Authors: Rebecca Gowers,Rebecca Gowers
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The
Guardian
supplies a splendid example of the species of parenthetical, half-submerged âsea-serpent' sentence that Mark Twain attempted to warn against: âIn a highly political family, daughter Rachel also worked for Brown at No. 10 while her older brother Stephenâborn in 1970, a few months before his father, only child of a mining family from the closely knit Welsh valleys, became an MPâcarved out a post-Cambridge career with the British Council'. This sentence may be boggling in many ways, but it is undoubtedly most boggling for its momentary suggestion of a son born some months before his own father. ~
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Gowers's preferred system of punctuation has largely fallen out of fashion, though it is still used here and there, for instance in the
Times Literary Supplement
. ~
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George Eliot uses the âI say' device in
Middlemarch
: âBrother Jonah, for example (there are such unpleasant people in most families; perhaps even in the highest aristocracy there are Brobdingnag specimens, gigantically in debt and bloated at greater expense)âBrother Jonah, I say, having come down in the world â¦'. But in modern writing this use of âI say' would be likely to invite what Gowers calls elsewhere âthe prick of ridicule'. ~
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If all the commas are left out, as they are in
Usage and Abusage
, this passage is made to look even harder to understand than it really is.