[Lesson III.]—The meaning of δουλος as used by the Greek poets, [510]; Valckenaerus on the phonetic relation of Greek words to their derivative, [511] to [514]; the argument that δουλος could not have meant an unconditional slave, refuted, [515], [516].

[Lesson IV.]—Extracts from Grecian historians, philosophers, and poets, showing the classical sense in which they used the word δουλος and its derivatives, [516] to [536].

[Lesson V.]—The use of the word δουλος by Thucydides, Herodotus, and Xenophon, [536] to 546.

[Lesson VI.]—Extracts from Xenophon continued, [546] to [549].

[Lesson VII.]—Extracts from Xenophon’s Cyropædia, [549] to [554].

[Lesson VIII.]—Extracts from Herodotus of Halicarnassus, [554] to [558].

[Lesson IX.]—The Scriptural use of the word δουλος, [559] to [561].

[Lesson X.]—Scriptural extracts continued, [562] to [564].

[Lesson XI.]—The Greek word signifying slave-stealers in 1 Tim. i. 5 to [11], [564] to [566]; quotation from Xenophon in proof, [566]; the appeal of Mr. Barnes to the Dutch, [567]; Greek words from freeman and slave, [568].

[Lesson XII.]—Paul on slave stealing, [569] to [572].