APPENDIX. 313 



In the New Monthly Magazine for December, 1288, the Mechanics' 

 Magazine, and Weekly Free Press, of about the same date, the Morn- 

 ing Herald of September .5, 1830, the Gazette of Health for the same 

 year, and in the New Monthly Magazine of January 1832, the Maidstone 

 Journal of October 22, and the Maidstone Gazette of October 22, and 29, 

 1833, copious lleports of my various Courses of Lectures will be found, 

 and to which the reader is most respectfully referred. 



From J. RENNIE, Esq. A.M. Professor of Zoology, King's College, 



London. 



Lee, Kent, 29th February, 1832. 



Mr. Rennie presents his compliments to Professor Dewhurst, and 

 thanks him for the copy of his book, (the Lecture on the Architecture of the 

 Human Body), and regrets that he has no connection with any Periodical 

 in which he could give a notice of it, such as it certainly well merits. 



Ta H. W. Dewhurst, Esq. 

 Professor of Zoology, Anatomy, &c. 



©big {g ta tcrttfg that I have known Professor HENRY WILLIAM 

 DEWHURST, since October 1828, during which period, I have had 

 numerous opportunities of becoming acquainted with his abilities as a 

 Public and Private Teacher of the Sciences of Anatomy, Zootomy, 

 Natural History, and Phrenology ; also as a Medical Writer and General 

 Practitioner ; and it gives me much pleasure to state that I consider him 

 to be a man of irreproachable reputation. 



Witness my hand, this 20th day of March, 1832. 



WILLIAM HUNT,* 



Surgeon-Dentist. 

 No. 2, Manchester Street, Manchester Square. 



From David Mallock, Esq., A. M., author of a most beautiful Poem, 

 entitled " The Immortality of the Soul." 



April, 1832. 



During the winter of 1830, H. W. DEWHURST, Esq., Professor 

 of Zoology, &c. &c, delivered before the Members of the Westminster 

 Co-operative Institution a Course of Lectures on Human and Compara- 

 tive Anatomy ; and I have the greatest pleasure in stating that these 

 Lectures gave unqualified satisfaction. Though the subject, especially 

 to those who had little or no opportunity of previously becoming ac- 



* I was honoured by this gentleman dedicating to me his ingenious 

 and valuable little work on " Diseases of the Teeth." 



