I may love possibly I will. I should love-under obligation. THE SUBJUNCTIVE MOOD. The Subjunctive Mood shows that a thing is done on certain conditions, or from some motive, and often has a conjunction before it. If he loves not- I'll go away, But if he loves me-then I'll stay If I chastise-you'll cry. If I were you-I'll tell you what, THE INFINITIVE MOOD. The Infinitive Mood has no Number and Person, and generally has to before it. I learn to read, to write, to sew, I learn to parse, point out, or know To draw, to skip, play, sketch, and sing, THE IMPERATIVE MOOD. The Imperative Mood commands, exhorts, entreats, and permits, and has only Second Person Singular and Second Person Plural. A pronoun's understood behind, Sit thou or sit, dance thou, dance ye, Sing, dance ye merrily. - EXERCISE. Point out the mood to which each of the following sentences belongs : I can sing. You may go. He could walk. Run away. To think. Do I may go. You must Hear me. I love you, Jane. you? The coach will arrive soon. We understand this lesson. They must attend church on New-yearsday. He would not go. TENSE OR TIME. Now since you've learned these moods so well, Tense means the time, you know. PRESENT TENSE. The Present Tense tells what is going on. The first is called the present tense, "It is so very wet just now, And rains so much, I know not how PAST TENSE. The Past Tense represents the past. Now when we talk about the past, We say it rained on Friday last, The hail fell down-it thundered too— My cloak was drenched quite through and through, But all that's past you see. THE FUTURE TENSE. Its signs are shall or will. The future means the time to come, The birds shall sing, the bees will hum, I shall put you in jail next week, PERFECT TENSE. Its signs are have, hast, has. Present and past you've learned before, I have cut, he has cut this minute- PAST PERFECT. Its signs are had and hadst. Now when the thing was lately done, And done before another one, Past perfect now it's called. Thus John had eaten all the pie Before the others came-but I Shall have that overhauled. CONJUGATION OF THE VERB. M. I really think it is high time That you should learn without a rhyme, say I love, thou lovest, so does he, We love, you love, they love-O see! Now I, thou, he, we, you, and they Ch. What's the objective, do you mean? I hate, thou hatest, he hates too, It is indeed a shocking sight When darling little brothers fight— These verbs love, hate, are short indeed, I understand all that you tell, |