The Medical Times and Gazette, Volumen2

Portada
J. & A. Churchill, 1881
 

Otras ediciones - Ver todas

Términos y frases comunes

Pasajes populares

Página 216 - Lives of great men all remind us We can make our lives sublime, And, departing, leave behind us, Footprints on the sands of time; Footprints, that perhaps another, Sailing o'er life's solemn main, A forlorn and shipwrecked brother, Seeing, shall take heart again.
Página 160 - Yet I doubt not through the ages one increasing purpose runs, And the thoughts of men are widened with the process of the suns.
Página 174 - Wherefore is there a price in the hand of a fool to get wisdom, seeing he hath no heart to it?
Página 138 - Professor of Diseases of Women in the College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, and PAUL F. MUNDE, MD, Professor of Gynecology in the New York Polyclinic. New (sixth) edition, thoroughly revised and rewritten by DR. MUNDE.
Página 302 - ... the smallpox was always present, filling the churchyards with corpses, tormenting with constant fears all whom it had not yet stricken, leaving on those whose lives it spared the hideous traces of its power, turning the babe into a changeling at which the mother shuddered, and making the eyes and cheeks of the betrothed maiden objects of horror to the lover.
Página 143 - It is not only that the pure science of human life may match with the largest of the natural sciences in the complexity of its subject-matter; not only that the living human body is, in both its material and its in-dwelling forces, the most complex thing yet known ; but that in our practical duties this most complex thing is presented to us in an almost infinite multiformity. For in practice we are occupied, not with a type and pattern of the human nature, but with all its varieties in all classes...
Página 68 - cynanche trachealis," or "croup," were frequently recognised in this country at the end of the eighteenth or beginning of the nineteenth century...
Página 290 - ... but at Limerick there was a more determined display of force on the part of both the Nationalists and the police, and several sharp encounters took place between them, ending, however, in nothing more serious than a few broken heads. 28. In the Queen's Bench Division of the High Court of Justice the Archbishop of York appeared personally to show cause against the mandamus of the Civil Court to compel him to accept Dr. Tristram as a member of the Northern Convocation. 29. Lord Hartington and Mr....
Página 184 - Democritus and medicine. Nevertheless, in so far as he, and those who worked before and after him, in the same spirit, ascertained, as matters of experience, that a wound, or a luxation, or a fever, presented such and such symptoms, and that the return of the patient to health was facilitated by such and such measures, they established laws of nature, and began the construction of the science of pathology. All true science begins with empiricism — though all true science is such exactly, in so...
Página 212 - God and the Doctor we alike adore, But only when in danger, not before ; The danger o'er, both are alike requited, God is forgotten, and the Doctor slighted.

Información bibliográfica