+### Boxes: type expressions with one free type variable
+
+Recall that we've been using lower-case Greek letters
+<code>α, β, γ, ...</code> to represent types. We'll
+use `P`, `Q`, `R`, and `S` as metavariables over type schemas, where a
+type schema is a type expression that may or may not contain unbound
+type variables. For instance, we might have
+
+ P ≡ Int
+ P ≡ α -> α
+ P ≡ ∀α. α -> α
+ P ≡ ∀α. α -> β
+
+etc.
+
+A box type will be a type expression that contains exactly one free
+type variable. Some examples (using OCaml's type conventions):
+
+ α Maybe
+ α List
+ (α, P) Tree (assuming P contains no free type variables)
+ (α, α) Tree
+
+The idea is that whatever type the free type variable α might be,
+the boxed type will be a box that "contains" an object of type α.
+For instance, if `α List` is our box type, and α is the basic type
+Int, then in this context, `Int List` is the type of a boxed integer.
+
+We'll often write box types as a box containing the value of the free
+type variable. So if our box type is `α List`, and `α == Int`, we
+would write
+
+<table border=2px><td>Int</td></table>
+