20 LEA & BLANCHARD'S PUBLICATIONS.— (Practice of Medicine.) 



WATSON'S PRACTICE OF MEDICINE— New Edition. 



LECTURES" ON THE 



PRINCIPLES AND PRAGTKGE OF PHYSIC. 



DELIVERED AT KING'S COLLEGE, LONDON, 



BY THOMAS WATSON, M. D., &c. &c. 

 Third American, from the last London Edition. 



REVISED, WITH ADDITIONS, BY D. FRANCIS CONDIE, M. D. 



Author of " A Treatise on the Diseases of Children," &c. 



IN ONE OCTAVO VOLUME, 



Of nearly ELEVEN HUNDRED LARGE PAGES, strongly bound with raised bands. 



To say that it is the very best work on the subject now extant, is but to echo the sentiment of the medical 

 press throughout the country. — IV. O. Medical Journal. 



Of the text-books recently republished Watson is very justly the principal favorite,— Holmes' Report to 

 Nat. Med. Assoc. 



By universal consent the work ranks among the very best text-books in our language.— III. and Ind. Med. 

 Journal. 



Regarded on all hands as one of the very best, if not the very best, systematic treatise on practical medi- 

 cine extant — St. Louis Med. Journal. 



Confessedly one of the very best works on the principles and practice of physic in the English or any other 

 language.— Med. Examiner. 



As a text-book it has no equal; as a compendium of pathology and practice no superior. — N. Y. Annalist. 



We know of no work better calculated for being placed in the hands of the student, and for a textbook. 

 On every important point the author seems to have posted up his knowledge to the day.— Amer. Med. Journal. 



One of the most practically useful books that ever was presented to the student — indeed, a more admirable 

 summary of general and special pathology, and of the application of therapeutics to diseases, we are free to 

 say, has not appeared for very many years. The lecturer proceeds through the whole classification of human 

 ills, a capite ad calcem, showing at every step an extensive knowledge of his subject, with the ability of com- 

 municating his precise ideas in a style remarkable for its clearness and simplicity. — N. Y. Journal of Medi- 

 cine and Surgery. 



A careful examination of this volume has satisfied us that it merits all the commendation bestowed on it in 

 this country and at home. It is a work adapted to the wants of young practitioners, combining, as it does, 

 sound principles and substantial practice It is not too much to say that it is a representative of the actual 

 state of medicine as taught, and practised by the most eminent physicians of the present day, and as such we 

 would advise every one about embarking in the practice of physic to provide himself with a copy of it. — 

 Western Journal of Medicine and Surgery. 



We have for several years considered this one of the best works extant on the Principles and Practice of 

 Medicine. Its style is adapted to all classes of readers, and the views of the author are sound and practical, 

 — Mo. Med. and Surg. Journal. 



THE GREAT MEDICAL LIBRARY. 



THE CYCLOPEDIA OF "PRACTICAL MEDICINE; 



COMPRISING 



Tr -atises on the Nature and Treatment of Diseases, Materia Medica, and Thera- 

 peutics, Diseases of Women and Children, Medical Jurisprudence, &c. &c. 



EDITED BY 



JOHN FORBES, M. D., F. R. S., ALEXANDER TWEEDIE, M. D., F. R. S. 



AND JOHN CONNOLLY, M. D. 



Revised, with Additions, 



BY ROBLEY DUNGLISON, M. D. 



THIS WORK IS NOW COMPLETE, AND FORMS FOUR LARGE SUPER- ROYAL OCTAVO VOLUMES, 



Containing Thirty-two Hundred and Fifty-four unusually large Pages in Double Columns, Printed 

 on Good Paper, with a new and clear type. 



THE WHOLE WELL AND STRONGLY' BOUND WITH RAISED BANDS AND DOUBLE TITLES. 



Or, to be had in Twenty-four Parts. 



This work contains no less than FOUR HUNDRED AND EIGHTEEN DISTINCT TREATISES, 

 By Sixty-eight distinguished Physicians. 



The most complete work on Practical Medicine extant; or, at least, incur language. — Buffalo Medical 

 and Surgical Journal. 



For reference, it is above all price to every practitioner. — Western Lancet. 



One of the most valuable medical publications of the day — as a work of reference it is invaluable. — 

 Western Journal of Medicine and Surgery. 



It has been to us, both as learner and teacher, a work for ready and frequent reference, one in which 

 modern English medicine is exhibited in the most advantageous light. — Medical Examiner. 



We rejoice that this work is to be placed within the reach of the profession in this country, it being unques- 

 tionably one of very preat value to the practitioner. This estimate of it has not been formed from a hasty ex- 

 amination, but after an intimate acquaintance derived from frequent consultation of it during the past nine or 

 ten years. The editors are practitioners of established reputation, and the list of contributors embraces many 

 of the most eminent professors and teachers of London, Edinburgh, Dublin, and Glasgow. It is, indeed, the 

 great merit of this work that the principal articles have been furnished by practitioners who have not only 

 devoted especial attention to the diseases about which they have written, but have also enjoyed opportunities 

 for an extensive practical acquaintance with them. — and whose reputation carries the assurance of their 

 competency justly to appreciate the opinions of others, while it stamps their own doctrines with high and just 

 authority.— American Medical Journal. 



