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TREATISE ON THE ENLARGED TONSIL 



and Elongated U?ula, and other Diseases of the Throat 

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London : John Chcrchill. Princes-street, Soho. 



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NEW EDITION OF 



PROF, LINDLEY'S INTRODUCTION TO BOTANY. 

 Recently published, in 2 vols. 8vo, with Six Copper-plates and 



numerous Wood Engravings, price 24?. cloth, 



TNTRODUCTION TO BOTANY. 



1 By Professor Lindlet, Ph.D. F.R.S. Professor of Botany 

 in University College, London, Ac. FourthEdition, with Lor- 



rections and numerous Additions. 



Extract from Preface. 

 In this new and enlarged Edition, the Author has followed 

 very nearly the method recommended by the celebrated Pro- 

 fessor Be Candolle, than whom no man is entitled to more 

 deference, whether we consider the soundness of his judgment 

 in all that relates to order and arrangement, or the great ex- 

 perience which a long and most successful career of public in- 

 struction has necessarily given him. A.«iv ft ni,i M t 



The Author has begun with what is called Organography. 

 (Book I.) ; or an explanation of the exact structure of plants ; 

 a branch of the subject comprehending what relates either to 

 the various forms of tissue of Which vegetables are constructed 

 or to the external appearance their elementary organs assume 

 in a state of combination. It is exceedingly desirable that these 

 topics should be well understood, because they form the basis 

 of all other parts of the science. In physiology, every function 

 is executed through the agency of the organs i: systematic 

 arrangements depend upon characters arising out of their con- 

 sideration ; and descriptive Botany can have no logical pre- 

 cision un 



A differ ei — v . ~ r - . ,. . 



botanists, upon some points connected with this subject, so 

 that it has been found expedient to enter occasionally into 

 much detail, for the purpose of satisfying the student of the 

 accuracy of the facts and reasonings upon which he is expected 



To this succeeds Vegetable Physiology (Book II.) ; or the 

 history of the vital phenomena that have been observed both 

 in plants in general, and in particular species, and aUo in each 

 of their organs taken separately. It is that part of the science 

 which has the moat direct bearing upon practical objects. Its 

 laws, however, are either unintelligible, or susceptible of no 

 exact appreciation, without a previous acquaintance with the 

 more important details of Organography. Much of the subject 

 is at present involved in doubt, and the accuracy of some of 

 the conclusions of physiologists is inferred rather than demon- 

 strated ; so that it has been found essential that the grounds of 

 the more popularly received opinions, whether admitted as true 

 or rejected as erroneous, should be given at length. 



Next follows Glossology (Book III.) ; or, as it was formerly 

 called, Terminology ; restricted to the definition of the ad- 

 jective terms, which are either used exclusively in Botany, or 

 which are employed in that science in some particular and 

 unusual sense. The key to this book, as also to the substantive 

 terms explained in Organography, will be found in a copious 



Index at the end of the volume. * 



It has been the Author's wish to bring every subject that he 

 has introduced down, as nearly as possible, to the state in which 

 it is found at the present day. In doing so, he has added so 

 very considerable a quantity of new matter, especially in what 

 relates to Vegetable Anatomy and Physiology, that the present 

 Edition may be considered, in those respects, a new work. 

 Loudon : Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans. 



NEW WORK liY ALBERT SMITH. 

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A View of Passing Subjects, Manners, Home and 

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CONTENTS of the NUMBER for SATURDAY 

 LAST, JUNE 28, OF 



THE ATHEN/EUM, 



BOTANICAL WORKS BY PROFESSOR LINDLET. 



THE VEGETABLE KINGDOM ; or the Structure, 

 Classification, and Uses of Plants; illustrated upon the 

 Natural System. Second Edition. 500 Illustrations. Price 

 30s. in cloth. 



" We assure our readers that it contains a vast quantity of 

 matter interesting and useful to many classes of persons, and 

 to none more so than to Pharmaceutists, to whom we strongly 

 and cordially recommend it." — Pharmaceutical Journal, 



THE ELEMENTS OF BOTANY, Structural and 

 Physiological, with a Copious Glossary of Terms. Fifth 

 Edition. 8vo. Pr ce lis., cloth. 



This will complete the series of Elementary Botanical 

 Works by Professor Lindley, of which " School Botany," and 

 11 The Vegetable Kingdom." form the other parts. 



The first two Parts of The Elements of Botany, comprising 

 Structural and Physiological Botany, aud a Glossary of Tech- 

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These three parts form a complete manual of Botany for 

 Medical and other Students who have made themselves 

 acquainted with the author's " School Botany." 



N.B. The Glossary may be had separately, price 5s. 



CONTENTS. 



Part I.— -Chap. 1. General Attributes— 2. Of : he Elementary 

 Organs — 3. Of the Epidermis and its Processes — 4. of the 

 Compound Organs— 5. Of the Root— G. Of the Stem— 7. Of the 

 Leaf-Buds— 8. Of the Leaves— 9. Of Food and Secretions— 

 1 10. Of the Motions of Fluids— II. Of the Flower-Bud-12. O. 

 the Inflorescence— 13. Of the Floral Envelopes— 14. Of the 

 Male Organs— 15. Of the Disk— 16. Of the Female Organs— 

 17. Of the Receptacle of Torus— 18. Of the Ovule— 19. Of Fer- 

 tilisation— 20. Of the Fruit— 21. Of the Seed— 22. Of Germina- 

 tion— 23. Of Flowerless Plants. 



Part II.— Chap. 1. Linnsean Sexual System- 

 Method— 3. The Manner of Studying.— Glossary 



*♦* The Elements of Medical and (Economical Botany, illue- 



2. Analyica 





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PROFESSOR LINDLEY'S CEQONOMICAL BOTANY, 

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price 14s. 



Imun. AjEDICAL AND (ECONOMICAL BOTANY ; or, 



locks— .LfJL An account of the Principal Plants employed in Medicine 



or Domestic (Economy. 



tu tt EXTRACT FltOM THE AUTHOR'S PREFACE. 



« The Vegetable Kingdom contains, among a large quantity 

 of plants ot no known importance to man, various useful spe 

 cies employed in medicine, the arts, or in the many branches ot 

 domestic oeconomy. The principal part of those which can be 

 brought by teachers in Europe under the notice of students 01 

 which, from their great importance, deserve to be among 'the 

 earliest subjects of study, are mentioned in the following pages 

 where they are arranged in the manner proposed inthe ' Veo& 

 table Kingdom' of the author, with the sequence of mattei 

 departed from in a few instances, when it was believed that the 

 convenience of younger students would be consulted by doin* 

 so. The author trusts that this selection will be found to have 

 been made in such a way that all teachers who possess reason- 

 ably extensive means of illustrating their lectures, and al/ 

 Botanic Gardens, may furnish the larger part of the specie, 

 which are mentioned. A small selection was indispensable ; 

 firstly, because a greater work would have been beyond the 

 reach of the majority of purchasers ; and secondly, because 

 experience shows us that those who have to study a science ot 

 observation such as Botany, require to concentrate their atttn- 

 tiot), in the fir> , instance, upon a limited number of objects." 

 London: Bradbury and Evans 11, Bouverie-street. 



CHALL WeTeIp - P ffi ed C & ft, 



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FLOWERS, SCULPTURE^ fVU WP1 ^ 

 London : John Murrat, Albemarle^ 



among 



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1 MANUAL OF BRITISH BOTANY 7o ABlXG WS'S 

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