534 Lectures. 
the second Tuesday in October at Nine in the Morning, 
and are continued every Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday 
throughout the Season, terminating in May. 
The Subjects eetaprebiendud’ in the Course are treated of 
in the following order. 
Division 1. Of the Powers and Properties of Matter, and 
the general Laws of Chemical Changes. 
Ii. Of undecompounded Substances, and their Matual 
Combinations. 
III. Vegetable Chemistry. 
IV. Chemistry of the Animal Kingdom. 
V. Geology. 
In the First Division the principles and objects of Che- 
mical Science, and the general Laws of Chemical Changes 
are explained, and the phenomena of Attraction and of 
Light, Heat, and Electricity developed, and illustrated by 
numerous experiments. 
In the Second the undecompounded bodies are exa- 
mined, and the modes of procuring them in a pure form, 
- and of ascertaining their chemical characters, exhibited 
‘upon an extended scale.—The Lectures on the Metals in- 
clude a succinct account of Mineralogy, and of the me; 
thods of analysing and assaying Ores. This part of the 
Course will also contain a full examination of Pharmaceu- 
tical Chemistry: the Chemical Processes of the Pharma- 
copeia will be particularly described, and compared with 
those adopted by the Manufacturer. 
The Third and Fourth Divisions relate to Organic Sub- 
stances ;—including the Chemical changes induced by Ve- 
getation ; the principles of Vegetables ; ‘the theory of Fer- 
mentation ; and the characters of its products——The Che- 
mical History of Animais is illustrated by an examination 
of their component parts, in health and in disease; by an 
inquiry into the Chemistry of the Animal Functions, and 
mito the application of Chemical principles to the treatment 
of Diseases. 
The Course concludes with an Account of the Structure 
of the Earth, of the changes which it is undergoing, of the 
objects and uses of Geology, and of the principles ‘of Agri- 
cultural Chemistry. 
The applications of Chemistry to the Arts and Manu- 
factures, and to ceconomical purposes, are discussed. at 
some length jn various parts of the Course; and the most 
jmportant of them are experimentally exhibited. 
Farther particulars may be obtained at the Theatre in 
Winds 
