The Port FolioEditor and Asbury Dickens, 1822 |
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Side 24
... respect to the patient . But if the reverse be the case , either no perceptible effect will take place , or the phenomena will be seen in the magnetizer and not in the patient . When the magnetizer operates on a susceptible subject , he ...
... respect to the patient . But if the reverse be the case , either no perceptible effect will take place , or the phenomena will be seen in the magnetizer and not in the patient . When the magnetizer operates on a susceptible subject , he ...
Side 28
... respecting an absent friend , by a gentleman , described him as in the water . Some days after , being again in a trance , she was asked the same question , and replied that she saw but his bones , and the fishes swimming about hini ...
... respecting an absent friend , by a gentleman , described him as in the water . Some days after , being again in a trance , she was asked the same question , and replied that she saw but his bones , and the fishes swimming about hini ...
Side 29
... respect to changes of the weather , to say nothing of those calendars or barometers which men who have been wounded of- ten carry in their bones for ever after . What are we also to make of the still more curious faculty by which horses ...
... respect to changes of the weather , to say nothing of those calendars or barometers which men who have been wounded of- ten carry in their bones for ever after . What are we also to make of the still more curious faculty by which horses ...
Side 30
... respect to hearing and smell ; and although none of the magnetizers seem to have acquir- ed any facts of this phenomenon arising naturally , yet there are several within our own knowledge singularly inexplicable . In one of Lord Byron's ...
... respect to hearing and smell ; and although none of the magnetizers seem to have acquir- ed any facts of this phenomenon arising naturally , yet there are several within our own knowledge singularly inexplicable . In one of Lord Byron's ...
Side 31
... respecting the sympathetic affinity of individuals . The romance and beauty of the tale are extremely dramatic . When the Count de la Tour Laudre was in London , we believe ambassador from Louis XIII . , a young shoemaker , in taking ...
... respecting the sympathetic affinity of individuals . The romance and beauty of the tale are extremely dramatic . When the Count de la Tour Laudre was in London , we believe ambassador from Louis XIII . , a young shoemaker , in taking ...
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Adam Blair Anacreon ancient animal appear Aston Sandford attention beautiful called captain character Christ Christian church Cromwell death delight desert divine door duty effect eyes feelings feet fire give Granville Sharp Griqua Guilder hand heart holy honour human inhabitants interesting Josephus king labour length live Lord Lord Byron Lord Exmouth manner means ment mind Miss Brooke Montpelier moral mountains nation nature never night Nismes novel o'er object observed occasion party passed Persia person Pont du Gard Poplar Lane Port Folio present President principles prisoners readers religion remarks river Rixdollar Russia sacred scarcely scene Scriptures Secretary seemed ship side Society soon spirit Suetonius Tacitus thee thing thou thought tion traveller truth volume whole words writers young