N. 
Nephritis, a case of, 37, 170, 315 
Neurotomy, a case of, 423 
North Devon cattle, account of, 76 
Norton Farmers’ Club, interesting account of it, 431 
O. 
CEsophagotomy, a case of, by Mr. C. Tennant, 34 
Osborne, Mr., his account of the swallowing of an egg and stick, 180 
Os hyoides, account of the, 263 
Ox, calculous concretions in the, 517 
P. 
Parazzer, the first author who mentions glanders, 701 
Pastern joint, lameness of the, 21 
Paulet, M., on glanders, 705 
Peall, Mr., on glanders and farcy, 712 ' 
Percivall, Mr. C., on laryngitis, 29, 486 — on calculi in the intestines, 486 
Percivall, Mr. W., case of fracture of the acetabulum, 31 — his case of stricture 
of the rectum; his case of colic, melanosis, and megrims, 41 — the effect of 
medicine on horses, lead, 54; zinc, 55 — on the act of standing, 61 — ditto 
rearing, 61 — ditto kicking, 65 — ditto leaping, 65 — the medical effects of 
silver, 108 — the progression of the horse, 121 — the line of gravitation, 122 
— the proper position of the head and neck, 123 — the motion of the legs in 
the walk and trot, 125— the movement of the fore limbs, 126 — their safety 
and beauty of going, 128 — his case of apoplexy in a horse, 250 — the effects 
of barytes, 270 — carbonate of barium, 270 — chloride of barium, 271 — the 
first general meeting of the Charter, very properly described, 315 — the 
paces of horses, 341 — the walk, 342 — faulty or defective walking, 344 — 
the lift of the foot, 345 — grounding, 346 — the rate of walking, 346 — on 
water farcy, 396 — the trot, 401 — the different paces, 402 — the order of 
the movement of the limbs, 403 — high and low action, 403 — the feats of 
trotting horses* 405 — topical swellings unaccompanied by general tume- 
faction, and gradually yielding, 442 — with somewhat different termina- 
tions, 443 — the partial or topical swellings originate in the same disease 
as the general ones, and scarlatina is of the same nature, 447 — descrip- 
tion of the gallop, 461 — the walk, 463 — the French gallop, 464 — canter, 
467 — amble, 468 — the effect of medicine on horses, 510 — the effect of pure 
barytes, 510 — on oxide of barium, 510 — the propagation of glanders by 
inoculation, 582 — the various inoculations with the matter of glanders, 
582 — the difference between inoculated glanders and inoculated diseases 
in general, 584 —Mr. Percivall’s opinion, that, before any horse is allowed 
to run, his age should be such as to qualify him for the stakes for which he 
is to compete ; colour alone cannot be depended on, but marks with few 
exceptions, 618 — the miasm of the stable, 641 — glanders communicated 
by contagion, 641 — Professor Coleman on farcy and glanders, 642 — the 
origin of farcy and glanders, 644 — the nature of ditto, 644 — the effects of 
manganese, 683 — ditto of sulphuric acid, 685. The authors whose works 
are most concerned with the nature and seat of glanders, are, Lafosse, sen. 
Parazzer, Dupuv, Vegetius, Leonard Mascal, Blundeville, Gervais Mark- 
ham, De Grey, Solleysel, Lafosse, jun. Malouin, Gibson, Reeves, Bracken, 
Bartlett, Bourgelat, Paulet, Gilbert, Vitet, Volpi, Snape, Taplin, St. Bel, 
Professor Coleman, Feron, Shipp, Peall, Smith, Aygalenq, Dupuy, Morel, 
Gerard, Rodet, Benard, Barthclemy,Delafond,Hurtrel D’Arboval, Sewell, 
Youatt, Vines, Blaine, Spooner, Tardieu, 761-723 
