Читать книгу Algonquin Legends of New England - Charles Godfrey Leland - Страница 6
BOOKS, MANUSCRIPTS, ETC.
ОглавлениеThe Story of Glooskap. A curious manuscript in Indian-English, obtained for me by Tomah Josephs.
The Dominion Monthly for 1871. Containing nine Micmac legends by Rev. S.T. Rand.
Indian Legends. (Manuscript of 900 pp. folio.) Collected among the Micmac Indians, and translated by Silas T. Rand, Missionary to the Micmacs.
A Manuscript Collection of Passamaquoddy Legends and Folk-Lore. By Mrs. W. Wallace Brown, of Calais, Maine. These are all given with the greatest accuracy as narrated by Indians, some in broken Indian-English. They embrace a very great variety of folk-lore.
Manuscript Fairy Tales in Indian and English. By Louis Mitchell.
Manuscript: The Superstitions of the Passamaquoddies. In Indian and English.
A History of the Passamaquoddy Indians. Manuscript of 80 pages, Indian and English. All of these were written for me by L. Mitchell, M.L.
Wampum Records. Read for me by Sapiel Selmo, the only living Indian who has the key to them.
David Cusick's Sketches of Ancient History of the Six Nations. Lockport, N.Y., 1848. Printed, but written in Indian-English.
Manuscript: Six Stories of the St. Francis or Abenaki Indians. Taken down by Miss Abby Alger.
Osgood's Maritime Provinces. In this work there are seven short extracts relative to Glooskap given without reference to any book or author.