FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   >>  
ulture, to renounce the _x_ at the end of _beaux_ and _bureaux_ and to spell these plurals 'beaus' and 'bureaus'. And yet no one doubts that 'beau' and 'bureau' have both won the right to be regarded as having attained an honourable standing in our language. VIII 'De Quincey once said that authors are a dangerous class for any language'--so Professor Krapp has reminded us in his book on _Modern English_, and he has explained that De Quincey meant 'that the literary habit of mind is likely to prove dangerous for a language ... because it so often leads a speaker or writer to distrust natural and unconscious habit, even when it is right, and to put in its stead some conscious theory of literary propriety. Such a tendency, however, is directly opposed to the true feeling for idiomatic English. It destroys the sense of security, the assurance of perfect congruity between thought and expression, which the unliterary and unacademic speaker and writer often has, and which, with both literary and unliterary, is the basis for all expressive use of language'. And since I have borrowed the quotation from Professor Krapp I shall bring this rambling paper to an end by borrowing another, from the _Toxophilus_ of Roger Ascham (1545). 'He that will wryte well in any tongue must folowe this council of Aristotle, to speake as the common people do, to think as wise men do. Many English writers have not done so, but using straunge wordes as latin, french, and Italian, do make all things darke and harde. Once I communed with a man whiche reasoned the englyshe tongue to be enryched and encreased thereby, sayinge--Who wyll not prayse that feaste where a man shall drinke at a diner bothe wyne, ale and beere? Truly, quod I they all be good, every one taken by hym selfe alone, but if you put Malmesye and sacke, read wine and whyte, ale and beere, and al in one pot, you shall make a drynke neyther easie to be knowen nor yet holsom for the body.' BRANDER MATTHEWS. NOTES The word #laches#, which is not noticed in the above paper, is one of a list of words sent to us by a correspondent who suggests that it is the business of our society to direct the public as to their pronunciation. Like other examples given by Mr. Matthews, _laches_ seems to be at present in an uncertain condition; and as it is used only by lawyers they will be able to decide its future. What seems clear about it is that the two contending pronunciat
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   >>  



Top keywords:
language
 

English

 
literary
 

Professor

 
unliterary
 
laches
 
speaker
 

writer

 

dangerous

 

tongue


Quincey

 

Italian

 

french

 

things

 

wordes

 

straunge

 

communed

 

englyshe

 

prayse

 

enryched


encreased

 

sayinge

 

reasoned

 

whiche

 
drinke
 
feaste
 

examples

 

Matthews

 

present

 

direct


society

 
public
 
pronunciation
 

uncertain

 

condition

 

contending

 

pronunciat

 

future

 

lawyers

 
decide

business
 
suggests
 

neyther

 

drynke

 
knowen
 

Malmesye

 

holsom

 

correspondent

 

noticed

 
BRANDER