These sentences, and this mimicking exercise is taken from Sharon Crowley and Debra Hawhee’s Ancient Rhetorics for Contemporary Students Below you’ll find two sentences that I’ve arranged so that you can see the parts. The first one shows the use of four prepositional phrases in a row, an interesting stylistic choice, and something that you can try to mimic. You’ll see that I’ve given an example, right below it, of my own mimicking attempt. The second one is equally interesting because the subject and verb of the sentence sit in the middle of two extensive branches—left and right. Both are interesting sentences to mimic. The rest of the sentences are divided by type, and aren’t set out in this way, but you could arrange them in whatever way helps you to see the parts, and then try your hand at mimicking the structure with different ideas/concept as the theme for the sentence structure type! Crossing the common in snow puddles at twilight under a clouded sky without . . . good fortune I have enjoyed a perfect exhilaration. MY TRY: Running away from the college campus under duress from too many papers to grade with students racing after me in my...