The Physiology of Common Life, Volume 1D. Appleton, 1875 |
No interior do livro
Resultados 1-5 de 49
Página vi
... as seemed useful ; and never at secondhand , unless specially acknowledged . The deficiencies in this re spect will be found greatest in the English department ; the PREFACE . vii reason of which is that my purse vi PREFACE .
... as seemed useful ; and never at secondhand , unless specially acknowledged . The deficiencies in this re spect will be found greatest in the English department ; the PREFACE . vii reason of which is that my purse vi PREFACE .
Página 15
... never moves for months ; its respiration is slow and feeble , but it does breathe , and the waste of its tissues which this breathing causes is very noticeable at the close of winter . Now , if we suppose Janet to have been in a state ...
... never moves for months ; its respiration is slow and feeble , but it does breathe , and the waste of its tissues which this breathing causes is very noticeable at the close of winter . Now , if we suppose Janet to have been in a state ...
Página 16
... never survived three months Granié , who murdered his wife , starved himself in the prison of Toulouse , and expired on the sixty - third day , during which time he drank water , and occasionally ate a little . The reli- gious ...
... never survived three months Granié , who murdered his wife , starved himself in the prison of Toulouse , and expired on the sixty - third day , during which time he drank water , and occasionally ate a little . The reli- gious ...
Página 17
... never to be forgotten by those who have once seen it : all the vitality of the body seems centred there , in feverish brightness ; the pupil is dilated , the eye is fixed in a wild stare , which is never veiled by the winking lids . All ...
... never to be forgotten by those who have once seen it : all the vitality of the body seems centred there , in feverish brightness ; the pupil is dilated , the eye is fixed in a wild stare , which is never veiled by the winking lids . All ...
Página 20
... never- theless in no proper condition to eat that food , and can only arrive at the proper condition by degrees , by eating a little at a time . The fact is , however , that , like all other organs , the stomach suffers for want of ...
... never- theless in no proper condition to eat that food , and can only arrive at the proper condition by degrees , by eating a little at a time . The fact is , however , that , like all other organs , the stomach suffers for want of ...
Outras edições - Ver tudo
The physiology of common life: with numerous woodcuts ; in 2 vol, Volume 1 George Henry Lewes Visualização integral - 1860 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
absorbed action albumen alcohol alimentary amount Animal Heat arterial blood atmosphere auricle become beef Bernard bile bird body breathing burning capillaries carbonic acid caseine cause cease cells changes chemical chemist Chemistry chyle circulation Claude Bernard coagulation cold contain death diet digestion discovery discs drink eaten effect endosmosis exhalation experiments fact fibrine fish flesh fluid fresh frog gases gastric juice Gelatine glands Harvey heart Hunger hypothesis increase influence inorganic INTESTINAL JUICE intestine lacteals less Liebig liquid liver living lungs meat milk minutes muscle muscular nervous nitrogen nourish nutritive value observed organic substances oxidation oxygen Pancreatic Juice passes Physiologie portal vein produce proportion quantity reader Respiration saliva salt secretion sensation solid starch stomach suffice sugar take place temperature theory thirst tion tissues tubes vegetable veins venous blood ventricle vessels vital activity warm-blooded warm-blooded animals waste
Passagens conhecidas
Página 36 - The two latter I frequently dislodged by shifting my hold on the bars, and driving my knuckles into their ribs ; but my friend above stuck fast, and, as he held by two bars, was immovable.
Página 149 - It would be very desirable indeed, if the men could acquire the taste for Greenland food, since all experience has shown that the large use of oil and fat meats is the true secret of life in these frozen countries, and that the natives cannot subsist without it, becoming diseased, and dying with a more meagre diet.
Página 36 - Mr. Jervas Bellamy, who lay dead, with his son, the lieutenant, hand in hand, near the southernmost wall of the prison.
Página 31 - ... eighteen feet, in a close sultry night, in Bengal, shut up to the eastward and southward (the only quarters from whence air could reach us) by dead walls, and by a wall and door to the north, open only to the westward by two windows, strongly barred with iron, from which we could receive scarce any the least circulation of fresh air.