An introduction to pathology and morbid anatomy / by T. Henry Green.
- Green, T. Henry (Thomas Henry), 1841-1923
- Date:
- 1878
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: An introduction to pathology and morbid anatomy / by T. Henry Green. Source: Wellcome Collection.
Provider: This material has been provided by the Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine, through the Medical Heritage Library. The original may be consulted at the Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine, Harvard Medical School.
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![THOMPSON (SIR HENRY), ■* Surgeon and Professor of Clinical Surgery to University College Hospital. LECTURES ON DISEASES OF THE URINARY ORGANS. With illustrations on wood. Second American from the Third English Edition. In one neat octavo volume. Cloth, $2 25. {Just Issued.) T>T THE SAME AUTHOR. ON THE PATHOLOGY AND TREATMENT OF STRICTURE OF THE URETHRA AND URINARY FISTULA. With plates and wood-cuts. From the third and revised English edition. In one very handsome octavo volume, cloth, $3 50. (Lately Published.) ROBERTS [WILLIAM], M.D., ■X* Lecturer on Medicine in the Manchester School of Medicine, etc. A PRACTICAL TREATISE ON URINARY AND RENAL DIS- EASES, including Urinary Deposits. Illustrated by numerous cases and engravings. Sec- ond American, from the Second Revised and Enlarged London Edition. In one large and handsome ootavo volume of 616 pages, with a colored plate j cloth, $4 50. (Lately Published.) rPUKE (DANIEL HACK), M.D., J- Joint author of The Manual of Psychological Medicine, &c. ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE INFLUENCE OF THE MIND UPON THE BODY IN HEALTH AND DISEASE. Designed to illustrate the Action of the Imagination. In one handsome octavo volume of 416 pages, cloth, $3 25. (Lately Issued.) B LANDFORD (O. FIELDING), M.D., F.R.C.P., Lecturer on Psychological Medicine at the School of St. George's Hospital, &c. INSANITY AND ITS TREATMENT: Lectures on the Treatment, Medical and Legal, of Insane Patients. With a Summary of the Laws in force in the United States on the Confinement of the Insane. By Isaac Ray, M. D. In one very handsome octavo volume of 471 pages; cloth, $3 25. It satisfies a want which must have been sorely feltby the busygeneralpractitioners of thiscountry. It takes the form of a manual of clinical description of the various forms of insanity, with a description of the mode of examining persons suspected of in- sanity. We call particular attention to this feature of the book, as givingit a unique value to the gene- ral practitioner. If we pass from theoretical conside- rations to dessriptions of the varieties of insanity as actually seen in practice and the appropriate treat- ment for them, we find in Dr. Blaudford's work a considerable advance over previous writings on the subject. His pictures of the various forms of mental disease are so clear and good that no reader can fail to be struck with their superiority to those given in oidinary manuals in the English language or (so far as our own reading extends)in any other.—London Practitioner, Feb. 1871. TEA (HENRY C). SUPERSTITION AND FORCE: ESSAYS ON THE WAGER OF LAW, THE WAGER OF BATTLE, THE ORDEAL, AND TORTURE. Third Revised and Enlarged Edition. In one handsome royal 12mo. volume of 552 pages. Cloth, $2 50. (Just Ready.) The appearance of a new edition of Mr. Henry C. I polemic. Though he obviously feels and thinks Lea's Superstition and Force is a sign that our strongly, he succeeds in attaining impartiality. highest scholarship is not without honor in its na- ti re country. Mr. Lea has met every fresh demand for his work with a careful revision of it, and the present edition is not only fuller and, if possible, more accurate than either of the preceding, but, from the thorough elaboration, is more like a har- monious concert and less like a batch of studies.— The Nation, Aug. 1, 1878. Many will be tempted to say that this, like the Declineand Fall,isone of the uncriticizable books Its facts ate innumerable, its deductions simple and inevitable, and its chevaux-de-frise of references bristling and dense enough to make the keenest, stoutest, and best equipped assailant think twice before advancing. Nor is there anything contro- versial in it to provoke assault. The author is no Whetter looked on as a picture or a mirror, a work such as this has a lasting value.—Lippineott's Magazine, Oct. 1S78. Mr. Lea's curious historical monographs, of which one of the most important is here reproduced in an enlarged form, have given him an unique position among English and American scholars. He is dis- tinguished for his recondite and affluent learning, his power of exhaustive historical analysis, the breadth and accuracy of his researches among the rarer sources of knowledge, the gravity and temper- ance of his statements, combined with singular earnestness of conviction, and his warm attachment to the cause of human freedom and intellectual pro- gress.—jV. Y. Tribune, Aug. 9, 1878. B 7 THE SAME AUTHOR. (Lately Published.) STUDIES IN CHURCH HISTORY—THE RISE OF THE TEM- PORAL POWER—BENEFIT OF CLERGY—EXCOMMUNICATION. In one large royal 12mo. volume of 516 pp.; cloth, $2 75. The story was never told more calmly or with graater learning or wiser thought. We doubt, indeed, if any other study of this field.can be compared with this for clearness, accuracy, and power.— Chicago Examiner, Dec. 1870. Mr. Lea's latest work, Studiesin Church History, fully sustains the promise of the first. It deals with three subjects—the Temporal Power, Benefit of Clergy, and Excommunication, the record of which has a peculiarimportancefortheEnglish student,and is a chapter on Ancient Law likely to be regarded as final. We can hardly pass from our mention of such works as these—with which that on Sacerdotal Celibacy should be iucluded—withontnotingt.be literary phenomenon that the head of one of the first American houses is also the writer ofsomeofitsmost original books.—London Athenaum, Jan. 7 1871.](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b2105521x_0375.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)


