Mr. Edward Arnold's Autumn Announcements 9 



A HISTORY OF 

 THE LONDON HOSPITAL. 



By E. W. MORRIS, 



SECRETARY OF THE LONDON HOSPITAL. 



Illustrated. One Volume. Cloth. 6s. net. 



The history of this great Hospital is not only interesting on 

 account of the particular incidents of its long and honourable career, 

 and the prominent men who have been connected with it, but also 

 provides a typical example of the way in which our splendid medical 

 charities have grown and developed. Beginning with a survey of 

 the condition of Medicine and Surgery in 1741, the date of the 

 foundation of the Hospital, the author describes its early days in 

 Goodman's Field, the move to Whitechapel, and the gradual growth 

 during the last hundred and fifty years. He then deals with the 

 system of Administration, Finance, and Management, the relation of 

 the Hospital to Medical and Surgical Science, the Medical School, 

 and the Development of Sick Nursing. The reader is initiated into 

 some noteworthy customs and ceremonies of the Hospital, and some 

 account is given of the men whose names stand out in its history. 

 The author has enjoyed exceptional advantages in writing his book, 

 through his position as Secretary of the Hospital, and has collected 

 some valuable materials for illustrating it from sources not generally 

 accessible. 



A GREAT BISHOP 

 OF ONE HUNDRED YEARS AGO: 



ffiefng a Sfcetcb of tbe OLifc of JBfsbop Doraleg. 

 By the Rev. H. H. JEBB, 



RECTOR OF STREATHAM. 



Crown Svo. 55. net. 



This book has considerable historical interest. It touches on several 

 present problems, including the condition of the Welsh Church, 

 Passive Resistance, and the immigration of Roman Catholics. 

 Overton, the historian, says that Bishop Horsley was regarded as 

 far and above all other contemporary writers on the side of the 

 Church. The author possesses the Bishop's private letters, and 

 information hitherto unpublished. 



