38G Scientific Intelligence, 
and female ; the ear and eye magnified ; the head, in different 
aspects ; and the feet. These two figures, which represent the 
first layer of muscles, with the nerves and bloodvessels, will 
form the first fasciculus. Two other figures of the same size, 
representing back and front views, will be devoted to the second 
layer of muscles, with the corresponding vessels and nerves. 
And two others, also of the same size, will exhibit the third 
layer of muscles, with the bloodvessels, nerves, and lymphatics. 
And, lastly, two equally large will represent the skeleton in 
different aspects, together with the arteries which enter, and 
the veins and lymphatics which proceed from it. Each fascicu- 
lus will have, in addition, plates of the viscera contained in the 
three great cavities, in union with their arteries, veins, and 
nerves. Copious explanations, with annotations, tending to es- 
tablish, on a certain basis, every anatomical fact, will be ap- 
pended ; and the facts most uniform and constant will be no- 
ticed. Outline drawings, for the explanation of the plates, will 
be attached ; and, besides letters of reference placed on the re- 
spective parts, the denomination most in use by others will be 
subjoined. — Some of the designs for this work were executed 
under the author's inspection by Giro Santi, by whom the 
plates of the work on the Lymphatic System had been drawn 
and engraved ; others by Guerrini and Santorini, artists of the 
greatest ability ; and the engravings are by Carlo Lasinio, and 
other distinguished artists. The work was entirely finished be- 
fore the death of its illustrious author, and is now to be pub- 
lished by his heirs. The conduct of the publication is entrusted 
to Signior Antommarchi, a distinguished pupil of the author, 
and afterwards his successor in the chair of anatomy in Florence. 
This great work will be published by subscription. The price to 
subscribers will be 65 zecchini (about 10s. 6d. each) of Florence 
with the plates pZam, and 85 for those coloured. Non»subscribers 
will pay 70 zecchini for the work in black, and 90 for it coloured. 
We have been assured by an intelligent gentleman, who has 
seen the work, that the coloured copies are greatly preferable to 
the hlaclc in point of distinctness, — a circumstance of the great- 
est consequence in figures of so complicated a nature. This 
work is preceded by a Prodromus, written in Itahan, and to 
be afterwards translated into Latin, the object of which is, 
