frequently traceable ; and I am convinced, that the many bearings of this subject upon the physical and mental energies, have a much closer and more frequent relationship to phthisical affections, than we can ever expect, from their peculiar nature, to... On Consumption: Its Nature, Symptoms and Treatment - Página 71por Richard Payne Cotton - 1858 - 302 páginasVisualização integral - Acerca deste livro
| 1853 - 528 páginas
...unrestrained indulgence of the sensual passions. To this cause, indeed, the germ of tubercle are too frequently traceable; and I am convinced that the...their peculiar nature, to see fully demonstrated. It is, probably, in this way that so much evil appears as the sequel to marriage contracted at too... | |
| 1878 - 58 páginas
...tubercle are very frequently traceable ; and I am convinced that the many bearings of this subject upon physical and mental energies have a much closer and...their peculiar nature, to see fully demonstrated." " Menorrhagia, diarrhœa, leucorrhœa, and other hœmorrhages and fluxes, if excessive, reduce the... | |
| Edmund A. Kirby - 1881 - 114 páginas
...tubercle are very frequently traceable; and I am convinced that the many bearings of this subject upon physical and mental energies have a much closer and...their peculiar nature, to see fully demonstrated." In a paper read before the Medico-Chirurgical Society, by Dr. Smith, entitled " A Statistical Inquiry... | |
| 1883 - 396 páginas
...tubercle are very frequently traceable, and I am convinced that the many bearings of this subject upon physical and mental energies have a much closer and...their peculiar nature, to see fully demonstrated." There is no etiological problem as interesting and complex as the influence of climate upon this disease.... | |
| John Adams Thacker - 1878 - 906 páginas
...tubercle are very frequently traceable ; and I am convinced that the many bearings » of this subject upon physical and mental energies have a much closer and...their peculiar nature, to see fully demonstrated." "Menorrhagia, diarrhœa, leucorrhœa, and other haemorrhages and fluxes, if excessive, reduce the powers... | |
| |