Anacoluthon is a term employed both in Grammar and Rhetoric, to denote the absence of strict logical sequence in the grammatical construction. Good writers sometimes sacrifice the logical sequence to emphasis, clearness, or graceful arrangement. An example is Coleridge's 'His young and open soul—dissimulation is foreign to its habits.' In colloquial speech, nothing is more common than examples of anacoluthon.
Anacoluthon
Chambers's Encyclopaedia, Volume 1: A to Beaufort, p. 244
Source scan(s): p. 0263