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58 Tuesday

Approachable

In the sentence below, it is possible to replace the verb can with other verbs, e.g. must, should, won’t. How does your choice of verb affect the meaning or mood of the sentence? Illustrate your ideas by using the sentence in a little dialogue.

I can talk to him.

Suggestions

Must. Ought to. Shall. Should. Will. Would.

Mustn’t. Oughtn’t to. Shan’t. Shouldn’t. Won’t. Wouldn’t.

Based on an exercise in English Exercises 12-13 (1933) by NL Clay.

59 20 Apr

The First Easter

This translation of St Mark’s breathless account of the resurrection of Jesus was made in the reign of King James VI and I, and published in 1611. The language was deliberately archaic, even for William Shakespeare’s time, and translated the traditional ‘Byzantine’ text of the New Testament rather than the academic reconstructions preferred since the 19th century.

The First Easter

In a translation from the Authorized Version of the Bible, published in 1611, St Mark recounts the discovery of Christ’s empty tomb.

60 18 Apr

A Collect for Easter Day

This prayer was appointed in the English Book of Common Prayer, first published under Edward VI in 1549, for Easter Day.

A Collect for Easter Day

A short prayer from the Book of Common Prayer, for the day of Christ’s resurrection.

61 16 Apr

The Gambler

Many colourful words and phrases come from past customs. Which common adjective is dictionary-writer Dr Johnson (1709-1784) talking about here?

(5-5). In open sight; without artifice or trick. A figurative expression, borrowed from gamesters, — who, when they put their hands under the table, are changing their cards.

Answer

62 16 Apr

If I Had But Two Little Wings

Read this little poem by Samuel Taylor Coleridge out aloud. You will need to add (in your mind) lines of verse and suitable punctuation. Don’t forget such useful little things as dashes, exclamation marks and question marks. Hint: there are three stanzas.

if i had but two little wings and were a little feathery bird to you id fly my dear but thoughts like these are idle things and i stay here but in my sleep to you i fly im always with you in my sleep the world is all ones own and then one wakes and where am i all all alone sleep stays not though a monarch bids so i love to wake ere break of day for though my sleep be gone yet while tis dark one shuts ones lids and still dreams on

See below for the whole poem.

If I Had But Two Little Wings

Samuel Taylor Coleridge holds on to those precious moments when loneliness is a problem for tomorrow.

63 12 Apr

Red Eye

For each sentence, reconstruct the speaker’s original words, as they would be given in direct speech (i.e. inside quotation marks).

1 Peter said that his eyes were red because he had a cold.

What words did Peter use?

2 ‘I expect they’ve left the gas on once too often, and the draught blew it out, and they’re suffocated in their beds. Father always said they would some day,’ said Robert cheerfully.

What words did Robert’s father use?

Sentences taken from the children’s stories of Edith Nesbit.

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