Contents. Lecture I. The English language our inheritance ; all other possessions from our own industry The care we have taken of it. The language of a people a proof of their advancement in knowledge. The effect of climate on Our language too much neglected. The language of the ancient Britone. The Saxon language from Alfred the Wise to Alfred the Great. The change of the Saxon after the conquest. The origin of the English language. For good poetry there must be a high degree of mental cultivation. The English language enriched from many sources. The copiousness, and the strength of the English language ; Specimens ; beauty, sweetness, majesty, with specimens for illustration. ' The diffusion of the English language. The attention now paid to the acquisition of it. The necessity of keeping it pure The origin a dictionaries Dr. Johnson's labours. Dr. Webster's dictionary. The invention of the Cherokee alphabet. Sec-quah-yah the inventor ; the method of his invention of letters, and of numbers his talents and character The Cherokee newspaper, &c. - - - 9 LECTURE II. Literature Plan of the following lectures Greek literature General observations. Roman and Arabick literature. The value at lectures in communicating knowledge. The state of learning when our ancestors came to this country. The character of the colonists. Sir Walter Raleigh sent to this country. The Virginia settlement. John Smith, his character and writings. The pilgrims. The settlement of the province of Maxxachusetts Bay. The value of the bible to the first settlers; and to all men. The object and hopes of the lecturer. - - 0 - 29 LECTURE III. Sketches of some of the pilgrims; Brewster, Bradford, Standish, Winslow. Proofs of the intellectual advancement of the pilgrims. The books they wrote; Morton's Memorial, Winslow's Good News, Mourt's Journal. The precarious situation of the first settlers. The colony of Massachusetts Bay. Winthrop, as a magistrate and historian, Dudley, Sir Richard Saltonstall, John Wilson, John Elliot, the apostle to the Indians. The Sheppards and their writings. Nathani8el Ward, Peter Bulkley. Nathaniel Rogers, Ezekiel Rogers. The founding of Harvard College. Presidents, Dunster, Chauncey, Hoar, Oaks, Rogers, Increase Mather. Mathematical science. John Sherman. Progress of literature in the ancient dominion. Their clergy. Maryland settled by respectable catholicks. New York History of the Waldenses. Settlement of Connecticut; its distin- guished men; of New-Hampshire; of Rhode Island. Roger Williams. The character of the females of that age; the cause of their superiority. General remarks upon our progenitors. - - - - - 43 A2