IROQUOIAN LANGUAGES. 



19 



Brickell (J.) — Coutiuned. 



" The material for this worlc was stolen from 

 LawsoQ with scarcely the disguise of change of 

 form. All that portion of tho work from pp. 

 277 to 40S is devoced to 'An Accoimt of the In- 

 dians of Xorth Carolina,' which is such a mu- 

 tilated, interpolated, aud unscrupulous appro- 

 priation of the unfortuna*^e John Lawson's 

 work of the same sub title, that the transcrip- 

 tion is scarcely more than a parody."— FieWs 

 Jissai/, pp. 46-47. 



Copies ncen : Astor, Boston Athemcnm, Brit- 

 isli Museum, Brown, Congress. 



Priced in Stevens's Xuggets, Xo. 340, 10s. 

 0(7. At tho Brinley sale a copy, Xo. 3843 

 • old calf," brought$5. Clarke & Co., 1886, No! 

 3192, price it -15. 



Tlie same sheets with a new title page as 

 follows : 



The I Niitural History | of | North 



Carolina. | With an | account | of the | 

 Trades, Manners, and Customs, of the | 

 Christian and Indian Inhabitants, | 

 Strange Beasts, Birds, Fishes, Snakes, 

 Insects, I Trees, and Plants, itc. j Illus- 

 trated by Coiiper-Phites. | By John 

 Brickell, M.D. | [One line quotation.] | 



Dublin, Printed for tho Author: | 

 London, Sold by Charles Corbett, i 

 at Addison's | Head, opposite St. 

 Duustan'.s Church, Fleetstreet. | 

 MDCCXLIII [1743]. Price Gs. j 



Pp. i-viii, 1-4U8, 8^. — Linguistics as in the 1 

 previous edition. 



Copirs seen : Biitish Museum. j 



Bringisr (L.). Notices of the geology, ! 

 mineralogy, topography, productions, 

 aud Aboriginal inhabitants of the re- 

 gions around the Mississippi aud its 

 confluent waters — in a letter from L. 

 Briugier, Esq., of Louisiana, to Rev. 

 Elias Cornelius — communicated tor this 

 Journal. i 



In American Jour. Sci. vol. 3, pp. 15-46, New- 

 Haven, 1821, 8=. 



"Indian languages," with brief comparative 

 vocabulary, Cherokee, Othoniito, aud English, 

 pp. 35, 36.— Names of the Cherokee clans, with 

 significations in English, p. 38. 

 Brinley: This word following a title or within 

 parentheses after a note indicates that a cojjy 

 of the work referred to was seen by the com- 

 piler at the sale of books belonging to the late 

 George Brinley, of Hartford, Conn. 



Brinley (George). Sec Trumbull (J. 

 H.). 



Brinton : This word following a title or within 

 parentheses after a note indicates that a copy 

 of the work referred to was seen by the com 

 piler in the library of Dr. D. G. Brinton, Media. 

 Pa. 



Briiiton (Dr. Daniel Garrison), Ameri- 

 can I hero-mytlis. | A study in the na- 

 tive religious | of the western conti- 

 nent. I By I Daniel G. Brinton, M. D., | 

 Member [&c. five lines]. | 



Philadelphia: | H. C. Watts &Co., [ 

 50G Minor Street. | 1832. 



Title 1 1. dedication verso blank 1 1. preface 

 pp. vii-sii, contents pp. xiii-xvi, text pp. 17-230, 

 indexes pp. 241-251, 8°.— A number of Algon- 

 kin, Iroquois, Mexican, and Maya terms passim. 



Copies seen : British Museum, Eames. 



Aboriginal | American authors | aud 



their productions ; | e.specially those in 

 the native languages. | A Chapter in 

 the History of Literature. | By ( Daniel 

 G. Brinton, A. M., M. D., | Member [&c. 

 six lines.] | [Design, with a line de- 

 scriptive thereof beneath.] | 



Philadelphia: | No.115 South Seventh 

 Street. | 188:3. 



Title reverse blank 1 I. preface reverse blank 

 1 1. contents pp. vii-viii, text pp. 9-G3. 8°.— 

 Notes on Cherokee literature, pp. 14, 22, 41, 55 ,- 

 on the Iroquois, pp. 21, 44, 48. 



Copies seen : Eames, Pilling. 



Kate of change in American lan- 

 guages. 



In Science, vol. 10, p. 274, New York, 1837, 4^. 

 States the results of a " comparison between 

 the Alagiiilac of Guatemala, which is the most 

 southern dialect known of tlie Nahuatl, by 

 means of a vocabulary obtained in 1878, with 

 that tongue as spoken in the valley of Mexico 

 in 1550, preserved in the ' Vocabulario ' of Mo- 

 lina;" also, a comparison of Lenape expres- 

 s.ous from different .sources. Reference to the 

 Klamath, Chapanec, Kiche, Kakchiquel, aud 

 Huron is made. See Beauchamp ( W. M.). 



British and Foreign Bible Society : These words 

 following a title or within parentheses after 

 a note indicate that a copy of the work was 

 seen by the compiler in the library of that in- 

 stitution, 146 Queen Victoria Street, Loudon. 

 Eng. 



British and Foreign Bible Society. Speci- 

 mens of some of the languages aud dia- 

 lects i in which | The Britisli and For- 

 eign Bible Society | has printed or cir- 

 culated I the Holy Scriptures. | 



Colophon : London : Printed by 

 Messrs. Gilbert &, Riviugton, for the 

 British and Foreign Bible Society, 

 Queen Victoria Street, E. C, where all 

 information concerning the .society's 

 work may bo obtained, [n. d.] 



1 sheet, large folio, 28 by 38 inches, 6 col- 

 umns. — St. John iii, 16, in Mohawk, No. 132. 



Copies seen : British and Foreign Bible So- 

 cietv, Pilling, Powell. 



