• Green published 'Outlines of a Course of Dissections' anonymously in 1820. The same year, he also enlarged the book into his 'Dissector's Manual,' with plates, said to have been the first work of the same kind or scope yet published. • He wrote no original memoirs except a minor piece in
Med.-Chir. Trans. xii. 46. • A memoir of Green's was published in the
Medical Times and Gazette a week after his death. • Two of his Royal Academy lectures, on 'Beauty' and on 'Expression', were published in the
Athenæum 16 and 23 December 1843. • When the claims made by the Cooper family led to a quarrel, Green's part in it was published in a long pamphlet ('Letter to Sir Astley Cooper on the Establishment of an Anatomical and Surgical School at Guy's Hospital,' London, 1825), which stated the legal case. • Green published, chiefly in
The Lancet, a large number of lectures, clinical comments, and cases. • In 1832 Green gave the opening address of the winter session, which was published taking as his subject the functions or duties of the professions of divinity, law, and medicine according to Coleridge. • Green published two pamphlets on medical education and reform: 'Distinction without Separation: a Letter on the Present State of the Profession' (1831), and 'Suggestions respecting Medical Reform,' 1834. • In 1841, he published his advocated reforms in a pamphlet 'The Touchstone of Medical Reform'. Changes to the College of Surgeons' constitution in 1843, providing for a new class of fellows and the election of the council by the fellows, was in accord with his views. • As
Hunterian orator at the College of Surgeons in 1840, he gave an obscure address on 'Vital Dynamics', being an attempt to connect science with the philosophy of Coleridge, before a distinguished audience. • As the Hunterian orator in 1847, he supplemented his former Coleridgean exposition with another in the same vein on 'Mental Dynamics or, Groundwork of a Professional Education.' • Green made little definite progress with the Coleridgean system but before he died he compiled a work from Coleridge's marginalia, fragments, and recollected oral teaching in two volumes under the title
Spiritual Philosophy, founded on the teaching of S. T. Coleridge (1865). It included a memoir of Green by his friend and former pupil
Sir John Simon. The first chapter of the first volume had been dictated to Green by Coleridge himself and concerns a groundwork of principles. The second volume is theological. ==References==