The History of Tom Jones: A Foundling, Volumen3A. Millar, 1749 |
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Página 101
... Surgeon . These Commands , together with the Drawer's Report of what he had himself seen , not only produced the Soldiers , but presently drew up the Landlord of the Houfe , his Wife and Servants , and , indeed , every one elfe , who ...
... Surgeon . These Commands , together with the Drawer's Report of what he had himself seen , not only produced the Soldiers , but presently drew up the Landlord of the Houfe , his Wife and Servants , and , indeed , every one elfe , who ...
Página 104
... Surgeon , having viewed the Wound , having en his Head , and blamed every Thing was done , ordered his Patient in- ftan Iy to Bed ; in which Place , we think proper to leave him , fome Time , to his POfe , and ' fhall here , therefore ...
... Surgeon , having viewed the Wound , having en his Head , and blamed every Thing was done , ordered his Patient in- ftan Iy to Bed ; in which Place , we think proper to leave him , fome Time , to his POfe , and ' fhall here , therefore ...
Página 105
... Surgeon , and the folid Skill in Cafuiftry of the war- thy Lieutenant . W HEN the wounded Man was car- ried to his Bed , and the House began again to clear up from the Hurry which this Accident had occafioned ; the Landlady thus ...
... Surgeon , and the folid Skill in Cafuiftry of the war- thy Lieutenant . W HEN the wounded Man was car- ried to his Bed , and the House began again to clear up from the Hurry which this Accident had occafioned ; the Landlady thus ...
Página 108
... Surgeon entered the Room . The Lieutenant immediately asked how his Pa- tient did ? But he refolved him only by faying , Better , I believe , than he would have been by this Time , if I had not £ been called ; and even as it is ...
... Surgeon entered the Room . The Lieutenant immediately asked how his Pa- tient did ? But he refolved him only by faying , Better , I believe , than he would have been by this Time , if I had not £ been called ; and even as it is ...
Página 109
... Surgeon , • Fractures are not always the most dangerous Symp- toms . Contufions and Lacerations are ⚫ often attended with worfe Phænomena , and with more fatal Confequences than Fractures . People who know nothing of the Matter ...
... Surgeon , • Fractures are not always the most dangerous Symp- toms . Contufions and Lacerations are ⚫ often attended with worfe Phænomena , and with more fatal Confequences than Fractures . People who know nothing of the Matter ...
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Términos y frases comunes
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Pasajes populares
Página 311 - Nor will all the qualities I have hitherto given my historian avail him, unless he have what is generally meant by a good heart, and be capable of feeling.
Página 311 - In reality, no man can paint a distress well which he doth not feel while he is painting it; nor do I doubt but that the most pathetic and affecting scenes have been writ with tears. In the same manner it is with the ridiculous. I am convinced I never make my reader laugh heartily but where I have laughed before him...
Página 144 - As we have no public notoriety, no concurrent testimony, no records to support and corroborate what we deliver, it becomes us to keep within the limits not only of possibility, but of probability too ; and this more especially in painting what is greatly good and amiable.
Página 150 - The great art of all poetry is to mix truth with fiction, in order to join the credible with the surprising.