Reirofpect of German Literature,—Surgery & Natural Hiffory. 653 
riveat fome kind of certainty with refpect 
to their opinions. In the mean time, a 
greai number of works have been written 
for and againft his fyfiem: for inltance, 
the ** Antigall;” BarreL’s * Bemer- 
kungen, &c.; ‘ Darftellung und Be- 
leuchtung des Gallfchen Syttems;”” ‘Gall. 
Lehre.” 
Schadellehrers,—-Travels of a Craniolo- 
gilt.”” 
HEIDEMANN treated of Galvanic elec- 
tricity; and PauLus, LAuGE£RMAN, 
LavaTrer, and ARoNsOoN, cf the yel- 
low fever. The ingenious Keri. pub- 
lithed a fecond edition, with additions, of 
his work “* Uberdie Cur und Erkenntnifs 
des Fiebers,—On the Cure and Symptoms 
of Fever. 
We find likewife aenounced the fourth 
volume of HUFELAND’s ‘* Syftem der 
Praktifchen Heilkunde,—Syftem of Prac- 
tical Medicine ;** and the fecend feGtion of 
his ** Therapeutics,” treating of cutane- 
ous difeafes, and the effeéts of poifon. 
Beer, the German Scarpa, gave a 
¢¢ Nachtrag zur Anficht der Staphyloma- 
tofen Metamorphofen des Auges,”’ in 
which he communicated fome further ob- 
fervations on the ftaphylomatofe difeales 
of the eye. 
VoceELt favoured us with ** Anhropo- 
logifche und Medicinifche Erfahrungen, 
— Anthropological and Medical Obferva- 
tions and Experiments.’? WiCHELHAU- 
SEN wrote on the ‘* Erkenntnifs, &c. der 
fleimigen Lungenfucht,—On the Signs, 
Prevention, and Cure of Pituitous Pul- 
monary Confumption ;*”> and WOLLKOP 
gave us the fecond volume of ¢* Unteriu- 
chungen tiber den Blutausflufg,” in which 
he treats, according to the principles of 
the Brunonian fyftem, of the fymptoms, 
caules, and cure of the Bloody Flux. 
Franx’s excellent work, ** De Curan- 
dis Hominum Morbis Epitome, juxta ejus 
PraleGtiones in Clinico Vindobonenfi ha- 
bitas, anonnul‘is fuorum Auditorum con- 
tinuata,”’ had advanced as far as Liber 
VII. de Neurofibus. 
EmMBDEN gave us a ‘¢ Verfuch einer 
Hypochondralogia ;"”  JaHN wrote on 
«© Keichhulten, — Chincovgh ;” and 
LeHNHosinuk * Unterfuchungen uber 
Leidenfchaften, &c. als Urfachen und 
Heilmittel der Krankheiten,”’ in which he 
inveftigates the influences of the paflions 
and affections of the mind, with refpect 
to the caufe and cure of difeafes. 
There appeared likewife ‘* Medici- 
nifche Merwiirdigkeiten fiir Criminal- 
Richter, Acrzte und Prediger,—Medical 
We even find ** Reifen eines: 
Memorabilia, for the ufe of Judges, Phy- 
ficians, and Clergymen ;”" and the Jour 
nals edited by AuGusTinN, HorwN, 
Réscutaus, and SCHELLING; as like. 
wife SINBOLD’s Lucina, and SCHERF’s 
“¢ Allgemeines Archiv fir die Gefundheits 
Polizei,—General Repofitory for Medical 
Police,’” and other periodical publications, 
were regularly continued. 
SURGERY. 
This art is likewife now much improv. 
ed, and the number of works written upon 
it increafe in proportion as wars are mul- 
tiplied. 
Of Loscuce’s * Abbildungen der 
Knochen,—Figures of the Bones,” the 
third number of the fecond edition was 
delivered. 
MicHet had furnithed ** Abhand- 
lungen, &c.—-Diflertations and Obferv- 
ations on Subjects taken from comparative 
and Human Anatemy and Phyfology 3°" 
OuLe, ‘* Obfervationes Anatomico- patho~ 
logice;"" Pererxa, a ‘ Commentatio 
Anatomico-phyficlogica Medico-chirur- 
gica de Morbis Oculorum,’” RosENMULe 
LER, the firt number of his ‘¢ Chirur- 
gifch-anatomifche Abbildungen, — Chi- 
rurgico-Anatomical Tables ;’> SANDIFOR- 
tius* ** Deglutionis Mechanifmus ver- 
ticalifefiione Narium, Oris, Faucium illaf 
tratus ;°> and SCHRAMMiUs, a “© Traét- 
atus de Inflammatione Offium.”’ 
Mursina’s * Journal fur Surgery, 
Medicine, and Midwifery,’’ was continued 
to the third number of the fecond va- 
‘lume. 
NATURAL HISTORY. 
This favourite fcience of men at an 
advanced period of life, of the wealthy 
and great, and of all thofe who, difgufted 
with the noify pleafures of the world, re- 
turn to the tranquil and peaceful contem- 
piation of nature, furnifhes employment to- 
a great number of writers, in the prefent 
times; when the too early introduction to 
the luxurious enjoyments of iife foon pro- 
duces fatiety, and when fudden revolu- 
tions mult fo often bring us back to 
Nature, purfuing with a firm tiep her un- 
interrupted courfe, 
jufice requires that the firft place in 
our hilt be afligned to Patuas’s ‘ I}lui- 
trationes Plantarum imperfeéte vel non- 
dum cognitarum, cum Centuria Iconum, 
fafc. 3.” Then follow, befides a variety 
of figures of infeé&ts and animals, anda 
multitude of pitture-books, ‘* Rorn’s 
“¢ Cataleéta Botanica, quibus Plante nova 
et minus cognitz defcribuntur, atque il- 
luftrantur,’” fafc. 3.3 Reuss’s ‘* Lehr- 
buch 
