84 HENRY SOTHERAN & CO., 140, STRAND, W.C., AND 37, PICCADILLY, W. 



1657 GREGORY (Duncan FarquJiarson) Examples of the Process of the Differential and 

 Integral Calculus, 4^ folding plates, 8vo. cl., 4* Qd Cambridge, 1841 



1658 Another Copy, hf. calf gilt {nice copy), 5s 6d 



1659 Second [last] Edition, by William Walton, 4 folding plates, large 8vo. cl, 7s 6d 



ib., 1846 

 ' a work which produced a great change for the better in the Cambridge mathematical books. It is the first in which 

 constant use is made of the method known by the name of the separation of the symbols of operation, and the author has 

 enlivened its pages by occasionally introducing historical notices of the problems discussed.' — D. N.B. 



1660 Mathematical Writings, ed. by William Walton, with Memoir by Robert Leslie 



Ellis [Baconian], portrait and plate, large 8vo. cl.,ls 6d ib., 1865 



Containing the author's contributions to the Cambridge Mathematical Journal in a collected form. 



1661 , and William WALTON: Treatise on the Application of Analysis to Solid 



Geometry, 3 plates, 8vo. cl., 4s ib., 1845 



1662 Another Copy, hf. calf gilt {nice copy), 5s 



1663 Second [last] EBiTiO'S,'with Opiates, 8vo. boards, Qs 6c? ib., 1852 



' The first treatise in which the system of solid geometry is developed by means of symmetrical equations, and a great 

 advance on those of Leroy and Hymers '.— D. N. B. 



1664 GREGORY (James, f.r.s.) Vera Circuli et Hyperbolae Quadratura, cui accedit 

 Geometria [sic] Pars Universalis, inserviens Quantitatum Curvarum Transmutationi et 

 Mensurfe; with diagrams, 2 \o\h. sm. 4to. in 1, contemporary calf, ivith arms in gold on sides 

 {first title mounted, otherwise a large and sound copy) ; RARE, £1. 1* Patavii, 1668 



' Showing how the areas of the circle and hyperbola could be obtained in the form of infinite convergent series, and here 

 (I believe for the first time) we find a distinction drawn between convergent and divergent series. It contains a remark- 

 able geometrical proposition to the effect that the ratio of the area of any arbitrary sector of a circle to that of the 

 inscribed or circumscribed regular polygons is not expressible by a finite number of algebraical terms. Hence he inferred 

 that the quadratur^i of a circle was impossible '.—fF. W. R. Ball. 



This edition first contains the Geometrue Pars, in which the author explains how the volumes of solids of revolution can 

 be deterniined. 



1665 GREGORY (James, Pi'of. Medicine, Edin.) Philosophical and Literary Essays, 2 vols. 8vo. 

 old hf binding {cracked), 105 6o? Edin., 1792 



' stating with considerable ability the argument against the necessitarians. Priestley, to whom he communicated the 

 essays, declared that a reply would be as superfiuous as the defence of a proposition iu Euclid. Gregory's main argument 

 is contained in the 2iid vol. ' An Essay on the Difference between the relation of Motive and Action and that of Cause aud 

 Effects in Physics, on physical and mathematical principles.*— D. N.B. 



1666 GREGORY (Olinthus Gilbert, ll.d.) Treatise on Astronomy, demonstrated on Mathe- 

 matical Principles, ^folding plates, 8vo. old calf {cracked), 3* Qd 1802 



1667 Treatise of Mechanics, Theoretical, Practical, and Descriptive, 4th Ed., improved, loith 



Q^i plates, 3 vols. 8vo. hf bound. Is Qd 1826 



The author was a self-taught mathematician, who carried on simultaneously the profession of a mathematical teacher 



and a bookseller. ' His treatise on mechanics is his most important contribution to physical science.' — D. N. B. 



1668 GREGORY (William, m.d.) Letters to a Candid Enquirer on Animal Magnetism, thick 

 post 8vo. cl., 4s 1851 



1669 GREN (Friedrich Albert Karl ; founder of ' Annalen der Physik') Principles of Modern 

 Chemistry, systematically arranged, trans., with Notes and Additions, concerning Later 

 Discoveries, by the Translator, and Tables [on Chemical Attractions, etc.], plates, 2 vols. 8vo. hf 

 bound, uncut,' Ss Qd 1800 



1670 GREVENSTEIN (Anton) Eclipsium Omnium a.d. 1593 uscjue ad a.d. 1620 accurata et 

 diligens ex Tabulis Prutenicis Supputatio, accomodata Meridianis Regiomontano Borussia?, et 

 Bremensi, cum Appendice, accessit Tractatiis Procli DiADOCHi, de Significationibus Eclipsium ; 



• with diagrams, cr. 4to. new hf calf {rare), \0s Qd Brema;, 1592 



Nothing is known of the author of this curious work, which was unknown to Poggendorff, and other bibliographers. 



1671 GRIBBLE (Theodore Graham, c.e.) Preliminary Survey and Estimates, illustrated, 

 cr. 8vo. cl, Zs Qd (p. Is Qd) 1891 



Containing at end a valuable glossary of astronomical and geodetic tenns (pp. 25). 



1672 GRIFFIN (Jolin Joseph) Chemical Handicraft : a classified and descriptive Catalogue of 

 Chenucal Apparatus, with over 1500 illustrations, 8vo. cl., 3* Qd 1866 



* He devised many new and simple forms of chemical apparatus, and did much iu introducing scientific methods into 

 commercial processes.' — Prof. W. J. Harrison. 



1673 Chemical Recreations, Part I (Chemical Manipulation, and Blowpipe Analysis), 8th 



Ed., numerous woodcuts, cr. 8vo. cl., '2s Glasgow, 1838 



1674 The Radical Theory in Chemistry, post 8vo. cl., 3* 1858 



1675 GRIFFIN (William Nathaniel, pr.) Treatise on Optics, ^plates, 8vo. boards, 2s 



Cambridge, 1838 



1676 Second Edition [enlarged], 4 folding plates, 8vo. boards, 2s Gd ib., 1842 



1677 Treatise on the Motion of a Rigid Body, plate, 8vo. boards, 2s ib., 1847 



1678 Another Copy, with Solutions of the Examples, 2 folding plates, 2 vols. 8vo. boards, 



3? Qd ' ib., 1847-8 



1679 GRIFFITHS (Major Frederick Augustus, r.a.) The Artillerist's Manual, and British 

 Soldier's Compendium, 7tli Ed., illustrated, 12mo. hf calf {title stamped), 2s Qd 1856 



1680 GRIGBY (George) Memoir, containing a Description of the Construction and Use of some 

 Instruments to Ascertain the Heights and Distances of Inaccessible Objects without 

 the Necessity of Reference to Logarithmic Tables, 2 plates (1 stained), and woodcuts, 4to. sewn, 

 QsQd r- V / ^g^^ 



1681 GRIMALDI (Gabriello) Memorie sopra la Direzione, Utilita, ed Invenzione dei Globi 

 Aereostatici, 8vo. boards, 10* Qd Firenze, 1788 



Barb, not noticed in Hatton Tumor's Aslra Castra. 



