It has been dreadfully destructive among the poor. It is very probable, that at least seven-eighths of the number of the dead) were of that class. The inhabitants of dirty houses have severely expiated their neglect of cleanliness and decency, by the... Edinburgh Medical and Surgical Journal - 第 348 頁1815完整檢視 - 關於此書
| John Haygarth - 1801 - 206 頁
...dirty room, for days and nights.* Whence we may conclude, * See CAREY'S Account, p. 60.—" It has been dreadfully destructive among the poor. It is very...were of that class. The inhabitants of dirty houses have severely expiated their negleft of cleanliness and decency, by the numbers of them that have fallen... | |
| John Clark - 1802 - 302 頁
...fallen sacrifices ; Whole families, in such houses, have sunk into one silent, undistinguishing grave. It is very probable, that at least seven-eighths of...number of the dead were of that class." — " The mortality in confined streets, small alleys, and close houses, debarred of free circufation of air,... | |
| John Clark - 1802 - 302 頁
...fallen sacrifices : Whole families, in such houses, have sunk into one silent, undistinguishing grave. It is very probable, that at least seven-eighths of...number of the dead were of that class." — " The mortality in confined streets, small alleys, and close houses, debarred of free circulation of air,... | |
| Literary and Philosophical Society of New-York (New York, N.Y.) - 1815 - 616 頁
...city where the houses were small, and the least attention given to cleanliness and ventilation. In the language of Mr. Carey, " it was dreadfully destructive-...among the poor. It is very probable that at least seven eighths of the number of the dead were of that class ; the inhabitants of dirty houses have severely... | |
| Mathew Carey - 1830 - 480 頁
...an extraordinary degree of fidelity. It has been dreadfully destructive among the poor. It is vepy probable, that at least seven-eighths of the number...were of that class. The inhabitants of dirty houses have severely expiated their neglect of cleanliness and decency, by the numbers of them that have fallen... | |
| R. M. DEVENS - 1876 - 1014 頁
...domestics likewise fell victims. Dreadful was the destruction among the poor ; indeed, it is computed that at least seven-eighths of the number of the dead were of that class. The occupants of filthy houses severely expiated their neglect of cleanliness and decency. Whole families,... | |
| Richard Miller Devens - 1879 - 680 頁
...domestics likewise fell victims. Dreadful was the destruction among the poor ; indeed, it is computed that at least seven-eighths of the number of the dead were of that class. The occupants of filthy houses severely expiated their neglect of cleanliness and decency. Whole families,... | |
| Richard Miller Devens - 1883 - 756 頁
...domestics likewise fell victims. Dreadful was the destruction among the poor; indeed, it is computed that at least seven-eighths of the number of the dead were of that class. The occupants of filthy houses severely expiated their neglect of cleanliness and decency. Whole families,... | |
| Pennsylvania. State Board of Health and Vital Statistics - 1902 - 676 頁
...streets in the suburbs that had the benefit of the country air * * * have suffered little." "It has been dreadfully destructive among the poor. It is very...were of that class. The inhabitants of dirty houses have severely expiated their neglect of cleanliness and decency by the numbers of them that have fallen... | |
| Billy Gordon Smith - 1990 - 276 頁
...most epidemics, poor citizens suffered the highest mortality. As Carey lamented, the disease "had been dreadfully destructive among the poor. It is very probable that at least seven eighths of the number of the dead, was of that class," and the occupations of those who died... | |
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