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even one Indo-Germanic tongue, let alone several; it is proved
that this obstacle can be removed at the cost of a few months'
study: this study is not only the most directly remunerative study in the world, comparing results with cost, but it is admirable mental discipline and a direct help towards further real linguistic culture-giving studies for those who are fit to undertake them. Show cause, then, why you prefer to suffer under an unnecessary obstacle, rather than avail yourselves of this means of removing it." It is easier for the Indo-Germanic peoples to learn each other's languages-e.g. for an Englishman to learn Swedish or Russian than it is for a speaker of one of any of the other families of languages to learn any Indo Germanic tongue; so that some idea may be formed of the magnitude of the task imposed upon the newer converts to Western civilization by the Indo-Germanic world, in making them learn one or more of its national languages. At the same time, it is but just that the peoples who have paid the piper of progress should call the common lingual tune. Therefore, what more fitting than that they should provide an essence of their allied languages, reduced to its simplest and clearest form? This they would offer to the rest of the world to
be taken over as part of the general progress in civilization which it has to adopt; and this it is which is provided in the international language, Esperanto.
XVII
IMPORTANCE OF AN INTERNATIONAL LANGUAGE FOR THE BLIND Now that higher education for the blind is being extended in every country, owing to the more humanitarian feeling of the present age that these afflicted members of the community ought to be given a fair chance, the problem of supplying them with books is beginning to be felt. The process of producing books for the blind on the Braille system is, of course, far more costly than ordinary printing, and at the same time the editions must