A STUDENT'S TEXT-BOOK OF ZOOLOGY 



SOME OPINIONS OF THE PRESS continued. 



" Mr. Sedgwick's book is a very good one, ably put together 

 and likely to be extremely useful. It is, in fact, not only the last 

 but the best zoological text-book in the language." Prof. Ray 

 Lankester in Nature (1898). 



" Zoologists are to be congratulated on the appearance of the 

 second volume of what promises to be a monumental work." 

 Athenceum (1905). 



" There is all the information that the student, and even the 

 advanced student, requires about the anatomy and the classification 

 of vertebrated animals ; moreover all the salient facts are illus- 

 trated by numerous figures in the text. We know of no English 

 text-book that is so full." LanceJ (1905). 



" The student will find everything that a text-book of zoology 

 should contain." British Medical Journal (1905). 



" This cautious and excellent text-book."- Zoologist (1905). 



"It is a fine piece of work which will fully uphold the reputa- 

 tion that the first volume has gained."- Cambridge Review (1905). 



" The first volume has a well-deserved reputation for accuracy, 

 clearness, terseness and independence, and in the crowd of text-books 

 it has filled a definite place to the satisfaction of teachers as well 

 as of students. 



" The scholarliness, clearness and carefulness of statement are 

 obvious, but those who work with it will discover other virtues. 

 A suggestive scepticism, a mature judgment and a more indefinable 

 quality which we can only hint at in the phrase morphological 

 insight." Nature (1905). 



