Memorial of Alonzo Benjamin Palmer, M.D., LL. D.: Born, October 6, 1815, Died December 23, 1887Printed at the Riverside Press, 1890 - 196 pages |
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Page 20
... land- ing at Liverpool , of the immediate prospect of war between Austria and Italy , necessitated a change of plan . The next two months were spent in London , in visiting the hospitals , attend- ing lectures , and becoming acquainted ...
... land- ing at Liverpool , of the immediate prospect of war between Austria and Italy , necessitated a change of plan . The next two months were spent in London , in visiting the hospitals , attend- ing lectures , and becoming acquainted ...
Page 23
... land so far as the latter went for liberty and jus- tice , but that an early maxim of our government was to make no entangling alliances with Euro- pean powers . That so long as these powers confined their operations to this side of the ...
... land so far as the latter went for liberty and jus- tice , but that an early maxim of our government was to make no entangling alliances with Euro- pean powers . That so long as these powers confined their operations to this side of the ...
Page 55
... land of the future . I was delighted with him . My rooms here over- look the Rhine and the seven hills in the near distance across the river . July 31st . Arrived at Coblenz and took a carriage to Stolzenfels , the summer residence of ...
... land of the future . I was delighted with him . My rooms here over- look the Rhine and the seven hills in the near distance across the river . July 31st . Arrived at Coblenz and took a carriage to Stolzenfels , the summer residence of ...
Page 58
... land . An infinite number of vari - colored lights , ar- ranged in the most graceful forms , made a blaze of glorious light . The moon , at full , looked out in its usual placid mood through a transparent sky , occasionally overspread ...
... land . An infinite number of vari - colored lights , ar- ranged in the most graceful forms , made a blaze of glorious light . The moon , at full , looked out in its usual placid mood through a transparent sky , occasionally overspread ...
Page 61
... land , passing through Wales , and pausing for a visit to Pem- broke Castle , " a magnificent old ruin , one of the finest in the kingdom . " September 3d . Reached Waterford early in the morning . This is the first Irish town I have ...
... land , passing through Wales , and pausing for a visit to Pem- broke Castle , " a magnificent old ruin , one of the finest in the kingdom . " September 3d . Reached Waterford early in the morning . This is the first Irish town I have ...
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Memorial of Alonzo Benjamin Palmer, M. D. , LL. D.: Born, October 6, 1815 ... Love M. Root Palmer No preview available - 2016 |
Common terms and phrases
Aberdeen Acland Alonzo American Ann Arbor appointed Association attention beautiful Benjamin Brodie Berkshire school Bowdoin Bowdoin College breakfast Brigade castle character cheerful Church cliniques College dine with Dr disease duty Edinburgh England Europe exceedingly express Faculty fessor followed G. H. Lewes gave give happy heard Herkimer County hills horse hospital House ical intelligent interest kind labor learned lectures London looked Lord Brougham Lyster Martin Chuzzlewit Medical Department meeting ment morning ness never noble o'clock October Palmer Paris patients physician Pittsfield pleasant Practice of Medicine present profes profession Professor Sharpey Queen Regiment schools scientific seemed September Southampton speech spent spoke Surgeon teacher teaching tion told took town typhoid fever University of Michigan Ventnor veratrum viride versity York young
Popular passages
Page 13 - A made a finer end, and went away, an it had been any christom child ; 'a parted even just between twelve and one, even at the turning o' the tide : for after I saw him fumble with the sheets, and play with flowers, and smile upon his fingers...
Page 31 - Our revels now are ended... These our actors, As I foretold you, were all spirits, and Are melted into air, into thin air, And, like the baseless fabric of this vision, The cloud-capped towers, the gorgeous palaces, The solemn temples, the great globe itself, Yea, all which it inherit, shall dissolve, And, like this insubstantial pageant faded, Leave not a rack behind: we are such stuff As dreams are made on; and our little life Is rounded with a sleep..
Page 13 - A' made a finer end and went away an it had been any christom child; a' parted even just between twelve and one, even at the turning o' the tide: for after I saw him fumble with the sheets and play with flowers and smile upon his fingers...
Page 196 - Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord; Yea, saith the Spirit, for they rest from their labours, and their works do follow them.
Page 69 - Science are therefore at once the most humble and the loftiest which man can undertake. He only does what every little child does from its first awakening into life, and must do every moment of its existence ; and yet he aims at the gradual approximation to divine truth itself. If, then, there exists no difference between the work of the man of Science and that of the merest child, what constitutes the distinction ? Merely the conscious self-determination. The child observes what accident brings...
Page 10 - NY, and when it became the College of Physicians and Surgeons of the Western District of New York in 1813 he was appointed as its president.
Page 69 - Association, not a secret confraternity of men jealously guarding the mysteries of their profession, but inviting the uninitiated, the public at large, to join them, having as one of its objects to break down those imaginary and hurtful barriers which exist between men of science and so-called men of practice — I felt that I could, from the peculiar position in which Providence has placed me in this country, appear as the representative of that large public, which profits by and admires your exertions,...
Page 68 - Remembering that this Association is a popular Association, not a secret confraternity of men jealously guarding the mysteries of their profession, but inviting the uninitiated, the public at large, to join them, having as one of its objects to break down those imaginary and hurtful barriers which exist between men of science and so-called men of practice...
Page 69 - Science, in its most general and comprehensive acceptation, means the knowledge of what I know, the consciousness of human knowledge. Hence, to know is the object of all Science; and all special knowledge, if brought to our consciousness in its separate distinctiveness from, and yet in its recognized relation to the totality of our knowledge, is scientific knowledge.
Page 70 - ... which the Almighty has implanted in them, that we can hope to grapple with the boundlessness of His creation, and with the laws which govern both mind and matter. The operation of Science then has been, systematically to divide human knowledge, and raise, as it were, the separate groups of subjects for scientific consideration, into different and distinct sciences.