Thomas Wolsey, Thomas More y la lengua inglesa estándar de su época
Autor
Gómez Soliño, José S.Fecha
1981Resumen
The analysis, with regard to 31 variable items, of a score of
holograph letters both by Th. More and Th. Wolsey, and the study of
their behaviour vis-á-vis the official language of the Statutes of the
Realm inrolled in Chancery, throw some interesting light on the
process and progress of linguistic standardization in the early 16th
century. The letters show signs of their writers' idiosincratic evolution
towards (but also incomplete accommodation to) Chancery Standard.
Both groups of texts exhibit some dialectal traits which, though they
tally with More's and Wolsey's known local origins, are not quite
enough in themselves for precise identification of provenance. The
official language, on the other hand, is not free from some of the
variations we observe in the private documents. The Statutes reflect in
some points the individual preferences of the clerks who copied or drew
them up. But public documents also lead the way in many respects
towards modern forms. On the whole, the situation in the early 16th c.
does not seem radically different from that described by N. Davis
regarding the Paston Letters of the late 15th c.