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 |
---|---|
26058 | The question is, can she grow and develop on a diet which will keep her sugar- free? |
37142 | But how, it is immediately asked, does something immaterial act upon something material? |
37142 | But how, it is immediately asked, is something material to make something immaterial? |
38090 | ESS{?} |
38090 | Obscured letters in the original publication are indicated with{?}. |
16230 | And suppose that tonics do not help to make exertion easy, and that the great tonic of change of air fails us, shall we still persist? |
27944 | Why not, indeed, eliminate this middleman( the doctor) and buy the nostrums direct? |
27944 | But what doctor worthy of the name would prescribe a medicine the composition of which he was ignorant? |
27944 | What are the motives which impel persons to buy and use patent medicines? |
23468 | And who is to oppose these great authorities? |
23468 | Who is the judge in this matter to whose opinion he commands us to bow? |
23468 | Who is this Goliah of Surgery? |
29737 | ? |
29737 | Hull Maison Dieu? |
29737 | Kingsland( Hackney) Knightsbridge Holy Trinity? |
29737 | Marlborough S. John? |
29737 | Shoreham S. James? |
30099 | The poorest moss that is trampled under foot, has its important uses: is it at the bottom of a wood we find it? |
30099 | What the weak moss performs upon the rock the loathed toadstool brings about in timber: is an oak dead where man''s eye will not find it? |
30099 | creeps it along the surface of a rock? |
9172 | The question might arise, To what extent do the distinctions thus made correspond to reality? |
9172 | The whole question might more profitably be approached from another point of view: To what extent are the distinctions of this classification useful? |
37057 | In what manner are we to effect a cure? |
37057 | When medical men are called upon to attend a commission of lunacy, they are always asked, whether the patient has had a_ lucid interval_? |
37057 | Would any rational practitioner, in a case of phrenitis, or in the delirium of fever, order his patient to be scourged? |
14743 | How can you reduce fat? |
14743 | However, I have been fat-- notice that"have been"? |
14743 | I even went so far as to stop getting on the scales; and when anybody-- as almost everybody did-- said,"Why, you''re getting bigger, ai n''t you?" |
14743 | What happened? |
28177 | BOYCE, SIR ROBERT W. Mosquitoes or Man? |
28177 | Is the Common House- fly a Factor in the Spread of Tuberculosis? |
28177 | Now what does all this mean? |
28177 | Now where do all these bacteria come from? |
28177 | Now, how are they thus removed from the circulation under normal conditions? |
28177 | Why? |
31807 | And how should that be, if they were not either suck''d into the Stomach with the Breath, or taken into it with some unwholesome Food? |
31807 | And why the Plague should not be as well in_ India_,_ China_, the South Parts of_ Africa_ and_ America_, as in these Parts of the World? |
31807 | But it may be ask''d, why these infectious Distempers, subject to Men, Cattle and Plants, are not universal? |
31807 | But there may yet be another Question,_ viz._ Whether it is not the_ East_ Wind of it self that blights, without the help of_ Insects_? |
31807 | It is not against Experience, that Insects can live and encrease in Animal Bodies: How often do we find Men, Women and Children troubled with Worms? |
31807 | Or is it reasonable to conjecture that the same degree of Heat is necessary to enliven an Insect as is required to hatch the Egg of a Pullet? |
31807 | What Varieties of those Insects are often voided by them? |
19261 | 9, Direct view, recumbent patient; web postdiphtheric(?) |
19261 | Are there any contraindications to endoscopy? |
19261 | Do attacks of sudden dyspnea and cyanosis occur? |
19261 | Is a foreign body present? |
19261 | Is a peroral endoscopic procedure indicated? |
19261 | Is it Preceded by a Recognizable Precancerous Condition? |
19261 | What has been the previous treatment and what attempts at removal have been made? |
19261 | Where is it located? |
19261 | or congenital(?). |
27947 | = Quantity of Air Required.=--What do we regard as impure air? |
27947 | Algæ-- what are they? |
27947 | From what source shall good water be obtained? |
27947 | How much air is required to render pure an air in a given space, in a given time, for a given number of people? |
27947 | How often can the change be safely made, and how? |
27947 | If this gory insect does not live by blood alone, how is it nourished? |
27947 | Is mosquito fighting a success? |
27947 | What is a reasonable daily domestic consumption? |
27947 | What is the index of impurity? |
1739 | And how was it possible that they could from the heart embrace Christianity, when its precepts were never more outrageously violated? |
1739 | In a methodist chapel at Redruth, a man during divine service cried out with a loud voice,"What shall I do to be saved?" |
1739 | On whom, then, was it so likely to fall as on the Jews, the usurers and the strangers who lived at enmity with the Christians? |
1739 | The Oriental Plague is, sometimes, but by no means always occasioned by_ pestilence_(? |
1739 | Why then, may we not, from this fact, draw retrospective inferences respecting those extraordinary phenomena? |
17439 | 205 Vaccination after Exposure to Smallpox 205 With what should one be vaccinated? |
17439 | 206 After Vaccination 206 Common Appearances after Vaccination 206 What to do during and after Vaccination? |
17439 | 206 Where Vaccination Should Be Performed? |
17439 | 207 Make a Record of your Vaccination? |
37592 | Are we, then, to admit functions of active dilatation of vessels, and active impulse to secretion in certain fibres of the fifth? |
37592 | Is it, or is it not, an exaltation of the ordinary function of sensation? |
37592 | The question before us now is this: What is that functional state of the nerves which consciousness interprets as pain? |
37592 | _ Cerebral Neuralgia._--We enter, here, on an extremely obscure and doubtful subject: Can there be pain in the central masses of the encephalon? |
26008 | And the patients? |
26008 | And who would mind a little trouble, when he can save a fellow creature''s, perhaps a darling child''s life and health? |
26008 | IS WATER APPLICABLE IN ALL TYPHOID CASES? |
26008 | Is Water applicable in all typhoid cases? |
26008 | Is there any other remedy, that has the same general and beneficial effect? |
26008 | The question has been raised, whether in typhoid cases, and in cases of torpid reaction in general, water is at all applicable? |
26008 | WHAT EFFECT COULD BE EXPECTED FROM A WARM WET- SHEET? |
26008 | What effect could be expected from a warm wet- sheet? |
21907 | And how, I ask, can it be otherwise, in such circumstances? |
21907 | Can carbon inhaled destroy a tubercular formation? |
21907 | Could extensive fanners not be erected and propelled by the same machinery? |
21907 | Could fresh air not be forced down by the power of the steam- engine, which is at every coal- pit? |
21907 | [ 26] Could oxygen not be prepared and forced down? |
36474 | Brain fever(?) |
36474 | In reply, I would ask, Of what disease do we know the ultimate nature any better than that of epilepsy? |
36474 | _ Over 50 Years._ 1 30-- 8 2 24 1-- Does the fact of the disease being recent or chronic affect the prognosis of treatment? |
36474 | _ Surgeon H.M. Indian Forces; late in Medical charge of the Dalhousie Sanitarium._ WHAT IS MALARIA? |
36474 | and if we did, how would that assist us in treating it? |
36474 | and why is it most intense in hot climates? |
45673 | And who could stay in the City amidst the horrible Infection which those Bodies would exhale, as they are consuming? |
45673 | But to this likewise there are several Objections; Where is Lime enough to be had for consuming so many Bodies? |
45673 | In this Condition, how could 2 or 3000 Beggars, that were then in the City, be turned out of it? |
45673 | What Gratitude for this will not Subjects so obedient and so faithful ever cherish in their Hearts? |
45673 | What can be done in Circumstances so full of Desolation? |
45673 | Where are Men to help to cart it? |
45673 | Would it operate so slowly? |
45673 | Would the Plague, say they, attack none but such poor People? |
13197 | And what are the causes to which these peculiarities are to be laid? |
13197 | And what are the facts in these schools? |
13197 | Are we not merely using the interest on these accumulations of power, but also wastefully spending the capital? |
13197 | Does any physician believe that it is good for a growing girl to be so occupied seven or eight hours a day? |
13197 | Have we lived too fast? |
13197 | How will she sustain herself under the pressure of those yet more exacting duties which nowadays she is eager to share with the man? |
13197 | Is it any wonder if asylums for the insane gape for such men? |
13197 | There is a Turkish proverb which occurs to me here, like most proverbs, more or less true:"Dreaming goes afoot, but who can think on horseback?" |
13197 | What, indeed, can be said? |
13197 | or that it is right for her to use her brains as long a time as the mechanic employs his muscles? |
33241 | Could I not and can I not now expose the hollow misery of the sham, the real nature of which is as plain as the noon- day sun? |
33241 | Could they not have legally coerced me to keep the peace? |
33241 | Do they perhaps think their conduct so outrageous, that the meekness of Moses could no longer endure it without resentment? |
33241 | What must be their effect if they continue for months? |
33241 | What would Humboldt, Grimm, Ampère, Burnouf, and some of our other friends on the other side of the water say to such proceedings? |
29414 | But what was this disease? |
29414 | Shall we not be able now to account for this on a rational principle?] |
29414 | Should it be asked whether this investigation is a matter of mere curiosity, or whether it tends to any beneficial purpose? |
29414 | [ Footnote 2: What effect would a similar treatment produce in inoculation for the Small- pox?] |
49567 | How are those who are constantly with the sick, to know the disorder, so as to be put upon their guard against taking infection? |
49567 | How is the patient himself to know that he is attacked with this dreadful disorder, so as to be able to apply for help at the very beginning? |
49567 | In what manner is the contagion, which is making such great ravages in this place, propagated? |
49567 | In what respects does it differ from other malignant fevers, and what symptoms has it in common with them? |
49567 | On the other hand, are we not threatened with a similar danger from the East? |
49567 | What are the symptoms which show that a person is infected with this disorder? |
49567 | [ 65] Why no animal food? |
48499 | ? |
48499 | Can it be wondered, then, that a state so easily diagnosed is nevertheless so difficult to comprehend? |
48499 | Is it not to store up the secretion formed in the intervals of digestion, and to retain it until it is required? |
48499 | It may be asked,"Then why do you treat of jaundice as if it were a disease?" |
48499 | Next comes the question,"In what manner does bile aid in the absorption of fatty matter?" |
48499 | Were it so, however, where would be the necessity for a gall- bladder? |
48499 | What is the source of the tyrosine, and leucine found in the urine, in cases like those previously described? |
48499 | What, then, is the cause of this difference? |
48499 | Whence is this? |
48499 | acid(?) |
48499 | acid(?) |
48499 | { 13} IS BILE ESSENTIAL TO LIFE? |
48499 | ||From|Congenital Deficiency|Small Ducts(?) |
18324 | +--How do we judge whether a patient is radically cured or not? 18324 + Effect of Syphilis on the Child- bearing Woman.+--What does syphilis mean for the woman who is in the child- bearing period? 18324 + Medical Examination for Syphilis before Marriage.+--How shall we recognize syphilis in a candidate for marriage? 18324 And why single out syphilis as the badge of venery? 18324 But will it stay negative if treatment is then stopped? 18324 How can such control be taught? 18324 How much scarlet fever would there be if every case of the disease could be treated in this way? 18324 Is a cure worth while? 18324 The disease can not teach such people anything, and if it can not, how can the physician? 18324 What if there are a few who deserve what they got? 18324 What made syphilis terrible to the many really fine and upright spirits in the mass thus flung together in a common bondage? 18324 Why not make the itch a sign of shame? 18324 Would she go over to the dispensary in the next block and find out how to take care of herself? 18324 you are cured? |
18935 | Can a body|| that is defiled with poison and polluted with the sin of self- abuse be|| a fit dwelling place for the Holy Ghost? |
18935 | Can a moral man so far intrude upon the|| health, happiness and peace, even of a race of cannibals? |
18935 | Can you|| thus abuse both the mind and body, and call yourselves unspotted from|| the world, or call yourselves the children of a pure God? |
18935 | How much less qualified is he for deep moral|| and intellectual reasoning which he is entirely unacquainted with? |
18935 | Is the thing|| possible? |
18935 | Then why expect an affected and poisoned body and mind, to|| produce those that are active and strong? |
18935 | What dost|| thou hope to do with that monster tree? |
18935 | When a party of Indians, trappers or|| soldiers gets to town"to have a blow out,"what do they do? |
18935 | When a party of old gout- toed wine- bibers make a supper what|| do they do? |
18935 | When"bloods"go out on a''bender''what do they do? |
18935 | Where are you leading the people to by precept|| and example? |
18935 | Will wisdom tread the path of folly? |
18935 | |||| What think you of a preacher of Christ with a cud in his mouth|| squirting poison at the souls he is trying to save? |
18935 | |||||| WILL HEALTH REIGN IN A DISEASED BODY? |
19667 | Leave it off? 19667 ***** How can a temperance man use tobacco? 19667 Do you suppose I have lived so long in the world without knowing what does me good, and what does not? |
19667 | How could they have done so without my perceiving it? |
19667 | How much on an average daily? |
19667 | If tobacco afford protection, in such cases, why does it not secure those who use it, against cholera? |
19667 | Nay, would he be tolerated in such a violation of the principles of good breeding? |
19667 | Sir, said I, do you use tobacco? |
19667 | Would he be commended, either for his cleanliness, politeness, or kindness? |
21560 | How can this be rectified? 21560 Again, why should the use of the linen underwear we recommend have such a beneficial effect on sufferers from rheumatism and various skin troubles? 21560 Are the pores blocked up? 21560 But, now, is there nothing that can be done to quicken that inner action, the slowness of which has paved the way for all this mischief? 21560 How in the world could it do good? 21560 How is it that vital action seizes these mere motor nerves and leaves the brain? 21560 How is this explained? 21560 In every case of realnervous prostration,"our question must be-- How shall we enable this vital element to recreate itself? |
21560 | No one would ask their guests to wash with water others had used; how many offer them air which has been made foul by previous use? |
21560 | Now, there will occur a most important question: Is the child cold or feverish? |
21560 | The sister heard all in thoughtful silence, but when the doctor went away she said to herself,"May not I lower this flame? |
21560 | Throat, Sore.--The first question in any case of sore throat, is, What is the temperature of the patient? |
21560 | What is wrong? |
21560 | What, therefore, prevents everyone enjoying it at all times? |
21560 | Why should not sensible men and women get a little independent thought of their own? |
21560 | You are, perhaps, ready to ask if we care nothing about bad water? |
57069 | And what becomes of the patient? |
57069 | As to her ailments, did they arise from an excess of blood in the system, or was she suffering from cardiac disease? |
57069 | Asthma, bronchitis, bronchorrhoea, pulmonary catarrh, in fat persons, both male and female, do they terminate favourably? |
57069 | But are not the principal organs of the body, for the most part, mutually dependent on each other, and all of them subject to a general_ consensus_? |
57069 | But until this"by- and- bye,"until this"to- morrow,"what happens to the patient? |
57069 | Can corpulence be reduced without injuriously affecting the general health? |
57069 | How are these phenomena to be explained? |
57069 | Now whose fault is this? |
57069 | What amount of temper can be expected in those who daily experience pain in the stomach while the digestive process is going on? |
57069 | What explanation can be given as to the cause of these results? |
57069 | What is the consequence of this medical specialism? |
57069 | Why may not the secreted milk be likewise re- absorbed? |
57069 | You live upon meat principally, it is true; but how much liquid do you imbibe daily?" |
37675 | Another question in regard to personal habits is how much tobacco does the patient use and in what form does he use it? |
37675 | Can the causes be removed? |
37675 | Has he been an athlete, particularly an oarsman? |
37675 | Has he been under any severe, prolonged, mental strain? |
37675 | If so, in what form of manual labor is he engaged? |
37675 | In a few seconds consciousness returned, the patient would shake himself, pass his hand over his brow and ask,"Where am I? |
37675 | Is he a laborer? |
37675 | Last but not least, and perhaps the most important question is, has the patient been a heavy eater? |
37675 | Of what use is it to save the teeth and lose the body? |
37675 | The question is this--"Is the applicant now in good health?" |
37675 | The really crucial question which should always be asked is, Is the heart enlarged or decreased in size? |
37675 | Then the question arises, How are we to recognize early arteriosclerosis? |
37675 | To combat such a grave(?) |
37675 | We know of no drug, unless it be iodide of potassium, which has the property of causing changes in the blood( decrease in viscosity? |
37675 | What causes the hypertension? |
37675 | What infectious diseases has the patient had? |
37675 | What is the patient''s occupation? |
37675 | Why not do the same with the whole body? |
18398 | Are n''t you afraid I''ll kill you? |
18398 | Do n''t you know, Mr. Ring went to Annapolis and hung himself?" |
18398 | How can her mother leave her so long in such care as this? |
18398 | How could Mrs. Mills speak so unkindly to her, pushing her with her foot to make her rise up? |
18398 | How unkind Mrs. Mills is today; does she think this sort of treatment is for the good of our health? |
18398 | I come back to my own room and write again; what shall I do? |
18398 | I do n''t wish to deprive any one of that which they require, but have I not a right to all I require to feed me and make me well? |
18398 | Is there any justice on earth or under heaven? |
18398 | Is this the way it should be done? |
18398 | My tears unbidden flow; why do I go back in memory to those sorrowful days? |
18398 | Sometimes I term it a college, in which I am finishing my education, and I shall graduate some day-- when will it be? |
18398 | We chat together as usual; how can he think me crazy? |
18398 | What had that to do with us? |
18398 | What have I done to merit such treatment? |
18398 | Who does keep this boarding house? |
18398 | Will I be free to breathe the air of heaven again, to walk out in the warmth of His sunshine? |
18398 | Will I ever see him again? |
18398 | Will this thing always be allowed to go on? |
37144 | _ Hotsp._ Revolted Mortimer? 37144 An indifferent person remarking that it was a bad day, he immediately retorted,Sir, did you ever know God make a good one?" |
37144 | Does Dr. Harpur, who announces in his preface, that he has quitted the beaten track, fulfil his promise in the course of his work? |
37144 | In what manner are we to effect a cure? |
37144 | It may be enquired, how we are to ascertain this increased, proportionate, and deficient activity of mind? |
37144 | What species of delirium is that, which succeeds long continued and abstract calculation? |
37144 | When medical persons are called upon to attend a commission of lunacy, they are always asked, whether the patient has had a_ lucid interval_? |
37144 | Why should the most_ active_ characteristics of our nature be termed_ Passions_? |
37144 | Would any rational practitioner, in a case of phrenitis, or in the delirium of fever, order his patient to be scourged? |
37144 | _ Question._ Are you of opinion that warm and cold baths are necessary for lunatic patients? |
37144 | and is his section on mental indications any thing but a prolix commentary on the doctrines of the ancients? |
37144 | and, is it not necessary to distinguish the steps of the English empirics from the methods of treatment adopted in their public hospitals? |
37144 | or, on the contrary, may not that which we attribute to a subtile policy, be merely the effect of circumstances? |
43481 | --"_Quæres a me lector amabilis quod plerique sciscitantur laudemne an vero damnem tabaci usum? |
43481 | A quart of brandy is admitted to be poison; is not, therefore, a spoonful of brandy also poison? |
43481 | A sailor, he says, should not smoke; for"why should he go round this beautiful world drugged?" |
43481 | And now the question arises, what_ is_ a stimulant dose? |
43481 | But now some curious inquirer may ask, what_ is_ this stimulant action? |
43481 | Did it ever dimly occur to Mr. Parton that all men may not be constructed on exactly the same plan with himself? |
43481 | How much tobacco can a man take daily with benefit to himself? |
43481 | If such pleasure is to be obtained without detriment to the organism, who but the grimmest ascetic can say that here is not a gain? |
43481 | In the spirit of the teetotaler''s logic, then, it may be asked, If a pound of salt is a poison, is not a grain of salt also a poison? |
43481 | Is this the way in which"well- groomed"people are expected to behave? |
43481 | Locke, Addison, Scott, Thackeray, Robert Hall, Christopher North-- hogs? |
43481 | Milton a hog? |
43481 | Mr. Parton asks, Why have the teetotalers failed? |
43481 | No doubt, by this time, the reader is beginning to rub his eyes and ask, Is this the way in which you are going to show that smoking is beneficial? |
43481 | What do we do to ourselves when we smoke a cigar or pipe? |
43481 | What is a narcotic? |
43481 | What is the physiological expression for it, reduced to its lowest terms? |
43481 | What more can be desired? |
43481 | What then is a stimulant? |
43481 | What then must happen? |
43481 | While in college we once heard a tipsy fellow- student repeat_ verbatim_ the whole of that satire of Horace which begins"Unde et quo, Catius?" |
43481 | Why is this? |
14901 | And He asked his father, How long is it ago since this came unto him? 14901 How old is the child, madam?" |
14901 | What is the moral ideal set before children in most families? 14901 ***** CHAPTER XXI TRAINING THE NERVOUS CHILDWhen shall I begin to train my child?" |
14901 | A common procedure is to send a question form, and, after answering the query,"What are you suffering from?" |
14901 | After some months of treatment, ask yourself-- Am I able to walk ten miles with ease? |
14901 | Another old remedy was to cut off a lock of the victim''s hair while in a seizure and put it in his hand, which stopped(?) |
14901 | Awkward questions require truthful answers, even though these only suggest more"Why s?" |
14901 | One highly popular type consists of port wine, reinforced(?) |
14901 | The question is not:"How much can I eat?" |
14901 | To give an instance: Does the son of a drunkard inherit a tendency to drink? |
14901 | We protect these unfortunates against others; why not posterity against them? |
14901 | _ Cassius_: Have you not love enough to bear with me, When that rash humour which my mother gave me Makes me forgetful? |
14901 | but:"How much do I need?" |
14901 | to be good company for myself on a rainy day? |
14901 | to entertain visitors so that all enjoy themselves? |
14901 | to listen to a lecture, and be able afterwards to rehearse the main points? |
14901 | to read essays or poetry with as much pleasure as a novel? |
14901 | to submit to insult, injustice or petulance with dignity and patience, and to answer them wisely and calmly? |
14901 | when introduced to a stranger of either sex or any age, to converse agreeably, profitably and without embarrassment? |
35270 | Then there is no place whatever in Scotland for the care of the acute alcoholic case? |
35270 | What course shall we follow? |
35270 | Why? |
35270 | You offer no definite medical help along special lines? |
35270 | ARE ALCOHOLICS GETTING A FAIR CHANCE? |
35270 | And, furthermore, can this disturbance of healthy equilibrium be permanent and the body acquire a lasting diseased condition? |
35270 | But is it not true that harmful results of average smoking for the average man are rare?" |
35270 | Does it do any one any physical good? |
35270 | Have not smokers undergone a noticeable moral deterioration in at least one particular? |
35270 | How can we get it? |
35270 | Is this not a kind of moral obtuseness? |
35270 | Money? |
35270 | On all sides the attitude seems to be,"What right has any one to object to my smoking?" |
35270 | The matter is really on just the_ opposite_ basis,"What right has any one to smoke when other people object to it?" |
35270 | This happens with all habitual indulgence, of course, but is it not carried more generally to an extreme with tobacco than with anything else? |
35270 | Usually the question, What is this man willing to do in return for help? |
35270 | What is disease? |
35270 | What, then, would be the difficulties in passing a Federal bill to restrict the sale of patent medicines containing habit- forming drugs? |
35270 | Who among us can not follow up the branches of his family- tree and find somewhere upon one side or the other a person of alcoholic tendencies? |
35270 | Would not this be a vastly better way of dealing with him than those which are at present followed? |
19762 | And in the name of common sense let me ask: what is the difference_ how_ we are cured if we_ are_ cured and are_ happy_ as a result of it? |
19762 | But does it follow that such children should have a nervous breakdown almost before they are out of their teens? |
19762 | But of what benefit are a certain number of extra pounds of flesh and how can a man explain such a senseless action? |
19762 | But"his servants came near and said...''If the prophet had bid thee do some great thing, wouldest thou not have done it?''" |
19762 | Ca n''t you see it?" |
19762 | Can you give me an axe that will cut it down?" |
19762 | Did not the Master of us all say,"Are there not twelve hours in the day?" |
19762 | Did you ever notice how often people laugh when at play? |
19762 | Do you know that most nervous people have a way of sitting down to the table and eating until they are literally full? |
19762 | Do you realize that you can live in those days again? |
19762 | Do you really get me? |
19762 | Do your children have"night terrors"? |
19762 | If you had a happy childhood-- and most people had-- do you not recall the glorious times you had? |
19762 | Is it burned or is it not?" |
19762 | Is n''t that enough? |
19762 | Nobody will do it for me; how shall I get it down? |
19762 | Now did not the thorough mastication of that food increase the value of the proteins, fats, and carbohydrates? |
19762 | Now why in the world were these two people attracted to each other? |
19762 | The man comes over to you and says,"Where''s the tree? |
19762 | Then can we not devote three of the twelve to our food? |
19762 | Will the axe keep on until the work is done? |
19762 | You remember when we were children how much we loved to play? |
37222 | His questions have ever been, whence am I? |
37222 | Shall we be less careful or less wise in our treatment of children? |
37222 | The question now arises: By what measures, or through what influences, if any, can such proneness to nervous diatheses be avoided? |
37222 | [ 2]"The Past in the Present: What is Civilization?" |
37222 | [ 8] What now has been substituted in the place of this home- training for business occupations and trades? |
37222 | _ b._ What number is that to which if you add 4/9 of 11, the sum will be 44- 3/5? |
37222 | _ b._ Why is the Archipelago southeast of Greece sometimes called the Ægean Sea? |
37222 | _ c._ What number multiplied by 11 will give 44- 3/5 for a product? |
37222 | _ c._ What poet is sometimes called the Ettrick Shepherd? |
37222 | _ d._ What is the largest bell in the world, and how much does it weigh? |
37222 | _ d._ What number divided by 4- 2/7 will give 243/324 for a quotient? |
37222 | _ e._ What divisor will give 4- 2/7 for a quotient, 66 being the dividend? |
37222 | _ e._ What was the debt of the United States at the close of the Revolution? |
37222 | _ f._ What number is that 8/14 of which exceeds 1/2 by 4- 2/7? |
37222 | _ g._ What number is that to which if 8/14 of itself be added, the sum will be 66? |
37222 | _ h._ What number is that from which if 1/3 of itself be subtracted, the remainder will be 11? |
37222 | and whither do I go? |
37222 | that, somehow or other, a smattering of book- knowledge would enable everybody to get on in the world without hard work? |
43012 | Oh, shame, where is thy blush? |
43012 | Suffers from? |
43012 | What then? 43012 What was their operation? |
43012 | --to the palsied,"Run you this errand,"--to the sick in bed,"Arise, and write a book?" |
43012 | And how? |
43012 | But in his essay on the works of Walter Savage Landor, is he not a little too inflated, and does he not run his ironical style into the ground? |
43012 | But what eater of opium, after taking much of the drug the day previous, ever arose in the morning without feeling unutterably miserable? |
43012 | Did any one ever before hear such an insane compound of contradictions? |
43012 | How can he write in this condition? |
43012 | I fear the reader would fain cry out,"What, in the name of Judas Iscariot, is the man after, and when is he going to catch up to it? |
43012 | In sober practice, would you say to the blind,"Copy this writing?" |
43012 | The outward effects and injurious properties of the drug soon made themselves manifest: what was I to do? |
43012 | Try what repentance can: what can it not? |
43012 | We quote as follows:"You know the Paradise Lost? |
43012 | What madman would not have known he was injuring his friend by hauling into notice and retailing such stuff as this? |
43012 | What rests? |
43012 | What three things does opium especially provoke? |
43012 | What would you call this, unless reaction? |
43012 | Will alcohol become unpopular, then be abhorred, and then opium be substituted in its stead? |
43012 | Will it? |
43012 | Would you compare the fettered African with the roving Arabian?--the bond to the free? |
43012 | Would you do this? |
43012 | Would you expect grapes from a hyperborean iceberg?--figs from the Sahara?--palms from Siberia? |
43012 | Yes, and who blamed him for lacking energy? |
43012 | Yet what can it, when one can not repent? |
43012 | Yet why traverse again step by step this sad pilgrimage; the reader has read similar experiences; then why trouble him with mine? |
43012 | who or what is equal to it? |
62587 | Can abortion be prevented? |
62587 | Do these tumors ever become sarcomatous or malignant? |
62587 | Does pregnancy exist and is abortion inaugurated? |
62587 | Even admitting the existence of that state, what evidence is there that nerve- force accumulates in the body under the same conditions as the blood? |
62587 | Finally, what insane asylum does not hold incurable women whose mental infirmities seem to depend wholly upon the act of ovulation? |
62587 | How shall the operation be done? |
62587 | How shall the operation be done? |
62587 | Is abortion completed? |
62587 | Shall it be secured by a clamp? |
62587 | The question naturally arises, Why does the cerumen form such impacted masses as are met with? |
62587 | This author defines muscular rheumatism as"an affection of the voluntary muscles of an inflammatory nature(? |
62587 | Was it in the prostate, the bladder, or the kidney? |
62587 | What effect does pregnancy have upon the growth of these tumors? |
62587 | When shall the abscess be opened? |
62587 | Where shall the opening be made? |
62587 | Where shall the opening be made? |
62587 | Why allow these dangerous membranes to remain, as claimed by some,"as long as no injurious effects appear"? |
62587 | Why should not a similar set of conditions in the internal ear produce similar results? |
62587 | or are the symptoms those of dysmenorrhoea, metritis, or uterine tumor? |
62587 | or shall it be tied, cut off, and dropped back? |
62587 | shall it be burned off by the actual cautery? |
15365 | Why is it I can never feel joy as I used to do? |
15365 | First, what is the standard according to which we are to judge them? |
15365 | How about psychiatry''s contribution beyond its own narrower sphere? |
15365 | How can we harmonize strict science with what we try to do in our treatment of patients? |
15365 | How can we, with our mechanistic science, speak of effort, and of will to do better? |
15365 | How could mind and soul ever arise out of matter? |
15365 | How could we ever be clear on the relation of mind and body? |
15365 | If such is the case, what becomes of the classical distinction between neuroses and psychoses? |
15365 | Is it necessary to insist on the presence or absence of anatomical lesions which one tries to ascertain at the post- mortem examination? |
15365 | Is it necessary to say that we made a mistake in our diagnostic and that from the first demential psychosis should have been recognized? |
15365 | Months later when I had my first interview with her, her sole remark during the hour was"How can I speak in a place like this?" |
15365 | No abuse, no shouting as usually occurred, but a whisper,"Who told you about it?" |
15365 | On one occasion I said to him,"George, what is that incident in your life which you can not forget and which has troubled you so seriously?" |
15365 | Rush), with a plaintive tone of voice,"Strike your father?" |
15365 | Secondly, to what extent are the reactions of the patient abnormal in kind to the driving stimulus? |
15365 | Shall we say with Sandras, Axenfeld, Huchard, Hack, Tuke, that neuroses are diseases without lesions? |
15365 | Shall we speak of the consciousness the patient has of his state? |
15365 | They may perhaps be reckoned abnormal in degree, but, to what extent, if at all, are they abnormal in kind? |
15365 | To the educated and enlightened man who still asks,"Am I my brother''s keeper?" |
15365 | Was it not for the reason that being dominated by misery and fear, joy could find no place? |
15365 | What then do we actually mean by soul or by psyche? |
15365 | What was the meaning of these queer behaviors? |
15365 | Will it be said that with psychoses the disorders of the mind last very much longer? |
30487 | And did you read up on the subject? |
30487 | Did you hear my lecture on mitral murmurs yesterday? |
30487 | What done? |
30487 | What in thunder''s the matter with you, feller? |
30487 | What''s the use? |
30487 | An incident that appealed to me in a more benign way was this:--"Pray, of what did your brother die?" |
30487 | Another was:"Do you at times imagine that you are falling from a high precipice?" |
30487 | But to what new things could I now turn in order to divert my mind from myself and my ailments? |
30487 | Dear one, what will you do? |
30487 | How should I treat them? |
30487 | I concluded that the best thing I could do was to take up some fad to relieve my overworked(?) |
30487 | I said:--"Doctor, will it have to be done to- night?" |
30487 | In consequence of which, am I to be despised and rejected of women? |
30487 | Is human nature not sincere? |
30487 | Is the human body so radically different from what it was a few years ago? |
30487 | It reminds me of this little conversation between a mother and her nurse- maid:--_ Mother_--"Martha, what is Johnnie doing?" |
30487 | Nearly all men of affairs had begun in that way; why should I not? |
30487 | One was:"Do you ever imagine that you see a big spider crawling up the wall?" |
30487 | Or is it simply erratic? |
30487 | Professor Cardack had a peculiar smile on his big, kind face when he asked:--"Have you been listening to my lectures on diseases of the heart?" |
30487 | What is your answer? |
30487 | What should it be? |
30487 | When the demonstrator of anatomy came by to test our knowledge and to see our work, he asked:"What have you here?" |
30487 | Why should there be such a state of chaos on matters of the most vital importance? |
30487 | Why should they have it so frequently to- day? |
30487 | Why? |
30487 | _ Doctor_--"Did you take the entire contents of the bottle?" |
30487 | why had I not used some deliberation before thus consummating the desperate deed? |
56407 | ( I wish the reader to mark the manner in which the doctor addressed me, for what has a physician to do with a person''s christian experience?) |
56407 | Ask yourself the question, what did Dr. Bell urge me to relate my christian experience for? |
56407 | Because God saw fit not to give me the abundance of this world was I any the less incapable of happiness here and hereafter? |
56407 | Because I differed from some of my family in my religious opinion must I be taken and imprisoned? |
56407 | Because I was a poor factory girl must I be treated in this brutal manner, in this boasted land of liberty? |
56407 | But why is all this contention about religion? |
56407 | But would I have willingly thrown myself away? |
56407 | Could it be that Eliza Lufkin would turn me out of her house on the third day of my illness? |
56407 | Had a poor persecuted christian ought to be consigned into the hands of unconverted rough men? |
56407 | I felt prepared to meet Christ, but was often asked what I thought of it? |
56407 | I often thought that I would give up my business and labor entirely for the Lord; and then I thought what should I do for a home? |
56407 | If I was in a weak state and tryed about my spiritual state, was it right to shut me up away from all my dear associates and godly influence? |
56407 | In my usual manner I asked him if he had a change of heart? |
56407 | Is it not a law in nature that every body desires happiness? |
56407 | Is there a person this side of the grave for whom God has nothing more to do? |
56407 | Is this done in this free and happy land? |
56407 | Miss Barber said sneeringly, do you not expect to enter the pearly gates and walk the golden streets of the city of the New Jerusalem? |
56407 | My sister had asked me if she should send for brother Stephen? |
56407 | Reader, can you imagine what my sufferings were? |
56407 | Upon that I made the expression"_ grated windows, and locked door_, where am I?" |
56407 | What does such language imply? |
56407 | What kind of treatment is this in this Gospel land of light and liberty? |
56407 | What right had they to put me in such a place? |
56407 | Why is the public so silent upon the sufferings of a poor girl? |
56407 | Why should I wish to start such a thing before the world if it was not so? |
56407 | Why was I shut up and no one allowed to see me? |
56407 | why did he ask me how much I read the Bible, more than any other book? |
48455 | Ca n''t you furstawn, Haunse? 48455 Doctor, do you know where I can get a calve''s rennet or a cod- fish to grease my hair?" |
48455 | How is that? |
48455 | What,said she,"is the matter with him?" |
48455 | ( Think you he entered as a patient? |
48455 | Again, Paul, what do you mean by being alive once without the law? |
48455 | At this critical moment the door unlocked and in came Alfred, the attendant, saying,"what is the matter?" |
48455 | But where are these duty- bound men? |
48455 | But who knows they do? |
48455 | But, says one, did not the attendant care for you? |
48455 | But, says one, who governed these patients you have named within? |
48455 | Can a mistaken person change his or her ways till the mind is changed? |
48455 | Cast one beast into such a pit and where is the bottom for his foot? |
48455 | Could Saul of Tarsus, desist in persecuting the church till his mind was changed, for he said he"verily thought he was doing God service?" |
48455 | Could the blind man whose eyes Jesus opened see until there was a cure wrought by the Divine Redeemer? |
48455 | Does these twenty- six Governors, under whose direction is this Institution? |
48455 | Is no one accountable for his death? |
48455 | Is not this slavery in the first degree? |
48455 | My mother approached me, raised my hat, and kindly says,"Moses, what is the matter, have you the cholic?" |
48455 | Paul, do you mean by this death, you was unconscious? |
48455 | Reader, can you rise from your seat until your mind is changed? |
48455 | Reader, did I not have a specific object of prayer before me as a room mate? |
48455 | The attendant now asks the Magdalene_ Isabel_,"Where shall I put him?" |
48455 | This patient once had a kind mother and an affectionate father, but where is he now? |
48455 | WHO GOVERNS THE INMATES? |
48455 | What now? |
48455 | Would either of you dare be shaved by one of these? |
48455 | Would you like to be in that room to- day and be treated as one poor man was in the hands of two doctors and their attendant? |
48455 | how long are you going to keep me here?" |
48455 | not better than Kirk was cared for?) |
38282 | Are you a relation of his? |
38282 | But look here,interrupted a gentlemen of the party,"what about those houses on Lombard street and the houses on Fourth street?" |
38282 | Did you not live at Fourth and Lombard Streets? |
38282 | Do you like to live here? |
38282 | Do you mean Joseph Herriges? |
38282 | Does my brother annoy you? |
38282 | For how long a time? |
38282 | Has he any relatives except his mother and brother? |
38282 | How long has he been out of his mind? |
38282 | Is that any of your business? |
38282 | John, where are you living now? |
38282 | John, where is your right arm? |
38282 | Now you will do me justice, wo n''t you? 38282 Then what are those iron and wooden slats at that window for?" |
38282 | Was he so very violent that you kept him locked up in this cage? |
38282 | Was there vermin? 38282 Well, I do n''t know, that it is, but I would like to know what he is penned up there for?" |
38282 | Well, now what was the reason you had John confined here? |
38282 | What have you got that man locked up in that room for? |
38282 | Where did you live before you came here? |
38282 | Yes,answered she,"and I want to know, whether you ca n''t move away from here? |
38282 | At this moment Mrs. Gibson saw Mrs. Herriges, John''s mother, in the yard, and called to the prisoner, saying:"What are you there for? |
38282 | How do you make that agree with this last statement?" |
38282 | Lieutenant Thomas replied:"Had I not better attend to it myself?" |
38282 | Mr. Gibson then spoke to him saying:"Why do n''t you try and get out of there?" |
38282 | Mrs. H.--Well, is n''t he insane sometimes? |
38282 | Mrs. Hurtt then said to him:"Ca n''t you drop that case?" |
38282 | Reporter-- How long did he remain under treatment there? |
38282 | Reporter-- I do not understand how a vegetable diet could cause insanity, when it is well known that Horace Greeley is a vegetintarian? |
38282 | Reporter-- What do you assign, madam, as the primary cause of his insanity? |
38282 | Reporter-- When did the insanity of John begin to develop itself? |
38282 | Reporter-- Why did you not attempt a cure in accordance with the usual method? |
38282 | Reporter-- Why did you permit your brother to remain so dirty? |
38282 | Reporter-- Why so short a length of time? |
38282 | When we asked,"What of your husband?" |
38282 | Why do n''t you pull off the boards and get out?" |
53728 | Again we ask, Will calomel fulfill any of the indications required? |
53728 | And did it fulfill the indications required? |
53728 | Can any sane man say the disease-- the cholera-- was not here, on board these ships, generated and produced? |
53728 | Can the result be reasonably accounted for on any other principle than the one assigned-- the stimulating power of the free caloric? |
53728 | Did, then, the principle evolved accord with the pathology and phenomena of disease? |
53728 | Does then the practice, the prominent features of which are given above, accord with the indications required? |
53728 | For our inquiries are, What are the modes of practice? |
53728 | Has it any influence or power to arrest this disease, to quiet the nervous system, relieve the cramps, or restore warmth to the body? |
53728 | Here we may ask, Will opium aid, or give the relief so urgently demanded? |
53728 | Here we might ask, What constitutes the chief reliance in the formulæ? |
53728 | How else can the violent attacks, suddenly terminating in death, be accounted for? |
53728 | Shall we rest satisfied with the diversified modes of treatment now prevailing? |
53728 | The great question, then, is, Did the principle evolved fulfill the indications required? |
53728 | The question is asked,"What is the pathological explanation of this remarkable train of symptoms?" |
53728 | The question, however, will arise, Can this principle be rendered available? |
53728 | To what other principle can this altered condition and stagnation of the blood be attributed? |
53728 | Was it the opium that so promptly met and arrested the disease? |
53728 | What are, then, the remedies? |
53728 | What course, then, should the epidemic cholera again prevail in our midst, shall we pursue? |
53728 | What more could be desired in any single agent than the result here obtained? |
53728 | What, then, are these results, regarded as shedding light on this intricate subject? |
53728 | What, then, was the principle evolved in this experiment, which gave immediate relief? |
53728 | What, we ask, could have been more satisfactory, or better calculated to aid the discovery of an important truth? |
53728 | Would intelligence and reason justify the neglect to improve the means at command? |
53728 | and if so, is it available and consistent with the pathology and the peculiar phenomena, or symptoms of the disease? |
53728 | and what modes, if any, are consistent with the pathology and the essential phenomena of the disease? |
53728 | and whether as such it has that curative influence, or direct controlling power, to arrest, suspend, and cure the disease, so imperiously demanded? |
53728 | or the combination of the other powerful stimulants with which it was united? |
28147 | Are there not yet remaining traces of the generally exploded doctrine of even contagion in ague, at one time attempted to be maintained? |
28147 | Are we now to expect that, should the occasion need, they will heroically make war against their own declared opinion? |
28147 | But_ for whom_ could Dr. Hawkins have written his_ curious_ book? |
28147 | Can this be true? |
28147 | Could any such with the disease upon them in any shape, have encountered such a winter journey without leaving traces of it in their course? |
28147 | Could the truth then be heard on such a field, or what native officer would venture to impugn the authority of his rulers, proclaiming contagion? |
28147 | Do we not know that Portal, at one period of his life at least, would not, for fear of"infection,"open the body of a person who had died of phthisis? |
28147 | How does the case stand with respect to one of the gentlemen whom he quotes,--Mr. Jukes, of the Bombay Establishment? |
28147 | How far is this alleged diagnosis well founded? |
28147 | In Dr. Macmichael''s pamphlet, consisting of thirty- two pages, and professing to be a consideration of the question,"Is cholera contagious?" |
28147 | Is dysentery, known to make such ravages sometimes, especially in armies, considered now, as at one time, to be contagious? |
28147 | Is there yet enough of evidence to shew that this disease is positively_ not to be made_ communicable from the sick? |
28147 | It may then be asked, have we no protection against this fearful plague? |
28147 | Let me ask why_ all_ the documents of importance forwarded to the Board of Health are not published in the collection just issued? |
28147 | No means of warding it off? |
28147 | Now, along with hundreds of other instances, what does Dr. French, of the 49th regiment, say, in his Report of 1829? |
28147 | Well, what of all this has occurred? |
28147 | What then are we to think when we find in that for Bengal the following most interesting and conclusive statements ever placed on record? |
28147 | Where is the medical man now to be found who would set up such a plea? |
28147 | Who will now stand up and try to maintain that the disease in those epidemics was propagated from person to person? |
28147 | Who, after this, can read over with common patience directions for the separation of a cholera patient from his friends, as if"_ an accursed thing_?" |
28147 | [ 13] Why has not an important document forwarded by our Consul at Riga not been published? |
28147 | or who(_ il faut trancher le mot_) will now follow those directions? |
39036 | ( 2), Estne mulier carens ovariis, utero vel tubis Fallopianis impotens? |
39036 | ( 3), Quid sit impotentia sub hac lege in viro? |
39036 | ( 4), Estne vir aspermatosus impotens, et quid de viris semen sterile habentibus? |
39036 | Are diprosopi twins? |
39036 | Does my sin against the insane man give him a right to kill me? |
39036 | Estne licita laparotomia quando agitur de pregnatione extra- uterina, seu de ectopicis conceptibus? |
39036 | Estne una lex pro ista a natura castrata et alia pro muliere a chirurgo castrata et tertia pro vetula senectute castrata? |
39036 | Estne vir aspermatosus, seu carens semine, impotens? |
39036 | Has the woman or the surgeon, her protector, the right to permit the death of the foetus to defend the woman''s life? |
39036 | Hisce omnibus positis, rogamus:( 1), Quid sit impotentia sub lege in muliere? |
39036 | How is the extremely complex human body with its various physical characteristics built up from the nucleus of a fecundated cell, the ovum? |
39036 | If I maliciously make a man insane and he afterward tries to kill me, may I or my protector kill him in my defence? |
39036 | In such a case must the surgeon let the mother die lest he hasten the death of a non- viable child? |
39036 | Is A, or the man in the boat, justified? |
39036 | Is he or the woman to be given the benefit of the doubt? |
39036 | Is he to let the mother die for the sake of staving off for a half- hour the certain death of a useless embryo the size of a pigeon''s egg? |
39036 | Is it then allowable? |
39036 | Is she justified? |
39036 | Is the Diprosopus, however, the two- faced monster, possessed of one or two souls? |
39036 | Is the Dipygus( single down to the navel, double below) one or two persons? |
39036 | May A do so? |
39036 | May he let the lunatic fall? |
39036 | Nunc, estne mulier ovariis carens impotens? |
39036 | Should he let both perish? |
39036 | The woman, we suppose, has maliciously put the foetus in its position of material aggressor, but has the foetus the right to kill her? |
39036 | Therefore, what of the stigmata of the saints from a scientific point of view? |
39036 | Was her husband unknowingly a bigamist? |
39036 | What degree of opacity between intellect and the world separates the ignorant man from the lunatic? |
39036 | What is the surgeon to do in a case like this? |
39036 | What is to be done? |
39036 | What portion of a human body is required to contain a new soul? |
39036 | What should he do? |
39036 | Where shall we draw the line between the weak but responsible will and the insane will? |
39036 | Would he certainly or probably be justified in following out this medical doctrine? |
39036 | You object again, if this woman has a right to permit the death of the foetus to save her own life, how may she be punished for that death? |
39036 | { 21} The third question proposed by the bishop is:"Is laparotomy licit when performed for extrauterine pregnancy or ectopic gestation?" |
5994 | And what else happened that summer? |
5994 | Oh, Doctor, did n''t papa tell you? 5994 Sixty years is a long time to pass between meetings, is n''t it?" |
5994 | Some time when you are older, wo n''t you try to find her and help her? |
5994 | What would you like better, Mater? 5994 What''s the use?" |
5994 | Why, child, what could have happened to make a young, happy girl of sixteen wish to die? 5994 A message came that her stepmother was ill-- could she come home and help? 5994 And had n''t he noticed the marks of tears when she came back? 5994 And of all reality''s ruthlessness, what was less tolerable than monotony? 5994 And why should n''t she be in love and have a lover? 5994 And why should this be? 5994 Annette could do it tip- top; why not he? 5994 But what of his success as a father? 5994 Can we ignore the omnipotence of the spiritual? 5994 Did it hurt? 5994 Did whiskey- drinking hurt? 5994 Do you think there is any chance for me, Doctor? |
5994 | Had she not already given the best years of her youth to others? |
5994 | Had she not waited without a thought of rebellion for the coming of the right one? |
5994 | How did it happen? |
5994 | How shall we tell of the next three years? |
5994 | Now is n''t that more beautiful than your dreams? |
5994 | She was feeling so well; why could she not be like other people? |
5994 | The mother was only repeating fully in principle, and largely in detail, her own rearing; and had she not"turned out to be one of the favored few?" |
5994 | To forgive anything, everything, she was eager, but he never could come across square, and as the years passed the horror of the uncertain"What next?" |
5994 | Was he a child or a chattel? |
5994 | Was he mentally irresponsible that he should be thus transferred from one hand to another without a hearing? |
5994 | Was her sorrow eating away at her heart? |
5994 | Was it they that were fated to charm away manhood and nobility and the rich earnest of success? |
5994 | Was it they that were to entice, into this fine promise of fine living, crookedness of thought, unwholesomeness of feeling-- dishonorable years? |
5994 | Was there something obscure, a lurking condition which he had overlooked? |
5994 | Was there something really serious that you have n''t told?" |
5994 | Were they not fairly cursing the wrong which had robbed her of the hope and rights of her womanhood? |
5994 | What could get her poor child out of this almost apathy? |
5994 | What is the secret of this miserable old woman''s failure to adjust herself to the richness which life offered her? |
5994 | What less capable of leading a man to the heights than the eternal grind of the office? |
5994 | What miracle was it that shielded that ever- smiling white face, crowned with its flaming shock, from the storm of lead and death? |
5994 | What other boy in Wisconsin was so well equipped to win the gold medal? |
5994 | What truly was wrong? |
5994 | What was to restrain her jerkings and twitchings and meanings? |
5994 | Where could a new baby have found a more perfect setting for her childhood and girlhood? |
5994 | Where will you find a healthier man at sixty- five? |
5994 | Who can count the price this woman has paid for her nervousness? |
5994 | Why a weary life of strife and misunderstanding? |
5994 | Why struggle against the laws of determinism? |
5994 | Would they forgive her? |
5994 | You believe I am brave, do n''t you, Doctor? |
5994 | must I tell you? |
13332 | A thousand times in wretched bitterness I have asked myself, What have I to do with life? |
13332 | And how few suspected that slowly but surely they were poisoning the wellsprings of life? |
13332 | And why? |
13332 | Art thou the offspring in whom the lineaments of these tyrants are faithfully preserved? |
13332 | But some one says, Why do n''t you quit? |
13332 | But who shall say what these great, men lost and will lose in the end by this forcing process? |
13332 | Can you wonder that the outcast abandons hope and plunges the knife into his heart? |
13332 | Did you imagine that there was no danger in inflicting on me pains, however great; miseries, however direful? |
13332 | Do they not help to shape for him the dagger of self- destruction? |
13332 | Do you believe me impotent, imbecile, and idiot- like, with no understanding to contrive my escape and thy ruin, and no energy to perpetrate it? |
13332 | Do you envy me the horrors through which I have passed? |
13332 | Do you know what is meant by delirium tremens, reader? |
13332 | Have you fought them as present and near dangers? |
13332 | How can I tell the emotions which swell in my heart? |
13332 | How many of them have hastened to death through the agency of whisky? |
13332 | How many of these who blame me would have been more successful? |
13332 | I feel that I can almost hear some one say,"Why did you not pray? |
13332 | I screamed, why did I leave it? |
13332 | If the grave, self- sought, would hide every error, blot out every pang, and shield from every storm, why not seek it? |
13332 | Is her breathing so easy that you would impede it with a brutal stab? |
13332 | Is it come to this? |
13332 | Is there no secret baseness he would hide?--no act which, proper to be told, he would swerve from the truth to tell in his own favor? |
13332 | Need I say that intemperance is at the bottom of it? |
13332 | Need I tell you what has wrought all this ruin? |
13332 | Need they be told that they have no right to kick, or jerk, or otherwise abuse an unresisting victim? |
13332 | Seeming, do I say? |
13332 | Should I end my miserable existence? |
13332 | Struggle for life-- A cry of warning--"Why do n''t you quit?" |
13332 | Struggle for life-- A cry of warning--"Why do n''t you quit?" |
13332 | The evils of which I speak are not unknown to you, but have you considered them as things real? |
13332 | The question now arises, does any man dare to be sufficiently candid to write such a work? |
13332 | The rich man may get just as drunk as the poor man, and may be fined the same, but what of that? |
13332 | Think you that I would regret the ruin that had overwhelmed you? |
13332 | Was it my duty to go forth and tell the world of the horrors of intemperance, and warn all people to rise against this great enemy? |
13332 | Was the world, with all its climates, made in vain for thy helpless, unoffending victim? |
13332 | What blessing comes from forming or indulging the habit? |
13332 | What ingredients of poison do they not mix with the fatal drink which deprives him of breath? |
13332 | What news of yourself can you send her? |
13332 | What sort of sense or justice is there in it, anyhow? |
13332 | What would you have her know? |
13332 | What, let me ask, is to be gained by drinking? |
13332 | Where from? |
13332 | Where should the most blame rest, where does it most rest in the eyes of God-- with society which drives him forth a depraved and friendless creature? |
13332 | Who is not proud of being an American citizen, and walking erect and secure under the Stars and Stripes? |
13332 | Who would not escape from misery if he could? |
13332 | Why license men to sell liquor, and then punish others for drinking it? |
13332 | Will you put your wayward foot on her tender and feeble heart? |
13332 | Would it not be not only more human, but also more in accord with the spirit of our intelligent and liberal age, to convey him to a hospital? |
13332 | You will not murder her, will you? |
13332 | and what are they?--what have they been? |
13332 | or with himself no longer accountable for his acts? |
13332 | robber and reviler!--what should make thee inaccessible to my fury? |
45313 | Is not the true trouble in the nervous system, in the nerves presiding over secretion and nutrition in the abdominal viscera? |
45313 | The question really is this: Is there one peculiar conformation of the teeth due to inherited syphilis and not produced by any other cause? 45313 Where inflammation,"he says,"occurs, is it not secondary rather than primary, the result rather than the cause?" |
45313 | (_ a_) In what part of the intestinal canal is the disease located? |
45313 | According to present physiological doctrine, the exciting cause of rheumatism, cold, either acts directly upon the vaso- motor or the trophic(?) |
45313 | As the formation of pus has taken place in most cases when symptoms have begun, the question of highest importance is, Shall the pus be evacuated? |
45313 | But why is it that this peculiar process takes place at an early age only? |
45313 | By the timely administration of one or more of these would it not be possible to stay the progress of the atrophic degeneration? |
45313 | By what means or through what channels can the disease of the parents reach the child? |
45313 | Congenital( of pylorus)? |
45313 | Do these cases prove that there is something peculiar to rheumatic fever which tends to disturb the nervous centres? |
45313 | Do we possess any means to check the overgrowth of connective tissue{ 1001} in cases of sclerosis? |
45313 | Does it contain daughter and granddaughter vesicles? |
45313 | From torsion of duodenum? |
45313 | From whom did the profession adopt it? |
45313 | He says:"The mucous membrane( intestinal), like the skin( and is not the one looked upon as an inversion of the other? |
45313 | If it will, then the further question presents itself, By what chemical action is the change effected within the body? |
45313 | If not, has a recent case of syphilis occurred in the one who at first escaped? |
45313 | If puncture with the trocar or aspiration be practised, shall all the fluid be withdrawn at once? |
45313 | If so, under what circumstances? |
45313 | If the question be put, Are teeth of the type described pathognomonic of syphilis? |
45313 | If, notwithstanding, peri- or endocarditis, or both, supervene, as it frequently happens, what is to be done? |
45313 | In the tissue of the serous membrane itself, soon after the deposition on its surface, an accumulation of indifferent(?) |
45313 | Is it not a ptomaine generated under unknown conditions in the intestine? |
45313 | Is it when it occurs in the heart?) |
45313 | Is rachitis hereditary? |
45313 | Is syphilis in all its stages transmissible(_ a_) to the wife or husband,(_ b_) to the offspring? |
45313 | It may be inquired, however, If the bile already formed has no outlet by the proper route, what utility can there be in making the organ produce more? |
45313 | Now, how did this treatment originate? |
45313 | Oedema? |
45313 | Or, in other words, is it ever proper to consent to the marriage of a person who has had syphilis? |
45313 | Paresis from neuropathic causes? |
45313 | Shall the effort be made to check the discharges, or shall they be allowed to continue? |
45313 | The cause being removed if possible, what means, if any, can be resorted to to cause the absorption of the amyloid matter? |
45313 | The question, then, arises, Will the chemical constitution of fibrin permit its conversion into oil? |
45313 | They base their denial, first, on the physiological fact(?) |
45313 | They were carefully dissected off and the bowel cavity(?) |
45313 | Times and Gazette_(? |
45313 | Were both parents originally infected? |
45313 | What are the pathology and symptoms of hereditary syphilis? |
45313 | What is the condition of women at this period in life which renders them so susceptible to this malady? |
45313 | What is the treatment--(_a_) prophylactic, applied to the parents, and(_ b_) curative? |
45313 | With an adequate cause of abscess, whether there were chills or not, what else could it be? |
45313 | [ Footnote 61: If chancre were the first symptom of constitutional syphilis, why should it not appear in cases of hereditary syphilis?] |
45313 | and in the bone only? |
11962 | Are n''t you feeling well? |
11962 | Did you pick it? |
11962 | Do n''t you want to read it? |
11962 | Safe,did I say? |
11962 | Shall we go to 30 Trumbull Street? |
11962 | Then will you take a message to the assistant physician who stays here? |
11962 | Well, shall we go home? |
11962 | What are you going to do with that? |
11962 | What did you do it for? |
11962 | What''s the use of living in a place like this, to be abused as I''ve been to- day? |
11962 | Where is it? |
11962 | Why do n''t you talk? |
11962 | Why do n''t you talk? |
11962 | Will you ask the doctor whether Mr. Blank can or can not walk about the grounds with my special attendant when I go? |
11962 | Will you promise not to repeat my statements to any one else? |
11962 | Yes, and they are your relatives, are n''t they? |
11962 | ("Then why,"was my recorded comment,"can not the changes I propose to bring about, be brought about?") |
11962 | --Whose heart but mine? |
11962 | Addressing me, the attendant said,"Did you see that?" |
11962 | And had he been humanely, nay, scientifically, treated, who can say that he might not have been restored to health and home? |
11962 | And the things indited-- what were they but the humanitarian projects which had blossomed in my garden of thoughts over night? |
11962 | And what would the patient have received? |
11962 | At what cost had I signed that commitment slip? |
11962 | But what of the strips of felt torn from the druggets? |
11962 | Can not some of the causes be discovered and perhaps done away with, thereby saving the lives of many-- and millions in money? |
11962 | For of what account are Truth and Love when Life itself has ceased to seem desirable? |
11962 | Friends have said to me:"Well, what is to be done when a patient runs amuck?" |
11962 | Had I any of those impracticable delusions which had characterized my former period of elation? |
11962 | How are you feeling?" |
11962 | How could I say,"Yes"? |
11962 | How could they, if still free, even approach me while I was surrounded by detectives? |
11962 | How had this peril overtaken us? |
11962 | I must have given him an incredulous look, for he said,"Do n''t you think we can take you home? |
11962 | If you want to know who I am, just ask his Excellency, and oblige, Yours truly,?" |
11962 | Need I add that the attendant did not take Mr. Blank for a walk that morning? |
11962 | Now, if a brother who had enjoyed perfect health all his life could be stricken with epilepsy, what was to prevent my being similarly afflicted? |
11962 | Other books had spoken even from the grave; why should not my book so speak-- if necessary? |
11962 | Seating himself on the side of the bed, the physician said:"You wo n''t try again to do what you did in New Haven, will you?" |
11962 | Should a man be nearly killed because he swears at attendants who swear like pirates? |
11962 | Suppose my relatives and friends had held aloof during this apparently hopeless period, what to- day would be my feelings toward them? |
11962 | The account of my sufferings naturally distressed my conservator, but, as he said when he next visited me:"What could I have done to help you? |
11962 | To- day I have no such desire, for were they not victims of the same vicious system of treatment to which I was subjected? |
11962 | Was it not I who would defray the cost? |
11962 | Were good manners and sweet submission ever the product of such treatment? |
11962 | What better, thought I, than to begin my book on a plane so high as to be appropriate to this noble summit? |
11962 | What did he learn? |
11962 | What of it? |
11962 | What''s the use when one is caged like a criminal? |
11962 | Who would not resist when meek acceptance would be a confession which would doom his own mother or father to prison, or ignominy, or death? |
11962 | Why absurd? |
11962 | Why? |
14196 | ''Tis folly to fight, we both lose by battle; whose is the gain? |
14196 | How about her fitness for marriage? |
14196 | How do people get along who get less than we do? |
14196 | Is it the best I can do? |
14196 | Should I rest now; have I the right to rest? |
14196 | What right has a poor woman anyway to desires above her station, and why does not she resign herself to her lot? |
14196 | Where does it all go? |
14196 | And who sets the pace for her, for all of her group; who establishes the standard of expenditure? |
14196 | But we are concerned with these questions:"What happens to her in marriage?" |
14196 | Can one purge a woman of futile longings and strivings, rid her of natural fears and even of absurd fears? |
14196 | Can the home be altered to bring in more of the social spirit and yet maintain its great virtues, its extraordinary attraction for the human heart? |
14196 | Did the housewife of a past generation go through the same stage? |
14196 | Discreditable to those women who use it? |
14196 | Discreditable to women? |
14196 | Does a strenuous existence make against easy motherhood? |
14196 | Here the question arises: Is there room in our society for matrimony and a business career? |
14196 | How avert such a thing? |
14196 | How does this apply to the nervous housewife? |
14196 | How often is it closely approximated? |
14196 | Is the average man''s impression the correct one? |
14196 | Is the increasing incidence of divorce a revolt against domesticity? |
14196 | Is the maternal instinct waning in intensity in this period of feminization? |
14196 | Is the modern woman more susceptible to the effects of pregnancy,--less resistant to the strain of childbearing and childbirth? |
14196 | Is there a subconsciousness, and what is it? |
14196 | Men in comfortable places cry"Why worry?" |
14196 | Of what use is it to raise taste when this is injured at the very outset of life by giving bad taste a fascinating attraction? |
14196 | Of what use is it to teach children good English when the newspaper deliberately teaches them the cheapest slang? |
14196 | Of what use is it to teach them manners and kindliness when the newspaper constantly spreads boorishness and"rough house"conduct? |
14196 | Or are we dealing with the incorrigible disposition of man to glorify the past? |
14196 | Repair of the parts immediately is indicated, but in what percentage of cases is this done? |
14196 | Second-- Is it labor saving? |
14196 | Shall it be the nowadays emphasized moral suasion, the appeal to conscience and reason? |
14196 | Shall it be the old- fashioned corporal punishment of a past generation, the appeal to pain and blame? |
14196 | She came out of her dereliction dazed; could it be she who had done this, who had descended into the vilest degradation? |
14196 | She was no longer dissatisfied, no longer eager for romance; but could she live with him if she had been unfaithful? |
14196 | Should a man knowingly marry such a woman? |
14196 | The first question asked about a woman is,"Is she pretty?" |
14196 | The tests by which the good household device ought to be judged are these: First-- Is it efficient? |
14196 | The woman wonders whether her husband will long be able to keep up,--and then"what will become of us?" |
14196 | There have always been some bad, careless, selfish mothers; has their number increased? |
14196 | Third-- Is it time saving? |
14196 | This has been done so often and so effectively(?) |
14196 | What are the causes of the change? |
14196 | What are the chief sources of conflict? |
14196 | What are the difficulties confronting the partners which impede happiness and especially which bring the neurosis of the housewife? |
14196 | What are these phases that are attended with difficulty? |
14196 | What can emotion produce that is pathological, detrimental to well- being? |
14196 | What part does a subconscious personality take in all this and in further symptoms? |
14196 | What system will do that? |
14196 | What will she do with her time; what will the better- to- do woman do? |
14196 | Why is this? |
14196 | is his cry;"Must we spend as much as we do?" |
43480 | By the way,he says in a postscript,"did you receive my letters each year of the war?" |
43480 | Have you a letter of introduction from any one? |
43480 | We must have something of the kind; do you know any one in Boston? |
43480 | What can I do for you? |
43480 | What is the real attraction of these gorgeous establishments? |
43480 | Where am I? |
43480 | Why, what''s the matter with the cuss? |
43480 | Am I far enough advanced in convalescence to trust myself to breathe the air of the valley for an hour?" |
43480 | Are any of us drinkers of beer and wine capable of such a feat? |
43480 | Are we getting to be Turks? |
43480 | Are we to knock the heads out of all our wine- casks, join the temperance society, and denounce all men who do not follow our example? |
43480 | At length one said to another,"Will Jones be here this week?" |
43480 | B----; will you take me in?" |
43480 | But is it wholly her fault? |
43480 | But is the thing in itself pernicious?--pure wine taken in moderation? |
43480 | DOES IT PAY TO SMOKE? |
43480 | Do not these men live and thrive upon such practices? |
43480 | Do you think it would be salutary? |
43480 | Does it pay him? |
43480 | Dr. R. T. Trall of New York, the most thoroughgoing teetotaler extant, exclaims:"Where are we to- day? |
43480 | Has not the truth flashed upon you, at such moments, that you had been talking prose upon a subject essentially poetical? |
43480 | Have you never felt how mean and low a thing it was to linger in sensual stupefaction, rather than take your proper place in such a scene as this? |
43480 | How could I help, on Sunday, being entombed in a Sunday- school room, eight or nine feet high, crowded with children, all breathing their utmost? |
43480 | If it had been put to the vote( by ballot), when the company had assembled, Shall we have ladies or not? |
43480 | If these men, he adds, are not blackguards, who are blackguards? |
43480 | If, then, wine does not nourish us, does not assist the decomposition of food, does not warm, does not strengthen, what does it do? |
43480 | Is he not the purse- holder? |
43480 | Is it not a husband''s duty to prevent his wife from dishonoring herself in that manner? |
43480 | The question is, Does it pay these gentlemen to smoke? |
43480 | WILL THE COMING MAN DRINK WINE? |
43480 | What are we to conclude from all this? |
43480 | What becomes of the ether? |
43480 | What can a man want with brains in a beer- barrel? |
43480 | What concealed from them the iniquity and deep vulgarity of what they were doing? |
43480 | What could enable them to look into one another''s faces without blushing scarlet at the infamy of such a waste of time, food, and digestive force? |
43480 | What could sustain human nature in such an amazing effort? |
43480 | What does a glass of wine do to us when we have swallowed it? |
43480 | What happens then? |
43480 | What is wine? |
43480 | Who could wish to deny a poor man a luxury so cheap, and so dear? |
43480 | Who has ever seen any happy people that were not voluntarily carrying a heavy burden? |
43480 | Who would not_ like_ to have a clear conviction, that what we have to do with regard to all such fluids is to let them alone? |
43480 | Why is this?" |
43480 | Why not? |
43480 | Why should he go round this beautiful world drugged? |
43480 | Why should they not set an example of the follies which enrich them? |
43480 | Why were none of these gifted ladies present to grace and enliven the scene? |
43480 | Will the Coming Man drink wine when he is sick? |
43480 | Wine, ale, and liquors, administered strictly as medicine,--what of them? |
43480 | genuine Old Bourbon? |
43480 | good beer? |
26365 | 13. Who can fear being made sick by adopting cleanly habits? |
26365 | And these same purveyors, by the way, why do they care more for Wealth than for Health, their own and ours? |
26365 | And what can more life- giving be Than cooling breezes from the sea, Whose bosom bears upon their way The stately ships from day to day? |
26365 | Are a sour stomach and foul intestinal canal fit receptacles for food and liquids? |
26365 | But no matter about the cause and character of the proctitis, the question is, Have you inflamed anal and rectal canals? |
26365 | But why are we all of us so neglectful of Inner cleanliness and so careful of Outer? |
26365 | Can any one that suffers from proctitis, etc., have a natural stool? |
26365 | Can we not acquire a similar attitude and habit in regard to our health? |
26365 | Can we not give sub- conscious attention to the little details of such bodily functions as are liable to get out of order? |
26365 | Can you afford to take the chances? |
26365 | Did you ever notice how like death such persons appear when they are asleep? |
26365 | Do the egesta pass out in the form of normal feces? |
26365 | Does Nature have her way, or do neglect and bad habits rule the assimilative and eliminative functions of the bowels? |
26365 | Does it not follow, consequently, that the digestive apparatus, from a physiological point of view, is the most important organ of the human body? |
26365 | Does the fire then continue to digest the coal? |
26365 | Exercise ought to strengthen muscular tissue; and what could give the bowels more gentle muscular exercise than the proper use of them? |
26365 | HOW OFTEN SHOULD AN ENEMA BE TAKEN? |
26365 | HOW OFTEN SHOULD AN ENEMA BE TAKEN? |
26365 | Has the intestinal canal been obstructed like the Erie Canal during the winter months? |
26365 | Have mothers or nurses any similar guides? |
26365 | How do we expend the energy? |
26365 | How shall we determine the proper amount and kind of food for the various ages, sexes, and conditions of life? |
26365 | How, then, can it be otherwise than-- gormand that he is-- that he should fare ill with this gluttonous, mammoth digestive canal? |
26365 | If a limb be fractured and splints be applied, would you worry lest you form the habit of wearing them? |
26365 | Is it not unfortunate that we were not born with an automatic irrigator? |
26365 | Is not the same precaution more essential with the receptacles for digestion and egestion? |
26365 | Now, what can a prescriber of a gastro- intestinal ejector expect to accomplish by disturbing the maleconomy of this apparatus? |
26365 | The important question with the victim of abscess and fistula is,"How did I get it? |
26365 | The_ seventh_ objection is quite naive:"Inasmuch as the Indians of this country had no use for the enema, why should we resort to it?" |
26365 | To cleanse(?) |
26365 | Upon which the other asks,''Where didst thou ever see a cold bath dedicated to Hercules?'' |
26365 | WHY? |
26365 | WHY? |
26365 | What can the inevitable outcome be but_ emaciation_ and_ anemia_, and all their attendant suffering and consequences? |
26365 | What else can we do? |
26365 | What have we done? |
26365 | What is that key? |
26365 | What more gentle means of exercising the large intestines than by the enema? |
26365 | Who, verily, are the medical quacks? |
26365 | Why does not man take on flesh in a similar way? |
26365 | Why not in the former? |
26365 | Why should it? |
26365 | Why should not such prompt care and attention be given to the human mechanism, to the economy of vital functions? |
26365 | Why? |
26365 | Would it not be unwisdom, therefore, to treat directly the symptoms of decay, instead of treating the soil, or changing it? |
26365 | You are a factor in the social and business world; then why not look, feel, and be your best by simply adopting internal hygienic measures? |
18467 | You found everything as represented? |
18467 | 87? |
18467 | Can a proposition be plainer? |
18467 | Can an offer be more fair and business- like? |
18467 | Do you consult your own reason and best interests? |
18467 | Does not every one know that, when the unnatural stimulus is removed, he fails? |
18467 | Does the fact that an article is prepared by a process known only to the manufacturer render that article less valuable? |
18467 | For instance, how is the chair of astronomy filled? |
18467 | For what crime can be more deserving of punishment than the holding out of false hopes and pretenses to the unfortunate? |
18467 | He asked me"why I did not go to the Invalids''Hotel and Surgical Institute, at Buffalo, N.Y., and get cured?" |
18467 | How many physicians know the elementary composition of the remedies which they employ, some of which never have been analyzed? |
18467 | How shall we distinguish the combination of organic elements, if not by the manner in which they characterize the constitution? |
18467 | How, then, can we account for the evident accommodation of the eye to the varying distances? |
18467 | I spent the day in grateful tears-- how could I help it? |
18467 | I then asked him, what about Dr. Pierce''s world- famed Surgical Institute? |
18467 | If he have light, why hide it from the world? |
18467 | If she desire a plurality of loves, it must be a law of her nature; but is communism the desire of our wives and daughters? |
18467 | If these were the statistics twenty- four years ago, with our greatly increased population, what must they be to- day? |
18467 | If you ask: Is there any advantage in considering the phenomena of nature as the result of DIVINE VOLITION? |
18467 | In all seriousness we ask would any other remedy except a narcotic or stimulant be used with such persistency for anything like this length of time? |
18467 | Is it any wonder that acute suppressions occur or that inflammations set in? |
18467 | Is it meritorious in the physician to modestly veil his discoveries, regardless of their importance? |
18467 | Is it not apparent that such agents form a habit which is often worse than the disease, and yet fail to effect a cure? |
18467 | Is it not preferable to say that she responds to intelligent, loving Omnipotence? |
18467 | Is not this true of nine- tenths of all who suffer from this malady, and have recourse to this class of remedies? |
18467 | It therefore follows that generation in some animals require? |
18467 | Legislators have battled with intemperance, but have done comparatively little to banish from our midst this necessary(?) |
18467 | Man breathes by means of lungs; but who can understand their wonderful mechanism, so perfect in all its parts? |
18467 | Now to the point-- are you listening? |
18467 | Of course the principle which is lacking should be supplied; but has the physician the remedial agents properly prepared, and ready for prescribing? |
18467 | Reader, are you accustomed to think and act for yourself? |
18467 | Should this vitalizing power be termed nerve- force, electricity, heat, or motion? |
18467 | Then by what? |
18467 | Then how can we remedially fulfill the preceding indications? |
18467 | This being done, the question naturally arises:_ How can health be best maintained and longevity secured?_ INFLUENCE OF FOOD. |
18467 | Under the continued operation of a poison, inducing such symptoms as these, what chance is there for remedies to accomplish their specific action? |
18467 | What are newspapers for, if not to circulate information? |
18467 | What are the physiological and morbid results attending the ordinary and the immoderate exercise of the VOLITIVE FACULTIES? |
18467 | What earthly being do we love so devotedly as our mother? |
18467 | What more valuable information can a newspaper give than to tell a sick man where he can be cured? |
18467 | What physician presumes to prescribe for himself, when suddenly prostrated by serious illness? |
18467 | What rendered him thus perfect? |
18467 | What results follow the_ natural_ and the_ excessive_ exercise of the EMOTIVE FACULTIES? |
18467 | What rounded off his natural asperities, and moulded up his virtues? |
18467 | What shall we say concerning abortionists, men and women who are willing to engage in the murder of innocents for pay? |
18467 | What should be the essential characteristics of an Invalids''Home? |
18467 | What suffering is greater than the sense of awful suffocation from a heart that is not acting well? |
18467 | When the faculty of a university is to be chosen, how are its members selected? |
18467 | Who can estimate the value of such a transformation from nervousness and despondency to vigorous manhood? |
18467 | Why? |
18467 | Why? |
18467 | Why? |
18467 | Would any one think of giving to a weak, debilitated man large portions of brandy to enable him to work? |
53305 | And, indeed, is it not at variance with the views of a host of the best medical observers? |
53305 | Another question which is apt to be asked is,"How can you ascertain so quickly that there is no disease?" |
53305 | Another question, still, is,"Will not organic disease be likely to be produced by the functional disorders?" |
53305 | Are we again to explain the abortive formation of the vascular septum or any portion of the branchial arches by the unknown want of formative power? |
53305 | At what period does it begin? |
53305 | But how can we arrive at an accurate estimate of the amount in the chest? |
53305 | But how shall we act with our second class of cases? |
53305 | Can it have been Hippocrates''s modes of physical explanation that suggested to Laennec the idea that led to his great discovery of auscultation? |
53305 | Can we discern them? |
53305 | Do globular vegetations occur in pneumonia? |
53305 | Does it always exist? |
53305 | Does it not seem possible that in some rare cases the opening found in the septum ventriculorum is in reality a reopening? |
53305 | Does not this show that in this country, in following Bowditch''s precepts of great care and deliberation, the operation has been more successful? |
53305 | How and where does the regeneration of red corpuscles take place after a severe hemorrhage? |
53305 | How shall the operation of tracheotomy be performed? |
53305 | If this process is sluggish, can we by medicines promote it? |
53305 | If, now, the external pressure is suddenly removed, what will be the result? |
53305 | In the event of pulmonary embolism taking place in spite of all preventive means employed, what shall we do in order to combat this terrible accident? |
53305 | Is internal treatment required? |
53305 | Is it not frequently of different length? |
53305 | Is it possible for the disease to be cured by the absorption of the pus? |
53305 | Is the dicrotic wave equally developed? |
53305 | Is the tidal wave equally high and sustained in both? |
53305 | Is there a form of anæmia dependent upon hyperplasia of the bone- marrow-- an anæmia medullaris? |
53305 | Is there any difference in the percussion waves?--_i.e._ is the up- stroke more sloping or the apex less pointed in the one than in the other? |
53305 | Is there any other method which can be adopted with any chance of success? |
53305 | May any infarctions be restored to a condition of perfect integrity? |
53305 | May not it be that the obstruction of the artery was the cause of collapse of the ductus? |
53305 | May not the condition be equally well interpreted in a different manner? |
53305 | May we use the alkaline treatment with reasonable hopes of benefit in a curative way? |
53305 | Moreover, if coagulation may form around an embolus, why can not similar causes which bring this about also occasion a spontaneous deposit of fibrin? |
53305 | Now, what are the means we have at our command to prevent the transport of this coagulum, or indeed to dissolve it, or absorb it in its place? |
53305 | Shall digitalis be employed in acute myocarditis? |
53305 | The question arises, How long shall we wait for absorption? |
53305 | The question is many times asked,"How is it possible that I should suffer so much, and yet the heart be free from disease?" |
53305 | To what extent can we judge by the subjective symptoms, especially by the dyspnoea? |
53305 | Was there a solution and disintegration of an incompletely formed heart- clot? |
53305 | Were they caused by thoracentesis or notwithstanding the operation? |
53305 | What amount is dangerous to life, and how can we arrive at an accurate estimate? |
53305 | What becomes of the effusion in the acute pleurisies? |
53305 | What becomes of the red corpuscles? |
53305 | What influence has the evidence of a congenital tendency and heredity upon the prognosis? |
53305 | What is this connection? |
53305 | What, then, is the basis for a favorable prognosis? |
53305 | When not urgent, how long should we wait for absorption of fluid? |
53305 | When the excavated fluid was thin( serous?) |
53305 | Why allow a warm abscess to be transformed into a cold abscess, which will open later spontaneously after having caused grave disorders? |
53305 | cit._] Why should we postpone pleurotomy, with or without resection of ribs, until we have used the drainage- tube, canula, etc.? |
39044 | Are they generally much alike, or do they change often? |
39044 | Are they in Child- bed? |
39044 | Are they pregnant? |
39044 | But what good Physician is mean and vile enough to purchase a few Hours of Ease and Tranquillity at so high, so very odious a Price? |
39044 | Can it be supposed then, that any one single Medicine, compound or simple, shall cure thirty times as many Diseases as those I have treated of? |
39044 | Does he cut them painfully? |
39044 | Does he draw his Breath easily? |
39044 | Does he expectorate, or cough up? |
39044 | Does he get Sleep? |
39044 | Does he go to stool often or seldom? |
39044 | Does he keep his Bed in the Day Time, or quit it? |
39044 | Does he make much Urine? |
39044 | Does he sweat? |
39044 | Does she suckle the Infant herself? |
39044 | Does the Child void Worms, upwards or downwards? |
39044 | Has he Pains in the Head, the Throat, the Breast, the Stomach, the Belly, the Loins, or in the Limbs, the Extremities of the Body? |
39044 | Has he any Fever? |
39044 | Has he had the Small Pocks? |
39044 | Has he never had the same Distemper before? |
39044 | Has he still tolerable Strength, or is he weak? |
39044 | Has her Milk come in due Time and Quantity? |
39044 | Has the Mother cleansed sufficiently? |
39044 | Has their Delivery been happily accomplished? |
39044 | How long has he been sick? |
39044 | How many Teeth has he cut? |
39044 | How then should a sick Person escape dying by them? |
39044 | If they have the very same Virtues, for what Purpose are they blended? |
39044 | In what Manner did his present Sickness begin, or appear? |
39044 | Is he any- wise ricketty, or subject to Knots or Kernels? |
39044 | Is he generally a healthy Person? |
39044 | Is he hot, or cold? |
39044 | Is he in the same Condition throughout the whole Day? |
39044 | Is he still, or restless? |
39044 | Is his Belly large, swelled, or hard? |
39044 | Is his Pulse hard or soft? |
39044 | Is his Sleep quiet, or otherwise? |
39044 | Is his Tongue dry? |
39044 | Is she subject to the Whites? |
39044 | Is so, how long since? |
39044 | It is acknowledged however, that they have proved ineffectual in a few Cases; but what Disease is there, which does not sometimes prove incurable? |
39044 | The Progress of this Disease advances exactly like that described in the preceding Chapter: for how can they differ considerably? |
39044 | They will say, how shall the Patient sleep at this Rate? |
39044 | This is a very great and real Evil, and how shall it be prevented? |
39044 | Those, who inclose themselves in very hot Rooms, never get quite cured; and how is it possible they should be cured in such a Situation? |
39044 | What Advantage can accrue to us from opposing the fatal Torrent, which sweeps them off? |
39044 | What Appearance has his Urine, as to Colour and Contents? |
39044 | What Appearance have his Stools, and what is their usual quantity? |
39044 | What Effects have they produced? |
39044 | What Interest have any of us in forbidding sick People to eat, to be stifled, or to drink such heating things as heighten their Fever? |
39044 | What Medicines has he taken? |
39044 | What Regimen does he observe in his Sickness? |
39044 | What a deplorable Deficience of the necessary Assistance for such must then be in a Country, that is not provided with a single Hospital? |
39044 | What is his general Course of Life? |
39044 | What then are the Causes of this? |
39044 | _ General Questions._ What is the Patient''s Age? |
39044 | _ Questions relating to Children._ What is the Child''s exact Age? |
39044 | _ Questions with Respect to Women._ Have they arrived at their monthly Discharges, and are these regular? |
39044 | does he complain of Thirst? |
39044 | of Reachings to vomit, or of an Aversion to Food? |
39044 | of an ill Tast in his Mouth? |
7293 | ''To what, then, was the relapse owing? 7293 How much has he taken in the aggregate?" |
7293 | I gave thee so many talents, what hast thou done with them? |
7293 | In a letter dated October 27, 1814, Mr. Southey thus writes:''Can you tell me any thing of Coleridge? |
7293 | And I still take opium? |
7293 | And how do I find my health after all this opium- eating? |
7293 | And what am I doing? |
7293 | And, perhaps, have taken it unblushingly ever since"the rainy Sunday,"and"the Pantheon,"and"the beatific druggist"of 1804? |
7293 | Are there never any calm moments, when you impartially judge of your own actions by their consequences? |
7293 | As to the tincture of opium, commonly called laudanum,_ that_ might certainly intoxicate if a man could bear to take enough of it; but why? |
7293 | But could not I have reduced it a drop a day, or by adding water have bisected or trisected a drop? |
7293 | But in what way did that operate upon his exertions as a writer? |
7293 | But some will ask, was Mr. Coleridge right in either view? |
7293 | But what could be done? |
7293 | But what of the effects of opium- eating on the mind? |
7293 | But what then? |
7293 | But who are they? |
7293 | By what means? |
7293 | Could the immortal soul find itself in a more inextricable, a more_ grisly_ complication? |
7293 | Do you know Beaumont and Fletcher''s play of''Thierry and Theodoret?'' |
7293 | Do you know Dr. Fox? |
7293 | Friday,"26....... 200 What mean these abrupt relapses, the reader will ask, perhaps, to such numbers as 300, 350, etc.? |
7293 | He may find men who will give him board and lodging for the sake of his conversation, but who will pay his other expenses? |
7293 | Here I will be asked( as I am constantly out of the book), why not begin the abandonment of the drug as soon as this acute attack is over? |
7293 | How long has the patient habitually taken opium? |
7293 | How much constitutional strength remains to throw it off? |
7293 | I now took only one thousand drops of laudanum per day-- and what was that? |
7293 | I see a brother sinning a sin unto death, and shall I not warn him? |
7293 | In the one crime of OPIUM, what crime have I not made myself guilty of? |
7293 | Is indeed Leviathan so tamed? |
7293 | Is it a small thing, that one of the finest of human understandings should be lost? |
7293 | Is not the great test in some measure against you,"By their fruits ye shall know them?" |
7293 | It will occur to you often to ask, Why did I not release myself from the horrors of opium by leaving it off or diminishing it? |
7293 | Must he begin his former career again and afterward have all the same ground to go over? |
7293 | Need I say that my own apparent convalescence was of no long continuance? |
7293 | Still, bearing in mind the wonderful complexity of opium(_ vide_"What Shall They Do to be Saved?") |
7293 | Surely, now that the patient has gone for forty- eight hours or more without that dose, would it not be better never to return to it? |
7293 | That most of the influences to be derived from your present example should be in direct opposition to right and virtue? |
7293 | That your talents should be buried? |
7293 | The final decision of the question, How long a time should be allowed for the final relinquishment of the drug? |
7293 | The most judicious of the medical gentlemen whose aid I invoked, was, I think, the one who replied to my inquiry for his bill,"What for? |
7293 | The reader may ask who make up this unfortunate class, and under what circumstances did they become enthralled by such a habit? |
7293 | Then I took-- ask me not how much; say, ye severest, what would ye have done? |
7293 | Then what? |
7293 | Those Fata Morgana plans, should he again waste on them the effort of construction? |
7293 | Those pictures, why were they brought again to mock him? |
7293 | WHAT IS OPIUM? |
7293 | WHAT SHALL THEY DO TO BE SAVED? |
7293 | Were they not horrible impossibilities? |
7293 | Were they not, through the paralysis of his executive faculties, mere startling likenesses of Disappointment? |
7293 | What is to become of him? |
7293 | What then? |
7293 | What was I now to do? |
7293 | What, thought I, was to be the end of all the hopes I once cherished, and which were cherished of and for me by others? |
7293 | Who is sufficient for this long,_ long_ pull? |
7293 | Yes, but what else? |
7293 | You had, and still have, an acute sense of moral right and wrong, but is not the feeling sometimes overpowered by self- indulgence? |
7293 | and yet will you not be awakened to a sense of your danger, and I must add, your guilt? |
7293 | in short, how do I do? |
7293 | where did he learn_ that_? |
4256 | But yet,I argued with myself,"what good can come of it?" |
4256 | Cure myself? |
4256 | Would n''t it have been better,I asked,"if I had resigned myself to a life as a stammerer and let it go at that?" |
4256 | :"Can I be Cured?" |
4256 | After I had talked with him for quite a while, he looked at me, and with his kindly, almost fatherly smile asked,"Why do n''t you cure yourself?" |
4256 | And day after day, as the hours dragged by, I would wonder,"Will this day NEVER end? |
4256 | And who cared for me? |
4256 | Are the afflictions, mental and physical, of the pelted, brow- beaten, down- trodden stutterer imaginary? |
4256 | But I had disregarded this honest advice, sincerely given, had spent my money and my time-- and what had I gotten? |
4256 | But if it is as simple as it sounds, why is it that so many in the past have failed to cure stammering and stuttering? |
4256 | CHAPTER IV CAN STAMMERING BE CURED BY MAIL? |
4256 | CHAPTER VI CAN STAMMERING AND STUTTERING BE OUTGROWN? |
4256 | CHAPTER XIII WHERE DOES STAMMERING LEAD? |
4256 | Can Stammering Be Cured by Mail? |
4256 | Can Stammering Really Be Cured? |
4256 | Can Stammering and Stuttering Be Outgrown? |
4256 | Does it pay--? |
4256 | How did you learn that?'' |
4256 | How shall I get through recess? |
4256 | I asked myself:"Well, what new disgrace today? |
4256 | If I could talk-- Oh, but why tell it again? |
4256 | If stuttering and stammering are not caused by actual physical defects in the organs themselves, what then can be the cause? |
4256 | If you can, why should you go about hesitating, stumbling, sticking, stammering and stuttering? |
4256 | In answering the question:"Where Does Stammering Lead?" |
4256 | In the first place, a stammerer can not forget his difficulty-- who can say that he would be cured if he did? |
4256 | Like Darwin, they said:"It must be this, for if it is not this, then what is it?" |
4256 | Now, how to cure? |
4256 | Now, why do n''t you begin where they have left off and find out how to succeed?" |
4256 | Once again I said to myself,"Well, this has failed, too-- I wonder what next?" |
4256 | PART III THE CURE OF STAMMERING AND STUTTERING CHAPTER I CAN STAMMERING REALLY BE CURED? |
4256 | Should you ask:"Does it pay to be cured of stammering?" |
4256 | The child repeats,"I want a tooky,"and in all probability gets the further inquiry,"You want a TOOKY-- what''s that?" |
4256 | The inexperienced observer can only ask in wonder:"How can stammering or stuttering bring a man or woman to these depths of despair?" |
4256 | The mother, either through indifference or through habit, says,"You want WHAT?" |
4256 | Then he raised his head and there was a tear in the corner of his eye as he said,"But why should I go on? |
4256 | They would jibe and jeer-- and then ask,"What did you say? |
4256 | To the stammerer''s question:"When should I begin treatment for my stammering?" |
4256 | Was I discouraged? |
4256 | Was I discouraged? |
4256 | Was n''t that great pay for a man grown? |
4256 | We are now ready to ask,"What are the correct methods for the cure of stuttering and stammering?" |
4256 | Well, who will say that I was not? |
4256 | What are the results of stammering? |
4256 | What brings about such a miraculous cure? |
4256 | What do you think about that? |
4256 | What does this mean? |
4256 | What happens? |
4256 | What happens? |
4256 | What is it that causes the organ, muscle or parts to fail properly to function? |
4256 | What is the cause of this? |
4256 | What is the easiest way home?" |
4256 | What was the cause of their difficulty, if it did not lie in the organs used in the production of speech? |
4256 | What will the teacher say when I stumble? |
4256 | What, then, is this cause? |
4256 | Where Does Stammering Lead? |
4256 | Who? |
4256 | Whom will I meet this morning? |
4256 | Why do n''t you learn to talk English?" |
4256 | Why have so many so- called methods of cure passed into the discard? |
4256 | Why is it, for instance, that a stammerer can sing without difficulty, although he can not talk? |
4256 | Why should you continue to stammer if you can be cured? |
4256 | Why should you live a HALF LIFE as a stammerer, if you can be cured and live the complete, joyous, happy, overflowing life? |
4256 | Will I NEVER get out of this?" |
4256 | Would I not have been better off if I had listened to the advice and stayed at home? |
4256 | Would you take the offer? |
4256 | and"At what stage will I stand the best chance of being most quickly cured?" |
4256 | increase in salary pay? |
21965 | But,we fancy we hear some one inquire impatiently,"what do those academic, technical distinctions matter to us? |
21965 | How much is that above that of any surrounding structures? |
21965 | It is a church, you say? |
21965 | Madam, how long do you think it will take you to complete the recital of your symptoms? |
21965 | Well, do you think you could finish in three- quarters of an hour? |
21965 | What is the height of the building, gentlemen? |
21965 | A generation ago a prominent physician was asked by an anxious mother,"Doctor, how would you treat a cold?" |
21965 | And if this is true of the foundation structure of the body, is it to be expected that the law ceases to run upon the surface? |
21965 | And if we were to ask the question,"Upon what does their peculiar value to the body- politic depend?" |
21965 | And what is to be done? |
21965 | And why? |
21965 | As Louis XVI, facing a mob, exclaimed,''Afraid? |
21965 | As in the study of a drug, the chief points to be considered are: What are its actual powers? |
21965 | Brain tumor? |
21965 | But that only raises the further question, What is a tonsil? |
21965 | But what has this ancient history to do with us in the twentieth century? |
21965 | But what has this to do with taste? |
21965 | But what of the eggs? |
21965 | CHAPTER IX THE NATURAL HISTORY OF TYPHOID FEVER Why should not a disease have a natural history, as well as an individual? |
21965 | CHAPTER XI THE HERODS OF OUR DAY: SCARLET FEVER, MEASLES, AND WHOOPING- COUGH Why is a disease a disease of childhood? |
21965 | CHAPTER XIV RHEUMATISM: WHAT IT IS, AND PARTICULARLY WHAT IT ISN''T What''s in a name? |
21965 | Could it be cured without destroying its cause and reverting to barbarism? |
21965 | Could this antitoxin be obtained in sufficient amounts to protect the body of a human being? |
21965 | Cutting either paralyzed the limb below the cut,--and what more proof could you ask of their having the same function? |
21965 | Do you wonder that we become"fresh- air fiends"? |
21965 | Even supposing that we could prevent the spread of the disease from human sources, what of the animal consumptives and their deadly bacilli? |
21965 | Finally, what can be done to prevent or cure this grotesque yet deadly process? |
21965 | Given the bacillus, how does it get into the human system? |
21965 | Granted that mosquitoes do cause and are the only cause of malaria, what are you going to do about it? |
21965 | How can this be done? |
21965 | How can this be secured? |
21965 | How could a race be exposed to a disease like tuberculosis, generation after generation, without having its vital resistance impaired? |
21965 | How could we possibly, in reason, expect that the influences which had caused the disease could help us to cure it? |
21965 | How, then, did the impression become so widely spread and so firmly rooted that pneumonia is chiefly due to exposure? |
21965 | If he could n''t control that, what could he control? |
21965 | In what way does it produce its effects, directly or indirectly? |
21965 | Lastly come the two most pertinent and appealing questions:-- What is the outlook for me if I should develop appendicitis? |
21965 | Most of us can recall the favorite and brilliant repartee of our boyhood days in answer to the inquisitive query,"What''s the matter?" |
21965 | Now comes the question, how is this to be done? |
21965 | Now comes the question,"What are we going to do about it?" |
21965 | Now, what has happened when recovery begins? |
21965 | Pneumonia? |
21965 | Since the chief cause of appendicitis is the appendix, the first question for disposal is, How did the appendix become an appendix? |
21965 | Suppose that, in spite of all our precautions, the disease has gained a foothold in the throat, what will be its course? |
21965 | The first question which instantly raised itself was,"How did the plasmodium get into human blood?" |
21965 | The present attitude of thoughtful physicians may be graphically indicated by the flippant inquiry of the riddle- maker,"When is a cold not a cold?" |
21965 | The ultimate foundation question of the science of bacteriology is, How did the disease germs become disease germs? |
21965 | This brings us to the interesting and important question, What are the causes of these disturbances of the nerve- tissues? |
21965 | This brings us to the question, What are these adenoids, and how do they come to produce such serious disturbances? |
21965 | To come nearer yet, did you ever catch cold when camping out? |
21965 | To put it very roughly-- has he cancer of the stomach? |
21965 | Want to keep it off?" |
21965 | What are the diseases in which such effects may be useful, and how frequent are they? |
21965 | What can we do to prevent or suppress the rebellion? |
21965 | What could be done in such a case, except to bow in submission to the inscrutable ways of Providence? |
21965 | What effects can be produced with it, both in health and sickness? |
21965 | What fur you want to know when good luck''s a- comin''? |
21965 | What is a headache, and why does it ache the head? |
21965 | What is the habitat of our organism, and is it increasing its spread? |
21965 | What, then, is the cause of this nasal obstruction, and when does it begin to operate? |
21965 | What, then, will be the physical effect of a shock or fright or furious outburst of anger upon the vital secretions? |
21965 | Who could tell whether the"heal- serum,"as the Germans call it, would act in a human being as it had upon all the other animals? |
21965 | Why, then, does not every one develop pneumonia? |
39157 | [ 31] The question which now arises is, Shall septic intoxication be classified with septicaemia? 39157 --Do you think this is a healthy house?" |
39157 | --"Is it necessary that I should give up this house to preserve the lives and health of my children?" |
39157 | --"Is the location a healthy one?" |
39157 | : Are conditions of the system present which may interfere with the specific treatment by quinia, and which are not, in themselves, curable by it? |
39157 | Acute or chronic? |
39157 | And what is the character of the fresh- air supply as to purity? |
39157 | Are all the pipes, joints, and connections air- tight? |
39157 | Are any medicines to be given as succedanea to the specific remedy for the purpose of rendering its action more sure or prompt? |
39157 | Are there any cases of sporadic origin, or are they always due to endemic or contagious influences? |
39157 | Are there unpleasant odors in the building or not? |
39157 | Are these materiae morborum merely inorganic elements or compounds entering human bodies and acting there as chemical poisons? |
39157 | Are they so also in tending toward recovery, without curative treatment within a certain time? |
39157 | As to the site itself, is it on made ground? |
39157 | At the bedside the cardinal questions are, How does the present condition of our patient differ from health? |
39157 | But after how many years should revaccination be resorted to? |
39157 | But it may be asked,"Does not this admission cut both ways? |
39157 | But the question may be asked here with propriety,"Is fatal pyaemia, independent of a wound, ever produced by breathing vitiated air?" |
39157 | But the question still recurs, What is the cause of the gastro- intestinal flux? |
39157 | But, it will be asked, is appetite infallible as a guide in dietetics? |
39157 | Can that be accomplished? |
39157 | Can, then, foul exhalations produce alike diphtheria, typhoid, and dysentery? |
39157 | Do metastatic abscesses arise from a single cause or from a combination of causes? |
39157 | Do these diseases arise from a common poison? |
39157 | Does it come from the cellar, or from other rooms, or from a foul area? |
39157 | Does this protection extend to offspring of parents who have been"acclimatized"to yellow fever? |
39157 | Epithelium of mucous membranes or glands: Struma(? |
39157 | Following it as a guide, is food never taken beyond the requirements of health? |
39157 | Given the presence of a known or suspected cause of disease, what are the best means of avoiding or destroying it? |
39157 | Here the question comes up: Is vaccination less protective, either in degree or in duration of effect, than it was at the time of its adoption? |
39157 | How does it obtain access to the human system? |
39157 | How is it possible, if even normal lochia possess virulent qualities, that childbed is ever unattended by accessions of fever?" |
39157 | INVASION.--Is diphtheria, primarily, a local or a constitutional disease? |
39157 | If for nine months, why may they not do so for a much longer period-- for as many years, for example? |
39157 | In a given case of disease, what is the probable cause? |
39157 | Is a special proclivity to any of the group of enthetic febrile diseases ever inherited? |
39157 | Is diphtheria contagious? |
39157 | Is it possible for one hereditary constitution or diathesis to become, in transmission, not only modified, but transmuted, into another? |
39157 | Is it possible for pyaemia to originate spontaneously? |
39157 | Is it severe or of trifling account? |
39157 | Is it, in other words, ever generated de novo? |
39157 | Is the communication between the soil- pipe and the street sewer uninterrupted? |
39157 | Is the formation of emboli in the terminal branches of arteries always dependent on the disintegration of thrombi? |
39157 | Is the skin hot or cold, dry or moist? |
39157 | Is the soil- pipe well ventilated, or has it dead ends? |
39157 | Is the water- supply of each closet entirely cut off from the main supply to the house by means of a tank or cistern? |
39157 | Is there one primary miasmatic pyaemia analogous to the other epidemic, so- called zymotic diseases? |
39157 | It is therefore pertinent to the continuation of this inquiry to ask, By what agency is the putrefaction of animal substances produced? |
39157 | Or is the poison of a treble character, so that a part may give origin to diphtheria, another part to typhoid, a third to dysentery? |
39157 | So we come to the present attack: When did it begin, and how? |
39157 | Supposing it to be real, is it an illness or an accident or other injury? |
39157 | That being understood, what are the relative merits of animal and humanized vaccine? |
39157 | The first is a question of fact: What are the effects produced upon the inmates? |
39157 | The practical questions on this point are, what higher ground than the site in question exists in the vicinity? |
39157 | The question has been raised, Are they pus- cells or white blood- corpuscles? |
39157 | The questions which he will be asked are such as the following:"Is the cause of this particular case of disease in the house, or connected with it? |
39157 | What have been its prominent symptoms since? |
39157 | What is its mode of action when received? |
39157 | What is the impression given to the finger upon the skin by intense fever, and what by the relaxation which precedes death? |
39157 | What is the number of cubic feet of air per head that is introduced and removed per hour? |
39157 | What percentage of carbonic impurity is present? |
39157 | What relation to it has the administration of acids? |
39157 | What specific process is going on? |
39157 | What tendencies have they, or has he or she, shown by previous attacks and their results? |
39157 | What, on the other hand, are the points of superior excellence attaching to bovine virus? |
39157 | Which is to be preferred? |
39157 | Why should not these, whether as parasites or as poisons, always produce the same effects? |
39157 | Will not railroad companies resist a plan of regular disinfection because of its expensiveness? |
39157 | Will there not be an outcry against this as despotic and as a violation of the rights of the citizen? |
39157 | and if so, what is it?" |
39157 | and, What ought we to do to bring about his recovery? |
39157 | and, what precautions have been taken to secure drainage and to cut off communication between the interior of the house and the ground air? |
39157 | and, what sources of soil- pollution exist on the higher level? |
39157 | leucocythaemia, thrombosis, and embolism, or ichorrhaemia and septicaemia? |
39157 | or are there, as many have supposed, two ways in which pyaemia may originate? |
39157 | or may it not be that every time the diathesis is thus originated de novo? |
39157 | or, as Virchow teaches us, is this pyaemia, so greatly feared by all surgeons, only an ontological idea? |
39157 | what are the character and direction of the strata between such elevation and the site? |
39157 | what is the height of the foundation above the subsoil water? |
44043 | And so Chook Aloong is an opium smoker? |
44043 | Are all these men dying from opium smoking? |
44043 | But where are all the people who are suffering from opium smoking? |
44043 | But where are the smokers? |
44043 | Do many people smoke? |
44043 | Do you sell much? |
44043 | Oh, is not this a terrible thing? |
44043 | What for,said he,"you say my no talkee lie? |
44043 | You say they are good, respectable men? |
44043 | Against whom and against what is all this outcry? |
44043 | And for whom pray would this sacrifice be made? |
44043 | And what fault can be found with the merchants? |
44043 | Are these Chinese converts the class of the Chinese from which truth is to be gleaned? |
44043 | As he leaves he asks his guide,"Does the keeper of the opium shop expect a gratuity?" |
44043 | As to the tincture of opium( commonly called laudanum),_ that_ might certainly intoxicate, if a man could bear to take enough of it; but why? |
44043 | But even admitting, for argument''s sake, that smuggling in its ordinary acceptation did, in fact, exist, how does the matter stand? |
44043 | But how is it that such divergent opinions can exist between Englishmen living in China and certain Englishmen here at home? |
44043 | But what does Sir Robert Hart, with all his official information, say? |
44043 | But what if it be a mere figment of the imagination, and absolutely devoid, as Dr. Medhurst says, of a semblance of truth? |
44043 | By what right could the English Government or any other Government do such things? |
44043 | Can he believe that human nature in China is different to what it is in Europe? |
44043 | Could any evidence against the allegations of the Anti- Opium Society be stronger than this? |
44043 | Could anything be more disingenuous than this? |
44043 | Could the force of folly or fanaticism go further than that? |
44043 | Does Mr. Storrs Turner consider those gentlemen worthy of credit? |
44043 | Does it not strike His Lordship how absurd is such an antithesis as pleasure and death? |
44043 | Does not that form the strongest possible evidence that the Chinese are an extremely steady and abstemious race? |
44043 | Drink vely bad for Inglismen; what for you do n''t go home and teach them to be soba, plaupa men?" |
44043 | Here I would first inquire-- what is the poppy? |
44043 | How many times has it happened that the consuls have had discussions with the Chinese governors respecting these receiving ships? |
44043 | I admit that opium is in itself a poison, but let me ask what changes does not fire produce in the various substances which it consumes? |
44043 | I do not believe there is any solid truth in this assertion; but if there is, what does the fact prove? |
44043 | I should like to ask Mr. Storrs Turner were the medical and other gentlemen then present Englishmen or foreigners? |
44043 | If that is not what is wished, what is? |
44043 | Is it honest or just to place the civilized, wise, and educated Chinese in the same category with the barbarous natives of Central Africa? |
44043 | Is it not the Chinese who go out of their ports to the"Receiving Ships"to fetch it? |
44043 | Is the Chinese nation composed of children, or of savages who do not know right from wrong? |
44043 | Is the testimony of such people of the slightest value? |
44043 | Is this patriotic or proper on the part of this Anti- Opium Society? |
44043 | Now did anyone ever hear of such an extraordinary explanation of De Quincey''s motives in publishing that volume? |
44043 | Now why have not these merchants ever complained that commerce has suffered from the opium traffic? |
44043 | Now, is that a fair parallel? |
44043 | Now, why are England and Englishmen thought so well of by the Chinese? |
44043 | Now, why is this belief so prevalent? |
44043 | Should the Company prohibit the culture of the drug in order to allow other nations to derive the emoluments arising from it? |
44043 | Should we then have the Chinese the hard- working, industrious, thrifty, frugal people that we find them? |
44043 | Storrs Turner, who is himself no mean Chinese scholar, to mislead his readers by making use of so forced and inapplicable a comparison? |
44043 | Take him to the Tung- Wah and to an opium shop, you savee?" |
44043 | The great subject on his mind is opium, so he comes to the point at once, and asks,"Is there much opium smoked in the colony?" |
44043 | The whole affair is just as defensible a proceeding as that of some tenth- rate dauber who, having copied(?) |
44043 | They say,"We do not protect these ships; why do you not drive them away?" |
44043 | This is it:-- They[ the missionaries] secure some adherence to the Christian religion, no doubt, but what is the value of the Christianity? |
44043 | To reduce the quantity of opium smoked in China? |
44043 | Was he right or wrong in doing so? |
44043 | What do you mean, then, by trying to make Christians of us?" |
44043 | What was the celebrated saying of Prince Kung to the British Ambassador? |
44043 | What, then, is the fair conclusion to draw from such a state of things? |
44043 | What, then, may I ask, is the reproach constantly hurled at the East India Company? |
44043 | Whence, then, comes the great bulk of the drug to satisfy all these smokers? |
44043 | Why does he not apply the same rule to the one as to the other? |
44043 | Why, then, does not the Government of China suppress the cultivation of the poppy there? |
44043 | Why, then, is it not grown here? |
44043 | Why? |
44043 | Yet these are the people whom Mr. Storrs Turner would put in the same category as the savages of Africa? |
44043 | Yet what are the present plans of this pragmatical body? |
44043 | is that the way?" |
14980 | = If fatigue products can not pile up, why is extra rest ever needed? 14980 = What Is a Complex=?" |
14980 | But,says the sensitive person,"are we not born either violins or drums? |
14980 | Did you feel the pain in this same place before that time? |
14980 | Did you hear the clock strike? |
14980 | Do you mean,she said,"that I could keep from hearing them?" |
14980 | Doctor,he said,"would it be bad manners to run away?" |
14980 | Manners? |
14980 | No,she said;"did it strike?" |
14980 | Well? |
14980 | What are you eating? |
14980 | What is his number? |
14980 | What is the evidence for these sweeping statements? 14980 Why are you so joyous?" |
14980 | Why do you want more? |
14980 | Why, is n''t it very unhealthy not to sleep? |
14980 | Your periods are regular and easy; and do you know what they are for? |
14980 | [ 24][ Footnote 24: Frink:What Is a Complex?" |
14980 | = Fads Dynamogenic.= What is it that gives the impetus to fads about eating, or about religious belief? |
14980 | = Pugnacity and Anger.= What is it that makes us angry? |
14980 | = Spontaneous Outbursts.="How do we know all this?" |
14980 | = The Emotions Again.= What is the key that unlocks new stores of energy and drives away fatigue? |
14980 | = The Motives for Sensitiveness.= Sensitiveness is largely a matter of choice, but what determines choice? |
14980 | = What about Being Tired?= If all these things are true, why do people need to be told? |
14980 | = Why Menstruation Is Painful.= What sort of atmosphere is created for the young girl as she attains puberty? |
14980 | = Will Is Choice.= Just here we can imagine an earnest protest:"But why do you ignore the human will? |
14980 | A CATECHISM FOR THE WEARY ONE WHAT? |
14980 | A new water, full of unusual minerals, might hasten the bowel movement, but on what possible principle could it retard it? |
14980 | And what can a person do about it?" |
14980 | But after all, is not a blocking of the way in of vastly more importance? |
14980 | But how can a person help himself when he is fighting in the dark? |
14980 | But really, why should n''t she want one? |
14980 | But what about dreams? |
14980 | But what is fermentation? |
14980 | But what is instinct? |
14980 | But who wants to take his suggestions in such inconvenient forms as these? |
14980 | Can it be that a breakdown which seems such an unmitigated disaster is really welcomed by a part of our own selves? |
14980 | Can the average man stand this or that? |
14980 | Did you sleep well last night?" |
14980 | Do the people around you eat the thing that upsets you? |
14980 | Does not this answer our question as to why some people always take unhealthy suggestions? |
14980 | For example, why use our will to keep down fear or anger when a little understanding dissipates these emotions without effort? |
14980 | HOW? |
14980 | Has he not had long practice in the days before insomnia was invented? |
14980 | How can he forget his fatigue? |
14980 | How can he free himself when the thing he thinks he fears is merely a symbol of what he really fears? |
14980 | How can he get the idea? |
14980 | How can he ignore it? |
14980 | How may he express his inner feelings? |
14980 | How, then, are they brought about? |
14980 | I said:"But yes; do n''t you remember you were just saying,''When the time comes for me to go''?" |
14980 | INTRODUCING THE INSTINCTS= Back of Our Dispositions.= What is it that makes the baby jump at a noise? |
14980 | If all signs of the emotion are to be suppressed, all expression denied, why the emotion? |
14980 | If re- education is the cure, why is not education the ounce of prevention which shall settle the problem for all time? |
14980 | If the purpose of fatigue seems to be to slow down our efforts, why should we disregard it or seek to evade its warnings? |
14980 | If the wrong kind of food is the cause of constipation, why does the rectum prove to be the most refractory portion of the tube? |
14980 | If we can not remember, how can we discover these strange memories that are so powerful but so elusive? |
14980 | If we do not need to rest, why should fatigue exist? |
14980 | If''nerves''are not physical, what are they? |
14980 | In the same way man''s modest and simple question,"What makes people nervous?" |
14980 | Is it not always an invigorating emotion,--the zest of pursuit, the joy of battle, intense interest in work, or a new enthusiasm? |
14980 | Is it not apparent that will itself is choice,--the selection by the whole personality of the emotion and the action which best fit into its ideals? |
14980 | Is n''t it about time you grew a moral callous, too?" |
14980 | Is n''t it logical to go to bed?" |
14980 | Is not heredity rather than choice to blame? |
14980 | Is not the crux of the whole question summed up in that word"tired"? |
14980 | It is true: in the better kind of man the will is of central importance; but what is"will"? |
14980 | NERVOUS FATIGUE_ What of the Nervous Invalid?_ If the normal man lives constantly below his maximum, what shall we say of the nervous invalid? |
14980 | NERVOUS FATIGUE_ What of the Nervous Invalid?_ If the normal man lives constantly below his maximum, what shall we say of the nervous invalid? |
14980 | On what principle could a piece of chocolate inhibit the call to stool or contract the sphincter muscle? |
14980 | One day, after a long talk, with no suggestion on my part, only an occasional,"What does that remind you of?" |
14980 | Perhaps she could have spared John or Tom or Fred? |
14980 | Physical fatigue is quickly remedied, and what can rest do after that? |
14980 | She says that she asked me one night as she carried her hot- water bottle to bed,"Doctor, what makes cold feet?" |
14980 | Some people are able to adjust themselves; why not all? |
14980 | THE POSITIVE SIDE="Nerves"not Imaginary.="But,"some one says,"how can healthy organs misbehave in this way? |
14980 | The question,"What makes people nervous?" |
14980 | The test question for each individual is this:"Am I''like folks''?" |
14980 | The whole question resolves itself into this: What is fatigue? |
14980 | They turn and toss, exclaiming with each turn:"Why do n''t I sleep? |
14980 | WHO? |
14980 | WHY? |
14980 | What but the mothering instinct and the love of country could uncover all those unsuspected reserves of Dr. Girard- Mangin and others of her kind? |
14980 | What else creates fatigue? |
14980 | What energizes a man when you tell him he is a liar? |
14980 | What is fatigue? |
14980 | What is it but the enthusiasm for work which explains the indefatigable energy of Edison and Roosevelt? |
14980 | What is it in the amateur mountain- climbers that helps the body maintain its new standard? |
14980 | What is it that holds them back from satisfaction in direct expression, and prevents indirect outlet in sublimation? |
14980 | What keeps indefatigable workers on the job long after the ordinary man has tired? |
14980 | What magnifies fatigue? |
14980 | What makes a person too interested in his own sensations and feelings? |
14980 | What makes a woman slave for her children, or give her life for them if need be? |
14980 | What makes a young girl blush when you look at her, or a youth begin to take pains with his necktie? |
14980 | What makes him think, feel, and act as he does every hour of every day?" |
14980 | What makes men go to war or build tunnels or found hospitals or make love or save for a home? |
14980 | What makes us weary long after the cause is removed? |
14980 | What more natural than to look back to those little curdles in the dish and to start the tradition that such mixtures are dangerous? |
14980 | What of the business man who travels from sanatorium to sanatorium because five years ago he went through a strenuous year? |
14980 | What of the college student who is broken down because he studied too hard, or the teacher who is worn out because of ten hard years of teaching? |
14980 | What possible effect can rest have on the fatigue of a discouraged instinct? |
14980 | What, then, are some of these erroneous ideas, these misconceptions, that cause so much trouble? |
14980 | Where was it in the meanwhile, and what hunted it out from among all our other memories and sent it up into consciousness? |
14980 | Which is the suggestive idea for this person and which for that one? |
14980 | Who complains of fatigue before he has well begun? |
14980 | Who fancies his brain so exhausted that a little concentration is impossible? |
14980 | Who gets up tired every morning? |
14980 | Who knows how many times we all do just this thing without catching ourselves in the trick? |
14980 | Who lays all his woes to overwork? |
14980 | Who may drop his fatigue as soon as he"gets the idea?" |
14980 | Who still believes himself exhausted as the result of work that is now ancient history? |
14980 | Why are they willing to choose such an uncomfortable mode of expression? |
14980 | Why do many people believe themselves over- worked? |
14980 | Why do they take the suggestion? |
14980 | Why do you try to make man the creature of feeling? |
14980 | Why not? |
14980 | Why? |
14980 | Will you tell me why I have not been able to cure myself of this trouble? |
14980 | [ 68] Why struggle to subdue emotional bad habits when a little insight dispels the desire back of them, and makes them melt away as if by magic? |
14980 | but if we fail to respond by an equally polite"and I hope you had a good night?" |
14980 | then turns out to mean: What keeps people from a satisfactory outlet for their love- instincts? |
14980 | we are really asking:"What is man like, inside and out, up and down? |
14980 | why did you bring this up? |
37060 | An enlarged liver? |
37060 | Any B M yet? |
37060 | Any bowel movement yet? |
37060 | Any gas? |
37060 | Are livers supposed to have spots? |
37060 | Are you sure you''re OK? |
37060 | BLACK?!! |
37060 | But what color brown? |
37060 | But what do YOU think? |
37060 | Can I help you? |
37060 | Could... I... try them on in a dressing room or... something? 37060 Did n''t our marriage and family mean anything to you?" |
37060 | Did n''t you get my gift yet? |
37060 | Did that hurt? |
37060 | Did they keep it? |
37060 | Does that hurt? |
37060 | Does that stuff have any effects? |
37060 | Gas? |
37060 | Gas? |
37060 | Going to get your four hours? |
37060 | Have you had your blood drawn before? |
37060 | Hey, Mom,I said, throwing the words carefully,"The next time someone comes to the door to look, how''bout if I give''em a full frontal view?" |
37060 | How am I supposed to go if you do n''t feed me first? |
37060 | How shall I withstand the whirlwind? |
37060 | I really hope he wo n''t call... what would I need with a date?! |
37060 | If you have a problem, you should go to Mayo..."But... ca n''t you?... |
37060 | Is it okay if I take one of those? |
37060 | Is that your red car parked up there? |
37060 | Is this all there is to it? |
37060 | It''s pretty pathetic, is n''t it? |
37060 | Lauren Isaacson? |
37060 | Lauren Isaacson?... |
37060 | Norm, what do you think of mine? |
37060 | Those are in case you get sick... do you want to take one with you? |
37060 | Uh, could I see the other doctor? |
37060 | Uh... how much are you gon na take, anyway? |
37060 | What about a bowel movement? |
37060 | What are those? |
37060 | What could be more disturbing than a mole- infested lawn? |
37060 | What do you mean? |
37060 | What? |
37060 | When am I to live? |
37060 | Where are you from? |
37060 | Who are you fooling? |
37060 | Would you have been satisfied with just the operation? 37060 Yeh, but did you get a load of that kid in 2C?" |
37060 | Yeh, not bad, huh? |
37060 | You ca n''t swallow pills? |
37060 | You had to say it, did n''t you? |
37060 | You mean you''re just going to live with each other? |
37060 | You sure? |
37060 | You wore them all day?. |
37060 | You''re not done, are you? |
37060 | ( So intelligent a question, no?!) |
37060 | .?" |
37060 | .or claim my share of the conversation without rudely interrupting with,"shut up!"?... |
37060 | .that he would be cured if he simply believed in such a thing? |
37060 | 14, 1979...( He''s) making it a point to avoid me... nothing new though, right? |
37060 | A classic phone call ran as follows:"Laurie? |
37060 | A lack of conscience, or is it a lack of conscience awareness??? |
37060 | A lack of conscience, or is it a lack of conscience awareness??? |
37060 | A lack of conscience, or is it a lack of conscience awareness??? |
37060 | Alone? |
37060 | And stamina? |
37060 | And why? |
37060 | As Mom hung up the phone, I gasped,"Todd''s not going to die, is he?" |
37060 | Aug. 5, 1981... Is it wrong to have a friendship wherein one of the involved parties is highly romantically bound to the other, who is not? |
37060 | August, 1983... Is there really any sense to my life anymore? |
37060 | Black? |
37060 | Blinking at them idly, my mom inched closer and ask,"Honey, do you know us?" |
37060 | But where? |
37060 | Can one praise God for His kindness and love when the situation is nothing but grim and senseless? |
37060 | Could we bring her back home? |
37060 | Dad kept saying,"can you believe this?" |
37060 | Depression sets in like a cold, dark stare, And spurs my asking"Why do I care?" |
37060 | Did I embarrass him? |
37060 | Did not love matter more than all else? |
37060 | Divorce for income tax purposes? |
37060 | Flustered by the rude interruption, I nearly woke, and can recall my brother''s sleepy,"Is there something wrong?" |
37060 | Four? |
37060 | Good? |
37060 | Guess what? |
37060 | Have I nothing left to say? |
37060 | He stopped abruptly, eyeing me with marked curiosity and asked"Do you need some help?" |
37060 | He would make the bear twitch and shake with obvious delirium moaning simultaneously,"Whe''m I?.... Whe''m I?" |
37060 | How about a blond one? |
37060 | How can I describe The way I feel? |
37060 | How could marriage be so important that one would no longer consider his son a person because he desired to live unwed with his beloved? |
37060 | How could such a plan be a mistake?. |
37060 | How is one expected to live If no one will accept his love? |
37060 | How many days, I wondered, would my ears endure the repetition before the doctors were assured of the normalcy of my stomach and pancreas? |
37060 | How was it possible to say"no"without being hounded until my response was"yes"?. |
37060 | How would the killing need be vented? |
37060 | However, I shall try again... Am I at the end of the road? |
37060 | I almost hated to ask,"You OK?" |
37060 | I asked myself,"Why am I depressed?" |
37060 | I did not, however, have to be the best; depending on so many variables, who could determine what was"best"? |
37060 | I felt sorry for him; how could he know? |
37060 | I must have hurt it due to water retention(?). |
37060 | I should never expect less than the truth when I ask"How are you?" |
37060 | I wake up and Mom says,"You''d better start selling your cards, had n''t you?" |
37060 | I was a side- show and could almost hear them talking excitedly among themselves..."Boy, that hit and run was sure gruesome, was n''t it?" |
37060 | I was not resentful of their life; why would they resent"how much I had"? |
37060 | I wonder how he''ll feel when he finally discovers why everyone is smiling at him?!! |
37060 | I wondered about his effort of secrecy; did he have second thoughts as to the appropriateness of the gift, or was he concerned about Mom''s reaction? |
37060 | I wrote a profound thought yesterday;"Does not the sunrise from out of the Darkness?" |
37060 | IRREPLACEABLE? |
37060 | If a person has never been in a place before, how could he feel that he has seen it in another point in time? |
37060 | If their life was to be shared, why did n''t they just marry to please society? |
37060 | Immediately I asked,"what is it?" |
37060 | In? |
37060 | Is it wrong to relish each other''s company, ruled by the standards set by the individual who is not involved whole- heartedly? |
37060 | Is not mystery the food which keeps one alive? |
37060 | Is that asking too much? |
37060 | Is there such a thing as thinking too much? |
37060 | Is this the bittersweet price for societal living? |
37060 | It was a beautiful drive, and I dearly loved to travel; besides, what better reason could one have for dining in restaurants? |
37060 | It''s an owl... Whoo''s wishing you a Happy Valentine''s Day? |
37060 | Lack of trust or what? |
37060 | Marriage? |
37060 | May I respectfully disagree? |
37060 | My love is something I just ca n''t ignore, But I''m so tired... Can I take any more? |
37060 | My recurrence of cancer exhumed a need for closeness, and what should have been better than dating to answer such a need? |
37060 | No one had ever labeled me a"brat,"I mused with satisfaction, so why should I babysit for other people''s nightmares? |
37060 | Noisy? |
37060 | PAGE 251 Chapter 33 Treatments/ Hoax"What if...?" |
37060 | People began to ask innocently,"when is it due?" |
37060 | Question 1: Why would a person who did n''t want a disease, contract one? |
37060 | Question 2: Why would n''t it work for every one? |
37060 | Recovering, Mom asked,"What happened?... |
37060 | Rhetorically speaking, however, by what measure and under whose authority is"enough"determined? |
37060 | She always listens to my writings, no matter how trivial; why ca n''t I abide a few notes of song? |
37060 | Since my health was a mystery, I felt no urge to cry; and, I thought, if I knew, what difference would tears make? |
37060 | Smile? |
37060 | So What? |
37060 | So why then, am I Still falling head- first Into a bottomless cavern? |
37060 | Somewhat aghast I looked at them and replied that I had not;"Why?" |
37060 | Sure, the legality may only have been a grand joke to Tracy, but if it saved certain relationships, was it not worth the trouble? |
37060 | The shower is in the basement, the toilets are on first and second floor; what if I should encounter another siege? |
37060 | Thinking she''ll try another question, perhaps an easier one, she asked,"What''s your name, huh?" |
37060 | Thus, instead of"why me?" |
37060 | Up? |
37060 | Viewing the pictures taken by the CAT Scan of my liver, I had nonchalantly asked,"Are there supposed to be spots on it like that?" |
37060 | Was I not in the"right"crowd? |
37060 | Was it two weeks? |
37060 | Welcome home?... |
37060 | Were n''t you the folks with the Dart?" |
37060 | What became of my relationship with my former boy friend? |
37060 | What contributes to their lack of obligation? |
37060 | What could have been said that had not already expressed itself in his eyes? |
37060 | What do they think they''re doing to me? |
37060 | What if the door wo n''t unlock? |
37060 | What other choice does one have, excluding madness or suicide, but to live with it? |
37060 | What passed through his mind? |
37060 | What terror had I willfully agreed to undergo this time? |
37060 | What would you do while you were afflicted by runny bowels? |
37060 | What, after all, is my purpose for being here? |
37060 | When I went down to get the check for him, he said,"So when is it due?" |
37060 | Whisper? |
37060 | Who and how? |
37060 | Who decides these things, I wonder? |
37060 | Who, then, is the better off? |
37060 | Why are some left to insanity, psychosomatic disorders or neurotic behavior? |
37060 | Why did he have to say that? |
37060 | Why did they all have so much hair? |
37060 | Why do takers think they are so special that they do n''t have to offer conversation, aid, or show gratitude? |
37060 | Why else would hair suddenly lose its shine and lapse into a gray- sheened, death- like shadow? |
37060 | Why is it that a taker must always be asked to perform a duty? |
37060 | Why should I care what I look like? |
37060 | Why was it so necessary for them to nail down as truths those aspects of life which had no answers? |
37060 | Why was"good"never"good enough?" |
37060 | Would that have been enough?" |
37060 | Would you like to wear it?" |
37060 | Wrong? |
37060 | Yet could it be that feelings Speak more truthfully than words? |
37060 | You know what? |
37060 | You marry me?" |
37060 | are you sure?" |
37060 | did you ever see a seeing- eye dog that paused to mark each tree? |
37060 | how about some food?" |
37060 | in an apartment, to mark the beginning of a new job?. |
37060 | my question was generally,"why not me?" |
37060 | so what is wrong?" |
37060 | to which I answered"Yes"and a hasty,"Is it OK to be here?" |
37060 | well, who knows? |
37060 | what''s he look like?" |
44926 | How''d you know? |
44926 | Is it necessary, is it desirable? |
44926 | Should I consent to hospitalization? |
44926 | What will I encounter if I accept hospitalization? |
44926 | Wo n''t you sit down, please? |
44926 | Would you tell me your name? |
44926 | You mean_ you''re_ crazy? 44926 [ 4][ 4] Edward Erwin,"Is Psychotherapy More Effective Than a Placebo?,"in_ Does Psychotherapy Really Help People?_, p. 39. |
44926 | [ 4][ 4] Edward Erwin,Is Psychotherapy More Effective Than a Placebo?,"in_ Does Psychotherapy Really Help People?_, p. 39. |
44926 | ( A- A or P- C) SON: How do you like my new tie? |
44926 | ( Are you perhaps status- oriented?) |
44926 | ( C- P) MOTHER: Mmm, is n''t this the most delicious soufflé you''ve ever tasted? |
44926 | ( Do you cope well with the frustration of getting lost in your car, for example?) |
44926 | * Are you able to function relatively well in social groups? |
44926 | * Are you better able to enjoy life and work? |
44926 | * Do you now have a greater tolerance to frustration? |
44926 | * Have you developed realistic life goals? |
44926 | * Have you improved your understanding of yourself so that you feel a healthy measure of self- acceptance? |
44926 | 252 19 Confidentiality: Your Privacy 257 20 Does Therapy Work? |
44926 | A To a long- range plan for life improvement? |
44926 | A, C, E, P §_ 6 Rigidity_ Do you often find yourself trying to be, or wishing you were someone you''re not? |
44926 | A, F On the other hand, are you at ease with groups of people? |
44926 | A, G{ 84} §_ 13 Imagination_ As a child, did you have an imaginary friend? |
44926 | After all, who_ chooses_ to suffer? |
44926 | Again, whom do we ask to determine whether this is the case? |
44926 | Am I somehow_ benefiting_ from feeling depressed? |
44926 | And this is understandable, is it not? |
44926 | Any objections? |
44926 | Are you a religious or spiritual person, whether you attend church or not? |
44926 | Are you able to put your trust in a process where results are noticed only very gradually? |
44926 | Are you an uncompromising person? |
44926 | Are you depressed( see § 5, Table 1) or phobic( see § 4.2, Table 1)? |
44926 | Are you frequently intense and uptight? |
44926 | Are you impatient, or do you even resent receiving unsolicited suggestions? |
44926 | Are you in search of a richer meaning in life? |
44926 | Are you inclined to be moralistic, dogmatic, critical, or judgmental? |
44926 | Are you so troubled because of emotional upheaval that you can not work or maintain your family responsibilities? |
44926 | As you read a descriptive novel, do you tend to"see"many of the places and people? |
44926 | B Do you feel that you have pent- up feelings that are in need of release? |
44926 | B §_ 11 Articulateness and Analytical Attitude_ Can you talk openly and clearly about your feelings, about what is troubling you? |
44926 | But solutions for what? |
44926 | But why? |
44926 | But you must ask yourself:"To what extent do I_ need_ my present symptoms? |
44926 | C, J Are you"overcontrolling"--anxious when you do not feel you have things clearly under control? |
44926 | C, J Do you feel that somehow there are blocks_ in you_ that are standing in the way of your self- realization, of fulfilling your potential? |
44926 | CAN YOU HELP YOURSELF? |
44926 | CLIENT: What do you think I ought to do? |
44926 | Can you fairly readily describe examples of situations that may bother you? |
44926 | Can you see that? |
44926 | Can you think of a different way to reply to your mother, in addition to humor? |
44926 | Can you_ give up_ any real payoffs of being emotionally troubled? |
44926 | Concerned that"things be in their proper place"? |
44926 | Could Dr. Chase help? |
44926 | Could Dr. Frankl help him? |
44926 | C{ 82} Are you perfectionistic? |
44926 | DOES THERAPY WORK? |
44926 | DR. C.: How about telling your mother how you actually feel when she criticizes you? |
44926 | DR. K.: But you do n''t think you''re doing a great job? |
44926 | DR. K.: But_ they_ think you''re doing OK, is n''t that correct? |
44926 | DR. K.: Why_ should_ they? |
44926 | Did you come from a family with several children? |
44926 | Did you inherit it from your parents? |
44926 | Did your life decision come from your upbringing? |
44926 | Do the events come alive for you? |
44926 | Do you enjoy parties or social gatherings? |
44926 | Do you enjoy reading? |
44926 | Do you feel a_ need_ to acquire an overall sense of understanding of yourself, your family, and how they have influenced you? |
44926 | Do you feel friendly when you pass a house where a party is going on? |
44926 | Do you feel stultified or oppressed by your relationships with your spouse, friends, or family? |
44926 | Do you feel that you have the initiative to proceed without explicit direction from the therapist? |
44926 | Do you feel that you have this kind of_ tenacity_ and_ ability to follow through_? |
44926 | Do you feel that_ you_ have the personal traits that the therapy is most suited for? |
44926 | Do you feel you can develop a strong sense of commitment to long- term therapy? |
44926 | Do you feel, deep down, that perhaps your expectations and demands( concerning others, yourself, and the world) may be unrealistic? |
44926 | Do you feel, really feel, a sense of compassion or empathy for people who face poverty and misfortune? |
44926 | Do you find yourself thinking about the events in the book as though they make up a real world of their own? |
44926 | Do you have a mental habit of standing apart from what you''re doing and judging yourself and your work? |
44926 | Do you have any addictions that are causing grief for you or others close to you? |
44926 | Do you like art, music, or literature? |
44926 | Do you obtain little joy or satisfaction from living? |
44926 | Do you often find it useful or helpful to receive advice? |
44926 | Do you sometimes feel guilty because of your own situation, that there always seem to be others who are worse off? |
44926 | Do you sometimes have to"let off steam,"even though you know you are hurting others, damaging their property, or injuring yourself? |
44926 | Do you spend much time just"thinking about things,"even dwelling on problems that concern you? |
44926 | Do you suspect that other people think that you magnify evils, blowing negative things out of proportion? |
44926 | Do you tend to come home from a visit with friends or family and go over in your mind what went on and wonder why people said and did certain things? |
44926 | Do you think you are often inclined to confuse what you would like with what you need? |
44926 | Do you think you could find some things to compliment me on? |
44926 | Do you think you''re ready? |
44926 | Do you wonder whether what you are doing with your life is really right for you? |
44926 | Do you_ like_ to be physically active, to exercise? |
44926 | Do you_ like_ to talk about personal problem solving, about your feelings, past events, and why you have come to feel as you do? |
44926 | Does anyone_ want_ to wake up at 4:00 A.M. shaking and crying? |
44926 | Does that mean that you can not plan or select a therapy intelligently? |
44926 | Does your life lack emotional intensity? |
44926 | Don Diespecker in_ Does Psychotherapy Really Help People?_ Psychotherapy is much more like education than it is like medicine. |
44926 | Dr. Frankl responded with a question:"What would have happened, Doctor, if you had died first, and your wife had had to survive you?" |
44926 | E, P, H §_ 7 Inhibition_ Do you feel blocked, inhibited, or held in check by an overly critical self? |
44926 | Find the decision behind the problem: what has your implicit decision been in your life that has established an unhappy, or less happy, pattern? |
44926 | For example, do you sometimes find yourself thinking that so much of television programming is mediocre, trash, a waste of time? |
44926 | G §_ 15 Comfort in a Group Setting_ Do you feel comfortable and safe in groups? |
44926 | H §_ 8 Introversion or Extroversion_ Are you inner- directed? |
44926 | Helmering, Doris W._ Group Therapy: Who Needs It?_ Millbrae, CA: Celestial Arts, 1976. |
44926 | Her boss asks, apparently Adult- to- Adult( arrow 1),"What time is it?" |
44926 | How could you tell her that? |
44926 | How long would any service last if it failed to serve the needs of its market? |
44926 | How_ do_ you feel? |
44926 | I believe you''re going to take charge of your life but, until then, we may both feel impatient.... What_ do_ you want to do? |
44926 | I used to analyze everything to the point that I did n''t enjoy much and was always asking myself, like the bumper- sticker, am I having fun yet? |
44926 | IS YOUR PRIVACY PROTECTED? |
44926 | If the client was shy, he would remark about how the client held one hand in the other: Did he feel a need to have his hand held by Mother? |
44926 | In this, there is no abstract and general answer to the question"What is the meaning of life?" |
44926 | In( a) on the facing page, person 1 communicates in an Adult mode and receives an Adult response from person 2:"Where are you going?" |
44926 | In( b), a Parental boss receives a petulant response from the Child ego state of an employee:"What took you so long?" |
44926 | Instead of responding,"How long have you felt this way?" |
44926 | Is he or she an"effective learner"--that is, a"good student"? |
44926 | Is he or she motivated to learn how to change? |
44926 | Is it important to your self- image what other people think of you? |
44926 | Is it so strange and unacceptable that they should be prone to their own problems, that they, too, may bring suffering? |
44926 | Is it useful to me_ not_ to have a sense of direction? |
44926 | Is my anxiety_ helpful_ to me in some way?" |
44926 | Is psychotherapy only popular and simply ineffective? |
44926 | Is that_ awful_? |
44926 | JOAN: You mean, if I can get rid of_ shoulds_ and_ musts_ in my_ thinking_, I''d feel better? |
44926 | MARIE: What''s that? |
44926 | Monday or Tuesday? |
44926 | Now I think that if it makes me feel good about myself, and I want to treat myself to it, why not? |
44926 | O body swayed to music, O brightening glance, How can we know the dancer from the dance? |
44926 | O chestnut tree, great rooted blossomer, Are you the leaf, the blossom or the bole? |
44926 | Or is their faith really misplaced? |
44926 | Or, watching the waves breaking on the beach, do you find yourself lulled into a sense of absorption in nature? |
44926 | Q §_ 9 Motivation and Capacity for Physical Exercise_ Are you free of physical handicaps? |
44926 | Q, C{ 85} §_ 16 Severe Impairments_ Do you have any learning or communication disabilities? |
44926 | SHOULD YOU BE HOSPITALIZED? |
44926 | SO, DOES PSYCHOTHERAPY WORK? |
44926 | She tells him how much she is prepared to spend and then asks,"How much is that one?" |
44926 | Sometimes it can be useful to check with others: how do they see you? |
44926 | THE BENEFITS OF MEDITATION How_ will_ you recognize whether an approach to meditation has value for you? |
44926 | THERAPIST: What time Tuesday? |
44926 | THERAPIST: What time in the morning? |
44926 | THERAPIST: Which day? |
44926 | THERAPIST: You guess, or will it be Tuesday? |
44926 | The following is a sample of their dialogue during their first session of rational- emotive therapy: DR. K.: Well, what would you like to start on? |
44926 | The ulterior message from the boss is"Are you late again?" |
44926 | To what extent is your privacy protected? |
44926 | Upset when you make even fairly minor mistakes? |
44926 | W §_ 14 Sensitivity to Values_ Are personal values very important to you? |
44926 | WHAT DOES THERAPY TRY TO DO? |
44926 | WHAT KIND OF PERSON DO YOU WANT TO BECOME? |
44926 | WHAT LAWS PROTECT CONFIDENTIALITY? |
44926 | WHAT MAKES A GOOD THERAPIST? |
44926 | WHERE ARE YOU NOW? |
44926 | WHERE DO YOU WANT TO GO? |
44926 | WHY ARE YOU ALWAYS AT ME?..." |
44926 | WHY IS IT SO COMPLICATED? |
44926 | Weiss, Anne E._ Biofeedback: Fact or Fad?_ New York: Franklin Watts, 1984. |
44926 | Were the tears a way of hiding from self- responsibility? |
44926 | Were the tears another mask, standing in the way of self- acceptance, authenticity, and growth? |
44926 | What are your alternatives to the behavior that is causing a problem? |
44926 | What can act as a source for their motivation, for the strength they have lost? |
44926 | What do you plan to wear? |
44926 | What encourages_ them_? |
44926 | What other tack could you take? |
44926 | What situations legally justify your therapist to release information about you? |
44926 | What''s so terrible about that? |
44926 | When was the original decision made? |
44926 | When you do not immediately get what you want, can you tolerate fairly well what may seem like a long route to get where you want to go? |
44926 | When you sit on a rock by a brook in the woods, do you quickly begin to feel a special sense of relaxation? |
44926 | Which approach seems most appropriate given your goals or problems? |
44926 | Why do n''t you tell me more specifically what upsets you at work? |
44926 | Why do n''t you_ leave me alone_? |
44926 | Why? |
44926 | Will you take_ personal responsibility_ for coming to regular appointments on time? |
44926 | Wolberg, Lewis R._ Hypnosis: Is It for You?_ New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1972. |
44926 | Would you like me to help you?" |
44926 | Would you prefer encouragement that is patient and warm rather than a forceful push to change your life? |
44926 | Would you rather be alone or with one or two friends than attend a party? |
44926 | Would you try to think of one more alternative? |
44926 | You answer such questions as"Would you rather go to a party or stay home and read a good book?" |
44926 | You too?" |
44926 | You''re in the role of a leader, are n''t you? |
44926 | [ 10][ 10] Eysenck,"The Battle over Therapeutic Effectiveness,"in_ Does Psychotherapy Really Help People?_, p. 59. |
44926 | [ 15][ 15] Edward Erwin,"Is Psychotherapy More Effective Than a Placebo?,"in J. Hariman, ed.,_ Does Psychotherapy Really Help People?_, p. 48. |
44926 | [ 15][ 15] Edward Erwin,"Is Psychotherapy More Effective Than a Placebo?,"in J. Hariman, ed.,_ Does Psychotherapy Really Help People?_, p. 48. |
44926 | [ 3][ 3] Hans J. Eysenck,"The Battle over Therapeutic Effectiveness,"in J. Hariman, ed.,_ Does Psychotherapy Really Help People?_, p. 59. |
44926 | [ 5] THERAPIST: What day next week? |
44926 | _ Does Psychotherapy Really Help People?_ Springfield, IL: Charles C. Thomas, 1984. |
44926 | _ What Do You Say After You Say Hello?_ New York: Grove Press, 1972. |
44926 | and"Where do you want to go, or what kind of person do you want to become?" |
44926 | and"Where do you want to go?" |
44926 | or"What have you been feeling depressed about?,"a reality therapist might ask,"What have you been doing that continues to make you depressed?" |
44926 | or"What have you been feeling depressed about?,"a reality therapist might ask,"What have you been doing that continues to make you depressed?" |
44926 | or"Why are n''t you even_ more_ depressed?" |
44926 | { 252} 18 SHOULD YOU BE HOSPITALIZED? |
44926 | { 259} HOW IMPORTANT IS CONFIDENTIALITY TO YOU? |
44926 | { 267} 20 DOES THERAPY WORK? |
44926 | { 7} PARTI GETTING STARTED{ 9} 1 PRISONS WE MAKE FOR OURSELVES Which of us is not forever a stranger and alone? |
44926 | { 83} Do you begin to feel restless when a week or more goes by and you have been sedentary? |
12699 | And why do such as behold the stars look through a trunk with one eye? |
12699 | And why doth a basilisk kill a man with his sight? |
12699 | Are the menses which are expelled, and those by which the child is engendered, all one? |
12699 | Are they one or two? |
12699 | But does physiognomy give the same judgment on her, as it does of a man that is like unto her? |
12699 | By what means doth the milk of the paps come to the matrix or womb? |
12699 | For what reason do the menses not come down in females before the age of thirteen? |
12699 | For what reason do they leave off at about fifty? |
12699 | For what reason doth a man laugh sooner when touched in the armpits than in any other part of the body? |
12699 | For what reason doth the stomach join the liver? |
12699 | For what reason is the stomach large and wide? |
12699 | For what use hath a man hands, and an ape also, like unto a man? |
12699 | From whence do nails proceed? |
12699 | From whence proceeds the spittle of a man? |
12699 | How are hermaphrodites begotten? |
12699 | How come females to have monthly courses? |
12699 | How come hairy people to be more lustful than any other? |
12699 | How come living creatures to have a gall? |
12699 | How come steel glasses to be better for the sight than any other kind? |
12699 | How come the hair and nails of dead people to grow? |
12699 | How come those to have most mercy who have the thickest blood? |
12699 | How come women to be prone to venery in the summer time and men in the winter? |
12699 | How come women''s bodies to be looser, softer and less than man''s; and why do they want hair? |
12699 | How comes a man to sneeze oftener and more vehemently than a beast? |
12699 | How comes it that birds do not piss? |
12699 | How comes it that old men remember well what they have seen and done in their youth, and forget such things as they see and do in their old age? |
12699 | How comes it that such as have the hiccups do ease themselves by holding their breath? |
12699 | How comes it that the flesh of the heart is so compact and knit together? |
12699 | How comes it that the stomach is round? |
12699 | How comes marsh and pond water to be bad? |
12699 | How comes much labour and fatigue to be bad for the sight? |
12699 | How comes sleep to strengthen the stomach and the digestive faculty? |
12699 | How comes the blood chiefly to be in the heart? |
12699 | How comes the blood to all parts of the body through the liver, and by what means? |
12699 | How comes the heart to be the hottest part of all living creatures? |
12699 | How comes the jaundice to proceed from the gall? |
12699 | How comes the spleen to be black? |
12699 | How comes the stomach to be full of sinews? |
12699 | How comes the stomach to digest? |
12699 | How cometh the stomach slowly to digest meat? |
12699 | How doth love show its greater force by making the fool to become wise, or the wise to become a fool? |
12699 | How doth the urine come into the bladder, seeing the bladder is shut? |
12699 | How happens it that some creatures want a heart? |
12699 | How is it that the heart is continually moving? |
12699 | How is the child engendered in the womb? |
12699 | How is women''s blood thicker than men''s? |
12699 | How many humours are there in a man''s body? |
12699 | How many ways is the brain purged and other hidden places of the body? |
12699 | How much, and from what cause do we suffer hunger better than thirst? |
12699 | How, and of what cometh the seed of man? |
12699 | If water do not nourish, why do men drink it? |
12699 | Is an hermaphrodite accounted a man or a woman? |
12699 | May a man procure a dream by an external cause? |
12699 | Q. Doth the child in the womb void excrements or make water? |
12699 | Q. Wherefore do those men who have eyes far out in their head not see far distant? |
12699 | Q. Wherefore doth vinegar so readily staunch blood? |
12699 | Q. Wherefore should virtue be painted girded? |
12699 | Q. Whereof doth it proceed that want of sleep doth weaken the brain and body? |
12699 | Q. Whereof proceedeth gaping? |
12699 | Should he be baptized in the name of a man or a woman? |
12699 | Some have asked, what is the reason that women bring forth their children with so much pain? |
12699 | What are the properties of a choleric man? |
12699 | What causes men to yawn or gape? |
12699 | What condition and quality hath a man of a sanguine complexion? |
12699 | What dreams do follow these complexions? |
12699 | What is carnal copulation? |
12699 | What is the cause that some men die joyful, and some in extreme grief? |
12699 | What is the reason that if you cover an egg over with salt, and let it lie in it a few days, all the meat within is consumed? |
12699 | What is the reason that old men sneeze with great difficulty? |
12699 | What is the reason that some flowers do open with the sun rising, and shut with the sun setting? |
12699 | What is the reason that some men, if they see others dance, do the like with their hands and feet, or by other gestures of the body? |
12699 | What is the reason that such as are very fat in their youth, are in danger of dying on a sudden? |
12699 | What is the reason that those that have long yards can not beget children? |
12699 | What is the reason that when we think upon a horrible thing, we are stricken with fear? |
12699 | What is the reason, that if a spear be stricken on the end, the sound cometh sooner to one who standeth near, than to him who striketh? |
12699 | What kind of covetousness is best? |
12699 | What properties do follow those of a phlegmatic complexion? |
12699 | Whether are great, small or middle- sized paps best for children to suck? |
12699 | Whether is meat or drink best for the stomach? |
12699 | Whether it is hardest, to obtain a person''s love, or to keep it when obtained? |
12699 | Why are all the senses in the head? |
12699 | Why are beasts bold that have little hearts? |
12699 | Why are beasts when going together for generation very full of froth and foam? |
12699 | Why are boys apt to change their voices about fourteen years of age? |
12699 | Why are children oftener like the father than the mother? |
12699 | Why are colts''teeth yellow, and of the colour of saffron, when they are young, and become white when they grow up? |
12699 | Why are creatures with a large heart timorous, as the hare? |
12699 | Why are fruits, before they are ripe, of a bitter and sour relish, and afterward sweet? |
12699 | Why are gelded beasts weaker than such as are not gelded? |
12699 | Why are lepers hoarse? |
12699 | Why are men judged to be good or evil complexioned by the colour of the nails? |
12699 | Why are men that have but one eye, good archers? |
12699 | Why are men''s eyes of diverse colours? |
12699 | Why are not blind men naturally bald? |
12699 | Why are not old men so subject to the plague as young men and children? |
12699 | Why are not women bald? |
12699 | Why are nuts good after cheese, as the proverb is,"After fish nuts, and after flesh cheese?" |
12699 | Why are round ulcers hard to be cured? |
12699 | Why are sheep and pigeons mild? |
12699 | Why are some children like their father, some like their mother, some to both and some to neither? |
12699 | Why are some creatures brought forth with teeth, as kids and lambs; and some without, as men? |
12699 | Why are some men ambo- dexter, that is, they use the left hand as the right? |
12699 | Why are some women barren and do not conceive? |
12699 | Why are studious and learned men soonest bald? |
12699 | Why are such as are deaf by nature, dumb? |
12699 | Why are such as sleep much, evil disposed and ill- coloured? |
12699 | Why are the Jews much subject to this disease? |
12699 | Why are the arms round? |
12699 | Why are the arms thick? |
12699 | Why are the fingers full of joints? |
12699 | Why are the fingers of the right hand nimbler than the fingers of the left? |
12699 | Why are the heads of men hairy? |
12699 | Why are the lips moveable? |
12699 | Why are the lungs light, spongy and full of holes? |
12699 | Why are the paps below the breasts in beasts, and above the breast in women? |
12699 | Why are the paps placed upon the breasts? |
12699 | Why are the thighs and calves of the legs of men flesh, seeing the legs of beasts are not so? |
12699 | Why are the tongues of serpents and mad dogs venomous? |
12699 | Why are the white- meats made of a newly milked cow good? |
12699 | Why are they termed_ menstrua_, from the word_ mensis_, a month? |
12699 | Why are those waters best and most delicate which run towards the rising sun? |
12699 | Why are twins but half men, and not so strong as others? |
12699 | Why are water and oil frozen in cold weather, and wine and vinegar not? |
12699 | Why are we better delighted with sweet tastes than with bitter or any other? |
12699 | Why are we commonly cold after dinner? |
12699 | Why are whores never with child? |
12699 | Why are women smooth and fairer than men? |
12699 | Why are women''s paps hard when they be with child, and soft at other times? |
12699 | Why are young men sooner hungry than old men? |
12699 | Why can not a person escape death if the brain or heart be hurt? |
12699 | Why can not drunken men judge of taste as well as sober men? |
12699 | Why did nature give living creatures teeth? |
12699 | Why did nature make the nostrils? |
12699 | Why did the Romans call Fabius Maximus the target of the people, and Marcellus the sword? |
12699 | Why did the ancients say it was better to fall into the hands of a raven than a flatterer? |
12699 | Why do beasts move their ears, and not men? |
12699 | Why do bees, wasps, locusts and many other such like insects, make a noise, seeing they have no lungs, nor instruments of music? |
12699 | Why do cats''and wolves''eyes shine in the night, and not in the day? |
12699 | Why do chaff and straw keep water hot, but make snow cold? |
12699 | Why do children born in the eighth month for the most part die quickly, and why are they called the children of the moon? |
12699 | Why do contrary things in quality bring forth the same effect? |
12699 | Why do dolphins, when they appear above the water, denote a storm or tempest approaching? |
12699 | Why do fat women seldom conceive? |
12699 | Why do fish die after their back bones are broken? |
12699 | Why do garlic and onions grow after they are gathered? |
12699 | Why do grief and vexation bring grey hairs? |
12699 | Why do hard dens, hollow and high places, send back the likeness and sound of the voice? |
12699 | Why do hares sleep with their eyes open? |
12699 | Why do horned beasts want their upper teeth? |
12699 | Why do horses grow grisly and gray? |
12699 | Why do lettuces make a man sleep? |
12699 | Why do living creatures use carnal copulation? |
12699 | Why do many beasts when they see their friends, and a lion and a bull beat their sides when they are angry? |
12699 | Why do men and beasts who have their eyes deep in their head best see far off? |
12699 | Why do men feel cold sooner than women? |
12699 | Why do men get bald, and trees let fall their leaves in winter? |
12699 | Why do men incline to sleep after labour? |
12699 | Why do men live longer in hot regions than in cold? |
12699 | Why do men sleep better and more at ease on the right side than on the left? |
12699 | Why do men sneeze? |
12699 | Why do men wink in the act of copulation, and find a little alteration in all other senses? |
12699 | Why do not crows feed their young till they be nine days old? |
12699 | Why do not fish make a sound? |
12699 | Why do not swine cry when they are carried with their snouts upwards? |
12699 | Why do nurses rock and move their children when they would rock them to sleep? |
12699 | Why do persons become hoarse? |
12699 | Why do physicians forbid the eating of fish and milk at the same time? |
12699 | Why do physicians forbid us to labour presently after dinner? |
12699 | Why do physicians prescribe that men should eat when they have an appetite? |
12699 | Why do physicians prescribe that we should not eat too much at a time, but little by little? |
12699 | Why do serpents shun the herb rue? |
12699 | Why do small birds sing more and louder than great ones, as appears in the lark and nightingale? |
12699 | Why do some abound in spittle more than others? |
12699 | Why do some creatures want necks, as serpents and fishes? |
12699 | Why do some imagine in their sleep that they eat and drink sweet things? |
12699 | Why do some persons stammer and lisp? |
12699 | Why do some that have clear eyes see nothing? |
12699 | Why do some women love white men and some black men? |
12699 | Why do steel glasses shine so clearly? |
12699 | Why do such as are apoplectic sneeze, that is, such as are subject easily to bleed? |
12699 | Why do such as are corpulent cast forth but little seed in the act of copulation, and are often barren? |
12699 | Why do such as cleave wood, cleave it easier in the length than athwart? |
12699 | Why do such as use it often take less delight in it than those who come to it seldom? |
12699 | Why do such as weep much, urine but little? |
12699 | Why do such creatures as have no lungs want a bladder? |
12699 | Why do swine delight in dirt? |
12699 | Why do the arms become small and slender in some diseases, as in mad men, and such as are sick of the dropsy? |
12699 | Why do the dregs of wine and oil go to the bottom, and those of honey swim uppermost? |
12699 | Why do the eyes of a woman that hath her flowers, stain new glass? |
12699 | Why do the fore- teeth fall in youth, and grow again, and not the cheek teeth? |
12699 | Why do the fore- teeth grow soonest? |
12699 | Why do the hardness of the paps betoken the health of the child in the womb? |
12699 | Why do the nails of old men grow black and pale? |
12699 | Why do the paps of young women begin to grow about thirteen or fifteen years of age? |
12699 | Why do the teeth grow black in human creatures in their old age? |
12699 | Why do the teeth grow to the end of our life, and not the other bones? |
12699 | Why do the teeth only come again when they fall, or be taken out, and other bones being taken away, grow no more? |
12699 | Why do the teeth only, amongst all ether bones, experience the sense of feeling? |
12699 | Why do the tongues of such as are sick of agues judge all things bitter? |
12699 | Why do they at that time abhor their meat? |
12699 | Why do they continue longer with some than others, as with some six or seven, but commonly with all three days? |
12699 | Why do those of a hot constitution seldom conceive? |
12699 | Why do those that drink and laugh much, shed most tears? |
12699 | Why do we cast water in a man''s face when he swooneth? |
12699 | Why do we desire change of meals according to the change of times; as in winter, beef, mutton; in summer light meats, as veal, lamb, etc.? |
12699 | Why do we draw in more air than we breathe out? |
12699 | Why do we hear better in the night than by day? |
12699 | Why do we see ourselves in glasses and clear water? |
12699 | Why do white spots appear in the nails? |
12699 | Why do wolves grow grisly? |
12699 | Why do women conceive twins? |
12699 | Why do women easily conceive after their menses? |
12699 | Why do women easily miscarry when they are first with child, viz., the first, second or third month? |
12699 | Why do women look pale when they first have their menses upon them? |
12699 | Why do women show ripeness by hair in their privy parts, and not elsewhere, but men in their breasts? |
12699 | Why do women that eat unwholesome meats, easily miscarry? |
12699 | Why does hair burn so quickly? |
12699 | Why does hot water freeze sooner than cold? |
12699 | Why does much sleep cause some to grow fat and some lean? |
12699 | Why does not the hair of the feet soon grow grey? |
12699 | Why does the blueish grey eye see badly in the day- time and well in the night? |
12699 | Why does the heart beat in some creatures after the head is cut off, as in birds and hens? |
12699 | Why does the heat of the sun provoke sneezing, and not the heat of the fire? |
12699 | Why doth a child cry as soon as it is born? |
12699 | Why doth a cow give milk more abundantly than other beasts? |
12699 | Why doth a drunken man think that all things about him do turn round? |
12699 | Why doth a man die soon after the marrow is hurt or perished? |
12699 | Why doth a man gape when he seeth another do the same? |
12699 | Why doth a man lift up his head towards the heavens when he doth imagine? |
12699 | Why doth a man, when he museth or thinketh of things past, look towards the earth? |
12699 | Why doth a radish root help digestion and yet itself remaineth undigested? |
12699 | Why doth a sharp taste, as that of vinegar, provoke appetite rather than any other? |
12699 | Why doth an egg break if roasted, and not if boiled? |
12699 | Why doth carnal copulation injure melancholic or choleric men, especially thin men? |
12699 | Why doth grief cause men to grow old and grey? |
12699 | Why doth immoderate copulation do more hurt than immoderate letting of blood? |
12699 | Why doth it show weakness of the child, when the milk doth drop out of the paps before the woman is delivered? |
12699 | Why doth itching arise when an ulcer doth wax whole and phlegm ceases? |
12699 | Why doth man, above all other creatures, wax hoary and gray? |
12699 | Why doth much joy cause a woman to miscarry? |
12699 | Why doth much watching make the brain feeble? |
12699 | Why doth not oil mingle with moist things? |
12699 | Why doth oil, being drunk, cause one to vomit, and especially yellow choler? |
12699 | Why doth red hair grow white sooner than hair of any other colour? |
12699 | Why doth the air seem to be expelled and put forth, seeing the air is invisible, by reason of its variety and thinness? |
12699 | Why doth the child put its fingers into its mouth as soon as it cometh into the world? |
12699 | Why doth the hair fall after a great sickness? |
12699 | Why doth the hair grow on those that are hanged? |
12699 | Why doth the hair never grow on an ulcer or bile? |
12699 | Why doth the hair of the eyebrows grow long in old men? |
12699 | Why doth the hair stand on end when men are afraid? |
12699 | Why doth the hair take deeper root in man''s skin than in that of any other living creatures? |
12699 | Why doth the heat of the heart sometimes fail of a sudden, and in those who have the falling sickness? |
12699 | Why doth the shining of the moon hurt the head? |
12699 | Why doth the spittle of one that is fasting heal an imposthume? |
12699 | Why doth the sun make a man black and dirt white, wax soft and dirt hard? |
12699 | Why doth the tongue sometimes lose the use of speaking? |
12699 | Why doth the tongue water when we hear sour and sharp things spoken of? |
12699 | Why doth the voice change in men at fourteen, and in women at twelve; in men they begin to yield seed, in women when their breasts begin to grow? |
12699 | Why doth the woman love the man best who has got her maidenhead? |
12699 | Why doth water cast on serpents, cause them to fly? |
12699 | Why doth wrestling and leaping cause the casting of the child, as some subtle women do on purpose? |
12699 | Why has a man two eyes and but one mouth? |
12699 | Why has not a man a tail like a beast? |
12699 | Why hath a horse, mule, ass or cow a gall? |
12699 | Why hath a living creature a neck? |
12699 | Why hath a man a mouth? |
12699 | Why hath a man shoulders and arms? |
12699 | Why hath a man so much hair on his head? |
12699 | Why hath a man the worst smell of all creatures? |
12699 | Why hath a woman who is with child of a boy, the right pap harder than the left? |
12699 | Why hath every finger three joints, and the thumb but two? |
12699 | Why hath nature given all living creatures ears? |
12699 | Why hath the back bone so many joints or knots, called_ spondyli_? |
12699 | Why hath the mouth lips to compass it? |
12699 | Why have bats ears, although of the bird kind? |
12699 | Why have beasts a back? |
12699 | Why have beasts their hearts in the middle of their breasts, and man his inclining to the left? |
12699 | Why have birds their stones inward? |
12699 | Why have brute beasts no arms? |
12699 | Why have children gravel breeding in their bladders, and old men in their kidneys and veins? |
12699 | Why have children great eyes in their youth, which become small as they grow up? |
12699 | Why have choleric men beards before others? |
12699 | Why have melancholy beasts long ears? |
12699 | Why have men longer hair on their heads than any other living creature? |
12699 | Why have men more teeth than women? |
12699 | Why have men only round ears? |
12699 | Why have not birds and fish milk and paps? |
12699 | Why have not birds spittle? |
12699 | Why have not breeding women the menses? |
12699 | Why have not men as great paps and breasts as women? |
12699 | Why have not women beards? |
12699 | Why have not women their menses all one and the same time, but some in the new moon, some in the full, and others at the wane? |
12699 | Why have some animals no ears? |
12699 | Why have some commended flattery? |
12699 | Why have some creatures long necks, as cranes, storks and such like? |
12699 | Why have some men curled hair, and some smooth? |
12699 | Why have some men the piles? |
12699 | Why have some persons stinking breath? |
12699 | Why have some women soft hair and some hard? |
12699 | Why have the females of all living creatures the shrillest voices, the crow only excepted, and a woman a shriller and smaller voice than a man? |
12699 | Why have those beasts only lungs that have hearts? |
12699 | Why have vultures and cormorants a keen smell? |
12699 | Why have we oftentimes a pain in making water? |
12699 | Why have women longer hair than men? |
12699 | Why have women such weak and small voices? |
12699 | Why have women the headache oftener than men? |
12699 | Why have you one nose and two eyes? |
12699 | Why is Fortune painted with a double forehead, the one side bald and the other hairy? |
12699 | Why is a capon better to eat than a cock? |
12699 | Why is a dog''s tongue good for medicine, and a horse''s tongue pestiferous? |
12699 | Why is a man''s head round? |
12699 | Why is a man''s seed white, and a woman''s red? |
12699 | Why is a man, though endowed with reason, the most unjust of all living creatures? |
12699 | Why is all the body wrong when the stomach is uneasy? |
12699 | Why is every living creature dull after copulation? |
12699 | Why is goat''s milk reckoned best for the stomach? |
12699 | Why is he lean who hath a large spleen? |
12699 | Why is honey sweet to all men, but to such as have jaundice? |
12699 | Why is hot water lighter than cold? |
12699 | Why is immoderate carnal copulation hurtful? |
12699 | Why is it a good custom to eat cheese after dinner, and pears after all meat? |
12699 | Why is it esteemed, in the judgment of the most wise, the hardest thing to know a man''s self? |
12699 | Why is it good to drink after dinner? |
12699 | Why is it good to forbear a late supper? |
12699 | Why is it good to walk after dinner? |
12699 | Why is it hard to miscarry in the third, fourth, fifth and sixth month? |
12699 | Why is it hurtful to drink much cold water? |
12699 | Why is it hurtful to study soon after dinner? |
12699 | Why is it necessary that every living creature that hath blood have also a liver? |
12699 | Why is it not good soon after a bath? |
12699 | Why is it not proper after vomiting or looseness? |
12699 | Why is it unwholesome to drink new wine? |
12699 | Why is it unwholesome to wait long for one dish after another, and to eat of divers kinds of meat? |
12699 | Why is it wholesome to vomit? |
12699 | Why is love compared to a labyrinth? |
12699 | Why is man the proudest of all living creatures? |
12699 | Why is milk bad for such as have the headache? |
12699 | Why is milk fit nutriment for infants? |
12699 | Why is not milk wholesome? |
12699 | Why is not new bread good for the stomach? |
12699 | Why is not the head fleshy, like other parts of the body? |
12699 | Why is our life compared to a play? |
12699 | Why is our smell less in winter than in summer? |
12699 | Why is rain prognosticated by the pricking up of asses''ears? |
12699 | Why is sea- water salter in summer than in winter? |
12699 | Why is sneezing good? |
12699 | Why is spittle unsavoury and without taste? |
12699 | Why is spittle white? |
12699 | Why is the artery made with rings and circle? |
12699 | Why is the blood red? |
12699 | Why is the brain cold? |
12699 | Why is the brain moist? |
12699 | Why is the brain white? |
12699 | Why is the curing of an ulcer or bile in the kidneys or bladder very hard? |
12699 | Why is the eye clear and smooth like glass? |
12699 | Why is the flesh of the lungs white? |
12699 | Why is the hair of the beard thicker and grosser than elsewhere; and the more men are shaven, the harder and thicker it groweth? |
12699 | Why is the head not absolutely long but somewhat round? |
12699 | Why is the head subject to aches and griefs? |
12699 | Why is the heart first engendered; for the heart doth live first and die last? |
12699 | Why is the heart in the midst of the body? |
12699 | Why is the heart long and sharp like a pyramid? |
12699 | Why is the heart the beginning of life? |
12699 | Why is the melancholic complexion the worst? |
12699 | Why is the milk naught for the child, if the woman giving suck uses carnal copulation? |
12699 | Why is the milk white, seeing the flowers are red, of which it is engendered? |
12699 | Why is the neck full of bones and joints? |
12699 | Why is the neck hollow, and especially before, about the tongue? |
12699 | Why is the sight recreated and refreshed by a green colour? |
12699 | Why is the sparkling in cats''eyes and wolves''eyes seen in the dark and not in the light? |
12699 | Why is the spittle of a man that is fasting more subtle than of one that is full? |
12699 | Why is the tongue full of pores? |
12699 | Why is there such delight in the act of venery? |
12699 | Why is this action good in those that use it lawfully and moderately? |
12699 | Why is well- water seldom or ever good? |
12699 | Why only in men is the heart on the left side? |
12699 | Why should not the act be used when the body is full? |
12699 | Why should not the meat we eat be as hot as pepper and ginger? |
12699 | Why, if you put hot burnt barley upon a horse''s sore, is the hair which grows upon the sore not white, but like the other hair? |
12699 | _ Of Monsters._ Q. Doth nature make any monsters? |
12699 | and why do good archers commonly shut one? |