120 TRUBNER & CO.’S MONTHLY LIST. - 
NEARLY READY. 
New and greatly Enlarged Illustrated Edition, to which is added a Special Lecture on 
the Causes and Cure of Impediments of Speech, demy 8yvo, 
KING’S COLLEGE LECTURES ON ELOCUTION; 
Or, The Physiology and Culture of Voice and Specch, and the Expression 
of the Emotions by Language, Countenance, and Gesture. 
Being the Substance of the Introductory Course of Lectures annually delivered 
By CHARLES JOHN PLUMPER 
Lecturer on Public Reading and Speaking at King’s College, London, in the Evening Classes Department. 
Dedicated by permission to H.R.H. the Prince of Wales, 
Demy 8vo. 
THE HISTORY OF INDIA from the EARLIEST AGES. 
By J. TALBOYS WHEELER, 
Late Assistant Secretary to the Government of India in the Foreign Department ; Author of the 
“*Geography of Herodotus,” &c. &c. 
VoL. IV. Part II. 
MOGHUL EMPIRE—AURUNGZEB. 
NEW VOLUME OF THE ENGLISH & FOREIGN PHILOSOPHICAL LIBRARY. 
Post 8vo. 
CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE HISTORY OF THE 
DEVELOPMENT OF THE HUMAN RACE. 
Lectures and Dissertations 
By LAZARUS GEIGER, 
Author of ‘‘ Origin and Evolution of Human Speech and Reason.” 
Translated from the Second German Edition by Davip AsHER, Ph.D., Correspon 
Member of the Berlin Society for the Study of Modern Languages and Literature. 
I. Language, and its importance in the History of the Development of the Human Race. 
Il. The Earliest History of the Human Race in the light of Language, with Special 
Reference to the Origin of Tools. 
III. On Colour-sense in Primitive Times, and its Development. 
IV. On the Origin of Writing. 
V. The Discovery of Fire. 
VI. On the Primitive Home of the Indo-Europeans. 
ding 
“It ts a source of lively satisfaction to me to have been chosen as the medium of introducing to the 
English public the late lamented author of the following Lectures and Essays, one of the most original 
thinkers Germany has produced in recent times, and the ‘ greatest of her Philologers, as he has beer 
styled by a competent judge. His work itself, however, will best speak Sor him, and needs no commen- 
dation on my part. Let me only add that, though these Lectures and Essays, now submitted to the 
English reader, are but ‘chips’ from the author's ‘workshop,’ as it were, yet I believe they afford a 
good glimpse of his eminent powers and brilliant LenNtUs aS an znvestigator.’—EXTRACT FROM 
TRANSLATOR’S PREFACE, 
London: TRUBNER & CO., Ludgate Hill. 
