12 BLANCHARD & LEA'S PUBLICATIONS. (Anatomy.) 



SHARPEY AND QUAIN'S ANATOMY. Lately Issued. 



HUMAN A~N ATOMY. 



BY JONES QUAIN, M.D. 



FROM THE FIFTH LONDON EDITION. 



EDITED BY 



RICHARD QUAIN, F.R.S., 



AND 



WILLIAM SHARPEY, M.D., F.R.S., 



Professors of Anatomy and Physiology in University College, London. 

 REVISED, WITH NOTES Atfl> ADDITIONS, 



BY JOSEPH LEIDY, M. D. 



Complete in Two large Octavo Volumes, of about Thirteen Hundred Pages. 



BEAUTIFULLY ILLUSTRATED 

 With over Five Hundred Engravings on "Wood. 



We have here one of the best expositions of the present state of anatomical science extant. There is not 

 probably a work to be found in the English language which contains so complete an account of the progress 

 and present state of general and special anatomy as this. By the anatomist this work must be eagerly 

 sought for, and no student's library can be complete without it. The N. Y. Journal of Medicine. 



We know of no work which we would sooner see in the hands of every student of this branch of medical 

 science than Sharpey and Quain's Anatomy. The Western Journal of Medicine and Surgery. 



It may now be regarded as the most complete and best posted up work on anatomy in the language. It 

 will be found particularly rich in general anatomy. The Charleston Medical Journal. 



We believe we express the opinion of all who have examined these volumes, that there is no work supe- 

 rior to them on the subject which they so ably describe. Southern Medical and Surgical Journal. 



It is one of the most comprehensive and best works upon anatomy in the English language. It is equally 

 valuable to the teacher, practitioner, and student in medicine, and to the surgeon in particular. The Ohio 

 Medical and Surgical Journal. 



To those who wish an extensive treatise on Anatomy, we recommend these handsome volumes as the best 

 that have ever issued from the English or American Press. The N. W. Medical and Surgical Journal. 



We believe that any country might safely be challenged to produce a treatise on anatomy so readable, so 

 clear, and so full upon all important topics. British and Foreign Medico- Chirurgical Review. 



It is indeed a work calculated to make an era in anatomical study, by placing before the student every de- 

 partment of his science, with a view to the relative importance of each ; and so skillfully have the different 

 parts been interwoven, that no one who makes this work the basis of his studies will hereafter have any ex- 

 cuse for neglecting or undervaluing any important particulars connected with the structure of the human 

 frame ; and whether the bias of his mind lead him in a more especial manner to surgery, physic, or physiolo- 

 gy, he will find here a work at once so comprehensive and practical as to defend him from exclusiveness on 

 tlie one hand, and pedantry on the other. Monthly Journal and Retrospect of the Medical Sciences 



We have no hesitation in recommending this treatise on anatomy as the most complete on that subject in 

 the English language ; and the only one, perhaps, in any language, which brings the state of knowledge for- 

 ward to the most recent discoveries. The Edinburgh Medical and Surgical Journal. 



Admirably calculated to fulfil the object for which it is intended. Provincial Medical Journal. 



The most complete Treatise on Anatomy in the English language. Edinburgh Medical Journal. 



There is no work in the English language to be preferred to Dr. Quain's Elements of Anatomy. London 

 Journal of Medicine. 



THE STUDENT'S TEXT-BOOK OF ANATOMY. 

 NEW AND IMPROV'ED EDITION-JUST ISSUED. 



A SYSTEM OF HUMAN ANATOMY, 



GENERAL AND SPECIAL. 



BY ERASMUS WILSON, M. D. 



FOURTH AMERICAN FROM THE LAST ENGLISH EDITION. 

 EDITED BY PAUL B. GODDARD, A. M., M. D. 



WITH TWO HUNDRED AND FIFTY ILLUSTRATIONS. 



Beautifully printed, in one large octavo volume of nearly six hundred pages. 



In many, if not all the Colleges of the Union, it has become a standard text-book. This, of itself, is sufficiently 

 expressive of its value. A work very desirable to ihe student ; one, the possession of which will greatly 

 facilitate his progress in the study of Practical Anaiomy. New York Journal of Medicine. 



Its author ranks with the highest on Anatomy. South ern Medical and Surgical Journal. 



It offers to the student all the assistance that can be expected from such a work. Medical Examiner. 



The most complete and convenient manual for the student we possess. American Journal of Med. Science. 



In every respect this work, as an anatomical guide for the student and practitioner, merits our warmest 

 and most decided praise. London Medical Gazette, 



