Alma 36:4 Textual Variants

Royal Skousen
and I would not that ye think that I know of myself

Lyle Fletcher (personal communication, 21 April 2004) suggests that the text here should read “and I would not that ye think that I know these things of myself ”. This part of the text is extant in 𝓞, so if these things was lost, it must have happened as Joseph Smith dictated the text to Oliver Cowdery. Usage elsewhere in the text supports the proposed inclusion of these things in the expression “to know of oneself ”:

There are also a few instances where instead of these things in this construction we have a that- clause acting as the direct object:

Yet in support of the text in Alma 36:4, there are two examples where the direct object is left unexpressed:

Given these last two examples, the critical text will accept the reading in Alma 36:4 where no direct object is expressed: “and I would not that ye think that I know of myself”.

Summary: Accept in Alma 36:4 the reading of all the textual sources, including 𝓞: “and I would not that ye think that I know of myself ”; usage elsewhere in the text shows that no direct object need be expressed in the construction “to know of oneself ”.

Analysis of Textual Variants of the Book of Mormon, Part. 4

References