TWO CONSTITUENCIES OF ALWATO. 



the necessity (so far as they are concerned) of any 

 dictionary, and serving the most complex and varied 

 necessities of the human mind. Another department 

 of the new language ivill, however, be derived from the 

 materials now extant in existing languages ; a more 

 arbitrary department, for the definitions in lohich 

 the services of the dictionary will still be required. 

 Even the forms of the words and sentences, and, sub- 

 stantially, the whole of the leading existing lan- 

 guages, and hence, their literature intact, may be 

 thus preserved and imbedded in the matrix of the 

 New Scientific Universal language ; and the acquisi- 

 tion of these Special tongues will be, at the same time, 

 immensely facilitated by the knowledge of the phil- 

 osophy which underlies and has produced them. 

 Alwato will then stand, centrally, like a Rotunda in the 

 midst of a huge Speech Temple the Entire Lingual 

 Structure of the Planet with an internal, direct, and 

 convenient passage-way conducting to the heart and 

 centre of each of the Old-style or Instinctual Lan- 

 guages or forms of speech ; so that while it may seem 

 to replace them all, and ultimately to dispense with 

 them, it will truly conserve them all ; and will more 

 than compensate for the partial obsolescence it may 

 bring, in the coming ages, upon the extant literature 

 of a single tongue, the English, for instance, by the im- 

 mense facility it will offer for the mastery of that which 

 will then be the ancient literature of all tongues. 



151. The remainder of this chapter will be devoted 

 to a very abridged exhibit or slight sample of the two 

 methods of the Composition of the Vocal Elements 



