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Titles
- A most excellent cure for the stone and gravel1
- A practical treatise on the small-pox and measles1
- A supplement to Physical enquiries, lately published: in a letter to ... William Pulteney, Esq1
- An account of the sore throat attended with ulcers: a disease which hath of late years appeared in this city, and the parts adjacent1
- Aristotle's compleat and experienc'd midwife: in two parts : I. a guide for child-bearing women, in the time of theor conception, bearing and suckling their children : with the best means of helping them, both in natural and unnatural labours : together with suitable remedies for the various indispositions of newborn infants : II. proper and safe remedies for the curing all those distempers that are incident to the female sex : and more especially those that are any obstruction to their bearing of children : a work far more perfect than any yet extant, and highly necessary for all surgeons, midwives, nurses, and child-bearing women1
- Detection of a conspiracy, to suppress a general good in physic, and to promote error and ignorance in that important science: being the singular case of John Tennant, M.D. : which was brought against him, maliciously, a trial at the Old Bailey for bigamy1
- Lectures of pharmacy: exhibiting exact rules for prescribing1
- Outlines of the history and progress of botany1
- The sentiments of the professors of physick, in the foreign universities: concerning the operations and method of curing the diseases incident to the eye, as practised by John Taylor, doctor of physick, surgeon, oculist to his Majesty, and Fellow of several Colleges of Physicians in foreign parts1
- To the inhabitants of the parish of Midhurst, in the county of Sussex: advice against the modern practice of inoculating the small pox1
- [Cour]se of lectures upon midwifery: wherein the theory and practice of that art are explain'd in the clearest manner ; more particularly, the structure of the pelvis and uterus ; of the foetus in utero, and after parturition ; the management of child-bearing women, during pregnancy, in time of labour, and after delivery ; the manner of delivering women, in all the variety of natural, difficult, and preternatural labours, perform'd on different machines made in imitation of real women and children1