I'm reading my first ever novel in English (French is my mother tongue): Tales of Horror by H.P Lovecraft.
Surprisingly, reading this book is fine for me, however there's a sentence construction I don't fully understand. This is when Lovecraft is starting a sentence with For. He's using this style so often that I arrived at a point I really want to understand this way of writing.
Random examples:
From The Shunned House:
For on my ears rang the reverberations of that shocking scream, while my nostrils revolted at the stench which filled the place.
From Herbert West - Reanimator:
For that visitor was neither Italien nor policeman.
Could you please explain to me the purpose of adding For at the beginning of sentences like in these examples?
Does this way of constructing a sentence has a particular name?
I'm a bit confused by this style so I want to know more about it.
Thanks for your answers
For
at the beginning of a new paragraph. But still, it seems it's indeed about the preceding sentence even though it's a new paragraph. From what I quickly saw in his book, whenFor
is used at the beginning of a sentence it could be replaced byBut
. And when it's used after a comma, it could be replaced bybecause
.