The Semitic Languages and their Distribution, [84].—The Ancient Hebrew, [85].—Hebrew Alphabet, [86].—Spirit of Hebrew Poetry, [88].—Parallelism, [89].—Dawn of Hebrew Literature, [90].—The Books of Moses, [90].—The Historical Books, [92].—The Book of Job, [93].—Golden Age of Hebrew Poetry, [93].—The Psalms, [93].—Elegiac Poetry, [94].—Didactic Poetry, [95].—Prophetic Poetry, [96].—Silver Age, [97].—The Apocrypha, [99].—The Talmud, [100].
[Chapter V].—Chaldean, Assyrian, Arabic, and Phœnician Literatures.
(Pages 104-117.)
Cuneiform Letters, [104].—Assyrio-Babylonian Writing Materials, [106].—Golden Age of Babylonian Literature, [107].—Deluge Tablets, [112].—Arabic Literature, [114].—Himyaritic Inscriptions, [114].—Phœnician Literature, [115].—Carthaginian Relics, [116].
[Chapter VI].—Egyptian Literature.
(Pages 117-131.)
Egyptian Language, [118].—The Rosetta Stone, [119].—Hieroglyphic Writing, [120], [121].—Archaic Age of Egyptian Literature, [122].—Classical Age, [123].—Memoirs of Saneha, [124].—Tale of Snake Island, [125].—Minstrel’s Song, [126].—Golden Age, [126].—Book of the Dead, [126],127.—Hymns, [128].—Epic Poetry, [129].—Authorship, [130].
GRECIAN LITERATURE.
[Chapter I].—Birth of Grecian Literature.