Questions

This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.

identifier question
36926Is there not then some great gulf fixed between us and the good God?"
36926Then something happened-- how, who can tell?
36926Who made him dead to rapture and despair, A thing that grieves not and that never hopes, Stolid and stunned, a brother to the ox?
43300And what its_ size_?
43300Art sick from vinous surfeiting at night?
43300How_ often_?
43300They mowe use grete wyne and the fflessch of calvys that ben soowkynge and also of all ffowlys saff thoo that ben of the lakys and dichys[ dykes?]
43300To the weche it is to know that ther is nothynge more profytablere therefore thane to use glysteryes of malowys, mercurye[ cheno- podium?]
43300_ When_ the meal?
43300_ Where?_ lest, by some sad mistake, Ill- sorted things should meet and trouble make.
28390A white clay proved useful in treating the fevers( the clay of the Indians used for"sicknesse and paine of the belly"?
28390How many of the graves now at Jamestown must have been dug during that terrible winter?
28390Likewise, what is the use of narcoticks and sleeping medicines?
28390and by what passages medicines come to there?
28390and in what vein, those things ought to be done?
28390and what caution is to be observed in them?
28390in what persons?
28390what is the position and site of the internal places?
28390what is the use of clysters, what kind of vomits, the danger, kind and measure?
28390with what medicine?
46727100(?
4672750(?).--Eclecticism.
46727But on second thought he returned to the study of medicine, asking:''Can anything be done to make operations less painful?''
46727But what now is to be said of the condition of dentistry to- day?
46727Celsus, A.D. 1- 65(?).
46727Is it strange that homoeopathy or any other heterodox system sprang up in the midst of such measures?
46727John of Gaddesden, 1305--(?).
46727Now, what led to this sudden awakening?
46727The Four Masters, 1270(?).
46727This reminds one of that famous response in the school of the Middle Ages to a question:"Why does opium produce sleep?"
46727Was it chance, or the effect of certain causes which had long been operating''?
46664Item, I give to the poor of Christ Hospital[? 46664 ''How can it be,''said he,''whilst the Commonwealth is full of distractions, and I myself am still in the open sea? 46664 And how again are the eggs of sea and land tortoises, of fishes, silkworms, serpents, and even ostriches to be chipped? 46664 And if, as ministers of man, they effect such admirable ends, what I ask may we not expect of them, when they are instruments in the hand of God? 46664 And what did I find? 46664 Are any remains of Harvey left in the sarcophagus? 46664 Doctor Harvey being called to the patient did upon his view of the patient say, that by means of a boulster[ poultice?] 46664 I forthwith saluted him and asked if all were well with him? 46664 In like manner what does not fire accomplish? 46664 In the second day''s lecture the parlour[_ i.e._, the thorax?]. 33155 Now, Sir, how beats your Pulse? 33155 O ho, did you so? 33155 What a Difference then between a sober and an intemperate Life? 33155 _ Homine semi docto quid iniquius?_ and that a great Part of the Apothecaries are very illiterate! 33155 or the Marriage- Bed changed the first Night into a Sepulchre, and the unhappy Pair meet with Death in the first Embraces? 747 ( excrescences) of flesh( skin) hanging on the head, there shall be ill- will, the house will perish;( 53) that has some formed fingers( horns?) 747 ), absence of penis and umbilicus( epispadias and exomphalos? 747 ), and if it is so with facts, what must be the effect upon reports based upon no fact whatsoever? 747 32- 36), consisting of absence of the penis( epispadias? 747 Can anyone suggest the name, etc., of this helminth?
747How comes it that nowadays, by a reversal of things, the tender body of a little babe has limbs nearer akin to stone?"
747In his''Roman Questions''Plutarch asks:''Why do the Latins abstain strictly from the flesh of the woodpecker?''
747May this not explain its therapeutic action in this disease?
747Now, then, I was again happy; I took only a thousand drops of Laudanum per day, and what was that?
747She said:"Do you take me for an old sow?"
747The author asked if in this case we have to do with a latent leprosy which was evoked by the wound, or if it were a case of inoculation from the fish?
747The interspace between the thoraces may, however, have simply been the addition of the first artist who portrayed the Maids( from imagination?
20216He continues:"How many testimonies of this violence which is in love, are daily found?
20216Was Luke mistaken about the kind of snake which he saw?
20216Was either complete?
20216What is the purpose of man?
20216Which view was right and which was wrong?
20216Why are not the calves on the anterior portion of the legs?
20216Why are the breasts not on the abdomen?
20216Why does no hair grow on the nose of men?
20216Why does the stomach not lie behind the mouth?
20216Why does the windpipe not lie behind the esophagus?
18530''Does your watch blow open?'' 18530 People have often come to me and said casually,''Oh yes, Dr. Inglis was a very charming woman, was n''t she?''
18530''But our faces, the faces of the human race, have always been set towards the millennium, have n''t they?
18530And what are they all but the varied expressions of the One Divine Mind, of the Endless Life of God?
18530Had the impossible been accomplished?
18530If not, why?
18530It found, however, Scotch expression, shall we say?
18530Was the country really so very beautiful, or was it the contrast to all the misery that made it evident?
18530What made her passing so mighty and full of triumph?
18530Whence came the inspiration of the great soul who was founder of this monument?
18530Where did it come from?
18530Who had failed in performance?
18530Will they be content with a solution along lines that can only be called a second best?
18530Will they fail us?
35477Müller made mistakes, but then who ever fails to make mistakes in the face of nature? 35477 What can be the causes of so great a difference?"
35477First, ask yourselves, What have I done for my education?
35477Is it by the demand for class legislation?
35477Is not this very shocking?
35477Must I then defend Galvani in the eyes of posterity for one of the most beautiful sentiments that can spring from the nature of man?
35477Then, as you advance in life, What have I done for my country?
35477What is the object of your ambition?"
35477{ 195}"Is it by public agitation and remonstrances addressed to deaf or unwilling ears that these medical abuses are to be corrected?
39514Dr. Kerr, losing patience, said,"Can you not use the thermometer your Maker has put in your inside, and put on clothes when you are cold?"
39514Jesus cometh unto him and saith,"Peter, what aileth thee?"
39514May this narrow spot inurn Aught that could so beat and burn?"
39514The doctor''s Shakespearian reply was,"Do you think I am such a fool as to take physic?"
39514The traveller, as he paceth amazedly through those deserts, asketh of her, who builded them?
39514What is more distressing, both to patient and nurse, than whooping cough, or king- cough, as it is sometimes called?
39514What manner of man was this paragon of medical knowledge?
39514Who can that be, said my father?
39514Who cares that the author of that classic"Religio Medici"took his degrees at Leyden and at Oxford, and dispensed medicine to the end of his life?
39514Who cares that the author of"The Borough,""Tales in Verse,"and"The Parish Register,"was apprenticed to a surgeon?
39514Who cares that the writer of such dramas as"Virginius,""William Tell,"and"The Hunchback,"was trained for a physician?
39514_ Macduff._ What''s the disease he means?
39514and liest thou here?
39514sigh for the toothache?
39514sir, are we going to the bottom?"
5069ARE DOCTORS MEN OF SCIENCE?
5069After all, what harm is there in it?
5069Again, has the silliest burglar ever pretended that to put a stop to burglary is to put a stop to industry?
5069And what other men dare pretend to be impartial where they have a strong pecuniary interest on one side?
5069Are humane methods really to be preferred to cruel ones?
5069But the question remains: Do we all really wish to be spared that knowledge?
5069Could he not write as well-- or even better-- on one leg than on two?
5069Even if the experiments come to nothing, may not their cruelty be enjoyed for its own sake, as a sensational luxury?
5069If you come to that, what is laisser- faire but an orthodoxy?
5069Is any sick among you?
5069Not even if I have a chance of finding out how to cure cancer by doing it?"
5069THE PUBLIC DOCTOR What then is to be done?
5069The murderer who, when asked by the chaplain whether he had any other crimes to confess, replied indignantly,"What do you take me for?"
5069Then note the symptoms of a vivisector performing a cruel experiment; and compare them with the voluptuary symptoms and the mathematical symptoms?
5069What else can he do, except confess his ignorance and starve?
5069When a man says to Society,"May I torture my mother in pursuit of knowledge?"
5069When you have done that over and over again every day for a week, how much scientific conscience have you left?
5069Why not perform a careful series of experiments on persons under the influence of voluptuous ecstasy, so as to ascertain its physiological symptoms?
5069Why not test the diagnosis scientifically?
1566And what will he make of you?
1566Does your skin roughen without baths? 1566 How came it possible that the gifts of Athens and of Alexandria were deliberately thrown away? 1566 How did it arise among the peoples of the AEgean Sea? 1566 May not man be the radium of the Universe? 1566 Pat as a sum in division it goes--( Every plant had a star bespoke)-- Who but Venus should govern the Rose? 1566 The necessary knowledge existed, but under the circumstances could it be made effective? 1566 The question they asked about each writer was,Does he help to make better men?"
1566The reproduction which I show you here is from the"Epitome"--a smaller work issued before(?)
1566What could be more correct than this account of angina pectoris-- probably the first in the literature?
1566What is his record?
1566What of this Genius?
1566Which of you now knows the"Cellular Pathology"as we did?
1566Who but Jupiter own the Oak?
1566Who can say?
1566Why do we hold his name in reverence today?
1566and was anyone else ever known to be cured by him whether slave or freeman?
1566how would you have answered?"
1566or"Does he make life a better thing?"
47343And as for fame, what is it?
47343And now, what of the discoverers?
47343And what, of all this, it may be asked, do we now see?
47343But how could the disease germs make their way to the surface from a depth of eight or ten feet?
47343But was he secure against the contagion of small- pox?
47343How few persons can cite instances among their acquaintance of those who have died of small- pox after having been properly vaccinated?
47343If so, how has this been brought about, and by what means can it be restored?
47343Is it not a rare thing to meet a person whose face is scarred and his features deformed by small- pox?
47343Is this parasite present in the air or water in such localities as well as in the bodies of infected mosquitoes?
47343Must we again revert to the cow for a new supply?
47343So far a summary of Pasteur''s personal life and scientific work, but is it not possible to make a more general and rational estimate of these?
47343THE ART OF PROLONGING LIFE What is the natural term of life?
47343Was it really so?
47343While avoiding controversy and partisanship as far as may be, the question remains, What did Pasteur do in regard to hydrophobia?
47343[ 1] What did time bring to those who brought so great happiness to mankind?
58454Do you think so?
58454I hear,said he,"that you have asked to give evidence before the Select Committee; pray, what are you going to state?"
58454Indeed,I said,"is it usual for the gentleman to buy his future wife''s underclothing?"
58454Just so,I said,"but how have you managed to get all these things so exactly arranged as to size?"
58454Nonsense,I said;"how can you get a diploma from the College of Surgeons?"
58454Oh, then,I said,"the Chairman does not find you your dinner even; does he give you any beer or any money?"
58454Out of prison,I replied;"why, how could he have got into a prison?
58454What did they say to you?
58454Yes, my lord,I replied;"I hope, however, you do not think I have done wrong in giving the evidence I did?"
58454After ascertaining the nature of the case, which was one of colicky diarrhoea, I asked,"Well, what do you here?"
58454Are these complaints to be disregarded?
58454But he reckoned without his host, for when did the military ever recognize the civil power?
58454From that what good has not flowed?
58454He had written,"What does this d----d fellow mean by calling me''only a schoolmaster''?"
58454I asked,"Have you seen the master or matron?"
58454If done consciously and by premeditation, as the verdict would suppose, I would ask, Where could be the gain?
58454It may be asked, What are the police to do with persons who allege that they are ill?
58454It may be here said, If you had not confidence in your nurses, why did you not get rid of them?
58454J. Wallis, to state that he seemed perfectly void of shame and remorse; nay, asserting that he was an injured person by being put in prison''?
58454Now, it may be asked, How was the large sum of £ 1,500 got rid of in but little over eight months?
58454On the clerk''s letter being read the question was asked,''Should the usual reply be sent?''
58454To the further inquiry,"What have you got there?"
58454To the inquiry,"Who sent you?"
58454To which he rather angrily replied,"You speak to me like that, when I am an Inspector, and you only a Workhouse medical officer?"
58454Why?
58454With that, he pulled me into the centre of the ward, and giving me a friendly nudge of the ribs, laughingly said,"What do you imagine is Number Two?
16155He whose eyes are large and tremulous is lazy and a braggart(_ spaciosus?_), and fond of women.
16155Why are objects seen in their proper position?
16155Why do objects in water seem nearer than those in air?
16155Why do some animals see best objects at a distance, others those near at hand?
16155Why does not a single object appear double, inasmuch as we have two eyes?
16155_ Utrum color fit de nocte?_Does color exist at night?
16155_ Utrum color fit de nocte?_Does color exist at night?
16155After the ninth day a_ strictura_( cast, apparatus immobile?)
16155Again:"Why do some animals see at night, some in the day only and some only in the twilight?"
16155Flexion and extension of the joint are then to be practised three or four times( to assure complete reduction?
16155Gilbert continues:"I will tell you also what I myself saw in a woman suffering and screaming with pain in her right wrist(_ assuere_?
16155Gilbert tells us the siphac is sometimes relaxed, sometimes ruptured(_ crepatur_?)
16155He also says( f. 183a), the application of a dry cup(_ cuffa vero cum igne_?)
16155He says it often occurs from fracture(_ cassatura_?)
16155If the patient is a boy, cakes(_ crispelle_?)
16155If, however, it is found that swelling is occasioned by the cast(_ ex strictorio_?
16155Is this a reference to the septic parotitis not unfrequently seen in low fevers?
16155Now to which of these Ricardi does the eulogistic language of Gilbert refer?
16155Now, what precisely is Gilbert''s Compendium designed to be?
16155Once, while treating a man suffering from sanguineous gout, the pain of which involved the joints between the assuerus and the racheta(?)
16155Other physiological speculations are introduced by the questions:"May one see an object not actually present?"
16155Thus:"_ Utrum visus fiat intus suscipiendo?_"Is vision accomplished by something received into the eye?
16155Thus:"_ Utrum visus fiat intus suscipiendo?_"Is vision accomplished by something received into the eye?
16155ounce I. Opii, Misconis(, poppy juice?
58862Above all, do the French physicians advise bleeding in fevers?
58862And are we not led hereby to an animating view of the extent and power of medicine?
58862And how rarely do we see it accompany the extreme debility of old age?"
58862But when, and where, will science, humanity, and government first combine to accomplish this salutary purpose?
58862Did the oil, in these cases, act by destroying miasmata in the stomach chemically?
58862Do the French love soups?
58862Do the French love their meats well cooked?
58862Do the French physicians prescribe purges and glysters to cleanse the bowels?
58862Do the French sip coffee after dinner?
58862It has been asked again, why do not the putrid matters which produce the yellow fever in some years produce it_ every_ year?
58862It has been asked further, why were not these bilious malignant fevers more common before the years 1791, 1792, and 1793?
58862The contagions of the small- pox and measles consist of matter, and yet who has ever discovered this matter in the air?
58862What do people say now of the origin of the disease?
58862What quantity of blood may be taken, with safety, from a patient in an inflammatory fever?
58862Who ever heard of dropsy succeeding famine?
58862Who ever leaves off giving purges in a colic, attended with costiveness, before the bowels are opened?
58862Why should not blood- letting be used in the same way, and have the same chance of doing good?
58862or did it defend the stomach mechanically from their action?
58862or did it prevent the disease, only by gently opening the bowels?
58862or who lays aside mercury as a useless medicine, because a few doses of it do not cure the venereal disease?
15004Am I becoming insane? 15004 And how do you know that?"
15004And now she asks that other question,"I have daughters who are yet young, but how shall I guard them against nervousness?"
15004And what does he advise?
15004But of what use are these stern lessonings in the bearing of what none can quite escape?
15004Do they enable us to diminish pain or to feel it less?
15004Does he really want to know?
15004Does it accentuate pain and grief by simply dwelling on it with barren words?
15004Does it aid you to see clearly and to bear patiently?
15004Does it help you over the hard places?
15004Does it leave you feebler with mere pity?
15004Does it truly nourish character, and tenderly but, firmly set you where you can gain a larger view of the uses of pain and distress?
15004Had not one, nay, two, a novel to themselves?
15004How can he be that?
15004How can he be too prudent or too close- mouthed?
15004How can he see her suffer and not give her of the abundance of relief in his hands?
15004How can you answer?
15004How did that great mistress of her art learn all of physicians which enabled her to leave us this amazingly truthful picture?
15004I turn now to the mother who asks this question, and say,"What of your boys?
15004In the tender- hearted?
15004Is this due to an increase in the disorders which are eased by such drugs?
15004Let us suppose, however, that, soon or late, she is doing, in a merely medical way, all that he insists upon, what more can she do for herself?
15004Once well again, she asks you,--and the query is common enough from the thoughtful,--"What can I do to keep my girls from being nervous?"
15004Should one go to law about it and test the matter of ultimate responsibility?
15004The general feeling( shall I say prejudices?)
15004What can I do to overcome it?"
15004What caused all this trouble?
15004What does she mean by nervousness, and what does it do with her which makes it so unpleasant?
15004What made her, as she says, good for nothing?
15004What shall you do with this morbid, scared, obstinate child- man?
15004Why are you not concerned as to them?"
15004Why not have made it croton oil?
15004Will I end in an asylum?"
29307Having made a section of the frontal sinus,[ with a trephine?] 29307 ( Sulphate of_ rhubarbin._?) 29307 ( Where was the redness situated; in the peritoneal or the muscular coat? 29307 11, Does the conjunctiva run over the Cornea? 29307 And has magnetism been the occasion of any therapeutical discovery any where? 29307 But whence came the vaginal discharge? 29307 But, if not, why the pain and spasms which preceded it, and the alternation of these symptoms with each other? 29307 Does not cold occasion also ascites, which, in many cases, is regarded by every one as a local disease, sometimes terminating in anasarca? 29307 If so, why shall we regard anasarca, ending in ascites, as a general disease? 29307 If there be any analogy between magnetic and natural somnambulism, ought we to be astonished at the production of the former by certain practices? 29307 In Germany, said he, where magnetism is so much employed, do they cure better than elsewhere? 29307 In the English journal(?) 29307 Is coining words so difficult a task, that we can not find a proper and expressive name for it? 29307 Is there any further evidence wanting? 29307 Might not the womb be taken out above the symphysis pubis, or through the outlet of the pelvis?
29307Morbus enim magnus, vehemens et peracutus; magna quoque requirit remedia: sed quis illa in ore adhibere ausus?"
29307PATHOLOGY, 406 17, Are we followers of Dr. Broussais?
29307ROSTAN,( the ramollissement man, is his head soft too?)
29307The magnetisers conceal nothing, but publish all their proceedings, and do you call these the tactics of jugglers and charlatans?
29307Why do we call the common trunk of the right subclavian and carotid, the arteria innominata?
29307_ Has mercury any agency in producing this affection?_ The salivary glands have never been observed to be affected in it.
29307and, especially, why the slimy appearance, mixed with red matter, without a trace of any thing like coagula?
58861Again: has the body been_ suddenly_ debilitated by labour or exercise?
58861Are convulsions in the nervous system attended with alternate action and remission?
58861Are convulsions in the nervous system preceded by debility?
58861Are nervous convulsions most apt to occur in infancy?
58861Are persons once affected with nervous convulsions frequently subject to them through life?
58861Are there certain grades in the convulsions of the nervous system, as appears in the hydrophobia, tetanus, epilepsy, hysteria, and hypochondriasis?
58861Are there local convulsions in the nervous system, as in the hands, feet, neck, and eye- lids?
58861But is their action always proportioned to the causes which excite them?
58861But is this current proportioned to the loss of the equilibrium of the air?
58861But wherewith shall I come before the great FATHER and REDEEMER of men, and what shall I render unto him for the issue of my life from the grave?
58861But who can apply similar remarks to any one disease?
58861But who can say the same thing of any one disease?
58861But why do I multiply proofs of their deadly effects?
58861Do convulsions go off_ gradually_ from the nervous system, as in tetanus, and chorea sancti viti?
58861Do convulsions go off_ suddenly_ in any cases from the nervous system?
58861Do convulsions in the nervous system impart a jerking sensation to the fingers?
58861Do convulsions in the nervous system return at regular and irregular periods?
58861Do convulsions in the nervous system, under certain circumstances, affect the functions of the brain?
58861Do tremors precede convulsions in the nervous system?
58861Does debility induced on the whole, or on a part only, of the nervous system, predispose to general convulsions, as in tetanus?
58861Does not it show itself plainly in_ fevers_, faintings, palsies, consumptions, and passions of the mind[2]?"
58861Does palsy in some instances succeed to convulsions in the nervous system?
58861Has the body been debilitated by exposure to the cold air?
58861Is a coldness in the extremities a precursor of convulsions in the nervous system?
58861Is the strength of the nervous system increased by convulsions?
58861Is there a rigidity of the muscles in certain nervous diseases, as in catalepsy?
58861Why should it surprise us to see a yellow fever generated amongst us?
58861Why should we hesitate, in like manner, in admitting acute and chronic fever, in all those cases where no local inflammation attends?
34128Did John de Vigo describe Acupressure in the Sixteenth Century?
34128Is the Pyramid at Gizeh a Meteorological Monument?
34128Shall this pitiless and deliberate sacrifice of human life to conditions which are more or less preventable be continued, or arrested? 34128 Was the Roman Army provided with any Medical Officers?"
34128''Doctor,''said he,''I have a dreadful tooth, but it is so sore I can not summon courage to have it pulled; ca n''t you mesmerise me?''
34128According to his wo nt, he headed it with a quotation from Shakspeare:"Why doest thou whet thy knife so earnestly?
34128And now could you trust her future happiness to me under such circumstances?
34128And where his loving soul, his genius bold?
34128At Liége on June 13th he wrote:--"And is it possible that I here begin a second volume of a journal?...
34128Do not these terrible figures plead eloquently and clamantly for a revision and reform of our existing hospital system?"
34128Fifty- nine?
34128He could say, as Jenner said before him,"As for fame, what is it?
34128How could a young man like Simpson equal this?
34128I instantly, in as calm a tone as I could command, asked,''Are you ready to have your tooth extracted?''
34128I would not choose to say that Dr. F.''s case is perfectly analogous, but has it not some analogy?
34128In slumber?
34128Is he not working against Lippi, and it may be against truth, if they happen to go together, which I do not believe?
34128It is said that when in later years an Edinburgh citizen was presented at the Court of Denmark the King remarked,"You come from Edinburgh?
34128Nay, more; sin itself was the result of the Fall; was not the Church herself erroneously labouring to turn mankind from sin?
34128On another occasion he asked,"How old am I?
34128On one occasion he pointed out to some friends the then holder of the Chair, Professor Hamilton, thus:--"Do you see that old gentleman?
34128On what compulsion must I?
34128One of his most valuable writings was upon the subject,"Was the Roman Army provided with Medical Officers?"
34128Or waiting Evolution''s change, unawed?
34128Shall we a later, harder doom rehearse?
34128Should we therefore never allay our thirst with cold water?
34128The paper was entitled,"Does Anæsthesia increase or decrease the mortality attendant upon surgical operations?"
34128Were quibbles about the efficacy of pain to stand in the way of the merciful prevention of such suffering by the process of anæsthetisation?
34128What are any, or what are all these objects when contrasted with the most precious and valued gift of God-- human life?
34128What would the disciples of Father Mathew say to this?
34128When studying Nature directly he was constantly asking her"why?"
34128or already sent abroad On angels''wings and works, as some men hold?
58860And may not the red colour of their skins be occasioned by an irritation excited on them by the stimulus of the air?
58860Are there any advantages to be derived from the excitement of certain PASSIONS in the treatment of consumptions?
58860Are_ bitters_ proper to prevent a return of this state of gout?
58860Are_ issues_ proper to prevent the return of the violent state of gout?
58860But does not the gout prevent other diseases, and is it not improper upon this account to cure it?
58860Do dreams affect the memory, the imagination, and the judgment?
58860Do we ever observe a partial insanity, or false perception on one subject, while the judgment is sound and correct, upon all others?
58860Do we observe a connection between the intellectual faculties, and the degrees of consistency and firmness of the brain in infancy and childhood?
58860Do we observe any of the three intellectual faculties that have been named, enlarged by diseases?
58860Do we observe certain degrees of the intellectual faculties to be hereditary in certain families?
58860Do we observe the imagination in many instances to be affected with apprehensions of dangers that have no existence?
58860Do we observe the memory, the imagination, and the judgment, to be affected by diseases, particularly by madness?
58860Do we read, in the accounts of travellers, of men, who, in respect of intellectual capacity and enjoyments, are but a few degrees above brutes?
58860Does the external air act upon any other part of the body besides those which have been mentioned?
58860How is animal life supported in persons who pass many days, and even weeks without food, and in some instances without drinks?
58860How often do the peevish complaints of the night in sickness, give way to the composing rays of the light of the morning?
58860If physical causes influence morals in the manner we have described, may they not also influence religious principles and opinions?
58860May not the earth contain, in its bowels, or upon its surface, antidotes?
58860May not this be the effect of the sudden impression of air upon the tender surface of their bodies?
58860Othello can not murder Desdemona by candle- light, and who has not felt the effects of a blazing fire upon the gentle passions?
58860Should it be asked, why does general debility terminate by a disease in the lungs and trachea, rather than in any other part of the body?
58860The yellow fever carried off many chronic diseases in the year 1793, and yet who would wish for, or admit such a remedy for a similar purpose?
58860What shall we say of the effects of MEDICINES upon the moral faculty?
58860Where is the nation and the individual, in their primitive state of health, to whom bread is not agreeable?
58860Who can compare the symptoms and seats of both diseases, and not admit the unity of the remote and immediate causes of fever?
58860Why has the spirit of humanity made such rapid progress for some years past in the courts of Europe?
58860Why have indecency and profanity been banished from the stage in London and Paris?
58860Why should it be thought impossible for medicines to act in like manner upon the moral faculty?
58860Why, under certain unfavourable circumstances, may there not exist also a moral faculty, in a state of sleep, or subject to mistakes?
58859You mean,said his neighbour,"is he not_ sometimes_ sober?"
58859And may not this be the reason why so few inconveniences are felt from the mixture of a variety of vegetables in the stomach?
58859Are her strength, wisdom, or benignity, equal to the increase of those dangers which threaten her dissolution among civilized nations?
58859Are they inhabitants of cities?
58859Are they inhabitants of country places?
58859But are there no conditions of the human body in which ardent spirits may be given?
58859But further, what is the practice of our modern surgeons in these cases?
58859But it may be said, if we reject spirits from being a part of our drinks, what liquors shall we substitute in their room?
58859But may not the same heat, moisture, and diet which produced the diseases, have produced the worms?
58859But may not_ most_ of the diseases of armies be produced by the different manner in which wars are carried on by the modern nations?
58859But what are we to say to a compound of two medicines which give exactly the same impression to the system?
58859By what arts shall we persuade them to discover their remedies?
58859Do the blessings of civilization compensate for the sacrifice we make of natural health, as well as of natural liberty?
58859Does it suspend pain, and raise the body above feeling the pangs of Indian tortures?
58859Does the will beget insensibility to cold, heat, hunger, and danger?
58859How shall we distinguish between the original diseases of the Indians and those contracted from their intercourse with the Europeans?
58859In speaking of him to one of his neighbours, I said,"Does he not_ sometimes_ get drunk?"
58859Is he a husband?
58859Is he a magistrate?
58859Is he a minister of the gospel?
58859Is he the father, or is she the mother of a family of children?
58859Is it not to lay aside plasters and ointments, and trust the whole to nature?
58859Is it proper to refer these complaints to the same cause which produces the scarlatina anginosa?
58859Is she a wife?
58859Is there any such disease as an idiopathic WORM- FEVER?
58859Is this occasioned by the vigour of constitution peculiar to the inhabitants of those northern countries?
58859Should they continue to exert this deadly influence upon our population, where will their evils terminate?
58859What would be the effect of exciting a strong counter- action in the stomach and bowels in this disease?
58859What would be the effect of_ extreme_ cold in this disease?
58859What would be the effects of_ copious_ blood- letting in this disease?
58859Who knows but that, at the foot of the Allegany mountain, there blooms a flower that is an infallible cure for the epilepsy?
58859Why is not the same zeal manifested in protecting our citizens from the more general and consuming ravages of distilled spirits?
58859[ 22]"Aurengezebe, emperor of Persia, being asked, Why he did not build hospitals?
58859or has he been chosen to fill a high and respectable station in the councils of his country?
48343And now,said the divine,"will your Majesty permit me to ask a question?"
48343Are all the guineas found?
48343Better?
48343Do you indeed think so, my dear Lord? 48343 Have you taken it all?"
48343How, then, can you judge of what you have never heard?
48343Mr.----, what is the proper female companion of this John Dory?
48343My Lord Duke,said the tenant,"would it not be better to apply yourself directly to God?
48343Oh, he has, has he?
48343Pray, Sir, do you_ believe_ in a_ cook_?
48343Sir,replied Wesley,"did you ever hear me preach?"
48343Sir,retorted Wesley,"is not your name Nash?
48343WHAT IS AN ARCHDEACON?
48343Well?
48343What is the difference,asked Archbishop Whately of a young clergyman he was examining,"between a form and a ceremony?
48343What is the matter, Donald?
48343Where? 48343 Who wants Dr. Hannes, fellow?"
48343Why, my dear?
48343Why, then, does your Majesty read your speeches, when it may be presumed that_ you_ can have no such reason?
48343Will your deputy suffer eternal punishment for you too?
48343Would not a_ bit_ or two do you more good?
48343_ Quid est caritas?_( What is charity?)
48343_ Quid est caritas?_( What is charity?)
48343--"Suppose I do; what of that?
48343--A friend of Smith inquired,"What is Puseyism?"
48343After the patient was gone, Martin noticed two guineas lying on the table, and asked the doctor how it came that he left his money about in that way?
48343And what if I should say nothing else these three or four hours but these words?
48343But mark the consequence,_ quâ honorarium_: does the patient increase the fee for the pain and misery he is spared?
48343But should I have named him?
48343But what means this sudden lowering of the heavens, and that dark cloud arising from beneath the western horizon?
48343Do n''t you hear distant thunder?
48343Do n''t you see those flashes of lightning?
48343I would here ask one question: I would fain know who comptrolleth the devil at home at his parish, while he comptrolleth the Mint?
48343If the apostles might not leave the office of preaching to be deacons, shall one leave it for minting?
48343In another part of this discourse the Bishop proceeds to ask,"Is there never a nobleman to be a Lord President, but it must be a prelate?
48343Is there a Professor in this University who would so far degrade himself, as to take payment from one of his brotherhood, and a junior?"
48343Is there never a wise man in the realm to be a comptroller of the Mint?
48343Is this a meet office for a priest that hath the cure of souls?
48343Is this his charge?
48343Is this their calling?
48343Is this their office?
48343On his next visit the doctor asked,"What effect has the ptisan produced?"
48343One day his Majesty met the Doctor in the Mall, and said to him,"Doctor, what have I done to you that you are always quarrelling with me?"
48343Preaching on Pilate''s question,"What is truth?"
48343Should we have ministers of the Church to be comptrollers of Mints?
48343Smith.--"Do you believe in the apostolical succession?"
48343The Duke, naturally astonished at his conduct, said,"I suppose you know who I am?"
48343The chaplain, a little annoyed at Barrow''s laconic answer, continued--"_ Quid est spes?_"( What is hope?)
48343The chaplain, a little annoyed at Barrow''s laconic answer, continued--"_ Quid est spes?_"( What is hope?)
48343The consultation took place, and the student offered the fee; whereupon the good Gregory broke out:"Sir, do you mean to insult me?
48343To Dr. Blomfield accordingly the messenger went, and repeated the question,"What is an archdeacon?"
48343Well, well, is this their duty?
48343Wesley once preaching at Bath, Beau Nash entered the room, came close up to the preacher, and demanded by what authority he was acting?
48343What am I to do with this?"
48343What next?"
48343When Dr. Beadon was rector of Eltham, in Kent, his text one day was,"Who art thou?"
48343When, after some difficulty, his Majesty was made to comprehend the system, he exclaimed,"Is any man well in England, that can afford to be ill?
48343Why burst the ties Of nature, that should knit their souls together In one soft bond of amity and love?
48343Why delight In human sacrifice?
48343Why does the writer of a book, so honest and thoughtful as this about dominies, come before the public anonymously?
48343and are frogs, fungos, and toadstools the chiefest dish in a spiritual collation?
48343inquired of Boileau,"if he knew anything of a preacher called Le Tourneau, whom everybody was running after?"
48343my friend,"pleaded the Abbé,"how could you desire me to swallow a quart an hour?
48343where?"
48343why will kings forget that they are men, And men that they are brethren?
38929''In view of these facts, who should perform surgery? 38929 And are the contradictions and inconsistencies in discussions in medical journals kept from the public? 38929 And are they not to be classed as scoundrels? 38929 And it puzzles observing laymen sometimes to know why all the successful(?) 38929 And note the relevancy of these questions,Would not the medical man be angry?
38929And while the fortunate few get most of the practice, and make most of the money, what are the unfortunate many doing?
38929And would nature allow it to choke up or slip a cog just because a little thing like a worm got tangled in its gearing?
38929Are not all symptoms of disease put before the people anyway, and from the worst possible sources?
38929Are they men who took to graft and disgraced their profession because they loved that kind of life, and the stigma it brings?
38929Are they not to blame?
38929As a matter of right and wrong, who shall, in the opinion of the medical profession, advise and perform these responsible acts and who shall not?
38929At least a worm was always found in the evacuated material, and how was the deluded one to know that it was in the vessel or matter injected?
38929But what about Osteopathy?
38929But when hope long deferred has made the soul sick, and hope itself dies, what then?
38929But when"liberty of blood"is mentioned, what is meant by"liberty of arteries"?
38929By what standard is the physician judged by the people who enter his office?
38929Did you ever know a shyster to pad his library with Congressional reports?
38929Do men choose the strenuous, money- grabbing life because they really love it, or love the money?
38929Do you see now how Osteopaths get a"vast and perfect knowledge of anatomy"?
38929Do you suppose that the law of"the survival of the fittest"determines who continues in the practice of Osteopathy and succeeds?
38929Does it look as if Osteopathy has been standing or advancing on its merits?
38929Does it not seem that Osteopathy, as a complete system, is mostly a_ name_, and"lives, moves, and has its being"in boosting?
38929Does it seem funny to talk of adjusting lesions on one person for an hour at a time, three times a week?
38929Ever since Osteopathy began to attract attention, and people began to inquire"What is it?"
38929Gentlemen, can you explain your ex- brother''s meaning here?
38929Going back to the physician who has the well- equipped office, is he a grafter in any sense?
38929Had not nature made a machine, perfect in all its parts, self- oiling,"autotherapeutic,"and all that?
38929Has it required advertising to keep people using anesthetics since it was demonstrated that they would prevent pain?
38929Has it required boosting to keep the people resorting to surgery since the benefits of modern operations have been proved?
38929Have you a"leading doctor"in your town?
38929He has"silently folded his tent and stolen away,"and where has he gone?
38929He was so busy(?)
38929He went up to his office and-- went home again, day in and day out, year in and year out, and for what?
38929How about tapeworms, gallstones and Osteopathy, do you ask?
38929How about the worm exhibited?
38929How shall the surgeon be best fitted for these grave duties?
38929I think mainly because, being ignorant, they practice largely as quacks, and by curing(?)
38929I was told by a responsible book man that the encyclopedia containing a learned(?)
38929If I had been, to be consistent, I should have had to stimulate(?)
38929If Osteopathy is so complete, why did so many students, after they had received everything the learned(?)
38929If one has to be sick, why not have something worth while?
38929If so, is there not enough in it alone to explain the apparent success of quacks?
38929If these systems are fads and frauds, why do they so rapidly get and retain so large a following among intelligent people?
38929If truth always grows under persecution, how can the American Medical Association kill Osteopathy when it is so well known by the people?
38929In the treatment of worms the question was,"How do we treat worms?"
38929Is it accidental, or the result of their innate stupidity?
38929Is it to be wondered that intelligent laymen sometimes lose faith in and respect for the profession of medicine and surgery?
38929Is it true worth and scholarly ability that get a big reputation of success among medical men?
38929Is that enough?
38929May it not be true that, for many cases at least, the diagnosis is wrong?
38929O grave, where is thy victory?
38929Or to the Osteopathic colleges, from which, in all cases of which I ever knew, they returned sadly disappointed?
38929Or would espouse and proclaim anything that was not born of truth, and filled with blessing and benefaction for mankind?
38929Should not its waters be pure and uncontaminated, so that the invalid who thirsts for health may drink with confidence in their healing virtues?
38929Since people will be informed, why not let them get information that is authentic?
38929Some Osteopaths and other therapeutic reformers(?)
38929Strong case, do you say?
38929Students soon learned that they were never to ask,"_ Can_ we treat this?"
38929The man was taken into a darkened room for privacy(?
38929The question may be fairly put:"Why not have more of such frankness from the physician?"
38929The question was to be put,"_ How_ do we treat this?"
38929There are not only these evidences of inconsistencies to edify(?)
38929They did so, and a$ 100 incision was made after the X- ray had located(?)
38929They live a sort of"Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde"life, and why?
38929Was he squelched?
38929Was it any wonder that students flocked to schools that professed to teach how common plodding mortals could work such miracles?
38929What foundation is there for such a belief?
38929What is the Osteopath doing, who rolls and twists and pulls and kneads for a full hour, if he is n''t giving a massage treatment?
38929What is this disease?
38929What more in therapeutics is left to be desired?
38929What must we think of the one just given as a popular definition?
38929What shall we think, in this enlightened age, of judges pleading for the healing(?)
38929What standard, then, should be established, and what requirement should be made before one should be permitted to do surgery?
38929What was its foundation?
38929Where is that hope now?
38929Why are they there?
38929Why do the people have such erroneous conceptions of the X- ray?
38929Why has it had such a wonderful growth in popularity?
38929Why have nearly four thousand men and women, most of them intelligent and some of them educated, espoused it as a profession to follow as a life work?
38929Why?
38929With all respect for the devoted gentlemen among physicians we ask, Is it any wonder that the intelligent laity smile at such gush?
38929Would he not feel like wiping off the earth all the Osteopaths?"
38929Would he not feel like wiping off the earth with all the Osteopaths?
38929Would not the medical man be angry?
38929Yet the question has been very prominent and pertinent among Osteopaths:"Are you a lesion Osteopath?"
38929You may ask,"Have there been many such medical men?"
38929appear in those 15-cent papers published in Augusta, Me., and in many daily and even religious papers?
38929mean when he said,"Upon the success of these efforts depends the weal or woe of Osteopathy as an independent system"?
39074Do you observe this mark, doctor?
39074For what purpose am I called?
39074Why, my friend?
39074Why,he exclaims,"does the splendid Jupiter disappear during the twilight of morn to the eyes of the contemplator?
39074--"Does it inconvenience you?"
39074--"Then why wish for its extirpation?"
39074Admitting the facts, it may be asked, have the waters of these seas been impregnated by the copper?
39074And if the humble returns of their industry are expended in this leaf, what remains for the purchase of food better adapted to labour?
39074Are all these various tribes, brethren descended from one stock?
39074Are diminutive races more productive than those of stronger formation?
39074Are they corporeal impressions received prior to sleep, and the continuances of reflection, or are they the children of an idle brain?
39074Are we not warranted in conceiving that these individuals were dæmonomaniacs?
39074Are we then to administer a homoeopathic dose of_ cannabis_, or any other medicine which may give rise to a similar sensation?
39074Are we to attribute the same power of imagination to the brute creation?
39074But is not this circumstance an illustration of the wisdom of Providence?
39074But of what nature are these sensations?
39074But what limits can any enactment assign to the influence of credulity and superstition?
39074But why should we marvel at the credulity and superstition of our forefathers, when we daily observe equal absurdities?
39074Could there ever have existed a more superstitious belief than that which vested in the regal touch a healing power?
39074Did not these desperate bigots even pronounce that we were not warranted to seek in the brute creation a human remedy or preservative?
39074Did we possess this power over our rebellious thoughts, who would constantly ponder on a painful subject?
39074Do water and air contain them?
39074Does it add to the respect which the remains of the dead are entitled to?
39074Does she not draw up her scanty hair on her large forehead?"
39074Does the vitality of these constituent molecules hold any influence over our existence?
39074Dr. Arnould adds,"I inquired in what way his power was exercised?
39074For instance, what are the arguments he adduces to prove that in two similar diseases the strongest will overcome the weakest?
39074For what constitutes the cure of a disease, whether obtained by nature or by art?
39074Has it existed from all eternity, or has it been called into being by the Creator?
39074Has it uniformly exhibited its present harmonious arrangement, or was it once a waste and shapeless chaos?
39074He rests upon his own deserts; but how seldom are they rewarded: when modesty places her light"under a bushel"who will bring it into view?
39074How can we account for these anomalies?
39074How comes it that man seems more anxious to be deceived than enlightened?
39074How comes it, moreover, that this variety depends upon circumstances?
39074How could the polar bear have traversed the torrid zone?
39074How do we endeavour to drown the roar of distant artillery that causes terror in the heart of the soldier?
39074How, then, are we authorized to treat this doctrine as visionary or fraudulent?
39074I asked him what these hieroglyphics were, and how he perceived them?
39074I asked him where the being was who saw us and heard us?
39074If I be troubled with such a malady, what care I whether the devil himself, or any of his ministers, by God''s permission, redeem me?"
39074If a man fall in a ditch, what matter is it whether a friend or an enemy help him out?
39074If courage is an instinctive faculty, residing in a certain organ, how comes it that this organism varies at different periods?
39074In this wasteful existence how many valuable hours do we not lose?
39074Is any agency destructive to them injurious or destructive to us?
39074Is it not by the shrill notes of the fife united to the loud beat of the drum?
39074Is their life necessary to the preservation of ours?
39074It may be said, if destruction was rendered a prudent step, why were not these bodies consumed by fire?
39074Krautius informs us, that certain people of the territory of Nivers(?)
39074Lucian, however, makes Thais say of a rival courtezan,"Who can praise her person, unless he is blind?
39074May not all these ecstatic raptures be considered as belonging to this third class?
39074May not this analogy lead to singular results?
39074May not this be accounted for in some measure, by the exhaustion of her mental faculties during her paroxysms?
39074May not this circumstance be attributed to the fervour of their imagination and to their unequal mode of living?
39074May not this practice be the origin of the term_ leech_, applied in ancient times to medical men?
39074May we not indulge in the most sanguine hope, that our former glories are only the historic earnest of still more glorious days?
39074Metallic stones of large volume fall from the air: how are they produced?
39074Nay, whence arises the feeling of respect and veneration that we experience in the presence of the great and the pre- eminently good?
39074No power could release one from these bonds: Quis neget et magicas nervos torpere per artes?
39074Quid ad hominem claustra, carcer, custodia?
39074The first words she then uttered were,"What is trump?"
39074Then again:--"With what do we endeavour to relieve the olfactory nerves when offended by disagreeable odours?
39074These doctrines led to the unanswerable question, What was this matter-- this_ invisa materia_--from which every thing visible has proceeded?
39074Through what channel of communication does the cat- hater know that one of these animals is in the room, although unseen by him?
39074Thus differently formed and situated, how does their union take place?
39074To what are we to attribute these uncommon, nay, these unnatural faculties?
39074To what are we to attribute this exception?--are we to consider these delightful tormentors as essentially unharmonious and illogical?
39074To what can this unjust, this illiberal feeling be attributed?
39074To what circumstance are we to attribute this exemption?
39074To what then are we to attribute this power that fallacy possesses of inspiring the mind with visionary hopes and fears?
39074Was Franklin to be considered a quack when he announced that with a pointed metal he could command thunder?
39074Was it the mandragore that saved the Scotch in a similar_ ruse de guerre_ with the Danish invaders of Sweno?
39074Was this matter endowed with intelligence as a whole, or in its separate fractions?
39074Were antidotes sought in the thousands of similar cases that I could adduce?
39074What are the circumstances most favourable to longevity?
39074What has imagination to do with the vegetable kingdom, which also presents monstrous conformations?
39074What is there of an exciting nature in the common events of life and the usual course and uniformity of nature?
39074What was to be done?
39074When he opened the door, he said,''What do you disturb me thus for?''
39074Wherefore hath our mother earth brought out poisons( saith Pliny) in so great a quantity, but that men in distress might make away themselves?
39074While considering this interesting subject, a curious question arises: is enthusiasm more frequently excited by truth than by error?
39074Who is to decide between these two ingenious experimentalists?
39074Will any one maintain, that a similar nourishment would produce similar effects on man?
39074Will the homoeopathist tell us that we must seek in his catalogue of innumerable effects some substance which is known to produce similar symptoms?
39074Will this rapid intellectual progress tend ultimately to meliorate the condition of mankind?
39074With what different feelings does the traveller wander over the cemetery of_ Père la Chaise_?
39074Would it be irreligious to say,"Happy are the dead who die beloved?"
39074Would not a frequent visit to a lunatic asylum afford a wholesome lesson to the reckless despot, the proud statesman, and the arbitrary chieftain?
39074Would the same calculation apply to the lighter branches of the art?
39074Would the vulgar believe in the wonders of the solar and gaseous microscopes unless they were exposed to view?
39074_ Cur moriatur homo, cui salvia crescit in horto?_ After cheese comes nothing.
39074and why are particular fish only affected?
39074did he not pass the night in this house?"
39074did you want any thing that was ever denied you?"
39074how could something arise out of nothing?
39074how could something arise out of nothing?"
39074how many real enjoyments have we not deprived ourselves of?
39074if they are not, how can its influence extend to its inhabitants?
39074liberum ostium habet._ Death is always ready at hand:_ Vides illum precipitem locum, illud flumen?_ There is liberty at hand.
39074nothing more?"
39074of what avail are the considerations regarding the effects of the pernicious habit of drinking?
39074or must we trace them to more than one?
39074said the unwelcome visitor in a stern voice:"What is it you demand to have done?"
39074that enables us, even when surrounded with darkness, to recognise by the feel the hand of her we love?
39074what remaineth of our many and our energetic days?
39074whence come they?
39074why did you die?
34038After I left you,said he,"the thought struck me,--Why can not I control the muscles of my system as well as my appetites and passions?
34038And do you think,he added,"that I must die?"
34038And how long is it usual to wear it? 34038 And who is Hezekiah?"
34038And you have no positive knowledge of but one permanent cure among them all?
34038And you think, do you, that this highly seasoned food is the cause of your dyspepsia?
34038Any one else?
34038Are the public, then, fully determined to act against their own interest? 34038 Are you not aware,"I added,"that physicians seldom take their own medicines or give them to their families?"
34038Are you quite sure there_ is_ any gain or prize, after all?
34038But can you do nothing with my face?
34038But for what purpose would you give her pumpkin- seed tea? 34038 But he was very confident he could cure him?"
34038But how many have been cured by it? 34038 But our poor pathology and worse therapeutics-- shall we ever get to a solid bottom?
34038Do I understand you? 34038 Do n''t you think he is struck with death, doctor?"
34038Do we know, for example, in how many instances such a treatment fails, for the one time it succeeds? 34038 Do you know what Dr. Thornton thinks about it?"
34038Do you know,added Dr. Tisdale,"that we do a great deal more harm than good with medicine?"
34038Do you mean to ask if I believe Mr. Browning was really cured?
34038Do you mean to do nothing?
34038Do you mean to intimate that the bountiful provision you make for others renders it necessary for you to overeat? 34038 Do you really think so?"
34038Do you wish me to learn to swim, if possible? 34038 Has any one been really cured by it?"
34038Has the doctor ordered my daughter no milk punch?
34038Have you drank it?
34038Have you much confidence in a method of treatment that succeeds once in fifty times, or even once in twenty?
34038How could I doubt what I have seen and known?
34038How do you do?
34038How do you know?
34038How long have you been troubled with it?
34038How, then,she asked,"can the ninny expect she can ever have any nourishment for that_ boy_?"
34038Is it a favorite remedy with her?
34038Is there, then, no choice between medication and no- medication? 34038 Nonsense, my son,"said the father;"do you think coffee is powerful enough to give a man a lame knee?
34038There is no possibility of accounting for it, my son, and why should we talk about it? 34038 To what larger transgression, my dear father, will you be more ready to refer it?
34038Tried it? 34038 What can it mean?"
34038What have you been doing?
34038What have you done for it?
34038What,said they, with much surprise,"has become of the rum?"
34038What_ is_ tic douloureux?
34038Where is your distress?
34038Who hath woe,--as Solomon says, with respect to a very different description of human character,--if not this poor widow?
34038Who is this?
34038Why do medical men,I asked,"give us such strange names?
34038Why was it,said I,"that you could get no more blood?"
34038Why, then, is it not oftener done?
34038Why,said they,"what does the man mean?
34038Will it not be needful for you to call again?
34038Would you do nothing more?
34038Would you, then, do nothing at all but bind it up and keep it still?
34038--"But is there nothing of a healing nature I can use?"
34038--"Do you think you could bear to know the truth?
34038--"On the upper part of the foot?"
34038--"What do you want bleeding for?"
34038--"Why not?"
34038----?"
34038Almost out of patience, the doctor at length replied:"Struck with death?
34038An earnest mind, in connection with an indomitable will-- what may it not accomplish?
34038And are our physicians and our medicines likely to bring us there?
34038And by what means?
34038And does not salting it so harden or toughen it, or, as it were, fix it, that it will resist the natural tendency to decomposition or putrefaction?
34038And does not this fully account for a most remarkable fact?
34038And if so, is it not desirable to let well enough alone?"
34038And if we are to begin it at once, on whom shall the work devolve?
34038And in therapeutics, is it better yet, or worse?
34038And is it all over?
34038And may not this be one reason why a foreign language has been so long retained in connection with the names of diseases and medicines?
34038And was I not bound to do what I believed he would do, in similar circumstances?
34038And was the physician, think you, an uninterested spectator?
34038And what had become of the one barrel which had disappeared?
34038And what is the hope of his patient?
34038And whence all this?
34038And who are you with whom I am conversing?"
34038And why did not he?
34038And why, indeed, may I not coin terms as well as others?
34038Any objections to eating two sour apples after breakfast and dinner?"
34038Any salt fish?
34038Are they the result of chance or hap- hazard?
34038At least, how do we know but it may be so?
34038But could I avoid such a conclusion?
34038But could he have been thus worn out at the age of fifty- eight?
34038But did he cure?
34038But does he secure to himself the most pleasure who thinks most about it?
34038But for what purpose, as a final end?
34038But he was now gone to his final account, and on whose arm could Mary lean for medical advice?
34038But how is it known?
34038But how is it to be done?
34038But how was this to be done?
34038But is it not equally true that when he is resolutely going up hill, they are equally ready to help him on?
34038But is not plain,"unvarnished"truth sometimes not only"stranger,"but, in a work like this, better also, than any attempts at"fiction"?
34038But is there no medicine I can take that will_ partially_ restore me?
34038But what could I do?
34038But what could I do?
34038But what good would it have done?
34038But what shall hinder or prevent our coming to similar results, in the investigation, in time to come, of other diseases?
34038But what then?
34038But what would this do towards giving me a liberal education?
34038But why should such a young man be found at a seminary of learning?
34038But would there have been any advantage in such a recovery, over one which was equally rapid and perfect without the aid of medicine?
34038But, is it probable that this better day will dawn on a world which, in respect to health and longevity, is going in the other direction?
34038But, is this benefit immense?
34038By whom?
34038Can I eat tripe-- corned beef-- oysters-- lean pork steak?
34038Can any one suppose, for a moment, that so curious and complicated an organ as the skin, and one of such considerable extent, has nothing to do?
34038Can he reasonably expect, even with the aid of a skilful surgeon, ever to have a good leg?
34038Can it be so?
34038Can it be that she has been compelled, in this form, to pay a fearful penalty for her former abuses?
34038Can it kill him?
34038Can there be such a difference in the effects when there is only a difference of one degree in temperature?
34038Can you get rid of an effect till you first remove the cause?"
34038Could Hippocrates or Galen have done more?
34038Could I carry out my plan?
34038Could I possibly reach it?
34038Danforth and Hubbard?
34038Did I say I learned these important truths from this source?
34038Did the end either sanction or sanctify the means?
34038Do not such facts as these point, with almost unerring certainty, to the inefficiency of all medical treatment?
34038Do not these attract each other?
34038Do our diseases spring out of the ground?
34038Do they choose to be humbugged?"
34038Do we know how large a proportion of cases would get well without any treatment, compared with those that recover under it?
34038Do you mean as you say?"
34038Do you regard this assertion as extravagant or unfounded?
34038Do you suppose I have any power to grant you an immunity from the evil effects of high living while that high living is persisted in?
34038Do you think it would hurt her?"
34038Does it make much practical difference which?
34038Does it not operate like a charm?"
34038Either of these causes may, as it is most fully believed, produce disease; but if so, what is not to be expected from a combination of the two?
34038Every one said:"How can it be?"
34038Facts of similar import, in very great numbers, some more and some less striking, might be related, to almost any extent; but can it be necessary?
34038For example, when I spoke of my patient being worn out, prematurely, by overworking, it was asked by one man,"But how is this?
34038For if it was unfavorable, would it not be too much for you in your enfeebled condition?"
34038For if so, what necessity is there of the medical profession?
34038For residing, as we did, only a few miles apart, why had I not heard of it?
34038Grant that I saved, or seemed to save, the patient;--was she really saved?
34038Had I a moral right thus to do?
34038Had I the needful strength?
34038Had water, moreover, as his only drink, nothing to do with the cure?
34038Has the surgeon or physician, in such circumstances, much reason to hope?
34038Has the"glorious"_ Fourth_ gone by and I have not acted up to the dignity of a well- formed and glorious resolution?
34038Have I not great reason to fear that my advice was not sufficiently pointed and thorough?
34038Have all diseases, then, their exciting causes?
34038Have we judged-- have we deduced our results, especially in the last science-- from_ all_, or from a selection of facts?
34038Have you,"he added,"been into the cellar?"
34038He was evidently affected by the stramonium; but how, I said to myself, can this be?
34038How can a person, male or female, begin its use at forty and continue it to seventy years of age, and yet be, for the most part, strong and healthy?
34038How could I have done so?
34038How could this happen, you will naturally ask, if opium is such a deadly narcotic as some medical men proclaim it to be?
34038How is it that treatment so exactly opposite should be almost, if not quite, equally successful?
34038How long is it, pray, since you began to use the chalk and egg plaster?"
34038How much at a time?
34038How would it do, thought I, to commence at once the practice of medicine?
34038How would one of Lee''s pills defend me from it, even for two days?
34038I had the leisure, had I the needful strength?
34038I said, only half awake;"and where is the side of the mountain?
34038If honest, must we not acknowledge that, even in the natural history of disease, there is very much_ doubtful_, which is received as_ sure_?
34038If not, and if a radical change is desirable, when is it to be made?
34038In one of my most lucid intervals, therefore, he said to me,"Do you expect to recover from your disease?"
34038In these circumstances, I repeat, what could be done?
34038Is chewing gum from spruce trees injurious?--or birch bark?
34038Is it an arch enemy?
34038Is it not that man is made to live, and is tough, so that it is not easy to poison him to death?
34038Is it not to prevent change?
34038Is it not true-- the old adage, that while"God,"in his mercy,"sends us meats, the Devil,"in his malignity,"sends us cooks?"
34038Is it the Divine Being?
34038Is it to keep up the idea of mystery, as connected with the profession, in order thus to maintain an influence which modest worth can not secure?"
34038Is milk bad in case of liver disease?
34038Is she not doing as well as could be expected?
34038Is there a personage, spiritual but real, that strikes?
34038Is there any objection to baked sour apples and milk, or to sour apples after using a little milk or bread?
34038Is there any objection to my using all these now, in proper quantities?
34038Is_ perhaps_ to be our qualifying word forever and for aye?
34038It might, perhaps, be successful; but what if it should prove otherwise?
34038L.?"
34038May we not trust much more than we have heretofore believed, in the recuperative efforts of Nature?
34038Mr. Browning had something on his face, and it got well; but do we know it was a cancer?
34038Much of this was needed; and yet how could it be obtained?
34038Must I go down to the consumptive''s grave?
34038Must I perish at less than thirty years of age, and thus make good the declaration that the wicked shall not live out half his days?
34038Must the case be abandoned?
34038Must the disease be"touched off"with hot or impure air, by hard colds, by excitements of body and mind, and in a thousand and one other ways?
34038Must the igniting spark be applied?
34038Must we forever be obliged to hang our heads when the chemist and natural philosopher ask us for our laws and principles?...
34038Must we not, therefore, look for some other cause?
34038My father had credit, and could raise money for me; but_ would_ he?
34038Need I say here that a medical man-- one who rode daily on horseback-- paid a proper regard to the laws of exercise?
34038Now how do we know whether it is the disease that kills or the medicine?
34038Now, how do you account for it?"
34038Now, which is the best for me to use on my bread, at supper time-- cream, milk, molasses, or a little butter?--or with my other meals?
34038Observe, too, he says he feels no temptation to eat between his meals; but why?
34038One day, rather unexpectedly, I met him again, and inquired familiarly how he got along with his cholera?
34038Or have your remarks a reference to a supposed necessity of eating rich food?"
34038Or should a few stitches be taken?
34038Or was there some other way, some_ new_ way, by means, of which it could be reached?
34038Or, if Heaven more than persuades-- somewhat more-- does not man still decree?
34038Ought I not to have used the same plainness that he would have used?
34038Perhaps, at my age, entire restoration from such a hydra disease as dyspepsia is hardly to be expected; but can you not patch me up in part?"
34038Port;"what is the matter with it?"
34038R."Is it doing well?"
34038R., how are you?"
34038Reader, are here no confessions of medical importance?
34038Shall I be able to render up my account of the intercourse I had with them, in the great day, with joy, or must it be with grief and shame?
34038Shall I tell you how they were gradually and successfully overcome?
34038Shall I tell you the whole story?"
34038Shall we ever have fixed laws?
34038Shall we ever_ know_, or, must we always be doomed to_ suspect_, to_ presume_?
34038Shall we wait till we have run down a century or two longer, or shall we begin the work immediately?
34038Should I not be thankful?
34038Should you lose that little girl of yours, simply because you are anxious to carry out a theory, will you not be likely to regret it?
34038Somebody must assist him; and though the case was a troublesome one, why should I not take my share of troublesome cases among the rest?
34038Soon after I made a beginning, the thought struck me,"Why not make the experiment of frequently bathing the eyes in cold water?"
34038Starting up, he said,"Do you think my disease is consumption?"
34038The neighbors, almost as weak as herself, would come in and say:"Why do n''t your doctor give such or such a thing?
34038The rest of the family drank freely of the water, why did not they sicken as well as we?
34038The thought struck me as quickly as the imaginary blow did-- have I not taken the disease?
34038Their appeals were not wholly ineffective; indeed, what else could have been expected?
34038There was no other surgeon within a reasonable distance, and why should I refuse to do my best for him?
34038These young doctors, just from the schools, what can they know, the best of them?"
34038They admitted the danger of such cases generally; but how could the boy be injured, and not the rest of them?
34038This he called rheumatism; but was it so?
34038This was, in no trifling degree, an educational process; for is it not well known that,"Teaching we learn, and giving we retain?"
34038This, however, neither interested me much nor encouraged me; for( reader will you believe it?
34038True, she asked after the first swallow,"what will the doctor say to this?"
34038Under such circumstances what ground was there for hope?
34038WHO HATH WOE?
34038WHO HATH WOE?
34038Was I not his follower?
34038Was all this the result of mere accident?
34038Was he with"birds of a feather?"
34038Was it a hasty or forced one?
34038Was it any thing, I said to myself, which was imbibed or received from the mother?
34038Was it safe, in my present condition, to run the risk?
34038Was it strange even, if I approached at times, the very borders of despair?
34038Was it, then, safe for me to go?
34038Was not such a trial almost too great?
34038Was there any absolute gain in the end?
34038Was there any great risk in trying one?
34038Was there room, then, for a single gleam of hope?
34038Was there, now an opportunity?
34038We asked her if she could think of any other physician that she would like to see?
34038Were not, then, all my difficulties practically overcome, at least prospectively?
34038What am I to eat this winter-- next spring-- next summer?
34038What could be done without it?
34038What could be the cause?
34038What could be the possible cause, I often asked myself, of this downward tendency?
34038What do they mean by it?
34038What do you mean?
34038What evidence then was there that it had been useful now?
34038What food shall I be obliged to avoid to keep my passions in check?
34038What if it had given offence?
34038What kind of meats?
34038What kinds of meat and fish will do for me to eat?
34038What knew they about precocity and its effects on the after life?
34038What more could have been possible?
34038What more could my friends have expected?
34038What more or greater could I have asked?
34038What next?
34038What now should I do?
34038What should now be done?
34038What though the forcing plan seems to have succeeded quite happily in my own case?
34038What, then, I repeat it, can these things mean?
34038What, then, let us inquire, is that meaning?
34038What, then, were the agencies employed in the air- cure?
34038What_ kind_ of puddings, pies, and cake will answer?
34038When a disease is destined by_ Nature_ to be long, do we very often materially diminish it?"
34038When life is threatened, do we very often save it?
34038When will it be fully and practically received?
34038Who has not observed the difference, amid a general conflagration, between a most perfect stillness and a blustering or windy moment?
34038Why can I not declare independence of all external remedial agents, and throw myself wholly on nature and nature''s God?
34038Why do you so strongly object to cream toasts, or cream on bread?
34038Why might not I?
34038Why must I, at the early age of twenty- eight, be doomed to tread the long road of decline and death?
34038Why not annihilate it at once?"
34038Why should it not?
34038Why this deposit of an article so doubtful?
34038Why, the whole world-- I mean the whole civilized world-- use it; and do they all have stiff knees?"
34038Why, then, did I not call on some inquiring and highly experienced physician?
34038Why, then, may not children sometimes kill their parents?
34038Why, then, should I not persevere?
34038Why, then, was it made an adjunct, and more than an adjunct, in the first promulgation of the gospel, and this, too, by the gospel''s divine Author?
34038Why, what is our object in salting down butter?
34038Why, what rational man in the world will believe that a little coffee, once a day, will entail upon a person severe rheumatism?"
34038Will a little plain sauce do with my supper?
34038Will you allow me to eat any simple thing between meals?"
34038Will you not answer me soon, and give me your opinion on this and other subjects?
34038Would it not be the part of wisdom to meet them now, rather than postpone?
34038Would it not be well for you to take charge of something or of somebody?
34038Would it not otherwise soon become acid and disagreeable?
34038Would not the prospect of doing good, rather than of giving offence, have been worth something?
34038Would not this have greatly added to the severity of the disease?
34038Would there, in the latter case, have been no hazard to the constitution?
34038Yet if they are endangered who are least predisposed to this or any other disease, where is the safety of those who inherit such a predisposition?
34038Yet what could I do in the premises?
34038Yet, in the progress of society towards a more perfect millennial state of things, must it not come?
34038and suffer you to go on sinning?"
34038do you know?"
34038for, practically, the great question was,_ cui bono_?
34038have you tried it?"
34038how can these doctors wish to starve folks?
34038is it Satan himself?
34038is it not to trifle with the most solemn considerations?
34038now go on to woe irretrievable?
34038or, are they not the heaven- appointed penalties of transgression?
38752''Any laundry_ today_?'' 38752 ?"
38752?
38752?
38752?
38752A splint? 38752 Able to go to the show then, tonight?"
38752About what?
38752And been growing worse ever since?
38752And how old is she?
38752And pretty?
38752And what may that be?
38752And where is he to go?
38752And you gave the message to him?
38752And you''ll take others with you?
38752Are n''t you glad you got that galloway?
38752Are they good pay?
38752Are you feeling better today, Dolly?
38752Are you to make another call today?
38752But did you find your father at the office?
38752But how can I get word to you? 38752 But how could you lift the body without help?"
38752But how''ll papa get back?
38752But what if I should be called out in the night?
38752Ca n''t you use your knife, Doctor?
38752Can Uncle Peter cure other things?
38752Can they reason and argue people out of these things?
38752Can you come down to James Curtis''s right away?
38752Can you draw up a legal will because you happen to be the wife of a lawyer?
38752Can you eat anything?
38752Did he come up here to conjure you?
38752Did he look ashamed?
38752Did he tell you what was in this letter he sent to me?
38752Did it hurt?
38752Did n''t he ever bring any to your house?
38752Did she say she could n''t wait?
38752Did you find Dr. Brown in?
38752Did you find a woman waiting for you?
38752Did you give that message to the doctor?
38752Did you hear that?
38752Did you try pretty hard to stop it?
38752Do n''t know?
38752Do n''t you think my way is nicer than yours-- huh?
38752Do you know him?
38752Do you know the name of it?
38752Do you know what it is, or where it''s from?
38752Do you know where Dr. Blank is?
38752Do you know who she was?
38752Do you know who this is?
38752Do you like Omar?
38752Do you make your money by working by the week?
38752Do you see that little boy skipping along down there?
38752Do you think a great physician like Dr. Wentworth does n''t know what he is talking about?
38752Do you think it will ever be an established fact?
38752Do you think the baby''s eyes have been hurt by too much light?
38752Do you want it?
38752Doctor, do you think the baby will cut any more teeth this summer?
38752Doctor, is this you?
38752Doctor, will it hurt the baby to bathe it every morning? 38752 Does he keep all the babies at your house?"
38752Does he know where that is?
38752Does n''t it look all right?
38752Does n''t it strike you that you are going pretty far back for your bill?
38752Does she know that the powders are to be sent by her and will she call at the office?
38752Does she rattle?
38752Down where? 38752 Down where?"
38752Down_ where_?
38752Dr. Blank is there just now, is n''t he?
38752Dr. Blank, can you come over to the Woolson Hotel?
38752Dr. Blank, you''re president of the board of health, ai n''t ye?
38752Dye''s? 38752 East Oak or West?"
38752East or West?
38752Eh?
38752Four ounces in three days? 38752 Good morning, Mr. Blake,"said the doctor, shaking hands with him,"back again, are you?"
38752Got your dress cut out?
38752Had n''t you better put your ulster on, dear?
38752Has she any fever?
38752Has she been here today?
38752Has the doctor got there yet?
38752Has the doctor started yet?
38752Has_ The Record_ come?
38752Have n''t you ever made a splint?
38752Have you been up all day?
38752Have you got your baby to sleep yet?
38752Have you learned how to save it?
38752Have you something special on hand?
38752He did, eh?
38752He was up all last night and is not able to come--"Can I just talk to him about her?
38752He''ll go to the office first wo n''t he?
38752He''ll surely be back in a little bit now, wo n''t he?
38752Hello, is this Dr. Blank''s office?
38752Hello, still there?
38752Hello?
38752Hello?
38752Hello?
38752Hello?
38752Hello?
38752How can I help it, sweetheart?
38752How can that be? 38752 How did you know what was wanted with me out in the country?"
38752How do I know?
38752How do you think she is, Doctor?
38752How does he go about it?
38752How far away do you think that dove is?
38752How far did you walk?
38752How fast is it now?
38752How is the other patient tonight?
38752How long do you think I can live?
38752How long do you think I''ll live?
38752How long has he been_ gone_? 38752 How long has she been sick?"
38752How long have you been back, John?
38752How many of''em would a feller dare take at once?
38752How much do I have to pay?
38752How much water must I put in it?
38752How much will ye charge to pull a tooth?
38752How much?
38752How much?
38752How soon will he be back?
38752How soon will he be back?
38752How soon will he be back?
38752Huh- h?
38752I did n''t have any money, Doctor, but will the hen pay for the medicine?
38752I heard that sigh,he laughed,"but it wo n''t be very hard to sort of keep an ear on the''phone, will it?
38752I hope he went right down?
38752I mean how long will it last in the system?
38752I wanted the doctor, Mrs. Blank, do you know where he is?
38752I''ve got two kinds here, the Cyclone and the Monarch, which would you rather have?
38752If I should go down these stairs, seize him and dash his brains out against that building, what would you think of me?
38752If you were sick and had sent for a doctor would you like to have him fool around gathering grapes and everything else on his way?
38752In March? 38752 Into the lye this time, too?"
38752Is Doc at home?
38752Is Dr. Blank at home?
38752Is Dr. Blank there?
38752Is Dr. Blank there?
38752Is Dr. Blank there?
38752Is Dr. Blank there?
38752Is he in the office now?
38752Is he there?
38752Is he there?
38752Is he there?
38752Is he too far away for you to call him?
38752Is he? 38752 Is it done?"
38752Is it the house where the girl had the sore throat?
38752Is it? 38752 Is milk all right?"
38752Is n''t he back_ yet_?
38752Is n''t he there in the dining room?
38752Is n''t it lovely, John?
38752Is n''t that a pretty sight?
38752Is n''t that your''phone?
38752Is n''t the doctor coming?
38752Is n''t who lovely?
38752Is some one sick at your house, then?
38752Is someone calling Dr. Blank''s house or office?
38752Is that all you have to say about it?
38752Is that so?
38752Is that so?
38752Is that you, Doctor?
38752Is the doctor at home?
38752Is the doctor there?
38752Is the doctor there?
38752Is the doctor there?
38752Is the doctor there?
38752Is the doctor there?
38752Is the doctor there?
38752Is the patient in the tent now?
38752Is this Doctor Blank?
38752Is this Dr. Blank''s house?
38752Is this Dr. Blank''s office?
38752Is this Dr. Blank''s office?
38752Is this Dr. Blank''s office?
38752Is this Dr. Blank''s office?
38752Is this Dr. Blank''s office?
38752Is this Dr. Brown? 38752 Is this the Big Four?"
38752Is this the doctor''s office?
38752Is this the doctor''s office?
38752Is this the doctor?
38752Is this the doctor?
38752Is this the home of Mr. Walton at Drayton?
38752Is this you, Doc?
38752Is this you, Doctor Blank?
38752Is this you, Doctor?
38752Is this you, Doctor?
38752Is this you, Doctor?
38752Is this you, Mary?
38752Is this you, Mary?
38752Is this you, Warner?
38752It is n''t time yet, is it?
38752It''s Ben Morely is it? 38752 John, what possessed you to come to_ the church_?"
38752John, why in the world did n''t you give him some instructions as to how to take them?
38752John,she said,"when will the reign of ignorance and superstition end?"
38752Know what?
38752Lately?
38752Likes to see its mamma?
38752Likes to see its mamma?
38752Likes to see its papa?
38752Ma, he says, is it the place where the girl had the sore throat?
38752May I see you put it on, Doctor?
38752Miss''Blank,_ you_ know where Mr. Blank got our baby,_ do n''t_ you?
38752Mrs. Peters? 38752 Must I take it just like the other?"
38752No, did you?
38752On what street?.... 38752 Operated upon for what?"
38752Out of_ what_?
38752Out where?
38752Pretty fine, is n''t he?
38752Right away?
38752She''s just about a week old now, is n''t she?
38752Smith''s on Parks avenue?.... 38752 Stuck fast, eh?"
38752Swallowed benzine, did she? 38752 That long drive?"
38752The baby''s better, is n''t it?
38752The doctor has n''t come yet?
38752The doctor,said the old man meditatively, as if wondering that anybody should be calling for him--"the doctor-- you mean Dr. Blank, I reckon?"
38752Then how could she run it into the ground?
38752Then it was all right?
38752Then what in thunder did you send for me for?
38752They wo n''t? 38752 They''re going to make day hideous and night lamented, are n''t they?"
38752This is Mrs. Blank is it not?
38752This is his--"Hello, what is it?
38752Thornton''s-- let''s see-- have you a telephone directory handy-- could you give me their number?
38752To Drayton?
38752To bring what?
38752To go on to Drayton?
38752W''y, do n''t you know nothin''''bout conjurin''?
38752Was it a good one?
38752Was it?
38752Was n''t the message for you?
38752Was she thrown from a horse or a vehicle?
38752Was there nobody in sight?
38752Well, did you put them in hot water?
38752Well, he''s coming down today is n''t he?
38752Well, tell me, Tom, is Dr. Blank there?
38752Well, then will you send an officer?
38752Well, what has she done_ today_?
38752Well, what is it, Mamie?
38752Well, where is he now?
38752Well, where is the_ doctor_?
38752Well, where is the_ doctor_?
38752Well, who the devil_ are_ you?
38752Well, why did n''t you go?
38752Well, will you give me that prescription?
38752Well, will you send him down as soon as he comes? 38752 Well, you can get it for me, ca n''t you?"
38752Well, you''ll go, wo n''t you? 38752 Well-- if he gets through teething-- don''t you think he''ll be all right?"
38752Were they still there when you got back?
38752Wha- a- t?
38752What about?
38752What am I ever to do with Jane?
38752What are you there for?
38752What can I do for you today?
38752What did you do then?
38752What did you find?
38752What do you call this kind?
38752What do you mean, Doctor?
38752What do you mean?
38752What do you mean?
38752What do you think I want with them?
38752What does she mean by''in front of it''?
38752What fer?
38752What for?
38752What for?
38752What for?
38752What has she taken?
38752What have you been doing to stop the bleeding?
38752What is it?
38752What is it?
38752What is it?
38752What is it?
38752What is it?
38752What is it?
38752What is it?
38752What is it?
38752What is the disease?
38752What is the nature of it?
38752What sort of prescription?
38752What''s the matter down there, grandmother?
38752What''s the matter there now?
38752What''s the matter?
38752What''s the matter?
38752What''s the matter?
38752What''s your uncle''s name?
38752What?
38752What_ is_ a seton?
38752What_ is_ it?
38752What_ is_ the matter out there?
38752When he comes will you tell him to come out to Frank Tiller''s?
38752Where are you, anyway?
38752Where did he learn them?
38752Where did you get this?
38752Where do you live?
38752Where is he?
38752Where is she?
38752Where is that?
38752Where is the doctor?
38752Where is the soapstone?
38752Where shall I go?
38752Where''s the boy?
38752Where''s the doctor?
38752Where_ is_ he?
38752Which stops it, the Bible or the words?
38752Which''phone was it?
38752Which, the candy or the coming down?
38752Who built it?
38752Who is it?
38752Who is it?
38752Who is the patient?
38752Who is this?
38752Who told ye?
38752Who told you so?
38752Who was it?
38752Who''s at the office?
38752Who?
38752Who?
38752Whose clock_ is_ that?
38752Why did n''t you call me, John, instead of standing there and scaring me to death?
38752Why did n''t you do as I told you, yesterday?
38752Why do you do that?
38752Why do you suppose they walk instead of riding?
38752Why have n''t you let me know about this baby''s eyes?
38752Why have n''t you let me know about this baby''s eyes?
38752Why not Occident?
38752Why the devil did n''t you say so at the start?
38752Why, does papa have to go away?
38752Why, how many clocks do you have to wind?
38752Why, will they hurt me?
38752Why? 38752 Why?"
38752Why?
38752Why?
38752Why?
38752Why?
38752Why?
38752Will it make any difference if she does n''t take it till tonight?
38752Will you please ask him to come to the''phone?
38752Will you please telephone him there to bring a roast with him?
38752Will you please tell him to come at once?
38752Will you please tell him when he comes in to call up 83?
38752Will you please try?
38752Will you take your pay in pills?
38752Wo n''t you come in?
38752Wo n''t, eh?
38752Wo n''t_ you_ tell''i m to come down to Sairey Tucker''s? 38752 Worse tonight?
38752Would n''t you like to go to the country?
38752Would you give her any aromatic spirits of ammonia?
38752Yes, what is it John?
38752Yes..... Who is this?.... 38752 Yes?"
38752You are at the office then? 38752 You did?
38752You do n''t do it, do you?
38752You do n''t think it will hurt me then?
38752You got Mrs. Dorlan''s message did you?
38752You have to go some place, do you?
38752You make all the babies''dresses, do n''t you?
38752You slice the onions and put sugar on them, do n''t you?
38752You think he would?
38752You''ll never, never tell if I do?
38752You''re the doctor''s wife, ai n''t ye?
38752Your harness is broken, have you got a string?
38752_ Another_ patient? 38752 _ This_ is Dr. Blank''s office?"
38752_ Well_, when will he be back?
38752_ Where do you live!_"_ Where do you live?_"Well maybe it does. 38752 _ Where do you live?_""We live on Oak street."
38752''Mary,''he said in a helpless sort of way,''It struck_ seven_--what_ time_ is it?''
38752''s compliment?"
38752A giggle and a loud girlish voice in his ear asking,"Is this you, Nettie?"
38752A lady''s voice was asking,"Who_ is_ this?"
38752A quart?"
38752A solemn voice asked,"Have you made your will?"
38752A spirited dialogue was taking place between a young man and a maid:"Where_ are_ you, Jack?"
38752A subdued voice asked,"What are you going to do now, Doctor?"
38752About two o''clock there came a tragic pounding at the door and when the doctor went to open it a voice asked,"What''s the matter down here?"
38752After some time Mary was awakened by her husband''s voice asking,"What is it?"
38752And did n''t I hear you commanding Jack just the other day to take the hoe right out of the house and to go out the same door he came in?"
38752And give her a spoonful of mustard-- anything to produce vomiting...... She has?
38752And if, after waiting, he still failed to find the doctor?
38752And not give him anything at all?
38752And when at last he came her lips could hardly frame the question,"How is he, John?"
38752Another little laugh,"You do n''t think it would?"
38752Are you doing it?
38752As he passed out the doctor stopped to inquire,"How''s that sore breast?
38752As his wife went back to the kitchen her daughter called,"Mother, did you take the loaf of bread in there with you?"
38752As they drove off she asked,"You came pretty near catching a tartar, did n''t you?"
38752Blank''s?"
38752Blank''s?"
38752Blank''s?"
38752Blank, do n''t you think red is God''s favorite color?''
38752Blank, do you know who the Hammell''s are?''
38752Blank, will you do me a great favor?''
38752Blank?"
38752Blank?"
38752Blank?"
38752Blank?"
38752Blank?"
38752Blank?"
38752Blank?"
38752Blank?"
38752Blank?"
38752Blank?"
38752Blank?"
38752Blank?"
38752Blank?"
38752Blank?"
38752Blank?"
38752Brownson?"
38752Brownson?"
38752But I am very thirsty, might I have a glass of water?"
38752But are good things about me so rare that you made a note of it?"
38752But it was the voice of a friend and it surprised Mary with this question:"Mrs. Blank, if you were me would you have your daughter operated upon?"
38752But what could she tell her?
38752But what makes you think it is red?''
38752But what would be the use?
38752But you might push a little on the brandy, or the strychnine-- how much brandy have you given her since I saw her?"
38752By the way, Mr. Nelson, will you just''phone the doctor at the office, please?
38752Can I begin giving him a little more today?
38752Can he have some ice- cream for dinner?
38752Can we move Henry out into the yard?
38752Can we move Jennie into the house?
38752Can you come up to my house right away?"
38752Can you find out who it was?"
38752Can you get him awake?"
38752Come where?....
38752Could n''t you have taken the tent farther out?"
38752Curtis?"
38752Did she hear footsteps down the walk?
38752Do n''t you know I have the reputation of being the meanest man in the county?"
38752Do n''t you want to see how much she''s growed?"
38752Do you remember me?"
38752Do you remember that drive we took a week or two ago up north?"
38752Do you suppose it''s a felon?....
38752Do you think I''d choose a day like this for a pleasure trip?"
38752Do you think it would help my aunt?"
38752Do you think she wo n''t have any more?"
38752Do you think we will need any more?....
38752Do you understand?"
38752Do you want to wait that long?"
38752Do you_ have_ to?"
38752Doctor, will it hurt Jennie to eat some tomatoes this morning-- she craves them so?
38752Doctor, you know those pink tablets you left?
38752Dorlan''s?"
38752Down near Dyre''s?
38752Father, mother and baby all doing well?"
38752Felton?"
38752For an instant the doctor did not speak; then he asked,"Are you sure that this is true?"
38752Going, one morning, to speak to a friend about some little matter she heard her husband say:"What is it, doctor?"
38752Going, one morning, to speak to a"Doctor, will it hurt the baby to bathe it every morning?"
38752Had an occasion arisen now?
38752Had some wild beast escaped from a passing menagerie and was it coming in to devour the household?
38752Haig?"
38752He curved one hand around his ear and said again,"Hey?"
38752He rang and put the receiver to his ear:"Did you put your washin''out today?"
38752He takes it down and hears a voice say leisurely,"D''ye get them?"
38752Her companion looked at her and said,"Hey?"
38752How are they to know?
38752How did you_ do_ it?"
38752How do you make it?"
38752How does it happen I get the house?"
38752How long will that morphine last?"
38752How long will you be in the office this morning, Doctor?......
38752How many people do you know who want to see the new moon over the left shoulder?
38752How much?...
38752How old is he?"
38752How soon do you think he will be back?"
38752How would you like a star- light drive?"
38752How''s the doctor?"
38752Huntley?"
38752I am young and you are growing old, Doctor, but will you take this word from me?
38752I say on which side of Wilson''s mill?....
38752I suppose I can disconnect it but--""But you do n''t see how you can?
38752I''ve been giving her digitalis; what do you think about that?"
38752I''ve been"Doctor, will it hurt the baby to bathe it every morning?
38752I''ve been"Likes to see it''s mamma?"
38752If a woman has n''t a right to a night''s sleep once in awhile what_ is_ she entitled to?"
38752If red is his favorite color why should he put it where it ca n''t be seen?''
38752In a minute a voice said,"What is it?"
38752In a minute he exclaimed,"Say, Mary, what was the rest of that story?"
38752In what way?"
38752Is it a boy or a girl added to the world today?"
38752Is n''t she pretty?"
38752Is she suffering much?....
38752Is that all right?"
38752Is there a''phone there?"
38752Is there anyone here to do it?"
38752It was Fanny, and he settled back on one elbow and asked,"What you doing, Fanny?"
38752It was a woman''s voice asking,"How much of that gargle must I use at a time?"
38752It''s a hurry call, is it?
38752Lemonade wo n''t hurt Helen, will it?
38752Mary listened with interest to what was to come:"?"
38752Mary, from the living room, heard her husband''s voice:"What is it?"
38752Milton?"
38752Mrs. Dorlan''s on Brownson street, will you remember it?"
38752Now what is it?"
38752Of what was he thinking?
38752On which side?
38752Parkin?"
38752Presently he said,"Mr. Stirling, will you come here a minute?"
38752Richards?"
38752Right next to Wilson''s mill?....
38752See how many there are?"
38752Shall she speak?
38752She heard the same voice ask,"Is this you, Doctor?"
38752She hurried out to the porch,"Is n''t papa here?"
38752She went to the''phone, expecting to hear a querulous woman''s voice asking,"Has the doctor started yet?"
38752She would take down the receiver and ask,"What is it?"
38752She''s going to sleep..... Well, I guess she_ ca n''t_ see very well with her eyes shut..... Then you wo n''t come down?....
38752Shortridge?"
38752Should she step out doors where the cherry tree would not be in the way?
38752Should she take it for granted?
38752Soon the same voice says,"Are you there yet, Doctor?"
38752Tell her to put her finger down her throat and vomit some more..... No, I think it wo n''t be necessary for me to come down..... You would?
38752Ten, you say?
38752The doctor answered solemnly,"The baby''s fat and healthy is n''t it?"
38752The doctor came out, and the little boy looking up at him asked,"Is they any more babies down in the woods?"
38752The doctor turned to go then paused to ask,"How''s the baby?"
38752The old, old question:"Is the doctor there?"
38752The other two began,"Yes,""Well,""What is it?"
38752The pleasant voice spoke again,"This is Dr. Blank, is it?"
38752The voice went on,"Mrs. Blank, could n''t you just speak to the druggist about it so I could get it right away?"
38752Then she asked,"Is there a''phone at Mr. William Huntley''s?"
38752There came into his mind the image of Mary as she had asked so earnestly,"How are they to know?
38752They did n''t?
38752Torren''s?"
38752Twitchell''s?"
38752Very pleasantly, almost apologetically she asks,"What is it?"
38752Was he going to reprimand her?
38752Was n''t it?
38752Well, where is the_ doctor_?"
38752West?
38752What does it mean?"
38752What had I better do with this Polish girl''s hand?"
38752What had happened at home?
38752What have you been doing to prevent it?"
38752What in h- ll did you cut us off for?"
38752What is it?"
38752What is it?"
38752What is it?....
38752What kind is this?"
38752What must I do with it?"
38752What''s a wife for?
38752What''s the matter?"
38752What''s wanted?"
38752What_ you_ doing?"
38752When I opened the door he asked as he always does,''Any laundry?''"
38752When he came home Mary asked,"Did you stop the leak?"
38752When he gets off, will you please tell him?"
38752When he got the number and asked,"Is this you, Fanny?"
38752When the young girl entered the room her mother said,"Gertrude, you answered the''phone awhile ago, did n''t you?"
38752When they were in the buggy again Mary said,"But what if the baby goes blind after all?
38752Where can the boys have got to?
38752Where do you live?"
38752Where is it?"
38752Where is she?
38752Where was he to go?"
38752Where were you then?"
38752Where''s the doctor?"
38752Where''s the doctor?"
38752Where''s the doctor?"
38752While the light was being brought he asked,"Did this inflammation begin when the baby was about three days old?"
38752Who is to blame for the blindness in the first place?
38752Who is to tell them?
38752Who is to tell them?"
38752Who was calling Dr. Blank a while ago?"
38752Who''s sick out there?"
38752Who''s sick out there?"
38752Who''s?"
38752Who_ did_ tell ye?"
38752Whose sick out there?"
38752Why did n''t you find out?"
38752Why did n''t you have central''phone you at Smith''s if Hanson called and save me all that bother?"
38752Why did n''t you holler before?"
38752Why, Tom, you''re not_ sick_, are you-- huh?"
38752Will he be back soon?"
38752Will you be right out?
38752Will you be right out?"
38752Will you be right out?"
38752Will you be there when he comes?"
38752Will you come down?"
38752Will you excuse me just an instant till I see what is wanted?"
38752Will you tell him that?"
38752Wo n''t you please see that someone goes down at once?"
38752Would it be too much trouble for you to step into Hall''s and ask them to send me up a quart of ice- cream for dinner?"
38752Would it turn at the corner and come up toward their house?
38752Would she still be waiting?
38752Would you give her any more morphine?"
38752Yes, I know where that is..... Galliver-- that''s the name is it?
38752You can tell better when you see it?....
38752You live not far from Thomas Calhoun''s, do you not?"
38752You say he''ll be back in half an hour?"
38752You say it wo n''t?....
38752_ Not_ Smith''s?....
38752exclaimed James Curtis,"have you been floundering around all this time in these woods so close to the house?
38752hain''t he got there yet--?"
38752is n''t she lovely, John?"
38752is_ he_ there?
38752she said impatiently,"I''m_ very_ sorry to have to answer you again but--""Is the doctor there?"
38752what will she think?"
38752you rascal,"the doctor called, as he passed,"why did n''t you go all the way with her?"
41595''An''this big wheel, what''s this fur?'' 41595 ''An''who''ll yeze like to see, sure?''
41595''And did n''t you think it was very cruel in them to leave you there to suffer so long?'' 41595 ''And the big black one; who did that come out of?''
41595''And the twins?'' 41595 ''And were you among those poor boys who were left lying where you fell, that bitter cold morning, till you froze fast to the ground?''
41595''Are n''t you Charley----?'' 41595 ''Are you-- that is, do you play rapidly, and at sight?''
41595''Be you the engineer what runs the machine?'' 41595 ''But when it was taken, you were in too great agony to know or care for it?''
41595''But,''I said,''do you not adjust your dress in this way on purpose to give us a chance to look?'' 41595 ''Did the cat''s hair grow?''
41595''Did you count the eggs, Sammy, and get an odd number?'' 41595 ''Fixed the nest up all nice, Sammy?''
41595''Hallo, sir,''growled the schoolmaster( Squeers),''what''s that?'' 41595 ''How many eggs did you set her on, Sammy, dear?''
41595''Indeed, sir? 41595 ''Not beautiful, am I?''
41595''Now, Charley, what brought you back? 41595 ''O, sneezed, did you?''
41595''Then shall I apply some leeches?'' 41595 ''Well, sir, what do you know about the science of medicine?''
41595''Well, sir,''continued the first,''what would you do if during an action a man was brought to you with both arms and legs shot off? 41595 ''Well, why the d----l do n''t you go?''
41595''What hopes, good doctor?'' 41595 ''What is this you have on it?''
41595''What is your mode of treatment, or what school do you represent?'' 41595 ''What shall I do to prevent its falling out?''
41595''What shall I do? 41595 ''What you call that place you''re in?''
41595''What? 41595 ''Where do you live, and what is your name, sir?''
41595''Who?'' 41595 ''Why not?''
41595''Why should he be cupped?'' 41595 ''You want a piano player?''
41595''_ Why_ should you desire to bleed him?'' 41595 A dead man?"
41595A newspaper man?
41595AN''WHO''LL YEZE LIKE TO SEE, SURE?
41595Ai n''t she an angel?
41595And is it two dollars for the snap of a job likes to that, noo, ye''ll be axin''a poor man?
41595And what do you think was the effect of putting cold water into a man''s stomach, under these circumstances?
41595And where will you try your luck next?
41595And who was Anglicus Ponto?
41595And why should any truth be counted as treasonable?
41595And wo n''t he die, if we follow this strange prescription?
41595Anything to eat in that pantry?
41595Are not physicians and apothecaries sometimes owners of patent medicines?
41595Are they not all found?
41595Are you drunk, or sober, doctor?
41595Are you drunk, or sober?
41595Are you not very cold, in those thin clothes?
41595Are you the doctor?
41595At what time do you get up?
41595Be thou as chaste as ice, or pure as snow, thou shalt not escape calumny,and if she fall, who shall restore her?
41595Better?
41595But ca n''t you give me some snuff, doctor?
41595But what has become of the poor, wet fellow? 41595 Ca n''t you tell a story just as well without swearing, Sam?"
41595Can you cure me? 41595 Can you familiarize me with the most direct course to a physician?"
41595Can you tell me where a doctor lives?
41595DOES HE LOVE ME?
41595Did n''t you tell me I had a good case?
41595Did n''t your''grandma sleep during nearly a hundred years''on a feather bed?
41595Did the other party, the young''flirt,''know it?
41595Did you ever hear a teacher say,''I will whip you within an inch of your life?''
41595Did you feel that your sins were so great as to require a frequent repetition of the ordinance?
41595Did you follow my directions?
41595Die with? 41595 Do n''t the newspaper publishers know it is a swindle?"
41595Do n''t you observe the arms of Mrs. Mapp on the carriage?
41595Do n''t you recollect me?
41595Do n''t you see the stove, and feel the awful heat, Frank?
41595Do you have books here, my dear?
41595Do you have to pay the bill, sir?
41595Do you know Lord Barrymore?
41595Do you like soda water?
41595Do you never experience any contrition, at times, for the deed?
41595Do you suppose that old woman is talking there now, with her nightcapped head poked out of the window?
41595Do you think it will relieve me from this oppression, doctor?
41595Does Captain Blank live here?
41595Dr. Smith, have you ever attended a common school?
41595Excuse me, madam, for disturbing your slumbers; but can you inform a stranger if this is the right road to B.?
41595Finally one of them approached and said,--''Stranger, are this''ere a injine?''
41595For Sir George, did you say, Joe?
41595Gentlemen,said the liveried servant, hat in hand,"can your honors tell me if Dr. Hannes is present?"
41595Good evening, Stephen; p''taters doin''well?
41595Good wind, Mr. T.? 41595 Great God,"he cried, in agony of soul,"why did I take you from your father''s house, where you had plenty?
41595HOW MUCH?
41595Have you got any money, young man?
41595Have you got any_ Bonyset arbs_?
41595Have you swallowed it all?
41595He eyed me closely for a moment; then, turning to his companion, he remarked,--''Bill, it do n''t take much of a man to be a engineer-- do it?''"
41595He return it? 41595 He was merely announced as''The Sanatorian,''but was indorsed( true or false?)
41595Here, Sammy; do n''t you know that is one of the nastiest and most indigestiblest things you could put into your stomach? 41595 Hey?"
41595Hiding from the snakes in his back room?
41595Hoss?
41595How are you, my friend, and where have you been? 41595 How could such a lady as you come way down here to take care of us poor, sick, dirty boys?"
41595How could that be possible? 41595 How did it happen?
41595How did she describe the old lady as appearing?
41595How did them old_ anti- delusion_ fellows live?
41595How do you manage to take all those abominable pills and drugs, Madame Bertrand, which the doctor is continually prescribing for you?
41595How is he, woman?
41595How long will it take?
41595How mooch? 41595 How much do you charge, sir?"
41595How much have you made to- day?
41595How shall I be cheerful when all the world goes wrong with me?
41595I beg pardon, but can you tell me if the doctor has many patients?
41595I can not tell,replied the doctor;"what is the difference?"
41595I do forgive her,she whispered,"but can I forget myself, unblessed as I am?
41595I say, madam, when is this farm going to_ sail_?
41595Ignorant?
41595In New York city?
41595In exposing the_ reverend wolf_, do n''t you see they would expose their own weakness? 41595 Is Miss---- at home?"
41595Is he at home?
41595Is he better now?
41595Is it possible?
41595Is it true that consumption of the lungs is ever cured?
41595Is that a bust of Pallas he has over his secretary yonder?
41595Is the disease left in the box when you are done pumping? 41595 Is there anything more wanted?"
41595Is this Dr. Hannes''carriage?
41595Is_ Miss_ Kingsbury at home?
41595Let me see, Mr. Smith: how much did you pay me for that advice?
41595Let me see,said he;"how many patients have you seen to- day?"
41595Ma''am, where did you come from?
41595Madam, what can I do? 41595 May not a man be both?"
41595Me name, is it? 41595 Me tight?
41595Me? 41595 Me?
41595Medicine? 41595 Mine?
41595Ninepence? 41595 Now, what''s your name, boy?"
41595Now,continued the patient, very_ naïvely_,"supposing I did, what the devil was that to him?"
41595O, did you ever see such a comical sight?
41595O, docther, dear, I''ve pizened my boy; what will I do intirely?
41595O, doctor, then I am dying at last-- am I?
41595O, is there a God in Israel?
41595O, mermaids, is it cold and wet Adown beneath the sea? 41595 O, my lord, we never talk about anything but eating and drinking,--except--""Except what, sir?"
41595O, what-- what do I see?
41595PINNY, SIR? 41595 Pinny, sir?
41595SHALL I ASSIST YOU TO ALIGHT?
41595Sanburn,said she,--for that was the invalid''s name,--"could you eat some mush?"
41595Seen, my lord?
41595Shall I assist you to alight?
41595Shall we give him some?
41595Sir, do you see that I have both hands full?
41595Sixty, sir; and how old are you?
41595So you believe me totally incapable of truly loving_ any_ girl, do you?
41595Still, do you believe I never loved that darling girl?
41595Take? 41595 That?
41595The dark one? 41595 Then a patent medicine vender?"
41595Then it is only another''Reverend''dodge-- is it?
41595Then stand on your head; do n''t you see that all the light here comes from the skylight? 41595 Then what do you come here for, sir?"
41595There I''ve been luggin''water all the morning for the doctor''s wife to wash with, and what do you s''pose she give me for it?
41595This man has cut himself very bad on the head; big iron wheel come down on him: can you fix him up?
41595Tongue? 41595 Very sick, any of them?"
41595WHAT''S IN THE MILK?
41595WHO- A''-YOO?
41595WHY DID I TAZE YE?
41595WILL YE TAK''A BLAST, NOO?
41595Was you born in the woods to be scared by an owl?
41595Well, Dr. A., how is practice here, in general?
41595Well, what did you tell him?
41595Well, what has that to do with health and long life?
41595Well, what have you seen?
41595Well, what was his reply?
41595Well, you see that bank and all them nests? 41595 Well,"said the lady,"what do you children want?"
41595Well,said the man of science,"and pray what do you think of me now you have seen me?"
41595What are the proofs?
41595What are you waiting for?
41595What avails it that I know as much as other physicians who have entered upon a practice? 41595 What brings you here, blackie?"
41595What brought you out, and where are you going, on this cold winter morning, my poor boy?
41595What business?
41595What d''ye want?
41595What did she reply?
41595What do you call glucose?
41595What do you suppose I found him doing?
41595What do you talk about?
41595What do you think of this?
41595What explanation can you give for such conduct, sir?
41595What have you got these nailed up over the door for?
41595What have you here?
41595What is a sample clerk, my lad?
41595What is he doing in a slaughter- house, sis?
41595What is it?
41595What is it?
41595What is that you hold in your hand?
41595What is the disease?
41595What is the hour?
41595What is the matter, sir?
41595What is the object of the two canine specimens being always present when I have consulted you?
41595What is the price of this meat, sir?
41595What is your name?
41595What regiment''s yours, and under whose flag Do you fight?
41595What shall I say to her? 41595 What was the effect of the ptisan?"
41595What were you doing at the front door but a moment since?
41595What will Mrs. Codfish say when she sees this turned dress?
41595What''s o''clock?
41595What''s that hollow thing for?
41595What''s the matter? 41595 What''s the matter?"
41595What, in the name of Heaven, shall I now do?
41595What? 41595 What?"
41595Where do you live?
41595Where is it?
41595Where is your father, did you say?
41595Where was I born? 41595 Which shall we follow?"
41595Which way?
41595Who has done this wicked thing?
41595Who wants Dr. Hannes, fellow?
41595Who''s telling this story,--you or me?
41595Who?
41595Why are you up, without my permission?
41595Why did you do such a remarkable deed?
41595Why do n''t some of the thousand victims who have been swindled into buying this worthless stuff expose him?
41595Why not surprised by receiving the letter from a stranger?
41595Why should Mrs. Lozier, a gentle, modest, unambitious, home- loving woman, have chosen the calling of a physician?
41595Why, Bridget, did n''t I tell you never to polish the front door- knobs during the warm season? 41595 Why, what''s the matter at the shanty, Fitzgibbon?"
41595Will they cure this?
41595Will yeze be axin''that much?
41595Will you ask a blessing?
41595Will you go to Mrs. Higgins''s party?
41595Will you please come and see my mother?
41595Will-- will-- you go? 41595 Winked?"
41595Woman, my lord?
41595Would n''t a_ bit_ or two serve you as well?
41595Yes, I am; and you are a--''pathist; are you not?
41595Yes, and did n''t you advise me to sue him?
41595Yes, sir; buy one?
41595Yes; and have you any more pennies?
41595Yes; but I mean, had intemperance anything to do with it?
41595You ca n''t be at Bedford Row( where Abernethy resided)"at nine, then?"
41595You have long desired to visit Bangor?
41595You see that bank over opposite?
41595You were often with him?
41595Yours, sir-- what''s your name?
41595Zounds, woman, have n''t I told you to give him all he will take? 41595 _ Cur?_"( why) was a favorite inquiry of Dr. Abernethy''s.
41595''Are you a clairvoyant?''
41595''Could any tumultuous passion ever have agitated that bosom so gently swelling in repose?''
41595''For God''s sake, Mr. Bilious, have you got any good preventive for falling of the hair?''
41595''How now?''
41595''How will ye have it?''
41595''No hopes,_ dear_ doctor?''
41595''Not beautiful at all, am I?
41595''O, my God, what shall I do?''
41595''Then what did you say"Nothing"for, sir?''
41595''Why ar Moses like er cotton- gin?''
41595( How far can one travel, in this country, without crossing water?)
41595( I nodded, and smiled, for how could I refrain from smiling?)
41595( Would not this be excellent advice to some of the apothecaries of the present day?)
41595( a smile?)
41595*****"Did you know that George is sick?"
41595*****[ Illustration: WHAT KILLED THE DOG?]
41595--A GAY BEAU.--UP THE PENOBSCOT.--DYING FOR LOVE.--"IS HE MAD?"
41595--A GAY BEAU.--UP THE PENOBSCOT.--DYING FOR LOVE.--"IS HE MAD?"
41595--HIS LAST JOKE.--AN ASTONISHED DARKY.--OLD DR. K.''S MARE.--A SCARED CUSTOMER.--"WHAT''S TRUMPS?"
41595--HIS LAST JOKE.--AN ASTONISHED DARKY.--OLD DR. K.''s MARE.--A SCARED CUSTOMER.--"WHAT''S TRUMPS?"
41595--MONEY DOES IT.-- GREAT SUMS OF MONEY.--"LOVE POWDER"EXPOSÉ.--HASHEESH.--"DOES HE LOVE ME?"
41595--MONEY DOES IT.--GREAT SUMS OF MONEY.--"LOVE POWDER"EXPOSE.--HASHEESH.--"DOES HE LOVE ME?"
41595--RIGHT TO BEAR ARMS.--RUNS IN THE FAMILY.--ANECDOTES.--"WHICH GOT THRASHED?"
41595--RIGHT TO BEAR ARMS.--RUNS IN THE FAMILY.--ANECDOTES.--"WHICH GOT THRASHED?"
4159515),"What deed is this that ye have done?
41595A poor mechanic, three weeks after marriage, was addressed by his wife thus:--"Harry, do n''t you think a new silk dress would become my beauty?"
41595A reverend(?
41595A wag once entered one of these apotheco- groco- dry- goods- meat- and- fish- market- stores, and asked the keeper,--"Do you keep matches, sir?"
41595A whisper was passed to a female passenger; a policeman was summoned from outside the ladies''(?)
41595A.?''
41595ANIMAL OR VEGETABLE DIET?
41595Ah, Biddy, will ye have me?"
41595Ah, an''what would me poor mother say, if she was here?
41595Ah, why did I taze ye?"
41595Am I fainting?"
41595Among eighty- five"female physicians"(?)
41595An invalid from boyhood, his time and means exhausted in travelling"in Europe two years,"and was only"sent a missionary(?)
41595And did John rescue the saddle- bags?"
41595And do you not know that life is pretty much what you make it and take it?
41595And for what, and for whom, are you fighting?"
41595And how was I to reach it?
41595And the girls?
41595And what do they leave in their wake?
41595And what is the reverse of this exclusiveness?
41595And what of her brother who was on the other end of the plank?
41595And what was the result?
41595And who shall smooth the dying pillow, hear the last prayer, for self, and for loved ones far away in the northern homes?
41595And why did you stay?
41595And would_ she_ possibly betray the daughter of her old friend?"
41595And yet, what shall I say?
41595And you are next led to ask,--"Where is the''dodge''?
41595Any more, gentlemen?
41595Are not these historical facts?
41595Are sly glances, winks, or billets- doux prayers?
41595Are the_ males_ the only"oppressors"of the gentler sex?
41595Are there not many who now believe this?
41595At which gate did he really make his exit?
41595Away hastened the girl, who, quickly returning, asked in very primitive simplicity,--"How will you have them cooked?"
41595Being late at school, the teacher would inquire,--"Where have you been lingering, that you are behind time at school?"
41595But from Ellsworth, Maine, which way else could one go, without going"south- west,"unless he really went to the"jumping- off place, away down east?"
41595But have n''t you been cleaning the door- knob and the bell- pull?"
41595But how about the bedaubed face and the huge knife?
41595But how old are the twins, and Mike, and the baby?''
41595But how shall we judge of the motives of Dr. Hammond but by_ appearances_?
41595But since the ruined drunkard used tobacco, how do you know it was not tobacco which ruined him?
41595But the abrupt question of the Pantheist was,"Mr. Emmons, how old are you?"
41595But what of thy bewildered votaries?
41595But what would you think of a doctor, a respectable graduate of a medical college, who sought, if not advice, recreation and solace in Mother Goose?
41595But who shall defend the babies''rights?
41595But who was to know whether"the doctor made more visits per week to the widow Wealthy than her state of health seemed to warrant"?
41595But why is the doctor forgot?
41595CUI BONO?
41595CUR?
41595Ca n''t I have some more of that drink?"
41595Can an adulterer perceive it?
41595Can the reader suppose any sensible person would believe this to be magic?
41595Can you help me?
41595Can you see?"
41595Can you, honest reader, believe there are such institutions in our enlightened land?
41595Colts grew horses, beards turned gray, Deacon and deaconess dropped away; Children and grandchildren-- where were they?
41595Come, that''ll do very well for a joke; but how could I get water on my chest when I have n''t touched a drop in twenty years?
41595Could I say no to so honest a statement of his low state of finance?
41595Could I take her fee?
41595Could yeze spare a quarter for a poor divil?
41595Did a legitimate business require such mazy windings as I had just passed through?
41595Did our grandfathers or mothers die of consumption?
41595Did the fortune- teller know your address?"
41595Did they dissipate in any way?
41595Did they drink, smoke, or chew?
41595Did you ever know a patient to recover from sun- stroke when ice had been applied to his head?
41595Did you ever see one before?''
41595Did you ever?"
41595Did you propose to Jenny?
41595Did you?
41595Do n''t I sometimes wish I kept an"O''clo''"store, like the old Jew?
41595Do n''t you know me now?"
41595Do n''t you know who I am?
41595Do not"well- informed physicians"prescribe calomel?
41595Do sleep and digestion agree well in their case, and not so in the case of man?
41595Do women dress for men?
41595Do you begin to see the_ dodge_?
41595Do you call that the conduct of a gentleman?"
41595Do you have sore places about your chest?
41595Do you hear now?
41595Do you know a lady of this description whom you like?"
41595Do you know how much money is being squandered to- day, in the United States, in the filthy, health- destroying use of tobacco?
41595Do you understand?
41595Do you wonder it gives him a_ quietus_?
41595Do you wonder that the mortality among children is greatly on the increase?
41595Docther, now what are ye doin''?
41595Does any one question but something of this virus is transmitted to the offspring?
41595Does it act as physic, emetic, a bath, or do the sores follow right out of the blood into the box?"
41595Does it add anything to, or take anything from the limb?"
41595Does it really suck all the disease into the thing by the process?"
41595Does not the female show as strong lungs as the male in its_ earliest_ disapprobation of this unceremonious world?
41595Does she live in_ this house_?"
41595Does the mother, by habits which injure her health, jeopardize the life and health of her offspring?
41595Dr. Saffron took the wounded arm, looked at Job, and said,--"Is this your doings?"
41595Each_ monath_( new moon or month) religious(?)
41595Echo answers,"Where?"
41595Educate a clairvoyant doctor, and what becomes of his clairvoyant power?
41595Familiar title:''Excuse me, how is your stomach?''
41595Females, their victims, drown; but who ever heard of a natural- born villain committing suicide, unless to escape the threatening halter?
41595Fish contains more phosphorus; but are fish- eating Esquimaux,[10] or coast- men, the more intellectual for having made fish their principal diet?
41595Git up?
41595Give her the freedom of the boy, the pure air that the boy breathes; not the romping, rude, boisterous plays, perhaps(?
41595H. S."HOW MUCH?"
41595HOW MUCH?
41595HUNTER''S GENEROSITY.--"WHAT''S THE PRICE OF BEEF?"
41595HUNTER''S GENEROSITY.--"WHAT''S THE PRICE OF BEEF?"
41595Has she accepted, and are you beside yourself with ecstatic joy?
41595Has your doctor failed to do this?
41595Hath a seducer known it?
41595Hear, d---- you, Slush- bucket?"
41595His mother was a widow, very poor, and I asked him,--"What will she say when you return with no money to show for your day''s work?"
41595Hoo much wather, docther dear?
41595Hoo much?
41595Hopen de door, unt I preaks him mit mine feest; do n''t it?"
41595How about curing gout?
41595How about the comparative strength exhibited in the demonstrations of each when the lacteal fluid is not forthcoming in proportion to the appetite?
41595How am I to look into your nose?"
41595How could his dreams but have been disturbed, with the load of guilt and remorse that he ought to have had resting upon his conscience?
41595How else can you account for nearly all the professional clairvoyants( and spiritualists) being persons of low intellectuality?
41595How fares it with the more precious human clay?
41595How is it with you?"
41595How is the patient to detect it?
41595How is the physician to know the cheat?
41595How is the power, or force, conveyed from the operator to the person operated upon?
41595How many young women in Boston can avouch for the truth of this statement?
41595How mooch is the damage?
41595How shall I stay life''s sunny hours?
41595How shall we account for the evil?
41595How shall we, then, tell a pure gum arabic drop from those nasty glue drops?
41595How would our Powers have succeeded as a sculptor, without this knowledge, or Miss Bonheur as a painter of animals?
41595Hunter and Scipio-- in your case, sir?"
41595I discovered it accidentally, but how such an_ error_(?)
41595I have no money, but you see all my treasures arranged along on the mantel- piece there?"
41595I know this was decidedly unprofessional; but what care I?
41595I ran back to see what it was all about, and there was the pianist(?)
41595I was at this time_ seen_( by them?)
41595If it were"spirits,"why does the spirit always seek a_ low organization_ through which to manifest itself?
41595Is Faith of no avail?
41595Is Hope blown out like a light By a gust of wind in the night?
41595Is a sordid man capable of love?
41595Is he much sick?"
41595Is humanity below the animals?
41595Is it an incisor, bicuspid, or a molar?"
41595Is it anything strange that a dissipated, weakened man should die after having a score of suffocative fits?
41595Is it not quite time-- I appeal to the sensible reader-- that such folly was expunged from our literature?
41595Is it really"hidden from the wise and prudent, and given to babes?"
41595Is n''t she lovely?
41595Is she here?
41595Is that"too homeopathic?"
41595Is the active, prancing steed, or the inactive, sluggish swine, the better representative of beauty, strength, and long life?
41595Is there not more happiness and health in the obeying of this command, than in disobedience to it?
41595Is this a bad custom?
41595Is this true?
41595Just then Chaplain C. rode up, and hearing the contraband swearing, said,--"Do you know what the great I Am said?"
41595Keeps the_ lip_ pure, while wood and ivory stains?
41595Landlord and the Santipede( Xantippe?)
41595MAPP?"
41595MAPP?"]
41595Many of the abbeys of Europe and Asia had a"phlebotomaria,"or bleeding- room, connected, in which the sacred(?)
41595Mark says,"What, sir, would the peoples of the earth be without woman?
41595May I ask if it is not right that we should demand of you as much modesty as you demand of us?''
41595May not this man''s bones be full of nicotine, which will come out through, if we replace the integuments, blood, and garments?
41595Mr. Beecher published him as a thief and forger of his name, which only served to bring the doctor(?)
41595Mrs. T. fairly leaped to the bedside, and placing her hand over the daughter''s mouth, with affrighted gestures, she exclaimed,--"What is it?
41595Mustering courage, he said, very gently,--"Madam, if you please, you are standing on my feet--""Your feet, sir, did you say?"
41595Name, did I say?
41595Never heard of it?
41595No spavins?
41595No wonder our informant asks,"Did this really occur?
41595Nothing the matter?
41595Now my friends will think that I have returned from Saratoga--""And is it to Saratogy ye''ve been, ma''am?"
41595Now, can you cure me?"
41595Now, how about the babies?
41595Now, how could he have obtained my address?"
41595Now, how does a Yankee differ in his habits from the rest of the world''s people?
41595Now, is this a"divine"quality, that only ignorance can make use of?
41595Now, will not a child sleeping continually with an aged person or invalid tend to reduce the vitality of the child?
41595Nurse, did he sleep well?"
41595O, was n''t it horrid?
41595O, where is the right heir of all this wealth?
41595Of what?
41595On handing it to the latter gentleman, he asked,--"What is this, Brougham?"
41595On his return, the following dialogue occurred:--"''Sammy, my dear, have you set her?''
41595One day, an elderly gentleman, of the fogy school, blundered into the lawyer''s office, and asked,--"Is the doctor in?"
41595Or can I, in a few chapters, instruct such in the art of curing complicated diseases?
41595Or was it a temptation of the devil?
41595Or was the editor of the_ Mercure_ the original Baron Munchausen?"
41595Ought not he to know best?
41595PUBLIC CONFIDENCE(?
41595PUBLIC CONFIDENCE(?
41595Please, may I make so bold as to ask, are you the doctor?"
41595Pray why do n''t_ you_ get up something similar?"
41595Pusbelly?"
41595S.?"
41595Sell dry or wet goods?"
41595Sending the nurse from the room, I quickly pressed the young girl''s hand within my own, and said to her,--"Do you really wish to live, Emily?"
41595Several visits were thus made, when, on presenting it for the last time, Abernethy said,--"Well?"
41595Shall she seek shelter in the house of prayer?
41595Shall women remain passively resigned to the lamentable physical condition of her sex?
41595She carries the evidences of her guilt( or misfortune?)
41595She smiled, took a second look at me, and said,--"Who?"
41595Shines the_ soul_ fair where Tophet- blackness reigns?
41595Should he hide behind the hedge and solicit the help of some male passer?
41595Should he turn back to the house from whence he had been so ruthlessly ejected?
41595So the M. D. very benevolently(?)
41595So the doctor proposed the following:--"What is the difference between a priest and a jackass?"
41595So the publikin he marched in, and the bar- keeper said,''What want ye?''
41595Some years since there was found, after the flight of one Dr. Jaques(?
41595Stays the_ sight_ clear, while smoke obscures the day?
41595Sure, were n''t we children together in the ould counthry?
41595The Countess said,--"There, my good woman, is it not much better?"
41595The Shakspearian inquiry would at once and repeatedly be put,--"How chance it they travel?
41595The bishop repeated the question,--"Who are you?"
41595The corpse is here?"
41595The doctor made no reply; but when he had completed the sorting of his preparations, he said, looking up,--"Eh?"
41595The following is to the point:--_ Doctor._ Well, deacon, how did your wife manage her new shower bath?
41595The medical attendant, being present, asked the surgeon,--"''Shall I bleed him at once, sir?''
41595The next question was more strange than the first:--"Will the young gentleman marry me, eventually?"
41595The parson was working his Sunday''s text, Had got to_ fifthly_, and stopped perplexed, And what the-- Moses-- was coming next?
41595The question is repeated every time there is a great robbery or a murder committed,--"Why do not the clairvoyants tell who has committed this crime?"
41595The slight hacking cough is scarcely heeded; for do not people often cough without having consumption, and without raising blood?
41595The sound of carriage wheels startled him, but to where should he flee?
41595The windows are wooden, and--""Where was it?"
41595The witches in"Macbeth"( for what impression of the times he lived in has Shakspeare lost?)
41595The young mother has doubtless been sent to a fashionable boarding- school, where she was taught algebra, French,(?)
41595Their bare names would fill a large volume, and who would care to read them?
41595Them''s the biler-- ain''t it?''
41595Then is there no help for woman''s condition in this cold, uncharitable world?
41595Then may not the continued touch of a healthy person( king or subject) affect the health of a weaker, on the principle of increased vitality?
41595Then to her he put the question,--"What is in my pocket?"
41595Then turning to the wagoner, he said,"And you found Sir Scipio lying in the road?"
41595Then, taking two dollars from his purse, he asked,"Wo n''t that do?"
41595Therefore, of what good is it?
41595These, too, are the religious(?)
41595This leads us to ask,"Who are the quacks?"
41595Though Christ, the lowly, the magnanimous, said,"_ Neither do I condemn thee_,"his followers(?)
41595Throat sore?"
41595Through what medium does it act?
41595Vere you leefs ven you''s t''home?
41595Vich a man ca n''t come mit his vife, altogedder?
41595WARM.--THE OLD LADY AND THE AIR PUMP.--SAVED BY HER BUSTLE.--COUNTRY PRESCRIPTIONS AND A FUNNY MISTAKE.--ARE YOU DRUNK OR SOBER?
41595WARM.--THE OLD LADY AND THE AIR- PUMP.--SAVED BY HER BUSTLE.--COUNTRY PRESCRIPTIONS AND A FUNNY MISTAKE.--ARE YOU DRUNK OR SOBER?
41595WHAT KILLED THE DOG?
41595WHAT SHALL WE EAT?
41595Was Dr. Hammond,"a member of the medical profession highly esteemed for scientific attainments,"attempting a reform in medicine?
41595Was it you?
41595Was not the newspaper proprietor who advertised these several offices a_ particeps criminis_ in the transaction?
41595Was not this double quackery?
41595Was not this the office of an overseer, or"keeper of a magazine"?
41595Was there ever a greater mistake?
41595Was this a blow aimed at"quackery"?
41595Was this an expression of God''s wrath upon church- goers?
41595We take a horse- car for up or down town, and opposite, in bold and variegated letters, the persistent remedy(?)
41595Well, he was as religious as a cuss,--that ai n''t swearin'', is it, cap''n?
41595What advantage were they ever to King Saul, the grass- eating king with the long name, or any other individuals, in their perplexities?
41595What class do they principally represent-- the active and virtuous, or the idle and vicious?
41595What de debble you doin''?"
41595What did the old tarantula say to you?"
41595What do men, generally speaking, know of woman''s dress?
41595What do you mean?"
41595What do you suppose the matter is?"
41595What do you think I did?
41595What do you think the parson found, When he got up and stared around?
41595What does my diploma amount to if I have no patients?"
41595What does she mean?
41595What does that imply?
41595What does this prove?
41595What else should she do?
41595What else?"
41595What for?
41595What have I to do with gilding but on pills?
41595What is a ghost?
41595What is a house without a good foundation?
41595What is it?
41595What is it?"
41595What is that?"
41595What is the connection?
41595What is the difference between the doctor and the ass?"
41595What is the matter?"
41595What is the nature of gypsum, terra alba, or white earth?
41595What is the unseen power, appropriated mostly by the ignorant, which at times controls another weaker mind, or, for the time being, controls disease?
41595What next?
41595What possible use can a man have for_ ten million shirts_?
41595What shall I say of those demoralizing institutions where the"young ladies"are taught algebra, languages, and ill manners?
41595What time would you find it most convenient to perform the little operation?"
41595What was it?
41595What was the value received?
41595What were their habits?
41595What would our modern cooks do without the above enumerated articles in the culinary department?
41595What would you do?''
41595What''s good for the scurvy?
41595What''s wanted?"
41595What-- hic-- do you want?"
41595When Dr. Abernethy gave her the prescription, she asked,--"What am I to do with this, sir?"
41595When a young man is about to be"taken into society,"the question naturally arises, Is the young man, or the society, to be benefited by the accession?
41595When he recovers a little, do not press around and confuse him with questions of"What can I do for you?"
41595Where are your_ men_?"
41595Where had it gone so very suddenly?
41595Where is the other man, or class of men, who would have returned the money, honestly earned, as agreed upon beforehand, unasked?
41595Where they are forbidden to recognize a gentleman in the school- room, prayer- room, or street?
41595Where, then, O where, shall Neatness hope to hide From this o''erwhelming of the blackened tide?
41595Where-- how-- should I raise the money necessary to take me from this land of strangers?
41595Which will you choose?"
41595While making change, the telegraph man said,"My friend, are you not afraid your mother- in- law will take the small- pox?"
41595Who could it be, singing amid the fearful tempest?
41595Who does not love to listen to the beautiful heart and home songs of Dr. J. P. Ordway, such as"Home Delights,""Come to the Spirit Land,"etc.?
41595Who does not love-- and who is not entitled to-- the sweet money earned by labor, be it labor of hand, brain, or cloth?
41595Who ever saw, heard, felt, tasted, or smelled one?
41595Who has developed and promulgated the knowledge relative to anatomy, chemistry, physiology, botany, etc., but the physicians?
41595Who has done it?
41595Who is to soothe the fearful anguish, from lacerated nerve and muscle, by cruel shot and shell?
41595Who loves, what loves, and what is the result?
41595Who says to laugh is"_ hoidenish_?"
41595Who so well knew the value, or injury, of calomel, as he who had used it for twenty odd years?
41595Who will stop it?
41595Who will tell us how these aged people managed to keep up their youthful spirits so long?.
41595Who wonders that he should request his physician to allow him to"_ die in peace_"?
41595Who would put faith in a man with no recommendation, and possessing such a small wardrobe?
41595Why all these intricate passages?
41595Why did I taze ye?"
41595Why did n''t you say so before?"
41595Why did you put so many eggs under her, Sammy?''
41595Why does one''s yawning set a whole room full to yawning?
41595Why so?
41595Why, what''s got inter-- pony?
41595Why?
41595Why?
41595Will I die?"
41595Will ye give me the pinny, sir?"
41595Will you please call her out?"
41595Will you walk in?"
41595Will, he''s ate nothin''for a hole wake, and in the night he wanted some bread an''sugar, do ye see?
41595Without vouchsafing an immediate reply to the query, the dutiful son- in- law remarked,"Sir, are you a married man?"
41595Wo n''t you come in, sir?"
41595Works the_ brain_ true, while poison fills the veins?
41595Wot ye not that such a man as I can certainly divine?"
41595Would it not be well to reverse the thing, and make such murderous physicians as Theveneau and M. Palmery rank as hangmen- extraordinary?"
41595Would n''t they look gay?
41595Would that imply that I was a play- actor, or owner of the Museum?"
41595Would you have known her?
41595Would you have the prayers and blessing of the good?
41595Yankee or Irish, English or Scotch, French or German, they all rush to the drug store for pills, for powder, for whiskey(?
41595Ye''ll have me now-- will ye not?"
41595Yes,"Why?"
41595Yes; they made you sick?
41595You prefer cupping?''
41595You took the pills?
41595[ 9]"The nursery shows thy pictured wall, Thy bat, thy bow, Thy cloak, thy bonnet, club, and ball; But where art thou?
41595[ Illustration:"AN''WHO''LL YEZE LIKE TO SEE, SURE?"]
41595[ Illustration:"PINNY, SIR?
41595[ Illustration:"SHALL I ASSIST YOU TO ALIGHT?"]
41595[ Illustration:"WHAT''S IN THE MILK?"]
41595[ Illustration:"WHO-- A''--YOO?"]
41595[ Illustration:"WHY DID I TAZE YE?"]
41595[ Illustration:"WILL YE TAK''A BLAST NOO?"]
41595_ Apothecary._ Who calls so loud?
41595_ Doctor( with great professional dignity, speaking very slowly)._"Well, mariner, what tooth do you require extracted?
41595_ I was afraid it was a stomach- pump!_""WHAT''S TRUMPS?"
41595_ Lord Clifford._''Tis true the noble should; but who is noble?
41595_ Macbeth._ How now, you secret, black and midnight hags, What is''t ye do?
41595_ Rom._ Art thou so bare, and full of wretchedness, And fear''st to die?
41595_ What_ circumstances?
41595and did n''t we take our potaties and butthermilk out o''the same bowl?
41595and have you derived the anticipated benefit therefrom, sir?"
41595and how shall I know Miss Kingsbury from any other lady?"
41595and why was I each time taken around through them, and out through a different door from that which I entered?
41595do n''t you see it?"
41595do n''t you see them-- crawling along?"
41595doth Charity fail?
41595exclaimed the old negro in astonishment;"hab de Lord done gone an''loss hisself?"
41595have you no faith in your patron saint?
41595he was game-- was he?
41595how''s this?"
41595lend him money?"
41595looking at the bare head;"why did n''t you run after him?"
41595more pedagogues turned doctors?"
41595my grandmother once sarcastically inquired when I was frightened from the barn by an old owl inquiring,--"Who-- a''--yoo?"
41595not money?
41595now, friend,"said the Abbe,"how could you expect me to swallow a quart at a time, when I hold only a pint?"
41595or an annual cost to the people of Boston( and vicinity?)
41595or for each other''s eye?
41595or who-- what was the woman who has been here?"
41595poor child of weakness''?"
41595said the female, and, turning again to me, said,--"Whom did you inquire for?"
41595that so many of the darling, helpless little innocents die from dropsy, brain fever, epileptic fits, and the like?
41595to please the opposite sex?
41595what shall I do?"
41595what wilt ye do, mun?"
41595who shall give the"water"which raging thirst momentarily demands?