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of Scotland; Parker on Diseases of the Stomach; and very recently 

 Budd on Diseases of the Liver. 



Dr. Worcester, of Cincinnati, whose early death is much to be 

 lamented by the profession, published, in 1845, the only original 

 treatise on Diseases of the Skin which the country has produced. 

 The translations of Cazenave and Schedel, and of Rayer, and the 

 works of Green, Plumbe, Dendy and Wilson, have been republished. 



Dr. Gross' Pathological Anatomy, an original work with numerous 

 illustrations, has passed to a second edition, and been adopted as a 

 text-book in several medical schools. Dr. J. B. S. Jackson's "De- 

 scriptive Catalogue of the Anatomical Museum of the Boston Society 

 for Medical Improvement," is justly said, by Dr. Stille, to be "by 

 far the most important and original illustration of morbid anatomy 

 yet published in America." Dr. Horner's Treatise has been long 

 known and esteemed. 



The following works have been republished wholly, or in part; 

 the little Essay of Baillie; the work of Andral, translated by R. 

 and W. Townsend; the first part of Rokitansky, by Dr. J. C. Peters; 

 the general treatises of Mayo and Vogel, and that of Hasse on the 

 Diseases of the Organs of Circulation and Respiration. 



Various other American productions not falling under the above 

 heads, remain to be noticed. Mann's Medical Sketches give inte- 

 resting accounts of the diseases prevailing in the army in 1812, and 

 the following years; Webster's brief History of Epidemic and Pesti- 

 lential Diseases, is an earlier contribution from a deep scholar not 

 belonging to the medical profession; Dr. Forry's works on Climate 

 and Meteorology, have been already alluded to; Dr. Lawson's Meteor- 

 ological Register should be mentioned in the same connection ; Dr. 

 Henderson's Hints on the Medical Examination of Recruits, are 

 valuable to the army surgeon; and Dr. Stewart's account of the 

 Hospitals of Paris, must be prized by all who visit that great centre 

 of medical instruction. 



Among the many works which have not been mentioned under the 

 above heads the following may be briefly referred to. Those of 

 Clymer, Willis and Bird upon Urinary Diseases; of Carmichael, 

 Ricord, Parker and Acton on Venereal Affections; of Hufeland, 

 translated by Dr. Meigs, and of Lugol, translated by Dr. Doane, 

 on Scrofula ; of Phillips on the same disease ; of Rush, Esquirol, 

 Prichard, Baillarger, Spurzhcim, Combe and Millingen, on Insanity; 

 of Andral on the Blood, translated by Drs. Meigs and Stille, and of 



