234. In the impersonal uses the infinitive appears to stand as subject to the verb
ἀργαλέον ἐστὶ θέσθαι
= making is hard
οὐ μὲν γάρ τι κακὸν βασιλευέμεν
to be a king is not a bad thing
This construction however is not consistent with the original character of the infinitive. It is plain that ἔστιν εὕδειν can never have meant "sleeping is," but "there is (room etc.) for sleeping" and so ἀργαλέον ἐστὶ θέσθαι is originally, and in Homer, it (the case, state of things, etc.) is hard in view of making. It is only in later Greek that we have the form ἀργαλέον ἐστὶ τὸ θέσθαι, in which θέσθαι is an indeclinable neuter noun.
The process by which the infinitive, from being a mere word of limitation, comes to be in sense the subject or object of the principal clause, can be traced in sentences of various forms.
- With a personal subject.
Il. 5.750 τῆς ἐπιτέτραπται μέγας οὐρανὸς Οὔλυμπός
τε ἠμὲν ἀνακλῖναι πυκινὸν νέφος ἠδʼ ἐπιθεῖναιthe meaning "to them is entrusted the opening and shutting of the thick cloud of heaven," is expressed by saying "to them heaven is entrusted for opening and shutting the cloud."
Il. 1.107 αἰεί τοι τὰ κάκʼ ἐστὶ φίλα φρεσὶ μαντεύεσθαι
Il. 4.345 ἔνθα φίλʼ ὀπταλέα κρέα ἔδμεναι
Meaning you love to prophesy evils (to eat roast flesh, etc.).
- The impersonal form (ἀργαλέον ἐστί) only differs from the other in the vagueness of the subject, which makes it easier for the infinitive to become the subject in sense, while it is still grammatically a wοrd limiting the vague unexpressed subject.
The use of a neuter pronoun as subject
τό γε καλὸν ἀκουέμεν
the thing is gοοd, to listenmay be regarded as a link between the personal and impersonal forms of expression; cp. § 161, footnote, also § 258.
- Similarly an infinitive following the object of a verb may become the logical object.
Il. 4.247 ἦ μένετε Τρῶας σχεδὸν ἐλθέμεν
dο you wait for the Trojans for their cοming on?
i. e. for the coming on of the TrojansIl. 14.342 Ἥρη, μήτε θεῶν τό γε δείδιθι μήτε τινʼ ἀνδρῶν ὄψεσθαι
do not fear any οf gods οr of men for their being about to seei. e. that any one will see: cp. Od. 22.39, 40.
Α further development of this use leads, as we shall see, to the accusative with the infinitive.
- Again, the infinitive sometimes takes the place of a vague unexpressed object. Thus οἶδε νοῆσαι means knows (enough) to perceive; the full construction being such as we have in Il. 2.213
ὅς ῥʼ ἔπεα φρεσὶν ᾗσιν ἄκοσμά τε πολλά τε ᾖδει . . ἐριζέμεναι
who knew (had a store of) words wherewith to wrangleSo too δίδωμι with an infinitive is originally construed as
Od. 8.44 τῷ γάρ ῥα θεὸς πέρι δῶκεν ἀοιδὴν τέρπειν
Il. 11.20 τόν ποτέ οἱ Κινύρης δῶκε ξεινήϊον εἶναι
thence it comes to mean "to give (such a state of things) that some event shall happen," i. e. to grant the happening; as δὸς τίσασθαι grant that l may punish. In such a passage as Il. 3.322
τὸν δὸς ἀποφθίμενον δῦναι κτλ.
we may take τόν with δός or as an accusative with the infinitive δῦναι.
A neuter pronoun, too, may serve as a vague object, explained by an infinitive.
Il. 5.665-6 τὸ μὲν οὔ τις ἐπεφράσατʼ . . . ἐξερύσαι
Cp. Od. 21.278 καὶ τοῦτο ἔπος κατὰ μοῖραν ἔειπε, νῦν μὲν παῦσαι τόξον κτλ.
- The infinitive may also be equivalent in sense to the genitive depending on a noun.
Il. 7.409 οὐ γάρ τις φειδὼ νεκύων κατατεθνηώτων
γίγνετʼ ἐπεί κε θάνωσι πυρὸς μειλισσέμεν ὥκαi.e. there is no grudging about the appeasing of the dead. Hence is developed an idiomatic use of the genitive parallel to that of the Accusatiνus de quο; see Shilleto on Thuc. 1.61.1.