56 



BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE 



Lubbock (J.) — Coutinned. 



Loudou I Lougmaus, Green, iiu<l co | 

 1880 I All rights re.serve<l 



Half-title vc.tso printers 1 1. froutispieee 1 1. 

 title verso blank 1 1. preface (dated February, 

 1870) pp. vii-x, contents pp. xi-xvi, illustration.s 

 pp. xvii-xviii, li.st of principal works quoted 

 pp. xix-xxiii, text pp. f-486, appendix pp. 487- 

 529, notes pp. 531-539, index pp. 541-554, list of 

 ■works by the same author verso blank 1 1. live 

 other plates, 8°. 



Linguistics as under titles above, p. 432. 



Copies seen : Eanies. 



Lucy-Fossarieu (M. P. de). Extrait | du 

 eonipte rendu st^nograjjhique | du 

 Cougres internatioual | des sciences 

 etlinograpbiques, | tenu a Paris du 15 

 au 17 juillet 1878. | Les langues indi- 

 eniies | de la Californie. | fitude de 

 philologie etbnographique, | par M. P. 

 de Lucy-Fossarieu, | membre du con- 

 seil central de I'lustitution ethnogra- 

 pliique, I laur6at de la Soci4t6 anidri- 

 caine de France. | [Design.] ] 



Paris. I Imprimerie nationale. | M 

 DCCC LXXXI[1881]. 



Cover title as above, half-title verso blank 1 

 1. title as aboveverso blank 1 1. text pp. 5-55, 8°. 



Vocabulary of the Loloten orTutataniys, pp. 

 20, 24, 28, 32, 30, 40, 44, 48, 52, 54. 



Cojnes seen : Briuton, Pilling. 



Lude'wig (Hermann Ernst). The | liter- 

 ature I of I American aboriginal lan- 

 guages. I By I Hermann E. Ludewig. | 

 With additions and corrections | by 

 professor Wm. W. Turner. | Edited by 

 Nicolas Triibner. | 



London : | Triibner and co., 60, Pater- 

 noster row. I MDCCCLVIII [1858]. 



Half-title " Triiljner's bibliotheca glottica I" 

 verso blank 1 1. title as above verso printer 1 1. 

 preface pp. v-viii, contents verso blank 1 1. ed- 

 itor's advertisement pp. ix-xii, biographical 

 memoir pp. xiii-xiv, introductory bibliograph- 

 ical notices pp. xv-xxiv, text pp. 1-209, ad- 

 denda PI). 210-246, index pp. 247-256, errata pp. 

 257-258, 8°. An-anged alphabetically by lan- 

 guages. Addenda by Wm. W. Turner and 

 Nicolas Trubner, pp. 210-246. 



Contains a list of grammars and vocabularies, 

 and among others of the following peoples : 



American languages generallj-, pp. xv-xxiv ; 

 Apaches, pp. 8, 211 ; Athapascan, pp. 14, 211 ; 

 Atnah, pp. 15, 212; Beaver, p. 18; Chepewyan, 

 pp. 35-36, 215-216; Dogrib, p. 66; Hoo-pah, p. 82; 

 Hudson's Bay, pp. 83-84, 223 ; Kinai, pp. 92-93, 

 225; Koltschanes, p. 96; Kutchin, Loucheux, 

 pp.99, 226; Lipan, p.J226; Navajos, pp. 132-133, 

 233; Piualenos, p. 150; Sicannis, p. 175; Sussee, 

 p. 178; TacuUiea, pp. 178-179,240; Tah-lewah, p. 



Ludewig (H. E.)^ Continued. 



]7!t; Ti.orillas (.Jicarillas), p. 180, 241 ; Tlats- 

 kanai, p. 189; Umpqua, pji. 195, 244. 



Copies seen : Bureau of Ethnology, Congress, 

 Eames, I'illing. 



At the Fischer sale. no. 990, a copy brought 

 5«. M. ; at the Field sale, no. 1403, $2.63 ; at the 

 •Squiersale, no. 699, $2.62; another copy, no. 1906, 

 $2.38. Priced by Leclerc, 1878, no. 2075, 15 fr. 

 The Pinart co^ty, no. 565, sold for 25 fr., and the 

 Murphy copy, no. 1540, for $2.50. 



Br. Ludewig has himself so fully detailed the 

 l)lan and purport of this work that little more 

 remains for me to add beyond the mere state- 

 ment of the origin of my connection with the 

 publication, and the mention of such additions 

 for which I am alone responsible, and which, 

 during its jirogress through the i)ress, have 

 gradually accumulated to about one-sixth of 

 the whole. This is but an act of justice to the 

 memory of Dr. Ludewig; because at the time of 

 his death, in December, 1856, no more than 172 

 pages were printed off, and these constitute the 

 only portion of the work which liad the benefit 

 of his valuable personal and final revision. 



Similarity of pursuits led, during my stay in 

 New York in 1855, to an intimacy with Dr. 

 Ludewig, during which he mentioned that he, 

 like myself, had been making bibliographical 

 memoranda for years of all books which serve 

 to illustrate the history of spoken langu.ige. As 

 a first section of a more extended work on the lit 

 erary history of language generallj', he had pre- 

 pared a bibliographical memoir of the remains of 

 the aboriginal languages of America. The man- 

 uscript had been deposited by him in the library 

 of the Ethnological Society at New York, but 

 at my request he at once most kindly jjlaced it 

 at my disposal, stipulating only that it should 

 be printed in Europe, under my personal super- 

 intendence. 



Upon my return to England, I lost no time in 

 carrying out the trust thus confided to me, in- 

 tending then to confine myself simply to pro- 

 ducing a correct copy of my friend's manuscript. 

 But it soon became obvious that the transcript 

 had been hastily made, and but for the valu- 

 able assistance of literary friends, both in this 

 country and in America, the work would prob- 

 ably have been abandoned. Mj' thanks are more 

 particularly due to Mr. E.G. Squier, and to Prof. 

 William W. Turner, of Washington, by whoso 

 considerate and valuable cooperation many dif- 

 ficulties were cleared away and my editorial 

 labors greatly lightened. This encouraged me 

 to spare neither personal labor nor expense in 

 the attempt to render the work as perfect as 

 possible; with what success must be left to 

 the judgment of those who can fairly appreciate 

 the labors of a pioneer in any new field of liter- 

 ary research. — Editor's advertisement. 



Dr. Ludewig, though but little known in this 

 country [England], was held in considerable 

 esteem as a jurist, both in Germany and the 

 United States of America. Born at Dresden in 

 1809, with but little exception he continued to 



