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Oliver Cowdery, Kirtland, OH, to William Frye, Lebanon, IL, 22 Dec. 1835, in Cowdery, Letterbook, 71; see also “Notebooks of Copied Egyptian Characters, ca. Early July 1835”; and “Copies of Egyptian Characters, ca. Summer 1835.” There are two extant notebooks, inscribed by Oliver Cowdery and William W. Phelps, and several loose leaves with copied characters.
Cowdery, Oliver. Letterbook, 1833–1838. Huntington Library, San Marino, CA.
Phelps made space for a “letter” column, and Cowdery followed suit. Phelps supplied data in that column for the first three entries, while Cowdery did the same for the first entry only. Phelps’s inclusion of more data suggests that his work began before Cowdery’s. (See Egyptian Alphabet, ca. Early July–ca. Nov. 1835–B and –C.)
At character 2.6, it appears that “under or less” was heard and interpreted differently by Phelps and Cowdery. Phelps seems to have begun to write “under,” but then upon hearing “or,” he replaced “under” with “less.” Cowdery, on the other hand, heard “under or less,” and wrote the entire phrase, interpreting the “or” as a clarifying word. (See Egyptian Alphabet, ca. Early July–ca. Nov. 1835–B and –C.)
For instance, both Cowdery and Phelps expanded upon definitions of characters 1.6, 1.15, and 1.17. (See Egyptian Alphabet, ca. Early July–ca. Nov. 1835–A, –B, and –C.)
Egyptian Alphabet–B is missing the top portion of the page, though enough of the descenders of the letters exist to indicate that it was likely originally labeled “Egyptian Alphabet.”
For these labels, see Egyptian Alphabet, ca. Early July–ca. Nov. 1835–C; see also Egyptian Alphabet, ca. Early July–ca. Nov. 1835–B.
See Egyptian Alphabet, ca. Early July–ca. Nov. 1835–A. This change may have signaled a move away from an attempt to outline a direct correlation between an ancient alphabet and the English alphabet to a more generic approach that identified characters, sounds, and explanations.
In 1832, early church member and scribe John Whitmer copied a document he titled “sample of pure language” into a collection of revelations. This document contained sounds and definitions of a few words that Whitmer apparently believed were part of the pure language spoken by Adam and Eve. In May 1835, William W. Phelps sent a more developed version of that document to his wife, Sally Waterman Phelps. Phelps’s version listed characters from an unknown source in addition to the sounds and definitions found on the earlier version. (Revelation Book 1, p. 144; Sample of Pure Language, between ca. 4 and ca. 20 Mar. 1832; William W. Phelps, Kirtland, OH, to Sally Waterman Phelps, Liberty, MO, 26 May 1835, William W. Phelps, Papers, BYU.)
Phelps, William W. Papers, 1835–1865. BYU.
One exception is character 1.7, which is a hieratic character with an accompanying transliteration (Kah tou man) that is also in the two notebooks of copied characters. Character 1.15, for instance, is a composite of characters 1.10, 1.13, and 1.14, all of which are of undetermined origin. (See “Valuable Discovery,” ca. Early July 1835; Notebook of Copied Egyptian Characters, ca. Early July 1835; and Egyptian Alphabet, ca. Early July–ca. Nov. 1835–A, –B, and –C.)
In Egyptian Alphabet–B, Cowdery provided two sounds and one explanation for character 5.27. Phelps, in Egyptian Alphabet–C, provided two sounds for character 5.27 and one sound for 5.28, though the initial sound for 5.27 was removed from the entry for 5.28 and placed there. In Egyptian Alphabet–A, Cowdery provided the sound and explanation for character 5.28; the explanation of that same character is later expanded on a subsequent page.
Character 1.15 in the Egyptian Alphabet documents, for instance, has the sound of “Iota tou-es Zip-Zi,” which is a composite of the sounds of characters 1.10 (“Zip Zi”), 1.13 (“tone tahe or tohe tou-es”), and 1.14 (“Iota”). The explanation for character 1.15 is also an amalgam of the definitions of characters 1.10, 1.13, and 1.14. The character itself also is composed of individual characters 1.10, 1.13, and 1.14. A similar system exists in the Grammar and Alphabet volume. (See Egyptian Alphabet, ca. Early July–ca. Nov. 1835–A, –B, and –C; and Grammar and Alphabet of the Egyptian Language, ca. July–ca. Nov. 1835.)
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