MEXICAN MIJANGOS. 1023' 
Mexican — contiuued. 
§ XXV. 3. Some principles of said [Christian] doctrine, on 4 leaves of Euro- 
pean paper, not continued. Besides the pictures and ciphers, there are a few 
lines in the Otonii language. 
§ XXXV. 2. A manuscript in Nahuatl. It treats of many things pertaining 
to the Mexican Empire, and iu a few lines, in concise style (like the rest of it), 
refers to the Apparition of the Holy Lady in the Cerro (mount) dc Tcpey&cac. 
The author did not put correctly the Arabic numbers of the year in which 
the apparition occurred, but the history is old and authentic, and I will prove it 
in [my] said Prologo. 
2579 Mexican MS. | Pintura | del | Gobernador, Alcalde.s, j y 
Itegidores de | Mexico. Codice | eu geroglificos Mexicanos y en 
lengua castellana | y azteca existente en la Biblioteca | del Excmo. 
Senor | Duque de Osuna. | 
Madrid, | Iiuprenta de Manuel G. Hernandez | 1878 | * 
11., 10 pp., 39 11. fac-similes. folio. Improved title of No. 2579, furnished by 
Sr. Icazbalceta. 
2580 a Micmac. Cabier mikmaque copi6 le 1^"^ jour de d6cembre, I'an 
1830. * 
Manuscript. 4.511. folio. Comprises the principal religious offices in Micmac, 
with music; copy of a manuscript composed in 1754 by a French missionary. — 
Piiiart Sale Cat., No. 622. 
2580 b De la Langue Sauvage Mikmaque. 
Manuscript. 103 11. folio. Comprises a grammar, French-Mikmak, and a 
catechism of prayers, French-Mikmak; composed by a missionary at the end of 
the last century. — Pinart Sale Cat , No. 620. 
2580 c Pieces manuscrites [eu langue mikmaque]: Grammaires, 
Vocabulaires, Oatecbismes, Livres de priferes et Documents divers. * 
Manuscript. Title from the Pinart Sale Catalogue, No. 621. 
See Irving {Mr. —), No. 1949 a. 
2580 d [Miguel (I>om)]. [Manuscript in tbe Mexican language.] B. 
13 11. 12°. In the Bancroft library, San Francisco. 
A curious fragment, in a handwriting of the middle of the 17th century. At 
the end of the manuscript a note in Spanish states that these fragments of excel- 
lent Mexican were written by Don Miguel, ministro, or vice-rector, of the Jesuit 
college in Mexico, of which the celebrated Father Carochi was rector. Titles of 
dialogues and speeches are in Spanish. 
Contents: Salutation of one who, going to the market place, passes the house 
of a kinsman, and reply ; congratulations to a newly married couple, and replies ; 
what the cihuatlanques say to the parents of a maiden demanded in uuirriage by 
the king of Tezcoco, and replies ; salute of the king to his bride ; salutations of 
a lord to the queen and to the king; salutation to the queen on the birth of a 
child; congratulations to the king on this event; taking leave of a dead king; 
condolence of a noble with others on the king's death; advice on good breeding 
given by an old man to children ; salutation of a noble youth to a religious ; con- 
versation of two noble youths with their grandmother, mother, tutor, a noble- 
man and an old noblewoman ; how children were reared by the Mexicans when 
they were heathens. 
2582 a Mijangos (i*'r. Juan). Directorio espiritual, eu mejicauo y cas- 
tellan o. 
"Of "reat literary merit, if wo are to believe what is said of this work by a 
person so competent as Senor Dr. Torres Cano, professor of this language in the 
