CONTENTS. CHAPTER I.-ORIGIN AND AFFINITIES. 1. The Dispersion of the Race and the Confusion of Tongues; 2. The Migrations; 3. Origin of Speech in the Instinct to communicate Thought; 4. The First Words; 5. Languages, Monosyllabic, Agglutinative, and In- flectional; 6. The Indo-European Family of Languages; 7. The English a Dialect of the Low German Branch; 8. The Celtic Element in English; 9. The Roman Invasion; 10. The Anglo-Saxon Occupation of England; 11. The Danish and Norwegian Invasions; 12. The Norman Conquest. CHAPTER II.-REPRESENTATIVE SELECTIONS. 1. Versions of the Bible; Notes on the Versions; State of the Language PART II.- ELEMENTS OF THE ENGLISH LAN- CHAPTER I.-FORMATION AND GROWTH OF LANGUAGE. §1. Nature of Language, expressing Thought, social, through Articulate Sound; §2. Its Elements, (1) Thought, (2) Person, (3) Matter of Thought; - Notion Words distinguished by Forms; § 8. Formative Elements- Form CHAPTER II. — DEPARTMENTS OF LANGUAGE AND LITERA- TURE. CHAPTER III.-ORTHOEPY. § 13. Elements-Phthongal and Aphthongal; Vowels and Consonants; Organic Position; § 14. Rise of Vowels; § 15. Rise of Consonants; § 16. Orthoepic System. CHAPTER IV.- ORTHOGRAPHY. § 17. Orthography defined; § 18. Expedients to distinguish Quantity; §19. Expedients to distinguish Phthongal and Aphthongal Elements; § 20. Digraphs; § 21. Expedients to show Character of Sound; § 22. Diphthongs; § 23. Diverse Functions of Characters; § 24. Homonyms: § 25. Influence of Typography on Orthography; § 26. The Final E; § 27. Alphabetic System. CHAPTER V.-SYLLABICATION. § 28. Syllable as to its Essential Nature; § 29. Syllabication Threefold; § 30. Orthoepic Syllabication; § 31. Etymological Syllabication; § 32. Orthographic Syllabication. CHAPTER VI.-ACCENTUATION. CHAPTER VII.- DERIVATION. § 35. Principles and Modes of Derivation, Grimm's Law; § 36. Composi- tion; § 37. Affixes; § 38. Euphonic Affixes; § 39. Orthographic Affixes; § 40. Thought Affixes; § 41. Matter Affixes; § 42. Grammatical Affixes; § 43. Discriminative Affixes; § 44. Prefixes; § 45. Suffixes; § 46. Internal Changes in Words; § 47. Changes in use of Words; § 48. Admission of § 51. Kinds; § 52. Alliteration; § 53 Rhyme; § 54. Rhythm; § 55. ENGLISH LITERATURE. PART I. HISTORY AND SELECTIONS. CHAPTER I. ORIGIN AND AFFINITIES. 1. THE most advanced investigations of philological science significantly point to an original unity of race and of language; and the Biblical narrative of the dispersion of the human family, and of the contemporaneous confusion of human speech, is the most trustworthy theory of race and dialect that the science of language and of literature, at its present stage, can propose to itself. According to that narrative, a few centuries after the Deluge, the race of man, that up to that time had been kept together in the use of the same language, broke asunder, to seek in families or in larger tribal communities separate abodes for themselves, and in the separation framed to themselves separate dialects. This was the great historical epoch of the dispersion of the race and of the confusion of speech. Whatever may have been the particular dialect spoken before the dispersion, whether more or less developed, it was among the necessities of things that, in a few cen |