## Clerisy
The word *clerisy* carries within it one of the stranger journeys in the history of the English language: from a Greek word for casting lots to a proposed national institution of secular scholars. That journey passes through theology, literacy, bureaucracy, and Romantic philosophy — and it begins not with a church but with a pile of stones.
### The Lot and the Lord's Portion
The Greek *klêros* meant a lot — specifically the kind cast to make decisions, to divide land, or to assign destinies. It is the same root behind *cleric*, *clerk*, *clergy*, and ultimately *clerisy*, but its theological inflection came from a single passage. In Deuteronomy 18:2, the Levites are told that they shall have no territorial inheritance among the Israelites: the Lord himself is their inheritance. When the Septuagint rendered the Hebrew
From this the early Christian church drew the term *klêrikos* — one who belongs to the Lord's lot — and applied it to ordained ministers. The Latin form *clericus* entered the Western church and became the standard word for a clergyman across medieval Europe.
### Clergy, Clerk, and the Monopoly on Letters
In medieval Europe, the clergy held a near-monopoly on literacy. To be a *clericus* was to be both ordained and lettered; the two things were so closely associated that the word gradually extended to anyone who could read and write. A *clerk* — the English descendant of *clericus* — originally meant a clergyman or scholar. Only over centuries, as literacy spread beyond ecclesiastical circles, did *clerk* drift toward its modern bureaucratic sense: a copier of documents, a keeper of records, a shop assistant.
The shift is preserved in pronunciation. British English retained the older form /klɑːk/, which passed into the common surname Clark and Clarke — a name that, at its origin, meant simply *clergyman* or *learned man*. The American pronunciation /klɜːk/, closer to the spelling, arrived later.
By the time English *clerk* had settled into its administrative meaning, it had left behind a gap: there was no single word for the literate, cultivated class as a whole. That gap is what Samuel Taylor Coleridge moved to fill.
### Coleridge's Invention
In 1830, in *On the Constitution of the Church and State*, Coleridge coined *clerisy* to name something he believed England urgently needed: a permanent national class of educated people whose function was not to govern or to trade but to cultivate and transmit the nation's learning, language, and civilization. This was emphatically not the clergy in any religious sense. Coleridge was proposing a secular intellectual institution — philosophers, scientists, poets, historians, teachers — endowed and distributed across the country, maintaining the cultural life of the nation the way a national church maintained its spiritual life.
The coinage was almost certainly influenced by German *Klerisei*, the German cognate for the clerical class, which Coleridge would have encountered during his extended engagement with German Romantic and idealist thought. He took the word's root and redirected it entirely: away from ordination, toward *Bildung*.
Coleridge was writing against what he saw as the corrosive effects of commercial society on culture. A nation that valued only trade and utility would, he argued, lose the capacity to transmit what made it a civilization rather than merely an economy. The *clerisy* was his answer — an educated class with a public function, supported not by the market but by the state.
The concept proved influential. Matthew Arnold, writing later in the century, drew on related ideas when he argued in *Culture and Anarchy* (1869) that culture was not a private possession but a social force requiring custodians. Arnold's vision of "the best that has been thought and said" presupposes something like Coleridge's clerisy — a group charged with knowing it, preserving it, and making it available.
### Survival and Revival
As a word, *clerisy* never achieved wide currency. It remained a term of art among those discussing the social role of intellectuals. In the twentieth century it surfaced in debates about the responsibilities and failures of educated elites — sometimes approvingly, sometimes as an accusation, the suggestion being that such a class had either abrogated its duty or had never deserved the role Coleridge imagined for it.
The word's rarity is itself a small irony. *Clerisy* names a class defined by its command of language, yet the word itself has barely survived. It persists mainly in academic writing and the occasional polemic about what educated people owe the societies that produced them — which is, more or less, exactly the context Coleridge had in mind.
The full etymological sequence runs: casting lots (*klêros*) → the Lord's allotted portion (Deuteronomy via the Septuagint) → the ordained clergy (*klêrikos*, *clericus*) → any literate person (*clerk*) → bureaucratic office worker (*clerk*, modern) / the national intellectual class (*clerisy*, Coleridge). Five conceptual stages, one unbroken word.