The words, a nagual, nagualism, a nagualist, have been current in English prose for more than seventy years; they are found during that time in a variety of books published in England and the United States, yet are not to be discovered in any dictionary of the English language; nor has Nagualism a place in any of the numerous encyclopaedias or "Conversation Lexicons," in English, French, German or Spanish. This is not owing to its lack of importance, since for two hundred years past, as I shall show, it has been recognized as a cult, no less powerful than mysterious, which united many and diverse tribes of Mexico and Central America into organized opposition against the government and the religion which had been introduced from Europe; whose members had acquired and were bound together by strange faculties and an occult learning, which placed them on a par with the famed thaumaturgists and theodidacts of the Old World; and which preserved even into our own days the thoughts and forms of a long suppressed ritual.
The Pursuit of Happiness: A Book of Studies and Strowings
Daniel G. Brinton
bookThe History and Legends of Lenâpé
Daniel G. Brinton
bookA Record of Study in Aboriginal American Languages
Daniel G. Brinton
bookThe Religious Sentiment : Its Source and Aim: A Contribution to the Science and / Philosophy of Religion
Daniel G. Brinton
bookThe Philosophic Grammar of American Languages, as Set Forth by Wilhelm von Humboldt : With the Translation of an Unpublished Memoir by Him on the American Verb
Daniel G. Brinton
bookAnthropology : As a Science and as a Branch of University Education in the United States
Daniel G. Brinton
bookThe Study of Lenâpé and Their Mythology
Daniel G. Brinton
bookThe Lenâpé and Their Legends : Ethnological study of the The Lenâpé Indians in Eastern Pennsylvania
Daniel G. Brinton
bookReligions of Primitive Peoples
Daniel G. Brinton
bookNagualism: Aztecs Folklore and Magic
Daniel G. Brinton
bookAmerican Hero-Myths
Daniel G. Brinton
book