The British Journal of Homoeopathy, 11. cilt

Ön Kapak
1853
 

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Sayfa 94 - And when the barbarians saw the venomous beast hang on his hand, they said among themselves, No doubt this man is a murderer, whom, though he hath escaped the sea, yet vengeance suffereth not to live.
Sayfa 22 - And had suffered many things of many physicians, and had spent all that she had, and was nothing bettered but rather grew worse, 27 When she had heard of Jesus, came in the press behind, and touched his garment.
Sayfa 26 - ... The scurvy doth not only in variety of symptoms imitate most distempers, but also, when come to a height, in degree of virulence equal the most malignant. Of this we have a remarkable proof in that horrible description of the scorbutic patients in the hospitals of Paris, given by Monsieur Poupart, in the Memoirs of the Royal Academy of Sciences, for the year 1699.
Sayfa 164 - If a person under its influence wishes to step over a straw or small stick, he takes a stride or a jump sufficient to clear the trunk of a tree ; a talkative person cannot keep silence or secrets ; and one fond of music is perpetually singing.
Sayfa 177 - The wear and tear went on without intermission — the whirl of the wheel never ceased. Sometimes, indeed, thoroughly overpowered and exhausted, I sought for escape. The physicians said ' Travel,' and I travelled ; ' Go into the country,
Sayfa 179 - The suspension from study only afflicted me with intolerable ennui, and added to the profound dejection of the spirits. The brain, so long accustomed to morbid activity, was but withdrawn from its usual occupations to invent horrors and chimeras. Over the pillow, vainly sought two hours before midnight, hovered no golden sleep. The absence of excitement, however unhealthy, only aggravated the symptoms of ill-health. It was at this time that I met by chance, in the library at St. Leonard's, with Captain...
Sayfa 177 - Go into the country," and I went. But in such attempts at repose all my ailments gathered round me — made themselves far more palpable and felt. I had no resource but to fly from myself — to fly into the other world of books, or thought, or reverie — to live in some state of being less painful than my own. As long as I was always at work it seemed that I had no leisure to be ill. Quiet was my hell. At' length the frame thus long neglected — patched up for a while by drugs and doctors —...
Sayfa 178 - ... the person around whom was entwined the strongest affection my life had known — and when all was over, I seemed scarcely to live myself. At this time, about the January of 1844, I was thoroughly shattered. The least attempt at exercise exhausted me. The nerves gave way at the most ordinary excitement, a chronic irritation of that vast 1844-1845.
Sayfa 180 - ... of the cure; they seem laid asleep as if by enchantment. The intellect shares the same rest ; after a short time mental exertion becomes impossible ; even the memory grows far less tenacious of its painful impressions, cares and griefs are forgotten ; the sense of the present absorbs the past and future ; there is a certain freshness and youth which pervade the spirits, and live upon the enjoyment of. the actual hour. Thus the great agents of our mortal wear and tear — the passions and the...
Sayfa 181 - Malvern — none in which nature was so thoroughly possessed and appreciated. The rise from a sleep sound as childhood's — the impatient rush into the open air, while the sun was fresh, and the birds first sang — the sense of an unwonted strength in every limb and nerve...

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