Aboriginal American Authors by Daniel Garrison Brinton
page 84 of 89 (94%)
page 84 of 89 (94%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
carry the authentic history of Northern America back to a period fifty
years earlier than the era of Columbus. The introductory essay treats of the ethnology and history of the Huron-Iroquois League and its founders, the origin of the Book of Rites, the composition of the Federal Council, the clan system, the laws of the League, and the Iroquois character, public policy, and language. NOTICES OF THE PRESS AND OF EMINENT WRITERS. "This work may be said to open a field of Indian research new to ethnologists. ... These precious relics of antiquity are concise in their wording, and full of meaning. ... The additions made by Mr. Hall are almost as valuable as the texts themselves." --_The Nation_ New York, September 13, 1883. "The reputation of the author, added to this fascinating title, will insure its favorable reception, not only by ethnologists, but also, the reading public. ... A remarkable discovery, and indisputably of great ethnological value. ... A book which is as suggestive as this must bear good fruit."--_Science_, August 31,1883. "The work contains much new material of permanent interest and value to the historical scholar and the scientist. ... "--_The Magazine of American History_, September, 1883. "In this Book of Rites we have poetry, law, history, tradition and genealogy, interesting and valuable for many reasons...."--_Good Literature_, August 18, 1883. |
|