Gaillard's Medical Journal and the American Medical Weekly, 第 1 巻1866 |
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abscess acid action amputation appearance applied artery artificial artificial limbs attention ball Bellevue Hospital bladder blood body bone cause chloroform cholera colour condition cure death disease doses dysmenorrhoea effect epidemic examination experience extract fact fever fluid fracture fragments hæmorrhage healed heat Hospital inch incision inflammation injection injury instances instrument lectures less limb lithotomy lithotrite lithotrity matter maxilla Medical and Surgical Medical College Medical Journal Medicine membrane ment minie ball months morphia mucous membrane muscles nature observed occurred operation opium organic oxalic oxalic acid pain passed patient periosteum Philadelphia Physicians poison practice practitioners present produced profession Professor pulse quantity quinine rays recovered regard remedy removed Richmond skin splint substance success suppuration surface surgeon surgery symptoms thigh tion tissues treatment tumour uric acid urine uterus valve wound York
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233 ページ - tis not so deep as a well, nor so wide as a church door ; but 'tis enough, 'twill serve : ask for me to-morrow, and you shall find me a grave man.
407 ページ - GENERAL: I have just received your note, informing me that you were wounded. I cannot express my regret at the occurrence. Could I have directed events, I should have chosen, for the good of the country, to have been disabled in your stead. I congratulate you upon the victory which is due to your skill and energy.
374 ページ - It is hardly necessary to add that anything which any insulated body, or system of bodies, can continue to furnish without limitation, cannot possibly be a material substance; and it appears to me to be extremely difficult, if not quite impossible, to form any distinct idea of anything capable of being excited and communicated in the manner the Heat was excited and communicated in these experiments, except it be MOTION.
378 ページ - I have also seen snow-flakes descending so softly as not to hurt the fragile spangles of which they were composed ; yet to produce from aqueous vapour a quantity, which a child could carry, of that tender material, demands an exertion of energy competent to gather up the shattered blocks of the largest stone-avalanche I have ever seen, and pitch them to twice the height from which they fell.
374 ページ - Heat is a motion, expansive, restrained, and acting in its strife upon the smaller particles of bodies. But the expansion is thus modified: while it expands all ways, it has at the same time an inclination upwards. And the struggle in the particles is modified also: it is not sluggish, but hurried and with violence.
374 ページ - When I say of Motion that it is as the genus of which heat is a species, I would be understood to mean, not that heat generates motion or that motion generates heat (though both are true in certain cases), but that Heat itself, its essence and quiddity, is Motion and nothing else...
219 ページ - Bunsen's lamp threw the bright sodium lines upon the solar spectrum with unexpected brilliancy. In order to find out the extent to which the intensity of the solar spectrum could be increased without impairing the distinctness of the sodium lines, I allowed the full sunlight to shine through the sodium flame, and, to my astonishment, I saw that the dark lines, D, appeared with an extraordinary degree of clearness.
412 ページ - A few moments before he died he cried out in his delirium, " Order AP Hill to prepare for action ! pass the infantry to the front rapidly ! tell Major Hawks " — then stopped, leaving the sentence unfinished.
182 ページ - The Diagnosis, Pathology, and Treatment of Diseases of Women ; including the Diagnosis of Pregnancy. By GRAILY HEWITT, MD &c. President of the Obstetrical Society of London. Second Edition, enlarged; with 116 Woodcuts. 8vo. 24s. Lectures on the Diseases of Infancy and Childhood. By CHARLES WEST, MD &c.
374 ページ - The immediate cause of the phenomena of heat then is motion, and the laws of its communication are precisely the same, as the laws of the communication of motion.