| 1841 - 176 페이지
...Bart., Sergeant Surgeon to his late Majesty, and undoubtedly the highest surgical authority now living, observes, " If one of these miserable cases could...list is considerably augmented from maltreatment, the employment of injudicious remedies, and the nostrums of illiterate uneducated pretenders to physic,... | |
| 1842 - 164 페이지
...authority. He was accustomed to say, in his public lectures, in reference to a certain class of cases ; "If one of these miserable cases could be depicted...maltreatment and the employment of injudicious remedies." To different minds it is necessary to produce varying argument and illustration, proof and conviction... | |
| P B. Lloyd - 1847 - 130 페이지
...have deserted them. Sir Astley Cooper, in reference to such instances, says, in one of his lectures, " If one of these miserable cases could be depicted...maltreatment and the employment of injudicious remedies" The voice of Revelation anathematizes the vice, and inculcates the opposite virtue in the most glowing... | |
| I. A. Jacques (and co.) - 1852 - 134 페이지
...Astley Cooper was accustomed to say in his public lectures, in reference to a certain class of cases, " If one of these miserable cases could be depicted...list is considerably augmented from maltreatment and and the employment of injudicious remedies." But if after all we have stated we should fail to convince... | |
| Robert Johnstone Kahn - 1917 - 266 페이지
...pulpit, as an illustration of the evil effects of a vicious and intemperate course of 1'r- '*- ^vould, I think, strike the mind with more terror than all...maltreatment and the employment of injudicious remedies. If the dangerous effects of the too abundant discharge of this humor depended wholly upon the quantity,... | |
| Robert Johnstone Kahn - 1902 - 226 페이지
...the miserable cases could be depicted from the pulpit, as an illustration of the evil effects of a think, strike the mind with more terror than all the...maltreatment and the employment of injudicious remedies. If the dangerous effects of the too abundant discharge of this humor depended wholly upon the quantity,... | |
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