30 LEA AND BLANCHARD'S PUBLICATIONS. 



NEW AND ENLARGED EDITION- JUST READY. 1850. 



tjhtlow s medical jurisprudence. 



MEDICAL JURISPRUDENCE. 



BY ALFRED 8. TAYLOR, 



Lecturer on Medical Jurisprudence and Chemistry at Guy's Hospital, &c. 



SECOND AMERICAN, FROM THE THIRD AND ENLARGED LONDON EDITION. 



With numerous Notes and Additions, and References to American Practice and Law. 



BY R. E. GRIFFITH, M. D. 



In one large octavo volume. 

 This work has been much enlarged by the author, and may now be considered as the standard 

 authority on the subject, both in England and this country. It has been thoroughly revised, in 

 this edition, and completely brought up to the day with reference to the most recent investigations 

 and decisions. No further evidence of its popularity is needed than the fact of its having, in the 

 short time that has elapsed since it originally appeared, passed to three editions in England, and 

 two in the United States. 



We recommend Mr. Taylor's work as the ahlest, most comprehensive, and, above all, the most practically 

 useful book which exists on the subject of legal medicine. Any man of sound judgment, who has mastered 

 the contents of Taylor's " Medical Jurisprudence," may go into a court of law with the most perfect confi- 

 dence of being able to acquit himself creditably.— Medico- Chirurglcal Review. 



The most elaborate and complete wojrk that has yet appeared. It contains an immense quantity of cases 

 lately tried, which entitle it to be considered what Beck was in its day. — Dublin Medical Journal. 



TAYLOR ON POISONS. 



ON POISONS, 



IN RELATION TO MEDICAL JURISPRUDENCE AND MEDICINE, 



BY ALFRED S. TAYLOR, F. R. S., &c. 



Edited, with Notes and Additions, BY R. E. GRIFFITH, M. D. 

 In one large octavo volume, of 688 pages. 



The most elaborate work on the subject that our literature possesses.— Brit, and For. Medico- Chir u r Review. 



One of the most practical and trustworthy works on Poisons in our language. — Western Journal of Med. 



It contains a vast body of facts, which embrace all that is important in toxicology, all that is necessary to 

 the guidance of the medical jurist, and all that can be desired by the lawyer. — Medico- Chirurglcal Review. 



It is, so far as our knowledge extends, incomparably the best upon the subject ; in the highest degree credit- 

 able to the author, entirely trustworthy, and indispensable to the student and practitioner.— N. Y. Annalist. 



TRATLL'S MEDICAL JURISPRUDENCE.— Outlines of a Course of Lectures on Medical Jurisprudence- 

 Revised, with numerous Notes. In one small octavo volume of 234 pages. 



DUNGLISON OBT HUMAN HEALTH. 



HUMAN HEALTH, 



OR THE INFLUENCE OF ATMOSPHERE AND LOCALITY, CHANGE OF AIR AND CLIMATE, SEASONS, 



FOOD, CLOTHING, BATHING, EXERCISE, SLEEP/, &C. &C &C, ON HEALTHY MAN. 



CONSTITUTING ELEMENTS OF HYGIENE. 



Second Edition, with many Modifications and Additions. 

 BY ROBLEY DUNGLISON, M. D., &c. &c. 



In one octavo volume of 464 pages. 



JMRTZ.ETT OJV CERTJtlJVTY* TJV JlIEniCIJYE.-Woto Ready. 



AN INQUIRY OTTO THE DEGREE" OF CERTAINTY IN MEDICINE, 



AND INTO THE NATURE AND EXTENT OF ITS POWER OVER DISEASE. 

 BY ELISHA BARTLETT, M. D., 



Author of" Fevers of the United States," " i'hilosophy of Medical Science." 

 In one small volume of 84 pages, crown 8vo., extra cloth. 



AN ESSAY ON THE PHILOSOPHY OF MEDICAL SCIENCE. 



BY ELISHA BARTLETT, M. D., Author of "Fevers of the United States." 



In one handsome octavo volume, of three hundred and twelve pages. 



DUNGL1SONS MEDICAL STUDENT.— The Medical Student, or Aids to the Study of Medicine. Revised 



ami Modified Edition. 1 vol. royal lSino., extra cloth. 312 pp. 

 MITCHELL ON FKVERS — On the Cryptogamous Origin of Malarious and Epidemic Fevers. In 1 vol. 



royal 12mo. 13b pp. 



