Page:Archæologia Americana—volume 2, 1836.djvu/589

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LETTER OF DR. ADAM CLARKE.* Millbroolc, Prescot, Lancashire, Nov. 22d, 182L Dear Sir, Almost six months after date, I was honored with your letter enclosed with Vol. I. of the Arch&ologia Americana. For this token of respect I beg leave to return my warmest thanks to your Honorable President, and to the Society ; and to yourself for the handsome and polite manner in which this valuable present was conveyed. Two literary friends who were with me on a visit begged to read the work ; their perusal of it kept me nearly eight days from having the pleasure which they told me they had received in perusing it. On its return, I threw aside all other studies, and bent my mind fully to consider its contents. To say I was pleased with it, will express very little of my feelings ; I was highly delighted, and much instructed. The investiga- tions relative to your ancient people, led me into a new world. Fancy, a rare operator in antiquarian pursuits, got immedi- ately to work ; and I began to travel with your travellers ; survey with your surveyors ; and thought how well I could have digged with the laborers employed in clearing the old tanks, ditches, he. Mounds, cairns, and forts, which I had repeatedly seen in England, Ireland, and Scotland, presented themselves before me ; as also the various instruments of stone and clay, which I have seen, particularly in Ireland, dug up by the spade or turned up by the plough. Those which I have myself examined bear such a striking resemblance to those which you have described, that I cannot possibly doubt of their affinity. For several years, I have bent my mind frequently to the study of the ancient customs of the Irish ; especially of those who live in the glens, who preserve their ancient language, and

  1. This celebrated scholar and eminent divine, died of the Asiatic

cholera, at London, Aug. 21st, 1832, aged sixty-nine years. vol. ii. 70