Illustrated by Plates.
“We would strongly recommend every surgeon who may have to treat for the first time a patient with Strabismus, to study the Treatise attentively from beginning to end. Mr. Lucas seems to possess the rare quality of conveying a great deal of knowledge in a few words.”—Provincial Medical and Surgical Journal.
“Mr. Lucas’ book gives a plain, unpretending, and trustworthy account of the matter.”—Dublin Medical Press.
“Mr. Lucas’ work is in our opinion the most comprehensive and indeed the best on the subject which has yet appeared.”—Edinburgh Monthly Medical Journal, March, 1841.
“This is a sensible and useful treatise.”—Medical Gazette.
“The plan of Mr. Lucas’s Treatise is well conceived, and the execution of it at once scientific and practical.”—British and Foreign Medical Review, April, 1841.
“The most complete account hitherto published of the pathological theory of Squinting, and its different varieties and causes; and of the circumstances requiring or contra-indicating the performance of the operation.”—Edinburgh Medical Journal.
JOHNSON’S TOUR TO THE GERMAN SPAS.
PILGRIMAGES TO THE SPAS IN PURSUIT OF HEALTH AND RECREATION.
By James Johnson, M.D., Physician Extraordinary to the late King.