The Rebirth of England
and English
The Vision of William Barnes
Father Andrew Phillips
English history is patterned with spirits so bright that
they broke through convention and saw another England. Such was the
case of the Dorset poet, William Barnes (1801-86), priest, poet, teacher,
self-taught polymath, linguist extraordinary and that rare thing - a
man of vision. In this work the author looks at that vision, a vision
at once of Religion, Nature, Art, Marriage, Society, Economics, Politics
and Language. He writes: 'In search of authentic English roots and values,
our post-industrial society may well have much to learn from Barnes'.
For the first time Saxon-English words created and used by Barnes have
been gathered together and listed next to their foreign equivalents.
This book is well
worth the money just for Barnes' word lists in which he gives 'Saxon'
alternatives to words with Latin or Greek roots. While some of the words
he suggests using are odd, most are sensible. If William Barnes were
alive today he would argue forcefully against 'civic waste disposal
facility' and suggest we use 'town rubbish dump'.
5
A5 ISBN 1-898281-17-3 160pp
