| 1829 - 488 頁
...and certain other political causes, have, occasioned this retardation in the natural progress of the city. The overweening paternity of the government...impulses of his children, while he permits an easy veut to their baser propensities. Prague, the capital of Bohemia, is both a larger and more healthy... | |
| 1829 - 770 頁
...longevity is confined to poverty and raarried life. "The excessive spirit of regulation, the dread of novelty, the restrictions imposed on the medical...of his children, while he permits an easy vent to thi ir baser propensities." "According to an average of several years no nobleman, no wealthy person,... | |
| 1829 - 604 頁
...persons are found who have attained the age of 90. " The excessive spirit of regulation, the dread of novelty, the restrictions imposed on the medical...concerns of the citizens, in the same manner in which an arhitrary and untaught father sometimes restrains the useful impulses of his children, while he permits... | |
| Francis Lieber, Edward Wigglesworth, Thomas Gamaliel Bradford, Henry Vethake - 1830 - 648 頁
...of novelty, the restrictions imposed on the medical profession, and political causes which need not be enumerated, appear to have retarded the natural...easy vent to their baser propensities. — Prague, the capital of Bohemia, has only one third the population of Vienna, and is much healthier. The superior... | |
| Encyclopaedia Americana - 1830 - 632 頁
...the medical profession, and political causes which need not be enumerated, appear to have retardetl the natural progress of this city. The overweening...easy vent to their baser propensities. — Prague, the capital of Bohemia, has only one third the population of Vienna, and is much healthier. The superior... | |
| Francis Lieber, Edward Wigglesworth, Thomas Gamaliel Bradford - 1830 - 636 頁
...political causes which need not be enumerated, appear to have retarded the natural progress of mis city. The overweening paternity of the government...easy vent to their baser propensities. — Prague, the capital of Bohemia, has only one third the population of Vienna, and is much healthier. The superior... | |
| Encyclopaedia Americana - 1830 - 636 頁
...of novelty, the restrictions imposed on the medical profession, and political causes which need not be enumerated^ appear to have retarded the natural...father sometimes restrains the useful impulses of bis children, while he permits an easy vent to their baser propensities.—Prague, the capital of Bohemia,... | |
| Francis Lieber, Edward Wigglesworth, Thomas Gamaliel Bradford - 1830 - 634 頁
...of novelty, the restrictions imposed on the medical profession, and political causes which need not be enumerated, appear to have retarded the natural...government interferes with the trivial concerns of ihe citizens, in the same manner in which an arbitrary and untaught father sometimes restrains the... | |
| Francis Lieber, Edward Wigglesworth - 1835 - 630 頁
...of novelty, the restrictions imposed on the medical profession, and political causes which need not be enumerated, appear to have retarded the natural...children, while he permits an easy vent to their baser pro|iensitics. — Prague, the capital of Bohemia, has only one thinl the population of Vienna, and... | |
| Sir Daniel Keyte Sandford - 1836 - 502 頁
...imposed on the medical profession, and political causes which need not be enumerated, appear to liave retarded the natural progress of this city. The overweening...interferes with the trivial concerns of the citizens, ir the same manner in which an arbitrary and untaught father sometimes restrains the useful impulses... | |
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