Hall's Journal of Health and Miscellany, Volumen21855 |
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Página 13
... feeling in the sufferer . Learn also to move quietly and speak gently in the sick - room . Tread lightly and let your voice be always modulated to a low but distinct , tone . Even the rustling of Nursing the Sick . 13.
... feeling in the sufferer . Learn also to move quietly and speak gently in the sick - room . Tread lightly and let your voice be always modulated to a low but distinct , tone . Even the rustling of Nursing the Sick . 13.
Página 26
... feeling of tiredness about the throat or neck ; most generally it is a dull hurting ; or he finds there is a kind of lumpish feeling in the throat , and he attempts to swallow it away , and it does seem to go down , but it does not stay ...
... feeling of tiredness about the throat or neck ; most generally it is a dull hurting ; or he finds there is a kind of lumpish feeling in the throat , and he attempts to swallow it away , and it does seem to go down , but it does not stay ...
Página 27
... feels it his duty and his interest to do for you the best he can , and he will do it . Do not tell him that if he cures ... feel that you are as green as you suppose him to be . Do not come the pathetic over him , that you have six wives ...
... feels it his duty and his interest to do for you the best he can , and he will do it . Do not tell him that if he cures ... feel that you are as green as you suppose him to be . Do not come the pathetic over him , that you have six wives ...
Página 29
... feels it promptly . A proper use of the voice strengthens the throat , and gives it a capability of resisting disease , just as a judicious use of any other muscles of the body increase their strength and health . But improper use , as ...
... feels it promptly . A proper use of the voice strengthens the throat , and gives it a capability of resisting disease , just as a judicious use of any other muscles of the body increase their strength and health . But improper use , as ...
Página 30
... feel uncomfortably , then what you have eaten , does not agree with you ; you have eaten , either in quantity or quality what your stomach cannot digest . Nine times out of ten , it is the quantity and not the quality , which does the ...
... feel uncomfortably , then what you have eaten , does not agree with you ; you have eaten , either in quantity or quality what your stomach cannot digest . Nine times out of ten , it is the quantity and not the quality , which does the ...
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Términos y frases comunes
Abbott Lawrence allopathy amount appetite argument attention barrel become blood Bodenhamer body Boston bowels bread Bronchitis calomel cause cents cholera Chronic Laryngitis church clergymen cold feet constipation consumption costive cure daily death diarrhoea disease dollars Dyspepsia editor exercise fact feel feet fire FISTULA flour gentleman give GRAHAM'S MAGAZINE half Hall's Journal happy heart human hundred Inhalists Journal of Health keep labor lady laudanum less LITTELL'S LIVING AGE live lungs malaria means Medicated Inhalation medicine ment mind moral morning multitude nature never observation once opium paper patient persons physician poison practice present principles published reader remedy riences sick skin sleep stomach success swallow symptoms things thousand throat Throat-Ail tion treatment truth whole wife WILLIAM ROSS WALLACE York young
Pasajes populares
Página 67 - For all flesh is as grass, and all the glory of man as the flower of grass. The grass withereth, and the flower thereof falleth away : but the word of the Lord endureth for ever. And this is the word which by the gospel is preached unto you.
Página 240 - Here lie the bodies of Thomas Bond and Mary his wife. She was temperate, chaste, and charitable. But She was proud, peevish, and passionate. She was an affectionate wife and a tender mother, But Her husband and child, whom she loved, seldom saw her countenance without a disgusting frown ; Whilst she received visitors whom she despised with an endearing smile. Her behaviour was discreet towards strangers, But Imprudent in her family.
Página 256 - ... expenditure, the brain withers — this is insanity. Thus it is, that in early English history, persons who were condemned to death by being prevented from sleeping, always died raving maniacs; thus it is also, that those who are starved to death become insane ; the brain is not nourished, and they cannot sleep.
Página 257 - Give yourself, your children, your servants — give all that are under you, the fullest amount of sleep they will take, by compelling them to go to bed at some regular, early hour, and to rise in the morning the moment they awake...
Página 42 - ... to the latter ; it teaches a man how to set his house in order, and how to make his will ; it appoints a dowry for...
Página 71 - ... sun-gilt clouds piled up in a deep azure sky, and its gusts of tempest of almost tropical grandeur, when the forked lightning and the bellowing thunder volley from the battlements of heaven and shake the sultry atmosphere, — and the sublime melancholy of our autumn, magnificent in its decay, withering down the pomp and pride of a woodland country, yet reflecting back from its yellow forests the golden serenity of the sky ! — surely we may say that in our climate, " The heavens declare the...
Página 37 - I counted the perspiratory pores on the palm of the hand, and found 3,528 in a square inch. Now, each of these pores being the aperture of a little tube of about a quarter of an inch long, it follows that in a square inch of skin on the palm of the hand, there exists a length of tube equal to 882 inches, or 73£ feet.
Página 70 - And here let me say a word in favor of those vicissitudes which are too often made the subject of exclusive repining. If they annoy us occasionally by changes from hot to cold, from wet to dry, they give us one of the most beautiful climates in the world. They give us the brilliant sunshine of the south of Europe, with the fresh verdure of the north. They float our summer sky with clouds of gorgeous tints or fleecy whiteness, and send down cooling showers to refresh the panting earth and keep it...
Página 71 - ... fleecy whiteness, and send down cooling showers to refresh the panting earth and keep it green. Our seasons are all poetical ; the phenomena of our heavens are full of sublimity and beauty. Winter with us has none of its proverbial gloom. It may have its howling winds, and chilling frosts, and whirling snow-storms ; but it has also its long intervals of cloudless sunshine, when the snow-clad earth gives redoubled brightness to the day...
Página 241 - Nov. 28th 1768, in the 54th year of his age. WILLIAM BOND, Brother to the deceased, erected this stone as a weekly monitor to the surviving wives of this parish, that they may avoid the infamy of having their memories handed down to posterity with a patch-work character.