Medical Extracts: On the Nature of Health, with Practical Observations and the Laws of the Nervous and Fibrous Systems by a Friend to Improvements, Bind 21796 |
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Side 35
... taken fick , whatever his Illness might be , his panic- ftruck Neighbours endeavoured , by every Means , to have him fent to the Hofpital , © 2 ib . ib . Unexpectedly PAGE Unexpectedly Monf . GERRARD , a Native of France CONTENTS .
... taken fick , whatever his Illness might be , his panic- ftruck Neighbours endeavoured , by every Means , to have him fent to the Hofpital , © 2 ib . ib . Unexpectedly PAGE Unexpectedly Monf . GERRARD , a Native of France CONTENTS .
Side 56
... taken too hot , ib . { Where MUCH EXERCISE is used a boiled foft Egg or two may not be improper , 1 ib . 2. OF DINNER . ' The DINNER of our Ancestors , Their AFTERNOON REPAST , · Their SUPPER and EVENING REGALE , The MODERN PRACTICE of ...
... taken too hot , ib . { Where MUCH EXERCISE is used a boiled foft Egg or two may not be improper , 1 ib . 2. OF DINNER . ' The DINNER of our Ancestors , Their AFTERNOON REPAST , · Their SUPPER and EVENING REGALE , The MODERN PRACTICE of ...
Side 57
... taken at the fame Time , and to these we should al- ways add VEGETABLES , { PUDDINGS and PIE - CRUST not approved of , - In a Note . The Art of Cookery is likened to the Art of undermining a Town . SIMPLICITY and TEMPERANCE recommended ...
... taken at the fame Time , and to these we should al- ways add VEGETABLES , { PUDDINGS and PIE - CRUST not approved of , - In a Note . The Art of Cookery is likened to the Art of undermining a Town . SIMPLICITY and TEMPERANCE recommended ...
Side 99
... taken from its body twenty- four hours , and that of a turtle thirty or longer ; and in animals whose blood is hot , it moves until the fat is rendered ftiff by the cold , at which time the mo- tions of the heart and all the other ...
... taken from its body twenty- four hours , and that of a turtle thirty or longer ; and in animals whose blood is hot , it moves until the fat is rendered ftiff by the cold , at which time the mo- tions of the heart and all the other ...
Side 100
... taken off , and the fpinal marrow removed . 3. And THIRDLY , it is generally allowed , that the nerves are the organs and the brain the receptacle of all our fenfations , the fources of all our ideas ; but the nerves and the brain , as ...
... taken off , and the fpinal marrow removed . 3. And THIRDLY , it is generally allowed , that the nerves are the organs and the brain the receptacle of all our fenfations , the fources of all our ideas ; but the nerves and the brain , as ...
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againſt alfo almoſt alſo animal arifing arteries atmoſphere Baron de HALLER becauſe bladder blood body brain cauſe cerebellum cerebrum chyle chyme cloſe cold confequence confiderable degree of heat diaphragm diftinct digeftion diſcovery diſeaſe diſorder duct duodenum DURA MATER eſcaped excited exerciſe experiments faid fame FAT+ fays Dr fecreted feems fenfible feven fever fhall fhew fhewn fhould fide firſt fituation fluid fome foon ftill ftimulus ftomach fubject fuch fuffer fufficient furface fyftem heart himſelf hoſpital houſes increaſed infenfible inftances inteſtines irritable itſelf lacteals leaſt lefs leſs Mammæ MEDULLA OBLONGATA membrane minutes moft moſt motion muſcles muſcular fibres muſt nature neceffary nerves obferved occafions omentum OXYGEN pain perfons periosteum PERITONEUM philofophers phyfician PLEURA preſent Rain raiſed reaſon refpect ſays SECT ſenſe ſeveral ſkin ſmall ſome ſpread ſtate ſtill ſtreets ſyſtem tendons thefe themſelves thermometer theſe thofe thoſe tion URETERS uſe veffels Vide whofe
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Side 182 - In consequence of this address, the bells were immediately stopped from tolling. The expedience of this measure was obvious; as they had before been almost constantly ringing the whole day, so as to terrify those in health, and drive the sick, as far as the influence of imagination could produce that effect, to their graves.
Side 251 - Prometheus, which feems indeed to have been invented by phyficians in thofe ancient times, when all things were clothed in hieroglyphic, or in fable. Prometheus was painted as ftealing fire from heaven, which might well reprefent the inflammable fpirit produced by fermentation ; which may be faid to animate or enliven the man of clay : whence the conquefts of Bacchus, as well as the temporary mirth and noife of his devotees.
Side 313 - There surely never was a greater number of miracles ascribed to one person, than those, which were lately said to have been wrought in France upon the tomb of Abbe Paris, the famous Jansenist, with whose sanctity the people were so long deluded.
Side 313 - But what is more extraordinary; many of the miracles were immediately proved upon the spot, before judges of unquestioned integrity...
Side 311 - That e'en above the smiles and frowns of Fate Exalts great Nature's favourites : a wealth That ne'er encumbers, nor to baser hands Can be transferr'd : it is the only good Man justly boasts of, or can call his own. Riches are oft by guilt and baseness earn'd ; Or dealt by chance to shield a lucky knave, Or throw a cruel sunshine on a fool.
Side 310 - After foft fhow'rs ; and fweet the coming on Of grateful evening mild ; then filent night With this her folemn bird, and this fair...
Side 171 - No facts have been preserved to sustain an account, or even a conjecture, of the numbers that perished in this extraordinary mortality. I only find, that during three months, five, and at length ten thousand persons, died each day at Constantinople ; that many cities of the East were left vacant, and that in several districts of Italy the harvest and the vintage withered on the ground.
Side 183 - It was, in fact, a great human slaughter-house, where numerous victims were immolated at the altar of riot and intemperance. No wonder, then, that a general dread of the place prevailed through the city, and that a removal to it was considered as the seal of death.
Side 203 - When Richmond was told, that if he did not go on he would in a short time be frozen to death, he answered, that he desired nothing but to lie down and die...
Side 177 - ... parents forsaking their only children — children ungratefully flying from their parents, and resigning them to chance, often without an enquiry after their health or safety — masters hurrying off their faithful servants to Bushhill, even on suspicion of the fever, and that at a time, when, like Tartarus, it was open to every visitant, but never returned any — servants abandoning tender and humane masters, who only wanted a little care to restore them to health and usefulness — who, I...