~ Addiimial Noles^^ S4S 



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Greek, and Latin languages, and of Grecian and Roman anti- 

 quities ; a professor of mathematics, natural phllosopEy, 

 chronology, and geography ; and a professor of chemistry. 

 Beside these, there are in the medical school attached to the 

 college, a dean of faculty ; a professor of anatomy and sur- 

 gery;, a professor of the institutes of medicine; a professor 

 of obstetrics ; and a professor of materia medica and botany, 



To qualify students for admission into this college, it is ne-_ 

 cessary .that they should be able to read the four Gospels jn 

 Greek, together with four books of Virgil's iEneid, four books 

 of Cassar's Commentaries, and four orations of Cicero against 

 Catiline. 

 . The^course of instruction in this college is as follows : " 

 , The first year, Sallust, Livy, two books of Virgil's Geor- 

 gics, part of the New Testament in Greek, from twenty to" 

 thirty dialogues of Luc i an, and two books (generally) .br 

 Xenophon. To these are added arithmetic, algebra, a small 

 portion of Euclid, and Latin composition, . • 



The second year, Virgil's Georgics finished, Horace's Odes, 

 and part of his Satires, the Orations of Demosthenes, an ad- 

 ditional portion of Xenophon, and two books of Homer. WitK 

 these are mingled, English grammar, six books of Euclid, 

 modern geography, trigonometry, with its various applica'- 

 tions to surveying, navigation, &c., Latin and English coin- 

 position. 



The third year, Horace's Epistles, and Art of Poetry, six 

 books of Homer, conic sections, spheric trigonometry, with 

 its application to astrononiical problems, ancient geography, 

 rhetoric, and English composition. , .. . 



The fourth year, natural philosophy, logic, and moral phi- 

 losophy, Terence, Longinus, chemistry, and English compo^ 

 siti9!^., .J public speaking once a week through the wli^Ie 



course.;, : ... , --. , -r 



' / ■■^jyj.-j : , - i:-nl- jJS!03niin; '•>nT 



I^,is,;^)(?lieved that there is no other college in the United^ 

 States, ija which the Greek and Latin languages are studied, 

 •with fo much, care, aad, to pch an extent,, as in tjiis. insti-. 

 tvjtion. ■ 



