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Untitled Article
those who are ignorant of the subject would scarcely understand it distinctly from his allusions to it . In a healthy state , no decay will ever take place in them , but the roots will be gradually absorbed in the sockets , till , as the second tooth aescends , the first is pushed out , presenting an appearance as though its root had been nibbled off , but perfectly white and free from disease .
The chapters on * Dentition ' are able and clear , and good sense and knowledge of the subject are apparent throughout the work . M . Beattie * s Switzerland ; Illustrated by Bartlett . Nos . 14 and 15 . Virtue . The Shakspeare Gallery of Female Characters . By C . Heath . No . I . Tilt .
The first of these publications continues with unabated spirit and excellence . Every number deserves a repetition of the praises which we bestowed on its commencement . The other is also full of beauty . It contains fancy portraits of Viola , Beatrice , and Anne Page ; the second from a painting by Hayter , the other two from Meadows . Of each , not only tne character , but the particular scene and feeling may be easily guessed , so appropriate is the conception , and so exquisite the execution . We have subjected them so repeatedly and successfully to the experiment , that when it fails we take the fault to be in the observer and not in the artists . This fact is the best review of them which we can give . F .
Plan of the London Infirmary for Diseases of the Skin , 1836 . This little pamphlet contains reports of the Committee of a highl y praiseworthy charitable institution . We were not previously aware of the existence of the following class of felonious curiosities . Dr . Litchfield lias given in his clinical Lectures on Diseases of the Skin a description of the acurus scabieij found in the pustules of a patient , at the London Infirmary . This curious animalcule has eight many-jointed legs of a deep red colour , the body being round and of a white gelatinous appearance . It is placed by naturalists in the order aptera .
Companion to the Hydro-Oxygen Microscope , w Those among our London readers who are interested in the wonders of the microscope have no doubt visited the Adelaide Gallery ; but our friends in the country should be informed that the microscopic power is now increased to hucIi an extent that a flea is made to appear almost as large in comparison with a prize ox , as the said ox appears to the flea when viewed with the naked eye . But the flea seems an innocent creature
Untitled Article
^ 6 S Critical Notices .
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), June 2, 1836, page 388, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2658/page/60/
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