THE YOUTH’S CABINET. All these combinations or groupings, it is evident, constitute one cdea, and that the idea of an action. The complex sentence, “The father, anxious about the child, wrote a long letter,” may be analyzed thus: “The father wrote,” is a predicative combination. «The anxious father,” is an attributive sombination. “ Wrote a letter,” is an objective com- bination. “ Anxious about the child,” is an ob- jective combination. “A long letter,” combination. In this way, sentences may be devel- oped to an indefinite extent. is an attributive mM, New Haven, Or. ee WANs ‘AN | AY Tr te ily 1s ii Mt Ae ae Fs t Va meu y ie ! i } Ve mil ae re an \\s Sine Greenough’s Statue of Washington. 0 ONE of the many thousands who annually visit the capital of our nation, fails to spend a few moments in gazing upon Horatio Greenough’s Statue of Washington, a view of which is given in the above en- graving. It is well worthy of study, and though we cannot give a very mi- nute description of it, we must tell our readers what is said of it, by Mr. Alex- ander Everett, a gentleman of most ex- cellent taste and judgment in the fine arts. He says, “The statue greatly ex- ceeded the expectations I had: formed concerning it. It is of colossal grand- eur; about twice the size of life. The