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Forms necessary for persons in business

The complete Petitioner; containing 57 forms of pe-
titions, suited to all the various circumstances

of human life

Directions for addressing persons of all ranks

PREFACE.

THE HE great utility of epistolary writing is so well known, that the necessity of being acquainted with an art replete with such advartages is needless to insist upon. Those, who are accomplished in it, are too happy in their knowledge to need farther information concerning. its excellence. And such as are unqualified to convey their sentiments to a friend, without the assistance of a third person, feel their deficiency so severely, that nothing need be said to convince them, it is their interest to become acquainted with what is so necessary and agreeable.

Had letters been known at the beginning of the world, epistolary writing would have been as old as love and friendship; for, as soon as they began to flourish, the verbal messenger was dropped, the language of the heart was committed to characters that faithfully preserved it, secrecy was maintained, and social intercourse rendered more free and agreeable.

Some of the most ancient compositions were written in this manner, and the light of the gospel was delivered by the holy apostles in the epistolary way.

The Romans were perfect masters of this art, as Cicero's letters sufficiently evince; nor.

are the moderns less sensible of its excellencies. Some of the finest French writers have built their fame upon epistolary correspondence; and the English are at present so convinced of the advantages attending this method of conveying their sentiments, that it seems to have triumphed over almost every other species of composition; the historian has adopted it; we have the Greek and Roman histories, as well as that of our own nation, admirably executed in letters. Almost every thing didactive, and perceptive, is delivered in this way; the Novelist finds it better adapted to his purpose than any other mode of writing. No great poet is without his familiar epistle to his friend; and the traveller seemed lost, till he found the method of conveying his intelligence in letters.

To conclude: letters are the life of trade, the fuel of love, the pleasure of friendship, the food of the politician, and the entertainment of the curious.

To speak to those we love or esteem, is the greatest satisfaction we are capable of knowing, and the next is being able to converse with them by letter.

A NEW

PLAIN AND EASY

ENGLISH GRAMMAR

G

OF GRAMMAR.

RAMMAR is the art of speaking properly, reading well, and writing correctly. It contains four grand divisions, viz.

ORTHOGRAPHY, or the art of spelling.

PROSODY, or the art of pronouncing and reading.
ANALOGY, or the derivation and meaning of words.
SYNTAX, or the use of words in forming sentences.-

OF ORTHOGRAPHY

There are twenty-six letters in the English language, viz. a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h, i, j, k, l, m, n, v, p, q, r, s, t, u, v, w, x, y, z. Of these, five letters, that is, a, e, i,, o, u, are always vowels, and y is a vowel only when its comes at the end of a word; the other twenty letters are

consonants.

By a vowel I mean a letter which has a perfect and dis-tinct sound of itself; on the contrary, a consonant signifies. a letter which cannot form a distinct sound without a voweli either before or after it.

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