RELIGIO CHEMICI. 



By GEOEGE WILSON, M.D. late Regius Professor of Technology in the 

 University of Edinburgh. Crown 8vo. cloth. 



With a Vignette Title Page by NOEL PATCH, engraved by C. 

 Price 8s. 6d. 



THE FIVE GATEWAYS OF KNOWLEDGE. 



A popular work on the Five Senses. By GEORGE WILSON, M.D. Eighth 

 Thousand. In fcp. 8vo. cloth, with gilt leaves, 2s. 6d. People's Edition in 

 ornamental stiff cover, Is. 



THE PROGRESS OF THE TELEGRAPH. 



By GEORGE WILSON, M.D. Fcp. 8vo. Is. 



!*~l^9^2s?<i*r' 



MEMOIR OF GEORGE WILSON, M.D. F.R.S.E. 



Regius Professor of Technology in the University of Edinburgh. By his Sister, 

 JESSIE AITKEN WILSON. With Portrait. 8vo. cloth, price 14s. 



' His life was so pregnant in meaning, so rich in noble deeds, so full of that spiritual vitality 

 which serves to quicken life in others ; it bore witness to so many principles which we can 

 only fully understand when we see them in action: it presented so many real pictures of daunt- 

 less courage and of Christian heroism, that we welcome gratefully the attempt to reproduce it 

 which has resulted in the volume before us- Miss Wilson has entered lovingly upon her task, 

 and has accomplished it well.' PRESS. 



MEMOIR OF EDWARD FORBES, F.R.S. 



Late Regius Professor of Natural History in the University of Edinburgh. 



By GEORGE WILSON, M.D. F.R.S.E. and ARCHIBALD GEIKIE, F.R.S.E. 

 F.G.S. of the Geological Survey of Great Britain. 8vo. cloth, with 

 Portrait, 14s. 



' We welcome this volume as a graceful tribute to the memory of as gifted, tender, generous a 

 soul as Science has ever reared, and prematurely lost.' LITERARY GAZETTE. 



' It is long since a better memoir than this, as regards either subject or handling, has come 

 under our notice. . . The first nine chapters retain all the charming grace of style which 

 marked everything of Wilson's, and the author of the latter two-thirds of the memoir deserves 

 very high praise for the skill he has used, and the kindly spirit he has shown. From the first 

 page to the last, the book claims careful reading, as being a full but not overcrowded rehearsal 

 of a most instructive life, and the true picture of a mind, that was rare in strength and 

 beauty.' EXAMINER. 



11 



