CONTENTS. 



Lect. Page 



VIII. On Voice and Language ; Vocal Imitations, and Ventriloquism . 254 

 IX. On natural and inarticulate Language, or that of Animals ; arti- 

 ficial and articulate Language, or that of Man 262 



X. On legible Language, imitative and symbolical 274 



XL On the literary Education of former Times ; and especially that 



of Greece and Rome 289 



XII. On the Dark or Middle Ages 299 



XIII. On the Revival of Literature 312 



SERIES TIL 



NATURE OF THE MIND: ITS GENERAL FACULTIES AND FURNITURE. 



Lect. Page 



I. On Materialism and Immaterialism . 322 



II. On the Nature and Duration of the Soul, as explained by popular 



Tradition, by various Schools of Philosophy, and by Revelation 332 



[II. On Human Understanding ~ 342 



IV. The Subject continued 351 



V. On Ancient and Modern Skeptics 361 



VL On the Hypothesis of Common Sense 374 



VII. On Human Happiness 388 



VIII. On the general Faculties and Free-agency of the Mind .... 398 



IX. On the Origin, Connnexion, and Character of the Passions . . 407 

 X. On the leading Characters and Passions of savage and civilized 



Life 415 



XI. On Temperaments and Constitutional Propensities 422 



XII. On Pathognomy, or the Expression of the Passions 429 



XIII. On Physiognomy and Craniognomy, or the Expression of the 



Temper and Disposition 437 



XIV. On the Language of the Passions 448 



XV. On Taste, Genius, ctnd Imagination 460 



