at oxford
Scotch and English agriculture, [18]. Expenses at Oxford, [19]. Did Smith graduate? [20]. State of learning, [20]; Smith's censure of, [20]. His gratitude to Oxford, [22]. Life in Balliol College, [22]. Smith's devotion to classics and belles-lettres, [23]. Confiscation of his copy of Hume's Treatise, [24]. Ill-health, [25]. Snell exhibitioners ill-treated and discontented at Balliol, [26]. Desire transference to other college, [27]. Smith's college friends, or his want of them, [28]. Return to Scotland, [28].
lecturer at edinburgh
Lord Kames, [31]. Smith's class on English literature, [32]. Blair's alleged obligations to Smith's lectures, [33]. Smith's views as a critic, [34]. His addiction to poetry, [35]. His economic lectures, [36]. James Oswald, M.P., [37]. Oswald's economic correspondence with Hume, [37]. Hamilton of Bangour's poems edited by Smith, [38]. Dedication to second edition, [40].
professor at glasgow
Admission to Logic chair, [42]. Letter to Cullen about undertaking Moral Philosophy class, [44]. Letter to Cullen on Hume's candidature for Logic chair and other business, [45]. Burke's alleged candidature, [46]. Hume's defeat, [47]. Moral Philosophy class income, [48]. Work, [50]. Professor John Millar, [53]. His account of Smith's lectures, [54]; of his qualities as lecturer, [56]. Smith's students, [57]. H. Erskine, Boswell, T. Fitzmaurice, Tronchin, [58], [59]. Smith's religious views suspected, [60]. His influence in Glasgow, [60]. Conversion of merchants to free trade, [61]. Manifesto of doctrines in 1755, [61]. Its exposition of economic liberty, [62]. Smith's alleged habitual fear of the plagiarist, [64]. This manifesto not directed against Adam Ferguson, [65].