The Utopian Communist: A Biography of Wilhelm Weitling

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CHAPTER XV

NEW FRONTIERS

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HE quest for a universal language has not been a specialty-
limited to experts on linguistics and phonetics; it also has
been a major objective of many reformers. The litera­
ture of the subject is extensive. Weitling was neither the first nor
the last to work on plans to unify mankind into "one world" by
the simple device of inventing a new common tongue.
The Promethean (London) of February, 1842, reprinted a
letter from Lewis Masquerrier of New York to Goodwyn
Barmby, its editor, in which the writer expressed his desire to
join the London communist society and offered to send "my uni­
versal alphabet, improved orthography, etc." and "get you to be­
come its godfather." In an earlier number Barmby had published
his own "Essay Towards Philanthropic Philology, or Ideas on
Language in reference to the future, or transition and com­
munity." The author maintained that "we must no longer have
only learned philology; we must have philanthropic philology.
The benevolent reformers of society, with prophetic hope, call
out with a voice of high and harmonious cadence, for a universal
language." Barmby was convinced that what the world needed
was "a general tongue" and a "grammar of humanity" for hitherto
the "various idioms and tongues of languages" had been a barrier
to the "greatest designs of humanity." He referred to other pio­
neers in this field, including Benjamin Franklin, and suggested that
English, "a decomposition of Greek, Latin, French, German" and
other languages, might well serve as the transitional tongue until
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