Which preposition to use with monographs
The Child Study Society has published a little monograph on the subject giving the experience of different teachers and specimens of the writing.
The thymus was introduced by the great classic monograph of Friedleben on the "Physiology of the Thymus," in which he mentioned the usual forgotten pioneers: Felix Plater, a Swiss physician, who in 1614 had found an enlarged thymus in an infant dying suddenly, and Restelli, an Italian, who interested himself in the effects of removal of the thymus more than ten years before.
For the founding of the several colonies, their charters, etc., the student may profitably consult the learned monographs in Winsor's Narrative and Critical History of America, 8 vols.
They witnessed, not only the publication of Claude Bernard's "Lectures on Experimental Physiology," but also the appearance of a monograph by Thomas Addison, an English physician, entitled "On the constitutional and local effects of disease of the suprarenal bodies."
[I invented this monograph for the purpose of inducing Petherton to reload.]
(Monographs in English, no.4) (In University of Buffalo studies, July 1945)
Bell's Cathedral Series ILLUSTRATED MONOGRAPHS ON THE GREAT ENGLISH CATHEDRALS AND CHURCHES Crown 8vo.