LEA & BLANCHARD'S PUBLICATIONS. 



BRODIE'S SURGICAL WORKS. 



SELECT SURfilCAL WORKS OF SIR BENJ'N BROBIE, BART., V.P.R.^. 



CONTAINING HIS 



CLINICAL LECTURES ON SURGERY, 

 LECTURES OW THE DISEASES OF THE URINARY ORGANS, 



AND 



OBSERVATIONS ON THE DISEASES OF THE JOINTS. 



The whole in one neat oclavio t'olinue, strongly bound. 



ALSO, 



Kach of tlie alto've works to be had separately, done up in clotli. 



MULLER'S PHYSICS AND METEOROLOGY— Nearly Ready. 



PRINCIPLES OF PHYSICS AND METEOROLOGY. 

 BY J. MULLER, 



PROFESSOR OF PHYSICS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF FREIBURG. 



Illustrated with nearly Five Hundred and Fifty Engravings on Wood, and Two Colored Plates. 



In One Octavo Volume. 



"The Physics of Muller is a work superb, complete, unique ; the greatest want known to English Science 

 could not have been belter supplied. The work is of surpassing interest. The value of this coniribulioii to 

 the scientific records of this country may be duly estimated by the fact, that the cost of the original drawings 

 and engravings alone has exceeded the sum of £2000."— Lancet, March lt47. 



SOLLY ON THE BRAIN— Nearly Ready. 

 THE HUMAN BRAIN: ITS STRUCTURE, PHYSIOLOeY, AND BISEASES. 



WITH 



A DESCRIPTION OF THE TYPICAL FORMS OF BRAIN IN THE ANIMAL KINGDOM. 

 BY SAMUEL SOLLY, F.R.S., 



Senior Assistant-Surgeon to St. Thomas' Hospital; and Lecturer on Clinical Surgery, &c. 



SECOND EDITION, GREATLY ENLARGED. 



One Octavo Volume, with 120 Cuts. 



MILLER'S SURGICAL WORKS. 



I' 

 BY JAMES MILLER, F.R.S.E., F.R.C.S.E., 



Professor of Surgery in the University of Edinburg, &c. 

 In one neat octavo volume, to match the Author^ s volume on " Practice.''^ 

 " We feel no hesitation in expressing our opinion that it presents the philosophy of the science 

 more fully and clearly than any other work in the language with which we are acquainted." — Phi- 

 ladelphia Medical Examiner. 



LATELY PUBLISHED. 



THE PRACTICK OF SURGERY. 



BY JAMES MILLER, 



Professor of Surgery in the University of Edinburg. 

 In one neat octavo volume. 

 This work is printed and bound to match the " Principles of Surgery," by Professor Miller, lately 

 issued by L. & B. Either volume may be had separately. 

 " This work, with the preceding one, forms a complete text-book of surgery, and has been under- 

 taken by the author at the request of his pupils. Although as we are modestly informed in the 

 preface, it is not put forth in rivalry of the excellent works on practical surgery which already exist, 

 we think we may take upon ourselves to say,that it will form a very successful and formidable 

 rival to most of them. While it does not offer the same attractive illustrntions, with which some of 

 our recent text-books have been embellished, and while it will not, as indeed is not its design, set 

 aside the more complete and elaborate works of reference which the profession is in possession of, 

 we have no hesitation in stating that the two volumes form, together, a more complete text-book 

 of surgery than any one that has been heretofore offered to the student." — The Northern Journal 

 of Medicine. 



