When George Orwell sat down in 1946 to write Politics and the English Language, he wasn’t just irritated by bad prose. He felt something larger slipping away—clarity, honesty, even the ability to think straight. To him, the decline of language wasn’t a cosmetic problem; it was a moral one. Foolish thoughts produced sloppy language, and sloppy language made it easier to think even more foolish thoughts. Left unchecked, the cycle would spin on forever.
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| Eric Arthur Blair (1903 – 1950) who wrote under the pen name of George Orwell |
The Fog That Thinks for You
Orwell describes the modern writer as someone moving through a thick fog of ready‑made phrases. The fog is comforting; it saves effort. Why think when a cliché can do the thinking for you? Why confront a brutal truth when a soft euphemism can cushion it? Orwell sees how this fog works on the mind; once you stop choosing your own words, you stop choosing your own thoughts.
Orwell had a gift for metaphor, and he used it to expose the
tricks of bad writing. He compared insincere writers to cuttlefish, creatures
that release clouds of ink whenever they feel threatened. Politicians and
bureaucrats, he argued, do the same thing—only their ink takes the form of long
words, stale metaphors, and phrases so overused they no longer mean anything.
He noticed how often writers and politicians reached for ready‑made phrases,
“long strips of words". These bits of
language, he said, anesthetize the mind. They allow a writer to sound
authoritative without actually thinking.
Worst of all for Orwell was political euphemism—the art of making “lies
sound truthful and murder respectable.” Bombing civilians became pacification.
Forced displacement became transfer of populations. The words were
clean; the actions were not.
And then there were the meaningless words—terms like democratic
or fascist that had been stretched so thin they could mean anything or
nothing. Such words were perfect for praise or condemnation because they
required no evidence, only emotion.
Echoes in His Fiction
Orwell's concerns weren't confined to his essays. They
became the backbone of his fiction. In 1984, Newspeak is the logical
endpoint of linguistic decay: a language engineered to shrink the range of
human thought. If there is no word for freedom, how can one imagine it?
In Animal Farm, language becomes a weapon of control.
Slogans are repeated until they replace memory. Commandments are quietly
rewritten. And the chilling line “All animals are equal, but some animals are
more equal than others” shows how easily language can be twisted to make
injustice sound natural.
A Way Back
Despite his bleak diagnosis, Orwell wasn't a fatalist. He believed that the decline of language was reversible. He insisted that writers and speechmakers could resist the drift into the fog by choosing clarity over ornament, precision over vagueness, honesty over convenience. His six rules for writing—avoid clichés, use short words, cut unnecessary language, prefer the active voice, avoid jargon, and break any rule before saying something absurd—were meant as an act of resistance and rebellion.
Fighting for a clean sentence, Orwell is not polishing prose for beauty’s sake. He is trying to keep language alive because once language collapses, truth is next. His essay is a reminder that clarity is not just a stylistic choice. It is a moral stance. It is a refusal to let someone else think on your behalf. It is the belief that words, used honestly, can still cut through the fog.
More on Orwell
The
Future Orwell Feared Is the One We Built


