189.
“Ascertainment.”
Eighteenth-century attempts to codify the English language and to direct its course fall,
we may repeat, under three main heads: (1) to reduce the language to rule and set up a
standard of correct usage; (2) to refine it—that is, to remove supposed defects and
introduce certain improvements; and (3) to fix it permanently in the desired form.
The appeal to authority, 1650-1800 241
As pointed out in the preceding section, one of the chief defects of English that people
became acutely conscious of in the latter part of the seventeenth century was the absence
of a standard, the fact that the language had not been reduced to a rule so that one could
express oneself at least with the assurance of doing so correctly. Dryden sums up this
attitude in words: “we have yet no prosodia, not so much as a tolerable dictionary, or a
grammar, so that our language is in a manner barbarous.”
3
That is, the language did not
possess the character of an orderly and well-regulated society. One must write it
according to one’s individual judgment and therefore without the confidence that one
might feel if there were rules on which to lean and a vocabulary sanctioned by some
recognized authority. It was a conviction of long standing with him. In his dedication of
Troilus and Cressida
to the earl of Sunderland (1679) he says: “how barbarously we yet
write and speak, your lordship knows, and I am sufficiently sensible in my own English.
For I am often put to a stand, in considering whether what I write be the idiom of the
tongue, or false grammar.” And he adds: “I am desirous, if it were possible, that we might
all write with the same certainty of words, and purity of phrase, to which the Italians first
arrived, and after them the French; at least that we might advance so far, as our tongue is
capable of such a standard.” The ideal was expressed many times in the earlier part of the
eighteenth century, perhaps nowhere more accurately than in the words “we write by
guess, more than any stated rule, and form every man his diction, either according to his
humour and caprice, or in pursuance of a blind and servile imitation.”
4
In the eighteenth century the need for standardization and regulation was summed up
in the word
ascertainment
. The force of this word then was some-what different from that
which it has today. To
ascertain
was not so much to
3
Discourse concerning Satire
(1693).
4
Thomas Stackhouse,
Reflections on the Nature and Property ofLanguage in General, on the
Advantages, Defects, andManner oflmproving the English Tongue in Particular
(1731), p. 187.
A history of the english language 242
learn by inquiry as to settle a matter, to render it certain and free from doubt. Dr. Johnson
defined
ascertainment
as “a settled rule; an established standard”; and it was in this sense
that Swift used the verb in his
Proposal for Correcting, Improving, and Ascertaining the
English Tongue
.
5
When reduced to its simplest form the need was for a dictionary that
should record the proper use of words and a grammar that should settle authoritatively the
correct usages in matters of construction. How it was proposed to attain these ends we
shall see shortly.
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