360 Miscellanies. 



Sec. 6. Boron, boracic acid, borates, &z;c. 

 Sec. 7. Fluoric acid* and its compounds. 

 Sec. 8. Selenium — its oxide, acids and salts. 



Volume II. 



Muriatic acid — muriates. 



Chlorine — its oxides, chlorides, acid and salts, and compounds 

 with combustibles. 



Iodine — its acids and salts, and other compounds. 



Bromine — its acids and salts, and other compounds. 



The Metals, including the bases of the fixed alkalies and earths 

 — their oxides, salts, and other compounds. 



Organic Bodies. 

 I. V^egeiable matter. 



Elementary and proximate principles ; spontaneous changes ; fer- 

 mentation j bread; alcohol; ether; germination; vegetation, &:c. 



II. Animal matter. 



Its ultimate and proximate principles ; decomposition ; cyanogen ; 

 hydro-cyanic or prussic acid,-|- and the compounds of that class ; an- 

 imal acids; immediate parts of animals in connexion with the proxi- 

 mate principles that prevail in them. 



Galvanism, (included in the beginning, in the list of general pow- 

 ers, and there concisely sketched as to its agency in attraction and 

 repulsion,) is here exhibited in the necessary details, as it draws its 

 illustrations from every part of Chemistry. 



Tables. — Analysis of waters and minerals. — Addenda, Sic. 



It will be perceived, that the remarks already made on chemical 

 method, render unnecessary any farther elucidations of the prece- 

 ding arrangement. I will add, that Dr. Turner places oxygen at the 

 beginning, but chlorine, iodine and bromine, follow the combusti- 

 bles, and occupy the last place before the metals. 



In a word then, the only important peculiarities in my arrange- 

 ment are, that the alkalies and earths are introduced before the 

 metals ; and galvanism, although sketched in the beginning, is fih- 



* Placed here because it may have a peculiar combustible base. 

 \ This is explained in a general way in the first volume, that we may be able to 

 speak of its compounds with the metals. 



