| Charles Wentworth Dilke - 1816 - 468 pagine
...she'll hearken to you. Hip. Yes, my lord, And when she wakes to honour, then she'll thank me for't. I'll imitate the pities of old surgeons To this lost limb ; who, ere they show their art, Cast one asleep, then cut the diseas'd part : So out of love to her I pity most, She shall not feel him... | |
| Thomas Middleton - 1840 - 652 pagine
...she'll hearken to you. HIP. Yes, my lord, And when she wakes to honour, then she'll thank me for't: I'll imitate the pities of old surgeons To this lost limb, who, ere they shew their art, Cast one asleep, then cut the diseas'd part; So, out of love to her I pity most, She... | |
| 1847 - 648 pagine
...In Middleton's tragedy of " Women Beware Women," published 105 7, there is the following passage : " I'll imitate the pities of old surgeons To this lost limb, who, ere they show their art, Cast one asleep ; then — cut the diseas'd part.1' Railway Speed. — The railway papers are boasting of... | |
| Perry Fairfax Nursey - 1847 - 668 pagine
...In Middleton's tragedy of " Women Beware \Vomeu," published 1657, there is the following passage : " I'll imitate the pities of old surgeons To this lost limb, who, ere they show their art, Ctist one aiieep ; thtn — cut the d iteat'd part." Railway Speed. — The railway papers are boasting... | |
| 1847 - 654 pagine
...In Middleton's tragedy of '* Women Beware Women," published 1657, there is the following passage : " I'll Imitate the pities of old surgeons To this lost limb, who, ere they show their art, Catt one asleep ; then— cut the discos' d part," Railway Speed. — The railway papers are boasting... | |
| 1848 - 1200 pagine
...practice of adopting means for the prevention of pain in operations was general and well known : — " I'll imitate the pities of old surgeons To this lost limb, who ere they show their art. Cast one asleep, then cut the diseased part." The author concluded by expressing a bope that he had convinced... | |
| 1849 - 444 pagine
...the passage in Pliny, but of one in Middleton's tragedy of Women beware Women, published in 1657. " I'll imitate the pities of old surgeons To this lost limb, who, ere they shew their art, Cast one asleep; then,—cut the diseas'd part." In Mr. Samuel Cooper's Surgical Dictionary,... | |
| La Roy Sunderland - 1853 - 140 pagine
...improbable but that Middleton referred to it in the following passage, two hundred years ago : — * " I'll imitate the pities of old surgeons To this lost limb, who, ere they show their art, Cast one asleep, — then cut the diseased part."* Indeed, the "tharin" is retained in various forms to... | |
| 1856 - 730 pagine
...she shall never know till it be acted ; And, when she wakes to honour, then she'll thank me for't. I'll imitate the pities of old surgeons To this lost limb ; who, ere they show their art, Cast one asleep, then cut the diseas'd part ; So, out of love to her I pity most, She shall not feel him... | |
| James Young Simpson - 1856 - 776 pagine
...directly alludes, in the following lines, to the practice of anaesthesia in ancient surgery : — " I'll imitate the pities of old surgeons To this lost limb — who, ere they show their art, Cast one asleep, then cut the diseased part." Indeed, the whole past history of anaesthetics is interesting,... | |
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