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the implied subject of "looking down into a valley"

English Language & Usage Asked on May 28, 2021

Human beings like a prospect from which they can survey a landscape, and at the same time they enjoy a sense of refuge. A cave on the side of a mountain, a child’s tree house, and the king’s castle are situations with appeal. Protection afforded by an overhang of some sort (trees, cliff face, roof) is preferred, along with a sense of being “safe” from observation or attack from behind. The most attractive landscapes tend to combine some of these elements, in pictures as much as in reality. In fact, most landscape representation in the history of painting places the implied viewer at some desirable vantage point — a cliff edge, perhaps, typically looking down into a valley.

Q. I was wondering what would be looking down into a valley. Would the implied subject of “looking down ~” be the “implied viewer” or the “vantage point”, which rephrased as a cliff edge in this sentence?

2 Answers

According to www.merrian-webster.com/dictionary/look we see within the section intransitive verb, (definition 3) "look" can be something that an inanimate object can do. With that I say that the cliff is looking down...

Answered by AdvenJack on May 28, 2021

In the sentence as it stands a cliff edge, perhaps, typically looking down into a valley is in apposition to "some desirable vantage point". And thus, expanded:

In fact, most landscape representation in the history of painting places the implied viewer at some desirable vantage point , for example, a cliff edge, perhaps, that typically is looking down into a valley.

at some desirable vantage point, for example, a cliff edge, perhaps, typically looking down into a valley. is an adjectival phrase modifying "viewer".

Answered by Greybeard on May 28, 2021

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