[DOWNLOAD] "Magazine, or Animadversions on the English Spelling (1703)" by G. W. * eBook PDF Kindle ePub Free
eBook details
- Title: Magazine, or Animadversions on the English Spelling (1703)
- Author : G. W.
- Release Date : January 18, 2006
- Genre: Foreign Languages,Books,Reference,
- Pages : * pages
- Size : 149 KB
Description
I first came across what is, as far as I know, the unique copy of Magazine, by G. W. , when working in the library formed by the late Sir Isaac Pitman. It is bound up as the last item in a volume which contains several nineteenth-century pamphlets on language and spelling, and also the first numbers of the periodical The Phonetic Friend. (The volume was for a time in the possession of the Bath City Free Library, to which it was presented by Isaac Pitman; it must subsequently have been returned to him. ) I drew attention to the existence of Magazine in an article published in 1937; to the best of my knowledge it had not been noticed in print before that, though it is of considerable interest in a number of respects. I am indebted to Sir Isaac Pitman & Sons Ltd. , London, for permission to reproduce the pamphlet herewith in the Augustan Reprints. G. W. was a spelling reformer, one of the many writers who, from early Elizabethan times onwards, have been critical of traditional English orthography and have made proposals for improving it. Although nothing that could be called a spelling-reform “movement” existed until the nineteenth century, there were earlier periods when the subject was much in the air, when a number of people were writing about it and reading and discussing each other’s ideas. The publication of Magazine does not fall at one of these times; it comes, in fact, in the very middle of a recession of interest in spelling reform which lasted almost a hundred years. From about 1650 to 1750 there were few critics of our orthography, and they were usually neither very strong in their criticisms nor radical in their proposals for amendment. G. W. is thus a somewhat isolated figure, and his scheme for reform would appear, in its details at least, to be fairly original.