Section 7
It is characteristic of the manner
in which large enterprises forced themselves upon
the Brissago council, that it was not until the end
of the first year of their administration and then
only with extreme reluctance that they would take
up the manifest need for a lingua franca for the world.
They seem to have given little attention to the various
theoretical universal languages which were proposed
to them. They wished to give as little trouble
to hasty and simple people as possible, and the world-wide
alstribution of English gave them a bias for it from
the beginning. The extreme simplicity of its
grammar was also in its favour.
It was not without some sacrifices
that the English-speaking peoples were permitted the
satisfaction of hearing their speech used universally.
The language was shorn of a number of grammatical
peculiarities, the distinctive forms for the subjunctive
mood for example and most of its irregular plurals
were abolished; its spelling was systematised and
adapted to the vowel sounds in use upon the continent
of Europe, and a process of incorporating foreign nouns
and verbs commenced that speedily reached enormous
proportions. Within ten years from the establishment
of the World Republic the New English Dictionary had
swelled to include a vocabulary of 250,000 words, and
a man of 1900 would have found considerable difficulty
in reading an ordinary newspaper. On the other
hand, the men of the new time could still appreciate
the older English literature…. Certain minor
acts of uniformity accompanied this larger one.
The idea of a common understanding and a general simplification
of intercourse once it was accepted led very naturally
to the universal establishment of the metric system
of weights and measures, and to the disappearance of
the various makeshift calendars that had hitherto
confused chronology. The year was divided into
thirteen months of four weeks each, and New Year’s
Day and Leap Year’s Day were made holidays,
and did not count at all in the ordinary week.
So the weeks and the months were brought into correspondence.
And moreover, as the king put it to Firmin, it was
decided to ‘nail down Easter.’ . . .
In these matters, as in so many matters, the new civilisation
came as a simplification of ancient complications;
the history of the calendar throughout the world is
a history of inadequate adjustments, of attempts to
fix seed-time and midwinter that go back into the
very beginning of human society; and this final rectification
had a symbolic value quite beyond its practical convenience.
But the council would have no rash nor harsh innovations,
no strange names for the months, and no alteration
in the numbering of the years.
The world had already been put upon
one universal monetary basis. For some months
after the accession of the council, the world’s
affairs had been carried on without any sound currency
at all. Over great regions money was still in
use, but with the most extravagant variations in price
and the most disconcerting fluctuations of public confidence.
The ancient rarity of gold upon which the entire system
rested was gone. Gold was now a waste product
in the release of atomic energy, and it was plain
that no metal could be the basis of the monetary system
again. Henceforth all coins must be token coins.
Yet the whole world was accustomed to metallic money,
and a vast proportion of existing human relationships
had grown up upon a cash basis, and were almost inconceivable
without that convenient liquidating factor. It
seemed absolutely necessary to the life of the social
organisation to have some sort of currency, and the
council had therefore to discover some real value
upon which to rest it. Various such apparently
stable values as land and hours of work were considered.
Ultimately the government, which was now in possession
of most of the supplies of energy-releasing material,
fixed a certain number of units of energy as the value
of a gold sovereign, declared a sovereign to be worth
exactly twenty marks, twenty-five francs, five dollars,
and so forth, with the other current units of the
world, and undertook, under various qualifications
and conditions, to deliver energy upon demand as payment
for every sovereign presented. On the whole,
this worked satisfactorily. They saved the face
of the pound sterling. Coin was rehabilitated,
and after a phase of price fluctuations, began to
settle down to definite equivalents and uses again,
with names and everyday values familiar to the common
run of people….