utenberg@html@files@49849@49849-h@49849-h-15.htm.html#Page_74" class="pginternal">74. Egyptian temples, 147. Egyptians, 51. Elysian fields, 128. Engraving, 155, 162. Enoch, 43. Eudoxus, 125. Eve, 46. Evolution, 9, 22. Evolution of language, 58. Face painting, 105. Family histories, primitive, 132. Featherwork, 86, 162. Fetish, 162. Fetish collections, 88. Fetish objects, 87. Fetishes, 89, 132. Field of library science, 3. Filipino head hunters, 82. Financial accounts, 132. Finger-print records, 102. First fruits, 123, 136. Folded documents, 19, 147. Folklore, 23. Footprints, 101. Foretelling, 13. Fossils, 103, 106. Fox, 34. Fox’s brush, 85. Genetic, 9. Germ of the library, 140. Gesture, 58. Gesture language, 35, 37, 59, 60, 61, 72, 99. Gesture records, 60. Gesture signs, 112. Gestures, 10, 34. Girdles, 148. Golden tumors, 124. Graves, 132. Greek mysteries, 74. Greek temple treasuries, 120. Hairdressing, 162. Ham, 42. Hand gesture, 59. Handwriting, 36. Hanno, 125. Haoma, 32. Happy hunting grounds, 128. Head of c
> Models, 121. Mongol libraries, 40. Monuments, 22. Moses, 43. Mourning, 162. Moving pictures, 100. Museums, 79. Mythologers, 32. Myths, 157. Natural image, 103. Natural method, 11. Natural object images, 101. Natural relics, 138. Natural stone forms, 107. Nautical knot, 94. Necklace, 103, 148. Nectar, 32. New York Public Library, 17. New York Public Library school, 3. Nick-stick, 95. Nisibis, 44. Noah, 26, 42, 43. North American Indians, 107, 111. Notch books, 91, 95. Notch records, 95. Object abbreviation, 82. Object collections, 116, 119. Object libraries, 53, 55. Object record collection, 88. Objects buried with the dead, 118. Odin, 27, 29, 30, 31. OdrÖrer, 31. Old Testament, 69. One book library, 17. Onopides, 125. Oracles, 33. Oral speech, 58. Oral verbal tradition, 69. Origin of libraries, 133. Ornament, 162. Ornament a personal record, 129. Orphic tablets, 128, 164. Ownership mark, 104. Painting, 162. Palaeography, 152, 154, 157. Palermo stone, 63, 134. Pantomime, 61, Excepting clear outliers, variations in capitalisation and hyphenation have been retained.Page 40, ‘preadamite’ changed to ‘Preadamite,’ “libraries are Preadamite survivals!” Page 42, ‘Negro’ changed to ‘negro,’ “and negro contemporaries” Page 93, ‘Egyptain’ changed to ‘Egyptian,’ “the ancient Egyptian hieroglyphics” Facing page 102, full stop struck following ‘p. 27,’ “Childhood of Man, p. 27” Page 139, ‘carniverous’ changed to ‘carnivorous,’ “mild and carnivorous Abel” Page 161, punctuation and capitalisation changed for clarity from “the Dawn of Mediterranean civilisation. Ch. 2. pp. 11-43 The Origin of Writing and still better Evans, Scripta Minoa” to “the Dawn of Mediterranean civilisation, ch. 2, pp. 11-43, “The Origin of Writing,” and still better, Evans’ Scripta Minoa” Page 164, title italicised, “Prolegomena to the study of Greek religion” Index B, comma inserted after ‘also,’ “See also, Pouches.” Index C, comma inserted after ‘146,’ “Clay boxes, chests or jars, 19, 145, 146, 147, 148.” Index F, ‘Foot prints’ changed to ‘Footprints,’ “Footprints, 101.” Index L, comma struck after ‘always,’ “Latest book not always best, 6.” Index L, second ‘bag’ struck, “Lawyer’s green bag, 146.” |
|