290
Adverbial Clauses
b ehaved like such a saint? (H. JAMES) Here, too, it is the lexical meanings of the words which make the relation clear. Of course a
when-clause
of this kind can only come after its head clause.
There are two more points to be mentioned in connection with temporal clauses, and they both bear on the temporal clause losing its subordinate character and tending to become independent of the clause with which it is connected.
One of these is the type of sentence which consists of a clause narrating some situation and followed by a
when-clause telling of an event which burst into the situation and which is the central point of the whole sentence. Such a
when-clause always comes after the main clause and this may be considered its grammatical peculiarity. A clear example of this type may be seen in the following sentence:
Judith had just gone into her room and closed the door when she heard a man's voice in the parlour, and in a few minutes she heard the closing of Eve's bedroom door. (E. CALDWELL) It is quite clear here that the
when-clause
does not indicate the time when the action of the first clause took place but contains the statement which is the centre of the whole composite sentence. It is also evident that a
when-clause
of this kind must necessarily come after the head clause within the composite sentence. Compare also the following passages:
It was the middle of the August afternoon when Harry Emory got back to his office at the canning factory after lunch and he felt drowsy and sluggish and downright lazy in the summer heat. (E. CALDWELL) Once more, we see from the lexical meanings of the words that the
when-clause
does not indicate the time when the action of the other clause took place. It might indeed be argued that it is the other way round: the first clause indicates the time when the action of the
when-clause took place. This way of constructing the sentence seems to be designed to lay the main
stress on the time indication, that is, to mark it out as the rheme of the whole sentence.
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