The Doctor's Window: Poems by the Doctor, for the Doctor, and about the DoctorIna Russelle Warren C.W. Moulton, 1897 - 288 psl. |
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8 psl.
... Dream . Anonymous 275 DOCTOR DROllhead's CurE THE DOCTOR . . LINES TO A Skeleton OULD DOCTHER MACK . APPENDICITIS LIST OF AUTHORS Anonymous 277 Anonymous 278 • • Anonymous • 279 • • Anonymous 280 • • Anonymous • · • 282 • 283 285 287 ...
... Dream . Anonymous 275 DOCTOR DROllhead's CurE THE DOCTOR . . LINES TO A Skeleton OULD DOCTHER MACK . APPENDICITIS LIST OF AUTHORS Anonymous 277 Anonymous 278 • • Anonymous • 279 • • Anonymous 280 • • Anonymous • · • 282 • 283 285 287 ...
9 psl.
... Dream . ELL , I must wait ! " The Doctor's room , Where I used this expression , Below , the Doctor's garden lay . If thus imagination. OSTON MEDICAL JAN 26 1927 LIBRARY IN THREE ACTS , WITH A PROLOGUE . PROLOGUE W Wore the severe ...
... Dream . ELL , I must wait ! " The Doctor's room , Where I used this expression , Below , the Doctor's garden lay . If thus imagination. OSTON MEDICAL JAN 26 1927 LIBRARY IN THREE ACTS , WITH A PROLOGUE . PROLOGUE W Wore the severe ...
28 psl.
... dreams . Lifeless , wasted arm and hand Stripped of skin by scalpel keen ; Shining tendons , band on band Ligaments and muscles seen . Wondrously the fingers move , Answering to the testing touch Of each muscle far above , Whilst the ...
... dreams . Lifeless , wasted arm and hand Stripped of skin by scalpel keen ; Shining tendons , band on band Ligaments and muscles seen . Wondrously the fingers move , Answering to the testing touch Of each muscle far above , Whilst the ...
55 psl.
... dream , if you're ill , for this doctor to send , For certainly on you he will not attend . Whatever your malady , be well assured , You must not seek HIM , if you want to be cured . Should he , like a common hack doctor , go round-- He ...
... dream , if you're ill , for this doctor to send , For certainly on you he will not attend . Whatever your malady , be well assured , You must not seek HIM , if you want to be cured . Should he , like a common hack doctor , go round-- He ...
62 psl.
... dream of unseating ME - me , sir , the Mayor ! Then back With your bottles and drugs to the wilds of Dahomy , There practice at ease , on fresh corpse or old mummy , With nothing to fear , But only not here , So ! out of the town with ...
... dream of unseating ME - me , sir , the Mayor ! Then back With your bottles and drugs to the wilds of Dahomy , There practice at ease , on fresh corpse or old mummy , With nothing to fear , But only not here , So ! out of the town with ...
Kiti leidimai - Peržiūrėti viską
The Doctor's Window– Poems by the Doctor, for the Doctor, and about the Doctor Ina Russelle Warren Visos knygos peržiūra - 1897 |
The Doctor's Window: Poems by the Doctor for the Doctor and about the Dctor Ina Russelle Warren Peržiūra negalima - 2019 |
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
ailing ARTE MEDENDI AUDI ALTERAM PARTEM bless blister blood Bolus bones bright Calomel chyle country doctor cure dead dear death disease Doctor Bonomi Doctor Munroe DOCTOR'S WINDOW dose dream eyes face fair fame fear fever FRANCIS SALTUS SALTUS gave gentle give Gout grave hand head healing heart honor hour jalap knew knife learned life's light lips live look Marshal Saxe medicine mighty nerves never night numbers o'er old Doctor old oaken bucket OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES once oxymel pain pale patient physician pills pity pneumogastric nerve poor praise pulse quack Rip Van Winkle round sick sigh skill sleep smile soul strife surgeon sweet SYDNEY DOBELL tell thar thee There's thet things thou thought Tol de rol Twas
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282 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.
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256 psl. - BEHOLD me waiting — waiting for the knife. A little while, and at a leap I storm The thick, sweet mystery of chloroform, The drunken dark, the little death-in-life. The gods are good to me: I have no wife, No innocent child, to think of as I near The fateful minute; nothing ail-too dear Unmans me for my bout of passive strife.
260 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,...
80 psl. - twas dearer to its first employer ! I thought mortality did well to keep Some mute memento of the Old Destroyer. Time was, some may have prized its blooming skin ; Here lips were woo'd, perhaps, in transport tender ; Some may have chuck'd what was a dimpled chin, And never had my doubt about its gender. Did she live yesterday or ages back ? What...
282 psl. - Twas a skull Once of ethereal spirit full. This narrow cell was Life's retreat: This space was Thought's mysterious seat. What beauteous visions filled this spot! What dreams of pleasure long forgot! Nor hope, nor joy, nor love, nor fear Have left one trace of record here. Beneath this moldering canopy Once shone the bright and busy eye; But start not at the dismal void. If social love that eye employed...