234 Transactions.— Miscellaneous. 
fountain of the Polynesian race), the evidence leading to the following con- 
clusions :—1st. That Hindostan, as well as the Indian Archipelago, at one 
time contained a negro population. 2nd. That waves of migration issued 
from the South Peninsula, or Barata, east and west. 8rd. That no western 
emigration ever proceeded out of Tamasak, or the south part of the penin- 
sula of Malacca or Sumatra, so as to affect Madagascar. 4th. That the 
progress of the Barata is traceable eastward by language to the Moluccas, 
of which Ternati is the principal settlement. 5th. That the race was 
modified in colour and physiognomy by the incursions of the Mangians 
and Annamese, but not in language. 6th. With the Moluccas as a basis, a 
stream of the mixed race flowed eastward from island to island over Poly- 
nesia, one branch finding its way to New Zealand vid Tongataboo. "7th. 
That Barata, or South India, was therefore the whence of the Maori. 
My second paper was on Barata numerals, in which, of many tribes, 
I compared the numerals up to ten, scattered between Madagascar and 
Easter Island. The interesting fact which this enquiry divulged was to 
this effect: that within the regions occupied by the Barata race—of which 
the Maori is a portion—the more remote or primitive the tribes the greater 
was the analogy of dialect. "Thus a remote tribe, the Lampong, occupying 
a portion of the interior of Sumatra, have their ten numerals identical with 
Maori; Madagascar has nine identical; so also have Tagala, Papango, and 
Mindanao, in the Philippines, and so forth ; while the more accessible Malay 
has only five identical, Acheen only six, ete. 
Of this subject I then remarked, that I hoped I had satisfactorily shown 
that the first ten numerals (in as far as their evidence was valuable) tend to 
prove the intimate connection that subsisted between an archaic race that 
spread over nearly two-thirds of the circumference of the globe, and in 
which expansion the Malay had no connection,* but the ethnological 
phenomenon was due solely to the illustrious Barata. 
My next paper was philological, in which I scrutinized the structure of 
the languages of several of the leading races, glossarially, idiomatically, 
and phonetically—comparing first, Maori with Tongan; second, Maori 
with the many dialects of the Indian Archipelago ; third, Malagasi with 
Malay ; fourth, Maori with Malay; and lastly, the Murihiku dialect, New 
Zealand, with races in the Indian Archipelago. 
The general conclusion arrived at from the evidence brought out was, 
that had Madagascar not existed, or had it not been populated by its present 
race, our search for the whence of the Maori as we proceeded westward, 
might have stopped at the Silong tribe of Mergui, on the eastern shores of 
the Bay of Bengal; but the above circumstances we have set forth, force us 
* Excepting as a tribe or offshoot. 
