340 



GENERAL INDEX. 



HEWSON, Mr. (continued.) 

 a native of Hexham, xiii. 

 educated at the grammar-school 



there, xiv. 



pupil with Mr. LAMBERT at New- 

 castle, xiv. 

 his father, mother, and their family, 



xiv, xv. 

 goes to London and lodges with Mr. 



HUNTER, xiv, xv. 

 attends Dr. HUNTER'S lectures, and 



becomes his assistant, xv. 

 a pupil at Guy's and St. Thomas's 



Hospitals, xv. 



his habits and manners, xv, xvi. 

 studied at Edinburgh, xiv, xv, 92. 

 returns to London and becomes Dr. 



HUNTER'S partner, xiv, xvi. 

 lived in Litchfield street, where 



their school was, xvi. 

 went to France, and returned through 



Flanders and Holland to London, 



xiv, xvi. 

 went to Sussex to make experiments 



on fishes, xvi. 



his election into the Royal So- 

 ciety, xvi. 

 lived in Windmill street, and lectured 



with Dr. HUNTER there, xvi. 

 his marriage to Miss STEVENSON, 



xiv, xvi. 

 partnership between HUNTER and 



HEWSON dissolved, and HEWSON 



lectures on his own account, xvi. 

 his success, xvii, xviii. 

 letter on the disagreement between 



HUNTER and HEWSON, xvii. 

 his death, xiv, xviii. 

 buried at St. Martin's-in-the-Fields, 



xix. 



his, character, xiii-xv, xix. 

 his children, xiv, xviii, xxi. 

 his person, xix. 

 engraving of him, xix. 

 his bust in a picture at Bolt court, xix. 

 notice of his widow, xx. 

 account of his writings, xxi et seq. ; 



and list of, xlix. 

 his paper on paracentesis thoracis, 



xxi. 

 papers on the lymphatic system in 



oviparous vertebrata, xxi, xxiii. 

 his controversy with Dr. MONRO, 



xxi-iii, 91. 



his preparations of lymphatics of ovi- 

 parous vertebrata, xxiii. 

 award of the Copley medal to, 



xxiii-iv. 

 publication of his papers on the pro' 



perties of the blood, xxiv. 



HEWSON, Mr. (continued.) 



-first publication of his observations on 

 the red particles of the blood, and 

 on the uses of the lymphatic glands, 

 thymus, and spleen, xxiv. 



his letter to Dr. HAYGARTH, xxiv-v, 

 287. 



had a just view of the nature of false 

 membranes, xxv. 



notice of his inquiries concerning the 

 properties of the coagulable lymph, 

 the comparative sinking of the red 

 corpuscles in it and in serum, and 

 on the pathology of the lymphatic 

 system, xxxviii-ix. 



his work on the properties of the blood 

 characterized, xli. . 



his clear proofs of the opinion of 

 DAVIES, that the coagulation of 

 the blood is alone dependent on the 

 fibrin, xli, xliii ; though even lately 

 ascribed to Mr. HUNTER, xliv. 



separated the fibrin by salts, which 

 he well knew preserve the integrity 

 of the red corpuscles, xli, xliii ; and 

 by skimming the coagulable lymph 

 from the surface of blood during 

 the formation of the bufiy coat, an 

 experiment since wrongly claimed 

 for Mr. HUNTER, xliv. 



publication of the third part of his 

 Inquiries, xlvi. 



notice of his observations on the red 

 corpuscles of the blood, xlvi. 



on the pale corpuscles of the blood, 

 and on the corpuscles in the fluid 

 of the lymphatic system and of the 

 thymus, xlvi. 



on the lymphatic vessels of the thymus 

 and spleen, xlvi-vii. 



on red corpuscles in the splenic 

 lymph, and in that of the lymphatic 

 system generally, xlvii. 



on the office of the spleen, and of 

 other glands without excretory 

 ducts, xlvii; and on his doctrine of 

 central particles, and the relation 

 between the lymph-globules and 

 the red corpuscles of the blood, 

 xlvii, 254. 



generous fidelity of MAGNUS FAL- 

 CON AR to, xlviii. 



his central particle and the cell-nu- 

 cleus of the present day, xlvii- 

 xlviii. 



his style and matter, and rank as a 

 physiologist, xlviii. 



his note as to the date of his obser- 

 vations on the coagulable lymph, 

 41. 



