Originally posted by drstrange169
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You claim that Lechmere could have heard those footsteps coming up Buck's row for quite some time; but it doesn't parse with the construction of the sentences according to any newspaper account of lechmere's testimony that you wish to go over:
'He walked into the middle of the road, and saw that it was the figure of a woman. He then heard the footsteps of a man going up Buck's-row, about forty yards away, in the direction that he himself had come from.'
What happened first, he started out walking into the middle of the street, or he heard the footsteps?
If the latter, the coordinating conjunction 'then' was particularly ill chosen and misleading, nor would it be the manner in which the event would be described. It clearly pronounces a temporal sequence between to two different actions, which is its function.
Are you going to now argue about the meaning of the article 'the' in the 2nd sentence?



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