"The Elements of Style" |
IV. A FEW MATTERS OF FORM
August 9, 1918 | Chapter XII |
Rule 3 | 352d Infantry |
I went to his house yesterday (my third attempt to see him), but he had left town. |
He declares (and why should we doubt his good faith?) that he is now certain of success. |
(When a wholly detached expression or sentence is parenthesized, the final stop comes before the last mark of parenthesis.)
The provision of the Constitution is: "No tax or duty shall be laid on articles exported from any state." |
Quotations grammatically in apposition or the direct objects of verbs are preceded by a comma and enclosed in quotation marks.
I recall the maxim of La Rochefoucauld, "Gratitude is a lively sense of benefits to come." |
Aristotle says, "Art is an imitation of nature." |
Quotations of an entire line, or more, of verse, are begun on a fresh line and centred, but not enclosed in quotation marks.
Wordsworth's enthusiasm for the Revolution was at first unbounded:
But to be young was very heaven! |
Quotations introduced by that are regarded as in indirect discourse and not enclosed in quotation marks.
Keats declares that beauty is truth, truth beauty. |
Proverbial expressions and familiar phrases of literary origin require no quotation marks.
These are the times that try men's souls. |
He lives far from the madding crowd. |
The same is true of colloquialisms and slang.
In the second scene of the third act | In III.ii (still better, simply insert III.ii in parenthesis at the proper place in the sentence) |
After the killing of Polonius, Hamlet is placed under guard (IV. ii. 14). | |
2 Samuel i:17-27 | Othello II.iii 264-267, III.iii. 155-161 |
The Iliad; the Odyssey; As You Like It; To a Skylark; The Newcomes; A Tale of Two Cities; Dicken's Tale of Two Cities. |