558 
Analyses of Books. 
[September, 
know from recent experience 
we felt an irritation on the back of the left nand, much ^ ^ 
produced by the bite of a gna . . 7 settled on the spot, 
ordinary green aphis in the winged state ^ settled on I f> 
We brushed away the intruder, but the feeling oi irntauo 
mained for upwards of an hour. , . i flr p-er than a rabbit 
wat c b a U ;= 8 U ^oes not seem to 
ha fn ^ “ 
sensible remark i he special aiseascu are 
When will the believers in “progress learn t y 
moving in the wrong diiecftion ? 
“ Once a Month ” has our best wishes. 
Revista International de Ciencias Medians y Biologic** fundaia 
Mr Don Carlos de Vicente y Char pent er Vol . L, iNo 
April 15, 1885. Madrid : Tipographia de los Heueifanos. 
The successive chapters of this journal are devoted l to 'medical 
nhvsics chemistry, microbiology, anatomy, physiolo^} , ‘ 
S medkine, neurology, surgery, obstetrics, hygiene, oph- 
thalmology and syphilography. Embryology, taxonomy, general 
psycho og’, palaeontology, and organic geography do no, ,f we 
maviudee from the number before us, come within the plan of 
The Zulu Anatomy, too, appears to be treated exclusively 
from a medical point of view, and with reference, to mankn d 
al °He*nce for the non-medical biologist this journal offers little 
interest. 
The Ecclesiastical Gazette. 
In this paper we perceive the notice of a book by Mr. W. Arthur 
entitled “ Religion without God and God without Religion 
The reviewer writes “A recent controversy in the Nineteent 
Century ’ has revealed the existence of three schools of thought 
amon^ modern positivists, championed respectively by Mr. 
Frederic Harrison, Mr. Herbert Spencer, and Sir Fitzjames 
St Wem far from accepting the lenets-especially those more 
recently developed— of the “ Dux Synthet. corum but we do not 
think that they can be at all rightly characterised as positivist. 
The differences between the views of Auguste Comte and Mr. 
Herbert Spencer are fundamental. 
