Personal Memoirs of a Residence of Thirty Years with the Indian Tribes on the American Frontiers eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,003 pages of information about Personal Memoirs of a Residence of Thirty Years with the Indian Tribes on the American Frontiers.

Personal Memoirs of a Residence of Thirty Years with the Indian Tribes on the American Frontiers eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,003 pages of information about Personal Memoirs of a Residence of Thirty Years with the Indian Tribes on the American Frontiers.

“Without some system or order in the investigation of nature’s works and nature’s laws, the mind is puzzled and confounded, wandering, like Noah’s dove, over the face of the deep, without finding a resting-place.  What a pity that human knowledge and human powers are so limited!”

Indian Symbolic Figures.—­Professor Douglass (March 17th) writes, making some inquiries about certain symbolic figures on the Sioux bark letter, found above Sank River.

Expedition to the Yellow Stone.—­I fancy those western expeditions intend to beat us all hollow, in tough yarn, as the sailors have it; for it seems the Indian affair has got into the form of a newspaper controversy already:  vide Aurora and National Gazette.

Mineralogy of Georgia.—­J.  T. Johnston, Esq., of New York, writes (March 23d) that he has made an arrangement for procuring minerals for me from this part of the Union.

Scientific Subjects.—­Mr. McNabb writes (March 27th):  “I deeply regret that so little attention is bestowed by our legislatures (State and National) on objects of such importance as those which engage your thoughts, while so much time, breath, and treasure are wasted on frivolous subjects and party objects.  How long must the patriot and philanthropist sigh for the termination of such driveling and delusion!”

After a labor at my table of about fourteen weeks, the manuscript was all delivered to my printers; and I returned to New York, and took up my abode in my old quarters at 71 Courtland.  The work was brought out on the 20th of May, making an octavo volume of 419 pages, with six plates, a map, and engraved title-page.  Marks of the haste with which it was run through the press were manifest, and not a few typographical errors.  Nobody was more sensible of this than myself, and of the value that more time and attention would have imparted.  But the public received it with avidity, and the whole edition was disposed of in a short time.  Approbatory notices appeared in the principal papers and journals.  The New York Columbian says:—­

“The author has before given the public a valuable work upon the Lead Mines of Missouri, and, if we mistake not, a book of instructions upon the manufacture of glass.  He is advantageously known as a man of science and literary research, and well qualified to turn to beneficial account the mass of information he must have collected in his tour through that interesting part of the country, which has attracted universal attention, though our knowledge of it has hitherto been extremely limited.  We think there is no fear that the just expectations of the public will be disappointed; but that the book will be found to furnish all the valuable and interesting information that the subject and acquirements of the writer promised, conveyed in a chaste and easy style appropriate for the journalist—­occasionally enlivened by animating descriptions of scenery.  The author

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Personal Memoirs of a Residence of Thirty Years with the Indian Tribes on the American Frontiers from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.