BIBLIOGRAPHY. 543 



Gothic and Northern Languages. Webster's, Coil's, and Emerson's Spelling 

 Books; Kirkham's, Comly's, Greenleaf's Brace's, and Smith's Grammars for 

 Schools;* Murray's English Grammar, 1 v. 8vo. ; Johnson's Dictionary, 2 v. 4to., 

 and 1 v. 8vo. ; Webster's Dictionary, 2 v. 4to., and 1 v. 8vo. ; Worcester's Johnson' 

 Walker, and Todd, combined, 1 v. 8vo.; Worcester's Dictionary, 1 v. 12mo. ; 

 Crabb's English Synonyms, 1 v. 8vo; Bosworth's Anglo-Saxon Dictionary, 1 v. 8vo.; 

 Jamieson's Dictionary of the Scottish Dialect, 1 v. 8vo. ; Evans' Welsh Vocabu- 

 lary, 1 v. 12mo.; Irish Dictionary, Paris, 1768, 1 v. 4to; Janson's Dutch Gram- 

 mar, 1 v. 12mo. ; Bailey's Dutch Dictionary, 1 v. 8vo. ; Fallen's, Schade's, or Ber- 

 nay's German Grammar, 1 v. 12mo. ; Ehrenfreid's German Phrases, 1 v. 12mo. ; 

 Flugel and Sporscfiil's German Dictionary, 2 v. 8vo.; German Dictionary, pub. 

 by Mentz, of Philadelphia, 1834, 2 v. 8vo.; Adelung's Worterbuch, 7 v. 4to.; 

 Lange's Danische Sprachlehre, 2 v. 12mo. ; Wolff and Berthelson's Danish Die- 

 tionary, 1 v. 4to.; Sahlstedt's Schwedische Grammatik, 1 v. 12mo.; Sahlstedt's 

 Dictionarium Suecicum. 1 v. 4to. ; Maudru's Elemens do la Langue Russe, 

 2 v. 8vo. ; Weisman's Lexicon, German, Latin, Russian, with a Russian Gram- 

 mar, 1 v. 4to. : Bandtke's Polish Grammar, and Polish Dictionary, each 1 v. 8vo. 



BARBAROUS LANGUAGES. Roger Williams' Key to the Language of the Indians 

 of New England, (Mass. Hist. Coll., vol. 3) ; Eliot's Grammar of the Mass. Indian 

 Language, 1 v. 8vo. ; Gallatin's Indian Vocabulary, 1 v. 8vo. ; Pickering on the 

 Orthog. of the Indian Languages, (Mem. Am. Acad. Sciences); Duponceau's Re- 

 port on the Languages of the Am. Indians, 1 v. 8vo. ; Say's Vocabularies of In- 

 dian Languages, 1 v. 8vo. ; Zeisberger's Delaware Indian Spelling Book, 1 v. 12mo. ; 

 the Yaloff (African) Vocabulary, 1 v. 8vo. For other Barbarous Languages, see 

 the Publications of the Roman Propaganda. 



II. DEPARTMENT PSYCHOLOGY. 



GENERAL WORKS. Baxter's Inquiry into the Nature of the Human Soul, 2 v. 8vo.; 

 Kirwan's Metaphysical Essays, 1 v. 8vo.; Bentham's Table of the Springs of Ac- 

 tion, 1 v. 8vo.; Scott's Letters on Demonology and Witchcraft, 1 v. 12mo.; Kames' 

 Elements of Criticism, 1 v. 8vo., and Frost's School edition, 1 v. 12mo. 



RHETORIC. Newman's, or Lacy's Rhetoric, for Schools ; Comstock's, or Lacy's 

 Elocution, 1 v. 12mo. ; Jamieson's Rhetoric, 1 v. 12mo. ; Walker's Grammar of 

 Rhetoric, 1 v. 8vo.; Aristotle's Rhetoric, 1 v. 12mo.; Cicero De Oratore, tr. by 

 Guthrie, 1 v. 8vo. ; Quintilian's Institutes, 1 v. 8vo. ; Longinus on the Sublime, 

 1 v. 8vo. ; Campbell's Philosophy of Rhetoric, 2 v. 8vo. ; Blair's Lectures on 

 Rhetoric and Belles Lettres, 1 v. 8vo. ; Whateley's Elements of Rhetoric, 

 1 v. 12mo. ; Alison's Essays on the Nature and Principles of Taste, 8vo. ; Burke's 

 Inquiry into the Sublime and Beautiful, 1 v. 12mo. ; Rush on the Voice, 1 v. 8vo. 



LOGIC. Jamieson's, or Hedge's Logic, for Schools; Hinds' Logic, 1 v. 12mo.; 

 Aristotle, Excerpta ex Organo, 8vo. ; Bacon's Novum Organon Scientiarum, tr. by 

 Shaw, 2 v. 12mo. ; Woljius' Logic, from the German, 8vo. ; Watts' Logic, or the 

 Right Use of Reason, 2 v. 8vo., and his Improvement of the Mind, 1 v. 12mo. ; 

 Bentham's Book of Fallacies, 8vo. ; Whateley's Elements of Logic, 1 v. 12mo. ; 

 Malebranche's Search after Truth, 2io. 



PHRENICS. Blaisdale's First Lessons in Intellectual Philosophy, for Schools, 

 1 v. 12mo. ; Upham's Mental Philosophy, 2 v. 12mo. ; Aristotle., De Anima, 12mo.; 

 Plato's Dialogue on the Immortality of the Soul, 8vo. ; Locke's Essay concerning 

 Human Understanding, 1 v. 8vo. ; Stewart's Philosophy of the Human Mind, 

 1 v. 8vo. ; Reid's Essays on the Intellectual Powers, 2 v. 8vo. ; Brown's Lectures 

 on the Philosophy of the Human Mind, 3 v. 8vo. ; Abercrornbie's Inquiries concern- 

 ing the Intellectual Powers, 1 v. 12rno.; Spurzheim's Phrenology, 2 v. 8vo. ; 

 Combe's Constitution of Man, 1 v. 12mo. ; Edwards' Freedom of the Will, 1 v. 8vo.; 

 Kant's Critic and Investigation of pure Reason, 1 v. 8vo.; Cousin's Psychology, 

 or Examination of Locke, 1 v. 12mo.; Ranch's Psychology, 1 v. 8vo.; Combe's 

 Phrenology, 1 v. 8vo. 



* We object to the phrase you was, found in at least one of the above grammars, as 

 being incorrect. If the plural pronoun you is addressed to a single person, by way of 

 compliment, the plural form of the verb should be retained, for the same reason ; and it 

 should be you were, in both numbers. 



