WOEKS BY DR. CARPENTER. 



PRINCIPLES OF COMPARATIVE PHYSIOLOGY. 



A New American, from the Fourth and Revised London Edition. 



With more than three hundred beautiful illustrations. In one large and hand- 

 some octavo volume of 752 pages. 



Without pretending to it, it is an Ency- 

 clopaedia of ttie subject, accurate and com- 

 plete in all respects — a truthful reflection 

 of the advanced state at which the science 

 has now arrived. — Dublin Quarterly Jour- 

 nal of Medical Science. 



A truly magnificent work — in itself a 

 perfect physiological study. — Ranlcing's 

 Abstract. 



This work stands without its fellow. It 

 is one, few men in Europe could have 

 undertaken ; it is one, no man, we believe. 



could have brought to so successful an issue 

 as Dr. Carpenter. We feel that this ab- 

 stract can give the reader a very imperfect 

 idea of the fulness of this work, and no 

 idea of its unity, of the admirable manner 

 in which material has been brought, from 

 the most various sources, to conduce to its 

 completeness, of the lucidity of the reason- 

 ing it contains, or of the clearness of lan- 

 guage in which the whole is clothed. — 

 Medical Times. 



II. 



PRINCIPLES OP HUMAN PHYSIOLOGY. 



with their chief applications to 



PSYCHOLOGY, PATHOLOGY, THERAPEUTICS, HYGIENE, AND 

 FORENSIC .MEDICINE. 



A new American, from the last and revised London Edition, with nearly three 

 hundred illustrations. Edited, with additions, hy P. Gurney Smith, M.D. In one 

 large and handsome volume of about nine hundred pages. 



The most complete work on the science 

 in our language. — Am. Med. Journal. 



The most complete work now extant in 

 our language, — N. 0. Med. Register. 



The best text-book in the language on 

 this extensive subject. — London Med. Times. 



A complete cyclopEedia of this branch of 

 science.' — N. Y. Med. Times. 



The most complete exposition of physio- 

 logy which any language can at present 

 give. — Brit, and For. Med.-Chirurg. Reoiew. 



in. 



ELEMENTS (OR MANUAL) OE PHYSIOLOGY. 



INCLUDING PHYSIOLOGICAL ANATOMY. 



Second American, from the last and revised London Edition, with one hundred 

 and ninety illustrations. In one handsome octavo volume of 566 pages. 



In his former works it would seem that 

 he had exhausted the subject of Phy.siology. 

 In the present, he gives the essence, as it 

 were, of the whole. — N. Y. Journal of 

 Medicine. 



Those who have occasion for an elemen- 

 tary treatise on Physiology, cannot do bet- 

 ter than to possess themselvesof the manual 

 of Dr. Carpenter. — Medical Examiner. 



PREPARING. 



PRINCIPLES OF GENERAL PHYSIOLOGY, including ORGANIC CHEM- 

 ISTRY, and HISTOLOGY. With a general sketch of the Vegetable and Animal 

 Kingdoms. With several hundred illustrations. In one large and handsome 

 octavo volume. 



In his last edition of the "Comparative Physiology" and "Human Physiology," 

 the author found it desirable to omit the chapters connected with " General Physio- 

 logy." He has therefore undertaken to prepare a volume devoted exclusively to 

 that subject, forming an introduction to the other works, or, taken in conjunction 

 with them, constituting a complete and extended system of Physiology, in all its 

 branches. 



