But, if no such difference exists, or none that is worthy of a critic's notice; then the error is mine, and it is vain to distinguish between the restrictive and the Resumptive sense of relative pronouns.
"The Grammar of English Grammars"
Goold Brown
According to my notion, these two sentences clearly convey two very different meanings; the relative, in the former, being restrictive, but, in the latter, Resumptive of the sense of the antecedent.
"The Grammar of English Grammars"
Goold Brown
Not so, when the sense is Resumptive: as, "The additions, which are very considerable, are chiefly such as are calculated to obviate objections."
"The Grammar of English Grammars"
Goold Brown