garden pathing relative clause

Benjamin Barrett gogaku at IX.NETCOM.COM
Tue Mar 4 18:50:50 UTC 2008


On Mar 4, 2008, at 10:26 AM, Laurence Horn wrote:

> Is it just me, or does the last sentence in this excerpt from an
> article
> (http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/03/nyregion/03bishop.html?_r=1&scp=1&sq=Paul+Moore&st=nyt&oref=slogin
> )
> about the late activist Episcopalian bishop Paul Moore yield a garden
> path?
>
> =================
> Paul Moore Jr., the late, revered Episcopal bishop who became a
> national figure of liberal Christian activism from the cathedral's
> pulpit in the 1970s and '80s, had lived a secret gay life...
> In an elegiac article in the March 3 issue of The New Yorker magazine
> titled "The Bishop's Daughter," the poet Honor Moore describes her
> father, Bishop Moore, who died in 2003 at 83, as alternately
> passionate and elusive, capable of deep "religious emotion," yet just
> beyond her emotional reach. It was only after he died, she said, that
> she fully realized that he had had gay relationships during his two
> marriages, the first of which produced his nine children.
> ==================
>
> For me, the strong suggestion on the first pass is that it was the
> first of his gay relationships that produces his nine children, which
> then (not inexplicably) forces a reprocessing.  Others I've checked
> with split on whether or not they get the garden path.
>
>
I got the garden path reading as well. In fact, I had to carefully
evaluate the word "produced" to weigh whether the writer was more
likely saying it was the opposite-sex relationship or the same-sex one
that resulted in children as both are possible. BB

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