderful Lofty vocal-Tumbling of the florid and ambitious song, has often as little to do with sylables and words, as it has with Expression; or with anything else than Difficulty, profitable Engagements, and Applause. Writers on vocal science with the united resources of the old elocution, have endeavored to instruct us on this subject; yet the same preceptive page which enjoins its importance, directs that the vowels should principally compose the strain of utterance. The vowel or tonic sounds have the purest and most agreeable vocality for songj and unfortunately allow fashionable singers to vocalize themselves 606 A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF SONG. out of their articulation, and astonish an audience out of a na- tural ear and its educated taste; but it is also certain, that a sylable in plain melody, is distinctly recognized, by its proper accent, and by the proper apportionment of quantity among its elements. Here the purposes in these writers seem to be at vari- ance. It is the vocalist's duty to reconcile them, by making dis- tinct articulation agreeable. The preceding, is a general account of the structure of pitch in song. The manner of using it, in combination with other con- stituents, will be described hereafter.* * Upon a review of our history of the intonation of speech and song, it seemed to mej the effect of the discrete scale of the latter with its issuing vanish, might be produced on some musical instruments. I had designed, as an experiment, to connect a square and single organ-pipe with its finger-key, for a single note, by means of compound levers, so that the same touch which raises the wind-valve should, at a succeding moment, raise a hinged shutter on one side of the pipe, at its open end; the object of this shutter being to cover an oblong aperture, or ventage, reaching from the very end of the pipe, so far towards its sounding-lip, as to raise the pitch a tone or second when the shutter should be opened. This shutter having its center of motion towards the sounding-lip, was to overlap the edges of the oblong ventage: the under surface of this shutter, to have a block attached to it, for entering and closing the ventage, the overlap of the shutter forming a rebate or covering-edge to the sides of the aperture. This block to be of some thickness and beveled with its sharp angle towards the end of the pipe ; that when the shutter, together with the beveled block closing the vent- age, should be raised, the ventage would be gradually opened, and the intona- tion be thus made to rise gradually, with a concrete movement. With the shutter entirely opened, the long note then produced immediately following the concrete, might give the instrumental execution of the protracted vanish. In the transitions of melody with such a contrivance, it would be necessary that the valve in the wind-chest should be made to close before the shutter, otherwise the gradual descent of the shutter, would make a falling concrete, on every note. I here state the principle on which an experiment may be tried by those who have ability, time, and convenience for such things. Other modes may be con- trived by persons of mechanical cleverness, for producing the concrete move- ment on a sounding-pipe either of metal or wood. Perhaps this mechanism might be connected with the vox-humana stop of an organ, or even the ventages of a bassoon. If this is practicable, it may give to instruments a little more of the character of the singing voice than they at present possess. I cannot say how much further the principle might be applied, for adding the wider ranges of the concrete, by a ventage of greater reach in the pipe. A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF SONG. 607 Of the Time of Song. Time is here considered, only in rela- tion to individual constituents, not to the general construction of melody and its rythmus. Time is used with every degree of duration, on the note, on the upward and downward concrete, and on the wave. When, in quick-timed song it is so short as to exclude the note, the effect of the individual act of intonation does not differ from that of the radical and vanish of speech. Of Vocality in Song. Vocality has the same character and effect, in song and in speech. But the long quantities of the for- mer consisting of the protracted tonics, they are here more ob- vious. It may be harsh, full, slender, and nasal, and what is called in the language of the schools, Pure Tone. This subject is however so well known to singers, as to need no further con- sideration here. A subject of physiological inquiry, connected equally with song and speech, here deserves our notice. It is learned by a few trials, that all the tonic and most of the other elements may be made individually by the act of Inspiration*. The vocality is strangely altered; still the characteristic sound is complete. It would seem them the vocal functions are practicable both in the ebb and the flow of respirationj though the former has been uni- versally appointed to carry out the continued current of speech. As the inward flow of inspiration permits the utterance of only a single word, or at most three or four, the effect of inward speech resembles that of infants, upon their first attempts in expired speech. We have not for the purpose of inward speech, the Holding-breath, as we formerly called it, and therefore the act The mechanism even for the Second would not be simple, and the management of more than one concrete-key, if I may so call it, might be beyond the dexterity of the player. What could be done on barrel-organs, machinists can best tell. Automaton Figures have been made to speak, as it is called ; but it is in the thorough stress of the protracted note proper to song. Would not the imitation of speech be nearer, if the sound were by its instrumental cause, formed into the equable concrete? On the whole, I shall be sorry if any one should lose his labor by a vain working at this problem. It is not the odd-ends of time that ever do anything veil: and if the schemer should be disposed to devote one useful day, to the wasteful hazards of mechanical ingenuity, in such matters as here proposed, let him take, at the same time, a hint of caution. 608 A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF SONG. of inspiration, bearing its single word, immediately fills the lungs, as the Exhausting-breath with the infant, reversely drains them, and cuts off the course of utterance. It may then be made a question, whether by a practice as long and assiduous as that which gives command over the time of ex- piration, the same holding-breath might not be attained in inspi- ration; and, should the vocality of this inward voice, be improv- able, whether it might not be employed in the purposes of singing, for sustaining the voice indefinitely, and for insuring a continuous intonation in the higher intricacies of execution. It is knowm; this power has been attained in whistling, both as regards shril- ness, and the accuracy of pitch: and though in this case, the command over the holding-breath of expiration, far surpasses the command over that of inspiration, still, the turning point for in- haling may be rendered almost imperceptible, through the con- troling power that does exist. It has been proposed to apply the command over inspired speech, to the cure of stammering: but this irregular articulation may depend on unknown causes, in the mind as well as m the vocal muscle, and on a defective consent between them; in which case, no advantage would be gained by inhaled articulation.* Of Force of Voice in Song. Force has reference either to the general drift of the voice, or to its individual movements. We shall consider it only in the latter relation. All the forms of stress we have ascribed to speech are found in song. This is true, not only of the equable concrete, some- times used in the short impulses of the singing voice; but the radical, the median, and the vanishing stress, are also severally applied to the protracted note, and to every course and extent of the wave. The full and abrupt radical being always preceded by an occlu- sionj it may have a place at the outset of all the forms of the concrete^ and at the outset of the protracted radical or the note, represented in the two conditions of the preceding diagram. A * The Opera, and Concert Hall, in their Auctions of Fame, bid high for the execution of vocal difficulties. Here then is the chance of an enormous pay, for success in what, as far as known, has never been done before ; and what at first thought, may seem to be impossible. A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF SONG. 609 note at the termination of a rising or of a falling concrete can- not receve the radical stress. The greater duration of time, allotted to the different forms of the concrete and to the protracted notes, beyond that allowable in speech, gives rise to a modification of the median stress or swell, not practicable on the sylabic concrete of discourse; for more than one of these swells may be set on the same note; or the force may diminish and increase alternately. The median stress may also on a protracted quantity, slightly resemble re- spectively that of the radical and of the vanish, by suddenly enlarging in the course of the prolongation and gradually dimin- ishing; and by the reverse. This however, is a physiological refinement; and we are not yet ready for its practical use. Some of the stresses are perhaps applicable to the radical and vanish, on the short sylabic intonation of comic song. A very remarkable use of force is made by the compound stress, in that vocal ornament called the Trill, or Shake. The shake is described to be, a rapid alternation of a lower with an upper note, on proximate degrees of the diatonic scale. In stricter definition, it is a rapid alternation of two vocal or instrumental momentary sounds, for they are not notes, on the extremes of a tone or a semitone. Let us call these two con- stituents of the shake, its Co-sounds. We learned that every concrete impulse on a tonic or subtonic element, necessarily consists of a radical and vanish. Conse- quently, when we make two successive impulses on different de- grees of pitch, each must have these two essential portions of the concrete. But as the radical with its vanish consumes more time than the radical alone; and as the radical is an abrupt opening, after an occlusion, there would be, in this manner of making the shake, a delay from employing the whole time of the two portions of each concrete; as well as a momentary pause, between the close of the vanish on the first, and the opening of the radical on the second. The shake then being a rapid iteration of two co-sounds, without apparent interruption, it cannot be made by a series of concrete impulses each having its radical and vanish. For should a singer try to execute a shake by taking the whole of the dipthong a-le, as one of the co-sounclsj he cannot, by any 610 A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF SONG. effort, give its characteristic rapidity, when the first sound of a-\e is the beginning of each of its successive co-sounds; as the vanish, e-ve must necessarily follow the radical a-le, we employ the whole time of both the radical and vanishj which makes each co-sound too long for a rapid execution of the shake. By assigning each of the co-sounds respectively to the radical, and to the summit of the vanish of this dipthong, thus forming the Compound Stress, there will be no insuperable difficulty in its execution. And the same is true of a shake on the other dipthongs, their respective co- sounds being different in elemental vocality. In the case of the monothongs, their several co-sounds are the same. The rapid execution of the shake, and the momentary impulse of its co-sounds, make it a difficult subject of investigation. The resemblance however, of the intonation of the vocal, to that of an instrumental shake, affords a proof that the former like the latter, consists of two sounds on different degrees of pitch. It also ap- pears, from the like ilustration by an instrument, that the" co- sounds, though of different degrees of pitch, are of equal time, volume, and force.* * It may seem, that the shake might be made by each of the co-soimds being the momentary utterance of what we called the rapid concrete: and as this instinctively flies through with the radical and vanish, apparently as quick as a single co-sound, our explanation of an artificial and very difficult manner of deriving the fluent and rapid movement of the shake, from the slow accentual- efforts of the compound stress-j may seem to be unnecessary or incorrect. It may seem, being by the mass of mere Thinkers, from interest or other motive, so readily changed into it is^ there is no calculating the mischief it has done. I will not therefore oppose what may seem on one side, by what may seem on the others for we should then have to invoke the aid of Plato, Aristotle, and the ancient as well as the modern itinerant and lecturing Sophists^ but will only state, that the may seem on our side, has already been submitted to de- cisive observation, and experiment, in the instinctive tremor of the voice; and we have in the Guryle of the throat, an iteration of the rapid concrete with both its radical and vanish. Now this is not a shake; nor can any skill or velocity ever make one of it. Vocalists call it the 'Goat's Quiver,' or some such name, though they have not been able to show the difference of structure between the Quiver and the Shake. Our history tells us that the Gurgle or Quiver is formed by the Tittles of the second or of the semitone, on the tremu- lous scale; the Shake, by a rapid execution of the compound stress, on either of these intervals. Before the invention of the shaken which is altogether Arti- ficial, and is said to be of comparatively recent application to song^ this Gurgle, or 'Trembling,' as the French formerly called it, was used as a vocal orna- A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF SONG. 611 From our previous views, the formation of the shake may be described under two conditions; in each, the delay that might arise from every impulse having both a radical and a vanish^ which we have shown, creates the whole difficulty of the casej is obviated by a subdivision of the concrete movement into the Compound stress. For representing the first formative condition; let the summit of the concrete impulse, or the vanishing portion, be enforced to an equality w r ith the radical. We shall then have one impressive sound at each extreme of the impulse, joined by a smooth transi- tion of the fainter concrete, and forming the first two co-sounds of the shake; which, in this case, are both made within the time required for one impulse, when that impulse contains both a radical and a vanish. The vanishing stress, or what, in this instance, is improperly called the upper note of the shake, being terminated by an occluded catch, as in the sob and hiccups the voice is enabled by an immediate opening of that occlusion, to begin a new radical stress, improperly called the lower note; and by breaking from the occluded vanish of one impulse into the radical of the next, and so, saving the time of transition through one whole concrete with both its radical and vanish, the rapid and apparently united co-sounds of the shake are effected. In the following diagram^ 2 4 the lines a and b denote two proximate degrees of the scale. The figure 1 the radical stress, or lower co-sound of the shake: 2 the ment. It is instinctively practiced for Laughter and Crying, and for other purposes in the human voice; is found among sub-animals of all classes: and is distinguished from the shake by the slightly abrupt and chattering radical of the tittles. In the aspirated grating, scratching or chattering of the insect- voice, the tremor is exemplified by our common Black Cricket j Acheta ab- brevia',a; and the shake, though not a rapid one, with the median swell on its course, by the Cicada pruinosa, or Annual Locust of the Middle States. 612 A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF SONG. vanishing stress, or upper co-sound, on which the voice is oc- cluded. In an imperceptible instant, this occlusion breaks out into the next radical stress 3. The voice is then diminished in force; and again increased to its vanishing stress, and occlu- sion at 4. When made in this way, the shake may be considered as a rapid iteration of the compound stress, between the extremes of a tone or a semitone. For the second condition, let us take the first two of the co- sounds, or as we may call them, co-stresses, described and ilus- trated above. Deliberate trial will prove that an application of stress to the upper extreme of the rising concrete at 2, and to the lower at 3, as represented in the last diagram, in no way, prevents the voice, from making a downward continuous turn, from 2 to 3, in one case, and an upward continuous turn, from 3 to 4, in the other, into the form of a continued wave: and by an alternate succession of these radical and vanishing stresses, or expansions, joined by the fainter concrete, but without an occlusion of voice, we are able to effect a rapid iteration of the co-sounds of the shake; as represented in the following diagram^ where the voice opens at 1, with the radical stress; then diminishes to the faint concrete ; subsequently enlarges to the vanishing stress at 2 ; then ivithout an occlusion, turns downward, and after diminish- ing to the faint concrete, enlarges to the stress in the radical place at 3 ; and in this way, when rapidly executed, forms the proper co-sounds, or co-stresses, or co-expansions of the vocal shake. 2 4 =3flfifiAfi; 1 3 Under this view, the shake is a rapid alternation of the com- pound stress, on the rising and falling constituents of a continued wave of proximate degrees. And by it we learn, that the iterated co-sounds are not notes, but emphatic stresses of no assignable A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF SONG. 613 time, on the points of contrary flexure in the wave. But as there can be a sudden fulness of the voice, only on a first outbreak of the radicalj an engrafting of the vanishing stress on the concrete, at the place of the second or upper sound, must be made by a swell or expansion into the fulness of that stress. From 2, the fulness being diminished, is again swelled into the lower sound at 3; giving the shake the form represented in the diagram. This junction of the stresses by an intermediate and attenuated con- crete, with the gliding of one into the other, is the cause of the smoothness, and of the 'liquidity,' as it is called, of a skilful and finished execution of this vocal ornament. The peculiar manner of uniting this double stress with rapid intonation, in the shake, not being part of the coloquial and slower uses of the voice, for the compound stress in speech consists of but two co-sounds, it is not surprising^ the power of executing it, is unattainable by most singers, and only acquired, in any case, after a long time, by great industry and perseverance. This is an attempt to explain the manner of combining stress and intonation in the shake. And yet, I am unable to give an unquestionable description of it. By a slow and measurable movement of my own voice, I perceve, it can be made under each of the conditions above described. When it is quickened to its characteristic rapidity, the distinct perception of its structure and motion is lost, and I find it impossible to decide, which of the conditions is then employed : though strongly inclined to think it is the latter. With the assistance of the analysis here offered, some other observer may describe it more definitely. Perhaps the explanation here given, may furnish a rule for teaching the practice of the shake. A method founded on this analysis, enabled me, with no other instructors than Observation and Industry,- to attain a command over it, with a precision and rapidity, sufficient for the purposes of the present investigation: which certainly, could not, unassisted by a Master, have been as easily, if at all accomplished, without a knowledge of the com- pound stress, experimentally applied in reference to the radical explosion, and the vanishing sob. It would be difficult to say, how far the aid of our description might lessen the time and labor of the Conservatorio, in teaching the practice of the shake. 614 A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF SONG. As the compound stress is practicable on every interval, so a shake might be composed of an iteration of that stress on the extremes of wider intervals : and a slow shake of this- kind, is sometimes heard among the tricks of the Florid song : but it is not technically classed with that ornament. It has a singular, and as I have heard it, not an agreeable effect ; and the width of the concrete, preventing the rapidity of the proper shake, it has not its liquidity, nor its hovering pre-cadencial character. It is a question among vocalists, whether the 'accent' as they call it, is on the upper or the lower 'note,' or as we now regard it, co-sound of the shake. From our preceding account of this ornament, no cause appears, for a difference of opinion in this case, and for anything like an accent on either. There may be the usual rythmic perception of accent on the bar or bars through which the shake is sustained ; and with this mental beat, there might be a slight momentary swell on the co-sounds, at the points of these beats. But I cannot hear even this; and cannot there- fore beleve there is an alternate accent of force, much less an inequality in time, between the upper and the lower co-sounds. Once admit it, and there would be an alternation both of stress and of pitch that would destroy the even and graceful undulation, and the liquidity of the shake; and change the function to that of the tremulous gurgle. Vocalists have described several kinds of shake. With its proper structure and effect, I can observe but two ; the diatonic and the semitonic, severally formed on a tone and a semitone. What has been called a Rising and a Falling shake, is perhaps only the gurgling, or rising and falling radical pitch of the rising and falling of the tremor; for as the tremor is not made up of co-sounds, or compound stresses, but of rapid concretes with each its radical and vanishj the terms rising and falling, which do apply to the course of the tremor or gurgle, and not to the con- tinued line of the shake, have been improperly retained, after the introduction of the peculiar iteration on proximate co-sounds. This true shake, after continuing along its level line of pitch, may be skipped a degree, or perhaps more, and then continued on this new line. But when carried directly upward or down- ward, by proximate degrees, through more or less of the scale; A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF SONG. 615 which would make it a rising or falling shakej the course of the co-sounds is called a Division, the structure and movement of which will be presently described. Other shakes enumerated in books, are only particular uses of that ornament; or only com- binations of it, with various forms of intonation. The meaning and peculiar effect of the shaken for it cannot except on the semitone, be called Expressive of the state of mindj may be stated under Five heads ; and First. The most striking and agreeable character of the shake lies in its refined, its tuna- ble, and as it were, its polished vocality; which however I here consider with reference, exclusively to the high pitch of the So- prano voice. In men, generally speaking, the shake, like most of their florid execution, denotes in their lower pitch, and rougher vocality, little more than a muscular difficulty; for a low pitch, with a hollow fulness, as we learn from instruments, destroys the essential elegance of the shake ; though perhaps the harmony of a tenor and soprano, where the latter takes the lead on the ear, produces the most delightful effect of this ornament. Second. There is in the shake, what has been called, its Liquidity. This arises in part, from its vocality, and in part from the smooth and rapid gliding of the concrete into the expansions of the co-sounds; and is therefore more effective in the higher voices of women. Third. An agreeable effect is produced by the variety of one or more swells, in the continued line of the co-sounds. Fourth. The preceding remarks apply equally to both the shakes. But the semitone is distinguished by a pathetic character, though moder- ated perhaps, by the rapidity of the transit of the concrete and its co-sounds through the interval; and by an overruling impres- sion of vocality ; with the liquid pouring from one co-sound to another, in the current of their intonation. Fifth. I am dis- posed to class the effect of the shake, particularly the diatonic, with that of a downward skip, or a concrete of the third, in the Prepared Cadence of speech : for, as it seemsj the balanced sus- pension or hawk-like flutter of a prolonged shake, before its final stoop to the key-note, creates the expectation of a descent, and calls for the immediate close of song, similar in manner and effect, to that of the falling of a third, for the prepared and reposing cadence of discourse. 616 A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF SONG. There is another occasion, on which the compound stress is used in song. When an extent of the whole compass of the voice, greater or less than the seven degrees of the scale, is rapidly traversed, but with a marked designation of each degree in the flight, it is called, i running a Division.' We have seen, in the formation of the shake, that adjoining points of the scale cannot be marked in rapid succession by concretes, where each contains both the radi- cal and vanish ; it is necessary therefore in executing a Division, that the compound stress should be used, under one of the two conditions of its rapid execution, above described. In the first, the concrete receves the radical abruptness, and the vanishing occluded catch. This occlusion prepares the way for a second radical, and by successive concretes of compound stress, with a momentary but imperceptible occlusive catch between them, the degrees of the Division are rapidly traversed, and distinctly marked. For the second condition, we must suppose the voice to make a concrete movement through the scale, to the whole ex- tent of the designed Division; and the expansion of an emphatic stress to be applied on each of the proximate degrees of the scale, within that extent. This may be ilustrated, by supposing the chain of oblique figures in the second diagram of the shake, drawn-out vertically to a straight linej representing the stresses on the proximate degrees of a rising or a falling scale. A Divi- sion is then, a rapid iteration of the compound stress, on every proximate degree of the scale, for a given extent, in an upward or downward direction. There are various ways of running a division, or as we may call it, a Chain of compound stress. In long sweeps of agility, the whole compass of the voice may be passed through in one continued chain of an upward or downward, so to call it, knotted movement ; or the progress may be less extensive ; or it may be made by varied groups of compound stresses, with a pause be- tween the aggregates. In short, the compass may be traversed in numberless ways, by the pitch, time, and manner of succes- sion, of the co-sounds. Sometimes the run is by the proximate step of a semitone: but whatever the movements may be, they are all performed on the principle of the compound stress. A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF SONG. 617 Of the Melody of Song. Having described the particular forms of pitch, time, and stress, we may now take a general view of their combinations into Melody. The structure of melody exhibits every variety in the number of its constituents, and in their interchangeable succession, from the use of a simple protracted note with its quick and almost imperceptible concrete of a second, which we called Discrete- songj to that of every form of the concrete, and of every form of stress, particularly the compound^ constituting ' airs of agility ' or 'florid execution;' which we called Concrete-song. This dis- tinction however serves only to mark the extremes of a varied use of the voice ; song being rarely heard in the strictly discrete form ; and when once the concrete movement of wider intervals than the second is admitted, no definite line of separation can be drawn between the constituents of its structure. It was shown, in describing the drift of melody in Speech, that the three divisions of the states of mind and of the voice, though manifestly different in their several exclusive and restricted uses, often so run into each other, as to prevent a systematic separation of their inter- mingled signs. And we have the same difficulty of classification with the intercurrent melody or style of Song. In general terms then, and without pretending to describe the confines of each, I would call the Discrete-melodyj That which moves by proximate degrees, and by radical change, under the form of intonation represented in the first two scales of the pro- tracted radical and vanish; and showing occasionally, because it can scarcely be avoided, a concrete movement of some of the wider intervals, and of the wave. This is the style of song used by the Church, when the Choir is assisted by the Congregation. It is suited to the common capacity of the voice, and resembles the instrumental effect of the organ which accompanies it. I would call the Concrete-melodyj That disposition of the note, concrete, wave, compound stress, and every form of time and intonation, which, united with the Discrete, constitutes, within due limits, the delightful union of nature and art, in the expression of song ; but which forced beyond the just bounds of vocal facility, produces the extraordinary and unmeaning flights of a fantastic and wonder-working execution. An execution that 40 618 A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF SONO. has too often cunningly joined the profits of the Artist with the mere difficulties of his art ; and with all who do not see through the vicious combination, confounds a fanatical interest in the vocal artifices, name, and fashion of a Singer, with the cultivated feeling and taste of a musical ear. An execution that has at last brought an audience, too often to mistake a falling-in with the noisy applause of a surrounding crowd, for their own indi- vidual perception of the expression of melody, and to the harmo- nizing richness of its perfecting accompaniment.* Upon this, and our previous history, we are now prepared to sum up the differences between the construction of song and speech. The Discrete-melody of song, though resembling in a few points the melody of speech, is still remarkably distinguished from it, by the effect of the protracted note, and by the more frequent occur- rence of wider transitions in the radical change. In the Concrete-melody of song, under its most complicated form, for I choose an extreme case, the difference consists still further in the kind, number, and uses of its movements. The range of its melodial compass excedes that of proper speech. The compound stress, under rapid iteration in the shake, and in the rapid run of divisions, is the most frequent constituent of airs of * When this medley of the vocal constituents, with all its studied difficulties, was first taken over to England, for salej it was advertised as the- Italian Man- ner: and indeed its mannerism was then regarded, and properly too, as a caricature ; for certainly its Bravura-song is an exaggeration, and its Recita- tive a misplaced distortion of the natural voice of expression. But wonder and novelty are the chief Idols of popular Taste; and whoever then possessed a little vocal facility soon began to imitate the long-drawn concretes and waves of the New Importation. To this we owe the monotonous Squeel, taught by the Singing-Master in the Italian Style, with its ever-and-anon returning wave, surging upon the ear, and drowning-out the rest of the song: a sad fate to a Taste that happens to be in the neighborhood of a fashionable young lady who frequents the Opera, and of the sewing-girl over the way, who has learned from her, to execute those every half-minute Squeeling waves, equally well. It is often easier to find causes, than excuses for an offense. Perhaps the universal fashion, of our Italian-taught Misses affecting this repeated Porta- mento and Sostenuto, in a high Soprano wave, with its median stress, is en- couraged by a family recolection of the perverse Squeeling of their little brothers and sisters, and even of themselves^ when children begin to have their own noisy way in the nursery. A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF SONG. 619 agility; by the speaking voice it is used only in the two co-sounds of a slow and single concrete. A function common to both is the equable concrete, which is sometimes set to the short sylables of song; though common perception does not then recognize it as a characteristic of speech. The wider waves too, occasionally used for emphasis in discourse, occur perpetually in the florid song. Of the Expression of Song. Expression in song, and in other music is effected by the power of exciting certain states of mind, which in this case we properly call Feelings* by means of the pitch, time, force, vocality, and abruptness of sound. It appears from this definition, that the materials of expression in song are the same as those in speech: though some difference will be found in their special employment, and respective effect, in the two cases. The Italians who have extensively taught us in musicj and who, with the purpose of their art changed perhaps to a vain-glorious authority, enslave too many fashionable, and often musical ears to their National Mannerism^ have divided their song, with reference, rather to the style of its execution, and the places in which it is displayed, than to its expression. I am only hinting at an arrangement, upon the points of its rudimental functions and their effects upon the feelings. In a general view of the subject of expression, we findj the dignity of Song is produced by the same fulness in vocality, length of time, gravity in pitch, and limitation of the extent of concrete and of radical pitch, that give an elevated and solemn character to reading. There can be no grandeur in a melody with the reverse of these conditions. A lively style of song, on the contrary, like the sprightly manner of discourse, is made by a lighter vocality; a quicker time; wider intervals of concrete, and of radical pitch; and a greater variety in its successions. The Aria Buffa or the Comic Song, generally consists of such short quantities, that most of its sylabic impulses are made in the true equable-concrete of speech : and the only causes, as it appears to me, why it is known to be song, are its having a barred time, an occasional long quantity, and a concrete and radical pitch of wider intervals, than those of the current of speech. The plaintive effect of the semitone, and of the minor third, 620 A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF SONG. which is only a peculiar position of the semitone, is similar to the chromatic character of spoken melody. Perhaps as remarked above, we ought to consider the expression of the cadence as similar in these two uses' of the voice; for the return to the key- note in song, does, like the intonation at the periods of discourse, produce the agreeable feeling of satisfaction and repose. Let us take another and more particular view of expression, with reference to the different kinds of melody. And Firstj Of the Discrete- Song. This is not without expression, though it falls short of what is effected by a judicious use of the more ex- tended, and varied vocal movements. Its sources are derived from vocality, pitch, time, and stress. The tunable sound of a prolonged note may give a peculiar character to song. Fulness produces in the hearer the state of solemnity; smoothness that of grace; and in the grotesk efforts of the comic song, the extreme and distorted variations of Yocality excite a perception of the gay or the ridiculous. On the subject of this last named mode; the principles of expression are similar in speech and song: but perhaps its effect is more obvious in the latter. The expression of Pitch consists in the transition through certain intervals. The discrete-melody can therefore display the plaintiveness of the semitone, and occasionally of the minor third; together with what may be effected by the successions of other intervals of the scale. The Discrete-song may, by its Time, be either grave or gay. It appears, that the longer quantity of song is more agreeable than the short sylabic impulses of speech, even when they each have the same melodial order of pitch. This perhaps arises from a memorial connection of the protracted notes of song, with the expressive effect of long quantity in speech ; for extended quantity both in speech and song, is always the sign of either an energetic, or dignified state of mind. The radical and the median stress are applicable to the pro* tracted note of the discrete-melody ; but a varied swell of the median, constitutes the principal means of expression. The pro- tracted note may also bear the tremor. Some of the less expressive forms of the wave may be admitted A BRIEF ANALYSIS OP SONG. 621 into what I have called, without assigning a very definite boundary to it, the discrete-song. Our limited knowledge, in time-past, of the constituents of speech, together with our vague and imperfect notions and nomen- clature of the states and actions of the mind, has created a diffi- culty in arranging the intermingled vocal signs of thought and passion. It is the same with song. We can assign no exact line to the difference between the discrete and the concrete melody. It may however assist the purpose of system and nomenclature, to make an intermediate division, similar to that proposed in our sixth section, for the Inter-thoughtive or Reverentive style. We will then apply the term Mixed melody, to a style consisting in part of the constituents of the other two. From some very general descriptions, and some known par- ticulars of the Greek song, it might be infered that its most esteemed melody was of this Mixed character, enriched with all the concrete graces of expression, admissible into its simple structure. I speak of song, rendered touching, self-relying, and unambitious; song, with its all-sufficient melodial, andj as far as then known, its peculiar harmonic resources for delight* free from vain intrusion of hard-taught difficulties; and restricted to itself by the effective principles of Grecian taste. For we must sup- pose, nay we know from a satirical record^ there was a like cold caprice in composition, and a like difficulty in execution some- times shown-off for the profit of the Singer, and for the noisy excitement of an Athenian Audience, that at present so often slight the natural and universal feeling of the ear, to exalt the fantastic vanity of the fingers and the throat. In the intermediate style of Mixed melody, the simple dignity, pathos, grandeur, or gayety of the discrete, is combined with the more varied and expressive constituents of the concrete melody, forming a peculiar style of song. A style, which employed under the direction of feeling and taste, produces effects in the highest degree impressive and delightful. A style that has been, is now, and ever will be, the most generally gratifying to the in- stinctive and esthetically educated ear. For, though it perceves and may wonder at muscular facility and precision, yet rarely feels any effect from concrete flourishes, and agility in vocaliza- 622 A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF SONG. tion, striving to refine upon and to surpass itselfj and which require the delightful melody of the 'Aria' to preserve the fan- tastic mannerism, and mongrel recitative of the Italian Opera from the sadness of a meager audience^ except of those who go to look at one another's dresses, and to think of themselves. It has been thoughtj the Qantus planus of the early Christian Salmody, improved afterwards to the Ambrosian and the Gre- gorian Chant, is a traditional descent of a form of Greek Temple- Music, . through the old Roman ritual. However this may be, there is a striking analogy, both as to structure and effect, be- tween the Diatonic melody, and the Plain- Chant, in its early simplicity. This Chant, we are told, employed but four lines of the staff in the range of its pitch; the succession of its notes was by proximate degrees, through the radical pitch of a second; it never set more than one note to a sylable; and used but two divisions of time, the long and the short. In this account, sub- stitute the term Equable concrete for that of Note, and the re- semblance is in many points remarkable. The Plain- Chant is an example of what we have called the discrete-song, and in its use had originally, and when not desecrated by 'modern improve- ments ' of wider concrete and discrete intervals, and by affected gracesj still has, in its holy purpose of worship and prayer, that deep and long-drawn note of solemn dignity, which is but a trans- cending degree of the character, given to epic and dramatic read- ing, and to parts of the Church-service, by the fulness and quantity of an orotund voice, in the diatonic melody.* * We have in the course of this Work, pointed out similarities between the principles of Music and of Elocution, and have shown their very materials or tunable constituents, with the exception of the Note, to be common to both. The further we look into the Arts, the more closely we find them by their principles, related to each other: yet who will say, there is a resemblance between Architecture and Speech? To the eye and ear of the Doorkeeper, who within the grandeur of the Capitol, was obliged to listen to Cicero, there could have been none. But turn an inquiring and reflective mind to a consideration of the causes that constitute, or create, a similarity between them^ and observe how, in the analytic Perspective of a philosophic taste, their conditions approach each other: and with a still extended view, how, by the principles that direct them, they mingle into one. I have long thought of the analogy to which I here allude; but beleving it might pass for a metaphoric extravagance, rather than an ilustration, I have A BRIEF ANALYSIS OP SONG. 623 Second. Of Concrete- Song. This melody, in its forms of into- nation, time, and force, is varied from the limits of the Mixed style, to that intricate and affected composition of the extreme Bravura^ which by turning words into vowels, destroys the mean- ing of language; and by a continued whirling of these vowels, confounds every feeling excited by the more natural song. The means of expression in the unexaggerated forms of this melody include those of the Discrete and the Mixed; with the addition of other more elaborate forms of intonation. The further use of the radical and median force on the rising and falling con- crete, as well as on the wave, adds a brilliant variety to its char- acter. We have in the Bravuras and Volatas of this kind of song, all the extraordinary coloring of the compound stress, in the production of the shake, and of the endless run of Divisions through their course of stress and intonation. It likewise com- mands the powers of the Tremulous scale, both through the plaintiveness of the semitone, and the laughing movement of wider intervals. All the forms of expression, both in the Concrete and the Dis- crete song, whether of the grave, the gay, or the plaintive; and whether produced by pitch, time, vocality, or force, are to be con- sidered as independent of any purpose in thought or meaning : for it will be shown presently, that except in some accidental or not till this last moment, the date of the fourth Edition, dared to call the Dia- tonic Melody, the Doric order of Speech. In this country at least, I have met with none, so much interested in the Esthetic principles of these arts, as to wish to discover, or desire to be told their points of resemblance. When however, I think of a Doric Peripteral Temple with its marble-purity, brightly distinct in structure and outline, to the neighboring eye, yet still distinctly traceable in distant prospect; with its compendious Design at once upon my memory, in clearness of image second only to reality^ I see an ambitious sameness in form and light, yet Varied in line, and shadow, just to show-forth the striking elegance of its Unity^ a Grandeur rising above heaviness, till it appears in Graces and a Simplicity, with only such appropriate ornaments as make them harmonious parts of an undivided whole. With this picture before me, it brings-up in re- lated effect, the likeness of Roscius again upon the Stage, breaking his silence, with the gravity and fulness of the thoughtive orotund; and impressing the respectful ear by a simplicity in time and intonation^ varied only to give grace to its dignity ; and rising occasionally, with contrasted interval, and force, to beautify and not to destroy the plain and impressive unity of diatonic speech. 624 A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF SONG. habitual connections, song has, apart from the words which may accompany it, an imintelectual expression altogether of its own. As song employs in its composition, the expressional means of speech, it might be supposed that certain movements must have in each case an identical effect. Yet it is not always so. We have learned that some signs, as the semitone, the laughing and crying tremor, and long quantity, do represent the same state of mind in both : but many forms of intonation lose their mean- ing and force when separated from words, and transfered to song. On the subject of the vocal signs of thought and passion, it was shownj their purpose is not only modified by conventional lan- guage, but is sometimes purely dependent upon it. This was ilustrated by reference to the voices of birds: and song affords a still more satisfactory proof. For as its elaborate structure does employ all those forms of concrete and radical pitch, and of the wave, which produce the expression of speech, it would seem, we ought during the varied course of its melody, to be constantly recognizing the vocal signs of interrogation, surprise, positive- ness, sneer, contempt, and raillery; whereas the florid song which makes the freest use of these signs, never conveys any of these states except when joined to language that describes them. Song, nevertheless, without the use of words, may be power- fully expressive; and it is so by the use of these very concretes, quantities, waves, and swelling stresses, that give the thoughtive and passionative meaning to speech. The expression of song is produced in a manner peculiar to itself, and in very few, if any instances has relation to the thought or passion of particular words or phrases. Persons who enjoy the melody of song must percevej the feelings created by it are so indefinite^ they are not able to refer them to any other source, than that of primary per- ception, or of subsequent memory; nor to reduce the expression to anything more than certain classes of effects. Upon this subject I would ask two questions. Has song a system of expression properly its own, and does our indefinite perception of its forms arise from this system never having been analyzed and rendered familiar and specific by names? Or does the expression of song depend on some connection between its A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF SONG. 625 vocal movements, and those of speech; the former assuming the agreeable effect of the latter, without their definite meaning? By a comparison of the characteristics of speech and of song, it appears that song has a system of expression of its own, dis- tinct in most points from that of speech. If the Reader has fol- lowed me attentively, he must admitj the vocal expression of speech is derived soley from the concrete and discrete intervals of intonation, with the other modes of the voice ; and that he has at least heard of the precepts for that expression, if he has not the power of accurately executing them. Still we here offer in pardonable repetition, a few remarks on the expression of both song and speech. And first. No thought, term, proposition or meaning is di- rectly conveyed in song. By the melodial succession alone of its notes, it excites a state of mind, which we distinctively called feeling; always agreeable, except under some accidental and pervertive circumstances. In song we are further pleased with the vocality of its notes; in which its prolongation, is more agree- able than in the concrete of speech. It is a question so inviting to dispute, that we will not stop to consider^ whether these agree- able feelings are exclusively the direct result of the simple vocal impression, or are indirectly derived from memory, and in a manner, connected with thought. These feelings produced by the melodial succession of notes, and by their agreeable vocality in prolongation, are therefore peculiar to song. After the preceding view of the distinction between speech and song, we are prepared to hear, that a succession of intervals in song, when joined with the other modes of vocality, time, and force, and properly distributed, is, by the melodial relations of those intervals, capable of exciting the feelings of Grandeur, Solemnity, Plaintiveness, Gayety, and Grace. And if to these be added a perception of Oddity, or what has been called the Grotesk, they will perhaps include all the classes of effects, that independently of any peculiarities of thought and of the ear, seem to be within the expressive powers of song. We here exclude all those notional and false analogies, between sound and meaning, which; to try something like a transcendental metaphor* are more remote than far-feteh'd, if a resemblancej but infinitely distant, 626 A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF SONG. if at all a paralel ; such as are found in the music of 'Alexander's Feast,' 'St. Cecilia's Day,' and the 'Ode on the Passions,' to- gether with not a few in Haydn's 'Creation,' Handel's 'Messiah,' and all throughout that once fashionable and serious folly, the 'Battle of Prague.' These pretensions and falsities hold the same relation to the real expression of song, that we shall en- deavor to show the pretensions and falsities of Recitative do to the truth of expression in speech. Second. The agreeable expression of song by the mode of Pitch, consists in the comparison of one note, with others of a proximate, or of a remote degree; for song by its protracted notesj and by its key, which definitely marks the places of the tones, and semitones in the scale, has in the fixed places of its notes, the means for comparing them one with another, that they may be heard under what has been considered, a kind of harmony in melodial succession.* On the effect of this melodial succession of notes alonej without the individual note itself exciting or conveying a thoughtive or passionative state of mindj the pitch of song altogether depends for the means of producing agreeable Feelings of whatever kind. But the resource of this melodial succession of notes, speech does not possess. Its effects are derived from a power in the indi- vidual concrete, and individual discrete interval to express thought and passion, independently of a comparison with preceding or following concretes. Third. The expression of concrete, and of discrete intervals, in the melody of speech, differs both in character and cause, from that of the succession of the notes of song: though each is, in its * In the musical scale, the First, Third, Fifth, and Octave notes, when heard together, are said to be concordant: and Harmony to the ear, not its theory, is the perception of the effect of simultaneous concordant notes. Melody to the ear, regarding only the mode of Pitch, is the perception of the effect of certain relationships between successive notes. The effects of music arise then, from two conditions of its notes: one simul- taneous; the other successive. But the individual notes which produce har- mony are so impressive, that when heard in succession, the ear can compare the instant-passed, with the instant-present note; and thus perceve a harmoni- ous relation between the presently audible and the memorial note. This is what I call in the text, harmony in melodial succession. A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF SONG. 627 own way, variously agreeable, according to the susceptibility of the ear and intelect of an audience. We have said the intonation of speech, derives its expression, soley from the extent and di- rection of the single concrete and discrete interval, and the wave, assisted by the other modes of the voice. Plaintiveness^ is the effect of the single semitone; interrogation and wonder, of the single wider upwardj anger and command, of the single wider downward concrete; dignity, of the wave of the second; con- tempt and scorn, of the wider single or double waves: the ex- pression being here derived altogether from the individual interval itself, and not from the relation of one interval to another. For though a Fifth, for example, is emphatically perceptible in speech, by its contrast with a second, in a diatonic melody, it is not that contrast which gives the expression; as the Fifth is alike interrogative, both in a thorough interrogative sentence, where it is placed beside itself; and when it is unrelated to any other interval, on a neighboring sylable. And the same may be said of every expressive concrete, either solitary or in series. The expression of speech, again to repeat the proposition, is therefore derived from the effect of the concrete and discrete intervals alone: as speech having no System of Key to direct its progressions, cannot excite musical feeling by the harmony of melodial successions : for the perpetual sliding of its concretes, affords no stationary point nor continuous level line, by which a concord with any other point or line might be recognized. The words; second, third, fifth, octave, semitone, and wave, that in song convey the meaning of a melodial relationshipj designate in speech, only concrete and discrete intervals; which in themselves, denote thought and passion, by their extent and direction, not by any harmonic or melodial relations to each other. We have saidj the successions alone, of melody in song, with their varieties in time, and without embracing thought or mean- ing, produce its peculiar feeling or expression. Hence the per- mutations in the order of these notes for an agreeable succession would seem to be innumerable. But the more agreeable succes- sionsj whether they affect the mind instinctively through the ear, or through habit, or by connection with feelings derived from other senses^ might perhaps with their appropriate expression, be 628 A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF SONG. reduced to a few melodial phrases, and be described and named. As far as I have been able to assign the agreeable effects of melody, to such phrases, the forms do not seem to be numerous; and are really so simple, and comparatively so few, that they probably have all been known and used in song, from immemorial time; yet their intermingling successions, as it has happened with the long unknown and apparently confused phrases of in- tonation in speechj have to this day, prevented their being separately perceved and named. Composers are often charged with plagiary of certain agreea- ble passages of melody. But all these passages, or Phrases of Expression in song, as they may be called, have long been familiar to the ear, and enjoyed by Feeling; and have come down to us without known Authorship or Date. On the subject of this com- bination of notes into agreeable phrases in the melodial succes- sion of song, there can be no more originality, than on that of the combination of the elements into sylables of speech; which in all their permutations, have throughout time, and among nations, already been made. The mass of Composers^ like the mass of Writers, respectively, again and again borrow and repeat the commonplace phrases of melody and of thought; and only a few, like Bacon and Shakspeare, or Haydn and Mozart, choicely select and combine those striking, if not original thoughts, in one case, and expressive melodial phrases in the other, which, in their exalted accordance with nature and truth, are so far above being vulgarized by general adoption and imitation, as to seem to be always new, and destined to please forever. Under the class of phrases of expression in song, are included those groups of notes called Graces. And here, speech has no- thing directly corresponding to the Beat, the Turn and Shake. Perhaps however, there is a remote analogy, in effect, between the median stress of speech, and the appogiature; between the Tremolo, and the prolongation of the tremor on one line of pitch; between the anticipative character of the prepared cadence, and the suspension of the shake preceding a close on the key-note of song. But why has song been without a classification of other phrases, with their peculiar and no less striking expression, than that of its named ornamental Graces ? A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF SONG. 629 That song has its own peculiar expression, in no way con- nected with thought, or meaning of any kind, is proved by a well-known fact in lyric history. It has long been the practice of song writers, to adapt their verses to the music of existing airs; nor, with an exception of the use of the major and the minor mode-; of the allegro and penseroso, does this seem to have been done, under the assumed fitness of certain melodial phrases of the Air, to the thought or passion of the words; language of every different meaning and expression being adapted to the same air, and receved as satisfactory, without the least perception of a want of congruity.* It was formerly statedj that the fulest effect of speech, is pro- duced by a union of the natural sign with the conventional. Others are left to inquire, whether a triple union of the natural and conventional sign of thought and passion in speech, with the peculiar expression of song, may not give the highest delight to the mind and the ear. I have here furnished some desultory observations and reflec- tions, in answer to the questions above proposed; and have en- deavored to show that song has an expression of its own: upon the truth of which, if the subject deserves it, others must finally decide. We are now able to comprehend, why persons who sing with the greatest execution, are, under the present state of vocal in- * From innumerable instances of this principle, we select the following. There is a celebrated English Air applied, to the drinking song-j When Bibo went down to the regions below. Bibo in crossing the Styx, called-out to be rowed back, for his soul was thirsty. Be quiet, said Charon, you were drunk when you died. Row me back then, cried Bibo, I knew not the pain, And if drunk when I died, let me die once again. This is the air selected for more than one of our Liberty songs. The burden of one is the same in measure and intonation withj 'Row me back then, cried Bibo.' The star-spangled banner, ! long may it wave O'er the land of the free, and the home of the brave. Thus the Baccanal and the Patriot find the melody equally expressive; the one for his revels, the other of his Glory. 630 A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF SONG. struction, rarely or never good readers. One cause may be found, in the difference of the respective movements; and the frequent want of a full command over the equable concrete in all its vari- eties of time, by singers, who rarely employ it except for the short quantities of the comic song. The principal cause however, why those distinguished by great vocal flexibility in elaborate composition, are generally very indifferent actorsj is that such intricate execution is always made with a sacrifice of the proper expression of speech. We have learned, that the discrete-melody of song has in its use of certain modes and forms of the voice, an approximate identity with the expression of speech: and al- though the mixed melody, by its varied concretes and its radical skips, may have only a remote resemblance to the effect of those same constituents in speech, yet it has a peculiar and delightful expression of its own. But the Bravura-artifice of the throat, occupied only with variety and wonder, admits into its purposes neither the dignified and graceful feeling of song, nor the thought- ful nor passionative expression of speech. In it, long and short quantities, the radical explosion and the median swell, the diatonic succession and the chromatic, the plaintive and the laughing tre- mor, the various forms of the wave, concrete transitions and dis- crete skips from the deepest bass to a piercing falsette, the com- pound stress in all its forms of shake and division, are made to play with each other in every variety of permutation. And as the voice like the throat of the mocking-bird, mingles all its pos- sibilities, without regard to expressive design, the singer thereby confusing that instinctive connection between thought and. pas- sion, and their vocal sign, which good speaking always requires^ and between feeling and a certain succession of notes, which should also be the means of expression in song; so the habitual practice of the ambitious and unmeaning Bravura, destroys, in a great degree, a perception of the original signs of feeling in song; and by its artificial difficulties and contortions, destroys the com- mand over the means, originally ordained for the expression both of speech and of song. If I had the opportunities of European experience, I might speak with greater knowledge and precision; but far as I have observed; singers who excel in the florid execu- tion, acquired by the mere drill of the Conservatorio, and exer- A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF SONG. 631 cised in the rotine of the Concert-room or the Stage, are not often gifted with that delicacy of mental perception which some- times accompanies the organization of a musical ear. For the temperament of a singer can as readily be perceved, in his pecu- liar management of time, stress, and intonation, as the thought and passion of an original and independent writer can be gathered from his style. "What is called a musical ear, seems to depend on an inscrutable instinct, and the exercise of attentive observation by this sense: and though our history indicates, that high accomplishments in elocution must always be grounded on its discriminations; still the training of the ear, by those who excel in the affected diffi- culties of the Florid song, and the formal character both of taste and feeling thereby rendered habitualj must in a great measure, destroy the connection between the state of mind and its vocal sign, constituting the proper expression of speech. There have been Actors, who under an enlightened system of Elocutionary instruction, might have entered into the philosophy both of pas- sion and speech; and who, by discipline, could have reached the flexibility of florid execution in the singing voice. And yet we have cause to beleve, that had this power over the intricacies of song, been habitually exerted, particularly under the absorbing vanity, so apt, in this case, to accompany success, it must have destroyed the command over the equable concrete, which would have enabled them to give their consummate intonation to the language of the tragic poet. We will suppose, Mrs. Siddons, with a nice perception of Time and Tune, might perhaps have joined-voice with the incomparable Mara, in the expressive songs of Handel or Mozart, without impairing her power over Shak- speare. But she would have been lost forever to all the influence of thought and passion over speech, had she been trained with Catalani, to that extreme of vocal execution which is said to have outstripped the conventional means of notation, within the wonder- serving inventions of the composers of the day. 632 A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF RECITATIVE. OF RECITATIVE. The term Recitative is applied to the intonation of certain dramatic and vocal compositions. It had its name from being employed for narrative or recital, in contradistinction to the in- tonation of song, which was appropriated to express the mental state of Feeling. Recitative is however employed at present in the Italian Opera, and other compositions, as the supposed means of speaking expression, as well as for the common purposes of the dialogue. Nothing has puzzled musical logicians more than the attempt to define this term. Rousseau, in his dictionary, speaks of it thus : ' Recitative. A discourse recited in a musical and harmonious tone. It is a method of singing which approaches nearly to speech, a decla- mation in music, in which the musician should imitate as much as possible, the inflections of the declaiming (or the speaking) voice.' Busby gives the following definition: 'Recitative. A species of musical recitation, forming the medium between Air and rhe- torical Declamation, and in which the composer and performer, rejecting the rigorous rules of time, endeavor to imitate the in- flections, accent, and emphasis, of natural speech.' One calls 'Recitative, a kind of singing that differs but little from ordinary pronunciation.' Another says, ' Recitative is speech delivered through the medium of musical intonation.' And others, still more general, describe it as, ' singing speech,' and, 'speaking song.' Before we are taught what we require in knowledge, we do not perceve how little satisfies us: and although we have yet much to learn on the subject of the voice, we have taught ourselves enough, to authorize the remark, that all these definitions though written to instruct, contain no further explanation, than might be given by the humblest auditor at an Oratorio. By the terms of all these definitions, Recitative is somehow made-up of speech and A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF RECITATIVE. 633 song. As the elementary movements of song had, in a degree, been known and described, the meaning of its term might have been inteligible. But, regarding speech, on which these defini- tions are in part constructed, let us hear Rousseau, under the very article we have quoted. 'The inflections of the speaking- voice are not bounded by musical intervals. They are uncontroled, and impossible to be determined.' A knowledge therefore of the construction of Recitative, through that of its mingled or interwoven constituents, song and speech, the latter of which is here declared to be utterly inappreciable; must according to Rousseau at least, require some other powers of comprehension, than we at present possess. For having no perception of the characteristics of one of the constituents, our knowledge of Recitative seems to have been, if I may be allowed to jest, not unlike that of our personal acquaintance with the heads of a family, when the father is married to an inaudible, intangible and invisible woman. In general description, Speech, Song, and Recitative, are varied forms of intonation; deriving their specific differences from the number, kind, and combination of their respective vocal movements. Having described the melodial peculiarities of Speech, and of Song, which are the only divisions of vocal expression founded on instinctive indications, let us by the light of our history, endeavor to point out the characteristics of the artificial intonation of Recitative. The Plainest style of Recitative, for its style varies, is charac- terized by the following construction. First. It has no systematic rythmus or musical measure in the progression of melody. Second. It never gives more than one note to a single sylable ; song sometimes applying several short notes over one. Third. It employs the protracted radical and protracted vanish and the wave, on long quantities; and occasionally the equable concrete on short ones. Fourth. Its melodial intervals, or the discrete movements of its radical pitch, are of every extent, both in upward and down- ward transition. Fifth. It employs the means of time, force, vocality, abruptness and intonation. 41 634 A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF RECITATIVE. These are the simple constituents of Plain Recitative : and the following are some of the principles of their application. The melodial succession variously consists of the monotone, and of other phrases, through every interval of radical pitch. It makes no systematic distinction between a diatonic groundwork, and the contrasted emphasis of wider intervals, which gives effec- tive power, dignity, and expression to speech: the successions of its pitch being rather according to the promiscuous mingling of song. I have not recognized, in what is called unaccompanied recitative, an application of the doctrine of key; its melodial re- lationships having in this respect the characteristic of speech. The cadence or full pause is made by phrases of every form, from the monotone, to the rising and falling discrete octave; the current melody consisting of the protracted radical, or protracted vanish, with an occasional rising and falling concrete and wave. All these constituents are so intermingled and arranged by the composer, as not only to suit that caprice, he may miscall Ex- pression, but also to give that order to the constituents^ he may choose to call Melody. If however we cease to beleve upon authority, that Recitative is wonderfully expressive, we will then begin to reflect, how this supposed variety, founded on wider intervals and waves, with a frequent recurrence of upward and downward skips, and with so many mounting and plunging ca- dences, must, by its constant and violent obtrusions, be shockingly monotonous to the Natural Science of an ear, accustomed to a true vocal expression, under the easy and gratifying variety of cultivated speech. Such being the structure of Recitative, its expression can have but little resemblance to that of the speaking voice. Comparing its plainest form above described, with the intonation of speech, which it pretends to borrowj its only means of expression on in- dividual sylables, for its current has none, are included under the following heads. First. The expression of slow and of rapid utterance; and of long and of short quantity. Second. That of the degrees of force; both as to emphasis and drift. Third. Ofvocality; particularly of guttural vibration, and the orotund. A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF RECITATIVE. 635 Fourth. Of intonation; by the occasional employment of the discrete rising fifth or octave, for inquiry; of the downward skip, for positive or imperative declaration ; and of the wave of the semitone and the minor third, for plaintiveness. But even these are so irregularly mingled with contra-meaning constituents, that like the same constituents in the throat of the mocking-bird, they lose much, if not all their expressive character. Nor are they applied according to invariable rule: for I have heard true inter- rogative words, intonated with a simple monotone, or ditone; declarative questions with a downward fifth, or octave; and forci- ble imperatives, with the widest ascending intervals. This, with the 'Little Book' and pencil in hand, was noted at the Opera. Plain Recitative at once strikes the common ear as very re- markable, and so distinct from speech and song, that its structure, and its character^ for it can scarcely be regarded as expressive to a natural ear* must w T hen compared with the structure and ex- pression of speech and of song, give a definite perception of these three vocal functions, and enable us to point-out what is peculiar to each. We perceve, that one cannot assume the character of another, without dropping its own character, and becoming alto- gether that other: and that definitions which set-forth Recita- tive, as a musical intonation of speech, or an engrafting of the inflections of speech on song, or of song on speech, are without either clearness or truth. We can further perceve, that as speech never employs the protracted notes, but always the equable concrete, or its modifications, it does not, through this broad distinction, partake in effect, of the character of song or of re- citative; and both these, using the protracted notes, are more nearly related; and with slight change do mutually pass into each other. And so it happens, that the singer often gradually passes from the above described Plain Recitative, to the florid execution, by freely introducing all the intonations of song. Hence instead, of this plain construction with its few constitu- ents, he introduces to a greater or less extent, the rising and the falling concrete in all their forms; tremors, notes, waves, and even divisions and shakes: in short, while applying these con- stituents, under a barred and rythmic time, he does, in effect, produce the full characteristic of song itself. 636 A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF RECITATIVE. Of these three forms of intonation, it appears, that Speech and Song, both by construction and effect, are most unlike each other ; that even the plainest Recitative, by construction more nearly re- sembles song, and in its execution by vocalists, most readily runs into it; that Speech has the most extended and delicate powers of expressing thought and passion; by the union of a conven- tional language with an instinctive intonation, and a perfect adaptation of one to the other ; that Song, by the succession of its notes, and concrete intervals, and other forms of intonation, together with vocality, quantity, and force, has, exclusively of words, its otvn peculiar manner of exciting feelings of grandeur, pathos, gayety, and grace; and that Recitative, which, by one of the not unfrequent delusions of perception, was originally intro- duced, and has since been continued for centuries, as embracing within itself the characteristic expression of both speech and song, does, by this vain effort to join two incompatible functions, really destroy the peculiar and delightful character of each. Composers may among themselves have framed rules for a conventional meaning in Recitative, to which being long accus- tomed, they may have come at last to beleve them to be the rules of instinctive expression. If those, not under the influence of habit, do sometimes listen with pleasure to Recitative, or say they doj is it not from this vocal Oddity having been invented, or revived in modern Italyj Italy has, thereupon, assumed to give law to the musical world; or from its being expected at the Opera; or carelessly heard, in anticipation of the succeding Air? Such influences too often pervert our perception, and reconcile us to a vitiated taste. Besides, it is as far, in the present state of the human mind, from being true, in Art, as it is in Government-; that an allowed dictatorial authority, except in the saving-energy of a desperate case, is a protection against error and corruption. The Architecture of Italy, with a sort of prescriptive right to direct the world, has in most of its departments, from the old Roman, downward, done as much violence to the principles of unity, grandeur, simplicity, order, and cautious variety^ as the false pretensions of Recitative have done to the true and beautiful system of vocal expression both in speech and song. After Recitative, by some capricious straining after novelty. A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF RECITATIVE. 637 was introduced, it became an object with the reflective part of its votaries, as well it might, to find some ground to justify its use. With this view, it was by a strange conceit, classed among the Imitative arts; and its peculiar intonation was supposed to be a refined copy of common speech, raised to the 'Beau Ideal' of vocal expression. The following free translation of an extract from an article by Marmontel, in the French Encyclopedia of Diderot, under the word Recitative, describes this 'theory.' 'When the Italians proposed to give a melody to theatric declamation, the purpose in joining music with it, like the purpose of exalting prose into poetry, was to embelish Nature in imitating her. In other words, to give to declamation a character more agreeable to the ear, and if possible, more exciting to the feelings than that of natural speech ; without however, altering too far, the form of the Arch- etype; but so ordering the refined imitation, as not to obscure the purpose and means of the original.' And againj 'If then it is true, that song, like verse in relation to prose, does embelish speech in imitating it, thereby throwing an elegant ilusion over its character, we should not reject this additional pleasure of taste ; and whoever is endowed with a delicate ear, will not com- plain, on hearing speech delivered in a singing voice.' We are sorry to differ from M. Marmontel : and though we may not have that -delicate ear, and therefore may have no right to complain, yet with a taste acquired in the school of Nature, we cannot approve. And here, notwithstanding an early resolu- tion, only to observe and record, to which however I have not been able always to adhere^ I feel myself compelled to offer a transient argument, in dissenting from the unfounded notions on this subject. The theory of Imitation assumed common conversation, which it called the 'natural tonej' to be the archetype or pattern. The more deliberate and impressive style of the theater, and of public oratory, was called Declamation; and was the First remove in 'imitation' from the 'natural tone.' This declamation, when Chanted by the voice alone, or with the instrumental company of something like a varied drone-bass, was called Plain Recitative ; and its further remove from common speech, and approach to- 638 A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF RECITATIVE. wards song, was the Second degree of imitation. Recitative accompanied by instruments, in a barred and rythmic harmony, formed the Third degree of imitationj a still further remove from the ' natural tone,' or common speech: and Song, or what is called Air, was supposed to have the least resemblance to it. By the light of our history, the Reader may perhaps perceve the falacy of this assumption. Language is a sign of the mind, not a copy of it. Common speech then, is the sign of thought and passion, and in no meaning of the term, an imitation of them. Declamation is speech itself, in a more impressive use of its con- stituents. Plain recitative employs some intonations, not used in speech, and makes a false or garbled application of those that are^ and consequently is no imitation. Accompanied recitative has still greater differences from speech than the Plainj though of similar character and effect. Air, or Song having its own peculiar use of notes and intervals, with its own peculiar expres- sion, can have no resemblance whatever to speech; and cannot therefore be an imitation of it. Thus we learn that common speech is an original function, planned for itself alone; and to speak figuratively, only copied, if at all, from Nature's secret pattern of its purpose : nor has Nature herself ever copied any- thing from it. But conceitful man, in trying to beautify, by imitating her as he supposedj at last blundered into Recitative; the true or contorted archetype of which is not to be found in the natural voice of all this peopled earth. And if drawn by Plato's First Philosophy from the skiesj when, in the Sacred name of Urania, has any metaphysical audience of the heavenly choir, ever reported an example of its vocal oddity and monotonous affectation ! Another opinion, assumed to justify the use of Recitative, was-; that as speech is so widely different from song, in its effects upon the ear: and as the more acute and forcible sound, and stronger contrast of intonation, in song, together with the peculiar and different kind of expression, are much more striking than the 'natural tone,' it was supposed, there should be some interme- diate function, partaking of the character of each, to unite their succession, with less violence to the ear. The instances of things, both in nature and art, in favor of this medium of gradual tran- A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF RECITATIVE. 639 sition, are not more numerous than the instances of abrupt changes that oppose it ; and as no argument can therefore be drawn from this source, we must consider the case in itself. On the ground then of our history of the voice, we cannot ad- mit, there is the least plea in good taste, or the demands of the ear, for this interposition of Recitative. How does the principle apply to that universal function of Speech, the Equable Concrete, when a gradual vanish leads us out of the full and abrupt open- ing of the radical, and not gradually from silence, into it? Do the first notes of song, in a favorite melody, ever require more than their own delightful impression, to introduce them from silence or from speech? Who, in the Church-service, calls for a motly midway of intonation, in passing from prayer and bene- diction, to the chant and the anthem? And what, in the decent pride of consistency, becomes of this principle of gradual transi- tion, when the voice passes abruptly from silence to the striking peculiarity of this very Recitative; and again, when in an un- known language, it passes from this gibberish, both of words and expression, to the deafening jargon of melody, harmony, and articulation, in the over-strained voices and instruments of a full Operatic chorus?* The design of this notion of mediation, to prevent the violent contrast between speech and song, has ren- dered the whole course of the Operaj when not releved by the occasional variety of the delightful Aria, and by passages of ex- quisite orchestral harmony^ a continued monotony, to him whose ear has not been contorted by fashion, and who admits our view of the principles of Drift; for these show that in speech, the ear is guarded against the false and too frequent use of wide and ex- pressive intervals, by such a use being always monotonous and offensive. Nature has no unnecessary chasms in her designs^ though the works of man are full of them. When therefore he comes to study her purpose in the voice, he will find no gap be- * We had lately an instance in one of our Cities, of what an Italian Opera can play-off upon the ignorance or inattention of an audiencej by the first and second Tenor, and Bass, severally singing and reciting their parts in Italian, German, and French. The next day the amateurs and critics were very indig- nant, at the Troupe-leader's impudence. Strange complaint! when to an Eng- lish ear, the whole in 'choice Italian,' is impudent enough, without adding two other jargons, that nobody was attentive encfugh to perceve. 640 A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF RECITATIVE. tween speech and song, to be passed by the Ponticelloj no, the Ponte-rotto of Recitative.* From the violence offered by Recitative, to our vocal-habits, St. Evrcmond long ago formally questioned its claims to the merits of propriety, and taste. This is a very strong motive; for surely, no one ever did recognize or enter-into the expression * In refering above, to the undistinguishable words and expression of Reci- tative, in a foreign language; and to the deafening vowels of an Opera-Chorus, I do not so particularly allude to the Italian language, as to that uninteligible plain-English, which seems to be the common mother-tongue of so many of its singers. I lately heard in translation, the Oratorio of 'Joseph and his Breth- ren:' and throughout Solo, Duett, and Chorus^ Soprano, Tenor, and Bass, I did not recognize, with the exception of now and then an interjection, twenty words, so distinctly, as to know what they were. They had better have been in Japanese, for there would then have been no vexatious longing for what they pretended to be, and no endeavor to translate them. As to that clashing of vocality, and discord in intonation, the necessary vocal vices of a vociferating crowds 'Quousque tandem abutere, Coryphaeus, patientia nostra?' When will the Mob-like Chorus of the Opera cease its confounding uproar? For while each and all, in musical strife, are straining both voice and instrument into one time-beaten noises who has ever heard a smoothly moderated note, or an articulated word from any one of them? This is not the choice of uncorrupted nature in the human ear. It belongs to the whooping savage of an early age. In our own time, it comes from the Composer and the Audience reciprocally vitiating each other's taste. And it only adds another to the unnumbered in- consistencies of the mind and the senses, when in Christian Countries, after weekly returns, in our Churches, of delight at the impressive grandeur and grace of the subdued harmony of the Choir; and after once hearing the refined solemnity of the Choral Prayer in Masaniello, we can bear to be deafened by the brazen-racket of a certain red-headed scene in Norma, as 'got up' in our Country. It may be said, 'there is a style appropriate to the Church.' And so, it is equally proper, that in every place music, in its parts, should be distinctly heard; its expression unconfusedly felt: and the drum of the ear not to be torn by its unmerciful violence. But further, the critic tells us, this scene in Norma pre- sents the true vocal and military costume, and 'carroty-locks,' of the time and place in which the action is laid. Be it so. Are we therefore in any way, to sacrifice taste to an outlandish costume in sight, or scent, or sound? And be- cause some shouting Celts, like beings of a Hotter clime, 'clashed on their sounding shields the din of war,' and are allowed, 'highly to rage, and hurl defiance' against civilized ears, upon a modern Stage; how could we blame an Author who, in search of novelty, should locate his Opera among a Horde of Tartars, and who, with reference to the dramatic costume, and to the truth of his story, should bring his Soprano, Tenore and Basso assoluto^ the Reader allowing the homely similitude and phrase^ to 'wet their whistles' for a Trio, over a steaming caldron of the usual daintiest flesh of their country! A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF RECITATIVE. 641 of this extraordinary intonation, if he had not by the authority, or the daily practice of the Conservatorio, been drilled out of the instinct of a natural ear, into a forced belief that it is the only Artistic style for displaying the elevated character of dramatic thought and passion. But this argument, like that against many other things at first very shocking, may be refuted by custom and time. Our objection is drawn from another source. It has been shown, that speech being founded on a universal and identi- cal meaning and practice among mankind, has a system of verbal and vocal signs, for thought, and passion, often perverted and corrupted, but never overruled and changed to a different system ; that song, like instrumental music, has forms of intonation alto- gether its own, for the expression only of what we called Feeling, and totally independent of verbal signs. From a close observa- tion of these distinctions, and a studious search after any mode of the vocal signs, which for human purposes, might be admissible, we have insisted, that besides these two functions, speech and song, the voice has no other universal means of expression ; that from their separate characters, their uses are not compatible with each other or interchangeable; and that any attempt to institute other signs, for a just expression of thought and passion in one case, and of feeling, in the other, is like an endeavor to create anew the voice and mind of man. Our preceding objections are not in any degree drawn from a contest of our own personal with a prevailing conventional taste; nor entirely, from the debatable ground, of the violence offered at first to the unaccustomed ear: for we have endeavored to found them upon a survey of the re- spective means and purposes of speech and song; and thereby to show, that the modern invention of Recitative, which as a 're- fined copy of theatric declamation,' was designed to effect a more exalted expression, by engrafting song on speech, is, by the light of analysis, and the test of an unenslaved ear-; after all, but a fiction, and therefore by the doom of all fictional pretension, ought to be a failure. This conclusion will certainly be considered by the Masters of music, and their world of followers, as highly audacious: but it has been thought upon, much longer with reference to truth, than to opinion; and we appeal from prescriptive prejudice, and the 642 A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF RECITATIVE. inflexibility of the musical mind, to a liberal and a docile intelect- ual-ear, instructed by the history of an inflexible ordination in the uses of the human voice. But notwithstanding all our ob- jections, Recitative will still continue to be a fashionable and therefore self sufficient delight of the Opera; just as the artificial taste for Alcohol and its associate, that Nauseous Weed, will, among craving and restless wanderers in perception, regardless of the warning and the penalty of disease and death, continue to supply the place of self-contented purposes, in productive occupa- tion, and in educated thought. We owe the modern creation, or supposed revival of Recita- tive, in part, to the fatal influence of that vampire of Classic authority, which, while fanning us into a learned and vain-glori- ous stupefaction, has for ages, on more subjects than one, been drawing out the life-blood of our intelectual independence. The ignorance of both the Greeks and the Romans, upon the subject of the voice, obliged them to describe their limited perceptions, by loose explanation and indefinite metaphor; and we have been contented, in this as in some other of their arts, to take a record of the poverty of their knowledge, as the historic scraps of a sys- tem, regarded by the modern scholar, if it was not by themselves, as little short of perfection. The learned world has teazed itself into despair, by attempts to discover, wherein consisted the in- imitable charm of Greek poetical recitation; thereby to ilustrate the expressive means of that 'melodious language,' which when writers on the human voice shall broadly observe and reflect on their subject, they will admit to be very little more melodious, or as they will then mean, more rythmic than their own. 'Among the Greeks,' says Rousseauj and his classical scholarship and musical-philosophy may well represent the rest in this matter* 'among the Greeks, all their poetry was in recitative.' And againj 'The Greeks could sing in speaking, but among us, we must either sing or speak ; we cannot do both at the same time.' With such a miraculous physi- ology, no wonder, there should have been modern altars to this still 'Unknown God' of the power and perfection of ancient speech: nor that Pulci the poet, in reciting his Morgante Mag- giore, as we are told, at the table of Lorenzo de Medici, should have supposed himself to be the happy agent of a needed revela- A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF RECITATIVE. 643 tion, of the method of Grecian dramatic-recitative, or of Homer's declamatory song. If there is any truth and consistency in nature^ the human voice in its mechanism, its principles, and its uses for thought, and passion, and for the feeling of song, has been the same, wherever these states of mind have been the same. And as the earliest writings, and other records of the earliest nations, repre-- sent like characters of mind, to those existing at the present day, we must conclude^ if the Greeks did not use their voices, accord- ing to the laws of nature, as we acknowledge and fulfil themj they must by our decision at least, have used them improperly ; and have defeated the intention of those laws. When therefore, in the contemptuous language of classical scholarship, we are told, we cannot speak and sing at the same time^ we, scholars of Nature and inquiry, must say, the Greeks could not speak and sing at the same time. Notwithstanding a universal confidence in the taste of the Greeks, we cannot beleve, they were free from gross and uni- versal faults, in their Art of speech, on which they have left us neither method nor rule : well knowing how they violated their own established principles, in some of their boasted, and recorded arts. The selfish and tasteless schemes of the Statesman, the osten- tatious authority, and equal selfishness of the Priesthood, and the inflexible formality of a Ceremonial worship, may, in the Vocal- Ritual, as well as in Temple- Architecture, and in Sculpture, have continued the enormities of some ruder age, or courted a time- serving variety in the fashion of newer faults ; all in flagrant, and therefore thoughtless inconsistency with their methodic principles of Fitness, Unity, Grandeur, Harmony, Proportion, and Grace. In proof, let us learn how this fitness, and unity, and grandeur were marred, even by the renowned Phidias, in his renowned Minerva, by assigning her a labor of strength, not of wisdom, in balancing a victory on her palm ; with a sculptured form made up of ivory and gold, surrounded by an enriched and costly farrago of accessory decoration, all suitable perhaps to the 'pomp and vanity' of the Priest, and to the ignorant wonder of the Devotee; but to the eye of an uncontroled Grecian Artist, presenting in 1)44 A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF RECITATIVE. material, or color, or accessory, or form-* no unitizing relations, either of harmony or contrast. Let us learn too, how fitness and propriety were outraged by perching a statue aloft, on each angle of a Doric pediment; and by striping the immaculate whiteness of an external entablature with some gaudy and dis-gracing paint. In further and still existing proof, let us go ourselves to the cele- brated Erectheum, on that all-observed Athenian Acropolis; and bearing in mind the unity, simplicity, order, proportion, and sym- metry, which in a Peripteral Temple, impressed themselves, all at once, on the eye of the beholclerj we must perceve those princi- ples neglected in this unbalanced plan, as if unknown or forgot- ten ; a plan and superstructure confusing even to us, but to the reflective eye of a Grecian Artist, unbiased by the obligation of Conformity to the priesthood or the people, presenting only the distraction of undetermined entrances, with wwrespective sym- metry of fronts, and flanks; of unequal and awkward elevations on a hill-side; and of excrescences, vainly claiming by some tri- fling merits in detail, to be uniting and co-expressive parts' of a self-discordant whole. Bat we have not yet done with this un- grecian Erectheum. Its Caryatid-portico, if designed as an em- blem of Grecian enmity, has by that enmity, betrayed a lapse of excelence in Grecian taste. We still see in columns changed to Caryan women, with the conceit of reeded draperies, how these 4 Arts of Taste that civilize mankind,' while leading on to the grotesk, forgot their rules not only of unity, fitness, order and propriety, but of humanity itselfj in recording an ungenerous and degrading vengeance to the memory of a fallen foe. If we then weigh the ail-but faultless merits of Grecian taste, in its own balance, we may, from some overpoise of prejudice, or authority, sometimes find it wanting. On the subject of the voice, the Greeks having no oratorical physiology as we may call it, could have had no well-founded or influential rules. We are free therefore to suppose grosser violations of taste in the practice of their Speech, than we find in the choice productions of some of their Arts, which we know to have been generally directed by principles deep-founded and exact. If the history of the voice, contained in this work, authorizes the conclusion, we may rest in a belief, that could we have a dreaming revelation of the manner A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF RECITATIVE. 6-L5 of their hierophants, orators, players, sophists, street-criers, and school-boys, we would awake to record a chapter of criticism, very much like our fiftieth section, on the Faults of Readers in the nineteenth century. The style of that vocal perfection which the Roman eulogist, by the privilege of his poetry, figuratively ascribes to the inspira- tion of the Muse, may, in the chant of the Odeum, the declama- tions of the Theater, and the recitation of the Olympic Games, have been with the Greeks, a greater departure from the rule of nature, than they sometimes exhibited, in a departure from their high and all-sufficient principle of unity in Material, by the dis- cordant assemblage of gold, and ebony, marble, ivory and wood in their most celebrated statues: or in the violation of their own eternal rules of simplicity, grandeur, unity, decorum, and grace, exhibited in the Erectheumj placed, as it would seem, to make its faults more glaringj placed in 'audacious neighborhood,' beside the all-surpassing Parthenon. I return from this digression, to remark, that ignorant as we are of the real vocal practice of the Greeks, the Reader who has attentively considered and who comprehends the descriptions in this essay, will be satisfied to conjecture for himself, what they did if it was wrong; and to decide what it was, if they knew*, and did what is right. If then Signor Pulci did delight the adulated and munificent Lorenzo, by the recovery of some lost conventicle or canting tune, in vogue with the ancient Altar and the Stagey it might allow the conjecture, that some Recitative-corruption of speech had come dow 7 n by tradition from Homer, or. Tyrteus, or was in latter days, by some capricious influence, imposed upon the ser- vile ear: just as many of the laws of musical expression are in this generation, overborne with like distortion, by the inveterate dogmas of the composer, the masked tyranny of fashion, and the consenting slavery of mankind.* * At an early stage of these inquiries, I colected a few materials on the sub- ject of Greek Accent: and then contemplated subjoining to this essay, some remarks upon it. But perhaps the obscurity, inconsistencies, and meager phi- losophy of this worried topic of classical heresy and faith, are now sufficiently apparent, by the light of our preceding analysis. The self-delusions of national, like those of personal vanity, are peculiar to no age or people: and one can see 646 A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF RECITATIVE. Here I conclude the cursory view of the physiological func- tions of Song and Recitative : having avoided therein, everything like a practical application of the subject. Some one better qual- ified than myself may be disposed to prosecute the inquiry. In the first part of this Work, the vocal signs of expression in Speech are set-forth by an elementary description of their particular modes and forms. An analysis of the forms of expression in Song, by the light of that description, and according to the hints here thrown-out, would be interesting, and might be successful. Nothing could give me more pleasure than to assist in its develop- ment. But this would lead me from some other designs of duty ; and I have too impatient a perception of the wasted experience, about him every day, enough of the boast of empires, and of men, to make him scrutinize the rolls of fame, blazoned by the same genus of vain-glory and of credulity, two thousand years ago. We know all the stories about barbarian ambassadors being delighted with the music alone, of a language they did not comprehend: and of that universal acuteness and 'proud judgment of the ear,' which made the Athenian herb- women and porters speak with all the purity of the Academy. Yet we should have other proof than the report of grammarians: and should find them writing with more fulness and precision, on an art they are said to have known and practiced so well, before we can beleve, that on this subject, the Greeks were at all superior to ourselves; and if they did 'speak and sing at the same time/ they were not, when we except the singing-speech of the Quakers, even below us, in the proper uses of the voice. If one should be disposed to beleve in the vocal perfection of the Greeks, through any other than their own testimony, he might well question the author- ity of their Roman eulogists: since they themselves, the pupils of the Greeks, display no better analysis and system in their institute of elocution. We may fairly estimate their discrimination, when with the same pen that deals out the extravagancies of praise upon the Oratorical Action of their masters, they gravely give us, as proof too of their own nicety in vocal science, the story of one of their famous orators having occasion for a Pitch-pipe, to enable him to recognize his own voice, as the ignorant populace thought, and affectedly to govern his melody, through the more accurate perceptions of a slave, who now and then blew this little regulating trumpet at his elbow! ! Should I be obliged to hold an opinion upon the subject of ancient accent-; the fixed appropriation of an acute, grave, and circumflex rise, fall, and turn of the voice, to individual sylables, being utterly inconsistent with a proper or elegant system of intonation, would induce me to beleve^ the Greeks and Romans did always mean stress alone, in their report on the accentual function : but had connected with it a crude theory of pitch, formed perhaps out of some fragments of Egyptian, or Eastern science, or conceit-* which Pythagoras, or whoever im- ported them, did not thoroughly comprehend. A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF RECITATIVE. 647 and profitless notions which daily present themselves in the changeful errors of my Profession, not to desire to use in its service, a Method of Philosophy which I hope will be found to have been effectual here. For causes known to more than to myself, but which others need not at present know, I laid aside a Practical work on Medi- cine, with the view of completing this: and I am now going to resume it. It is at the date of this sixth Edition^ forty years since the pre- ceding sentence was written, on the first Printing of this essay. After its publication, I did resume the subject to which I then alluded. Its broad design was arranged in early life ; and much of its detail was afterwards executed. Having however resolved to pursue that subject by observation alone; and being unwiling either to throw time away, or to be forced into wasteful conten- tions, without even a distant prospect of usefulness, I long-ago laid it aside, for subjects, which if not contributive to others, might at least be instructive and agreeable to myself. Its pur- pose was, on the ground of the method of discovery adopted in this essay, to propose to the Practical Department of Medicine, the means for inquiring into the deep-laid causes of its unprofit- able theoretic habits; its sectarian contrarieties; its perpetual changes in opinion and practice; and its restless, but well-meant endeavors in the wrong way, to accomplish something right and needful for itself. To obtain if possible, a hearing in a Cause so apparently hope- less, I laid before the Medical Profession, the preceding Example of philosophic investigation. This was not done with the least thought to improve its Elocution; but, from the successful result of an inquiry into one of its own subjects, to invite a like inquiry into some of those versatile fictions, which under the name of knowledge, have to no purpose, occupied it so long; and which have, to the plain observation of the world, been the jest of a well-deserved but useless satire. In this, however, I have failed. For though it was submitted as an original view of the 648 A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF RECITATIVE. proper Physiology of the voicej yet with a Census of more than forty thousand Physicians, in the United States, I do not know, nor have I heard-of one, who has so far looked into it, as to have risked his Theoretic Life, by catching a single infectious thought from its adopted Baconian method: a method that did hope to recommend itself by what it had already done. To my inteligent Readers of another class, I may remark, and it will perhaps be receved, that widely different as the essay they have just finished is, in system and in practical character, from the Old Elocution; there might be under the method we have adopted, a still greater difference between some New Order of Medicine, and the disorderly opinions and practice of any of the countless Heterogeneous Systems of the day; systems under which, their votaries must still pretend to know more than they do know, and affect to perform more than with their jealous con- tentions among themselves, they ever can. Let them then change their narrow view of Causes and Effects, for one of Baconian breadth, in observation and thought: and possibly Truth, who in her purity and plainness seems to have always avoided them, may, with but a look of philosophic invitation on their part, lose all her shyness, and freely afford her restorative assistance in their pres- ent theoretic extremity. Philadelphia, March 20, 1867. THE END. *• «tf ^ ^« ^ ^ ,0*' ^ ■ ,* v % V J ■y ^ ^ ^^ *WB^ &' V ^ \^ > o«« % ^ .^ O^ * o M o