ANALYTICAL INDEX. 



GRAHAM, Dr. his account of dimorphism, 96. 



GRANGER, his experiment of removing the brain of a young 



puppy, 599, note. 



GRANT, Dr. on the unity of organization, 758. 

 GRANVILLE, Dr. on the prevalence of pthisis at St. Petersburg, 



788 ; on the evolution of heat during uterine contraction, 878. 

 GRAVITATION, a secondary effect, 40 ; regarded as a primordial 



principle, 171 ; phenomena which cannot be referred to it, 



268, note ; Dr. Thomas Brown on, 502. 



GREGORY, Dr. George, on the reason we cannot explain the phe- 

 nomena of disease, 1034, note ; on the exciting cause of most 



inflammatory diseases, 1084, note. 



GREGORY, Dr. James, on the nervous temperament, 991. 

 GUIZOT, M. on the infrequency of tubercles in new born infants, 



801. 

 GUYOT, M. Jules, his thermotic treatment of inflammation, 



1095, 1096. 



HADLEY, Dr. his theory of winds, 322. 



HAIL, observations of Professor Forbes on, 339. 



HALL, Dr. Marshall, on the functions of the spinal marrow, 611 ; 

 his views of life, 611, note ; his curious theory of hybernation, 

 828 ; on the seat of spasmodic diseases, 1013. 



HALLER, on the vis insita and vis nervosa, 495 ; on the cause of 

 the heart's action, 614. 



HANSTEEN, on the aurora borealis, 362, 366. 



HARE, Dr. on detonation, 209 ; on atmospheric electricity, 306. 



HARRISON, General, the cause of his unfortunate death, 801 , note. 



HARVEY, Dr. discovers the circulation, 487 ; on calidum in- 

 natum, 489 ; his theory of the heart's action, 584 ; on the 

 cause of coagulation of the blood, 646. 



HASSENFRATZ, on the conversion of arterial into venous blood, 552. 



HAWKINS, Dr. Bisset, on the longevity of the ancient Romans, 

 764. 



HEALTH, how to preserve, 807, 1077 ; definition of, 1033; ety- 

 mology of the word, 1077, 1078. 



HEAT, animal, obtained by respiration, passim, 2nd vol. ; what is 

 the use of, 568 ; opinion of a barber, 568, 569; contrasted 

 with that of medical men, 568, 569; consequence of its rapid 

 abstraction, 613 ; the cause of irratability and stimulability, 

 614; of the heart's action, 618, 620 ; of the capillary circula- 

 tion, 621, 622; of digestion, 627; of sanguification and de- 

 velopement of the ovum, 631, 638 ; of secretion and nutrition, 

 667, 668 ; of vital dynamics, 672 ; is always expended by vital 

 action, 677, 880. 



HEBERDEN, Dr. on the extremes of heat and cold in producing 

 apoplexy, 1060. 



