cratylus-第12章
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following him; utter a cry which resounds through the forest。 The cry is
almost or quite involuntary; and may be an imitation of the roar of the
animal。 Thus far we have not speech; but only the inarticulate expression
of feeling or emotion in no respect differing from the cries of animals;
for they too call to one another and are answered。 But now suppose that
some one at a distance not only hears the sound; but apprehends the
meaning: or we may imagine that the cry is repeated to a member of the
society who had been absent; the others act the scene over again when he
returns home in the evening。 And so the cry becomes a word。 The hearer in
turn gives back the word to the speaker; who is now aware that he has
acquired a new power。 Many thousand times he exercises this power; like a
child learning to talk; he repeats the same cry again; and again he is
answered; he tries experiments with a like result; and the speaker and the
hearer rejoice together in their newly…discovered faculty。 At first there
would be few such cries; and little danger of mistaking or confusing them。
For the mind of primitive man had a narrow range of perceptions and
feelings; his senses were microscopic; twenty or thirty sounds or gestures
would be enough for him; nor would he have any difficulty in finding them。
Naturally he broke out into speechlike the young infant he laughed and
babbled; but not until there were hearers as well as speakers did language
begin。 Not the interjection or the vocal imitation of the object; but the
interjection or the vocal imitation of the object understood; is the first
rudiment of human speech。
After a while the word gathers associations; and has an independent
existence。 The imitation of the lion's roar calls up the fears and hopes
of the chase; which are excited by his appearance。 In the moment of
hearing the sound; without any appreciable interval; these and other latent
experiences wake up in the mind of the hearer。 Not only does he receive an
impression; but he brings previous knowledge to bear upon that impression。
Necessarily the pictorial image becomes less vivid; while the association
of the nature and habits of the animal is more distinctly perceived。 The
picture passes into a symbol; for there would be too many of them and they
would crowd the mind; the vocal imitation; too; is always in process of
being lost and being renewed; just as the picture is brought back again in
the description of the poet。 Words now can be used more freely because
there are more of them。 What was once an involuntary expression becomes
voluntary。 Not only can men utter a cry or call; but they can communicate
and converse; they can not only use words; but they can even play with
them。 The word is separated both from the object and from the mind; and
slowly nations and individuals attain to a fuller consciousness of
themselves。
Parallel with this mental process the articulation of sounds is gradually
becoming perfected。 The finer sense detects the differences of them; and
begins; first to agglomerate; then to distinguish them。 Times; persons;
places; relations of all kinds; are expressed by modifications of them。
The earliest parts of speech; as we may call them by anticipation; like the
first utterances of children; probably partook of the nature of
interjections and nouns; then came verbs; at length the whole sentence
appeared; and rhythm and metre followed。 Each stage in the progress of
language was accompanied by some corresponding stage in the mind and
civilisation of man。 In time; when the family became a nation; the wild
growth of dialects passed into a language。 Then arose poetry and
literature。 We can hardly realize to ourselves how much with each
improvement of language the powers of the human mind were enlarged; how the
inner world took the place of outer; how the pictorial or symbolical or
analogical word was refined into a notion; how language; fair and large and
free; was at last complete。
So we may imagine the speech of man to have begun as with the cries of
animals; or the stammering lips of children; and to have attained by
degrees the perfection of Homer and Plato。 Yet we are far from saying that
this or any other theory of language is proved by facts。 It is not
difficult to form an hypothesis which by a series of imaginary transitions
will bridge over the chasm which separates man from the animals。
Differences of kind may often be thus resolved into differences of degree。
But we must not assume that we have in this way discovered the true account
of them。 Through what struggles the harmonious use of the organs of speech
was acquired; to what extent the conditions of human life were different;
how far the genius of individuals may have contributed to the discovery of
this as of the other arts; we cannot say: Only we seem to see that
language is as much the creation of the ear as of the tongue; and the
expression of a movement stirring the hearts not of one man only but of
many; 'as the trees of the wood are stirred by the wind。' The theory is
consistent or not inconsistent with our own mental experience; and throws
some degree of light upon a dark corner of the human mind。
In the later analysis of language; we trace the opposite and contrasted
elements of the individual and nation; of the past and present; of the
inward and outward; of the subject and object; of the notional and
relational; of the root or unchanging part of the word and of the changing
inflexion; if such a distinction be admitted; of the vowel and the
consonant; of quantity and accent; of speech and writing; of poetry and
prose。 We observe also the reciprocal influence of sounds and conceptions
on each other; like the connexion of body and mind; and further remark that
although the names of objects were originally proper names; as the
grammarian or logician might call them; yet at a later stage they become
universal notions; which combine into particulars and individuals; and are
taken out of the first rude agglomeration of sounds that they may be
replaced in a higher and more logical order。 We see that in the simplest
sentences are contained grammar and logicthe parts of speech; the Eleatic
philosophy and the Kantian categories。 So complex is language; and so
expressive not only of the meanest wants of man; but of his highest
thoughts; so various are the aspects in which it is regarded by us。 Then
again; when we follow the history of languages; we observe that they are
always slowly moving; half dead; half alive; half solid; half fluid; the
breath of a moment; yet like the air; continuous in all ages and
countries;like the glacier; too; containing within them a trickling
stream which deposits debris of the rocks over which it passes。 There were
happy moments; as we may conjecture; in the lives of nations; at which they
came to the birthas in the golden age of literature; the man and the time
seem to conspire; the eloquence of the bard or chief; as in later times the
creations of the great writer who is the expression of his age; became
impressed on the minds of their countrymen; perhaps in the hour of some
crisis of national developmenta migration; a conquest; or the like。 The
picture of the word which was beginning to be lost; is now revived; the
sound again echoes to the sense; men find themselves capable not only of
expressing more feelings; and describing more objects; but of expressing
and describing them better。 The world before the flood; that is to say;
the world of ten; twenty; a hundred thousand years ago; has passed away and
left no sign。 But the best conception that we can form of it; though
imperfect and uncertain; is gained from the analogy of causes still in
action; some powerful and sudden; others working slowly in the course of
infinite ages。 Something too may be allowed to 'the persistency of the
strongest;' to 'the survival of the fittest;' in this as i