| Medicine - 1830 - 602 pages
...taken from the heart, and another with the black vomit taken from the stomach — they were so similar that it was almost impossible to distinguish the one from the other. Thirdly, in violent continued fevers, the saline matter, like the fibrine, appears to be exhausted... | |
| Robley Dunglinson - Medicine - 1841 - 672 pages
...both in the arteries and veins, was changed from its natural scarlet, or modena red, to a dark colour. I have frequently filled one glass with the black...was very evident that such diseased blood could no mere stimulate the heart, or support life in the solids, than putrid water can nourish vegetables,... | |
| Medicine - 1842 - 278 pages
...both in the arteries and veins, was changed from its natural scarlet or modena red, to a dark colour. I have frequently filled one glass with the black...can nourish vegetables, or carbonic acid gas support respiration."1 In Asiatic cholera, again, we have an instance where the blood has been found in the... | |
| Sir John Forbes, Alexander Tweedie, John Conolly, Robley Dunglison - Medicine - 1848 - 828 pages
...I have frequently filled one glass with the black fluid taken from the heart, and another with tho black vomit taken from the stomach. They were both...was almost impossible to distinguish the one from tho other; and from its appearance it was very evident that such diseased blood could no more stimulate... | |
| Alexandre Dumas - France - 1851 - 320 pages
...Mask, whether brother or not of Louis XIV., it is asserted, resembled king Louis XIV. so strongly, that it was almost impossible to distinguish the one from the other. It is exceedingly imprudent to dare to resemble a king. Lauzun had been very near marrying, or did... | |
| Charles Henry Knox - 1852 - 928 pages
...Chasseurs of the Imperial Guard, who, as luck would have it, formed the French advanced guard ; so that it was almost impossible to distinguish the one from the other, except by their relative positions; and not very easy even so, for the French began to take liberties... | |
| James Hamilton - 1856 - 984 pages
...them, I beheld in them two sisters : costume — size — age — so nearly, if not exactly the same, that it was almost impossible to distinguish the one from the other. Alas ! and the same fell disease was evidently at work upon them both ! It had robbed their cheeks... | |
| Margaret Gatty - Artists - 1860 - 210 pages
...them, I beheld in them two sisters : costume — size — age — so nearly, if not exactly the same, that it was almost impossible to distinguish the one from the other. Alas ! and the same fell disease was evidently at work upon them both ! It had robbed their cheeks... | |
| Agnes Catlow, Maria E. Catlow - Italy - 1861 - 436 pages
...lichens: these rocks, and the snowy peaks surmounting them, were so perfectly reflected in the clear lake, that it was almost impossible to distinguish the one from the other ; every mark and crevice in the nearer rocks had their double in the watery image, and were quite as... | |
| Alexandre Dumas - 1894 - 306 pages
...Iron Mask, whether brother or not of Louis XIV., it is asserted, resembled King Louis XIV. so strongly that it was almost impossible to distinguish the one from the other. It is exceedingly imprudent to dare to resemble a king. Lauzun had been very near marrying, or did... | |
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