He resorted to other means of investigation and cure, but with equally indifferent success. The patient sunk into deeper and deeper dejection, and died in the same distress of mind in which he had spent the latter months of his life... Recollections of Rugby - Strana 44autor/autoři: Charles Henry Newmarch - 1848 - 180 str.Úplné zobrazení - Podrobnosti o knize
| 1831 - 602 str.
...hia own person. He resorted to other means of investigation and cure, but with equally inmii'erent success. The patient sunk into deeper and deeper dejection,...melancholy instance of the power of imagination to kill toe hody, even when its fantastic terrors cannot overcome the intellect, of the unfortunate persons... | |
| 1830 - 644 str.
...receiving an answer ascertaining, with such minuteness, that the ideal spectre was close to his own person. He resorted to other means of investigation and cure,...of the power of imagination to kill the body, even wheu its fantastic terrors cannot overcome the intellect, of the unfortunate persons who suffer under... | |
| 1830 - 480 str.
...receiving an answer ascertaining, with such minuteness, that the ideal spectre was close to bis own person. He resorted to other means of investigation and cure,...melancholy instance of the power of imagination to kill the hody, even when its fantastic terrors cannot overcome the intellect of the unfortunate persons who... | |
| 1830 - 592 str.
...placed betwixt him and me, but I observe his skull peering above your shoulder ! " ' It is added, that the patient sunk into deeper and deeper dejection,...which he had spent the latter months of his life.' Demonology, p. 30. We do not at all quarrel with the terms 'imagination,' 'disease,' ' visual derangement,'... | |
| Robley Dunglison - 1832 - 572 str.
...The doctor resorted to other means of investigation and cure, but without success. The patient sank into deeper and deeper dejection, and died in the...which he had spent the latter months of his life. The circumstances of his singular disorder were concealed, so that he did not, by his death and last... | |
| 1863 - 518 str.
...methods, all equally unsuccessful ; the patient sunk into deeper and deeper dejection, and finally " died in the same distress of mind in which he had spent the latter months of his life ; . . . and the circumstances of his singular disorder remaining concealed, he did not, by his death and last illness,... | |
| Alexandre-Jacques-François Brierre de Boismont - 1859 - 476 str.
...receiving an answer asserting, with such minuteness, that the ideal spectre was close to his own person. He resorted to other means of investigation and cure,...case remains a melancholy instance of the power of the imagination to kill the body, even when its fantastic terrors cannot overcome the intellect of... | |
| Alexandre-Jacques-François Brierre de Boismont - 1860 - 456 str.
...receiving an answer asserting, with such minuteness, that the ideal spectre was close to his own person. He resorted to other means of investigation and cure,...case remains a melancholy instance of the power of the imagination to kill the body, even when its fantastic terrors cannot overcome the intellect of... | |
| Henry Allon - 1862 - 512 str.
...methods, all equally unsuccessful ; the patient sunk into deeper and deeper dejection, and finally ' died in the same distress of ' mind in which he had...spent the latter months of his life ; . . . ' and the circumstances of his singular disorder remaining con' cealed, he did not, by his death and last... | |
| John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell - 1863 - 552 str.
...methods, all equally unsuccessful ; the patient sunk into deeper and deeper dejection, and finally " died in the same distress of mind in which he had spent the latter months of his life; . . . and the circumstances of his singular disorder remaining concealed, he did not, by his death and last illness,... | |
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