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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..d7b82bc --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,4 @@ +*.txt text eol=lf +*.htm text eol=lf +*.html text eol=lf +*.md text eol=lf diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6312041 --- /dev/null +++ b/LICENSE.txt @@ -0,0 +1,11 @@ +This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements, +metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be +in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES. + +Procedures for determining public domain status are described in +the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org. + +No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in +jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize +this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright +status under the laws that apply to them. diff --git a/README.md b/README.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..0d18e93 --- /dev/null +++ b/README.md @@ -0,0 +1,2 @@ +Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for +eBook #69810 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/69810) diff --git a/old/69810-0.txt b/old/69810-0.txt deleted file mode 100644 index 1d3dc23..0000000 --- a/old/69810-0.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,2248 +0,0 @@ -The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Pronunciation of Greek, by John -Stuart Blackie - -This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and -most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions -whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms -of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at -www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you -will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before -using this eBook. - -Title: The Pronunciation of Greek - -Author: John Stuart Blackie - -Release Date: January 16, 2023 [eBook #69810] - -Language: English - -Produced by: deaurider and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at - https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images - generously made available by The Internet Archive) - -*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PRONUNCIATION OF -GREEK *** - - - - - -Transcriber’s Notes: - - Underscores “_” before and after a word or phrase indicate _italics_ - in the original text. - Equal signs “=” before and after a word or phrase indicate =bold= - in the original text. - Small capitals have been converted to SOLID capitals. - Old or antiquated spellings have been preserved. - Typographical and punctuation errors have been silently corrected. - - - - - THE - PRONUNCIATION OF GREEK; - - ACCENT AND QUANTITY. - - A PHILOLOGICAL INQUIRY. - - BY - JOHN STUART BLACKIE, - - PROFESSOR OF GREEK IN - THE UNIVERSITY OF EDINBURGH. - - EDINBURGH: SUTHERLAND AND KNOX. - LONDON: SIMPKIN, MARSHALL, AND CO. - MDCCCLII. - - EDINBURGH: T. CONSTABLE, - PRINTER TO HER MAJESTY. - - “_Sit omnibus rebus suum senium, sua juventus; et - ut verba verbis, sic etiam sonis sonos succedere - permittamus._”—BISHOP GARDINER. - - “_This new pronunciation hath since prevailed, - whereby we Englishmen speak Greek, and are able - to understand one another, which nobody else - can._”—THOMAS FULLER. - - “_Maxime cupio ut in omnibus Academiis nostris - hodierna Græcorum pronuntiatio recipiatur._” - —BOISSONADE. - - “_Neque dubitamus quin_ ERASMUS, _si in tantam - Græcæ pronuntiationis discrepantiam incidisset, - vulgarem usum intactum et salvum reliquisset_.” - —SEYFFARTH. - - “_Ich gebe der neugriechischen Aus-sprache im - Ganzen bei weitem den Vorzug._”—THIERSCH. - - “_Neque enim de cœlo dilapsa ad nos pervenit Græcorum - lingua, sed e patria sua una cum omnibus quæ habemus - subsidiis, suo vestita cultu prodiit, quem tollere - aut immutare velle esset imperium in linguam liberam - exercere._”—WETSTEN. - - “_Die sogenannte Erasmische Aus-sprache, wie es - in Deutschland erscheint, ist völlig grundlos, ein - Gebilde man weiss nicht von wannen es kam, ein - Gemische welches jeder sich zustutzt nach eigner - Lust und Willkühr._”—LISCOV. - - - - -THE PRONUNCIATION OF GREEK, &c. - - -It is purely as a practical man, and with a direct practical result in -view, that I venture to put forth a few words on the vexed question -of the PRONUNCIATION OF GREEK. He were a frigid pedant, indeed, who, -with the whole glorious literature of Hellas before him, and the rich -vein of Hellenic Archæology, scarcely yet opened in Scotland, should, -for the mere gratification of a subtle speculative restlessness, walk -direct into this region of philological thorns. So far as my personal -curiosity was concerned, Sir John Cheke, wrapt in his many folded -mantle of Ciceronian verboseness, and the Right Reverend Stephen -Gardiner’s prætorian edicts in favour of Greek sounds,[1] and the βή ϐή -of the old comedian’s Attic sheep, might have been allowed to sleep -undisturbed on the library shelves. I had settled the question long -ago in my own mind on broad grounds of common sense, rather than on -any nice results that seemed obtainable from the investigations of the -learned; but the nature of the public duties now imposed on me does not -allow me to take my own course in such matters, merely because I think -it right. I must shew to the satisfaction of my fellow-teachers and of -my students, that I am not seeking after an ephemeral notoriety by the -public galvanisation of a dead crotchet; that any innovations which I -may propose are in reality, as so often happens in the political world -also, and in the ecclesiastical, a mere recurrence to the ancient -and established practice of centuries, and that whatever opinions I -may entertain on points confessedly open to debate, I entertain not -for myself alone, but in company with some of the ripest scholars -and profoundest philologists of modern times. I have reason also for -thinking with a recent writer, that the present time is peculiarly -favourable for the reconsideration of the question;[2] for, although -Sir John Cheke might have said with some show of truth in his day, -“_Græca jam lingua nemini patria est_,”[3] none but a prophetic -partisan of universal Russian domination in the Mediterranean will -now assert, that the living Greeks are not a nation and a people who -have a right to be heard on the question, how their own language is to -be pronounced. Taking the Greek language as it appears in the works -of the learned commentator Corais, in the poetry of the Soutzos and -Rangabe, in the history of Perrhæbus, so highly spoken of by Niebuhr, -and in the publications of the daily press at Athens; and taking -the new kingdom for no greater thing than the intrigues of meddling -diplomatists, its own wretched cabals, and the guns of Admiral Parker -will allow it to be; it is plain that to disregard the witness of -such a speaking fact, standing as it does upon the unbroken tradition -and catholic philological succession of eighteen centuries, would be, -much more manifestly now than in the days of the learned WETSTEN, to -“exercise a despotism over a free language,” such as no man has a right -to claim.[4] Besides, in Scotland we have already had our orthodox -hereditary routine in this matter disturbed by the invasion of English -teachers of the Greek language; an invasion, no doubt, which our strong -national feeling may look on with jealousy, but which we brought on -ourselves by the shameful condition of prostration in which we allowed -the philological classes in our higher schools and colleges to lie -for two centuries; and it was not to be expected that these English -teachers, being placed in a position which enabled them to give the -law within a certain influential circle, should sacrifice their own -traditional pronunciation of the Greek language, however arbitrary, to -ours, in favour of which, in some points, there was little but the mere -conservatism of an equally arbitrary usage to plead. Finding matters -in this condition, I feel it impossible for me to waive the discussion -of a matter already fermenting with all the elements of uncertainty. I -have therefore taken the trouble of working my way through Havercamp’s -two volumes, and comparing the arguments used in the famous old -Cantabrigian controversy with those advanced by a well-informed modern -member of the same learned corporation. I have taken the learned -Germans, too, as in duty bound, on such a question, into my counsels; -I have devoted not a little time and attention to the language and -literature of modern Greece; and above all, I have carefully examined -those places of the ancient rhetoricians and grammarians that touch -upon the various branches of the subject. With all these precautions, -if I shall not succeed in making converts to my views, I hope, at -least with reasonable men, to escape the imputation of rashness and -superficiality. - -[1] _Ego sonorum causam tueor ex edicto possessorio, et ut prætor, -interdixi de possessione._ - -[2] An Essay on the Pronunciation of the Greek Language. By G. T. -PENNINGTON, M.A., late Fellow of King’s College, Cambridge. London: -Murray. 1844. This is the work that I recommend to the English student -who wishes to understand the subject in detail, without wading through -the confounding mass of pertinent and impertinent matter that the -learned eloquence of more than three centuries has heaped up. - -[3] _Sylloge scriptorum qui de linguæ Græcæ vera et recta -pronuntiatione Commentarios reliquerunt; edidit_ HAVERCAMPUS. _Ludg. -Bat._, 1740. Vol. ii. p. 220 - -[4] JOH. RUDOLFI WETSTENII: _pro Græca et genuina linguæ Græcæ -pronuntiatione Orationes Apologeticæ_. Basil; 1686, p. 27. The whole -passage is quoted in the prefixed mottoes. - -The exact history of our present pronunciation of Greek, both in -England and Scotland, I have not learning enough curiously to trace; -but one thing seems to me plain, that all the great scholars in this -country, and on the continent generally, in the fifteenth, and the -early part of the sixteenth century, could have known nothing of our -present arbitrary method of pronouncing;[5] for they could pronounce -Greek no other way than as they received it from Chrysoloras, Gaza, -Lascaris, Musurus, and the other native Greeks who were their masters. -Erasmus was, if not absolutely the first,[6] certainly the first -scholar of extensive European influence and popularity who ventured to -disturb the tradition of the Byzantine elders in this matter; but his -famous dialogue, _De recta Latini Græcique sermonis pronuntiatione_, -did not appear till the year 1528, by which time so strong a -prescription had already run in favour of the received method, that it -seems strange how even his learning and wit should have prevailed to -overturn it. But there are periods in the history of the world when the -minds of men are naturally disposed to receive all sorts of novelties; -and the era of the Reformation was one of them. Erasmus, though a -conservative in religion, (as many persons are who are conservative -in nothing else,) pleased his free speculative whim with all sorts of -imaginations; and among other things fell—though, if what Wetsten -tells be true, in a very strange way[7]—on the notion of purging -the pronunciation of the classical languages of all those defects -which belonged to it, whether by degenerate tradition or perverse -provincialism, and erecting in its stead an ideal pronunciation, made -up of erudite conjecture and philosophical argumentation. Nothing was -more easy than to prove that in the course of two thousand years the -orthoepy of the language of the Greeks had declined considerably from -the perfection in which its musical fulness had rolled like a river of -gold from the mouth of Plato, or had been dashed like a thunderbolt -of Jove from the indignant lips of Demosthenes; yet more easy was it, -and admirable game for such a fine spirit as Erasmus, to evoke the -shades of Cicero and Quinctilian, and make mirth to them out of a -Latin oration delivered before the Emperor Maximilian, by a twittering -French courtier and a splay-mouthed Westphalian baron.[8] It is certain -also that there are in that dialogue many admirable observations on -the blundering practices of the schoolmasters, and even the learned -professors, his contemporaries, which very many of them in that day, -and the great majority even now have wanted either sense or courage to -attend to; observations which, I doubt not, will yet bear fruit in the -present age, if education is to be advanced in the only way possible, -viz., by those whose profession it is to teach others, learning in -the first place to teach themselves. But in one great point of his -rich and various discourse, the learned Dutchman was more witty than -wise, and achieved a success where he was altogether wrong, or only -half-right, that has been denied to him where he is altogether right. -While his admirable observations on accent and quantity, and many of -his precepts on the practical art of teaching languages, have been -totally lost sight of by the great mass of our classical teachers, his -strictures on the pronunciation of the Greek vowels and diphthongs have -been received more or less by pedagogic men in all parts of Europe; -or at least prevailed so far as to shake the faith of scholars in the -pronunciation of the native Greek, and lead them to invent a new and -arbitrary Hellenic utterance for each country, an altogether barbarous -conglomerate, made up of modern national peculiarities and scraps of -Erasmian philology. This is a sorry state of matters; but as European -scholarship then stood, innovators could look for no more satisfactory -result. Neither Erasmus nor the scholars who followed his “divisive -courses” in England and other countries, were in possession of -philological materials sufficiently comprehensive for settling so nice -a point. Much less could they use the materials in their hands with -that spirit of calm philosophic survey, and that touch of fine critical -sagacity which the ripe scholars of Germany now exhibit. It was one -thing to quarrel learnedly with the pronunciation of Chrysoloras, and -to chuckle with academic pride over the tautophonic tenuity of σὺ -δ’ εἶπέ μοι μὴ μῆκος, and other such ingeniously gathered scraps of -Atticism in the mouth of a modern Turkish serf; another, and a far more -serious thing, to draw out a complete table of elocutionary sounds, -such as they existed at any given period in Greek literature; say at -the successive epochs of Homer, Æschylus, Plato, Callimachus, Strabo, -Chrysostom. Bishop Gardiner, therefore, was right to press this point -hard against the Erasmians,—“_Quod vero difficillimum dicebam neque -statuis neque potes, ut tanquam ad punctum constituas sonorum modum. Ab -usu præsente manifeste recedis: sed an ad veterum sonorum formam omnino -accedas, nihil expeditum est._” Here, as in more serious matters, the -good Bishop saw that it was easier to destroy than to build up; and -therefore he interposed his interdict despotically in the Roman style, -_ne quid detrimenti respublica capiat_. But these maxims of old Roman -aristocracy do not apply to the democracy of letters. So the Bishop’s -philological thunderbolt started more heretics than it laid. The love -of liberty was now conjoined with the love of originality; to speak -Greek with Erasmus became now the sign of academic patriotism and the -watchword of philological progress. FORCE being the chief apparent -power on the one side, it was naturally felt by those against whom it -was exercised, that REASON was altogether on their side. The matter was -therefore practically settled on the side of persecuted innovation; -the subtlety of a few academic doctors triumphed proudly over the long -tradition of Byzantine centuries, and the living protest of millions of -men, with Greek blood in their veins and Greek words in their mouths; -and they who were once the few despised Nazarenes of the scholastic -world, are now a sort of philological Scribes and Pharisees, sitting in -the seat of Aristarchus, whose dictum it is dangerous to dispute. - -[5] See the opinions of SCALIGER, SALMASIUS, and some others, quoted by -WETSTEN. - -[6] WETSTEN refers to a work by ALDUS MANUTIUS _de potestate -literarum_, which I have not seen. - -[7] “_Audici M. Rutgerum Reschium professorem Linguæ Græcæ in collegio -Baslidiano apud Lovanienses, meum piæ memoriæ præceptorem, narrantem, -se habitasse in Liliensi pædagogeo una cum Erasmo, eo superius, se -inferius cubiculum obtinente. Henricum autum Glareanum Parisiis -Lovanium venisse, atque ab Erasmo in collegium vocatum fuisse ad -prandium: quo cum venisset, quid novi adferret interrogatum dixisse -(quod in itinere commentus erat, quod sciret Erasmum plus satis -rerum novarum studiosum ac mire credulum) quosdam in Græcia natos -Lutetiam venisse, viros ad miraculum doctos; qui longe aliam Græci -sermonis pronunciationem usurparent, quam quæ vulgo in hisce partibus -recepta esset: Eos nempe sonare pro_ Vita Beta, _pro_ II ita Eta, -_pro_ AI, ai, _pro_ OI, oi, _et sic in cæteris. Quo audito Erasmum -paulo post conscripsisse dialogum de recta Latini Græcique sermonis -pronunciatione, ut videretur hujus rei ipse incentor, et obtulisse -Petro Alostensi Typographo imprimendum: Qui cum forte aliis occupatus -renueret, aut certe se tam cito excudere quam volebat non posse -diceret, misisse libellum Basileam ad Frobenium, a quo max impressus in -lucem prodiit. Verum Erasmum cognita fraude, nunquam ea pronunciandi -ratione postea usum, nec amicis, quibuscum familiariter vivebat, ut eam -observarent, præcepisse. In ejus rei fidem exhibuit Rutgerus ipsius -Erasmi manu scriptam in gratiam Damiani a Gœs Hispani pronunciationis -formulam, in nullo diversam ab ea, qua passim docti et indocti in hac -lingua utuntur._” The voucher for the story is VOSSIUS, from whose -_Aristarchus_, lib. 1, c. 28, Wetsten quotes it. - -[8] Havercamp, vol. ii. p 174. - -Nevertheless, Erasmus, Wetsten distinctly asserts, (pp. 15, 115,) -did not himself adopt in his practice the perfect theory of Hellenic -vocalization which he sketched out. So much the less cause is there -for our having any hesitation in considering the whole question as now -open, and treating it exactly as if Professor John Cheke, and Professor -Thomas Smith of Cambridge University, and Adolphus Mekerchus, knight -and perpetual senator of Bruges, and the other Havercampian hoplites -had never existed. Let us inquire, therefore, in the first place, -whether any certain data exist on which such a matter can be settled -scientifically. We shall give only the grand outlines of the question, -referring the special student to the English work of PENNINGTON already -quoted, the German work of LISKOV, and the Latin of SEYFFARTH.[9] - -[9] _Ueber die Aus-sprache des Griechischen._ Leipzig, 1825. _De Sonis -literarum Græcarum_; _auctore_ GUSTAVO SEYFFARTHIO. Lipsiæ, 1824. - -Now, there are five ways by which the method of pronunciation used by -any gone generation of “articulate-speaking men” may be ascertained, -if not with a curious exactness in every point, at least with such -an amount of approximation as will be esteemed satisfactory by a -reasonable inquirer. FIRST, we have the imitation in articulate letters -of natural sounds and of the cries of animals. There is nothing more -certain in the philosophy of language than that whole classes of -words expressive of sound were formed on the principle of a direct -dramatic imitation of the sound signified. Thus the words DASH, -HASH, SMASH, in our most significant Saxon tongue, evidently express -an action producing sound, in which the strong vowel sound of A is -combined with a sharp sound to which the aspirated S was considered -the nearest approximation by the original framer of the word. So, -in the names expressive of flowing water, the liquids L and R are -observed to preponderate in all languages, these being the sounds -which are actually given forth by the natural objects so signified: -thus _river_, ῤέω, _strom_, _flumen_, _purl_, the Hebrew _nahar_ and -_nahal_, &c. And in the same manner, if the bird which we call CUCKOO -was called by the Latins _cuculus_, by the Greeks κόκκυξ, and by the -Germans _kukuk_, no person can doubt that the vowel sounds at least, in -these words, were intended to be a more or less exact echo of the cry -of the bird so designated. In arguing, however, from such words, care -must be taken not to press the argument too closely; for two things -are manifest—that the original framer of the words might have given, -and in all likelihood did give only a loose, and not a curiously exact -imitation of the sound or cry he meant to express; and then that in -the course of centuries the word may have deviated so far from its -original pronunciation, as to be no longer a very striking likeness -of the natural sound it is intended to imitate. These considerations -explain the fact how the very simple and obvious cry made by sheep, -which no child will mistake, is expressed by three very different -vowels, in three of the most notable European languages,—our own -_bleat_, the Latin _balare_, and the Greek βληχή, pronounced like A -in _mate_, according to the practice of the Greeks in the classical -age. From such words, therefore, no safe conclusion can be drawn as -to the pronunciation of any particular word at any particular period -of a highly advanced civilization. It is different, however, with -words not forming any part of the spoken system of articulate speech, -but invented expressly for the occasion, in order to represent by way -of echo certain natural sounds. In this way, should we find in an -old Athenian spelling-book this sentence, “_the sheep cries_ Βή,” we -should be most justly entitled to conclude, if not that the Greek _B_ -was pronounced exactly like the corresponding letter in our alphabet, -(for the consonants are less easily fixed down in such imitations -of inarticulate cries,) certainly that _H_ had the sound of our AI; -and this conclusion would be irresistible if other arguments were at -hand, such as will presently be mentioned, leading plainly to the same -conclusion. Here, however, also, care must be taken not to generalize -too largely; for, strictly speaking, the inference from such a fact -as the one supposed, is only that at the particular time and place -where the said book was composed, a particular vowel sounded to the -ear of the writer in a particular way; the proof remaining perfectly -open that at some other place during the same period, or at the same -place fifty years later, the same vowel may have been pronounced in a -perfectly different way.[10]. Those who are at all acquainted with the -style of reasoning on such points, exemplified in almost every page of -Havercamp’s Collection, will see the necessity of applying at every -step of their progress the rein of a strictly logical restraint. - -[10] “If we find a word pronounced in a given manner in the time of -Athenæus, we are warranted, in the absence of proof, in supposing it -to have been pronounced in the same way in the time of Homer; and what -prevailed in Homer’s time may be presumed to have continued till the -age of Athenæus.”—PENNINGTON, p. 7. This is too strong. Considering -the immense interval of time and progress of culture between HOMER and -ATHENÆUS, and considering the tendency to change inherent in human -nature, I can see no presumption that the pronunciation of the language -should have remained through so many centuries unchanged. - -Another and a most scientific way by which we may recover the traces of -a lost orthoepy, is from the physiological description of the action -of the organs of speech in producing the sounds belonging to certain -letters, as preserved in the works of grammatical or rhetorical -writers. This method of proof, taken by itself, may, no doubt, fail of -giving complete satisfaction in delicate cases; for it is extremely -difficult to give such an exact description of the action of the organs -of speech as will enable a student of an unknown language to reproduce -the sound, without the assistance of the living voice. But, taken -along with other circumstances, the proof from this source may be so -strong as absolutely to force conviction; or at all events imperatively -to exclude certain suppositions, which, without the existence of -such a description, would have been admissible. Now, it happens most -fortunately for our present inquiry, that a very satisfactory scale -of the Greek vowel-sounds is extant in the works of the well-known -historian and critic Dionysius of Halicarnassus, who lived in the time -of Augustus Cæsar. This we shall quote at length immediately; and as -the author was a professional rhetorician, no higher authority on such -a point, for the epoch to which he belongs, can be wished for.[11] - -[11] “I cannot help thinking that if this treatise of Dionysius had -been in early times made a text-book in schools, no controversy would -ever have arisen upon the pronunciation of the Greek letters,” (except -the diphthongs,) “or upon the nature of quantity.”—PENNINGTON. - -Again, a very large and various field of proof lies in those instances -of the direct transference of the sounds of one language into those -of another, which literary composition sometimes requires, and which -are sure to occur very frequently in an extensive literature like the -Greek. Examples of this are most common in the case of proper names, -and occur especially in translations, as in the ancient translations of -the Hebrew Bible and of the New Testament, which have been admirably -used for the illustration of Greek orthoepy in the work of Seyffarth. -When Strabo, for instance, (p. 213,) in the case given by Pennington, -(p. 73,) says of the inhabitants of the newly colonized town of Como in -Upper Italy,—Νεο κωμῖται ἐκλήθησαν ἅπαντες· τοῦτο δὲ μεθερμηνευθὲν Νο -ϐουμκώμουμ λέγεται, we learn that the diphthong ου was considered by -an intelligent scientific man in the time of Augustus, as being either -the exact equipollent of the Latin U, or the nearest approximation -to it within the compass of Hellenic vocalization; and when we are -told further that the modern Greeks and the modern Italians pronounce -the same vowels the same way even now, we cannot for a moment doubt -that the method of pronouncing that Greek diphthong now practised in -Scotland (as in _boom_) is the correct one. From the same passage we -may legitimately draw the inference, with regard to the second letter -in the Greek alphabet, that it was in all probability pronounced -softly like our V; for our B is no representative whatever of the Latin -V, whether we suppose that letter to have been pronounced like the -corresponding letter with us, or like our W. The modern Germans, in -the same way, who have not our sound of W, substitute for it in their -language the sound of V regularly, as in WASSER, which they pronounce -VASSER, and many such words. If, therefore, an ancient Greek wished -to express the letter V, and does so by his own _B_, the inference is -irresistible, either that his _B_ was pronounced like our V, and was -viewed as the exact expression of the Latin letter so pronounced, or -as an approximation to it, if pronounced like our W; or, on the other -hand, that the Greek organ being utterly incapable of pronouncing the -soft sound of the Latin V, and having no letter or combination of -letters capable of expressing it, gave up the attempt in despair, and -wrote the soft Latin V with a hard Greek _B_. But this supposition is -improbable, for three reasons: FIRST, because the general character -of the Greek language, as contrasted with the Roman, was not that of -blunt hardness but of liquid softness, (see QUINCTILIAN and CICERO, -_passim_;) SECONDLY, the ancient Greeks, in fact, had a combination of -letters by which they could express in an approximate way the Latin -V, namely, ου, and by which they actually did so express it on many -occasions; THIRDLY, the modern Greeks likewise do pronounce the second -letter of the alphabet like the Latin V; and the burden of proof lies -on those who assert that the ancients pronounced it otherwise. - -A fourth method of proof lies in the remarks made on the identical or -cognate sounds of syllables, either incidentally by general writers, -or specially by grammarians in treating orthography and orthoepy; and -in the accidental interchange of letters in inscriptions and coins. -Of the strictly grammatical kind of evidence a very valuable fragment -has been preserved in the Ἐπιμερισμοί of Herodian, the Priscian of the -Greek grammarians, published by Boissonnade in 1817. In this work are -alphabetically arranged large classes of words, which, while they are -pronounced with the same vowel to the ear, are differently spelt to -the eye; as if I should say in English that the vowel-sounds in the -words FAIR, FARE, HEIR, THERE, have the same or a similar orthoepy, -but a very different orthography. Of the other, or incidental kind, -may be mentioned those plays of sound with which epigrammatic writers -sometimes amuse themselves, and of which the echo-poems found in some -of the collections of modern Latin, are the most notable example. Thus, -Erasmus, in ridicule of the Ciceronians, wrote two lines, of which -the first, a hexameter, ends with _Cicerone_, the ablative case of -the great orator’s Latin name, while the second line, a pentameter, -striking the ear as a sort of echo of the first, ends with the Greek -word ὄνε, _O you ass!_ from which significant jingle the inference is -ready enough, that the penultimate syllable of both these words, in the -classical pronunciation of Erasmus, was accented, and that the sound of -the vowel in both was the same. The proof, of course, in such a case -would have been equally complete if the word in the second line had -been spelt with a different vowel instead of with the same. - -_Fifthly_, In determining the pronunciation of any language at any -past period of its history, its presently existing pronunciation, -though furnishing no absolute proof, is entitled to be taken into -account along with other circumstances, and in the absence of any -distinct evidence to the contrary, must be taken as conclusive. Erasmus -appealed with great success to the vanity of academic men, when he -said, with reference to the common Greek pronunciation in his day, -“_Pronuntiationem, quam nunc habent eruditi, non aliunde petunt quam -a vulgo, scis quali magistro_;” but to this a learned advocate of the -existing Itacism very wisely replies, that even supposing it were -true that the vulgar pronunciation of Greek comes to us only from the -VULGAR, the common people, as is well known, are generally far more -tenacious of hereditary national accent than the upper classes of -society;[12] of which we have a familiar English example in the case -of the stout Yorkshiremen, who have preserved for two thousand years -the deep hollow sound of _u_, (saying _Ool_, for _Hull_, &c.,) which is -the normal sound of that vowel in all the European languages. In this -view it is passing strange to note, that the slender sound of the first -syllable of ἡμέρα, as if written _heeméra_, which is the rule with the -modern Greeks, is the precise sound, that in a passage of Plato is -noted as the ancient sound, compared with the fuller sound, _haiméra_, -fashionable in his day;[13] while Aristophanes[14] in one of his plays, -introduces a conservative old Spartan lady saying ἵκει, instead of -ἥκει; a distinct proof both that η was not considered identical with ι -in his day, and that it was then sounded as it is now, by one of the -most ancient people in the Pelasgic peninsula. - -Such appear to me to be the methods of proof that lie open to an -inquirer into the orthoepy of any language, living or dead, at any -given period of its history. With these, of course, the student must -combine such general rules on the philosophy of language, and on the -habits of human speech, as a little experience of practical philology -will readily supply. I now proceed to state the results to which I have -arrived, by a thorough study of the existing evidences. After that we -shall make our practical inference, and answer a few natural objections. - -[12] “_Vulgus antiquæ pronuntiationis tenacissimus est._”—WETSTEN. -Compare the observations of Professor L. Ross, below, on the antique -element in modern Greek. - -[13] Pluto Cratylus, sec. 74, Bekker. - -[14] Aristophanes, Lysist. 86. - -In the shape of results, therefore, all that my present purely -practical purpose requires me to lay down, with regard to ancient Greek -vocalization, may be combined in the following two propositions— - - PROPOSITION I.—It is demonstrably certain that the - method of pronouncing the vowels and diphthongs - generally practised in England and Scotland, - especially in England, since the days of Sir John - Cheke,—that is from about the middle of the sixteenth - century—is doubtful in many points, and in not a few - most important points directly opposed to the whole - stream of ancient authority and tradition. It is in - fact in a great measure conjectural, arbitrary, and - capricious. - - PROPOSITION II.—It is equally certain that the modern - Greeks have declined in several most important points - from the purity of Hellenic orthoepy, as practised - in the most classic times; but many of the striking - peculiarities of the modern pronunciation can be - traced back, with more or less uniformity, to a - period not far removed from the most flourishing - period of Greek literature, a period certainly when - pure Greek was both a spoken and a written language, - and preserving such a living organic power, as - entitled it by a spontaneous impulse from within to - modify the laws of its own orthoepy. - -Both these propositions, so far as the vowels are concerned, are proved -by a single glance at the passage of Dionysius (περὶ συντάξεως) already -referred to, and which I shall now translate:— - -“There are seven vowels; two long, η and ω, and two short, ε and ο; -three both long and short, α, ι, υ. All these are pronounced by the -wind-pipe acting on the breath, while the mouth remains in its simple -natural state, and the tongue remaining at rest takes no part in the -utterance. Now, the long vowels, and those which may be either long or -short, when they are used as long, are pronounced with the stream of -breath, extended and continuous; but the short vowels, and those used -as short, are uttered by a stroke of the mouth cut off immediately -on emission, the wind-pipe exerting its power only for the shortest -time. Of all these, the most agreeable sounds are produced by the -long vowels, and those which are used as long, because their sound -continues for a considerable time, and they do not suddenly break off -the energy of the breath. Of an inferior value are the short vowels, -and those used as short, because the volume of sound in them is small -and broken. Of the long again, the most sonorous is the α, when it is -used as long, for it is pronounced by opening the mouth to the fullest, -while the breath strikes the palate. The next is η, because in its -formation, while the mouth is moderately open, the sound is driven out -from below at the mouth of the tongue, and keeping in that quarter does -not strike upwards. Next comes the ω, for in it the mouth is rounded, -and contracts the lips, and the stroke of the mouth is sent against the -extreme end of the mouth, (ἀκροστόμιον, the lips, I presume.) Inferior -to this is the υ, for in this vowel an observable contraction takes -place in the extreme region of the lips, so that the sonorous breath -comes out attenuated and compressed. Last of all comes ι, for here the -stroke of the breath takes place about the teeth, while the opening of -the mouth is small, and the lips contribute nothing towards giving the -sound more dignity as it passes through. Of the short vowels, neither -is sonorous; but o is the least agreeable, for it parts the mouth more -than the other, and receives the stroke nearer the wind-pipe.” - -Now, while every point of this physiological description may not be -curiously accurate,[15] there is enough of obvious certainty in it to -settle some of the most important points of Greek orthoepy, so far as -the rhetorician of Halicarnassus is concerned; and his authority in -this matter is that of a man of the highest skill, which, as the daily -practice of our law courts shows, is worth that of a thousand persons -taken at random. That the ITACISM of the modern Greeks did not exist, -or was not allowed by good speakers[16] in the time of this writer, so -far as the single vowels are concerned, is abundantly manifest; for -not only do η, ι, υ, which the modern Greeks identify, mean different -sounds, but the sound of the η in particular is removed as far from the -ι as it could well be in any scale of vocalization, which sets out with -the supremacy of the broad A. And if these sounds were distinguished -by polished ears in the days of Augustus Cæsar, it is contrary to -all analogy of language to suppose that in the days of Alexander -the Great, Plato, or Pericles, they should have been confounded. -Provincialisms, indeed, and certain itacizing peculiarities, such as -that noticed by Plato, (page 24 above), there might have been; but -that any language should confound its vowel-sounds in its best days, -and distinguish them in its days of commencing feebleness, is contrary -to all that succession of things which we daily witness. Different -letters were originally invented to express different sounds, and did -so naturally for a long time, till fashion and freak combined with -habit, either overran the phonetic rule of speech by a rank growth of -exceptive oddities, (as has happened in English,) or fixed upon the -organs of articulation some strong tendency towards the predominance -of a particular sound, which in process of time became a marked -idiosyncrasy, from which centuries of supervening usage could not -shake the language free. This is what has taken place in Greece with -regard to certain vowel-sounds. But before pursuing these observations -further, let us see distinctly what the special points are, that this -remarkable passage of the Halicarnassian distinctly brings out. The -ascertained points are these,— - -[15] What he says about the tongue performing no part in the formation -of the vowels is manifestly false, as any one may convince himself by -pronouncing the three sounds, _au_, _ai_, _ee_, successively, with open -mouth before a mirror. He will thus observe a gradual elevation and -advance of the tongue, as the sound to be emitted becomes more slender. - -[16] This limitation must be carefully borne in mind; for after Athens -ceased to be a capital, being overwhelmed by Alexandria, it still -remained a sort of literary metropolis, giving, or affecting to give, -the law in matters of taste, long after its authority had ceased -practically to bind large masses of those whose usage fashioned the -existing language. - - 1. The long or slender sound of the English A, (as - in _lane_,) is not acknowledged by Dionysius, nor - is its existence possible under his description. It - is altogether an anomaly and a monstrosity—like so - many things in this island—and should never have been - tolerated for a moment in the pronunciation of Latin - or Greek.[17] - - 2. The slender sound of η used by the English and - the modern Greeks, is an attenuation the farthest - possible removed from the conception of Dionysius. - About ε there is no dispute anywhere. - - 3. The sound of υ described is manifestly the French - _u_, or German _ü_ heard in _Brüder_, _Bühne_: a very - delicate and elegant sound bordering closely on the - slender sound of _i_, (_ee_, English,) into which - it is sometimes attenuated by the Germans, and with - which, by a poetical license, it is allowed to rhyme, - (as _Brüder_—_nieder_,) but having no connection with - the English sound of _oo_, (as in _boom_,) with - which, in Scotland, it is confounded. This with us - is the more unpardonable, as our Doric dialect in - the south possesses a similar sound in such words as - _guid_, _bluid_, attenuated by the Northerns into the - slender sound of _gueed_, and _bleed_. The English - sound of long _u_ is, as Walker has pointed out, - a compound sound, of which one element is a sort - of consonant—Y. It is, besides, altogether a piece - of English idiosyncrasy, that we have no reason to - suppose ever existed anywhere, either amongst Greeks - or Romans.[18] - - 4. The English sound of I is another of John Bull’s - phonetic crotchets, and must be utterly discarded. - It is, in fact, a compound sound, of which the deep - vowel α is the predominant element—an element which, - we have seen, stands at the very opposite end of the - Halicarnassian’s scale! - -[17] In some English schools a small concession has been made to common -sense, and to sound principles of teaching, by confining the long -slender sound of _a_ to the long α, while the short α is pronounced -like the short _a_ in _bat_. Now, as changes are not easily made -in England, especially among schoolmasters, who are a stiff-necked -generation everywhere, it would have been worth while when they were -moving, to kick the barbarous English A out of the scholastic world -altogether. But their conservatism was too strong for this; besides, -the ears of many were so gross that they would not have distinguished, -or would have sworn that they could not distinguish, a long _a_ from a -short one, without giving the former the sound of an entirely distinct -vowel! There is no limit to the nonsense that men will talk in defence -of an inveterate absurdity. - -[18] The following passage from MITFORD (Pennington, p. 37) may stand -here as an instructive lesson, how blindly prejudice many sometimes -speak: “Strong national partiality only, and determined habit, could -lead to the imagination cherished by the French critics, that the -Greek υ was a sound so unpleasant, produced by a position of the -lips so ungraceful as the French U.”—_History_, book ii. sec. iii., -note. SCALIGER (Opuscula: Paris, 1610, p. 131) says rightly, “Est -obscurissimus sonus in Græca vocali υ, quæ ita pronuntianda est ut -proxime accedat ad iota.” - -So far as we see, therefore, the English, Scotch, and modern Greek -methods of pronouncing the five vowels all depart in some point from -the highest authority that can be produced on the subject; in fact, the -single vowel ω alone has preserved its full rounded purity uncorrupted -by any party. But with regard to the other four vowels, there is a -marked difference in the degree of deflection from the classical norm; -for, while the Scotch err only in one point, υ, the modern Greeks err -in two, η and υ, (though their error is but a very nice one in the case -of υ, and has, in both cases, long centuries of undeviating usage to -stand on,) and the English err in all the four points, α, η, ι, and -υ, and that in the most paradoxical and abnormal fashion that could -have been invented, had it been the direct purpose of our Oxonian and -Etonian doctors to put all classical propriety at defiance. In such -lawless anarchy has ended the restoration of the divine speech of -Plato, so loftily promised by Sir John Cheke; and so true in this small -matter also, is that wise parable of the New Testament, which advises -reformers to beware of putting new patches on old vestments. Instead of -the robe of genuine Melibean purple which Erasmus wished to throw round -the shoulders of the old Greek gods, our English scholars, following in -his track of conjectural innovation, have produced an English clown’s -motley jacket, which the Zeus of Olympus never saw, and even Momus -would disdain. But let us proceed to the diphthongs. - -Unhappily Dionysius, by a very unaccountable omission, has given us -no information on this head; so we are left to pursue our inquiries -over a wide field of stray inquiry, and conclude from a greater mass -of materials with much less appearance of scientific certainty. The -following results, however, to any man that will fairly weigh the -cumulative power of the evidence brought together with such laborious -conscientiousness by Liscov and Seyffarth, must appear unquestionable:— - -1. It is proved by evidence reaching as far back as the time of -the first Ptolemies, that the diphthong ΑΙ was pronounced like the -same diphthong in our English word _gain_.[19] So the diphthong is -pronounced by the living Greek nation. There is, therefore, the -evidence of more than 2000 years in its favour, and against the -prevalent pronunciation, which gives it the broad sound of _ai_ in the -German word KAISER, rhyming pretty nearly with our English word WISER. - -[19] “_Utut sit, id saltem nacti sumus interpretum S. sc. singularum -atque omnium auctoritate ut constet_ AI _mature atque optimis adeo -Græcorum temporibus simplici vocali_ E _respondisse_.”—SEYFFARTH, p. -101. See also the Stanza from CALLIMACHUS, where ναίχι echoes to ἔχει, -Epig. xxx. 5, (and SEXTUS EMPIRICUS _adv._ Grammat. c. 5.) - -2. The diphthong EI was pronounced in the time of Ptolemy Philadelphus -like the English _ee_ in _seen_, or _ea_ in _beam_.[20] This -pronunciation it retains at the present day. In this, as in the -preceding case, we have a striking proof of the tenacity with which -a great nation clings to elocutional peculiarities. What likelihood -is there that a people, so constant to itself for 2000 years under -the most adverse circumstances, should, in the 200 years previous to -that period, have known nothing of what was afterwards one of its most -marked characteristics? - -[20] “_Quâ potestate literæ_ EI _fuerint eâ Græcorum ætate in quam -veteres Sc. s. interpretes incidunt ex plurimis iisque variis verbis in -singulas linguas conversis adeo clarum est ut nulla fere restet causa -de eâ dubitare._”—SEYFFARTH. The Old Testament translators, in fact, -use it as regularly for _Hirek_ and _Yod_, as they do AI for _Tzere_, -_Segol_, and _Sheva_. - -3. The evidence for the pronunciation of the diphthong ΟΙ is more -scanty. Unfortunately the Septuagint translators use this diphthong -only once for expressing a Hebrew name in the whole compass of the -Old Testament. From other evidence, and by a train of deduction that -appears somewhat slippery, Seyffarth comes to the conclusion that its -original pronunciation was probably that of the German _oe_, from which -it was by degrees softened into the French _u_, and lastly into the -slender sound of _i_ (_ee_), which it now has. But as I am dealing -with certainties in this paper, and not with probabilities, it will be -enough to say that LISCOV has produced evidence to shew that it was -confounded with _i_ so early as the time of Julius Cæsar, =ΙΩΝΙΣΤΗΣ= -being found on a coin of the great dictator for οἰωνιστής. So in -the coins of Emperors of the second century, =ΟΙΚΟΣΤΟΥ= frequently -occurs for εἰκοστοῦ.[21] That λοιμός was not pronounced exactly like -λιμός in the time of Thucydides, has been concluded from a well-known -passage in his second book, (c. 54;) but the passage is of doubtful -interpretation,[22] and no man can tell at this time of day what the -exact, perhaps a very small shade of, difference, was between the two -sounds. - -[21] With regard to this sort of evidence arising from wrong spelt -words, it is manifest that a single example proves nothing. When Aunt -Chloe, for instance, in the American novel, says, “I’m _clar_ on’t,” -this is no proof that the Americans pronounce the _ea_ in _clear_ like -_a_; the only conclusion is, that certain vulgar people in America -pronounce it so, and a word with a different vocalization must be -written in order to express their peculiar method of utterance. But -when mistakes of this kind occur extensively, and in quarters where -there is no reason to suspect anything particularly vulgar, they -authorize a conclusion as general as the fact, especially where no -evidence exists pointing in a different direction. - -[22] THIERSCH uses the passage as a proof of the antiquity of the -modern slender sound.—_Sprachlehre_, § 16, 5. - -4. In the above three examples, the Scotch and the English have equally -conspired to overthrow the living tradition of two centuries, by an act -of arbitrary academical conceit or pedagogic carelessness. In the case -of OU, we Northerns have again been happy; while the English, with -their fatal facility of blundering in such matters, have invented a -pronunciation of this diphthong which seems more natural to a growling -Saxon mastiff than to the smooth fulness of ancient Greek eloquence. -The Greek writers, with great uniformity, agree in expressing by -this diphthong the sound of the Latin _u_; while the modern Greeks, -with equal uniformity, agree in pronouncing their ου as the Italians -pronounce _u_; that is to say, like the English _oo_ in _boom_. -Seyffarth classes this diphthong with _a_ and _i_, _o_ and _e_, as a -sound about which there is no controversy. - -5. The diphthongs AU and EU follow; and in their case the contrast -between the pronunciation of the living Greeks, and that of those who -are taught only out of dead grammars and dictionaries, is so striking, -that the contest has been peculiarly keen. Here, however, as is wont -to be the case in more important matters, it may be that after much -dusty discussion, erudite wrangling, and inky hostility, it shall turn -out that both parties are in the right. On the first blush of the -matter, it seems plain that such words as βασιλεύς, ναῦν, καλεῦνται, -sound extremely harsh, and not according to the famous euphony of -the Attic ear, if in them the second letter of the diphthong receive -the consonantal sound of _v_ or _f_ given by the modern Greeks. -=VASILEFS, NAFN, CALEFNTAE=—these are sounds which no chaste classic -ear can tolerate, and which, among the phenomena of human articulation, -are more naturally classed with such harsh Germanisms as _Pfingst_, -_Probst_, &c., than with any sound that can be imagined to have been -wedded euphoniously to Apollo’s lute. All this is very true; and yet, -as modern German is not all harsh, so ancient Greek, it may be, was -not all mellow; and no mere general talk about euphony or cacophony -can, in so freakish a thing as human speech, be allowed to settle any -question of orthoepy. Now, when we look into the matter an inch beyond -the film of such shallow scholastic declamation, we find that so early -as the time of Crassus, that is, in the first half of the first century -before the Christian era, the diphthong _au_, which we pronounce _ou_, -(as in _bound_,) and the English like the same vowel in their own -language, (as in _vault_,) was actually enunciated consonantally like -_av_ or _af_. For Cicero (Divinat. ii. 40) tells the anecdote how, -when that unfortunate soldier was on his way to the East, and about -embarking in a ship at Brundusium, he happened to meet a Greek on the -quay calling out CAUNIAS! by which call the basket slung over his -shoulder might have plainly indicated that he meant FIGS! figs of the -best quality (worthy of a triumvir) from Caunus, in the south-west -corner of Asia Minor; but the triumvir’s ear—dark destiny brooding in -his soul—caught up the syllables separately, as _Cav’ ne eas_—=BEWARE -HOW YOU GO!= Now, as no person pretends that the _v_ in _caveo_ was -pronounced like the _u_ in _causa_, or could be so scanned in existing -Latin poetry, it follows that the _au_ in Caunias was pronounced by -a Greek of those times as a _v_ or _f_, exactly as the living Greeks -pronounce it now. This is one example, among the many that we have -adduced, shewing in a particularly striking way how impossible it is -for modern schoolmasters, judging from mere abstract considerations, -and bad scholastic habits, to say how the ancient Greeks might or might -not have pronounced any particular combination of sounds. No doubt this -Calabrian fig-merchant might not have pronounced that combination of -letters exactly in the same way that Pericles did 400 years earlier, -when, from the tribunal on the Athenian Pnyx, with the ominous roar -of a thirty years’ war in his ear, “he lightened and thundered and -confounded Greece;” but there is no reason, on the other hand, why a -Greek fig-merchant and a Greek statesman should not have pronounced -certain rough syllables in the same way, (for a great orator requires -rough as well as smooth syllables;) and this much at least is certain, -the anecdote proves that the modern pronunciation of αὐτός, _aftos_, is -ancient as well as modern; and the talk of those who will have it that -this, and other most characteristic sounds of the living orthoepy, were -introduced by the Turks and the Venetians, or the Greeks themselves -under their perverse influence, is mere talk—talk of that kind in which -scholastic men are fond of indulging, when, knowing nothing, they wish -to have it appear that they know everything. What was the real state of -the pronunciation with regard to this and the other diphthong ευ in the -days of Pericles or Plato, we have no means of knowing. Meanwhile the -result which Seyffarth, after a long and learned investigation, brings -out, that they were pronounced before a vowel as _v_, or the German -_w_, and before a consonant as a real diphthong, seems probable enough. -This agrees both with the natural laws of elocutional physiology, and -explains how the imperial name FLAVIUS in Roman coins (_Liscov_, p. -51) came to be written sometimes =ΦΛΑΥΙΟΣ= and sometimes =ΦΛΑΒΙΟΣ=. -However this be, there is no doubt that the consonantal pronunciation -of these letters has for more than 1800 years been known among the -Greeks. It has therefore all the claims that belong to a venerable -conservatism; whereas, if we reject its title, we throw ourselves loose -into an element of mere conjecture; as no person can tell us whether -Demosthenes pronounced αυ in the Scotch or English way, (supposing -one of the two to be right;) and as for ευ, what extraordinary feats -the human tongue can play with it, we may learn from the Germans, who -pronounce it like _oy_ in our _boy_—a rare lesson to the restorers of a -lost pronunciation how much is to be learnt in such a field from mere -argument and analogy! - -Let us now collect the different points of this inquiry under a single -glance. In the days of the first Emperors, and, in a majority of cases, -as early as the first Ptolemies, the scale of Greek vocalization, -according to the best evidence now obtainable, was as follows:— - - Letter. Power. - Long Α = _a_, as in _father_. - Short Α = _a_, ” _hat_. - Η = _ai_, ” _pain_. - Ε = _e_, ” _get_. - Ω = _o_, ” _pore_. - Ο = _o_, ” _got_. - Long Υ = _ü_, ” _Bühne_. - Short Υ = the same shortened. - Long I = _ee_, as in _green_. - Short I = the same shortened. - AI = _ai_, as in _pain_. - EI = _ee_, ” _green_. - OI = _ee_, ” _green_. - OU = _oo_, ” _boom_. - AU = _av_, _af_, or? - EU = _ev_, _ef_, or? - -Now, in stating the results thus, I wish it to be observed in the -first place, that I throw no sort of doubt on the possibility that -in the days of Herodotus and Pericles some of the diphthongal sounds -here declared normal in the days of the Ptolemies and the Cæsars might -have been pronounced otherwise. The theory of Pennington, also, (p. -51), that there might have co-existed in ancient times a system of -orthoepy for reciting the old poets, considerably different from that -used in common conversation, may be entertained by whosoever pleases, -and is not without its uses; but in the present purely practical -inquiry we must leave all mere theory out of view. It is also perfectly -open to Liscov, or any philologist, working out a suggestion of the -great Herman, to prove from the internal analogy of the language, and -especially from a comparison of the most ancient dialects,[23] that -_originally_ the diphthongs were pronounced differently from what -they are now, and were in the days of Ptolemy Philadelphus, (Homer -unquestionably said, παις—_païs_, and not _pace_. II. _Z_, 467;) but -in the present investigation, as a practical man, I want something -better than general probabilities and philosophical negations, or -even isolated correct assertions; I want a complete scheme of Greek -pronunciation, for some particular age, congruous within itself, and -standing on something like historical evidence. This I find only in -the pronunciation of the modern Greeks, or in that of the Ptolemies -and Cæsars, which differs from the other only in a very few points. -What then, we may ask, should hinder us from at once adopting this -pronunciation? Nothing, I imagine, but the dull inertness of mere -conservatism, (which in such matters is very potent,) the conceit of -academical men, proud of their own clumsy invention, and the dread -of ITACISM. Is it not monstrous, we hear it said, that half a dozen -different vowels, or combinations of vowels, should be pronounced -in the same way, and that in such a fashion as only curs yelp, and -mice squeak, and tenuous shades with feeble whine flit through the -airy paths that lead to Pluto’s unsubstantial hall? Now, I at once -admit that the prevalence of the slender sound of _i_ (_ee_), is a -corruption from the original purity of Hellenic vocalization, from -which I have no doubt the Pelasgi, and the venerable patriarchs who -put up the lions, now seen on the gates of Mycenæ, were free; but no -language spoken by a polished people is free from some corruption -of this kind; and this particular corruption, like the defects -observable in men of great original genius, is characteristic. In such -strongly marked men as Beethoven, Samuel Johnson, and John Hunter -the physiologist, nothing is more easy than for the nice moralist to -point out half a dozen points of character that he could have wished -otherwise. So it is with language. Who, for instance, would not wish to -reform the capriciousness of our English systemless system of spelling -and pronunciation? Who can say that we have not too much of the -sibilant sound of _s_ and _th_ in our language? who will not lament the -want of body in our vocalization, and the tendency to the ineffective -tribrachic and even proceleusmatic accent in the termination of our -polysyllables? In German, again, who does not indulge in a spurt of -indignation against “_Wenn Ich mich nicht_,” and other such common -collocations of gutturals? and in Italian are we not so cloyed with -_ōnes_ and _āres_, and other broad trochaic modulations, that we -long for the resurrection of some Gothic Quinctilian to inoculate -the luscious “_lingua Toscana in bocca Romana_,” with a few harsh -solecisms; while the French, who for cleverness and refinement, (and -some other things also,) are a sort of Greeks, do so clip and mince -the stout old Roman lingo, which they have adopted, that except in the -mouth of flower girls and ballet dancers, their dialect is altogether -intolerable to many a masculine ear. All these things are true; but no -sane man thinks of rebelling against such hereditary characteristics -of a human language, any more than he would against the ingrained -peculiarities of human character. We take these things as we find them; -just as we must make the best of a snub nose, or a set of bad teeth -in an otherwise pretty face. So also we must even attune our ears to -the Itacism of the Greeks; otherwise we shall assuredly sin against a -notable characteristic of the language, much more intimately connected -with the genius of that singular people, than many a clipper of new -Greek grammars and filcher of notes to old Attic plays imagines. What -says QUINCTILIAN? _Non possumus esse tam_ GRACILES; _simus_ FORTIORES, -(xii. 10.) Now, I ask the defenders of our modern system of pronouncing -Greek in this country, which some of them perhaps call classical and -Erasmian, but which is in fact, as has been proved, an incoherent -jabber of barbarisms, what if the so much decried _Itacism_ were -part of this _gracilitas_, this slenderness or tenuity of ancient -Hellenic speech, by which it was to the ear of the greatest of Latin -rhetoricians so strikingly distinguished from the Roman? Certain it is, -that the rude Teutonic sounds of _ou_ and _i_, (English _i_ and _ai_ -in _Kaiser_), that we hear so often in English Greek, do not answer to -Quinctilian’s description. In fact, both English and Scotch, instead of -preserving this natural contrast between Greek and Roman enunciation, -have in this, and in other matters, (as we shall see presently, when -we come to talk of accents,) done everything in their power to sweep -it away; and of nothing am I more firmly convinced than of this, that -a living conception of what the spoken Greek language really was in -its best days, will never be attained by any scholar who has not the -courage to kick all the Erasmian academic gear aside for a season, and -take a free amble with some living Christopoulos, or Papadopoulos, on -the banks of the Ilissus, or round the base of Lycabettus. This living -experience of the language is indeed the only efficient way to argue -against the learned prejudices of academic men; for, as THIERSCH well -observes, every one laughs at that pronunciation to which he has not -been accustomed, (_Sprachlehre_, sect. xvii. 3;) and no man can live -at Athens for any time, without having his ears reconciled to a slight -deviation from perfect euphony, or even coming to admire it, as one -sometimes does the lisp of a pretty woman, or the squint of an arch -humorist.[24] - -[23] GODOFREDI HERMANI _de emendenda ratione Græcæ grammaticæ_, Lib. i. -c. 2, quoted at length by LISCOV, p. 21. - -[24] On revisal it strikes me I have given the enemies of Itacism an -unfair advantage by not stating, that, while in any other language -the attenuation of so many different sounds into one, might have -proved a very grievous evil, there is such a richness of the full -sound of α (which the English have effaced) and ω in Greek, that the -blemish rarely offends. I have to mention also, that, while a certain -prominence even of this slender sound seems necessary to the phonetic -character of Greek, as distinguished from Latin, I have no objection, -in reading Homer and the elder poets, (were it only for the sake of -the often quoted πολυφλοίσβοιο θαλάσσης!) to pronounce οι, as _boy_ in -English, and η, as we do it in Scotland; just as in reading Chaucer we -may be forced to adopt some of the peculiarities of the pronunciation -of his day. But in the common use of the prose language, I think it -safer to stick by the tradition of so many centuries, than to venture -on patches of classical restoration, where it is impossible to revive -a consistent whole. I may say also, that if υ be pronounced uniformly -like the French _u_, the itacism will be diminished by one letter, -while the difference between that and the modern Greek pronunciation -is so slight, that a Scotchman so speaking in Athens will be generally -understood, whereas our broad Scotch _u_ (_oo_) besides being -entirely without classical authority, recedes so far from the actual -pronunciation of the Greeks, as to be a serious bar in the way of -intelligibility. - -So much for the vowel-sounds. I say nothing of the consonants, because -they are of less consequence in the controversy. I have already -spoken incidentally about β, (p. 21 above), and I have no wish to -write a complete treatise. Detailed information on minute points of -neo-Hellenic pronunciation may be found in Pennington’s work already -quoted, and in a recent work by Corpe.[25] I now proceed to the matter -of ACCENT, which we shall find to be no less important, but happily -much more easily settled. - -“In the pronunciation of a Greek word,” says JELF,[26] “regard ought -to be had both to accent and quantity;” a most significant power -lying in that word OUGHT, as we know well that many teachers in this -country pay a very irregular regard to quantity in reading, and very -few, if any, pay any regard to accent.[27] But that the proposition -laid down by Mr. JELF is true, no scholar can doubt for a moment, -though Mr. PENNINGTON, in the year 1844, most evidently anticipated -a great amount of stolidity, obstinacy, and scepticism, among his -academic friends on this point; with such minute and scrupulous care, -and breadth of philological preparation does he set himself to prove, -what no man that had ever dipped into an ancient Greek grammar, or a -common Latin work on rhetoric, would ever dream of denying. However, -I gave myself some trouble to set forth this matter learnedly some -years ago,[28] knowing that I might have to do with persons not always -open to reason, and utterly impervious to nature and common sense; -and the Fellow of King’s also might have had occasion to know that it -is one thing to prick soft flesh with a pin, another to drive nails -into a stone wall. The fact is, that the living Greek language having -come down to us with most audible accentuation, and the signs of these -accents being contained in all printed Greek books, and not only so, -but commented on by a long series of grammarians, from Herodian and -Arcadius, down through the Homeric bishop of Thessalonica, to Gaza and -Lascaris; in this state of the case, if any man does not pronounce -Greek according to accents, while I do, the burden of proof lies with -him who throws off all established authority in the matter, not with -me who acknowledge it. If there is no authority for accent in the -ancient grammarians, then as little is there for quantity. The fact -of the existence of the one as a living characteristic of the spoken -and written language of ancient Greece, stands exactly on the same -foundation as the other. So many ancient grammars, and comments on -grammars have been published within the last fifty years by Bekker -and other library-excavators, that the teacher who now requires to be -taught formally that the ancients really used accents in their public -elocution, is more worthy of a good flogging than the greatest dunce -in his drill. But what were accents? Accents are an _intension_ and -_remission_ (ἐπίτασις and ἄνεσις) of the voice in articulate speech, -whereby one syllable receives a marked predominance over the others, -this predominance manifesting itself principally in a higher note or -intonation given to the accented syllable.[29] This definition occurs -fifty times if it occurs once in the works of the ancient grammarians -and rhetoricians; so I need not trouble myself here by an array -of erudite citations to prove it; and that such an accent is both -possible and easy to bring out in the case of any Greek word, may be -experienced by anybody who will pronounce κεφαλή with a marked rise of -the voice on the last syllable, or νεφέλη with a similar intension of -vocal utterance on the penult. That the living Greeks give a distinct -prominence to these very syllables, any man may learn by seeking them -out in Manchester or London, in both which places they have a chapel. -Why then should Etonian schoolmasters, and Oxonian lecturers not do -the same? Do they not teach the doctrine of accents? Have they not -translated GOETTLING? Do they not print all their books with those very -marks which Aristophanes of Byzantium, two thousand years ago, with -provident cunning, devised even for this purpose, that we, studious -academic men, in the then ULTIMA THULE of civilisation, should now have -the pleasure of intoning a philosophic period as the divine Plato did, -or a blast of patriotic indignation as Demosthenes? They say there are -no accents properly so called in the French language. This I never -could exactly understand; but do our academic men actually realize this -peculiar form of levelled human enunciation, (the ὁμαλισμὸς of the old -grammarians,) without intension or remission, by pronouncing Greek -altogether unaccented? Believe it not. As if determined to produce a -scholastic impersonation of every possible monstrosity with regard to -the finest language in the world, they neglect the written accents -which lie before their nose, and read according to those accents which -they have borrowed from the Latin! and this directly in the teeth of -the public declaration of CICERO and QUINCTILIAN, that Latin had one -monotonous law of accentuation, Greek another and a much more rich -and various one.[30] And, as if to place the top-stone on the pyramid -of absurdities which they pile, after reading Greek with this Latin -accent (which sounds to a Greek ear exactly as a rude Frenchman’s first -attempts at English sound to an Englishman) for some half dozen years, -they set seriously to cram their brain-chambers with rules how Greek -accents should be placed, and exercise their memory and their eye, with -a most villainous abuse of function, in doing that work which should -have been done from the beginning by the ear! If consistency could have -been looked for from men involved in such a labyrinth of bungling, -there would have been something heroic in throwing away the marks -altogether from their books and from their brains, as well as from -their tongue; certainly this procedure would have saved many a peeping -editor a great deal of trouble, and many a brisk young gentleman -riding up in a Cambridge “coach” right into the possession of a snug -tutorship in Trinity, would have travelled on a smoother road, and felt -less seriously how the flowers of ancient literature are scarce to be -enjoyed amid the thorns of modern grammar that besiege a man’s fingers -and eyes from all sides.[31] But intellectual consistency is not to be -expected from persons once involved in a gross error, any more than -moral consistency is from thieves; and it is well for all parties that -it is so; for by this wise arrangement of nature, as a thief’s story -often discovers the theft it would conceal, so a philologer’s nonsense -is most readily refuted by the remnants of incoherent sense that he had -not wit or courage enough to eliminate. Besides, the dictum of PORSON -stood mighty over their heads;[32] and as for the young men, the more -time that was wasted on a reasonless method of teaching Greek, the -less danger would there be of that rude invasion of BOTANY, GEOLOGY, -HISTORY, and all the array of modern sciences which has long been the -special terror of English academic men. So they went on, and so they -go on now, teaching that people ought to accent κεφαλή on the last -syllable, and yet actually accenting it on the first! The consequence -of which perverse proceeding is not only that accents are one of the -most difficult things to learn in Greek, and seldom thoroughly mastered -even by those who are excellent scholars otherwise, (_see_ JELF, page -52, _note_), but an accomplished English scholar, when he makes his -continental tour, as is common enough in these days, even with men -who have not much money, finds that his perverse enunciation of the -Greek vowels, combined with his utter neglect of accents, has put him -in possession of a language of which he can make no use except in -soliloquy, and which any person can understand sooner than a native -of the country to which it belongs.[33] He then comes home belike -and tells his English friends that the modern Greeks are a set of -barbarians, who speak a “swallow’s jabber,” so corrupt that no scholar -can understand a word they say! So true is the record which honest -Thomas Fuller has left of the issue of the notable Hellenic controversy -raised by Sir John Cheke—“Here Bishop Gardiner, chancellor of the -university, interposed his power, affirming Cheke’s pronunciation, -pretended to be ancient, to be antiquated. He imposed a penalty on all -such as used this new pronunciation, which, notwithstanding, since -hath prevailed, and whereby we Englishmen speak Greek and are able to -understand one another, _which nobody else can_.”[34] - -[25] CORPE’s Neo-Hellenic Greek Grammar. London, 1851. See also a -notice of this work in the ATHENÆUM for last year, where I am happy to -observe that the opinions advocated in this paper are supported. - -[26] Greek Grammar. 1851, sect. 44, 45. DONALDSON (Greek Grammar, p. -17) says, ‘The accent is the sharp or elevated sound with which one of -the last three syllables of a Greek word is _regularly_ pronounced. -This “_regularly_” is as significant as Mr. JELF’s “_ought_.”’ - -[27] Of course I except Professor MASSON of Belfast, whose complete -mastery of the living dialect of Greece is the object of admiration to -all who know him. - -[28] Classical Museum, vol. i. p. 338. - -[29] There is also a greater _emphasis_ or _stress_ given to the -accented syllable, as is manifest from the pronunciation of the modern -Greeks, and from the striking fact that in the modern dialect, the -unaccented syllable has sometimes been dropt, while the accented -constitutes the whole modern word, as δὲν for οὐδὲν, μᾶς for ἡμᾶς. - -[30] QUINCTIL., lib. i. c. 5; DIOMED. de Oratione, ii.; PUTSCH. i. 426. - -[31] JELF, in the Preface to his Grammar, calls the doctrine of accent -“a difficult branch of scholarship.” The difficulty is altogether an -artificial one, made by scholastic men who will insist on teaching by -the eye only and the understanding, what has no meaning at all except -when addressed to the ear. The doctrine of accentuation in English has -no peculiar difficulty, plainly because men learn it in the natural way -by hearing. - -[32] “_Si quis igitur vestrum ad accuratam Græcarum literarum scientiam -aspirat, is probabilem sibi accentuum rationem quam maturrime comparet, -in propositoque perstet scurrarum dicacitate et stultorum derisione -immotus_,” ad Med. 1, apud JELF, vol. i. p. 37. I wonder if Porson -himself pronounced according to the accents. If he did not, he is just -another instance of that extraordinary incapacity of apprehending a -large principle that is so characteristic of the English mind. - -[33] I may insert here the whole of the passage of BOISSONADE, from -which the words in one of the prefixed mottoes are taken. “_Nisi quod -maxime cupio, in omnibus academiis nostris, gymnasiis et scholis -hodierna Græcorum pronuntiatio recipiatur. Nam cum prorsus perierit -antiqua pronuntiandi ratio qua Demosthenes, et Sophocles, vel ipsi -Alexandrini sub Ptolemæis utebantur, et fere ridiculum sit unumquemque -populum ad suæ linguæ sonos, atque etiam ad libitum, Græcorum quos -legit librorum pronuntiationem efformare, id saltem boni, admissa -neotericorum pronuntiatione, lucrabimur, non solum ut Gallus homo -et Germanus Anglum intelligant Græce loquentem et ab illo Græce -ipsi loquentes intelligantur, sed id etiam ut cum Græcis doctis et -scholastica institutione politis confabulemur verbis antiquorum -et facillime, si velimus, hodiernæ linguæ cognitionem ac usum -assequamur._”—HERODIAN, Epimerisni, BOISSONADE. London, 1819. Prefat. - -[34] History of the University of Cambridge, Section vii. - -Let us now ask in a single sentence how all this mass of absurdity came -about; for we may depend upon it a whole array of brave philologic -hoplites cannot have stumbled on their way suddenly without the -apparition of some real or imaginary ghost. The ghost that frightened -them on the present occasion, and caused them to forswear SPOKEN -ACCENT (for as we have seen they stuck to it on PAPER) was QUANTITY; -concerning which, therefore, we must now inquire, whether it be a -real ghost or only a white sheet. Quantity, they say, cannot stand -before Accent, or rather is swallowed up by it. Like hostile religious -sects, or belligerent medical corporations, they cannot meet without -quarrelling; so the public peace is consulted by getting rid of one of -them, not in the way of violent murder, (for the law does not allow -that,) but by what certain philosophical Chartist-Reformers used to -call “painless extinction.” Therefore they who speak according to -accent, are wont to remove quantity out of the way noiselessly; and -they who speak according to quantity must treat accent in the same way. -This is an old story. The BEAR in Erasmus’ dialogue, (Havercamp, ii. -95,) speaking rare wisdom in a gruff Johnsonian sort of style, says, -“_Sunt quidam adeo_ CRASSI _ut non distinguant accentum a quantitate, -quum sit longe diversa ratio_. =ALIUD EST ENIM ACUTUM ALIUD DIU -TINNIRE: ALIUD INTENDI, ALIUD EXTENDI.= _At eruditos novi qui, quum -pronunciarent illud_ ἀνέχου καὶ ἀπέχου, _mediam syllabam, quoniam tonum -habet acutum, quantum possent producerent, quum sit natura brevis vel -brevissima potius_.” Certain learned men, it appears, in the beginning -of the sixteenth century, could not accent the word ἀνέχου on the -penult, as it ought to be accented, without in the same breath making -that syllable long, which it is not. To avoid this blunder, the -Etonians, Oxonians, and other famous modern teachers, omit the accent -altogether on that syllable and on every syllable—of which the name is -legion—similarly situated in the Greek language, and thus, by removing -the cause, are sure of annihilating the effect. A very obvious, but -surely a very clumsy expedient, and hardly worthy of the subtlety of -the academic mind. A man by running too hard sometimes breaks his -legs; and you forthwith vow to avoid his fate by sitting in your chair -constantly and taking no exercise! Let us see how the case stands here. -The accent, you say, lengthens the syllable. Take any English word -in the first place, (as nonsense is not so transparent in a learned -tongue,) and make the experiment. If a Scotsman says _véesible_, you -will allow, I suppose, that the first syllable of that word is both -long and accented: if an Englishman says _viśible_, ’tis equally clear -that the same syllable is still accented, but it is not now long. -Accent, therefore, in English has no necessary power to lengthen the -sound of the vowel of the syllable on which it is placed; and if some -learned men on the banks of the Rhine, in the days of Erasmus, or on -the banks of the Isis, in our day, cannot accent a syllable without -at the same time lengthening it, this happens merely because, as -the Bear says, they are “ADEO CRASSI;” their ears are gross, and -have lost—by the dust of the libraries, perhaps—the healthy power of -discerning differences of modulation in the living human voice. Not a -few persons have I met with among those who are, or would be scholars, -in this country, who in this way assert that it is impossible to put -the accent on the penult of a Greek word, and at the same time, as the -law of the language requires, make the last syllable long. But these -persons had got their ears confounded by the traditionary jargon of -teachers inculcating from dead books a doctrine of which they had no -living apprehension; and this, along with the utter neglect of musical -and elocutionary culture so common among our classical devotees, had -rendered them incapable of perceiving, without an act of special -attention, the commonest phenomena of spoken language appealing to -the ear. In the English words _echo_, _primrose_, and many other of -the same description, the accent and quantity stand in that exact -relation which is so characteristic of Greek, as in ἔχω, λόγῳ; while -in the English words _clód-pated_, _hoúsekeeper_, we have that precise -disposal of accent and quantity which occurs in the word ἄνθρωπος, and -which has been so often quoted as a proof that it is impossible to -give effect to accent without violating quantity.[35] A very slight -elocutionary culture would put a stop to such vain talk; but we have, -unfortunately, too many scholars who gather their crude notions on -such subjects from a few phrases current in the schools, without ever -questioning their own ears, the only proper witness of what is right or -wrong in the matter of enunciation. Hence the cumbrous mass of erudite -nonsense on accent and quantity under which our library shelves groan; -hence the host of imaginary difficulties and impossibilities that -birch-bearing men will raise when you tell them to perform the simplest -act of perception of which an unsophisticated human ear is capable. -“_Vel ab_ ASINIS _licebat hoc discrimen discere_,” continues the -learned Bear, “_qui rudentes corripiunt acutam vocem, imam producunt_.” -Very true; a really wise man may learn much from an ass; but they who -conceit themselves to be wise, when they are not, will learn from -nobody. And so I conclude with regard to this whole matter of QUANTITY, -that it is only an imaginary ghost after all; a white sheet which a -single touch of the finger will turn aside, or only a white mist, -perhaps, which, if a brave man will only march up to, he shall not know -that it is there. - -[35] When I was at the railway station, SKIPTON, in Yorkshire, -waiting for a train, I heard one of the men call out, “Any person for -_Mánchéster_” with a distinct and well-marked dwelling of the voice -on the second as well as the first syllable. This gave me a very vivid -idea of the manner in which the Greeks must have pronounced ἄνθρωπος, -accenting the first syllable, but dwelling on the second syllable with -a distinct prolongation of the voice. - -One thing, however, I will admit—by way of palliation for the enormous -blunders that have been committed in this matter—that in words of two, -three, or more syllables, where the accent is on a syllable naturally -short, while the long syllable is unaccented, a careless speaker may -readily slur over the long syllable so as to make it short, thus -converting an anapæst accented on the first syllable, as - - ˏ ˏ - _cĕlăndīne_, into a tribrach with the same accent _cĕlăndĭn_, - -a very common vulgarism, as we all know. The unaccented syllable, -indeed, is, in the very nature of things, placed in a position where -it is not so likely to get its fair mass of sound as its accented -neighbour. Thus, except in solemn speaking, the first syllable of -ŌBĒDĬĔNT seldom gets full weight, though it is equally long with its -accented sequent; and the second syllable of EDUCATION is vulgarized -into _edication_, purely from the want of the accent. But that such -vulgarisms should form any bar in the way of academical men doing -proper justice to the correct elocution of the Greeks is really too -bad. The modern Greeks, indeed, we know, go a step farther;[36] they -not only in their common conversation fail to give the due prolongation -to their long syllables, when unaccented—making no distinction between -ω and ο—but they actually give _extension_ as well as _intension_ -to all their accented syllables, and thus fall into the same sin as -respects quantity that our academicians daily commit against accent. -But there is not the slightest reason why we should imagine it -necessary to imitate them in this idiosyncrasy. To do so would be for -the sake of a superfluous compliment to the living, to cut off one -great necessary organ, whereby the beautiful wisdom of the dead being -made alive again becomes ours. The laws of accent are a most important -element of the oratory of Pericles and Demosthenes; but without -quantity the harmony of Homer’s numbers is unintelligible. There is no -reason why we should sacrifice either the one or the other of these two -great modulating principles of ancient Hellenic speech. The one, so far -from destroying, does, in fact, regulate to a certain extent,[37] and -beautifully vary the other. Quantity without accent were a monotonous -level of dreary sing-song; accent without quantity can be likened -only to a series of sharp parallel ridges, with steep narrow ravines -interposed, but without the amplitude of grassy slope, flowering mead, -and far-stretching fields of yellow-waving corn. - -[36] See the essay on this subject in the second volume of the Greek -works of Professor RANGABE of Athens. - -[37] Every practical teacher ought to know how much more easily the -doctrine of quantity may be taught with constant reference to accent -than without it; so that pronouncing a word like ἡμέρα, the accent on -the penult, is the easiest way to make the student remember that the -final syllable of that word is long. - -But some one will still press the question, _How am I to read Homer? -how Sophocles?_ Is it not manifest, that if I read according to the -spoken accent, and not according to the quantitative metre, though I -may preserve myself, by decent care, from grossly violating quantity, -I shall certainly fail to bring out anything that the ear of the most -harshly-modulated Hottentot or Cherokee could recognise as rhythm? -Now what has been said hitherto of the compatibility of accent and -quantity relates only to words taken separately, or as they occur in -the loose succession of unfettered speech—a purely elocutional matter: -of the musical element of rhythm nothing has been said. That this must -modify the singing or recitation of measured verses to a considerable -extent, so as to make it different from the oratorical declamation of -prose, is evident; but that there is no such incomprehensible mystery -in the matter, as some people imagine, I hope I shall be able to make -plain in a very few words. The poetry of the ancients differed from -the mass of that now written in nothing more than in this, that it was -considered as a living element of the existing music, and exercised in -subjection to the laws of that divine art. Now the singing of words in -music has the effect of bringing out more prominently the mass of vocal -sound in the words, or what the prosodians in their technical style -call quantity, while the spoken accent—unless it be identified with the -musical accent or rhythmical beat—is apt to be overwhelmed altogether -and superseded. That this must be the case the very nature of the thing -shows; but we have a distinct testimony of an ancient musical writer -to this effect, which will be useful to those who in all matters are -constitutionally apt to depend more on authority than on reason.[38] -This explains why, in the ancient treatises on poetical measures, we -find not a word said about the spoken accent. If the full musical value -of each foot, (or bar, as we call it,) in point of vowel-fulness, -according to an established sequence be given, the poet is considered -to have done his duty to the musician; the rhythmical beat, or musical -accent, accompanies the measured succession of bars, as with us, but -the spoken accent is disregarded. Of all this in our elocutional -poetry we do, and must, in the nature of things, do the very reverse. -Poetry composed primarily for recitation must follow the laws of -spoken speech; and the spoken accent being the most prominent element -in that speech, becomes of course the great regulator of poetical -rhythm. Quantity, as the secondary element of spoken speech, though -the principal thing in music, is not indeed neglected altogether, but -left to the free disposal of the poet, so that the technical structure -of his verse is in no wise bound by it. The musician then comes in, -and finding that he has no liberty in the matter of the spoken accent, -(the public ear being altogether formed on that,) exercises his large -discretion in the matter of quantity, drawing out, without ceremony, a -spoken quaver into a sung minim, or cutting short a spoken minim into -a sung quaver. Now this license, familiar as it is to us, would have -strangely startled, and appeared almost ludicrous to a Greek ear; and -by the same effect of mere custom, we have to explain the fact, that -the practice of composing poetry, without any reference to the spoken -accent, practised by the ancients, appears to us so extraordinary. In -our attempts to explain it, we have sometimes altogether lost out of -view the fact, that music and conversational speech, though kindred -arts, and arts in the ancient practice of poetry indissolubly wedded, -have each their own distinctive tendencies and laws, to which full -effect cannot easily be given while they act together; and every such -case of joint action must accordingly be, to a certain extent—like the -harmonious practice of connubial life—a compromise. My conclusion, -therefore, with regard to the reading of Homer and Sophocles is, in -the first place, that they were never intended to be read in our sense -of the word, that they are not constructed on reading principles, -and that, when we do recite them—as the ancients themselves no doubt -likewise did—we must read them in a manner that makes as near an -approach as possible to the musical principles on which they were -constructed. With regard to the strictly lyrical parts of poetry, as -Pindar and the tragic choruses, I have no hesitation in saying, that -the only proper way to obtain a full perception of their rhythmical -beauty, is to sing or chant them to any extemporized melody, (which -would be much more readily done were not music so unworthily neglected -in our higher schools;) while with regard to the dialogic parts of the -drama, which were declaimed and not sung by the ancients themselves, -the teacher must take care to accustom his pupils to a deep and mellow -fulness of vocalization, and a deliberate stateliness of verbal -procession, as much as possible the reverse of that hasty trip with -which we are accustomed to read the dialogue of our dramatic poetry. -The musical accent, or rhythmical beat, will, of course, in such a -method of recitation, receive a marked prominence; the long quantity -will never be slurred; and with regard to the spoken accent, what I -say is this, the ear of the student must first be trained in reading -prose never to omit the accent, and accustomed to feel, by the living -iteration of the ear, that both accent and quantity are an essential -part of the word. This many schoolmasters will not do, because it -requires science, and will take a little trouble; but let such pass. -Those who do so train the young classical ear, will find that in -turning to poetry, and keeping time with their foot as they read any -metre, the attentive scholar will not only readily follow the given -rhythm, and appreciate the position of the musical accent, (very few -human beings being altogether destitute of the rhythmical principle,) -but will be able also to preserve the spoken accent in those places -where the flow of the rhythm does not altogether overpower it. What I -mean is this. In the line, for instance, - - οὐλομένην ἣ μυρἴ Ἀχαιοῖς ἄλγε’ ἔθηκεν, - -the second of the Iliad, the boy who has been properly trained to put -the accent on the penult of οὔλομένην, preserving the long quantity -of the final syllable, will, even though he retains that accent in -the rhythmical declamation of the line, find no impediment to the -rhythmical progress of the verse, but rather an agreeable variety, and -an antidote against monotony; and though, on account of the strong -effect which the rhythm always exercises on the closing word of the -line, it will be difficult to give the full effect to the spoken accent -on the antepenultimate of ἔθηκεν, while the closing musical accent lies -on the penult, nevertheless, a person who has been accustomed always -to pronounce this word in prose with its proper accent and quantity, -will bring out the first syllable of the word much more distinctly -than is done in the sing-song of a merely rhythmical recitation, and -will not spoil the verse, but rather improve it. And if any person -asks me how I prove that the ancients read Homer this way, I might -content myself by giving a Scotch answer, and asking, _How do you prove -that they read it your way?_ But, in fact, there is no possibility -of their having read it otherwise; for having once introduced the -habit of reading compositions, constructed originally on musical, not -elocutional principles, with that habit they could not but bring in -as much of the element of their spoken language as was consistent with -the musical principle on which the very existence of the composition, -as a rhythmical work of art, depended; that is to say, they allowed -the musical principle of quantitative rhythm to prevail over the -elocutional principle of accent, so far only as to produce harmony, not -so far as to fatigue with monotony. - -[38] Δεῖ τὴν φωνὴν ἐν τῷ μελῳδεῖν τὰς μὲν ἐπιτάσεις τε καὶ ἀνέσεις -ἀφανεῖς ποίεισθαι—ARISTOXENUS, apud PENNINGTON, p. 226. - -The reader will observe that I am not theorizing in all this, but -speaking from experience; and therefore I speak with confidence. For -ten years I read the Latin poets in Aberdeen, and I found no difficulty -in reading them so as to combine the living effect of both accent and -quantity, and teaching the student both by the ear alone. The first -line of Virgil, to take an example, in respect of accent and quantity, -may be read three ways. Either - - ˏ ˏ - _Árma virúmque cānŏ Trōjæ qui prímus ab óris_ - - Or, - ˏ - ... _cănō Trōjáe_ ... - - Or, - ˏ ˏ - ... _căn-ō Trōjæ_ ... - -I take notice of these two words CANO and TROJǼ, only because they are -the only two in which the musical accent of this line clashes with the -spoken accent, the rules of which, though not marked in Latin books as -in Greek, were preserved by the living tradition of the Roman Catholic -Church, and the accentual Latin poetry of their Service, and are -observed by our schoolmasters as faithfully (without knowing it, many -of them) as they violate the accent of the Greek. Now, of these three -ways of reading a Latin hexameter, the second is the only one which -proceeds upon the principle of the quantitative rhythm exclusively, -observing the spoken accent only where it happens to coincide with it, -(as happens here in four bars of the six;) while the first, which is -the vulgar English way, asserts the dominancy of the spoken accent in -all the six cases; and yet, as the clash only takes place in two cases, -preserves, without effort, (as I have just said with regard to Homer,) -the flow of the musical rhythm. With that grossness of ear, however, -which Erasmus and his learned Bear noticed in the learned of his day, -they fall with respect to Latin, plump into the extreme error practised -by the modern Greeks, and cannot accentuate the first syllable of CANO, -without lengthening it, while the final syllable of the same word is -generally deprived of its natural amount of sound, a strange error for -a people to make with whom Latin verse making (I shall not say with -what propriety) forms so prominent a part of school-discipline; but -there is no end to their absurdities, no limit to their contradictions; -the fact being, as one of themselves has distinctly stated,[39] that -the “composition of classical verses with them is almost entirely -MECHANICAL;” and yet they have the assurance to hold up this scholastic -abortion to the admiration of the public as one of the indispensable -elements in the training of that improved edition of the ancient -Roman—John Bull. But to finish. The third method of recitation is, I -think, the correct one. It violates neither quantity nor accent, but -makes the one play with an agreeable variety over the other, as we -see the iridescent colours in a gown of shot silk. I think I have now -answered the question satisfactorily—_How is Homer to be read?_ If -anything remains unclear, I shall be happy to communicate personally -with any person who has an ear. - -[39] “Our composition of classical verses is almost entirely -mechanical. When a boy composes such a verse as _Insignemque canas -Neptunum vertice cano_, how is he guided to the proper collocation -of the words? Not by his ear, certainly, for that would be struck -precisely in the same manner if he wrote it _Insignemque cano Neptunum -vertice canas_; no, he learns from books that the first of _cano_ (I -sing) is short, and the first of _canus_ (hoary) is long. Having so -used them, their respective quantity is stored up as a fact in his -memory, and by degrees he remembers them so well, that when he sees -either of them used in a wrong place, he thinks it offends his ear, -while in truth it only offends his understanding. But I apprehend a -Roman boy’s process of composition would be quite different. Having -been used from his cradle to hear the first syllable of _canus_ -take up about twice as much time as that of _cano_, such a verse as -_Insignemque cano Neptunum vertice canas_, would really hurt his ear, -because in the second foot the thesis would be complete before the -syllable was expressed, and he would have a time or σημεῖον too much; -and in the sixth he could not fill up the time of the arsis without -giving to the syllable a drawling sound which would be both unusual -and offensive.”—PENNINGTON, p. 249. So long as such an absurd system -of writing verses, whether Latin or Greek—from the understanding and -not from the ear—is practised, the boys who refuse to have anything -to do with prosody shew a great deal more sense than the masters who -inculcate it. - -Before concluding these observations, I have one or two remarks to make -on MODERN GREEK, which have a vital connexion with the state of the -argument. The reader will observe that I have from the beginning spoken -of Greek as a living language, having had a continuous uninterrupted -existence, though under various and well-marked modifications, from -the days of Cadmus and his earth-sown brood to the present hour. Now -the vulgar notion is, that Romaic, as it used to be called, though -the present Greeks have with a just pride, I understand, rejected the -epithet, is not only a different dialect of the Greek, from that spoken -by Plato and Demosthenes, but a different language altogether, in the -same way that Italian and Spanish are languages formed on Latin indeed, -but with an organic type altogether their own. In this view Greek -becomes a dead language; and the mass of scholastic and academical men -who teach it habitually as such, without any regard to its existing -state, will receive a justification of which they are not slow to -make use. But this vulgar notion, like many others, has grown out of -pedantic prejudice, and is supported by sheer ignorance. How such a -notion should have got abroad is easy enough to explain. I mentioned -already, that the English scholars—who have been allowed to give the -law on such subjects—have so completely disfigured the classical -features of Greek speech, that when they happen to meet Greeks, or to -travel in Greece and attempt conversation, they can make no more of -the answer they receive, than they can of the twitter of swallows, or -the language of any other bird. Again, at Oxford and Cambridge, as is -well known, the majority confine themselves to a very limited range -even of strictly classical Greek, so that a man may well have received -high honours for working up his Æschylus and his Aristotle, and yet be -quite unfit to make out the meaning of a plain modern Greek book when -he sees it; but the fact is, I have good reason to believe, there is -not one among a hundred of their scholars that ever saw such a thing. -Thirdly, we must consider under what a system of prim classical prudery -these gentlemen are often brought up. They are taught to believe, and -have been taught here also in Scotland publicly, that after a certain -golden age of Attic or Atticizing purity, the limits of which are very -arbitrarily fixed, a race of Greek writers succeeded who “increased -immensely the vocabulary of the language, while they injured its -simplicity and debased its beauty;” and under the influence of this -salutary fear they regard with a strong jealousy whole centuries of -the most interesting and instructive authors who do not come under -their arbitrary definition of “classical.” Men who think that the -vocabulary of the Hellenic language should have been finally closed at -the time of Polybius, and who pass a philologic interdict against any -phrase or idiom introduced after that period, will not be very likely -to look with peculiar favour on the prose of Perrhæbus, or the poetry -of Soutzos. But by a large-minded philologist all this prudery is -disregarded. He knows that grammarians can as little cause a language -to be corrupted and to die, by any dainty squeamishness of theirs, as -they with their meagre art can create a single word, or manufacture -one verse of a poem. Looking at the language of Homer and Plato as a -real historical phenomenon, and not as a mere record in grammatical -books, he sees that it went on growing and putting forth fresh buds and -blossoms long after nice lexicographers had declared that it ceased -to possess vitality. A language lives as long as a people lives—a -distinct and tangible social totality—speaking it, nor has it the power -to die at any point, where grammarians may choose to draw a line, -and say that its authors are no longer classical. What “classical” -means is hard to say; but as a matter of fact many persons will read -the Byzantine historians with much more pleasure than Xenophon’s -Hellenics, and not be able to explain intelligibly why the Greek of -the one should not be considered as good as the Greek of the other. -Greek certainly was not a dead language in any sense at the taking -of Constantinople in the year 1453. If it is dead, it has died since -that date; but the facts to those who will examine them, prove that -it is not dead. No doubt, under the oppressive atmosphere of Turkish -and Venetian domination, the stout old tree began to droop visibly, -and became encrusted with leprous scabs, and to shew livid blotches, -which were not pleasant to behold; but such a strong central vitality -had God planted in that noble organism, that, with the returning -breeze of freedom, and the spread of intelligence since the great year -1789, the inward power of healthy life began again to act powerfully, -and the Turkish and Venetian disfigurement dropt off speedily like a -mere skin-disease as it was; and smooth Greek sounded glibly again, -not only in the pulpit, which was the strong refuge of its prolonged -vitality, but in the forum and from the throne. Those who doubt what I -say in this matter, had best go to Athens and see; meanwhile, for the -sake of those to whom the subject may be altogether new,—and from the -general pedantic narrowness of our academical Greek I fear there may be -many such—I shall set down a passage from Perrhæbus, and another from a -common Greek newspaper, from which the fact will be abundantly evident -that the language of Homer is not dead, but lives, and that in a state -of purity, to which, considering the extraordinary duration of its -literary existence—2500 years at least,—there is no parallel perhaps on -the face of the globe, in Europe certainly not. - - “Κατὰ τὸ 1820 διατρίβων εἰς τὴν Σπάρτην ὁ Πεῤῥαιβὸς - ἐπὶ ἡγεμονίας τοῦ Πέτρου Μαυρομιχάλη, διέβη εἰς - Κωνσταντινούπολιν, κἀκεῖθεν εἰς Δακίαν, Βασσαραβίαν - καὶ Ὀδησσὸν, ὅπου εὗρε τὸν Ἀλέξανδρον Ὑψηλάντην - καὶ Γεώργιον Καντακοζηνὸν, φέροντας τὰ πρῶτα - τῆς Ἑταιρείας, καὶ μὲ ἀπερίγραπτον ἔνθουσιασμὸν - ἐτοιμαζομένους διὰ νὰ κινηθῶσι κατὰ τοῦ Σουλτάνου. - Τὸν αὐτὸν σχεδὸν ἐνθουσιασμὸν ἔβλεπέ τις οὐ μόνον - κατ’ ἐκεῖνα τὰ μέρη, ἀλλὰ καθ’ ὅλην τὴν Ἑλλάδα, - τόσον εἰς σημαντικοὺς, ὅσον καὶ παντὸς ἐπαγγέλματος - Ἕλληνας κατοικοῦντας εἰς πόλεις, χώρας καὶ χωρία. - Δὲν συστέλλομαι νὰ ὁμολογήσω, ὅτι ἤμην ἐναντίος τοῦ - τοιούτου κινήματος κατὰ τοῦ Σουλτάνου· ὄχι διότι - δὲν ἐπεθύμουν τὴν ἐλευθερίαν τοῦ Ἔθνους μου, ἀλλὰ - διότι μ’ ἐφαίνετο ἄωρον τὸ κίνημα, μὲ τὸ νὰ ἦσαν - ἀπειροπόλεμοι οἱ Ἕλληνες, καὶ οἱ πλεῖστοι ἄοπλοι, ὁ - δὲ κίνδυνος μέγας.”[40] - - =Ο ΚΟΣΣΟΥΤ ΕΝ ΑΜΕΡΙΚΗ=. - - “Τήν 6 Δεκεμβρίου εἰσήλθεν ὁ ἀρχηγὸς τῆς Οὐγγαρικῆς - δημοκρατίας εἰς τὴν πρωτεύουσαν πόλιν τῶν ἡνωμένων - Πολιτειῶν. Ἀπὸ τῆς πρώτης στιγμῆς τῆς ἀφίξεως του - ὅλοι οἱ ζωγράφοι παρουσιάσθησαν διὰ νὰ λάβωσι τὴν - εἰκόνα τοῦ διὰ τῆς ἡλιοτυπίας, ἀλλ’ ὁ Κοσσοὺθ κατ’ - οὐδένα πρόπον δὲν ἠθέλησε νὰ δεχθῇ τοῦτο. Ἄλλος τις - εὐφυέστερος καλλιτέχνης ἐφεῦρε τὸ μέσον νὰ τὴν λάβῃ - ἄκοντος αὐτοῦ. Ἔθεσε τὴν μηχανήν του εἴς τι παράθυρον - κατα τὴν διάβασίν του καὶ ἐπροκάλεσε μίαν ἔριν ὲν τῇ - ὁδῷ διὰ νὰ σταματήσῃ τὴν τέθριππόν του. Τοιουτοτρόπως - δὲ κατώρθωσε νὰ λάβῃ λάθρα οὐχὶ μόνον τὴν εἰκόνα τοῦ - Μαγυάρου Ἥρωος, ἀλλὰ καὶ ἄλλων τεσσάρων εὑρισκομένων - μετ’ αὐτοῦ ἐν τῇ ἁμάξῃ. Ὁ Κοσσοὺθ εὕρισκετο ἐντὸς - ἁμάξης ὑπὸ ἕξ καστανοχρόων ἵππων συρομένης ἐφόρει - δὲ στολὴν Οὐγγρικὴν, καὶ ἐπὶ τοῦ πίλου τοῦ μέλαν - πτερόν.”[41] - -[40] “Ἀπομνημονεύματα Πολεμικὰ, διαφόρων μαχῶν συγκροτηθεισῶν μεταξὺ -Ἑλλήνων καὶ Ὀθωμάνων κατά τε τὸ Σούλιον καὶ Ἀνατολικὴν Ελλάδα ἀπὸ -τοῦ 1820 μέχρι τοῦ 1829 ἔτους. Συγγραφέντα παρὰ τοῦ Συνταγματαρχοῦ -Χριστοφόρου Πεῤῥαίβου τοῦ ἐξ Ὀλύμπου τῆς Θετταλίας, καὶ διῃρήμενκ εἰς -τόμους δύω. Ἐν Ἀθήναις, ἐκ τῆς Τυπογραφίας Ἀνδρέου Κορόμηλα, Ὁδός -Ἓρμου, Ἀριθ. 215. 1836.” - -[41] “Αθηνα, Decemb. 31, 1851.” - -These are as fair specimens of the current dialect of Greece as I can -produce. For it is manifest that while it would be quite easy on the -one hand to select a specimen of the living dialect written by mere -men of learning, (as from the works of ŒCONOMUS,) which should make -a much nearer approach to the idiom of Xenophon, it would be equally -open on the other to produce a brigand’s song from the mountains of -Acarnania containing a great deal more of the elements of what the -admirers of unmixed Atticism would be entitled to call corruption. But -it is evident that a specimen of the first kind would be no more a -fair specimen of the average Greek now spoken, than the polished style -of George Buchanan was of the average Latin current in his day; and -a brigand’s song were just as fair a specimen of the Greek spoken by -people of education in modern Athens, as a ballad in the Cumberland -or the Craven dialect is of the English of Macaulay’s History, or -Wordsworth’s White Doe. With this remark, by way of explanation, let -any person who can read common classical Greek without a dictionary, -tell me with what face it can be asserted that the above is a specimen -of a new language, in the same sense that Italian is a different -language from Latin, and Dutch from German. I find nothing in the -extracts given, but such slight variations in verbal form, and in -the use of one or two prepositions and pronouns, as the reader of -Xenophon will find in far greater abundance when he turns to Homer. The -principal syntactic difference observable is the use of νὰ (for ἵνα), -with the subjunctive mood, instead of the infinitive, which the modern -Greeks have allowed to drop; but this is a usage, borrowed from the -Latin I have often thought, of which very frequent examples occur in -the New Testament; and besides, a mere new fashion in the syntactical -form of a sentence was never dreamt of by any sane grammarian, as -the sufficient sign of a new language. In English, for instance, we -say, _I beg you will accept this_, and, _I beg you to accept this_. -Now suppose one of these forms of expression to become obsolete, by a -change which mere fashion may effect any day, and the other to become -all dominant, could, I ask, any such change as this, or a whole score -of such changes, be said to corrupt the English language in such a -degree as to constitute a new tongue? Much less could the introduction -of a few new words, formed according to the analogy of the language, -be said to achieve such a transformation, though an academic purist -might indeed refuse to put such words as ἡλιοτυπία (photography), -and ἀτμοπλoῖov (a steam-boat), into his lexicon. As little could a -philosophical classical scholar be offended by the loss of the optative -mood, (used in the New Testament so sparingly,) and the substitution -for it of the auxiliary verb θέλω, which, though it is of comparatively -rare occurrence, is just as much according to the genius of the Greek -language, as the frequent use of the other auxiliary verb _to be_, -both in classical Greek and Latin. Instead of fastening upon such -insignificant peculiarities, a catholic-minded scholar will rather be -astonished to find that _in three columns of a Greek newspaper of the -year 1852, there do not certainly occur three words that are not pure -native Greek_. In fact the language, so far from being corrupt, as its -ignorant detractors assert, is the most uncorrupt language in Europe, -perhaps in the world, at the present moment. The Germans boast of their -linguistic purity, and sing songs to Hermann who sent the legions of -Varus with their lingo so bravely out of the Westphalian swamps; but -let any man compare a column of a German newspaper with a column from -the =ΑΘΗΝΑ=, or any other ἐφημερίς issued within the girth of King -Otho’s dominions, and he will understand that while the Greek language -even now is as a perfectly pure vestment, the German in its familiar -use is defaced by the ingrained blots of many ages, which no philologic -sponge of Adelung or Jacob Grimm will ever prevail to wash out. There -are reasons for this remarkable phenomenon in the history of language, -which to a thoughtful student of the history of the Greek people will -readily suggest themselves. I content myself with stating the fact. - -These things being so, the natural observation that will occur to -every one, as bearing on our present inquiry, is, that as the Greek is -manifestly a living language, and never was dead, but only suffering -for a season under a cutaneous disease now thrown off, those who speak -that language are entitled to a decisive voice in the question how -their language is to be pronounced, _and this on the mere ground that -they are alive and speak it_; and to their decision we must bow on the -sole ground of living authority and possessory right. For every living -language exercises this despotic authority over those who learn it; -and it is not in the nature of things that one should escape from such -a sovereignty. No doubt there may be certain exceptions to which, for -certain special philological purposes, this general rule of obedience -is liable; but the rule remains. Such an exception, for instance, -in the literature of our existing English language, is the peculiar -accentuation of many words that occur in Shakspeare, and even in -Milton, different from that now used, whereby their rhythm limps to -our ear in the places where such words occur. Such exceptions, also, -are the dissyllabic words in Chaucer, that are now shortened into -monosyllables, and yet must be read as dissyllables by all those who -will enjoy the original harmony of the poet’s rhythm. In Greek, as I -have already observed, the whole quantitative value of the language has -had its poles inverted; in which practice we cannot possibly follow -the living users of the tongue, because we learn the language not to -speak with them, as a main object, (though this also has its uses -seldom thought of by schoolmasters,[42]) but to read the works of their -ancient poets, the rhythmical value of whose works their living speech -disowns. This is a sweeping exception to that dominancy of usage which -Horace recognises as supreme in language; but philological necessity -compels; and the modern Athenians must even submit in such points to -receive laws from learned foreigners. But with all this large exceptive -liberty, we dare not disown the rule. We must follow the authority of -their living dictation, so far as the object we have in view allows; -and if we are philosophical students of the language, our object never -can be resolutely to ignore all knowledge of the elocutional genius -and habits of the living people who speak it. It must be borne in mind -also, with how much greater ease a living language can be acquired than -a dead one; so that were it only for the sake of the speedy mastery of -the ancient dialect, a thorough practical familiarity with the spoken -tongue ought first to be cultivated. The present practice, indeed, -of teaching Greek in our schools and colleges, altogether as a dead -language, can be regarded only as a great scholastic mistake; and it -may be confidently affirmed by any person who has reflected on the -method of nature in teaching languages, that more Greek will be learned -by three months’ well-directed study at Athens, where it is spoken, -than by three years’ devotion to the language under the influence of -our common scholastic and academic appliances in this country. - -[42] Perhaps some classical young gentleman at Oxford or Cambridge -may be moved by the consideration brought forward in the following -passage:—“I was much delighted with this really Grecian ball, at which -I was the only foreigner. The Grecian fair I have ever found peculiarly -agreeable in society. They are not in the smallest degree tainted with -the artificial refinements and affectations of more civilised life, -while they have all its graces and fascinations; and I cannot help -thinking that as some one thought it worth while to learn ancient Greek -at the age of seventy, for the sole purpose of reading the Iliad, so it -is well worthy the pains of learning modern Greek at _any_ age, for the -pleasure of conversing, in her own tongue, with a young and cultivated -Greek beauty.”—_Wanderings in Greece_, by GEORGE COCHRAN, Esq. London, -1837. - -I am now led, in the last place, to observe, that whatever may be -thought of Itacism and of accents, as the dominant norm for the -teaching of Greek in this country, one thing is plain, that no scholar -of large and catholic views can, after what has been said and proved -in this paper, content himself with teaching Greek according to the -present arbitrary and anti-classical fashion _only_. The living dialect -also must be taught with all its peculiarities, not only because the -heroic exploits of a modern Admiral Miaulis are as well worthy of the -attention of a Hellenic student as those of an ancient Phormion; but -for strictly philological uses also, and that of more kinds than one. -The transcribers of the MSS., for one thing, in the Middle Ages, all -wrote with their ear under the habitual influence of the pronunciation -which now prevails; and were accordingly constantly liable to make -mistakes that reveal themselves at once to those who are acquainted -with that pronunciation, but will only slowly be gathered by those -whose ears have not been trained in the same way. But what is of more -consequence for Hellenic philologers to note accurately is, that the -spoken dialect of the Greek tongue, though modern in name and form, -is nowise altogether modern in substance: but like the conglomerate -strata of the geologists, contains imbedded very valuable fragments -of the oldest language of the country. Of this it were easy to adduce -proofs from so common a book as Passow’s Greek-German Dictionary, where -occasional reference is made to the modern dialect in illustration of -the ancient; from which source, I presume, with much else that is of -first-rate excellence in lexicography, such references have passed into -the English work of Liddell and Scott. But on this head I shall content -myself with simply directing the student’s attention to the fact, and -appending below the testimony of Professor Ross of Halle—a man who has -travelled much in Greece, can write the language with perfect fluency, -and is entitled, if any man in Europe is, to speak with the voice of -authority on such a point.[43] - -[43] In a paper on the Comparison of the Forms of the Nominative -Case in certain Latin and Greek Nouns, (_Zeitschrift für die -Alterthums-Wissenschaft. 9ͭͤͬ Jahrgang_, No. 49,) Professor Ross writes -to Professor BERGH of Marburg, as follows:—“My views are founded -chiefly on the observation of the dialect used by the common people of -Greece, among whom and with whom I lived so long. This dialect, indeed, -now spoken by the Greek shepherds and sailors, and which, of course, -is not to be learnt from books, but from actual intercourse with the -people, the majority of philologists are apt to hold cheap, but it -has been to me a mine of rich instruction, and I have no hesitation -in saying that, at all events, in reference to the non-Attic dialects -of the Greek tongue, to Latin, Oscan, and even Etruscan, more may be -got from this source than from the many bulky commentaries of the -grammarians of the Middle Ages. See what I have said on this point in -my _Reisen auf den Griechischen Inseln_, iii. p. 155.” - -I have now finished all that I had to say on this subject, which has -proved perhaps more fertile of speculative suggestion and of practical -direction than the title at first promised. What I have said will at -least serve the purpose for which it was immediately intended, that -of justifying my conduct should I find it expedient to introduce -any decided innovations in the practice of teaching Greek in our -metropolitan University. And if it should further have the effect -of inducing any thoughtful teacher to inquire into a curious branch -of philology which he may have hitherto overlooked, and to question -the soundness of the established routine of classical inculcation in -some points, whatever disagreeable labour I may have gone through in -clearing the learned rubbish from so perplexed a path will not have -been without its reward. Any sympathizing reader who may communicate -with me, wishing that I should explain, reconsider, or modify any -statement here made, will find me, I hope, as willing to listen as to -speak, and not more zealous for victory than for truth. - -EDINBURGH: T. 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You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms -of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online -at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you -are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the -country where you are located before using this eBook. -</div> - -<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The Pronunciation of Greek</p> -<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: John Stuart Blackie</p> -<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: January 16, 2023 [eBook #69810]</p> -<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p> - <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: deaurider and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)</p> -<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PRONUNCIATION OF GREEK ***</div> -<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" /> -<h1>THE<br />PRONUNCIATION OF GREEK;<br /> -ACCENT AND QUANTITY.</h1> - -<p class="f200 space-above1 space-below2"><b>A PHILOLOGICAL INQUIRY</b>.</p> - -<p class="f150"><small><small>BY</small></small><br /> -JOHN STUART BLACKIE,</p> - -<p class="f90">PROFESSOR OF GREEK IN THE UNIVERSITY OF EDINBURGH.</p> - -<p class="f120 space-above2">EDINBURGH: SUTHERLAND AND KNOX.</p> - -<p class="center">LONDON: SIMPKIN, MARSHALL, AND CO.<br />MDCCCLII.</p> - -<p class="center space-above2">EDINBURGH: T. CONSTABLE,<br /> -PRINTER TO HER MAJESTY.</p> - -<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" /> -<div class="blockquot2"> -<p>“<i>Sit omnibus rebus suum senium, sua juventus; et ut verba -verbis, sic etiam sonis sonos succedere permittamus.</i>”—<span -class="smcap">Bishop Gardiner.</span></p> - -<p>“<i>This new pronunciation hath since prevailed, whereby we -Englishmen speak Greek, and are able to understand one another, which -nobody else can.</i>”—<span class="smcap">Thomas Fuller.</span></p> - -<p>“<i>Maxime cupio ut in omnibus Academiis nostris hodierna Græcorum -pronuntiatio recipiatur.</i>”—<span class="smcap">Boissonade.</span></p> - -<p>“<i>Neque dubitamus quin</i> <span class="smcap">Erasmus</span>, -<i>si in tantam Græcæ pronuntiationis discrepantiam incidisset, -vulgarem usum intactum et salvum reliquisset</i>.”—<span -class="smcap">Seyffarth.</span></p> - -<p>“<i>Ich gebe der neugriechischen Aus-sprache im Ganzen bei weitem -den Vorzug.</i>”—<span class="smcap">Thiersch.</span></p> - -<p>“<i>Neque enim de cœlo dilapsa ad nos pervenit Græcorum lingua, sed -e patria sua una cum omnibus quæ habemus subsidiis, suo vestita cultu -prodiit, quem tollere aut immutare velle esset imperium in linguam -liberam exercere.</i>”—<span class="smcap">Wetsten.</span></p> - -<p>“<i>Die sogenannte Erasmische Aus-sprache, wie es in Deutschland -erscheint, ist völlig grundlos, ein Gebilde man weiss nicht von wannen -es kam, ein Gemische welches jeder sich zustutzt nach eigner Lust und -Willkühr.</i>”—<span class="smcap">Liscov.</span></p> -</div> - -<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" /> - -<div class="chapter"> -<h2 class="nobreak">THE PRONUNCIATION OF GREEK, &c.</h2> -</div> - -<p>It is purely as a practical man, and with a direct practical result -in view, that I venture to put forth a few words on the vexed question -of the <span class="smcap">Pronunciation of Greek</span>. He were a frigid -pedant, indeed, who, with the whole glorious literature of Hellas before -him, and the rich vein of Hellenic Archæology, scarcely yet opened in -Scotland, should, for the mere gratification of a subtle speculative -restlessness, walk direct into this region of philological thorns. -So far as my personal curiosity was concerned, Sir John Cheke, wrapt -in his many folded mantle of Ciceronian verboseness, and the Right -Reverend Stephen Gardiner’s prætorian edicts in favour of Greek -sounds,<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> -and the βή ϐή of the old comedian’s Attic sheep, might have been -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</span> -allowed to sleep undisturbed on the library shelves. I had settled -the question long ago in my own mind on broad grounds of common sense, -rather than on any nice results that seemed obtainable from the -investigations of the learned; but the nature of the public duties now -imposed on me does not allow me to take my own course in such matters, -merely because I think it right. I must shew to the satisfaction of -my fellow-teachers and of my students, that I am not seeking after an -ephemeral notoriety by the public galvanisation of a dead crotchet; -that any innovations which I may propose are in reality, as so often -happens in the political world also, and in the ecclesiastical, a -mere recurrence to the ancient and established practice of centuries, -and that whatever opinions I may entertain on points confessedly open -to debate, I entertain not for myself alone, but in company with -some of the ripest scholars and profoundest philologists of modern -times. I have reason also for thinking with a recent writer, that the -present time is peculiarly favourable for the reconsideration of the -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</span> -question;<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> -for, although Sir John Cheke might have said with some show of truth -in his day, “<i>Græca jam lingua nemini patria est</i>,”<a id="FNanchor_3" href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> -none but a prophetic partisan of universal Russian domination in -the Mediterranean will now assert, that the living Greeks are not a -nation and a people who have a right to be heard on the question, how -their own language is to be pronounced. Taking the Greek language as -it appears in the works of the learned commentator Corais, in the -poetry of the Soutzos and Rangabe, in the history of Perrhæbus, so -highly spoken of by Niebuhr, and in the publications of the daily -press at Athens; and taking the new kingdom for no greater thing than -the intrigues of meddling diplomatists, its own wretched cabals, and -the guns of Admiral Parker will allow it to be; it is plain that to -disregard the witness of such a speaking fact, standing as it does upon -the unbroken tradition and catholic philological succession of eighteen -centuries, would be, much more manifestly now than in the days of the -learned <span class="smcap">Wetsten</span>, to “exercise a despotism -over a free language,” such as no man has a right to claim.<a id="FNanchor_4" href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> -Besides, in Scotland we have already had our orthodox hereditary -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</span> -routine in this matter disturbed by the invasion of English teachers of -the Greek language; an invasion, no doubt, which our strong national -feeling may look on with jealousy, but which we brought on ourselves -by the shameful condition of prostration in which we allowed the -philological classes in our higher schools and colleges to lie for two -centuries; and it was not to be expected that these English teachers, -being placed in a position which enabled them to give the law within -a certain influential circle, should sacrifice their own traditional -pronunciation of the Greek language, however arbitrary, to ours, -in favour of which, in some points, there was little but the mere -conservatism of an equally arbitrary usage to plead. Finding matters -in this condition, I feel it impossible for me to waive the discussion -of a matter already fermenting with all the elements of uncertainty. I -have therefore taken the trouble of working my way through Havercamp’s -two volumes, and comparing the arguments used in the famous old -Cantabrigian controversy with those advanced by a well-informed modern -member of the same learned corporation. I have taken the learned -Germans, too, as in duty bound, on such a question, into my counsels; I -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</span> -have devoted not a little time and attention to the language and -literature of modern Greece; and above all, I have carefully examined -those places of the ancient rhetoricians and grammarians that touch -upon the various branches of the subject. With all these precautions, -if I shall not succeed in making converts to my views, I hope, at -least with reasonable men, to escape the imputation of rashness and -superficiality.</p> - -<p>The exact history of our present pronunciation of Greek, both in -England and Scotland, I have not learning enough curiously to trace; -but one thing seems to me plain, that all the great scholars in this -country, and on the continent generally, in the fifteenth, and the -early part of the sixteenth century, could have known nothing of our -present arbitrary method of pronouncing;<a id="FNanchor_5" href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> -for they could pronounce Greek no other way than as they received it -from Chrysoloras, Gaza, Lascaris, Musurus, and the other native Greeks -who were their masters. Erasmus was, if not absolutely the first,<a id="FNanchor_6" href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> -certainly the first scholar of extensive European influence and popularity -who ventured to disturb the tradition of the Byzantine elders in this -matter; but his famous dialogue, <i>De recta Latini Græcique sermonis -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</span> -pronuntiatione</i>, did not appear till the year 1528, by which time -so strong a prescription had already run in favour of the received -method, that it seems strange how even his learning and wit should -have prevailed to overturn it. But there are periods in the history of -the world when the minds of men are naturally disposed to receive all -sorts of novelties; and the era of the Reformation was one of them. -Erasmus, though a conservative in religion, (as many persons are who -are conservative in nothing else,) pleased his free speculative whim -with all sorts of imaginations; and among other things fell—though, -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</span> -if what Wetsten tells be true, in a very strange way<a id="FNanchor_7" href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a>—on -the notion of purging the pronunciation of the classical languages -of all those defects which belonged to it, whether by degenerate -tradition or perverse provincialism, and erecting in its stead an -ideal pronunciation, made up of erudite conjecture and philosophical -argumentation. Nothing was more easy than to prove that in the course -of two thousand years the orthoepy of the language of the Greeks -had declined considerably from the perfection in which its musical -fulness had rolled like a river of gold from the mouth of Plato, or -had been dashed like a thunderbolt of Jove from the indignant lips -of Demosthenes; yet more easy was it, and admirable game for such a -fine spirit as Erasmus, to evoke the shades of Cicero and Quinctilian, -and make mirth to them out of a Latin oration delivered before the -Emperor Maximilian, by a twittering French courtier and a splay-mouthed -Westphalian baron.<a id="FNanchor_8" href="#Footnote_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a> -It is certain also that there are in that dialogue many admirable -observations on the blundering practices of the schoolmasters, and even -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</span> -the learned professors, his contemporaries, which very many of them in -that day, and the great majority even now have wanted either sense or -courage to attend to; observations which, I doubt not, will yet bear -fruit in the present age, if education is to be advanced in the only -way possible, viz., by those whose profession it is to teach others, -learning in the first place to teach themselves. But in one great point -of his rich and various discourse, the learned Dutchman was more witty -than wise, and achieved a success where he was altogether wrong, or -only half-right, that has been denied to him where he is altogether -right. While his admirable observations on accent and quantity, and -many of his precepts on the practical art of teaching languages, have -been totally lost sight of by the great mass of our classical teachers, -his strictures on the pronunciation of the Greek vowels and diphthongs -have been received more or less by pedagogic men in all parts of -Europe; or at least prevailed so far as to shake the faith of scholars -in the pronunciation of the native Greek, and lead them to invent a -new and arbitrary Hellenic utterance for each country, an altogether -barbarous conglomerate, made up of modern national peculiarities and -scraps of Erasmian philology. This is a sorry state of matters; but as -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</span> -European scholarship then stood, innovators could look for no more -satisfactory result. Neither Erasmus nor the scholars who followed his -“divisive courses” in England and other countries, were in possession -of philological materials sufficiently comprehensive for settling so -nice a point. Much less could they use the materials in their hands -with that spirit of calm philosophic survey, and that touch of fine -critical sagacity which the ripe scholars of Germany now exhibit. -It was one thing to quarrel learnedly with the pronunciation of -Chrysoloras, and to chuckle with academic pride over the tautophonic -tenuity of σὺ δ’ εἶπέ μοι μὴ μῆκος, and other such ingeniously gathered -scraps of Atticism in the mouth of a modern Turkish serf; another, and -a far more serious thing, to draw out a complete table of elocutionary -sounds, such as they existed at any given period in Greek literature; -say at the successive epochs of Homer, Æschylus, Plato, Callimachus, -Strabo, Chrysostom. Bishop Gardiner, therefore, was right to press this -point hard against the Erasmians,—“<i>Quod vero difficillimum dicebam -neque statuis neque potes, ut tanquam ad punctum constituas sonorum -modum. Ab usu præsente manifeste recedis: sed an ad veterum sonorum -formam omnino accedas, nihil expeditum est.</i>” Here, as in more -serious matters, the good Bishop saw that it was easier to destroy than -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</span> -to build up; and therefore he interposed his interdict despotically -in the Roman style, <i>ne quid detrimenti respublica capiat</i>. But -these maxims of old Roman aristocracy do not apply to the democracy -of letters. So the Bishop’s philological thunderbolt started more -heretics than it laid. The love of liberty was now conjoined with the -love of originality; to speak Greek with Erasmus became now the sign of -academic patriotism and the watchword of philological progress. <span -class="smcap">Force</span> being the chief apparent power on the one -side, it was naturally felt by those against whom it was exercised, -that <span class="allsmcap">REASON</span> was altogether on their side. -The matter was therefore practically settled on the side of persecuted -innovation; the subtlety of a few academic doctors triumphed proudly -over the long tradition of Byzantine centuries, and the living protest -of millions of men, with Greek blood in their veins and Greek words in -their mouths; and they who were once the few despised Nazarenes of the -scholastic world, are now a sort of philological Scribes and Pharisees, -sitting in the seat of Aristarchus, whose dictum it is dangerous to dispute.</p> - -<p>Nevertheless, Erasmus, Wetsten distinctly asserts, (pp. 15, 115,) -did not himself adopt in his practice the perfect theory of Hellenic -vocalization which he sketched out. So much the less cause is there for -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</span> -our having any hesitation in considering the whole question as -now open, and treating it exactly as if Professor John Cheke, and -Professor Thomas Smith of Cambridge University, and Adolphus Mekerchus, -knight and perpetual senator of Bruges, and the other Havercampian -hoplites had never existed. Let us inquire, therefore, in the first -place, whether any certain data exist on which such a matter can be -settled scientifically. We shall give only the grand outlines of -the question, referring the special student to the English work of -<span class="smcap">Pennington</span> already quoted, the German work of -<span class="smcap">Liskov</span>, and the Latin of -<span class="smcap">Seyffarth</span>.<a id="FNanchor_9" href="#Footnote_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a></p> - -<p>Now, there are five ways by which the method of pronunciation used -by any gone generation of “articulate-speaking men” may be ascertained, -if not with a curious exactness in every point, at least with such -an amount of approximation as will be esteemed satisfactory by a -reasonable inquirer. <span class="smcap">First</span>, we have the -imitation in articulate letters of natural sounds and of the cries of -animals. There is nothing more certain in the philosophy of language -than that whole classes of words expressive of sound were formed on the -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</span> -principle of a direct dramatic imitation of the sound signified. Thus the words -<span class="smcap">dash</span>, <span class="smcap">hash</span>, <span -class="smcap">smash</span>, in our most significant Saxon tongue, -evidently express an action producing sound, in which the strong vowel -sound of <span class="allsmcap">a</span> is combined with a sharp sound -to which the aspirated <span class="allsmcap">s</span> was considered -the nearest approximation by the original framer of the word. So, in -the names expressive of flowing water, the liquids <span class="allsmcap">l</span> -and <span class="allsmcap">r</span> are observed to preponderate in all -languages, these being the sounds which are actually given forth by the -natural objects so signified: thus <i>river</i>, ῤέω, <i>strom</i>, -<i>flumen</i>, <i>purl</i>, the Hebrew <i>nahar</i> and <i>nahal</i>, -&c. And in the same manner, if the bird which we call <span -class="smcap">cuckoo</span> was called by the Latins <i>cuculus</i>, -by the Greeks κόκκυξ, and by the Germans <i>kukuk</i>, no person can -doubt that the vowel sounds at least, in these words, were intended to -be a more or less exact echo of the cry of the bird so designated. In -arguing, however, from such words, care must be taken not to press the -argument too closely; for two things are manifest—that the original -framer of the words might have given, and in all likelihood did give -only a loose, and not a curiously exact imitation of the sound or cry -he meant to express; and then that in the course of centuries the word -may have deviated so far from its original pronunciation, as to be no -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</span> -longer a very striking likeness of the natural sound it is intended to -imitate. These considerations explain the fact how the very simple and -obvious cry made by sheep, which no child will mistake, is expressed -by three very different vowels, in three of the most notable European -languages,—our own <i>bleat</i>, the Latin <i>balare</i>, and the -Greek βληχή, pronounced like <span class="allsmcap">a</span> in <i>mate</i>, -according to the practice of the Greeks in the classical age. From -such words, therefore, no safe conclusion can be drawn as to the -pronunciation of any particular word at any particular period of a -highly advanced civilization. It is different, however, with words -not forming any part of the spoken system of articulate speech, but -invented expressly for the occasion, in order to represent by way of -echo certain natural sounds. In this way, should we find in an old -Athenian spelling-book this sentence, “<i>the sheep cries</i> Βή,” -we should be most justly entitled to conclude, if not that the Greek -<i>B</i> was pronounced exactly like the corresponding letter in our -alphabet, (for the consonants are less easily fixed down in such -imitations of inarticulate cries,) certainly that <i>H</i> had the -sound of our <span class="smcap">ai</span>; and this conclusion would -be irresistible if other arguments were at hand, such as will presently -be mentioned, leading plainly to the same conclusion. Here, however, -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</span> -also, care must be taken not to generalize too largely; for, strictly -speaking, the inference from such a fact as the one supposed, is only -that at the particular time and place where the said book was composed, -a particular vowel sounded to the ear of the writer in a particular -way; the proof remaining perfectly open that at some other place during -the same period, or at the same place fifty years later, the same vowel -may have been pronounced in a perfectly different way.<a id="FNanchor_10" href="#Footnote_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a>. -Those who are at all acquainted with the style of reasoning on such -points, exemplified in almost every page of Havercamp’s Collection, -will see the necessity of applying at every step of their progress the -rein of a strictly logical restraint.</p> - -<p>Another and a most scientific way by which we may recover the traces -of a lost orthoepy, is from the physiological description of the -action of the organs of speech in producing the sounds belonging to -certain letters, as preserved in the works of grammatical or rhetorical -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</span> -writers. This method of proof, taken by itself, may, no doubt, fail of -giving complete satisfaction in delicate cases; for it is extremely -difficult to give such an exact description of the action of the organs -of speech as will enable a student of an unknown language to reproduce -the sound, without the assistance of the living voice. But, taken -along with other circumstances, the proof from this source may be so -strong as absolutely to force conviction; or at all events imperatively -to exclude certain suppositions, which, without the existence of -such a description, would have been admissible. Now, it happens most -fortunately for our present inquiry, that a very satisfactory scale -of the Greek vowel-sounds is extant in the works of the well-known -historian and critic Dionysius of Halicarnassus, who lived in the time -of Augustus Cæsar. This we shall quote at length immediately; and as -the author was a professional rhetorician, no higher authority on such -a point, for the epoch to which he belongs, can be wished -for.<a id="FNanchor_11" href="#Footnote_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a></p> - -<p>Again, a very large and various field of proof lies in those instances -of the direct transference of the sounds of one language into those of -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</span> -another, which literary composition sometimes requires, and which are -sure to occur very frequently in an extensive literature like the -Greek. Examples of this are most common in the case of proper names, -and occur especially in translations, as in the ancient translations of -the Hebrew Bible and of the New Testament, which have been admirably -used for the illustration of Greek orthoepy in the work of Seyffarth. -When Strabo, for instance, (p. 213,) in the case given by Pennington, -(p. 73,) says of the inhabitants of the newly colonized town of Como in -Upper Italy,—Νεο κωμῖται ἐκλήθησαν ἅπαντες· τοῦτο δὲ μεθερμηνευθὲν Νο -ϐουμκώμουμ λέγεται, we learn that the diphthong ου was considered by an -intelligent scientific man in the time of Augustus, as being either the -exact equipollent of the Latin <span class="allsmcap">u</span>, or the nearest -approximation to it within the compass of Hellenic vocalization; and when we -are told further that the modern Greeks and the modern Italians pronounce -the same vowels the same way even now, we cannot for a moment doubt -that the method of pronouncing that Greek diphthong now practised in -Scotland (as in <i>boom</i>) is the correct one. From the same passage -we may legitimately draw the inference, with regard to the second -letter in the Greek alphabet, that it was in all probability pronounced -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</span> -softly like our <span class="allsmcap">v</span>; for our <span class="allsmcap">b</span> -is no representative whatever of the Latin <span class="allsmcap">v</span>, -whether we suppose that letter to have been pronounced -like the corresponding letter with us, or like our <span -class="allsmcap">w</span>. The modern Germans, in the same way, who -have not our sound of <span class="allsmcap">w</span>, substitute for -it in their language the sound of <span class="allsmcap">v</span> -regularly, as in <span class="smcap">wasser</span>, which they -pronounce <span class="allsmcap">VASSER</span>, and many such words. -If, therefore, an ancient Greek wished to express the letter <span -class="allsmcap">v</span>, and does so by his own <i>B</i>, the -inference is irresistible, either that his <i>B</i> was pronounced -like our <span class="allsmcap">v</span>, and was viewed as the exact -expression of the Latin letter so pronounced, or as an approximation to -it, if pronounced like our <span class="allsmcap">w</span>; or, on the -other hand, that the Greek organ being utterly incapable of pronouncing -the soft sound of the Latin <span class="allsmcap">v</span>, and -having no letter or combination of letters capable of expressing -it, gave up the attempt in despair, and wrote the soft Latin -<span class="allsmcap">v</span> with a hard Greek <i>B</i>. -But this supposition is improbable, for three reasons: <span -class="smcap">First</span>, because the general character of the Greek -language, as contrasted with the Roman, was not that of blunt hardness -but of liquid softness, (see <span class="smcap">Quinctilian</span> -and <span class="smcap">Cicero</span>, <i>passim</i>;) -<span class="smcap">Secondly</span>, the ancient Greeks, in fact, -had a combination of letters by which they could express in -an approximate way the Latin <span class="allsmcap">v</span>, -namely, ου, and by which they actually did so express it on<span -class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</span> many occasions; -<span class="smcap">Thirdly</span>, the modern Greeks likewise do -pronounce the second letter of the alphabet like the Latin -<span class="allsmcap">v</span>; and the burden of proof lies on -those who assert that the ancients pronounced it otherwise.</p> - -<p>A fourth method of proof lies in the remarks made on the identical or -cognate sounds of syllables, either incidentally by general writers, -or specially by grammarians in treating orthography and orthoepy; and -in the accidental interchange of letters in inscriptions and coins. -Of the strictly grammatical kind of evidence a very valuable fragment -has been preserved in the Ἐπιμερισμοί of Herodian, the Priscian of the -Greek grammarians, published by Boissonnade in 1817. In this work are -alphabetically arranged large classes of words, which, while they are -pronounced with the same vowel to the ear, are differently spelt to the -eye; as if I should say in English that the vowel-sounds in the words -<span class="smcap">fair</span>, <span class="smcap">fare</span>, -<span class="smcap">heir</span>, <span class="smcap">there</span>, have -the same or a similar orthoepy, but a very different orthography. Of the -other, or incidental kind, may be mentioned those plays of sound with -which epigrammatic writers sometimes amuse themselves, and of which the -echo-poems found in some of the collections of modern Latin, are the -most notable example. Thus, Erasmus, in ridicule of the Ciceronians, -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</span> -wrote two lines, of which the first, a hexameter, ends with -<i>Cicerone</i>, the ablative case of the great orator’s Latin name, -while the second line, a pentameter, striking the ear as a sort of -echo of the first, ends with the Greek word ὄνε, <i>O you ass!</i> -from which significant jingle the inference is ready enough, that -the penultimate syllable of both these words, in the classical -pronunciation of Erasmus, was accented, and that the sound of the vowel -in both was the same. The proof, of course, in such a case would have -been equally complete if the word in the second line had been spelt -with a different vowel instead of with the same.</p> - -<p><i>Fifthly</i>, In determining the pronunciation of any language at -any past period of its history, its presently existing pronunciation, -though furnishing no absolute proof, is entitled to be taken into -account along with other circumstances, and in the absence of any -distinct evidence to the contrary, must be taken as conclusive. Erasmus -appealed with great success to the vanity of academic men, when he -said, with reference to the common Greek pronunciation in his day, -“<i>Pronuntiationem, quam nunc habent eruditi, non aliunde petunt quam -a vulgo, scis quali magistro</i>;” but to this a learned advocate of -the existing Itacism very wisely replies, that even supposing it were -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</span> -true that the vulgar pronunciation of Greek comes to us only from the -<span class="smcap">vulgar</span>, the common people, as is well known, are -generally far more tenacious of hereditary national accent than the upper -classes of society;<a id="FNanchor_12" href="#Footnote_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> -of which we have a familiar English example in the case of -the stout Yorkshiremen, who have preserved for two thousand years the -deep hollow sound of <i>u</i>, (saying <i>Ool</i>, for <i>Hull</i>, -&c.,) which is the normal sound of that vowel in all the European -languages. In this view it is passing strange to note, that the slender -sound of the first syllable of ἡμέρα, as if written <i>heeméra</i>, -which is the rule with the modern Greeks, is the precise sound, that -in a passage of Plato is noted as the ancient sound, compared with -the fuller sound, <i>haiméra</i>, fashionable in his day;<a id="FNanchor_13" href="#Footnote_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a> -while Aristophanes<a id="FNanchor_14" href="#Footnote_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a> -in one of his plays, introduces a conservative old Spartan lady saying -ἵκει, instead of ἥκει; a distinct proof both that η was not considered -identical with ι in his day, and that it was then sounded as it is now, -by one of the most ancient people in the Pelasgic peninsula.</p> - -<p>Such appear to me to be the methods of proof that lie open to an -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</span> -inquirer into the orthoepy of any language, living or dead, at any -given period of its history. With these, of course, the student must -combine such general rules on the philosophy of language, and on the -habits of human speech, as a little experience of practical philology -will readily supply. I now proceed to state the results to which I have -arrived, by a thorough study of the existing evidences. After that we -shall make our practical inference, and answer a few natural objections.</p> - -<p>In the shape of results, therefore, all that my present purely -practical purpose requires me to lay down, with regard to ancient Greek -vocalization, may be combined in the following two propositions—</p> - -<p class="blockquot"><span class="smcap">Proposition I.</span>—It is -demonstrably certain that the method of pronouncing the vowels and -diphthongs generally practised in England and Scotland, especially -in England, since the days of Sir John Cheke,—that is from about the -middle of the sixteenth century—is doubtful in many points, and in -not a few most important points directly opposed to the whole stream -of ancient authority and tradition. It is in fact in a great measure -conjectural, arbitrary, and capricious.</p> - -<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</span></p> - -<p class="blockquot"><span class="smcap">Proposition II.</span>—It is -equally certain that the modern Greeks have declined in several most -important points from the purity of Hellenic orthoepy, as practised in -the most classic times; but many of the striking peculiarities of the -modern pronunciation can be traced back, with more or less uniformity, -to a period not far removed from the most flourishing period of Greek -literature, a period certainly when pure Greek was both a spoken and -a written language, and preserving such a living organic power, as -entitled it by a spontaneous impulse from within to modify the laws of -its own orthoepy.</p> - -<p>Both these propositions, so far as the vowels are concerned, are proved -by a single glance at the passage of Dionysius (περὶ συντάξεως) already -referred to, and which I shall now translate:—</p> - -<p>“There are seven vowels; two long, η and ω, and two short, ε and ο; -three both long and short, α, ι, υ. All these are pronounced by the -wind-pipe acting on the breath, while the mouth remains in its simple -natural state, and the tongue remaining at rest takes no part in the -utterance. Now, the long vowels, and those which may be either long or -short, when they are used as long, are pronounced with the stream of -breath, extended and continuous; but the short vowels, and those used -as short, are uttered by a stroke of the mouth cut off immediately on -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</span> -emission, the wind-pipe exerting its power only for the shortest time. -Of all these, the most agreeable sounds are produced by the long -vowels, and those which are used as long, because their sound continues -for a considerable time, and they do not suddenly break off the energy -of the breath. Of an inferior value are the short vowels, and those -used as short, because the volume of sound in them is small and broken. -Of the long again, the most sonorous is the α, when it is used as long, -for it is pronounced by opening the mouth to the fullest, while the -breath strikes the palate. The next is η, because in its formation, -while the mouth is moderately open, the sound is driven out from below -at the mouth of the tongue, and keeping in that quarter does not -strike upwards. Next comes the ω, for in it the mouth is rounded, and -contracts the lips, and the stroke of the mouth is sent against the -extreme end of the mouth, (ἀκροστόμιον, the lips, I presume.) Inferior -to this is the υ, for in this vowel an observable contraction takes -place in the extreme region of the lips, so that the sonorous breath -comes out attenuated and compressed. Last of all comes ι, for here the -stroke of the breath takes place about the teeth, while the opening of -the mouth is small, and the lips contribute nothing towards giving the -sound more dignity as it passes through. Of the short vowels, neither -is sonorous; but o is the least agreeable, for it parts the mouth more -than the other, and receives the stroke nearer the wind-pipe.” -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</span></p> - -<p>Now, while every point of this physiological description may not be -curiously accurate,<a id="FNanchor_15" href="#Footnote_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a> -there is enough of obvious certainty in it to settle some of the most -important points of Greek orthoepy, so far as the rhetorician of -Halicarnassus is concerned; and his authority in this matter is that -of a man of the highest skill, which, as the daily practice of our law -courts shows, is worth that of a thousand persons taken at random. That -the <span class="smcap">Itacism</span> of the modern Greeks did not -exist, or was not allowed by good speakers<a id="FNanchor_16" href="#Footnote_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> -in the time of this writer, so far as the single vowels are concerned, -is abundantly manifest; for not only do η, ι, υ, which the modern -Greeks identify, mean different sounds, but the sound of the η in -particular is removed as far from the ι as it could well be in any -scale of vocalization, which sets out with the supremacy of the broad -<span class="allsmcap">a</span>. And if these sounds were distinguished -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</span> -by polished ears in the days of Augustus Cæsar, it is contrary to -all analogy of language to suppose that in the days of Alexander -the Great, Plato, or Pericles, they should have been confounded. -Provincialisms, indeed, and certain itacizing peculiarities, such as -that noticed by Plato, (<a href="#Page_24">page 24 above</a>), there might have -been; but that any language should confound its vowel-sounds in its best days, -and distinguish them in its days of commencing feebleness, is contrary -to all that succession of things which we daily witness. Different -letters were originally invented to express different sounds, and did -so naturally for a long time, till fashion and freak combined with -habit, either overran the phonetic rule of speech by a rank growth of -exceptive oddities, (as has happened in English,) or fixed upon the -organs of articulation some strong tendency towards the predominance -of a particular sound, which in process of time became a marked -idiosyncrasy, from which centuries of supervening usage could not -shake the language free. This is what has taken place in Greece with -regard to certain vowel-sounds. But before pursuing these observations -further, let us see distinctly what the special points are, that this -remarkable passage of the Halicarnassian distinctly brings out. The -ascertained points are these,— -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</span></p> - -<div class="blockquot"> -<p>1. The long or slender sound of the English <span -class="allsmcap">a</span>, (as in <i>lane</i>,) is not acknowledged -by Dionysius, nor is its existence possible under his description. -It is altogether an anomaly and a monstrosity—like so many things in -this island—and should never have been tolerated for a moment in the -pronunciation of Latin or Greek.<a id="FNanchor_17" href="#Footnote_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a></p> - -<p>2. The slender sound of η used by the English and the modern Greeks, -is an attenuation the farthest possible removed from the conception of -Dionysius. About ε there is no dispute anywhere.</p> - -<p>3. The sound of υ described is manifestly the French <i>u</i>, or -German <i>ü</i> heard in <i>Brüder</i>, <i>Bühne</i>: a very delicate -and elegant sound bordering closely on the slender sound of <i>i</i>, -(<i>ee</i>, English,) into which it is sometimes attenuated by the -Germans, and with which, by a poetical license, it is allowed to rhyme, -(as <i>Brüder</i>—<i>nieder</i>,) but having no connection with the -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</span> English sound -of <i>oo</i>, (as in <i>boom</i>,) with which, in Scotland, it is -confounded. This with us is the more unpardonable, as our Doric dialect -in the south possesses a similar sound in such words as <i>guid</i>, -<i>bluid</i>, attenuated by the Northerns into the slender sound of -<i>gueed</i>, and <i>bleed</i>. The English sound of long <i>u</i> is, -as Walker has pointed out, a compound sound, of which one element is -a sort of consonant—<span class="allsmcap">y</span>. It is, besides, -altogether a piece of English idiosyncrasy, that we have no reason -to suppose ever existed anywhere, either amongst Greeks or -Romans.<a id="FNanchor_18" href="#Footnote_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a></p> - -<p>4. The English sound of <span class="allsmcap">i</span> is another -of John Bull’s phonetic crotchets, and must be utterly discarded. -It is, in fact, a compound sound, of which the deep vowel α is the -predominant element—an element which, we have seen, stands at the very -opposite end of the Halicarnassian’s scale!</p> -</div> - -<p>So far as we see, therefore, the English, Scotch, and modern Greek -methods of pronouncing the five vowels all depart in some point from -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</span> -the highest authority that can be produced on the subject; in fact, the -single vowel ω alone has preserved its full rounded purity uncorrupted -by any party. But with regard to the other four vowels, there is a -marked difference in the degree of deflection from the classical norm; -for, while the Scotch err only in one point, υ, the modern Greeks err -in two, η and υ, (though their error is but a very nice one in the case -of υ, and has, in both cases, long centuries of undeviating usage to -stand on,) and the English err in all the four points, α, η, ι, and -υ, and that in the most paradoxical and abnormal fashion that could -have been invented, had it been the direct purpose of our Oxonian and -Etonian doctors to put all classical propriety at defiance. In such -lawless anarchy has ended the restoration of the divine speech of -Plato, so loftily promised by Sir John Cheke; and so true in this small -matter also, is that wise parable of the New Testament, which advises -reformers to beware of putting new patches on old vestments. Instead of -the robe of genuine Melibean purple which Erasmus wished to throw round -the shoulders of the old Greek gods, our English scholars, following in -his track of conjectural innovation, have produced an English clown’s -motley jacket, which the Zeus of Olympus never saw, and even Momus -would disdain. But let us proceed to the diphthongs. -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</span></p> - -<p>Unhappily Dionysius, by a very unaccountable omission, has given us -no information on this head; so we are left to pursue our inquiries -over a wide field of stray inquiry, and conclude from a greater mass -of materials with much less appearance of scientific certainty. The -following results, however, to any man that will fairly weigh the -cumulative power of the evidence brought together with such laborious -conscientiousness by Liscov and Seyffarth, must appear unquestionable:—</p> - -<p>1. It is proved by evidence reaching as far back as the time of the -first Ptolemies, that the diphthong <span class="allsmcap">ai</span> was pronounced like the -same diphthong in our English word <i>gain</i>.<a id="FNanchor_19" href="#Footnote_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> So the diphthong -is pronounced by the living Greek nation. There is, therefore, the -evidence of more than 2000 years in its favour, and against the -prevalent pronunciation, which gives it the broad sound of <i>ai</i> in -the German word <span class="smcap">kaiser</span>, rhyming pretty nearly with our English -word <span class="smcap">wiser</span>. -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</span></p> - -<p>2. The diphthong <span class="smcap">ei</span> was pronounced in the time of Ptolemy -Philadelphus like the English <i>ee</i> in <i>seen</i>, or <i>ea</i> -in <i>beam</i>.<a id="FNanchor_20" href="#Footnote_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a> This pronunciation it retains at the present day. -In this, as in the preceding case, we have a striking proof of the -tenacity with which a great nation clings to elocutional peculiarities. -What likelihood is there that a people, so constant to itself for 2000 -years under the most adverse circumstances, should, in the 200 years -previous to that period, have known nothing of what was afterwards one -of its most marked characteristics?</p> - -<p>3. The evidence for the pronunciation of the diphthong ΟΙ is more -scanty. Unfortunately the Septuagint translators use this diphthong -only once for expressing a Hebrew name in the whole compass of the -Old Testament. From other evidence, and by a train of deduction that -appears somewhat slippery, Seyffarth comes to the conclusion that its -original pronunciation was probably that of the German <i>oe</i>, -from which it was by degrees softened into the French <i>u</i>, and -lastly into the slender sound of <i>i</i> (<i>ee</i>), which it now -has. But as I am dealing with certainties in this paper, and not with -probabilities, it will be enough to say that <span class="smcap">Liscov</span> -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</span> -has produced evidence to shew that it was confounded with <i>i</i> so early -as the time of Julius Cæsar, <b>ΙΩΝΙΣΤΗΣ</b> being found on a coin of -the great dictator for οἰωνιστής. So in the coins of Emperors of the -second century, <b>ΟΙΚΟΣΤΟΥ</b> frequently occurs for εἰκοστοῦ.<a id="FNanchor_21" href="#Footnote_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a> -That λοιμός was not pronounced exactly like λιμός in the time of Thucydides, -has been concluded from a well-known passage in his second book, (c. -54;) but the passage is of doubtful interpretation,<a id="FNanchor_22" href="#Footnote_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a> -and no man can tell at this time of day what the exact, perhaps a very -small shade of, difference, was between the two sounds.</p> - -<p>4. In the above three examples, the Scotch and the English have equally -conspired to overthrow the living tradition of two centuries, by an act -of arbitrary academical conceit or pedagogic carelessness. In the case -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</span> -of <span class="smcap">ou</span>, we Northerns have again been happy; while -the English, with their fatal facility of blundering in such matters, have -invented a pronunciation of this diphthong which seems more natural -to a growling Saxon mastiff than to the smooth fulness of ancient -Greek eloquence. The Greek writers, with great uniformity, agree in -expressing by this diphthong the sound of the Latin <i>u</i>; while the -modern Greeks, with equal uniformity, agree in pronouncing their ου -as the Italians pronounce <i>u</i>; that is to say, like the English -<i>oo</i> in <i>boom</i>. Seyffarth classes this diphthong with -<i>a</i> and <i>i</i>, <i>o</i> and <i>e</i>, as a sound about which -there is no controversy.</p> - -<p>5. The diphthongs <span class="allsmcap">AU</span> and <span class="allsmcap">EU</span> -follow; and in their case the contrast between the pronunciation of -the living Greeks, and that of those who are taught only out of dead -grammars and dictionaries, is so striking, that the contest has been -peculiarly keen. Here, however, as is wont to be the case in more -important matters, it may be that after much dusty discussion, erudite -wrangling, and inky hostility, it shall turn out that both parties are -in the right. On the first blush of the matter, it seems plain that -such words as βασιλεύς, ναῦν, καλεῦνται, sound extremely harsh, and not -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</span> -according to the famous euphony of the Attic ear, if in them the second -letter of the diphthong receive the consonantal sound of <i>v</i> or -<i>f</i> given by the modern Greeks. <b><span class="smcap">Vasilefs, -Nafn, Calefntae</span></b>—these are sounds which no chaste classic ear -can tolerate, and which, among the phenomena of human articulation, are -more naturally classed with such harsh Germanisms as <i>Pfingst</i>, -<i>Probst</i>, &c., than with any sound that can be imagined to -have been wedded euphoniously to Apollo’s lute. All this is very true; -and yet, as modern German is not all harsh, so ancient Greek, it may -be, was not all mellow; and no mere general talk about euphony or -cacophony can, in so freakish a thing as human speech, be allowed to -settle any question of orthoepy. Now, when we look into the matter an -inch beyond the film of such shallow scholastic declamation, we find -that so early as the time of Crassus, that is, in the first half of -the first century before the Christian era, the diphthong <i>au</i>, -which we pronounce <i>ou</i>, (as in <i>bound</i>,) and the English -like the same vowel in their own language, (as in <i>vault</i>,) was -actually enunciated consonantally like <i>av</i> or <i>af</i>. For -Cicero (Divinat. ii. 40) tells the anecdote how, when that unfortunate -soldier was on his way to the East, and about embarking in a ship at -Brundusium, he happened to meet a Greek on the quay calling out <span -class="smcap">Caunias!</span> by which call the basket -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</span> -slung over his shoulder might have plainly indicated that he meant -<span class="smcap">Figs!</span> figs of the best quality (worthy -of a triumvir) from Caunus, in the south-west corner of Asia Minor; -but the triumvir’s ear—dark destiny brooding in his soul—caught -up the syllables separately, as <i>Cav’ ne eas</i>—<b><span -class="smcap">Beware how you go!</span></b> Now, as no person pretends -that the <i>v</i> in <i>caveo</i> was pronounced like the <i>u</i> -in <i>causa</i>, or could be so scanned in existing Latin poetry, it -follows that the <i>au</i> in Caunias was pronounced by a Greek of -those times as a <i>v</i> or <i>f</i>, exactly as the living Greeks -pronounce it now. This is one example, among the many that we have -adduced, shewing in a particularly striking way how impossible it is -for modern schoolmasters, judging from mere abstract considerations, -and bad scholastic habits, to say how the ancient Greeks might or might -not have pronounced any particular combination of sounds. No doubt this -Calabrian fig-merchant might not have pronounced that combination of -letters exactly in the same way that Pericles did 400 years earlier, -when, from the tribunal on the Athenian Pnyx, with the ominous roar -of a thirty years’ war in his ear, “he lightened and thundered and -confounded Greece;” but there is no reason, on the other hand, why a -Greek fig-merchant and a Greek statesman should not have -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</span> -pronounced certain rough syllables in the same way, (for a great orator -requires rough as well as smooth syllables;) and this much at least is -certain, the anecdote proves that the modern pronunciation of αὐτός, -<i>aftos</i>, is ancient as well as modern; and the talk of those who -will have it that this, and other most characteristic sounds of the -living orthoepy, were introduced by the Turks and the Venetians, or the -Greeks themselves under their perverse influence, is mere talk—talk of -that kind in which scholastic men are fond of indulging, when, knowing -nothing, they wish to have it appear that they know everything. What -was the real state of the pronunciation with regard to this and the -other diphthong ευ in the days of Pericles or Plato, we have no means -of knowing. Meanwhile the result which Seyffarth, after a long and -learned investigation, brings out, that they were pronounced before -a vowel as <i>v</i>, or the German <i>w</i>, and before a consonant -as a real diphthong, seems probable enough. This agrees both with the -natural laws of elocutional physiology, and explains how the imperial -name <span class="smcap">Flavius</span> in Roman coins (<i>Liscov</i>, -p. 51) came to be written sometimes <b>ΦΛΑΥΙΟΣ</b> and sometimes -<b>ΦΛΑΒΙΟΣ</b>. However this be, there is no doubt that the consonantal -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</span> -pronunciation of these letters has for more than 1800 years been known -among the Greeks. It has therefore all the claims that belong to a -venerable conservatism; whereas, if we reject its title, we throw -ourselves loose into an element of mere conjecture; as no person can -tell us whether Demosthenes pronounced αυ in the Scotch or English -way, (supposing one of the two to be right;) and as for ευ, what -extraordinary feats the human tongue can play with it, we may learn -from the Germans, who pronounce it like <i>oy</i> in our <i>boy</i>—a -rare lesson to the restorers of a lost pronunciation how much is to be -learnt in such a field from mere argument and analogy!</p> - -<p>Let us now collect the different points of this inquiry under a single -glance. In the days of the first Emperors, and, in a majority of cases, -as early as the first Ptolemies, the scale of Greek vocalization, -according to the best evidence now obtainable, was as follows:—</p> - -<table class="fontsize_120 no-wrap" border="0" cellspacing="0" summary="Vocalization" cellpadding="0" > - <thead><tr> - <th class="tdr_ws1">Letter.</th> - <th class="tdc"> </th> - <th class="tdc">Power.</th> - <th class="tdc" colspan="2"> </th> - </tr> - </thead> - <tbody><tr> - <td class="tdr_ws1">Long Α</td> - <td class="tdc">=</td> - <td class="tdl_ws1"><i>a</i>,</td> - <td class="tdc">as in</td> - <td class="tdl_ws1"><i>father</i>.</td> - </tr><tr> - <td class="tdr_ws1">Short Α</td> - <td class="tdc">=</td> - <td class="tdl_ws1"><i>a</i>,</td> - <td class="tdc">”</td> - <td class="tdl_ws1"><i>hat</i>.</td> - </tr><tr> - <td class="tdr_ws1">H</td> - <td class="tdc">=</td> - <td class="tdl_ws1"><i>ai</i>,</td> - <td class="tdc">”</td> - <td class="tdl_ws1"><i>pain</i>.</td> - </tr><tr> - <td class="tdr_ws1">E</td> - <td class="tdc">=</td> - <td class="tdl_ws1"><i>e</i>,</td> - <td class="tdc">”</td> - <td class="tdl_ws1"><i>get</i>.</td> - </tr><tr> - <td class="tdr_ws1">Ω</td> - <td class="tdc">=</td> - <td class="tdl_ws1"><i>o</i>,</td> - <td class="tdc">”</td> - <td class="tdl_ws1"><i>pore</i>.</td> - </tr><tr> - <td class="tdr_ws1">O</td> - <td class="tdc">=</td> - <td class="tdl_ws1"><i>o</i>,</td> - <td class="tdc">”</td> - <td class="tdl_ws1"><i>got</i>.</td> - </tr><tr> - <td class="tdr_ws1 bt">Long Υ</td> - <td class="tdc bt">=</td> - <td class="tdl_ws1 bt"><i>ü</i>,</td> - <td class="tdc bt">”</td> - <td class="tdl_ws1 bt"><i>Bühne</i>. - <span class="pagenum" id="Page_41"><small>[Pg 41]</small></span></td> - </tr><tr> - <td class="tdr_ws1">Short Υ</td> - <td class="tdc">=</td> - <td class="tdl_ws1" colspan="3">the same shortened.</td> - </tr><tr> - <td class="tdr_ws1 bt">Long I</td> - <td class="tdc bt">=</td> - <td class="tdl_ws1 bt"><i>ee</i>,</td> - <td class="tdc bt">as in</td> - <td class="tdl_ws1 bt"><i>green</i>.</td> - </tr><tr> - <td class="tdr_ws1 bb">Short I</td> - <td class="tdc bb">=</td> - <td class="tdl_ws1 bb" colspan="3">the same shortened.</td> - </tr><tr> - <td class="tdr_ws1">AI</td> - <td class="tdc">=</td> - <td class="tdl_ws1"><i>ai</i>,</td> - <td class="tdc"> as in</td> - <td class="tdl_ws1"><i>pain</i>.</td> - </tr><tr> - <td class="tdr_ws1">EI</td> - <td class="tdc">=</td> - <td class="tdl_ws1"><i>ee</i>,</td> - <td class="tdc">”</td> - <td class="tdl_ws1"><i>green</i>.</td> - </tr><tr> - <td class="tdr_ws1">OI</td> - <td class="tdc">=</td> - <td class="tdl_ws1"><i>ee</i>,</td> - <td class="tdc">”</td> - <td class="tdl_ws1"><i>green</i>.</td> - </tr><tr> - <td class="tdr_ws1">OU</td> - <td class="tdc">=</td> - <td class="tdl_ws1"><i>oo</i>,</td> - <td class="tdc">”</td> - <td class="tdl_ws1"><i>boom</i>.</td> - </tr><tr> - <td class="tdr_ws1">AU</td> - <td class="tdc">=</td> - <td class="tdl_ws1"><i>av</i>, <i>af</i></td> - <td class="tdc"> </td> - <td class="tdl_ws1">or?</td> - </tr><tr> - <td class="tdr_ws1">EU</td> - <td class="tdc">=</td> - <td class="tdl_ws1"><i>ev</i>, <i>ef</i>,</td> - <td class="tdc"> </td> - <td class="tdl_ws1">or?</td> - </tr> - </tbody> -</table> - -<p>Now, in stating the results thus, I wish it to be observed in the -first place, that I throw no sort of doubt on the possibility that -in the days of Herodotus and Pericles some of the diphthongal sounds -here declared normal in the days of the Ptolemies and the Cæsars might -have been pronounced otherwise. The theory of Pennington, also, (p. -51), that there might have co-existed in ancient times a system of -orthoepy for reciting the old poets, considerably different from that -used in common conversation, may be entertained by whosoever pleases, -and is not without its uses; but in the present purely practical -inquiry we must leave all mere theory out of view. It is also perfectly -open to Liscov, or any philologist, working out a suggestion of the -great Herman, to prove from the internal analogy of the language, and -especially from a comparison of the most ancient dialects,<a id="FNanchor_23" href="#Footnote_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> -that <i>originally</i> the diphthongs were pronounced differently from what -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</span> -they are now, and were in the days of Ptolemy Philadelphus, (Homer -unquestionably said, παις—<i>païs</i>, and not <i>pace</i>. II. -<i>Z</i>, 467;) but in the present investigation, as a practical man, -I want something better than general probabilities and philosophical -negations, or even isolated correct assertions; I want a complete -scheme of Greek pronunciation, for some particular age, congruous -within itself, and standing on something like historical evidence. -This I find only in the pronunciation of the modern Greeks, or in that -of the Ptolemies and Cæsars, which differs from the other only in a -very few points. What then, we may ask, should hinder us from at once -adopting this pronunciation? Nothing, I imagine, but the dull inertness -of mere conservatism, (which in such matters is very potent,) the -conceit of academical men, proud of their own clumsy invention, and -the dread of <span class="smcap">Itacism</span>. Is it not monstrous, -we hear it said, that half a dozen different vowels, or combinations -of vowels, should be pronounced in the same way, and that in such -a fashion as only curs yelp, and mice squeak, and tenuous shades -with feeble whine flit through the airy paths that lead to Pluto’s -unsubstantial hall? Now, I at once admit that the prevalence of the -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</span> -slender sound of <i>i</i> (<i>ee</i>), is a corruption from the -original purity of Hellenic vocalization, from which I have no doubt -the Pelasgi, and the venerable patriarchs who put up the lions, now -seen on the gates of Mycenæ, were free; but no language spoken by -a polished people is free from some corruption of this kind; and -this particular corruption, like the defects observable in men of -great original genius, is characteristic. In such strongly marked -men as Beethoven, Samuel Johnson, and John Hunter the physiologist, -nothing is more easy than for the nice moralist to point out half a -dozen points of character that he could have wished otherwise. So -it is with language. Who, for instance, would not wish to reform -the capriciousness of our English systemless system of spelling -and pronunciation? Who can say that we have not too much of the -sibilant sound of <i>s</i> and <i>th</i> in our language? who will -not lament the want of body in our vocalization, and the tendency -to the ineffective tribrachic and even proceleusmatic accent in the -termination of our polysyllables? In German, again, who does not -indulge in a spurt of indignation against “<i>Wenn Ich mich nicht</i>,” -and other such common collocations of gutturals? and in Italian are we -not so cloyed with <i>ōnes</i> and <i>āres</i>, and other broad -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</span> -trochaic modulations, that we long for the resurrection of some Gothic -Quinctilian to inoculate the luscious “<i>lingua Toscana in bocca -Romana</i>,” with a few harsh solecisms; while the French, who for -cleverness and refinement, (and some other things also,) are a sort of -Greeks, do so clip and mince the stout old Roman lingo, which they have -adopted, that except in the mouth of flower girls and ballet dancers, -their dialect is altogether intolerable to many a masculine ear. All -these things are true; but no sane man thinks of rebelling against such -hereditary characteristics of a human language, any more than he would -against the ingrained peculiarities of human character. We take these -things as we find them; just as we must make the best of a snub nose, -or a set of bad teeth in an otherwise pretty face. So also we must -even attune our ears to the Itacism of the Greeks; otherwise we shall -assuredly sin against a notable characteristic of the language, much -more intimately connected with the genius of that singular people, than -many a clipper of new Greek grammars and filcher of notes to old Attic -plays imagines. What says <span class="smcap">Quinctilian</span>? -<i>Non possumus esse tam</i> <span class="smcap">graciles</span>; -<i>simus</i> <span class="smcap">Fortiores</span>, (xii. 10.) Now, I -ask the defenders of our modern system of pronouncing Greek in this -country, which some of them perhaps call classical and Erasmian, -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</span> -but which is in fact, as has been proved, an incoherent jabber of -barbarisms, what if the so much decried <i>Itacism</i> were part -of this <i>gracilitas</i>, this slenderness or tenuity of ancient -Hellenic speech, by which it was to the ear of the greatest of Latin -rhetoricians so strikingly distinguished from the Roman? Certain it -is, that the rude Teutonic sounds of <i>ou</i> and <i>i</i>, (English -<i>i</i> and <i>ai</i> in <i>Kaiser</i>), that we hear so often in -English Greek, do not answer to Quinctilian’s description. In fact, -both English and Scotch, instead of preserving this natural contrast -between Greek and Roman enunciation, have in this, and in other -matters, (as we shall see presently, when we come to talk of accents,) -done everything in their power to sweep it away; and of nothing am I -more firmly convinced than of this, that a living conception of what -the spoken Greek language really was in its best days, will never -be attained by any scholar who has not the courage to kick all the -Erasmian academic gear aside for a season, and take a free amble -with some living Christopoulos, or Papadopoulos, on the banks of the -Ilissus, or round the base of Lycabettus. This living experience of the -language is indeed the only efficient way to argue against the learned -prejudices of academic men; for, as <span class="smcap">Thiersch</span> well -observes, every one laughs at that pronunciation to which he has not been -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</span> -accustomed, (<i>Sprachlehre</i>, sect. xvii. 3;) and no man can live -at Athens for any time, without having his ears reconciled to a slight -deviation from perfect euphony, or even coming to admire it, as one -sometimes does the lisp of a pretty woman, or the squint of an arch -humorist.<a id="FNanchor_24" href="#Footnote_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a></p> - -<p>So much for the vowel-sounds. I say nothing of the consonants, because -they are of less consequence in the controversy. I have already spoken incidentally -about β, (<a href="#Page_21">p. 21 above</a>), and I have no wish to write a -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</span> -complete treatise. Detailed information on minute points of -neo-Hellenic pronunciation may be found in Pennington’s work already -quoted, and in a recent work by Corpe.<a id="FNanchor_25" href="#Footnote_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a> -I now proceed to the matter of <span class="smcap">accent</span>, which -we shall find to be no less important, but happily much more easily settled.</p> - -<p>“In the pronunciation of a Greek word,” says <span class="smcap">Jelf</span>,<a id="FNanchor_26" href="#Footnote_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a> -“regard ought to be had both to accent and quantity;” a most significant -power lying in that word <span class="allsmcap">OUGHT</span>, as we know well -that many teachers in this country pay a very irregular regard to quantity in -reading, and very few, if any, pay any regard to accent.<a id="FNanchor_27" href="#Footnote_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a> -But that the proposition laid down by Mr. <span class="smcap">Jelf</span> -is true, no scholar can doubt for a moment, though Mr. -<span class="smcap">Pennington</span>, in the year 1844, most evidently -anticipated a great amount of stolidity, obstinacy, and scepticism, -among his academic friends on this point; with such minute and -scrupulous care, and breadth of philological preparation does he -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</span> -set himself to prove, what no man that had ever dipped into an ancient -Greek grammar, or a common Latin work on rhetoric, would ever dream of -denying. However, I gave myself some trouble to set forth this matter -learnedly some years ago,<a id="FNanchor_28" href="#Footnote_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a> -knowing that I might have to do with persons not always open to -reason, and utterly impervious to nature and common sense; and the -Fellow of King’s also might have had occasion to know that it is one -thing to prick soft flesh with a pin, another to drive nails into a -stone wall. The fact is, that the living Greek language having come -down to us with most audible accentuation, and the signs of these -accents being contained in all printed Greek books, and not only so, -but commented on by a long series of grammarians, from Herodian and -Arcadius, down through the Homeric bishop of Thessalonica, to Gaza and -Lascaris; in this state of the case, if any man does not pronounce -Greek according to accents, while I do, the burden of proof lies with -him who throws off all established authority in the matter, not with me -who acknowledge it. If there is no authority for accent in the ancient -grammarians, then as little is there for quantity. The fact of the -existence of the one as a living characteristic of the spoken -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</span> -and written language of ancient Greece, stands exactly on the same -foundation as the other. So many ancient grammars, and comments on -grammars have been published within the last fifty years by Bekker -and other library-excavators, that the teacher who now requires to be -taught formally that the ancients really used accents in their public -elocution, is more worthy of a good flogging than the greatest dunce -in his drill. But what were accents? Accents are an <i>intension</i> -and <i>remission</i> (ἐπίτασις and ἄνεσις) of the voice in articulate -speech, whereby one syllable receives a marked predominance over the -others, this predominance manifesting itself principally in a higher -note or intonation given to the accented syllable.<a id="FNanchor_29" href="#Footnote_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a> -This definition occurs fifty times if it occurs once in the works of -the ancient grammarians and rhetoricians; so I need not trouble myself -here by an array of erudite citations to prove it; and that such an -accent is both possible and easy to bring out in the case of any Greek -word, may be experienced by anybody who will pronounce κεφαλή with a -marked rise of the voice on the last syllable, or νεφέλη with a similar -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</span> -intension of vocal utterance on the penult. That the living Greeks -give a distinct prominence to these very syllables, any man may learn -by seeking them out in Manchester or London, in both which places they -have a chapel. Why then should Etonian schoolmasters, and Oxonian -lecturers not do the same? Do they not teach the doctrine of accents? -Have they not translated <span class="smcap">Goettling</span>? Do they -not print all their books with those very marks which Aristophanes of -Byzantium, two thousand years ago, with provident cunning, devised even -for this purpose, that we, studious academic men, in the then <span -class="smcap">Ultima Thule</span> of civilisation, should now have the -pleasure of intoning a philosophic period as the divine Plato did, or -a blast of patriotic indignation as Demosthenes? They say there are no -accents properly so called in the French language. This I never could -exactly understand; but do our academic men actually realize this -peculiar form of levelled human enunciation, (the ὁμαλισμὸς of the old -grammarians,) without intension or remission, by pronouncing Greek -altogether unaccented? Believe it not. As if determined to produce a -scholastic impersonation of every possible monstrosity with regard to -the finest language in the world, they neglect the written accents -which lie before their nose, and read according to those accents which -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</span> -they have borrowed from the Latin! and this directly in the teeth of -the public declaration of <span class="smcap">Cicero</span> and <span -class="smcap">Quinctilian</span>, that Latin had one monotonous law of -accentuation, Greek another and a much more rich and various -one.<a id="FNanchor_30" href="#Footnote_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a> -And, as if to place the top-stone on the pyramid of absurdities which -they pile, after reading Greek with this Latin accent (which sounds to -a Greek ear exactly as a rude Frenchman’s first attempts at English -sound to an Englishman) for some half dozen years, they set seriously -to cram their brain-chambers with rules how Greek accents should be -placed, and exercise their memory and their eye, with a most villainous -abuse of function, in doing that work which should have been done from -the beginning by the ear! If consistency could have been looked for -from men involved in such a labyrinth of bungling, there would have -been something heroic in throwing away the marks altogether from their -books and from their brains, as well as from their tongue; certainly -this procedure would have saved many a peeping editor a great deal of -trouble, and many a brisk young gentleman riding up in a Cambridge -“coach” right into the possession of a snug tutorship in Trinity, would -have travelled on a smoother road, and felt less seriously how the -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</span> -flowers of ancient literature are scarce to be enjoyed amid the -thorns of modern grammar that besiege a man’s fingers and eyes from -all sides.<a id="FNanchor_31" href="#Footnote_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a> - But intellectual consistency is not to be expected from -persons once involved in a gross error, any more than moral consistency -is from thieves; and it is well for all parties that it is so; for by -this wise arrangement of nature, as a thief’s story often discovers -the theft it would conceal, so a philologer’s nonsense is most readily -refuted by the remnants of incoherent sense that he had not wit or -courage enough to eliminate. Besides, the dictum of <span class="smcap">Porson</span> -stood mighty over their heads;<a id="FNanchor_32" href="#Footnote_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a> -and as for the young men, the more time that was wasted on a reasonless -method of teaching Greek, the less danger would there be of that rude -invasion of <span class="smcap">Botany, Geology, History</span>, and -all the array of modern sciences which has long been -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</span> -the special terror of English academic men. So they went on, and -so they go on now, teaching that people ought to accent κεφαλή on -the last syllable, and yet actually accenting it on the first! The -consequence of which perverse proceeding is not only that accents -are one of the most difficult things to learn in Greek, and seldom -thoroughly mastered even by those who are excellent scholars otherwise, -(<i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Jelf</span>, page 52, <i>note</i>), but an -accomplished English scholar, when he makes his continental tour, as is -common enough in these days, even with men who have not much money, finds -that his perverse enunciation of the Greek vowels, combined with his -utter neglect of accents, has put him in possession of a language of -which he can make no use except in soliloquy, and which any person can -understand sooner than a native of the country to which it belongs.<a id="FNanchor_33" href="#Footnote_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a> -He then comes home belike and tells his English friends that the modern -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</span> -Greeks are a set of barbarians, who speak a “swallow’s jabber,” so -corrupt that no scholar can understand a word they say! So true is -the record which honest Thomas Fuller has left of the issue of the -notable Hellenic controversy raised by Sir John Cheke—“Here Bishop -Gardiner, chancellor of the university, interposed his power, affirming -Cheke’s pronunciation, pretended to be ancient, to be antiquated. He -imposed a penalty on all such as used this new pronunciation, which, -notwithstanding, since hath prevailed, and whereby we Englishmen speak -Greek and are able to understand one another, <i>which nobody else -can</i>.”<a id="FNanchor_34" href="#Footnote_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a></p> - -<p>Let us now ask in a single sentence how all this mass of absurdity came -about; for we may depend upon it a whole array of brave philologic -hoplites cannot have stumbled on their way suddenly without the -apparition of some real or imaginary ghost. The ghost that frightened -them on the present occasion, and caused them to forswear <span class="smcap">spoken -accent</span> (for as we have seen they stuck to it on <span class="smcap">paper</span>) -was <span class="smcap">quantity</span>; concerning which, therefore, we must now -inquire, whether it be a real ghost or only a white sheet. Quantity, -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</span> -they say, cannot stand before Accent, or rather is swallowed up by it. -Like hostile religious sects, or belligerent medical corporations, -they cannot meet without quarrelling; so the public peace is consulted -by getting rid of one of them, not in the way of violent murder, -(for the law does not allow that,) but by what certain philosophical -Chartist-Reformers used to call “painless extinction.” Therefore they -who speak according to accent, are wont to remove quantity out of -the way noiselessly; and they who speak according to quantity must -treat accent in the same way. This is an old story. The <span class="smcap">Bear</span> -in Erasmus’ dialogue, (Havercamp, ii. 95,) speaking rare wisdom in -a gruff Johnsonian sort of style, says, “<i>Sunt quidam adeo</i> -<span class="smcap">crassi</span> <i>ut non distinguant accentum a quantitate, quum -sit longe diversa ratio</i>. <b><span class="smcap">Aliud est enim acutum aliud -diu tinnire: aliud intendi, aliud extendi.</span></b> <i>At eruditos -novi qui, quum pronunciarent illud</i> ἀνέχου καὶ ἀπέχου, <i>mediam -syllabam, quoniam tonum habet acutum, quantum possent producerent, quum -sit natura brevis vel brevissima potius</i>.” Certain learned men, it -appears, in the beginning of the sixteenth century, could not accent -the word ἀνέχου on the penult, as it ought to be accented, without in -the same breath making that syllable long, which it is not. To avoid -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</span> -this blunder, the Etonians, Oxonians, and other famous modern teachers, -omit the accent altogether on that syllable and on every syllable—of -which the name is legion—similarly situated in the Greek language, -and thus, by removing the cause, are sure of annihilating the effect. -A very obvious, but surely a very clumsy expedient, and hardly worthy -of the subtlety of the academic mind. A man by running too hard -sometimes breaks his legs; and you forthwith vow to avoid his fate -by sitting in your chair constantly and taking no exercise! Let us -see how the case stands here. The accent, you say, lengthens the -syllable. Take any English word in the first place, (as nonsense is -not so transparent in a learned tongue,) and make the experiment. If -a Scotsman says <i>véesible</i>, you will allow, I suppose, that the -first syllable of that word is both long and accented: if an Englishman -says <i>viśible</i>, ’tis equally clear that the same syllable is still -accented, but it is not now long. Accent, therefore, in English has no -necessary power to lengthen the sound of the vowel of the syllable on -which it is placed; and if some learned men on the banks of the Rhine, -in the days of Erasmus, or on the banks of the Isis, in our day, cannot -accent a syllable without at the same time lengthening it, this happens -merely because, as the Bear says, they are “<span class="smcap">adeo crassi</span>;” -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</span> -their ears are gross, and have lost—by the dust of the libraries, -perhaps—the healthy power of discerning differences of modulation in -the living human voice. Not a few persons have I met with among those -who are, or would be scholars, in this country, who in this way assert -that it is impossible to put the accent on the penult of a Greek word, -and at the same time, as the law of the language requires, make the -last syllable long. But these persons had got their ears confounded -by the traditionary jargon of teachers inculcating from dead books a -doctrine of which they had no living apprehension; and this, along with -the utter neglect of musical and elocutionary culture so common among -our classical devotees, had rendered them incapable of perceiving, -without an act of special attention, the commonest phenomena of spoken -language appealing to the ear. In the English words <i>echo</i>, -<i>primrose</i>, and many other of the same description, the accent and -quantity stand in that exact relation which is so characteristic of -Greek, as in ἔχω, λόγῳ; while in the English words <i>clód-pated</i>, -<i>hoúsekeeper</i>, we have that precise disposal of accent and -quantity which occurs in the word ἄνθρωπος, and which has been so -often quoted as a proof that it is impossible to give effect to accent -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</span> -without violating quantity.<a id="FNanchor_35" href="#Footnote_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a> -A very slight elocutionary culture would put a stop to such vain talk; -but we have, unfortunately, too many scholars who gather their crude -notions on such subjects from a few phrases current in the schools, -without ever questioning their own ears, the only proper witness -of what is right or wrong in the matter of enunciation. Hence the -cumbrous mass of erudite nonsense on accent and quantity under which -our library shelves groan; hence the host of imaginary difficulties and -impossibilities that birch-bearing men will raise when you tell them -to perform the simplest act of perception of which an unsophisticated -human ear is capable. “<i>Vel ab</i> <span class="smcap">Asinis</span> -<i>licebat hoc discrimen discere</i>,” continues the learned Bear, -“<i>qui rudentes corripiunt acutam vocem, imam producunt</i>.” Very -true; a really wise man may learn much from an ass; but they who -conceit themselves to be wise, when they are not, will learn from -nobody. And so I conclude with regard to this whole matter of <span -class="smcap">quantity</span>, that it is only an imaginary ghost after -all; a white sheet which a single touch of the finger will turn aside, -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</span> -or only a white mist, perhaps, which, if a brave man will only march up -to, he shall not know that it is there.</p> - -<p>One thing, however, I will admit—by way of palliation for the enormous -blunders that have been committed in this matter—that in words of -two, three, or more syllables, where the accent is on a syllable -naturally short, while the long syllable is unaccented, a careless -speaker may readily slur over the long syllable so as to make it -short, thus converting an anapæst accented on the first syllable, as</p> - -<ul class="index no-wrap fontsize_120"> -<li class="isub1"> <big>ˏ</big></li> -<li class="isub1"><i>cĕlăndīne</i>, into a tribrach with the same accent</li> -<li class="isub1"> <big>ˏ</big></li> -<li class="isub1"><i>cĕlăndīn</i>,</li> -</ul> - -<p class="no-indent">a very common vulgarism, as we all know. The unaccented -syllable, indeed, is, in the very nature of things, placed in a position where -it is not so likely to get its fair mass of sound as its accented -neighbour. Thus, except in solemn speaking, the first syllable of -<b>ŌBĒDĬĔNT</b> seldom gets full weight, though it is equally long with its -accented sequent; and the second syllable of <span class="smcap">education</span> -is vulgarized into <i>edication</i>, purely from the want of the accent. -But that such vulgarisms should form any bar in the way of academical -men doing proper justice to the correct elocution of the Greeks -is really too bad. The modern Greeks, indeed, we know, go a step -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</span> -farther;<a id="FNanchor_36" href="#Footnote_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a> -they not only in their common conversation fail to give the -due prolongation to their long syllables, when unaccented—making no -distinction between ω and ο—but they actually give <i>extension</i> -as well as <i>intension</i> to all their accented syllables, and thus -fall into the same sin as respects quantity that our academicians daily -commit against accent. But there is not the slightest reason why we -should imagine it necessary to imitate them in this idiosyncrasy. To -do so would be for the sake of a superfluous compliment to the living, -to cut off one great necessary organ, whereby the beautiful wisdom of -the dead being made alive again becomes ours. The laws of accent are -a most important element of the oratory of Pericles and Demosthenes; -but without quantity the harmony of Homer’s numbers is unintelligible. -There is no reason why we should sacrifice either the one or the other -of these two great modulating principles of ancient Hellenic speech. -The one, so far from destroying, does, in fact, regulate to a certain -extent,<a id="FNanchor_37" href="#Footnote_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a> -and beautifully vary the other. Quantity without accent were -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</span> -a monotonous level of dreary sing-song; accent without quantity can -be likened only to a series of sharp parallel ridges, with steep -narrow ravines interposed, but without the amplitude of grassy slope, -flowering mead, and far-stretching fields of yellow-waving corn.</p> - -<p>But some one will still press the question, <i>How am I to read Homer? -how Sophocles?</i> Is it not manifest, that if I read according to the -spoken accent, and not according to the quantitative metre, though I -may preserve myself, by decent care, from grossly violating quantity, -I shall certainly fail to bring out anything that the ear of the most -harshly-modulated Hottentot or Cherokee could recognise as rhythm? Now -what has been said hitherto of the compatibility of accent and quantity -relates only to words taken separately, or as they occur in the loose -succession of unfettered speech—a purely elocutional matter: of the -musical element of rhythm nothing has been said. That this must modify -the singing or recitation of measured verses to a considerable extent, -so as to make it different from the oratorical declamation of prose, -is evident; but that there is no such incomprehensible mystery in the -matter, as some people imagine, I hope I shall be able to make plain in -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</span> -a very few words. The poetry of the ancients differed from the mass of -that now written in nothing more than in this, that it was considered -as a living element of the existing music, and exercised in subjection -to the laws of that divine art. Now the singing of words in music has -the effect of bringing out more prominently the mass of vocal sound -in the words, or what the prosodians in their technical style call -quantity, while the spoken accent—unless it be identified with the -musical accent or rhythmical beat—is apt to be overwhelmed altogether -and superseded. That this must be the case the very nature of the thing -shows; but we have a distinct testimony of an ancient musical writer -to this effect, which will be useful to those who in all matters are -constitutionally apt to depend more on authority than on -reason.<a id="FNanchor_38" href="#Footnote_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a> -This explains why, in the ancient treatises on poetical measures, we -find not a word said about the spoken accent. If the full musical value -of each foot, (or bar, as we call it,) in point of vowel-fulness, -according to an established sequence be given, the poet is considered -to have done his duty to the musician; the rhythmical beat, or musical -accent, accompanies the measured succession of bars, as with us, but the -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</span> -spoken accent is disregarded. Of all this in our elocutional poetry -we do, and must, in the nature of things, do the very reverse. Poetry -composed primarily for recitation must follow the laws of spoken -speech; and the spoken accent being the most prominent element in that -speech, becomes of course the great regulator of poetical rhythm. -Quantity, as the secondary element of spoken speech, though the -principal thing in music, is not indeed neglected altogether, but left -to the free disposal of the poet, so that the technical structure of -his verse is in no wise bound by it. The musician then comes in, and -finding that he has no liberty in the matter of the spoken accent, -(the public ear being altogether formed on that,) exercises his large -discretion in the matter of quantity, drawing out, without ceremony, a -spoken quaver into a sung minim, or cutting short a spoken minim into -a sung quaver. Now this license, familiar as it is to us, would have -strangely startled, and appeared almost ludicrous to a Greek ear; and -by the same effect of mere custom, we have to explain the fact, that -the practice of composing poetry, without any reference to the spoken -accent, practised by the ancients, appears to us so extraordinary. In -our attempts to explain it, we have sometimes altogether lost out of -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</span> -view the fact, that music and conversational speech, though kindred -arts, and arts in the ancient practice of poetry indissolubly wedded, -have each their own distinctive tendencies and laws, to which full -effect cannot easily be given while they act together; and every such -case of joint action must accordingly be, to a certain extent—like the -harmonious practice of connubial life—a compromise. My conclusion, -therefore, with regard to the reading of Homer and Sophocles is, in -the first place, that they were never intended to be read in our sense -of the word, that they are not constructed on reading principles, and -that, when we do recite them—as the ancients themselves no doubt -likewise did—we must read them in a manner that makes as near an -approach as possible to the musical principles on which they were -constructed. With regard to the strictly lyrical parts of poetry, as -Pindar and the tragic choruses, I have no hesitation in saying, that -the only proper way to obtain a full perception of their rhythmical -beauty, is to sing or chant them to any extemporized melody, (which -would be much more readily done were not music so unworthily neglected -in our higher schools;) while with regard to the dialogic parts of the -drama, which were declaimed and not sung by the ancients themselves, -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</span> -the teacher must take care to accustom his pupils to a deep and mellow -fulness of vocalization, and a deliberate stateliness of verbal -procession, as much as possible the reverse of that hasty trip with -which we are accustomed to read the dialogue of our dramatic poetry. -The musical accent, or rhythmical beat, will, of course, in such a -method of recitation, receive a marked prominence; the long quantity -will never be slurred; and with regard to the spoken accent, what I -say is this, the ear of the student must first be trained in reading -prose never to omit the accent, and accustomed to feel, by the living -iteration of the ear, that both accent and quantity are an essential -part of the word. This many schoolmasters will not do, because it -requires science, and will take a little trouble; but let such pass. -Those who do so train the young classical ear, will find that in -turning to poetry, and keeping time with their foot as they read any -metre, the attentive scholar will not only readily follow the given -rhythm, and appreciate the position of the musical accent, (very few -human beings being altogether destitute of the rhythmical principle,) -but will be able also to preserve the spoken accent in those places -where the flow of the rhythm does not altogether overpower it. What I -mean is this. In the line, for instance,</p> - -<p class="f120"><b>οὐλομένην ἣ μυρἴ Ἀχαιοῖς ἄλγε’ ἔθηκεν</b>,</p> - -<p class="no-indent"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</span> -the second of the Iliad, the boy who has been properly trained to put -the accent on the penult of οὔλομένην, preserving the long quantity -of the final syllable, will, even though he retains that accent in -the rhythmical declamation of the line, find no impediment to the -rhythmical progress of the verse, but rather an agreeable variety, and -an antidote against monotony; and though, on account of the strong -effect which the rhythm always exercises on the closing word of the -line, it will be difficult to give the full effect to the spoken accent -on the antepenultimate of ἔθηκεν, while the closing musical accent lies -on the penult, nevertheless, a person who has been accustomed always to -pronounce this word in prose with its proper accent and quantity, will -bring out the first syllable of the word much more distinctly than is -done in the sing-song of a merely rhythmical recitation, and will not -spoil the verse, but rather improve it. And if any person asks me how I -prove that the ancients read Homer this way, I might content myself by -giving a Scotch answer, and asking, <i>How do you prove that they read -it your way?</i> But, in fact, there is no possibility of their having -read it otherwise; for having once introduced the habit of reading -compositions, constructed originally on musical, not elocutional -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</span> -principles, with that habit they could not but bring in as much of -the element of their spoken language as was consistent with the -musical principle on which the very existence of the composition, -as a rhythmical work of art, depended; that is to say, they allowed -the musical principle of quantitative rhythm to prevail over the -elocutional principle of accent, so far only as to produce harmony, not -so far as to fatigue with monotony.</p> - -<p>The reader will observe that I am not theorizing in all this, but -speaking from experience; and therefore I speak with confidence. For -ten years I read the Latin poets in Aberdeen, and I found no difficulty -in reading them so as to combine the living effect of both accent and -quantity, and teaching the student both by the ear alone. The first -line of Virgil, to take an example, in respect of accent and quantity, -may be read three ways. Either</p> - -<table class="fontsize_150 no-wrap" border="0" cellspacing="0" summary=" " cellpadding="0" > - <tbody><tr> - <td class="tdr"> </td> - <td class="tdl_ws1"><big>ˏ</big></td> - <td class="tdl_ws1"> <big>ˏ</big></td> - </tr><tr> - <td class="tdr"><i>Árma virúmque</i></td> - <td class="tdl"> <i>cānŏ</i></td> - <td class="tdl"> <i>Trōjæ qui prímus ab óris</i></td> - </tr><tr> - <td class="tdc_space-above1" colspan="3">Or,</td> - </tr><tr> - <td class="tdr"> </td> - <td class="tdl_ws1"> <big>ˏ</big></td> - <td class="tdl_ws1"> </td> - </tr><tr> - <td class="tdr">. . .  </td> - <td class="tdl"><i>cănō</i></td> - <td class="tdl"> <i>Trōjáe</i>  . . .</td> - </tr><tr> - <td class="tdc_space-above1" colspan="3">Or,</td> - </tr><tr> - <td class="tdr"> </td> - <td class="tdl_ws1"> <big>ˏ</big></td> - <td class="tdl_ws1"> <big>ˏ</big></td> - </tr><tr> - <td class="tdr">. . .  </td> - <td class="tdl"><i>căn-ō</i></td> - <td class="tdl"> <i>Trōjáe</i>  . . .</td> - </tr><tr> - <td class="tdc" colspan="3"> </td> - </tr> - </tbody> -</table> - -<p class="no-indent">I take notice of these two words <span -class="smcap">cano</span> and <span class="smcap">Trojǽ</span>, only -because they are the only two in which the musical accent of this line -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</span> clashes with the -spoken accent, the rules of which, though not marked in Latin books as -in Greek, were preserved by the living tradition of the Roman Catholic -Church, and the accentual Latin poetry of their Service, and are -observed by our schoolmasters as faithfully (without knowing it, many -of them) as they violate the accent of the Greek. Now, of these three -ways of reading a Latin hexameter, the second is the only one which -proceeds upon the principle of the quantitative rhythm exclusively, -observing the spoken accent only where it happens to coincide with it, -(as happens here in four bars of the six;) while the first, which is -the vulgar English way, asserts the dominancy of the spoken accent in -all the six cases; and yet, as the clash only takes place in two cases, -preserves, without effort, (as I have just said with regard to Homer,) -the flow of the musical rhythm. With that grossness of ear, however, -which Erasmus and his learned Bear noticed in the learned of his day, -they fall with respect to Latin, plump into the extreme error practised -by the modern Greeks, and cannot accentuate the first syllable of <span -class="smcap">cano</span>, without lengthening it, while the final -syllable of the same word is generally deprived of its natural amount -of sound, a strange error for a people to make with whom Latin -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</span> -verse making (I shall not say with what propriety) forms so prominent -a part of school-discipline; but there is no end to their absurdities, -no limit to their contradictions; the fact being, as one of themselves -has distinctly stated,<a id="FNanchor_39" href="#Footnote_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a> -that the “composition of classical verses -with them is almost entirely <span class="smcap">mechanical</span>;” and yet -they have the assurance to hold up this scholastic abortion to the admiration -of the public as one of the indispensable elements in the training of that -improved edition of the ancient Roman—John Bull. But to finish. The -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</span> -third method of recitation is, I think, the correct one. It violates -neither quantity nor accent, but makes the one play with an -agreeable variety over the other, as we see the iridescent colours -in a gown of shot silk. I think I have now answered the question -satisfactorily—<i>How is Homer to be read?</i> If anything remains -unclear, I shall be happy to communicate personally with any person who -has an ear.</p> - -<p>Before concluding these observations, I have one or two remarks to -make on <span class="smcap">modern Greek</span>, which have a vital connexion -with the state of the argument. The reader will observe that I have from the -beginning spoken of Greek as a living language, having had a continuous -uninterrupted existence, though under various and well-marked -modifications, from the days of Cadmus and his earth-sown brood to the -present hour. Now the vulgar notion is, that Romaic, as it used to be -called, though the present Greeks have with a just pride, I understand, -rejected the epithet, is not only a different dialect of the Greek, -from that spoken by Plato and Demosthenes, but a different language -altogether, in the same way that Italian and Spanish are languages -formed on Latin indeed, but with an organic type altogether their own. -In this view Greek becomes a dead language; and the mass of scholastic -and academical men who teach it habitually as such, without any regard -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</span> -to its existing state, will receive a justification of which they are -not slow to make use. But this vulgar notion, like many others, has -grown out of pedantic prejudice, and is supported by sheer ignorance. -How such a notion should have got abroad is easy enough to explain. I -mentioned already, that the English scholars—who have been allowed -to give the law on such subjects—have so completely disfigured the -classical features of Greek speech, that when they happen to meet -Greeks, or to travel in Greece and attempt conversation, they can -make no more of the answer they receive, than they can of the twitter -of swallows, or the language of any other bird. Again, at Oxford and -Cambridge, as is well known, the majority confine themselves to a very -limited range even of strictly classical Greek, so that a man may -well have received high honours for working up his Æschylus and his -Aristotle, and yet be quite unfit to make out the meaning of a plain -modern Greek book when he sees it; but the fact is, I have good reason -to believe, there is not one among a hundred of their scholars that -ever saw such a thing. Thirdly, we must consider under what a system of -prim classical prudery these gentlemen are often brought up. They are -taught to believe, and have been taught here also in Scotland publicly, -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</span> -that after a certain golden age of Attic or Atticizing purity, the -limits of which are very arbitrarily fixed, a race of Greek writers -succeeded who “increased immensely the vocabulary of the language, -while they injured its simplicity and debased its beauty;” and under -the influence of this salutary fear they regard with a strong jealousy -whole centuries of the most interesting and instructive authors who do -not come under their arbitrary definition of “classical.” Men who think -that the vocabulary of the Hellenic language should have been finally -closed at the time of Polybius, and who pass a philologic interdict -against any phrase or idiom introduced after that period, will not be -very likely to look with peculiar favour on the prose of Perrhæbus, -or the poetry of Soutzos. But by a large-minded philologist all this -prudery is disregarded. He knows that grammarians can as little cause -a language to be corrupted and to die, by any dainty squeamishness of -theirs, as they with their meagre art can create a single word, or -manufacture one verse of a poem. Looking at the language of Homer and -Plato as a real historical phenomenon, and not as a mere record in -grammatical books, he sees that it went on growing and putting forth -fresh buds and blossoms long after nice lexicographers had declared -that it ceased to possess vitality. A language lives as long as a people -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</span> -lives—a distinct and tangible social totality—speaking it, nor -has it the power to die at any point, where grammarians may choose -to draw a line, and say that its authors are no longer classical. -What “classical” means is hard to say; but as a matter of fact many -persons will read the Byzantine historians with much more pleasure -than Xenophon’s Hellenics, and not be able to explain intelligibly why -the Greek of the one should not be considered as good as the Greek of -the other. Greek certainly was not a dead language in any sense at -the taking of Constantinople in the year 1453. If it is dead, it has -died since that date; but the facts to those who will examine them, -prove that it is not dead. No doubt, under the oppressive atmosphere -of Turkish and Venetian domination, the stout old tree began to -droop visibly, and became encrusted with leprous scabs, and to shew -livid blotches, which were not pleasant to behold; but such a strong -central vitality had God planted in that noble organism, that, with -the returning breeze of freedom, and the spread of intelligence since -the great year 1789, the inward power of healthy life began again to -act powerfully, and the Turkish and Venetian disfigurement dropt off -speedily like a mere skin-disease as it was; and smooth Greek sounded -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</span> -glibly again, not only in the pulpit, which was the strong refuge of -its prolonged vitality, but in the forum and from the throne. Those -who doubt what I say in this matter, had best go to Athens and see; -meanwhile, for the sake of those to whom the subject may be altogether -new,—and from the general pedantic narrowness of our academical -Greek I fear there may be many such—I shall set down a passage from -Perrhæbus, and another from a common Greek newspaper, from which the -fact will be abundantly evident that the language of Homer is not -dead, but lives, and that in a state of purity, to which, considering -the extraordinary duration of its literary existence—2500 years at -least,—there is no parallel perhaps on the face of the globe, in -Europe certainly not.</p> - -<p class="blockquot2 fontsize_120">“Κατὰ τὸ 1820 διατρίβων εἰς τὴν -Σπάρτην ὁ Πεῤῥαιβὸς ἐπὶ ἡγεμονίας τοῦ Πέτρου Μαυρομιχάλη, διέβη εἰς -Κωνσταντινούπολιν, κἀκεῖθεν εἰς Δακίαν, Βασσαραβίαν καὶ Ὀδησσὸν, -ὅπου εὗρε τὸν Ἀλέξανδρον Ὑψηλάντην καὶ Γεώργιον Καντακοζηνὸν, -φέροντας τὰ πρῶτα τῆς Ἑταιρείας, καὶ μὲ ἀπερίγραπτον ἔνθουσιασμὸν -ἐτοιμαζομένους διὰ νὰ κινηθῶσι κατὰ τοῦ Σουλτάνου. Τὸν αὐτὸν σχεδὸν -ἐνθουσιασμὸν ἔβλεπέ τις οὐ μόνον κατ’ ἐκεῖνα τὰ μέρη, ἀλλὰ καθ’ ὅλην -τὴν Ἑλλάδα, τόσον εἰς σημαντικοὺς, ὅσον καὶ παντὸς ἐπαγγέλματος Ἕλληνας -κατοικοῦντας εἰς πόλεις, χώρας καὶ χωρία. Δὲν συστέλλομαι νὰ ὁμολογήσω, -ὅτι ἤμην ἐναντίος τοῦ τοιούτου κινήματος κατὰ τοῦ Σουλτάνου· ὄχι διότι -δὲν ἐπεθύμουν τὴν ἐλευθερίαν τοῦ Ἔθνους μου, ἀλλὰ διότι μ’ ἐφαίνετο -ἄωρον τὸ κίνημα, μὲ τὸ νὰ ἦσαν ἀπειροπόλεμοι οἱ Ἕλληνες, καὶ οἱ -πλεῖστοι ἄοπλοι, ὁ δὲ κίνδυνος μέγας.”<a id="FNanchor_40" href="#Footnote_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a></p> - -<p class="space-above3"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</span></p> - -<p class="f120"><b>Ο ΚΟΣΣΟΥΤ ΕΝ ΑΜΕΡΙΚΗ</b>.</p> - -<p class="blockquot2 fontsize_120">“Τήν 6 Δεκεμβρίου εἰσήλθεν ὁ ἀρχηγὸς -τῆς Οὐγγαρικῆς δημοκρατίας εἰς τὴν πρωτεύουσαν πόλιν τῶν ἡνωμένων -Πολιτειῶν. Ἀπὸ τῆς πρώτης στιγμῆς τῆς ἀφίξεως του ὅλοι οἱ ζωγράφοι -παρουσιάσθησαν διὰ νὰ λάβωσι τὴν εἰκόνα τοῦ διὰ τῆς ἡλιοτυπίας, ἀλλ’ -ὁ Κοσσοὺθ κατ’ οὐδένα πρόπον δὲν ἠθέλησε νὰ δεχθῇ τοῦτο. Ἄλλος τις -εὐφυέστερος καλλιτέχνης ἐφεῦρε τὸ μέσον νὰ τὴν λάβῃ ἄκοντος αὐτοῦ. -Ἔθεσε τὴν μηχανήν του εἴς τι παράθυρον κατα τὴν διάβασίν του καὶ -ἐπροκάλεσε μίαν ἔριν ὲν τῇ ὁδῷ διὰ νὰ σταματήσῃ τὴν τέθριππόν του. -Τοιουτοτρόπως δὲ κατώρθωσε νὰ λάβῃ λάθρα οὐχὶ μόνον τὴν εἰκόνα τοῦ -Μαγυάρου Ἥρωος, ἀλλὰ καὶ ἄλλων τεσσάρων εὑρισκομένων μετ’ αὐτοῦ ἐν -τῇ ἁμάξῃ. Ὁ Κοσσοὺθ εὕρισκετο ἐντὸς ἁμάξης ὑπὸ ἕξ καστανοχρόων ἵππων -συρομένης ἐφόρει δὲ στολὴν Οὐγγρικὴν, καὶ ἐπὶ τοῦ πίλου τοῦ μέλαν -πτερόν.”<a id="FNanchor_41" href="#Footnote_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a></p> - -<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</span> -These are as fair specimens of the current dialect of Greece as I -can produce. For it is manifest that while it would be quite easy on -the one hand to select a specimen of the living dialect written by -mere men of learning, (as from the works of <span class="smcap">Œconomus</span>,) -which should make a much nearer approach to the idiom of Xenophon, it would -be equally open on the other to produce a brigand’s song from the -mountains of Acarnania containing a great deal more of the elements -of what the admirers of unmixed Atticism would be entitled to call -corruption. But it is evident that a specimen of the first kind would -be no more a fair specimen of the average Greek now spoken, than the -polished style of George Buchanan was of the average Latin current -in his day; and a brigand’s song were just as fair a specimen of the -Greek spoken by people of education in modern Athens, as a ballad in -the Cumberland or the Craven dialect is of the English of Macaulay’s -History, or Wordsworth’s White Doe. With this remark, by way of -explanation, let any person who can read common classical Greek without -a dictionary, tell me with what face it can be asserted that the above -is a specimen of a new language, in the same sense that Italian is a -different language from Latin, and Dutch from German. I find nothing in -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</span> -the extracts given, but such slight variations in verbal form, and -in the use of one or two prepositions and pronouns, as the reader of -Xenophon will find in far greater abundance when he turns to Homer. The -principal syntactic difference observable is the use of νὰ (for ἵνα), -with the subjunctive mood, instead of the infinitive, which the modern -Greeks have allowed to drop; but this is a usage, borrowed from the -Latin I have often thought, of which very frequent examples occur in -the New Testament; and besides, a mere new fashion in the syntactical -form of a sentence was never dreamt of by any sane grammarian, as -the sufficient sign of a new language. In English, for instance, we -say, <i>I beg you will accept this</i>, and, <i>I beg you to accept -this</i>. Now suppose one of these forms of expression to become -obsolete, by a change which mere fashion may effect any day, and the -other to become all dominant, could, I ask, any such change as this, or -a whole score of such changes, be said to corrupt the English language -in such a degree as to constitute a new tongue? Much less could the -introduction of a few new words, formed according to the analogy of -the language, be said to achieve such a transformation, though an -academic purist might indeed refuse to put such words as ἡλιοτυπία -(photography), and ἀτμοπλoῖov (a steam-boat), into his lexicon. As -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</span> -little could a philosophical classical scholar be offended by the -loss of the optative mood, (used in the New Testament so sparingly,) -and the substitution for it of the auxiliary verb θέλω, which, though -it is of comparatively rare occurrence, is just as much according to -the genius of the Greek language, as the frequent use of the other -auxiliary verb <i>to be</i>, both in classical Greek and Latin. Instead -of fastening upon such insignificant peculiarities, a catholic-minded -scholar will rather be astonished to find that <i>in three columns -of a Greek newspaper of the year 1852, there do not certainly occur -three words that are not pure native Greek</i>. In fact the language, -so far from being corrupt, as its ignorant detractors assert, is the -most uncorrupt language in Europe, perhaps in the world, at the present -moment. The Germans boast of their linguistic purity, and sing songs -to Hermann who sent the legions of Varus with their lingo so bravely -out of the Westphalian swamps; but let any man compare a column of a -German newspaper with a column from the <b>ΑΘΗΝΑ</b>, or any other -ἐφημερίς issued within the girth of King Otho’s dominions, and he will -understand that while the Greek language even now is as a perfectly -pure vestment, the German in its familiar use is defaced by the -ingrained blots of many ages, which no philologic sponge of Adelung or -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</span> -Jacob Grimm will ever prevail to wash out. There are reasons for this -remarkable phenomenon in the history of language, which to a thoughtful -student of the history of the Greek people will readily suggest -themselves. I content myself with stating the fact.</p> - -<p>These things being so, the natural observation that will occur to -every one, as bearing on our present inquiry, is, that as the Greek is -manifestly a living language, and never was dead, but only suffering -for a season under a cutaneous disease now thrown off, those who speak -that language are entitled to a decisive voice in the question how -their language is to be pronounced, <i>and this on the mere ground -that they are alive and speak it</i>; and to their decision we must -bow on the sole ground of living authority and possessory right. For -every living language exercises this despotic authority over those who -learn it; and it is not in the nature of things that one should escape -from such a sovereignty. No doubt there may be certain exceptions to -which, for certain special philological purposes, this general rule -of obedience is liable; but the rule remains. Such an exception, for -instance, in the literature of our existing English language, is the -peculiar accentuation of many words that occur in Shakspeare, and even -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</span> -in Milton, different from that now used, whereby their rhythm limps to -our ear in the places where such words occur. Such exceptions, also, -are the dissyllabic words in Chaucer, that are now shortened into -monosyllables, and yet must be read as dissyllables by all those who -will enjoy the original harmony of the poet’s rhythm. In Greek, as I -have already observed, the whole quantitative value of the language has -had its poles inverted; in which practice we cannot possibly follow the -living users of the tongue, because we learn the language not to speak -with them, as a main object, (though this also has its uses seldom -thought of by schoolmasters,<a id="FNanchor_42" href="#Footnote_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a>) -but to read the works of their ancient poets, the rhythmical value of -whose works their living speech disowns. This is a sweeping exception -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</span> -to that dominancy of usage which Horace recognises as supreme -in language; but philological necessity compels; and the modern -Athenians must even submit in such points to receive laws from learned -foreigners. But with all this large exceptive liberty, we dare -not disown the rule. We must follow the authority of their living -dictation, so far as the object we have in view allows; and if we -are philosophical students of the language, our object never can be -resolutely to ignore all knowledge of the elocutional genius and habits -of the living people who speak it. It must be borne in mind also, -with how much greater ease a living language can be acquired than a -dead one; so that were it only for the sake of the speedy mastery of -the ancient dialect, a thorough practical familiarity with the spoken -tongue ought first to be cultivated. The present practice, indeed, -of teaching Greek in our schools and colleges, altogether as a dead -language, can be regarded only as a great scholastic mistake; and it -may be confidently affirmed by any person who has reflected on the -method of nature in teaching languages, that more Greek will be learned -by three months’ well-directed study at Athens, where it is spoken, -than by three years’ devotion to the language under the influence of -our common scholastic and academic appliances in this country. -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</span></p> - -<p>I am now led, in the last place, to observe, that whatever may be -thought of Itacism and of accents, as the dominant norm for the -teaching of Greek in this country, one thing is plain, that no scholar -of large and catholic views can, after what has been said and proved -in this paper, content himself with teaching Greek according to the -present arbitrary and anti-classical fashion <i>only</i>. The living -dialect also must be taught with all its peculiarities, not only -because the heroic exploits of a modern Admiral Miaulis are as well -worthy of the attention of a Hellenic student as those of an ancient -Phormion; but for strictly philological uses also, and that of more -kinds than one. The transcribers of the MSS., for one thing, in the -Middle Ages, all wrote with their ear under the habitual influence of -the pronunciation which now prevails; and were accordingly constantly -liable to make mistakes that reveal themselves at once to those who are -acquainted with that pronunciation, but will only slowly be gathered by -those whose ears have not been trained in the same way. But what is of -more consequence for Hellenic philologers to note accurately is, that -the spoken dialect of the Greek tongue, though modern in name and form, -is nowise altogether modern in substance: but like the conglomerate -<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</span> -strata of the geologists, contains imbedded very valuable fragments -of the oldest language of the country. Of this it were easy to adduce -proofs from so common a book as Passow’s Greek-German Dictionary, where -occasional reference is made to the modern dialect in illustration of -the ancient; from which source, I presume, with much else that is of -first-rate excellence in lexicography, such references have passed into -the English work of Liddell and Scott. But on this head I shall content -myself with simply directing the student’s attention to the fact, and -appending below the testimony of Professor Ross of Halle—a man who has -travelled much in Greece, can write the language with perfect fluency, -and is entitled, if any man in Europe is, to speak with the voice of -authority on such a point.<a id="FNanchor_43" href="#Footnote_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a></p> - -<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</span> -I have now finished all that I had to say on this subject, which has -proved perhaps more fertile of speculative suggestion and of practical -direction than the title at first promised. What I have said will at -least serve the purpose for which it was immediately intended, that -of justifying my conduct should I find it expedient to introduce -any decided innovations in the practice of teaching Greek in our -metropolitan University. And if it should further have the effect -of inducing any thoughtful teacher to inquire into a curious branch -of philology which he may have hitherto overlooked, and to question -the soundness of the established routine of classical inculcation in -some points, whatever disagreeable labour I may have gone through in -clearing the learned rubbish from so perplexed a path will not have -been without its reward. Any sympathizing reader who may communicate -with me, wishing that I should explain, reconsider, or modify any -statement here made, will find me, I hope, as willing to listen as to -speak, and not more zealous for victory than for truth.</p> - -<p class="center space-above2 space-below2">EDINBURGH: T. CONSTABLE,<br /> -PRINTER TO HER MAJESTY.</p> - -<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" /> - -<div class="footnotes"> -<p class="f150"><b>Footnotes:</b></p> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[1]</a> -<i>Ego sonorum causam tueor ex edicto possessorio, et ut -prætor, interdixi de possessione.</i></p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">[2]</a> -An Essay on the Pronunciation of the Greek Language. By <span -class="smcap">G. T. Pennington</span>, M.A., late Fellow of King’s -College, Cambridge. London: Murray. 1844. This is the work that I -recommend to the English student who wishes to understand the subject -in detail, without wading through the confounding mass of pertinent -and impertinent matter that the learned eloquence of more than three -centuries has heaped up.</p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_3" href="#FNanchor_3" class="label">[3]</a> -<i>Sylloge scriptorum qui de linguæ Græcæ vera et recta -pronuntiatione Commentarios reliquerunt; edidit</i> <span -class="smcap">Havercampus</span>. <i>Ludg. Bat.</i>, 1740. -Vol. ii. p. 220</p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_4" href="#FNanchor_4" class="label">[4]</a> -<span class="smcap">Joh. Rudolfi Wetstenii</span>: <i>pro Græca et -genuina linguæ Græcæ pronuntiatione Orationes Apologeticæ</i>. Basil; -1686, p. 27. The whole passage is quoted in the prefixed mottoes.</p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_5" href="#FNanchor_5" class="label">[5]</a> -See the opinions of <span class="smcap">Scaliger</span>, -<span class="smcap">Salmasius</span>, and some others, quoted by -<span class="smcap">Wetsten</span>.</p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_6" href="#FNanchor_6" class="label">[6]</a> -<span class="smcap">Wetsten</span> refers to a work by -<span class="smcap">Aldus Manutius</span> <i>de potestate -literarum</i>, which I have not seen.</p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_7" href="#FNanchor_7" class="label">[7]</a> -“<i>Audici M. Rutgerum Reschium professorem Linguæ Græcæ in collegio -Baslidiano apud Lovanienses, meum piæ memoriæ præceptorem, narrantem, -se habitasse in Liliensi pædagogeo una cum Erasmo, eo superius, se -inferius cubiculum obtinente. Henricum autum Glareanum Parisiis -Lovanium venisse, atque ab Erasmo in collegium vocatum fuisse -ad prandium: quo cum venisset, quid novi adferret interrogatum -dixisse (quod in itinere commentus erat, quod sciret Erasmum plus -satis rerum novarum studiosum ac mire credulum) quosdam in Græcia -natos Lutetiam venisse, viros ad miraculum doctos; qui longe aliam -Græci sermonis pronunciationem usurparent, quam quæ vulgo in -hisce partibus recepta esset: Eos nempe sonare pro</i> Vita Beta, -<i>pro</i> <span class="smcap">ii</span> ita Eta, <i>pro</i> <span -class="smcap">ai</span>, ai, <i>pro</i> <span class="smcap">oi</span>, -oi, <i>et sic in cæteris. Quo audito Erasmum paulo post conscripsisse -dialogum de recta Latini Græcique sermonis pronunciatione, ut videretur -hujus rei ipse incentor, et obtulisse Petro Alostensi Typographo -imprimendum: Qui cum forte aliis occupatus renueret, aut certe se tam -cito excudere quam volebat non posse diceret, misisse libellum Basileam -ad Frobenium, a quo max impressus in lucem prodiit. Verum Erasmum -cognita fraude, nunquam ea pronunciandi ratione postea usum, nec -amicis, quibuscum familiariter vivebat, ut eam observarent, præcepisse. -In ejus rei fidem exhibuit Rutgerus ipsius Erasmi manu scriptam in -gratiam Damiani a Gœs Hispani pronunciationis formulam, in nullo -diversam ab ea, qua passim docti et indocti in hac lingua utuntur.</i>” -The voucher for the story is <span class="smcap">Vossius</span>, from -whose <i>Aristarchus</i>, lib. 1, c. 28, Wetsten quotes it.</p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_8" href="#FNanchor_8" class="label">[8]</a> -Havercamp, vol. ii. p 174.</p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_9" href="#FNanchor_9" class="label">[9]</a> -<i>Ueber die Aus-sprache des Griechischen.</i> Leipzig, 1825. -<i>De Sonis literarum Græcarum</i>; <i>auctore</i> -<span class="smcap">Gustavo Seyffarthio</span>. Lipsiæ, 1824.</p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_10" href="#FNanchor_10" class="label">[10]</a> -“If we find a word pronounced in a given manner in the time of -Athenæus, we are warranted, in the absence of proof, in supposing it -to have been pronounced in the same way in the time of Homer; and -what prevailed in Homer’s time may be presumed to have continued -till the age of Athenæus.”—<span class="smcap">Pennington</span>, -p. 7. This is too strong. Considering the immense interval of time -and progress of culture between <span class="smcap">Homer</span> and -<span class="smcap">Athenæus</span>, and considering the tendency to -change inherent in human nature, I can see no presumption that the -pronunciation of the language should have remained through so many -centuries unchanged.</p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_11" href="#FNanchor_11" class="label">[11]</a> -“I cannot help thinking that if this treatise of Dionysius had been -in early times made a text-book in schools, no controversy would -ever have arisen upon the pronunciation of the Greek letters,” -(except the diphthongs,) “or upon the nature of quantity.”—<span -class="smcap">Pennington.</span></p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_12" href="#FNanchor_12" class="label">[12]</a> -“<i>Vulgus antiquæ pronuntiationis tenacissimus est.</i>”—<span -class="smcap">Wetsten.</span> Compare the observations of Professor L. -Ross, below, on the antique element in modern Greek.</p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_13" href="#FNanchor_13" class="label">[13]</a> -Pluto Cratylus, sec. 74, Bekker.</p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_14" href="#FNanchor_14" class="label">[14]</a> -Aristophanes, Lysist. 86.</p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_15" href="#FNanchor_15" class="label">[15]</a> -What he says about the tongue performing no part in the formation -of the vowels is manifestly false, as any one may convince himself -by pronouncing the three sounds, <i>au</i>, <i>ai</i>, <i>ee</i>, -successively, with open mouth before a mirror. He will thus observe a -gradual elevation and advance of the tongue, as the sound to be emitted -becomes more slender.</p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_16" href="#FNanchor_16" class="label">[16]</a> -This limitation must be carefully borne in mind; for after Athens -ceased to be a capital, being overwhelmed by Alexandria, it still -remained a sort of literary metropolis, giving, or affecting to give, -the law in matters of taste, long after its authority had ceased -practically to bind large masses of those whose usage fashioned the -existing language.</p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_17" href="#FNanchor_17" class="label">[17]</a> -In some English schools a small concession has been made to common -sense, and to sound principles of teaching, by confining the long -slender sound of <i>a</i> to the long α, while the short α is -pronounced like the short <i>a</i> in <i>bat</i>. Now, as changes -are not easily made in England, especially among schoolmasters, who -are a stiff-necked generation everywhere, it would have been worth -while when they were moving, to kick the barbarous English -<span class="allsmcap">a</span> out of the scholastic world altogether. -But their conservatism was too strong for this; besides, the ears of many -were so gross that they would not have distinguished, or would have -sworn that they could not distinguish, a long <i>a</i> from a short -one, without giving the former the sound of an entirely distinct vowel! -There is no limit to the nonsense that men will talk in defence of an -inveterate absurdity.</p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_18" href="#FNanchor_18" class="label">[18]</a> -The following passage from <span class="smcap">Mitford</span> -(Pennington, p. 37) may stand here as an instructive lesson, how -blindly prejudice many sometimes speak: “Strong national partiality -only, and determined habit, could lead to the imagination cherished -by the French critics, that the Greek υ was a sound so unpleasant, -produced by a position of the lips so ungraceful as the French -<span class="allsmcap">u</span>.”—<i>History</i>, book ii. sec. iii., -note. <span class="smcap">Scaliger</span> (Opuscula: Paris, 1610, p. 131) -says rightly, “Est obscurissimus sonus in Græca vocali υ, quæ ita -pronuntianda est ut proxime accedat ad iota.”</p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_19" href="#FNanchor_19" class="label">[19]</a> -“<i>Utut sit, id saltem nacti sumus interpretum S. sc. singularum -atque omnium auctoritate ut constet</i> <span class="smcap">ai</span> -<i>mature atque optimis adeo Græcorum temporibus simplici vocali</i> -<span class="allsmcap">e</span> <i>respondisse</i>.”—<span -class="smcap">Seyffarth</span>, p. 101. See also the Stanza from -<span class="smcap">Callimachus</span>, where ναίχι echoes to ἔχει, Epig. -xxx. 5, (and <span class="smcap">Sextus Empiricus</span> <i>adv.</i> -Grammat. c. 5.)</p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_20" href="#FNanchor_20" class="label">[20]</a> -“<i>Quâ potestate literæ</i> <span class="smcap">ei</span> <i>fuerint -eâ Græcorum ætate in quam veteres Sc. s. interpretes incidunt ex -plurimis iisque variis verbis in singulas linguas conversis adeo -clarum est ut nulla fere restet causa de eâ dubitare.</i>”— -<span class="smcap">Seyffarth.</span> The Old Testament translators, in -fact, use it as regularly for<i>Hirek</i> and <i>Yod</i>, as they do -<span class="smcap">ai</span> for <i>Tzere</i>, <i>Segol</i>, and <i>Sheva</i>.</p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_21" href="#FNanchor_21" class="label">[21]</a> -With regard to this sort of evidence arising from wrong spelt words, -it is manifest that a single example proves nothing. When Aunt Chloe, -for instance, in the American novel, says, “I’m <i>clar</i> on’t,” this -is no proof that the Americans pronounce the <i>ea</i> in <i>clear</i> -like <i>a</i>; the only conclusion is, that certain vulgar people in -America pronounce it so, and a word with a different vocalization must -be written in order to express their peculiar method of utterance. -But when mistakes of this kind occur extensively, and in quarters -where there is no reason to suspect anything particularly vulgar, they -authorize a conclusion as general as the fact, especially where no -evidence exists pointing in a different direction.</p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_22" href="#FNanchor_22" class="label">[22]</a> -<span class="smcap">Thiersch</span> uses the passage as a proof of the -antiquity of the modern slender sound.—<i>Sprachlehre</i>, § 16, 5.</p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_23" href="#FNanchor_23" class="label">[23]</a> -<span class="smcap">Godofredi Hermani</span> <i>de emendenda ratione -Græcæ grammaticæ</i>, Lib. i. c. 2, quoted at length by -<span class="smcap">Liscov</span>, p. 21.</p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_24" href="#FNanchor_24" class="label">[24]</a> -On revisal it strikes me I have given the enemies of Itacism an -unfair advantage by not stating, that, while in any other language -the attenuation of so many different sounds into one, might have -proved a very grievous evil, there is such a richness of the full -sound of α (which the English have effaced) and ω in Greek, that the -blemish rarely offends. I have to mention also, that, while a certain -prominence even of this slender sound seems necessary to the phonetic -character of Greek, as distinguished from Latin, I have no objection, -in reading Homer and the elder poets, (were it only for the sake of the -often quoted <big>πολυφλοίσβοιο θαλάσσης</big>!) to pronounce οι, as -<i>boy</i> in English, and η, as we do it in Scotland; just as in reading -Chaucer we may be forced to adopt some of the peculiarities of the pronunciation -of his day. But in the common use of the prose language, I think it -safer to stick by the tradition of so many centuries, than to venture -on patches of classical restoration, where it is impossible to revive -a consistent whole. I may say also, that if υ be pronounced uniformly -like the French <i>u</i>, the itacism will be diminished by one letter, -while the difference between that and the modern Greek pronunciation -is so slight, that a Scotchman so speaking in Athens will be generally -understood, whereas our broad Scotch <i>u</i> (<i>oo</i>) besides being -entirely without classical authority, recedes so far from the actual -pronunciation of the Greeks, as to be a serious bar in the way of -intelligibility.</p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_25" href="#FNanchor_25" class="label">[25]</a> -<span class="smcap">Corpe</span>’s Neo-Hellenic Greek Grammar. -London, 1851. See also a notice of this work in the <span class="smcap">Athenæum</span> -for last year, where I am happy to observe that the opinions -advocated in this paper are supported.</p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_26" href="#FNanchor_26" class="label">[26]</a> -Greek Grammar. 1851, sect. 44, 45. <span class="smcap">Donaldson</span> -(Greek Grammar, p. 17) says, ‘The accent is the sharp or elevated -sound with which one of the last three syllables of a Greek word is -<i>regularly</i> pronounced. This “<i>regularly</i>” is as significant -as Mr. <span class="smcap">Jelf</span>’s “<i>ought</i>.”’</p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_27" href="#FNanchor_27" class="label">[27]</a> -Of course I except Professor <span class="smcap">Masson</span> of Belfast, -whose complete mastery of the living dialect of Greece is the object of -admiration to all who know him.</p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_28" href="#FNanchor_28" class="label">[28]</a> -Classical Museum, vol. i. p. 338.</p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_29" href="#FNanchor_29" class="label">[29]</a> -There is also a greater <i>emphasis</i> or <i>stress</i> given to -the accented syllable, as is manifest from the pronunciation of the -modern Greeks, and from the striking fact that in the modern dialect, -the unaccented syllable has sometimes been dropt, while the accented -constitutes the whole modern word, as <big>δὲν</big> for <big>οὐδὲν, -μᾶς</big> for <big>ἡμᾶς</big>.</p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_30" href="#FNanchor_30" class="label">[30]</a> -<span class="smcap">Quinctil.</span>, lib. i. c. 5; <span class="smcap">Diomed.</span> -de Oratione, ii.; <span class="smcap">Putsch.</span> i. 426.</p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_31" href="#FNanchor_31" class="label">[31]</a> -<span class="smcap">Jelf</span>, in the Preface to his Grammar, calls the -doctrine of accent “a difficult branch of scholarship.” The difficulty -is altogether an artificial one, made by scholastic men who will insist -on teaching by the eye only and the understanding, what has no meaning -at all except when addressed to the ear. The doctrine of accentuation -in English has no peculiar difficulty, plainly because men learn it in -the natural way by hearing.</p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_32" href="#FNanchor_32" class="label">[32]</a> -“<i>Si quis igitur vestrum ad accuratam Græcarum literarum scientiam -aspirat, is probabilem sibi accentuum rationem quam maturrime comparet, -in propositoque perstet scurrarum dicacitate et stultorum derisione -immotus</i>,” ad Med. 1, apud <span class="smcap">Jelf</span>, vol. i. -p. 37. I wonder if Porson himself pronounced according to the accents. -If he did not, he is just another instance of that extraordinary -incapacity of apprehending a large principle that is so characteristic -of the English mind.</p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_33" href="#FNanchor_33" class="label">[33]</a> -I may insert here the whole of the passage of <span class="smcap">Boissonade</span>, -from which the words in one of the prefixed mottoes are taken. -“<i>Nisi quod maxime cupio, in omnibus academiis nostris, gymnasiis -et scholis hodierna Græcorum pronuntiatio recipiatur. Nam cum prorsus -perierit antiqua pronuntiandi ratio qua Demosthenes, et Sophocles, -vel ipsi Alexandrini sub Ptolemæis utebantur, et fere ridiculum sit -unumquemque populum ad suæ linguæ sonos, atque etiam ad libitum, -Græcorum quos legit librorum pronuntiationem efformare, id saltem -boni, admissa neotericorum pronuntiatione, lucrabimur, non solum ut -Gallus homo et Germanus Anglum intelligant Græce loquentem et ab illo -Græce ipsi loquentes intelligantur, sed id etiam ut cum Græcis doctis -et scholastica institutione politis confabulemur verbis antiquorum -et facillime, si velimus, hodiernæ linguæ cognitionem ac usum -assequamur.</i>”—<span class="smcap">Herodian</span>, Epimerisni, -<span class="smcap">Boissonade.</span> London, 1819. Prefat.</p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"><a id="Footnote_34" href="#FNanchor_34" class="label">[34]</a> -History of the University of Cambridge, Section vii.</p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_35" href="#FNanchor_35" class="label">[35]</a> -When I was at the railway station, <span class="smcap">Skipton</span>, -in Yorkshire, waiting for a train, I heard one of the men call out, -“Any person for <i>Mánchéster</i>” with a distinct and well-marked -dwelling of the voice on the second as well as the first syllable. This -gave me a very vivid idea of the manner in which the Greeks must have -pronounced ἄνθρωπος, accenting the first syllable, but dwelling on the -second syllable with a distinct prolongation of the voice.</p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_36" href="#FNanchor_36" class="label">[36]</a> -See the essay on this subject in the second volume of the Greek works -of Professor <span class="smcap">Rangabe</span> of Athens.</p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_37" href="#FNanchor_37" class="label">[37]</a> -Every practical teacher ought to know how much more easily the doctrine -of quantity may be taught with constant reference to accent than -without it; so that pronouncing a word like ἡμέρα, the accent on the -penult, is the easiest way to make the student remember that the final -syllable of that word is long.</p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_38" href="#FNanchor_38" class="label">[38]</a> -<big>Δεῖ τὴν φωνὴν ἐν τῷ μελῳδεῖν τὰς μὲν ἐπιτάσεις τε καὶ ἀνέσεις -ἀφανεῖς ποίεισθαι</big>—<span class="smcap">Aristoxenus</span>, apud <span -class="smcap">Pennington</span>, p. 226.</p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_39" href="#FNanchor_39" class="label">[39]</a> “Our -composition of classical verses is almost entirely mechanical. When -a boy composes such a verse as <i>Insignemque canas Neptunum vertice -cano</i>, how is he guided to the proper collocation of the words? Not -by his ear, certainly, for that would be struck precisely in the same -manner if he wrote it <i>Insignemque cano Neptunum vertice canas</i>; -no, he learns from books that the first of <i>cano</i> (I sing) is -short, and the first of <i>canus</i> (hoary) is long. Having so used -them, their respective quantity is stored up as a fact in his memory, -and by degrees he remembers them so well, that when he sees either -of them used in a wrong place, he thinks it offends his ear, while -in truth it only offends his understanding. But I apprehend a Roman -boy’s process of composition would be quite different. Having been -used from his cradle to hear the first syllable of <i>canus</i> take -up about twice as much time as that of <i>cano</i>, such a verse as -<i>Insignemque cano Neptunum vertice canas</i>, would really hurt his -ear, because in the second foot the thesis would be complete before the -syllable was expressed, and he would have a time or σημεῖον too much; -and in the sixth he could not fill up the time of the arsis without -giving to the syllable a drawling sound which would be both unusual and -offensive.”—<span class="smcap">Pennington</span>, p. 249. So long as -such an absurd system of writing verses, whether Latin or Greek—from -the understanding and not from the ear—is practised, the boys who -refuse to have anything to do with prosody shew a great deal more sense -than the masters who inculcate it.</p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent fontsize_120"> -<a id="Footnote_40" href="#FNanchor_40" class="label">[40]</a> -“Ἀπομνημονεύματα Πολεμικὰ, διαφόρων μαχῶν συγκροτηθεισῶν μεταξὺ Ἑλλήνων -καὶ Ὀθωμάνων κατά τε τὸ Σούλιον καὶ Ἀνατολικὴν Ελλάδα ἀπὸ τοῦ 1820 -μέχρι τοῦ 1829 ἔτους. Συγγραφέντα παρὰ τοῦ Συνταγματαρχοῦ Χριστοφόρου -Πεῤῥαίβου τοῦ ἐξ Ὀλύμπου τῆς Θετταλίας, καὶ διῃρήμενκ εἰς τόμους δύω. -Ἐν Ἀθήναις, ἐκ τῆς Τυπογραφίας Ἀνδρέου Κορόμηλα, Ὁδός Ἓρμου, Ἀριθ. 215. 1836.”</p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_41" href="#FNanchor_41" class="label">[41]</a> -“Αθηνα, Decemb. 31, 1851.”</p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_42" href="#FNanchor_42" class="label">[42]</a> -Perhaps some classical young gentleman at Oxford or Cambridge may be -moved by the consideration brought forward in the following passage:—“I -was much delighted with this really Grecian ball, at which I was -the only foreigner. The Grecian fair I have ever found peculiarly -agreeable in society. They are not in the smallest degree tainted with -the artificial refinements and affectations of more civilised life, -while they have all its graces and fascinations; and I cannot help -thinking that as some one thought it worth while to learn ancient Greek -at the age of seventy, for the sole purpose of reading the Iliad, so -it is well worthy the pains of learning modern Greek at <i>any</i> -age, for the pleasure of conversing, in her own tongue, with a young -and cultivated Greek beauty.”—<i>Wanderings in Greece</i>, by -<span class="smcap">George Cochran</span>, Esq. London, 1837.</p> -</div> - -<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"> -<a id="Footnote_43" href="#FNanchor_43" class="label">[43]</a> -In a paper on the Comparison of the Forms of the Nominative -Case in certain Latin and Greek Nouns, (<i>Zeitschrift für die -Alterthums-Wissenschaft. 9ͭͤͬ Jahrgang</i>, No. 49,) Professor Ross -writes to Professor <span class="smcap">Bergh</span> of Marburg, as -follows:—“My views are founded chiefly on the observation of the -dialect used by the common people of Greece, among whom and with -whom I lived so long. This dialect, indeed, now spoken by the Greek -shepherds and sailors, and which, of course, is not to be learnt from -books, but from actual intercourse with the people, the majority of -philologists are apt to hold cheap, but it has been to me a mine of -rich instruction, and I have no hesitation in saying that, at all -events, in reference to the non-Attic dialects of the Greek tongue, to -Latin, Oscan, and even Etruscan, more may be got from this source than -from the many bulky commentaries of the grammarians of the Middle Ages. -See what I have said on this point in my <i>Reisen auf den Griechischen -Inseln</i>, iii. p. 155.”</p> -</div></div> - -<div class="chapter"> -<div class="transnote bbox space-above2"> -<p class="f120 space-above1">Transcriber’s Notes:</p> -<hr class="r10" /> -<p>Uncertain or antiquated spellings or ancient words were not corrected.</p> -<p>Typographical and punctuation errors have been silently corrected.</p> -</div></div> - -<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PRONUNCIATION OF GREEK ***</div> -<div style='text-align:left'> - -<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'> -Updated editions will replace the previous one—the old editions will -be renamed. -</div> - -<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'> -Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright -law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works, -so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United -States without permission and without paying copyright -royalties. 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