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8. Any Student injuring the furniture or buildings will be required to repair the same at his own expense, and will, in addition, be subject to such other penalty as the Faculty may see fit to inflict.

9. All cases of discipline involving the interest of more than one Faculty, or of the University in general, shall be immediately reported to the Principal, or, in his absence, to the Vice-Principal.

[NOTE.-All Students are required to appear in Academic dress while in or about the College buildings.]

§ IX. LIBRARY.

For Regulations see end of Calendar.

§ X. PETER REDPATH MUSEUM.

1. The Museum will be open every lawful day from 9 a.m. till 5 p.m., except when closed for any special reason by order of the Principal or Committee. 2. Students will obtain tickets of admission from the Principal on application.

3. Students will enter by the front door only, except when going to lectures. 4. Any Student wilfully defacing or injuring specimens, or removing the same, will be excluded from access to the Museum for the Session.

§ XI. FEES.

Matriculation Fee for the First Year (to be paid in the Year of Entrance only......

......

For the Second Year (exigible from Students who enter in the
Second Year, and also from those who have failed in the
First Year and re-enter in the Second Year on Examina-
tion)..............

Sessional Fee.............

Library Fee................................

Gymnasium Fee..............

...

$4 00

600

.........20 oo

Undergraduates are required to pay all the above fees.

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Partial Students, viz., those taking three or more Courses of Lectures, are required to pay the Matriculation, Library and Gymnasium Fees, and $5 for each Course which they attend, or $20 for all the courses.

Occasional Students taking one course of Lectures only, are required to pay

$5 per Session for that course.

Occasional Students taking two courses of Lectures are required to pay the Library Fee and $5 for each course.

The Matriculation, Library, and Gymnasium Fees are exigible from Students holding exemptions from Sessional Fees.

Graduates in Arts are allowed to attend, without payment of fees, all lectures except those noted as requiring a special fee.

The fees must be paid to the Secretary and the tickets shown to the Vice-Dean within a fortnight after the commencement of attendance in each session. In case of default, the Student's name will be removed from the College books, and can be replaced thereon only by permission of the Faculty and on payment of a fine of $2.

[All fines are applied to the purchase of books for the Library.]

Fee for the Degree of B.A...........

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$ 500

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.........

50 00

If the Degree of M.A. be granted, with permission to the Candidate, on special grounds, to be absent from Convocation, the fee is....................$25.00

The B.A. fee must be paid before Examination.

The M.A. fee must be sent to the Secretary of the University at the same time that the Candidate sends his Thesis to the Dean of the Faculty. This is a condition essential to the reception of his application.

A Bachelor of Arts or Master of Arts, intending to proceed to a higher Degree, is required, in addition to the above, to keep his name on the books of the University, by the annual payment of a fee of $2 to the Registrar of the University (which payment suffices also for Registration under Chap. III. of the Statutes of the University). He may, if he prefer it, compound for the above Annual fees, by the payment of $6 in one sum for the Master's Degree, or $30 for the Doctor's Degree, on or before the date of application for the Degree.

§ XII. COURSES OF LECTURES.

I. ORDINARY COURSE.

1. CLASSICAL LITERATURE AND HISTORY.

Professor, Rev. G. CORNISH, M.A., LL.D.

GREEK.

First Year.-XEnophon.—HellENICS, Book I.

Second Year.-EURIPIDES.-MEDEA.

Third Year.-LYSIAS.-CONTRA ERATOSTHENEM.

ÆSCHYLUS.-PROMETIIEUS VINCTUS.

Fourth Year.-ÆSCHINES.-Contra CTESIPHONTEM.

LATIN.

First Year.-VIRGIL.-ÆNEID, Book VIII.
CICERO.-EPISTOLAE SELECTAE.
Latin Prose Composition.

Second Year.-HORACE.-EPISTLES, Book I.

TACITUS.-GERMANIA, Chaps. I.-XXVII.
Latin Prose Composition.

Third Year.-JUVENAL.-SATIRES VIII. and X.

PLAUTUS.-AULULARIA.

Latin Prose Composition.

Fourth Year.-TACITUS.-ANNALS, Book II.

Latin Prose Composition.

In the work of the Class the attention of the Student is directed to the collateral subjects of History, Antiquities and Geography; also to the grammatical structure and affinities of the Greek and Latin Languages; and to Prosody and Accentuation.

2. ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE.

(MOLSON PROFESSORSHIP.)

Professor, CHAS. E. MOYSE, B.A.

First Year.-English Language and Literature. Three Lectures a week.

The Lectures on Language exemplify the more important features in the history of English: Exercises on Analysis are given in once a week. The Lectures on Literature comprise the period between the Celts and Wordsworth. Students who have leisure will be advised as to their reading.

Second Year.-A Period of English Literature, and one Play of Shakespeare. One Lecture week.

During the Session of 1882-3, the Chief Poets and Prose writers of the Victorian period will form the subject of the Lectures. Shakespeare-Tempest.

Third Year.-Chaucer's Prologue to Canterbury Tales.

Lecture once a week.

Text-Book, Chaucer's Prologue, &c., Ed. Morris.

Additional Department.-Early English—Morris and Skeat, extt. I.-IX. inclusive. Shakespeare-One Play.

Milton; Comus; Areopagitica; Par. Lost, Books I.-II.

Burke-Thoughts on Present Discontents; Reflections on French
Revolution.

History—Green, to Stuart period.

Fourth Year.-History.

The Lectures will be a sketch of general European History from

the fall of the Roman Empire to the end of the Eighteenth Century.

Additional Department.—Anglo-Saxon; Earle's Introduction and portions of

Sweet's Reader.

Spenser-Faerie Queene, Book I.

Pope-Essay on Criticism, Essay on Man, Moral Essays.

Tennyson-In Memoriam.

History-Hallam's Middle Ages, 2 caps.

Buckle, Hist. of Civ. in England, 4 caps.

(The Lectures of the Additional Department in each year are comprised in a

portion of the Honour Lectures.)

3. MENTAL AND MORAL PHILOSOPHY.

(JOHN FROTHINGHAM PROFESSORSHIP OF MENTAL AND MORAL PHILOSOPHY.) Professor, REV. J. CLARK MURRAY, LL.D.

Second Year.-First Term.—Elementary Psychology. Second Term.—Logic. Third Year.-Additional Department.—Advanced Logic and Psychology, leading to a discussion of the controversy between Idealism and Empirical Evolutionism. Text-books:-Mill's System of Logic (Books I., II., III.), and Murray's Outline of Hamilton's Philosophy.

Fourth Year.-First term.-The Psychological Basis of Ethics. Second Term.— Ethics Proper, comprising the elementary principles of Jurisprudence and Political Science. Additional Department.-Modern Philosophical Systems.

In the Third and Fourth Years Students are also required to write occasional Essays on Philosophical Subjects.

4. FRENCH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE.

Professor, P. J. DAREY, M.A., B.C.L.

First Year.- Darey, Principes de Grammaire francaise.
LA FONTAINE, les Fables, livres V. et VI.
MOLIERE, le Malade imaginaire.
Dictation. Colloquial exercises.

Second Year.-DE FIVAS, Grammaire des Grammaires.
MOLIERE, l'Avare.-RACINE, Phèdre.

Translation into French.-DR. JOHNSON, Rasselas.

Les Ecrivains célèbres de la France to the end of XVIIth ce nt.
-Bonnefon.

Dictation. Parsing. Colloquial exercises.

Third Year.-PONSARD, l'Honneur et l'Argent.

CORNEILLE, Horace.

Translation into French :-GOLDSMITH, The Vicar of Wakefield.
French Composition. Dictation.

Paul Albert, Litterature du XVIIIe siècle.

Additional Department.-LA FONTAINE, les Fables.

RACINE, Les Plaideurs.

PONSARD, l'Honneur et l'Argent.

PAUL ALBERT, Litterature du XVIIe. siècle.

Translation into French :-GOLDSMITH, The Vicar of Wakefield.
Cogery :-Third French course.

Fourth Year.-BARRIERE et CAPENDUS, les Faux bons hommes.
EMILE SOUVESTRE, Un Philosophe sous les toits.

Les Ecrivains modernes de la France :-Bonnefon.

Translation into French :-Shakespeare, "As you like it."
French Composition. Dictation.

Additional Department.—MOLIERE, le Misanthrope.
AUG. BRACHET, Grammaire Historique.

BONNEFON, Les Auteurs Modernes.

EMILE SOUVESTRE :-Un Philosophe sous les toits.

Cogery -Third French course.

Translation into French :-The Vicar of Wakefield.

The Lectures in the Third and Fourth Years are given in French.

5. GERMAN LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE.

I. Ordinary Course.

Professor, C. F. A. MARKGRAF, M.A.

First and Second Years.-Schmidt's German Guide (1st, 2nd, and part of 3rd Course); Adler's Progressive German Reader (Selections from Sections 1-5); Translations, oral and written. Exercises in Parsing. Third and Fourth Years.-Schmidt's German Guide 3rd part cont.); Whitney's Grammar (excerpts); Chamisso, Peter Schlemihl; Lessing, Minna von Barnhelm ; Schiller, Wallenstein; History of German Literature from the earliest periods to the close of the 18th century (a brief survey, by the Professor); Translation into German; German Prose Composition.

II. Additional Department.

Third Year. Whitney's German Grammar; Schiller, Wilhelm Tell; Tieck, Genovena; Koerner, Leyer and Schwert; History of German Literature (as in the Ordinary Course); Translation from English Prose writers.

Fourth Year.-Whitney's Grammar (cont.); Goethe, Iphigenie auf Tauris ; Lessing, Nathan der Weise; Schiller, Geschichte des 30 jahrigen Krieges; Moschzisker's Guide to German Literature (Epoch VII., Sections I.-VI.; 1750-1850); Translation from English writers; German Prose Composition.

6. HEBREW AND ORIENTAL LITERATURE.

Professor Coussirat.

Elementary Course.-(For Students of the First and Second Years).—Grammar;-Text-Book, J. Robert Wolf's Practical Hebrew Grammar, with exercises in orthography and etymology; Reading; Translation and Grammatical Analysis of Historical portions of the Scriptures-Syntax-Mishlé Shualim-Fables, &c. Advanced Course.-For Students of the Second, Third and Fourth Years. Introduction to the Study of Hebrew Poetry-its spirit and characteristics. Lowth and Sarchi as Text-Books Translation from the Psalms, Job, Ruth, and Isaiah. Ancient compared with Modern Hebrew Poetry; the productions of Halevi, Gabirol, &c. Grammar (Gesenius Hebrew Grammar), Exercises, &c., continued.

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