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Quoting Sources
To quote a passage from a source: 1. Enclose all quoted material within quotation marks. Make sure you have copied the original accurately.
Fit your quotation logically and grammatically into your sentence. The punctuation your sentence requires takes precedence over the punctuation of the original quotation.
Thoreau asks, "Why should we live with such hurry and waste of life?" (63).
2. Introduce each quotation with a "signal phrase." Often this phrase will include the author's name and/or title of the work. 3. Accordiing to the MLA format, you should cite each quotation parenthetically at its end, either by author and page number or simply by page number (depending on whether the author's name appears in the "signal phrase."
5. Use a colon to incorporate the quotation into your paragraph when the statement which preceded it is a sentence in its own right. Thoreau's explanation of why he went to live at Walden reveals his idealism:
6. Use an ellipsis (three spaced dots) to show that you have omitted something in a quotation. Thoreau explains that he went to live at Walden because he "wished to live deliberately . . . to live deep and suck out all the marrow of life" (61).
8. If you are quoting fewer than four lines of poetry, include it in your text. Separate the lines with virgules with a space before and after ( / ). In her long poem "Transcendental Etude," Adrienne Rich describes a new kind of poetry, one which "has nothing to do with eternity, / the striving for greatness, brilliance-- / only with the musing of a mind . . . "; she envisions the creator of this poetry as a woman carefully piecing together scraps of material: "pulling the tenets of her life together / with no mere will to mastery." 9. When quoting more than four lines of poetry, double-space it and indent it ten spaces from the left margin. Make sure you retain the original line breaks as well as features such as spacing, punctuation, capitalization, and indentation. Do not use quotation marks for block quotations. In "Transcendental Etude," Adrienne Rich skillfully develops an analogy between practicing music and practicing life:
10. If you cut out a line or more of poetry in a block quote, represent this "missing chunk" with a line of ellipses. 11. Cite line numbers whenever possible.
Blake scholars have often questioned, as does Urizen in "Jerusalem: The Emanation of the Giant Albion," "O Dkofield, why art thou / cruel?" (68:2-3) 12. When reproducing dialogue in drama, set quotations off from the text. Begin each character's speach with the character's name at left margin in capitals, followed by a period and the quotation and indent all subsequent lines about a quarter inch. Moliere's depiction of Orgon as an utter fool is balanced by his Cleante's as a crafty woman:
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