| Hal Gladfelder - 2001 - 308 str.
...physical deterioration. From "a lingering imperfect gout" (187), his condition had degenerated to include "no fewer or less diseases than a jaundice, a dropsy,...uniting their forces in the destruction of a body so emaciated, that it had lost all its muscular flesh" (189). Meanwhile, as Fielding's single, physical... | |
| Henry Fielding - 2006 - 238 str.
...recollect the outrages with which it began. Having thus fully accomplished my undertaking, I went into the country, in a very weak and deplorable condition,...all its muscular flesh. Mine was now no longer what was called a Bath case; nor, if it had been so, had I strength remaining sufficient to go thither,... | |
| Henry Fielding - 2006 - 266 str.
...recollect the outrages with which it began. Having thus fully accomplished my undertaking, I went into the country, in a very weak and deplorable condition,...all its muscular flesh. Mine was now no longer what was called a Bath case; nor, if it had been so, had I strength remaining sufficient to go thither,... | |
| Steven J. Peitzman - 2007 - 238 str.
...(1707—1754) found himself in much reduced health — "a very weak and deplorable condition," as he called it, "with no fewer or less diseases than a jaundice, a...entirely emaciated that it had lost all its muscular flesh."32 Drugs had failed him. As it happens, he pursued a cure with both tapping and travel, and... | |
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