Mosiah 29:6 Textual Variants

Royal Skousen
now I declare unto you that he to whom [that >jg NULL 1| ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRST] the kingdom doth rightly belong hath declined and will not take upon him the kingdom

In Mosiah 29:6, the printer’s manuscript reads “he to whom that the kingdom doth rightly belong”. Hyrum Smith, the scribe here, may have accidentally added an extra that as he copied the text from 𝓞 to 𝓟. The 1830 typesetter undoubtedly thought that this reading in 𝓟 represented a simple error, so he omitted the extra that, giving the form that would be correct in standard English: “he to whom the kingdom doth rightly belong”.

This unusual usage in 𝓟 is, however, supported by the nearby example of whosoever that. In this other instance, the scribe in 𝓟 was the unknown scribe 2:

As discussed under Mosiah 26:22, there is evidence for the occurrence of whoso that in late Middle English. Similarly, there is evidence for who that and whom that in late Middle English. The online Oxford English Dictionary provides, for instance, the following examples (including two with the specific form to whom that):

Some of these examples of who(m) that are generic in reference (that is, they have the meaning ‘who(m)soever’), such as the Wycliffe example (and perhaps the Chaucer one). But the rest of these examples are specific in reference. We can therefore find evidence in the history of English for the kind of usage found in the earliest reading to whom that in Mosiah 29:6. (I am grateful to Don Chapman for help in interpreting these citations.)

All the examples with specific reference appear in texts written within about a century of Early Modern English. Nonetheless, this usage may have extended itself up into Early Modern English, perhaps dialectally. The use of that after subordinate words was very frequent in Early Modern English, and this usage seems characteristic of that time period. In the original Book of Mormon text, we apparently have two examples of that following a wh-word (whosoever that in Mosiah 26:22 and to whom that in Mosiah 29:6). To be sure, there are many more instances in the original text of that following a subordinate conjunction (such as after that, because that, before that, since that, for that, and than that). For a complete list of examples of this more general type, see under subordinate conjunctions in volume 3.

Summary: Restore the archaic use of that after to whom in Mosiah 29:6 (“he to whom that the kingdom doth rightly belong”).

Analysis of Textual Variants of the Book of Mormon, Part. 3

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