London Medical Gazette: Or, Journal of Practical Medicine, 第 7 卷﹔第 42 卷

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Longman, 1848
 

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第 279 頁 - The character of the true philosopher is to hope all things not impossible, and to believe all things not unreasonable. He who has seen obscurities which appeared impenetrable in physical and mathematical science suddenly dispelled, and the most barren and unpromising fields of inquiry converted, as if by inspiration, into rich and inexhaustible springs of knowledge and power on a simple change of our point of view, or by merely bringing to bear on them some principle which it never occurred before...
第 439 頁 - The dissector has observed that the spermatic cord in the male and the round ligament in the female pierces the abdominal wall above Poupart's ligament.
第 86 頁 - But should I exhibit the remedy for pain to a thousand patients in labour, merely to prevent the physiological pain, and for no other motive — and if I should in consequence destroy only one of them, I should feel disposed to clothe me in sack-cloth, and cast ashes on my head for the remainder of my days.
第 433 頁 - ... by Europe, and which it was the glory of Sweden to be able to appropriate as the patrimony of one of her children. This letter was sent to Berzelius on his wedding-day. How few men of science have married with a patent of nobility on the breakfast table ! Sweden had, however, yet one more ovation for her beloved son.
第 169 頁 - That the rays of light diffused around the patient (and sometimes around the eye itself) should be excluded, c. That the observer should occupy a position as near as possible to the direct line...
第 517 頁 - The liquid portion may be separated from these fibres by a filter, but it is doubtful whether this is an advantage. In the evaporation of the liquid, these undissolved fibres, by felting with each other, appear to give a greater degree of tenacity and resistance to the dried mass. In the preparation of collodion it is indispensable to avoid the presence of water, as this renders it less adhesive ; hence the aethcr as well as the alcohol should be pure and rectified.
第 339 頁 - Every individual, on entering the profession, as he becomes thereby entitled to all its privileges and immunities, incurs an obligation to exert his best abilities to maintain its dignity and honor, to exalt its standing, and to extend the bounds of its usefulness.
第 432 頁 - In the same year he was appointed Secretary to the Academy of Sciences — a post which he held till his death. In 1831 he was allowed to retire from the active duties of his professorship at the Caroline Institute, but he still held the title of honorary professor. Up to this time he had resided in apartments provided for him at the building occupied by the Academy of Sciences,— where, on the same floor, he had his study and laboratory, so that he could with little difficulty pass from his desk...
第 535 頁 - ... the radical cure of the disease. It consists, simply, of a skein of lamb's wool; for infants. Berlin wool is preferable ; this encircles the pelvis, one end is passed through the other at a point corresponding with the inguinal ring; the free end is carried between the thighs, and is fastened behind to that portion which forms the cincture. This simple and cheap contrivance can be worn during the morning and •evening ablutions, and then changed for a dry one ; no attention is required on the...
第 517 頁 - Concentrated sulphuric acid * 60 ; Carded cotton 2. Mix the nitre with the sulphuric acid in a porcelain vessel, then add the cotton, and agitate the mass for three minutes by the aid of two glass rods. Wash the cotton, without first pressing it, in a large quantity of water ; and, when all acidity is removed (indicated by litmus-paper), press it firmly in a cloth.

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