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the indicative
by
richibi
“
Grammar
“
Gentile da Fabriano
____________
since I’d only recently
vaunted both
the
infinitive and the imperative moods
of
verbs
in this venue, you might’ve
expected that
the
indicative would
soon follow
and here it is,
the indicative
, the
mood
of narratives, storytelling, the
default
mode, essentially, where most of our
communication takes place, be it
oral or written
famous first lines of novels will attest
to that, lines you’ve probably heard
before,
however
only incidentally,
if
not
actually read
It was the best of times, it was the worst of times,
from
Charles
Dickens’
“
A Tale of Two Cities
“
and the rest is so good, I can’t, in all
consciousness, exclude it
it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was
the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity, it was the
season of light, it was the season of darkness, it was the
spring of hope, it was the winter of despair.
or
Last night I dreamt I went to Manderley again.
from Daphne du Maurier’s eerily Gothic
“
Rebecca
“,
heiress to not only Charlotte
Brontë’s
“
Jane
Eyre
“,
but
also
to her
sister Emily’s, to my mind,
much more
accomplished work,
“
Wuthering
“,
and
indeed
wonderful,
“
Heights
“,
whereupon
I’ll
refrain from continuing to follow the
sentences, however compelling, for
lack of space and time
but
I had a farm in Africa, at the foot of the Ngong Hills.
from
“
Out of Africa
“,
Karen Blixen’s
unforgettable novel, however brilliantly
translated to film, must take its place
here among towering introductory
sallies
Longtemps, je me suis couché de bonne heure.
Proust’s answer to Homer, his “
À la
recherche du temps perdu
“, his
“
Remembrance of Things Past
“
For a long time, I’d go to bed early.
which, as I read on, no less than
changed
my life
but that’s another story, however
totally engrossing
everywhere above, let me point out,
the mood has been indicative,
to a
very
verb,
so
unobtrusive
you
probably
didn’t
even
notice
in music, a counterpart for the
indicative would be
the allegro,
the baseline, not too
fast,
not
too
slow, the tempo
listeners
would
most easily
respond to
but more about that
only
later
, after
a
traipse through
the speculative
conditional,
then
the aspirational
subjunctive
meanwhile,
check this out
,
“
The
Heart of the Matter
“,
the
Eagles, a
ballad,
mostly indicatives
, but with
here and there an infinitive, and a
peppering of conditionals, however
might these be signal
, to utterly
break
your heart
listen
R ! chard
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Published:
May 29, 2019
Filed Under:
films to ponder
,
grammar
,
in search of beauty
,
in search of God/dess
,
in search of truth
,
literature to ponder
,
Marcel Proust
,
music to ponder
,
paintings to ponder
,
parsing art
,
up my idiosyncrasies
,
walking in beauty
Tags:
"A Tale of Two Cities" - Charles Dickens
:
"À la recherche du temps perdu" / Remembrance of Things Past" - Marcel Proust
:
"David Copperfield" - Charles Dickens
:
"Grammar" - Gentile da Fabriano
:
"Jane Eyre" - Charlotte Brontë
:
"Out of Africa" - Karen Blixen
:
"Rebecca" - Daphne du Maurier
:
"Wuthering Heights" - Emily Brontë
:
bare infinitives
:
Homer
:
the conditional
:
the imperative
:
the indicative
:
the infinitive
:
the subjunctive
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