Narrow View of Sequence of Tenses 329
a rgued that the past tense in the subordinate clause is used owing to the form's own meaning: the action of the subordinate clause is simultaneous with that of the head clause and is accordingly expressed by the same tense form.
A similar reasoning applies to our next example:
The lines on his face reminded her that he had known long and atrocious sufferings from wounds in the war. (R. WEST) It may be argued either that the past perfect in the subordinate clause is due
to the principle of sequence, or that it is used in its own right.
The choice between the two alternatives is entirely dependent on a scholar's viewpoint and it is not possible to prove that either of the two is the only correct one. If we prefer the former view, the notion of sequence of tenses will be taken in a wider sense, so as to include those types of sentences which admit of a different explanation. If we adhere to the second, the notion of sequence will be narrower, and will include only the sentences which do not admit of any other explanation. According as the one or the other view is endorsed, both the definition and the treatment of the sequence of tenses will have to be adjusted to it.
1
Let us consider one more example before we proceed to final conclusions on sequence of tenses. Let us compare the two sentences:
He sits near the window so that he may have a wider view of the landscape, and
He sat near the window, so that he might have a wider view of the landscape. The question is, why is the verb
may, which is part of a compound modal predicate
in the subordinate clause, used in the past tense form
might in the second sentence? Is this use due to the sequence of tenses, i. e. does the tense of the predicate verb in the head clause
(sat) influence the tense in the subordinate clause, so that the present tense
may is inadmissible after it? Or is the use of the past tense
might in the subordinate clause to be explained by the meaning of the form
might? The answer seems to be this. As the action denoted by the predicate of the subordinate clause is not necessarily limited to the past tense (his wider view of the landscape might well last into the present), there would appear to be no need for using the past tense form on account of its own meaning. The conclusion seems therefore to follow, that the use of the form
might is indeed due to the influence of the predicate verb form in the head clause. However, that view may perhaps be disputed, namely if we think that the action of the subordinate clause is limited to the past.
Having to make up our mind in favour of either one or the other alternative, we will decide
to choose the narrower view, that is, to
1 The whole problem has been treated at some length by Prof. I. Ivanova (see И. П. Иванова,
Последовательность времен английского языка. Исследования по английской филологии, ЛГУ, 1958).
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Sequence of Tenses
d efine sequence of tenses as a use of a tense entirely and unequivocally due to the tense form of the predicate verb in the head clause.
Taken that way, the rule of sequence applies to a limited number of syntactic situations only. It will not do to assert that sequence of tenses is a general law applying to all kinds of subordinate clauses and then to class all cases where this does not hold good as exceptions. Sequence of tenses applies to certain types of subordinate clauses only, and these are, object clauses and adverbial clauses of purpose. We need not give examples here, as the sentences we have so far considered in this chapter all belong either to the one or to the other variety. And even with object clauses sequence of tenses is not always found to be operating. Sometimes an object clause has its predicate verb in the present tense, though the predicate verb of the head clause is in one of the past tenses. This may be due either to the contents
of the subordinate clause, or to the stylistic colouring of the sentence. The contents of the subordinate clause may tell on the tense of its predicate verb if the statement contained in it is to be presented as something objectively true, rather than as somebody's utterance. This may be seen, for example, in the following passage, where the speaker, reporting another speaker's words, does not mean merely to report them as the other man's utterance but presents them as intrinsically true, no matter who the speaker may have been. Sentences like the following, with no sequence of tenses after a main clause with its predicate
verb in one of the past tenses, are by no means rare:
She had made me understand that not only her mother and brother, but you also, are well acquainted with the story of my acquaintance with Mrs Hurtle. (TROLLOPE) It is but natural that as the degree of objective value of somebody else's words may vary, so may the use of either the one or the other tense in indirect speech.
As for stylistic peculiarities connected with the use of tenses in an object clause, it may be noted that absence of sequence, that is, the use of a present tense in a subordinate clause with a head clause having its
predicate verb in a past tense, seems to characterise informal speech.
The general conclusion on sequence of tenses would then appear to be this, that it is the rule in Modern English, but not a rule that holds good in all cases equally. Under certain conditions, partly semantic and partly stylistic, a use of tenses is also possible which runs counter to the rule of sequence.