| William Temple - 1731 - 506 páginas
...too much Reflection upon what was to follow; and fo, when he was well, denied himfelf nothing of what he had a mind to Eat or Drink; which gave him a Body full of Humours, and made his Fits of the Gotit as Frequent and Violent aa rrioft I have known : When they came, he bore them as he could, and... | |
| William Temple - 1757 - 564 páginas
...much reflex ion upon what was to follow ; and fo, when hq wa; well, denied himfejf nothing of what he had a mind to eat or drink ; which gave him a body full of hu* rnours, and made his fits of the gout as frequent and violent as moft I have known i when they... | |
| Adam Smith - 1811 - 602 páginas
...with us all. Drydtn. 5. Grotefque imagery; jocularity; merriment. 6. Difeafed or morbid difpofition. He was a man frank and generous; when well, denied...himfelf nothing that he had a mind to eat or drink, drink, which gave him a body full of humours, and made his fits of the gout frequent and violent. Trmpk.... | |
| Adam Smith - 1811 - 596 páginas
...with us all. Drydcn. J. Grotefque imagery ; jocularity ; merriment. 6. Difeafed or morbid difpofition. He was a man frank and generous ; when well, denied...himfelf nothing that he had a mind to eat or 'drink, drink, which gave him a body fulf of humours, and made his fits of the gout frequent and violent. Tempie,... | |
| Sir William Temple - 1814 - 580 páginas
...much reflection upon what was to follow ; and so, when he was well, denied himself nothing of what he had a mind to eat or drink ; which gave him a body full of humours, and made his fits of the gout as frequent and violent as most I have known : when they came, he bore them as he could, and forgot... | |
| George Crabb - 1826 - 768 páginas
...term is very frequently applied to fluids of the body when in a corrupt state ; ' He denied himself nothing that he had a mind to eat or drink, which...humours, and made his fits of the gout frequent and violent.1 TEMPLE. STREAM, CURRENT, TIDE. A fluid body in a progressive motion is the object described... | |
| Thomas Curtis (of Grove house sch, Islington) - 396 páginas
...Rotcommon. In conversation humour is more than wit, easiness more than knowledge. Temple. He denied himself nothing that he had a mind to eat or drink, which gave him a body full of humouri, and made his fits of the gout frequent and violent. Id. Tempt not his heavy hand ; But one... | |
| Alexander Pope - 1899 - 141 páginas
...So rheumatism is derived from the Greek pkw, I flow. Cp. Sir William Temple : ' ' He denied himself nothing that he had a mind to eat or drink, which...and made his fits of the gout frequent and violent." The Spectator, No. 115: "Labour or exercise ferments the humours, casts them into their proper channels,... | |
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