HENRY SOTHERAN & CO., 140, STRAND, W.C, AND 37, PICCADILLY, W. 173 



3442 [PAMAN (Roger)] The Harmony of the Ancient and Modern Geometry asserted, plates 

 and diagrams^ 4to. sewn, 4* 1744 



^^ An answer to Bp. Berkeley's ' Analyst ' (7. v. ante). 



3443 PAMBOUR (Francjois Marie Guyonneau, Comte de) Practical Treatise on Loco- 

 motive Engines on Railways, with Formulae founded on a great many New Experiments on 

 the Liverpool and Manchester Railway, with many ditt'erent Engines and considerable Trains of 

 Carriages ; M'ith Appendix, showing the Expense of conveying Goods, by Locomotive Engines, on 

 Railroads, with ^ folding copperplates, 8vo. cL, uncut (SCARCE), 125 Qd 1836 



F1R.ST Editiok of the first English work on Locomotive Engineering, giving copious formulie for resistance, curves, 

 fuel consumption, etc. etc. 



3444 Second Edition, increased by a great many New Experiments and Researches, with 



b folding copperplates, thick N\ o. r/., or, /t/. calf, Is (id 1840 



3445 The Theory of the Sn am Engine, showing the Inaccuracy of the Methods in Use for 



calculating the Effects or the Proi)()rtions of Steam Engines, and supplying a Series of Practical 

 Formula?, etc. etc. etc., 8vo. hf coif {scarce). Is 6d 1839 



'The investigations of the Count de Panibour on the theory of the steam engine were conducive to the progress of 

 thermodynamics by pointing out the proper mode of applying mecliauital i.i iuciplos to the expansive action of an elastic 



3446 PANIZZA (Francesco) Aritmetica Pratica, 12mo. cL, ]s Milano, 1894 



3447 PAPER, Report of the Society of Arts Committee on the Deterioration of, with 

 Ai)pen(lixe.s, impl. 8vo. seimi, \s ^d 1898 



3448 PAPPI Alexandrini Mathematics Collectiones i\ Frederico Commanding in Latinum 

 conversji', et Commentariis illustratae, editio princeps ; with woodcuts and numerous diagrams, 

 folio, sound and tall copy in old calf gilt, red edges, IQs 6d Fisauri, 1588 



' Volume peu cnmnmn.'— Brunei. 



3449 ; — EpiTiO Nova : in hac nostra Editione ab innumeris, quibus scatebant Mendis, et 



priecipue in Grajco contextu diligenter vindicata [a Carolo Manolessio] ; urith Austrian arms 

 engraved on title, woodcuts, and numerous diagrams, folio, old calf (a number of II. badly stained 

 on blank margin, otherwise a sound and tall copy), £1. Bononice, 1660 



• . . . From tiie Seventh Book, which is th? longest and most valuable, is derived a large part of our knowledge of 

 Greek geometry. Many of the writings here analysed are no longer extant, and it is on the indications (e. g. Buclid's 

 Porismn) which Pappus gives of the object or the contents of them that the geometers of the 17th and 18th Centuries 

 relied for tlieir restorations of these writings. . . . Several of the books contain important theorems, the discovery of 

 which is probably due to Pappus himself. One of these has been long associated with the name of Guldinus (1577-1(543). 

 Some others have received a brilliant development from the mathematicians of modern times.' 

 V. Aristarchus, ante. 



3450 PARACELSUS (Aureolus Philippus Theophrastus Bombast ab Hohenheim, dictus) 

 Opeha Medico-Chemica sive Pauadoxa, cum Indicibus ; with woodcuts, including portrait, 

 11 V. in 1 : Bertheonea, sive Chirurgia Minor, 1 v.— 2 very thick vols. 4to. original pressed 

 pigskin, with clasps {browned throughout as usual) ; rare, £3. 3s [Francofurti a. M.,] 1603-5 



This Latin edition was unknown to Poggendorff, Graesse, Brunet, and Ebert. 



3451 , The Hermetic and Alchemical Writings of, now for the first Time translated faith- 

 fully and unabridged ; edited, with Notes, copious Hermetic Vocabulary, and Index, by 

 Arthur Edward Waite, printed on specially made antique paper, 2 vols. 4to. cL, uncut, t. e. g. 

 (scarce), £1. 155 1894 



' Containing the whole and unabridged body of literature attributed to this celebrated adept, treating directly of 

 Alchemy and the transcendental doctrines and physics of the Maqnum Opus ; besides the whole Pamcelsian Literature of 

 the Great Elixir and the Universal Medicine, and an exhaustive Catena of Alchemical References scattered throughout 

 his chirurgical works.' 



il-52 ^: Fasciculus Paracelsic^ Medicin^e Veteris et non Novx', per Flosculos Chimicos 



et Medicos, tanquam in compendiosiim Promptuarium coUectus, in quo de Vita, Morte, et Resus- 

 citatione Kerum, de Tuenda et Conservanda Sanitate, necnon Expellendo Morbo per Instaura- 

 tionem Viriura Natiiralium, de Prti^parationibus Medicamentoruni, etc. etc. etc., Gerardo 

 UORNEO interprete, sm. 4to. new hf. calf antique {rare), 16s Qd Francofurti a. M., 1581 



i453 : Paracelsus his Aurora, and Treasure of the Philosophers. Also of the Water- 

 Stone of the Wise Men ; describing the matter of, and manner how to obtain the Universal 

 Tincture. Faithfully Englished. And Published by J. H., Oxon., 16mo. old hf ca/f {sound and 

 clean copy), rare, £1. 1* G. Calvert, 1659 



' Paracelsus was the man who, in the first lialf of the XVI. century, opened out new paths for chemistry and medicine 

 by uniting them both. To him is undoubtedly due the merit of freeing chemistry from the restraining fetters of alchemy, 

 by a clear definition of scientific aims. He taught that ' the object of chemistry is not to make gold, but to prepare 

 medicines."— Pro/, E. v. Meyer. 



3154 V. Sendivogius, ;?05^ 



3455 * PARALLAX ' : Zetetic Astronomy— v. Rowbotham, post. 



3456 PARDIES (Ignace Gaston, s.j.) Elemens de Geometrie, oil par une Mdthoie courte et 

 aisee Ton peul apprendre . . . les plus belles Inventions des anciens et des nouveaux GeouK^tres, 

 4'"*^ Ed. ; with woodcuts, etc., 24mo. old calf gilt {back slightly damaged), with bookplate of Philip 

 2nd Earl Stanhope, F.R.S., As Qd ' 1683 



3457 Short, but yet Plain Elements of Geometry, rendered into English by John Harris, 



D.D., F.R.S., 3rd Ed., Avith many New Propositions, Additions, and usefullmproveinents, rfia^ra/w*, 

 16mo. old calf gilt {fine copy), with Lord Stanhope's bookplate, 5s 6d 1705 



3458 [PARIS (John Ayrton, m.d., p.r.c.p.)] Philosophy in Sport made Science in Earnest : an 

 Attempt to illustrate to First Principles of Natural Philosophy by the aid of Popular Toys and 

 Sports, new Ed., with numerous characteristic woodcuts by GEORGE Cruikshank, and diagrams, 

 cr. 8vo. cl., uncut {scarce), 10s 6d 1833 



The illustrations to this long popular book, with those to Pettigrew's ' Egyptian Mummies,' represent George 

 Cruikshank in the unusual rote of a scientific illustrator. 



