About This Book
The essay examines tensions between conservative written norms and the living vernacular, arguing that when official writing drifts from everyday speech it alienates the population and weakens national cultural life. It traces how written standards harden through fixation in print, describes the duty of educated writers to guide careful renewals, and warns that a growing gulf between written and spoken forms can impede intellectual progress. Drawing on historical precedents where adoption of the vernacular revitalized literature, the author concludes that a healthy written language must periodically borrow from popular speech to stay communicative and vital.
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