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How people spelled
when they could spell as they liked
before the 18th century
If peple could spel as they liked, what sort of caos would result?
What happened when they could?
The time when people actually could spell as they liked was before the late 18th century dictionaries of Johnson and others, and before the directions of 18th century society towards applauding 'conspicuous consumption' and snobbery and the 19th century valuation on elite correctness. These combined to set English spelling in concrete, less than two hundred and fifty years ago.Some of the answers to how these earlier writers wanted to spell then are interesting, and not quite what we might expect.
This question is relevant to spelling reform now. What were the spelling preferences of writers in those free old days? What linguistic principls did they tend to use?
We are diverted from asking this question about their spelling when we read old writings, because what hits us most are:
a) Vocabulary that has changed or is now obsolete.
b) Changes in English speech, particularly in vowel sounds and in dropped inflexions for word endings.
c) Changes in lettering: old spellings may seem full of antique usages such as Germanic-style 'sharp' ß and , and double sses, and lots of 'e' and 'y' and absences of 'j' , and the use of 'v' for 'w'.
d) The handwriting can be different - for example, here is some typical 17th century handwriting
The handwriting can be different - for example, here is some typical 17th century handwriting
Here is a study of 'how people spelled when they could spell as they liked', based on long observation in reading in those earlier periods, supported by an analyses of samples of print from around 1370 to 1670. The samples are not of the same length, and they are so short and such a limited sample that the findings can only be indicators to support my background of wider reading. The figures cannot be used for statistical comparisons, but there is a rich supply of material that was printed or handwritten from the late middle ages onward to examine, to back up the generalisations made here.
1. The Anglo-Saxons and perhaps even until Chaucer's time perhaps, writers in English may have 'spelled as they spoke', but after the invention of printing, an interesting thing happened.
Books and pamphlets multiplied phenomenally - everyone who could was reading like mad, and it sometimes seemed that they were all writing too. What happened, according to my observations, could probably be graphed as a diagonal, according to the writers' degrees of education and reading, if someone cared to do confirming research.
The less education and reading that a person had, the more likely that their spelling in their letters and other personal writing would be more closely fonetic, representing their own local speech.
With more education and wide reading, the more likely that the chief determinant of a writers' own spelling would be the spelling in the books and pamflets that they read, even if this spelling did not reflect their own speech - and even if many the commonest spellings they used were already capricious, answering to nobody's way of talking by that time. That is, writers were more likely to be conformers in their writing, tending to write down the vocabulary they used frequently according to habit, and resorting to their own phonetics when they were not sure or were not familiar with any widely accepted usage. Pitman's stenographers used to be like that too - with most of their originally-fonetic squiggles were heavily rote-lernt and then used by unthinking habit, but fonetically encoded when necessary.
One reason for this lack of 'spelling as you speak' could have been the lack of a Received Pronunciation even in Johnson's time, as he complained. There was no prime way of speaking among all the dialects even of London. So it could be wiser, from Aberdeen to Tiverton, to share as common a spelling as they could, in order to communicate. Printers from Caxton on also put in their bit to support more standardised spelling - it suited them better to have some automaticity, when the hot metal had to be placed letter by letter.)
The lesser educated had not such experience in the prevalent spellings. And in their personal letters, all writers were liable to spell with more personal abandon.
These grounds of habit in public spelling in English were setting even in Chaucer's time. Chaucer used many spellings, both regular and irregular, that we still use today - altho he would sometimes vary from them . . The following words and their spellings will be familiar still today: -
"in age was dwelling a dale this of which I my tale day that she last simple for and by of such as God two (a few lines further on, 'tweye') three large sheep sooty many sauce never no morsel passed made never to drank neither served most milk were enclosed land crowing his peer than abbey nature knew degrees ascended amended comb redder coral . ."
The discerning reader can fill in the spaces, since there is sufficient vocabulary to recognise this as the beginning of the Nonne Preestes Tale.
And so, from Scotland to Devon, the educated classes, regardless of their own local vowels, used a wide range of the same common irregular spellings, which they must have picked up from their reading - much as fashions of dress and manners also spread across Europe.
Here are irregular spellings that are still with us, from letters of Thomas Cartwright in 1590 (irregular in the sense of unpredictable)
" many trouble although reason come obedient voice whom who slaughter peace are most conscience words experience knowledge absurd declare prove sword used passionate third ascend have any beauty certain none worth possible people colour occasion weight prophecy measure breath receipt"
2. On the other hand, writers still varied greatly from the inconsistent standards while these were slowly developing. Shakespeare's first folios can be compared, as a case in point.
The data below that I will be using to examine spellings that are different from present spelling come from samples from the following printed books, although backed by my recollections of reading old books and mainly 17th century handwriting.
Consecutive samples have been taken from
Chaucer, (1340-1400)
Thomas Sackville (1536-1608)
Christopher Marlowe (1563-1593)
Letters of Thomas Cartwright, samples around 1590, first edited and published in 1951, so there is no question that the spellings were influenced by the printers of the time - as they could be with the other samples of print - in which case, of course, we are still looking at diverse spelling styles of the time.
Edmund Spenser (1551? -1599)
Scots ballads (dates of writing down are uncertain)
Scots prose 1662 and 1670
Leveller pamphlets - English Civil War 1646-1649 (exerpts from seven pamflets)Spellings that are different from present spelling are examined in six categories:
1. Morfemic spelling - that is, compound words have been spelled by their word-components, rather than as single words. The old writers had to endure less changing of letters when words were amalgamated. One more thing that spellers today have to learn about.
2. Spellings that are shorter than today. So many antique spellings are longer because of the additional spoken inflexions and fondnesses for doubled consonants - but Surplus-Cut spelling was also alive and well, omitting letters that served no purpose to represent meaning or pronunciation. Exampls of every one of the streamlining principles of Surplus-Cut spelling appear in all eight samples - although there were no Cuts that went against those principles. 'streamlining principles' appear in all eight writings.
3. Many ancient spellings are closer to present speech than their spellings today. Unnecessary complications bother lerners and spellers today - notably extra and unpredictable letters in vowel spellings, 'o' instead of 'u' for the short vowel foneme /u/, 'u' for /w/, simple CVC constructions for final syllables turned into CCV, and 'quite mad' changes to construct spellings like 'choir' and 'tongue'.
4. Following the eighteenth century obsession with genteel manners, we have been taught to be absolutely correct with our spelling, even more than with our morals. The old writers could be cavalier, and in letters particularly (cf Cartwright's) varying spellings of the same word could jostle each other on the same page.
5. It should knock for six that assumption of many spelling reformers that it would be easier for learners and spellers to spell the final sound in plurals and verbs 's' or 'z' according to whether natural articulation made that sound /s/ or /z/. None of these early writers ever did. Not even a woz. However, there was more fonetic discrimination between -d/ and -t/ in participles, less obvious grammar.
6. Across the board, spellings that varied from our spellings today tended to be actually closer to how we pronounce the words, apart from inflexions.
Comment: The principles that modify the alfabetic principl in Fastr Spelling are supported by how writers spelled when they had greater freedom than they do today.
1. Morphemic spelling
|
Chaucer |
Sackville |
Marlowe |
Cartwright |
Spencer |
Scots ballads |
Scots prose |
Levellers |
|
byside fyry housbond slayn trewely |
slayne layd woe begon wurthyest |
dayly |
cryed manyfold wisedom |
doen (done) prayses theyr |
spyed wellcum wellcum |
dyed middest rejoyce tryals payed |
chair-man dayly defyance denyal trible (cf dubl) tryall wisedom |
2. Shorter spelling
|
Chaucer |
Chaucer 2 |
Sackville |
Cartwright |
Marlowe |
Spencer |
Scots |
Levellers |
|
agast al arys bad (bade) berd (beard) bifel blis blisful blody bord bour chuk cok colerik com contree cotage cours Cresus dich dout ech erly fether flour (flower) ful fyn fyr groning herd lak laxatyf lege |
litel lyf lyk malencolye maner merier mery neded nigard peple Pharao resonable romed sleper sleping smal solas somtyme syk tarie therfor vois wal wel wo wyf wyn whyt slayne layd woe begon |
agast appered approched blud bluddy brest breth carkas corps delites dredfull drery ful gastly gladsom glas godhed gyltles hart hel knobd lothly lothsome ruful savor sorowing spred tyl unstedfast wel wil woful |
becom brused chuse clense comon comunion delite doctrin fal cal al frends ful grudg hart holesome immediatly knowledg maner obstinat oportunity stif thorow undoutedly unfained straite waied (weighed) wheras |
brest delite faining kis moovd opposit peble shal shels wandring |
al bels croking delite drery dwels fethered gon hed ly mischivous roring scatterd spels spred sumd yel
|
dyed middest rejoyce tryals befor chuse comunion disciplin doctrin doubl handl imediatly peopl requir sumond therof therin twelv wher |
chair-man dayly defyance denyal trible (cf dubl) tryall abreviations adjurnable al badg brests chuse disolvable endevors grevances garding greatned heightned entred grosly judg lingring opressions hav rendred sel selvs shal shufle sutable wil
|
3. Other spellings closer to modern speech than present spellings - None in the Marlowe sample
|
Chaucer |
Sackville |
Spenser |
Cartwright |
Scots ballads |
Scots prose |
Levellers |
Levellers 2 |
|
eet Egipt gentil meel middel repleet yeer |
candels cristall crummes eckoed iye mantels stomake wurdes |
doo dore neer obay perle quyre yvory |
sswaged perswasions reconsiliaton renued suffise tounges |
cumpanie cuntrie nobil cumpanie Inglish luving mault (malt) |
dait evrie disswaded meerly onely perswaded theevish yeeld |
arreers center! cleer cloaths compairing compleat compleatly |
deer gyant neerly onely perswaded supream yeers |
4..Varying spellings on the same page - None in the samples from Marlowe and Scots ballads; Scots prose- the only close variation was ' tym/tyme'
|
Chaucer |
Sackville |
Spenser |
Cartwright's letters |
Leveller pamflets |
|
blak/blake dreem/dremes seide/seyde seith/sey/seyn shal/shul wys/wyse |
assined/assynde worthy/wurthyest yel (but dwell) |
doen (done) doo |
beauty/beiuty buisnes/ busines curat/curate extorcioners/extortioners hainous/haynouse obay/obey sheepeheardes/shepheards/ sheephearde (all within 6 lines) shuld/shoulde solemne/solempne physition/phisition thretning/threatned- within 3 lines vnfained/unfained wel/well |
endevors/endevours grevances/grievances publique/publike |
5. t- endings to verbs. None in Chaucer, Spenser, Cartwright or Scots samples
|
Sackville |
Marlowe |
Leveller |
|
approcht dipt whypt slypt prest coucht opprest stretcht |
reacht past brancht sipt stript |
opprest releast stopt |
6.s/c/ variations - None in Marlow, Scots ballads or Leveller samples
|
Chaucer |
Sackville |
Marlowe |
Cartwright |
Spencer |
Scots ballads |
Scots prose |
Levellers |
|
compleccion congregacioun pacience tribulaciouns |
pearst (pierced) |
contricion gratious mencion pacient substanciall |
chace disperst noyce sence sences |
caice antient antients gratious councellor |
7. Obsolete distinctions of medial and final vowels - only Chaucer - broun doun renoun toun hewed (hued)
8. Other variations from present spelling
|
Chaucer |
Chaucer 2 |
Sackville |
Cartwright |
Spencer |
Scots ballads |
Scots prose |
Levellers |
|
abyde adversitee agayn allas beste bigan bihold binethe bisyde byte castel casuelly certeyn citee coude daunce deel depe dere devyse eres (ears) exercyse fere fy fynde grone hevene
|
hir kepe lilie necessitee orgon phisyk pryme saugh(saw) speke superfluitee swete throtet yme vanitee venimous whyde wikkednesse wommanwyse wyves yow |
ayer bemone boyles fyer guyde hugye hugie (huge) Iryshe miserie ougly (ugly) plaste (placed) portche quyeteshoar shoen (shone) skale (scale) skrip slepe speache syxe whurld wyde yong yelding
|
appeereth approchinge bloud deceaved doon ghoast greeued greeuous hee bee mee idyotes outwardli oyle oyntement annoynted prophane publique souldier tirant vertuous yeilding yow |
blew (blue) bynd coche (coach) damzel Eccho yeeld lillies mattins mayden sprinnckled trew vertues wemens wize __________ Marlowe __________ asswage blew (blue) deceaves eies nimph roiallye vaile vailing yron |
ayd bettir bi castell deir desyre dreirie dyed Erles grene gude luke mercie mete nevir pitie speik teirs tuik (took) blude monie beneith cauld (cold) heir (hwew? meit steids wheit yeir |
bussiness colledg dyocess oyl-colours publick subtil vertue |
apparant ballance carkasse comptrouled fellons humaine hazzarded imbezelled indempnitie kernill lyable moneths possitively totall mallice evill parrish priviledges probabilitie randezvouz saies seised shee souldiers soveraign stiled stincking tyred vertue wee |
Further pages on spelling:
1. Introduction
Introduction to spelling improvement. /spockham.htm. Text of a radio broadcast
Rationale. How assumptions and barriers against improving the writing system do not hold. Answering the common objections to spelling improvement. /sration.htm
2 Needs and abilities of users and learners: -
i. Needs and abilities of readers /sreadsp.htm
ii. Needs and abilities of writers to spell - /swritsp.htm
iii. Needs and abilities of learners - /slernsp.htm
iv. Needs and abilities of users of international English - /sintrnt.htm
v. Spelling reform for the Internet (an older page) http://home.vicnet.net.au/~ozideas/spinternet.htm
3. The nature and teaching of English spelling
See the online video, http://www.ozreadandspell.com.au
The underlying English spelling system that could be made more consistent - /spelsys.htm
Spelling patterns for the English vowels - /svowchart.htm
The Book of Spells & Misspells - a treasury of spelling for everyone
22 Lessons in reading and spelling - v01acover.htm
The 16 word spelling test for anyone who thinks they can spell - 16sp.htm
Spelling and classroom practices - sclassprac.htm
4 Improving English spelling
Spelling improvement. 2002. - /spelimp.html
Seven principles to repair English spelling, 2005 - /sp7princ.htm
Cutting out the surplus letters in words.Streamline - a first step in updating spelling. /ssurplu.htm
Quik gidelines for a next step, with sampl texts, and furthr notes /sfastrs.htm. FASTR Spelling
Cutting out surplus letters. /intspel.htm 2002
Further steps you can try yourself, with f, j, consistent word endings and vowel spellings. /intspel2.htm
Further experiments to spel sensibly - Pronunciation and gramr, and a final solusion? /intspel3.htm 2000
The future of English spelling. What can be done? /sfutspe.htm
5. Spelling as an entertainment
Spelling Games - starting with a Spelling ABC - different from a Spelling BEE
16-word Spelling Test of 16 common words that few experts can spell all correctly. /16sp.htm
International English Spelling Day, October 9 /spday.html
How people spelled when they spelled as they liked before the 18th century dictionaries /spfree17c.htm
Don Quixote spells in 'Spelling without traps'. - /spquixote.htm. To come
Twelve Short Short storys about the fùtùr. Can u imagin a mor ùser-frendly speling sistem? Look at every wurd to see if u think its speling is a trap for lerners.
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