Other formats

    Adobe Portable Document Format file (facsimile images)   TEI XML file   ePub eBook file  

Connect

    mail icontwitter iconBlogspot iconrss icon

The Pamphlet Collection of Sir Robert Stout: Volume 40

Language. A Baulk

Language. A Baulk.

I have by my side a modern Dictionary from which I quote the following:—

"Amongst all families of kindred tongues, the Indo-European is pre-eminent both for the perfection of its organic structure, and for the value of its literary monuments. The parent of the whole family—the one primitive Indo-European language—has left no such monument of itself; but its roots and forms may be made out to great extent by the scientific comparison of the languages which have descended from it." The main branches then follow—Indian, Iranian, Greek, Latin, Celtic, Slavonic, and Teutonic.

This conclusion is arrived at by first constructing and afterwards studying the rules of the constructed science of Lexicography. The writer says that there is no monument left of a lost language but its roots and forms. If the roots and forms are left the language is somewhere lost in sight, for a mother tongue can never be lost until the race to which it is a particle has died out. If the roots and forms are found scattered, the race is scattered. If a race dies, no seccucu remains, no root, for the root is a native articulate sound, the articulated sound of a formed totote, as the sounds of a flute are peculiar to its construction. The ability to articulate the cadences of a mother tongue is bom with the offspring of the race. Tongue and language are not synonymous terms. One is unstudied and a birthfall; the other constructed, a study, and a vocabulary. The Indo-European having left its roots behind has left its etymology, and amongst nations gradually making up disinterred vocabularies, the distich they frame must come to language by unerring etymology, and eventually to the same language its etymology first made it. It is a certainty, therefore, that amongst the descendants of the Indo-European the lost Indo-European will be found a living mother tongue, however imperfect

page 9

Your attention, Brethren!

There is but One perfection in one endet in Nature; there can, therefore, be but one list of alphabetical sounds. To suppose two alphabets is to suppose two perfections in one sum. How could it brate? Both must be alike, or they must differ. If they differed one sum would be two perfections—an absurdity; if both were alike, two perfections would be one sum—an absurdity.

If you can find in the whole range of euphonic articulated sounds one word the letters of the English alphabet will not spell, infuse and influx, you will find an imperfection; and as no imperfection can exist in a natural perfection, you must look elsewhere for a perfect alphabet in which none of the sounds of the Angle alphabet are euphenetted, and class the Angle with sub-divits. When it is found you will have discovered the pretone.

But you cannot find a sound, perfect in euphony, timed, toned and tuned, the letters of the Angle alphabet will not spell, and the vowels infuse and flux.

Lexicographers tell you that modern English is made up from Latin and Greek roots. They put the cart before the horse. An alphabet and its mono sounds are inseparable. If Latin and Greek are the primate mono tones of the English vocabulary, then the alphabet is a Latin and Greek alphabet, and English the incidence.

But the English is a mother tongue, and Latin and Greek are incidences, they have no rattle, they are Dead Languages. Latin is a law scrip, ponderous; Greek is a scripture, confluent. Neither of them are the emblet of a mother tongue. A child could not euphonise either of them. They are formal and precise and do not express vivid emotion. A child could not express or expend his petulance, or vent his little anathas in Greek or in Latin. They are dead languages and emotionless. They are studies. Who ever knew a child born to his father's study?

The Alphabet is the English alphabet, and not the beta of modern Greek at all.

If the English alphabet spells, and its liquids infused and influxed pronounce every word found in every other pater, the English language must, when perfected, include every other, and the "parent of the whole family" the lost Indo-European, will be restored in modem English: Indian, Iranian, Greek, Latin, Celtic, Slavonic, Lithurian, and Teutonic merging into it.

The Angle alphabet is perfect. The Indo-European, (in old parle Ina Europia) was a perfected vocobnosis, but the perfection of literative elegance, perspicuity and finish, is Ebretted Angle Caligrote, a vocabulary all dis-syllables.

I have raised a cloud carefully lowered, tinted, and embossed by the priestcraft of the Church, and made "Holy," (Church property) by every device, spiritual and temporal, supremacy could devise. At one time to see the lips move in response during the performance of a page 10 Latin orison would be followed by instant dismissal and severe pennance. Latin was a "Holy Mystery," not to be profaned.

This is my Baulk. No man after reading it can remove it until he has shown that a more perfect language than the English would be, if perfected, could be constructed out of more perfect elementary articulate sounds.

This is my Pulle.—The records of the Empire of Greece were removed to Delhi after the Massacre of Myteletus, and the destruction of the entableted City of Mycenæ. These records were archived, and the key to the Crypt was to be found in the Third Declination of Euphione, a star of the eleventh magnitude. The key was found eighty-one years ago by observed declination ordered by the King of Delhi on the North Cape of the North Island of New Zealand, and verified in Patma, one of the New Hebrides. The Crypt was opened, and the archives taken possession of by the Lodge of Sumne. The Records are in Greek, Angle, and Hebraic, in nine copies of each record. There are three-hundred and eleven thousand tons, and the custody of them is accompanied by strict conditions. They are lithograph grotesque caligraphy, re-produced from blocks of lignitite. Before the British took possession of Delhi every record was removed.

The Bummistrie, (correspondence) is writen in what would now be considered very pure and comprehensive English, and the Lodge gossip mostly in "Braw Scotch."

In other archives, the old libraries have been under the care of old Lodges. The St. Asaph Library contained fifteen hundred thousand volumes in one Panna—lyre, literature, and lore. Lyre is poetry—a phantasy; it is preserved in four tongues, Literature in one only—Ina Europia. Lore is Medecia, and annetted in every tongue.

Scripture is Greek caligraphy, a dead language constructed to prevent the translation of the Scriptures into various tongues, so that all who would read them should have the same text to peruse. The Pen-tutuk, Pologlot, and Panna would make ninety-two volumes, each equal in bulk to the Catholic Bible. They are the original scriptures known to the men who wrote the books which, now transmuted, versified, and arrayed, are compiled into "The Catholic Canon of Holy Scripture." Latin is another pinnot, a Dead Language, constructed to be the tomed heading prefixed to all Statutes of the Realm, in all tongues, languages, or other national direlects of speech, so that the Platitudes of the Law should be universal.

Virgil, a schoolmaster and a brilliant intellect, studied Scripture constructed Edmontine for eighty years to adapt it to poetry, and rendered an old Anglette poem into his "Emblazoned Greek." Homer followed him, and transmuted "The Illiad" and also wrote eleven other Eben poems. Ama came last, and wrote "The Odysaye" and another poem. These are all the poems ever written in Virgil's Emblazoned Greek. Modern Greek is a new eclypote framed by Hippolitus from one book of Virgil's, found in Corinth in a book shed.

page 11

All Greek Standard works are in Modern Greek, and their value is their intrinsic worth. If a demand arose, New Greek literature could be multiplied by the ton. Virgil's Emblazoned Greek is limited. The first edition of any modern Greek book printed or written, sacred or profane, was in the 12th century.

Had I left it to be inferred that my acquaintance with archived records depended on the translation of them out of all sorts of impossible cabalistic hieroglphics, such as the science of Lexicography has invented and arrayed under the heading of "Ancient Alphabets," I should have dug a pit for myself as priestcraft has done for itself, and set up an Ancient Aunt Sally to be knocked over by philosophic and scientific examination. No man can transcribe a record into Greek or Latin and re-transcribe it twelve months afterwards into the same sentences as the original copy, word for word, or even convey the identical ideas, unless he can remember the phraseology; much less can he render the dite of another. The tome of Latin and the confluence of Greek transmute, and a sentence only bears the plated impress, and may not contain one of the original words of construction. The Books of the Christian Bible are now in the same mother tongue in which they were written. There was no such structure as Modern Greek or Modern Latin until after the Canon of the Bible was set. The Bible was translated into not out of the Dead Languages, and the stupid idea of adding to its importance by the very imperfection which would diminish its value, was a trick of the Craft of the Priest, in Holy Conclave Assembled. How Professors of University studies will get out of their share of the inheritance of this silly swindle I do not know, but they know that not one of them could put a paragraph into Latin or Greek that another could re-write in English, and bear the slightest resemblance to the original. And there they are again abrood on the addled egg of Monk Everett, and have all they can get in the original copy carefully revised by the original manuscript, interpolations and edetta extra, "the only bias being in the interests of the Church."

There was not a line of the Bible translated or written in either Greek or Latin until the year 1204. The first printed editions of the Bible were in Angle, and three impressions of it, very much differing from the present version, are now in the Lodge of St. Andrew.

It would be out of place to speak of the Bible here had not so much care been taken by the priestcraft to influence all English education. There is not, perhaps, one man not a University student, who ever suspected the English Language of antiquity, and biblical Latin and Greek of modern origin.

Note.—If any brother of the Order wishes to convince himself that the story of Adam and Eve is not a translation, but was originally written as it appears (or nearly so), let him get the 3rd Chapter of Genesis experimented upon. It is not much mutilated and is the only one in the Church version resembling the original in sequence.

page 12

Corollary.—Nature has but one perfect set of Alphabetical sounds., proved by one set sufficing to spell and pronounce every word framed in euphony.

Corollary—That any word added to the vocabulary will take its place as an English word and agree with its nominative case in gender, number and person.

Corolander—The Angle is the oldest tongue of Primordial man, if he was created perfect, and is the one Universal Language to which all diatribic distich tends.