Subjunctive by attraction

In Latin grammar, the subjunctive by attraction (or attracted subjunctive) refers to uses of the subjunctive mood as the result of "attraction" or "assimilation" to another subjunctive or equivalent imperative. The name also applies to subjunctives used when a subordinate clause is "so closely connected with an infinitive as to form an integral part of" it.[1]

Examples of subjunctive by attraction

The following sentences show a verb in a subordinate clause which is made subjunctive because the main verb is subjunctive:[2]

'who would love a man that he fears?'
'that which you buy, you could rightly call your own'
'but I am afraid that while I want to lessen the work, I may increase it'
'whatever you have done to another, you should expect from a third person'
'thus it used to happen that whenever he went out in public, he made everyone's eyes turn to him'

The following examples each show a verb in a subordinate clause which becomes subjunctive because the verb on which it depends is an infinitive:[8]

'nor can goodness exist if it is not sought for its own sake'[9]
'it is a sign of a lazy nature to be content with things which have been discovered by other people'

The relative clause in the second example could also be seen as generic ('the sort of things which...').[11]

However, the verb in a relative clause dependent on a subjunctive does not always become subjunctive itself. In the following examples, the underlined verbs are indicative:[12]

'the thing which you see has perished, you should consider lost for ever'
'it is brought about by an orator that those who hear are affected as he wishes'
'he sent cavalrymen to pursue those who had fled'

According to Gildersleeve & Lodge (1895), the subjunctive by attraction has something in common with the subjunctive which is obligatory in dependent clauses in indirect speech, such as the following:[16]

'Cato used to say that he was surprised that one soothsayer didn't laugh whenever he saw another'
'the Greeks rightly teach that things which can't be accomplished shouldn't be attempted'

Accounting for the subjunctive by attraction

One authority, Hale, explains the usage as follows:[19]

In complex sentences made up of a main sentence with subjunctive verb and one or more subordinate sentences, the modal feeling in the speaker's mind which expresses itself in the main sentence is, in the nature of things, very likely to continue in the speaker's mind in the subordinated sentence or sentences, either quite unchanged or but slightly shaded. If, for example, I say in Latin, 'Let him send whom he will,' mittat quem velit, the mood in velit is not a case of 'attraction' or 'assimilation' at all. Velit is as much a jussive as mittat is. The meaning is, 'Let him choose his man and send that man.' Again, the frequent recurrence of such examples gives rise to the occasional use of a dependent subjunctive with only a formal likeness to the main subjunctive, and no true modal feeling.

Bennett (1910) contests this reasoning:[20]

I am unable to admit the soundness of this reasoning. To my mind Hale seems to do great violence to the interpretation of the passage above cited. ... I do not believe it legitimate to read into velit the jussive force which Hale attributes to it. Much less can I admit the justice of Frank's statement that Hale's interpretation of the mood of velit is beyond dispute. ... I am, therefore, inclined to believe that in the phenomenon under consideration we are to recognize a purely formal and mechanical attraction. At least I cannot recognize the validity of the evidence offered in support of the origin advocated by Hale and Frank. ... So far as I can see, only the theory of a mechanical attraction will account for the presence of the subjunctive in ... clauses [where the subjunctive occurs in preference to the future indicative].

Conditions under which attraction takes place

Frank's study (1904) shows:[21]

  1. The attracted clause is preferably in the same time-sphere as the clause on which it depends.
  2. Its favorite position is between the introductory conjunction (when such exists) and the verb of the governing clause.
  3. Its verb rarely expresses precise modal and temporal force.
  4. The clause as a whole is rather of the generalizing than of the determinative type.
  5. It is more frequently a temporal than a relative clause.
  6. It is connected with the predicate more frequently than with the subject or object of the sentence.
  7. As a rule, it is an essential clause, and grammatically depends very closely upon the main body of the clause to which it is attracted.

These favoring conditions are met in only about 37% of all the clauses dependent upon subjunctives. When these favoring conditions do not exist, the dependent clause stands in the indicative, unless the clause would regularly stand in the subjunctive for some other reason (purpose, result, etc.).

References

  1. Bennett, Charles Edwin (1910-01-01). Syntax of Early Latin ... Allyn & Bacon.
  2. Gildersleeve & Lodge (1895), pp. 403, 364; Harkness (1881), pp. 244-5.
  3. Cicero, Lael. 15.53
  4. Martial, 2.20.2
  5. Cicero, Leg. 1.12
  6. Syrus, quoted in Seneca, Ep. 94.43
  7. Nepos, Alc. 3.5
  8. Gildersleeve & Lodge (1895), p. 402; Harkness (1881), pp. 245.
  9. Cicero, Off. 3.118
  10. Quintilian, 10.2.4
  11. Woodcock (1959), p. 114.
  12. Gildersleeve & Lodge (1895), p. 403.
  13. Catullus, 8.2
  14. Cicero, Br. 49.185
  15. Caesar, B.G. 5.11.9
  16. Gildersleeve & Lodge (1895), p. 314.
  17. Cicero, Div. 2.24.51
  18. Quintilian, 4.5.17
  19. Hale, Amer. Journ. Phil. viii, p. 54; quoted in Bennett (1910), p. 306.
  20. Bennett (1910), p. 306
  21. Frank (1904)

Further reading

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