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English and Welsh

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1955 J. R. R. Tolkien lecture
As an adjective "English and Welsh" refers toEngland and Wales.

"English and Welsh" isJ. R. R. Tolkien's inaugural O'Donnell Memorial Lecture of 21 October 1955. The lecture sheds light on Tolkien's conceptions of the connections ofrace,ethnicity, andlanguage.

Publication

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It was first published inAngles and Britons in 1963 and was republished inThe Monsters and the Critics, and Other Essays in 1983.[1]

Contents

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Tolkien begins with an overview of the terms "British", "Celtic", "Germanic", "Saxon", "English" and "Welsh", explaining the last term's etymology inwalha.

Tolkien also addresses the historicallanguage contact betweenEnglish andWelsh since theAnglo-Saxon settlement of Britain, includingWelsh loanwords andsubstrate influence found in English, and converselyEnglish loanwords in Welsh. Comparing the Germanici-mutation and the Celticaffection, Tolkien says:

The north-west of Europe, in spite of its underlying differences of linguistic heritage – Goidelic, Brittonic, Gallic; its varieties of Germanic; and the powerful intrusion of spoken Latin – is as it were a singlephilological province, a region so interconnected in race, culture, history, and linguistic fusions that its departmental philologies cannot flourish in isolation.

In the final part of the lecture Tolkien explores the concept ofphonaesthetics, citing "cellar door" as a phrase recognised as sounding beautiful in English and adding that, to his own taste, in Welsh "cellar doors are extraordinarily frequent". Tolkien describes the working of phonaesthetics inherent in the moment of association ofsound and meaning:

[T]his pleasure is felt most immediately and acutely in the moment of association: that is in the reception (or imagination) of a word-form which is felt to have a certain style, and the attribution to it of a meaning which is not received through it.

Tolkien alludes to his view that such tastes are inherited, "an aspect in linguistic terms of our individual natures. And since these are largely historical products, the predilections must be so too." To refer to such an inherited taste of language, Tolkien introduces the term "native tongue" as opposed to "cradle tongue".

Influence

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Tolkien notes in his lecture that "Most English-speaking people … will admit that 'cellar door' is beautiful, especially if dissociated from its sense and from its spelling. More beautiful than, say, 'sky', and far more beautiful than 'beautiful' … Well then, in Welsh, for me cellar doors are extraordinarily frequent." This interest in and appreciation of Welsh influenced his own invented languages, notably the Elvish languageSindarin.[2]

This lecture is considered Tolkien's "last major learned work".[3] There are several important aspects to it. First, it "includes a valuable contribution to the study of the place of Britons in Anglo-Saxon England". Secondly, it offers a warning against racial theories. Third, it presents Tolkien's hypothesis of "inborn" linguistic tastes, which then leads into a discussion of his own views of aesthetics in language. Finally, it provides a (correct) hypothesis on the origins of the word "w(e)alh", which in turn provides an explanation of what happened to Celtic when the Anglo-Saxons invaded.[4]

References

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  1. ^"Truth or Consequences - Hammond and Scull".www.hammondandscull.com. Retrieved26 May 2018.
  2. ^"Why do the Elves in The Hobbit sound Welsh?".BBC Guides. Retrieved26 May 2018.
  3. ^A., Shippey, T. (2001).J.R.R. Tolkien: Author of the Century. London: HarperCollins. p. 113.ISBN 0261104012.OCLC 48194645.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. ^Drout, Michael D. C. (2007).J.R.R. Tolkien Encyclopedia: Scholarship and Critical Assessment. Taylor & Francis. pp. 162–163.ISBN 9780415969420.
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