Edinburgh Medical Journal, Volume 38,Parte 2

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Y. J. Pentland., 1893
 

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Página 959 - And forever and forever, As long as the river flows, As long as the heart has passions, As long as life has woes ; The moon and its broken reflection And its shadows shall appear, As the symbol of love in heaven, And its wavering image here.
Página 1145 - Illustrated Encyclopaedic Medical Dictionary : Being a Dictionary of the Technical Terms used by Writers on Medicine and the Collateral Sciences in the Latin, English, French, and German Languages.
Página 1176 - CROCKER. Diseases of the Skin. Their Description, Pathology, Diagnosis, and Treatment, with Special Reference to the Skin Eruptions of Children. 92 Illus. 3d Edition. Preparing. IMPEY. Leprosy. 37 Plates. 8vo. $3.50 SCHAMBERG. Diseases of the Skin.
Página 1095 - Hardly any faculty is more important for the intellectual progress of man than Attention. Animals clearly manifest this power, as when a cat watches by a hole and prepares to spring on its prey. Wild animals sometimes become so absorbed when thus engaged that they may be easily approached. Mr. Bartlett has given me a curious proof how variable this faculty is in monkeys. A man who trains monkeys to act in plays used to purchase common kinds from the Zoological Society at the...
Página 1095 - A man who trains monkeys to act used to purchase common kinds from the Zoological Society at the price of five pounds for each ; but he offered to give double the price, if he might keep three or four of them for a few days, in order to select one. When asked how he could possibly so soon learn whether a particular monkey would turn out a good actor, he answered that it all depended on their power of attention.
Página 909 - A country may be overrun by an armed host, but it is only conquered by the establishment of fortresses. Words are the fortresses of thought. They enable us to realize our dominion over what we have already overrun in thought; to make every intellectual conquest the basis of operations for others still beyond.
Página 909 - ... without these subsidiaries, neither process could be carried on beyond its rudimentary commencement. Though, therefore, we allow that every movement forward in language must be determined by an antecedent movement forward in thought ; still, unless thought be accompanied at each point of its evolution, by a corresponding evolution of language, its further development is arrested.
Página 593 - MD, Professor of Midwifery and the Diseases of Women and Children in the University of Pennsylvania, &c.
Página 694 - ... its history. 1. Precocious menstruation with an early appearance of the external manifestations of puberty. 2. Sexual development without menstruation. 3. Menstruation previous to development of the sexual organs. 4. Early conception and pregnancy. 5. Premature sexual development associated with tumours of the generative organs. 1. One of the most striking cases illustrative of this group is the oft quoted one of De Beau recorded in the American Medical Journal, vol.
Página 785 - ... according to the judgment of the Royal Academy of Sciences of Turin, shall have made the most important and useful discovery, or published the most valuable work on physical and experimental science, natural history, mathematics, chemistry, physiology, and pathology, as well as geology, history, geography, and statistics.

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