EE RR ERIE Is Pennsylvania German a Dialect ? By Charles Calvin Ziegler. As a Pennsylvania German I cannot sit still when Prof. Albert Bushneil Hart calls my mother-tongue a “so-called language,” “a barbarous compound of German and English words in German idiom, somewhat resembling that mixture of Hebrew and German called “Yiddish,” a “lingo” and a “jargon.” It is evident that his knowledge of Pennsylvania German was acquired during an automobile ride around Lancaster county, eked out by odds and ends fished from Phoebe Gibbons’ essay on Pennsylvania Dutch (1872) and a few other inconsequential sources. He repeats Phoebe’s “Buggy forray”—which one expression so spelled, is enough to relegate both her and him to the realm of incompetency in treating of our dialect. Twenty years did Phoebe dwell with and among our people and yet did not begin to understand our speech, and we cannot therefore expect Albert to do any better with only the exper- ience gathered during an automobile tour. . Professor Hart's article on the Pennsylvania Dutch in the Boston Trans- cript, reprinted in the November number of The Pennsylvania German, is cer- tainly very interesting and is, I believe, historically and ethnologically about correct, But he is simply mistaken when he asserts that our speech is a mon- grel mixture of German and English and not a German dialect. The halo of his Harvard professorship shall not invest this old error with the brightness of truth—not if I can help it. Why did not the Professor, when he snatched “Buggy forray” from Phoe- be Gibbons’ book, turn to the appendix where he would have learned some- thing of the structure of the dialect as given by Prof. Stahr? Does he not know that in 1872, S. S. Haldeman, then professor of Comparative Philology in the University of Pennsylvania, wrote an essay on “Pennsylvania Dutch,” in which he conclusively proved that our speech was a true German dialect, different from all the rest, but very much resembling the Pfalzisch? Is he ignorant of the scientific treatise on the Pennsylvania German dialect (1889) by Prof. Marion Dexter Learned, formerly of Johns Hopkins, now of the Uni- versity of Pennsylvania? After exhaustive research Prof. Learned shows beyond all cavil that ours is a true German dialect. Now I do not for a moment deny that the Pennsylvania Germans have ap- propriated a considerable number of English words into their speech. The proportion varies according to locality, the individual and the particular theme under consideration. The infusion of English at Mauch Chunk is im- mensely greater (judging from E. H. Rauch’s “Hand-Book”) than at Allen- town, Lancaster and York. In his lexicon Rauch gives the number of words in our dialect at about 5,000, of which 1,000 are English. But Rauch was a lawyer and editor, and hence includes a multitude of English law and technic- al words which are not at all in general use by our people. Prof. A. R. Horne, Allentown, on the contrary gives in “Em Horne sei Buch” 5,522 words of which only 176 are English. These two dictionaries show 20 and 3 per cent. respectively of English infusion—an astonishing difference. In Lancaster and York counties the English admixture seems to be quite small. According to Prof. Learned’s investigations it is less than one per cent. But what I want to emphasize is the fact that the Pennsylvania Germans brought their dialect with them when they came to Pennsylvania from their na- tive homes in the Palatinate and other sections of South Germany. The in- fusion of English is accidental and has not changed the essential character- istics of the dialect. It is Pennsylvania German not because of the adventi- tious mixture of German and English, but because it always was Pennsylva- nia German,—was so from the first,—from the period when it was brought to Pennsylvania by thousands of immigrants from South Germany. (See Rupp’s “Thirty Thousand Names of German Immigrants in Pennsyivania, from 1727 to 1776.”) It seems almost useless now to contend against the misnomer “Pennsylva- Dutch,” as it is so generally used. The fact remains, however, that there is really no more Dutch in Pennsylvania German than in English. Persons who speak with a far away loftiness of the Pennsylvania “Dutch” do not seem to realize the fact that the great English language is a tree whose ramifying branches are grafted on the trunk of the Dutch dialect called Anglo-Saxon. It is an immense and wonderfully compounded pot-pie with Dutch for the under-crust. It doesn’t take much erudition to prove this. From my diction- aries I gather within a few minutes this list of words which might easily be extended: English Dutch German Pa. German calf kalf kalb kalb that dat das des water water wasser wasser land land land land father vader vater vatter, daadi mother moeder mutter mutter, mammi sister zuster schwester schweschter brother broeder bruder bruder house huis haus haus what wat was was it het es es hood (hat) hoed hut hut cat kat katz katz foot voet fuss fuss’ great groot gross gross hand hand hand hand God God Gott Gott ox 0s ochs ochs sheep schaap schaf schoof hound (dog) hond hund hund ground grond grund grund wot (know) weet weiss wees good goed gut gut blood bloed blut blut plant plant pflanze planz (p-b) book boek buch buch sleep slaap sehlaf schloof week week woche woch over over neber iwwer tame tam zam zaam wild wild wild wild to prate praten, } sprechen schpreche } talk } spreken schwetze letter letter buchstaben buchschtaawe of alphabet } boor (farmer) boer bauer bauer Don’t you see the family resemblance in these words? All Teutonic. And you will notice that the relationship between English and Dutch is closer than between Dutch and Pennsylvania German. Prof. Hart surely knows Grimm’s law of consonantal changes, in accordance with which Pennsylvania German is at once seen to belong to the das branch and English to the dat branch of the Teutonic languages. The former is German, the latter Dutch. Talk about “barbarous compounds!” What was the English during the 400 years after the Norman Conquest, when Anglo-Saxon and N orman-French were being stirred in the pot and forced to combine? And consider all the elements that have been added to the mixture ever since; why, the combination isn’t homogeneous yet. “Double, double toil and trouble; Fire, burn; and cauldron, bubble.” How poor the English would be had. it not borrowed and incorporated thousands and thousands of words from every language under the sun! It is, to say the least, not fair to describe a dialect, as Prof. Hart has done, by presenting its unusual, abnormal elements and thus making it appear lu- dicrous to the uninformed. Every language has its funny aspects, but these are not the language itseif. A man may make a grimace occasionally, but that is not his natural expression. : 1 suppose people will continue to call us the Pennsylvania “Dutch” and perpetuate the old erroneous idea that our speech is only a curious compound of High German and English; but whenever I catch any one doing it—be he professor or clodhopper—TI shall take a shot at him. mmm The Northern Cross Will be Visible in September Skies. On September 23 at 1:44 p.m, Greenwich Civil time, the sun will cross the Equator going south in the constellation of Virgo. a Autumn will then begin in the Northern Hemisphere and spring in the Southern Hemisphere. The planet Mars, which has been too close to the sun to be seen for some weeks, will be in conjunction with the sun on September 13. It will be at its greatest distance from the earth on September 4, when it will be about 247,800,000 miles away. One of the features of the skies on September nights, says a bulletin by the American Nature Association, is the Northern Cross in the Milky Way, surrounded by a field of stars of great beauty. From mid-latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere at nine o’clock Tomorrow \ Alright A vegetable aperient, adde tone and viger to the digestive and eliminative system, improves the appe~ tite, relieves Sick Headache and Bil- fousness, corrects Constipation. — in the evening, one may see athwart A i PX the merkiizn, snd directly gyerkead, AR = this cross in the constellation of Cyg- > nus, the Swan. Adjoining it on the Chips off the Old | Block East, is the small constellation of Ly- ra, the Harp, with its brillian Vega. The Northern Cross is large. and crude and irregular in outline. * One-third the regular dose. Made of same ingredients, then candy coated. For children and adults. SOLD BY YOUR DRUGGIST C. M. PARRISH BELLEFONTE, PA. ——For good, reliable news always read the “Watchman,” Tells When to Treat Peach Borer. About this time of the year peach growers are eager to make applica- tions of paradichlorobenzine for con- trol of the peach borer. Many orchardists who have inquired as to the proper time to treat the trees have been told that because the ma- jority of the eggs are laid during ear- ly September, treatments are delayed as long as possible. Experiences have shown that work which is done from September 10 to the middle of Octo- ber gives the best results. By this $1,000, merchandise. TATA TA TATA TAS TNL A Vs starts. INAS The First National Bank BELLEFONTE, PA. time the majority of the eggs are laid and the young worms hatched, but little damage has been done to the Joes and the small borers are easy to Care should be taken in using the paradichlorobenzine to keep the ring at least one inch away from the tree and to remove the material from the trees before the ground freezes so that any injury which might result from unvolatilized substance will not cause harm during the winter months. Directions for making these treat- ments may be obtained from county agent, R. U. Blaney. 000.00 ¢ have More Than a Million Dollars Loaned Here at home, to thousands of borrowers. Think what this million dollars is doing —building homes, stocking farms, buying In a hundred ways doing what money alone can do. And we Can Arrange to Lend a Million More as Occasion Arises September 23rd is the date onwhich Our Annual Two-Weeks $1.50 Sale Watch for later announcements F. P. BLAIR & SON JEWELERS Bellefonte, Penna. ocal taxes seem to be going higher and higher—in some cases they ap- pear to rise like airplanes. Wise is the town and its officials who aim for prudent economy and do not place too heavy a burden on the people. At your service in all banking matters. | THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK STATE COLLEGE, PA. MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM in the morning. Leave Buffalo—_ 9:00 P. M Automobile Rate~$7.50. Send for free sectional puzzle chart of the Great Ship “SEEANDBEE” and 32-page booklet. The Cleveland & Buffalo Transit Co. Cleveland, Ohio Your Rail Ticket is Good on the Boats A restful night on Lake Erie Makes a pleasant break in your journey. A good bed in a clean, cool stateroom, a long sound sleep and an appetizing breakfast Steamers “SEEANDBEE”-“CITY OF ERIE”-“CITY OF BUFFALO” Daily May Ist to November 15th . Eastern Arrive Cleveland *7:00A.M.| Standard Time *Steamer “CITY OF BUFFALO?” arrives 7:30 A. M. 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