The grammar of Renaissance literature
From Gert Ronberg’s A Way With Words: The Language of English Renaissance Literature:
The Renaissance verb was in its syntactic behaviour often different from ours, which may cause some bewilderment to readers not accustomed to this. As an introductory illustrative example we make take the ‘verbal noun’ or the ‘gerund’ ... Because of its noun-like behaviour, the verbal noun can be preceded by the definite article: if it is, it cannot take an object but must be followed by an of-phrase instead; if it is not, it can take an object but not an of-phrase; compare the timing of his remarks was unfortunate with timing your remarks well is very important. However, this rigid rule was not a grammatical rule at all during the Renaissance, as we can see from the following two examples:
Next entry: Horses of a Different Color
Previous entry: On Language 8/3: Using cartoons to teach ESL
