BIBLIOGRAPHY. 



This list embraces, I believe, all the more important "Works, Memoirs, and Com- 

 munications on the subject of Internal Parasites, which have appeared in the English 

 language during the last half century. G-enerally speaking, however, papers merely 

 advocating the employment of particular remedies have been purposely omitted. My 

 especial object has been to do for British and American authors what Davaine has done 

 for foreign writers; and I think it may be said that onr treatises, aided by that of 

 Leuckart (now in course of publication), collectively present as complete a resume of 

 Entozoological literature as any one could reasonably desu-e or hope to obtain. 

 Foreigners, as a rule, have very little acquaintance with English writings ; but I could 

 name at least a dozen exceptions, among the more notable of whom are the above-named 

 Authors. J. Yictor Carus, of Leipsig, has done good service to his fellow-countrymen 

 by the publication of his " Jahresbericht," and other similar compilations ; whilst the 

 venerable Diesing of Vienna (notwithstanding his blindness) scarcely allows a single 

 observation, made either at home or abroad, to escape his notice. I may add, that 

 Knoch of Petersburg has supplied a tolerably complete bibliography of the genus 

 Bothriocephalus. — T. S. C. 



Abercrombie^ J. — A large (hydatid) cyst situated under the peritoneal coat 

 of tbe liver ; extr. from his work^ " On Diseases of the Abdo- 

 minal Viscera/^ and recorded in the " Lond. Med. and Surg. 

 Journ./^ vol. ii. (p. 276), 1829. 



Hydatid of the brain. SeeHeadington. 



AboussoUj L. — On the presence of worms (lumbrici) in the air passages, 

 from "Arch. Gen. de Med./' in "Med.-Chir. Rev./' 1886. 



Adams, A. L. — Remarks on Indian tapeworm : " Med. Times and 

 Gaz./' 1859. 



Adams, J. — Case of hydatid cyst in the parietes of the abdomen ; " Lancet,'' 

 1851. 



Agassiz, L. — Infusoria the larval state of intestinal worms ; from his '' Cor- 

 respondence" with J. D. Dana, in the "American Journal of Science 

 and Arts," vol. xiii., second series (p. 425), 1852. 



