The Doctor's windowCharles Wells Moulton, 1897 - 288 psl. |
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6 psl.
... YOUNG PHYSICIAN DOCTOR DAN'S SECRET THE BLUSH .. BEN KING . . 107 110 · Dr. George Chismore 111 • · • Dr. Edward Jenner 112 · Rebecca Morrow Reaves · . 113 . Thomas William Parsons Stuart Cameron Miles Tyler Frisbie John Greenleaf ...
... YOUNG PHYSICIAN DOCTOR DAN'S SECRET THE BLUSH .. BEN KING . . 107 110 · Dr. George Chismore 111 • · • Dr. Edward Jenner 112 · Rebecca Morrow Reaves · . 113 . Thomas William Parsons Stuart Cameron Miles Tyler Frisbie John Greenleaf ...
7 psl.
... YOUNG DOCTOR'S APOLOGY FOR THE SMOOTHNESS OF HIS FACE THE SKELETON SYNONYMES THE DRUG CLERK GRANNY'S " YARBS " THE DOCTOR IN LOVE PEACE BORN OF PAIN ODE TO DYSPEPSIA THE CONSULTATION • • Eugene Field . . · Dr. William Tod Helmuth . 152 ...
... YOUNG DOCTOR'S APOLOGY FOR THE SMOOTHNESS OF HIS FACE THE SKELETON SYNONYMES THE DRUG CLERK GRANNY'S " YARBS " THE DOCTOR IN LOVE PEACE BORN OF PAIN ODE TO DYSPEPSIA THE CONSULTATION • • Eugene Field . . · Dr. William Tod Helmuth . 152 ...
8 psl.
... YOUNG MEDIC AND THE OLD THE PHYSICIAN'S HYMN Dr. S. F. Bennett Charles H. Crandall Dr. W. J. Bell . Charles Wesley . J. William Lloyd Absalom B. Salom • 242 • · 244 • • 246 247 . 249 250 • • William Ernest Henley . 251 • THE NEW Doctor ...
... YOUNG MEDIC AND THE OLD THE PHYSICIAN'S HYMN Dr. S. F. Bennett Charles H. Crandall Dr. W. J. Bell . Charles Wesley . J. William Lloyd Absalom B. Salom • 242 • · 244 • • 246 247 . 249 250 • • William Ernest Henley . 251 • THE NEW Doctor ...
9 psl.
... young Pyramus , And his love Thisbe ; very tragical mirth . " Midsummer - Night's Dream . PROLOGUE ELL , I must wait ! " The Doctor's room , Where I used this expression , W Wore the severe official gloom Attached to that profession ...
... young Pyramus , And his love Thisbe ; very tragical mirth . " Midsummer - Night's Dream . PROLOGUE ELL , I must wait ! " The Doctor's room , Where I used this expression , W Wore the severe official gloom Attached to that profession ...
31 psl.
... young men , whose eager minds are burning With lore all medical , received at college . I thought that I could all diseases cure , Could dish out medicines for aches and ills , That no one need a single pang endure If I stood by with ...
... young men , whose eager minds are burning With lore all medical , received at college . I thought that I could all diseases cure , Could dish out medicines for aches and ills , That no one need a single pang endure If I stood by with ...
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
ailing apex cordis babe bless blister blood Bolus bones breath bright brow calomel Caroline Ingalls chyle country doctor cure dead dear death disease dose draught dream earth ease eyes face fair fame fear feel fever FRANCIS Saltus SaltuS gentle give Gout grace grave hand head healing heart Heaven Hippocrates honor hour jalap kind knew knife light live look mighty mind nerves never night numbers o'er old Doctor old oaken bucket OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES once oxymel pain patient physician pills pity pneumogastric nerve poor potions praise quack Rip Van Winkle round shrunken bone sick sigh skill sleep smile soul strife surgeon sweet SYDNEY DOBELL tell thar thee There's thet things thou thought Twas wine
Populiarios ištraukos
272 psl. - Can little now avail to them ; But if the page of truth they sought, Or comfort to the mourner brought, These hands a richer meed shall claim Than all that wait on wealth or fame.
118 psl. - Not far from that most celebrated place,* Where angry Justice shows her awful face ; Where little villains must submit to fate, That great ones may enjoy the world in state; There stands a dome, majestic to the sight, And sumptuous arches bear its oval height ; A golden globe, placed high with artful skill, Seems, to the distant sight, a gilded pill.
178 psl. - The tower that long had stood the crush of thunder and the warring winds, shook by the slow but sure destroyer time, now hangs in doubtful ruins o'er its base ; and flinty pyramids and walls of brass descend: — the Babylonian spires are sunk; Achaia, Rome and Egypt moulder down. Time shakes the stable tyranny of thrones, and tottering empires crush by their own weight. This huge rotundity we tread grows old and all those worlds that roll around the sun; the sun himself shall die ; and ancient night...
178 psl. - What does not fade ? The tower that long had stood The crush of thunder and the warring winds, Shook by the slow but sure destroyer Time, Now hangs in doubtful ruins o'er its base.
258 psl. - In and out among the cotton, Mud, and chains, and stores, and anchors, Tramped a squad of battered scarecrows — Poor old Dixie's bottom dollar ! ' Some had shoes, but all had rifles, Them that wasn't bald was beardless, And the drum was rolling Dixie...
20 psl. - re not Agassiz, and he 's not a fish. And last, not least, in each perplexing case, Learn the sweet magic of a cheerful face ; Not always smiling, but at least serene, When grief and anguish cloud the anxious scene. Each look, each movement, every word and...
74 psl. - He had a patient lying at death's door, some three miles from the town — it might be four ; to whom one evening Bolus sent an article, in pharmacy that's called cathartical ; and on the label of the stuff, he wrote this verse (which one would think was clear enough, and terse) "When taken; to be well shaken.
75 psl. - Bolus said. John shook his head. " Indeed? — hum! — ha! — that's very odd, He took the draught?" — John gave a nod! " Well — how? — What then? — Speak out, you dunce! " Why then," says John, " we shook him once." " Shook him! — how?" Bolus stammer'd out. " We jolted him about." " Zounds! shake a patient, man — a shake wont do." " No, sir — and so we gave him two.
193 psl. - With what anguish of mind I remember my childhood, Recalled in the light of a knowledge since gained ; The malarious farm, the wet, fungus-grown wild-wood ; The chills then contracted that since have remained ; The scum-covered...
250 psl. - SOME three, or five, or seven, and thirty years; A Roman nose ; a dimpling double-chin; Dark eyes and shy that, ignorant of sin, Are yet acquainted, it would seem, with tears ; A comely shape ; a slim, high-coloured hand, Graced, rather oddly, with a signet ring ; A bashful air, becoming everything ; A well-bred silence always at command. Her plain print gown, prim cap, and bright steel chain Look out of place on her, and I remain Absorbed in her, as in a pleasant mystery. Quick, skilful, quiet,...