/ 
| 
aati 
shikai i ian eta ae aa ee 
Second object is to persuade the “unlearned 1 
SEYFFARTH—CHAMPOLLION AND RENOUF. 589 
afew days ago came into my hands. 
It is not at all a matter of delight for a learned society to 
est himself in such matters, viz: when the common property 
of the whole human race, which is called truth, happens to be 
sailed; when falsehoods are spread abroad, preventing oth- 
ers from cultivating the same field of science, or leading them 
to the propagation of new errors; when the literary property 
of an individual, sometimes his whole possession in this world, 
isin danger of being stolen by unclean hands, and of being 
placed to another’s account. Any citizen that has sustained 
injury as regards property, or honor, can obtain satisfaction 
by a process of law; but for injured literary men no forum 
exists; their only refuge is public opinion, and the justice of 
other truth-loving men 
th: eader” to believe 
aig system is “fundamentally unsound, and simply illu- 
difficulty really seems to be. fatal to the entire 
“Surely, spelling like this is either “ easily 
7 6 th’s 
