Ladyship had several sickly children—children rendered sickly by their mother's overweening and injudicious care. Alarmed successively by every fashionable medical terror of the day, she dosed her children with every specific which was publicly advertised,... Patronage - Stran 209avtor: Maria Edgeworth - 1814 - 431 straniCelotni ogled - O knjigi
| Maria Edgeworth - 1814 - 448 strani
...or who would listen to any thing that was said by a young man without station or name ? Mr. Gresliam unluckily was at this time at his country seat.—Poor...age had taken such quantities of Ching's lozenges, God hold's elixir, or Dixon's antihilious pills. The conse-quence was, that the dangers, which had... | |
| Maria Edgeworth - 1825 - 560 strani
...lived in Grosvenor Square — Lady Spilsbury. Her Ladyship had several sickly children — children rendered sickly by their mother's overweening and...dosed her children with" every specific which was publiclyadvertised, or privately recommended. No creatures of their age had taken such quantities of... | |
| Bill Swainson - 2000 - 1360 strani
...yours. "An Essay on the Noble Science of Self-Justification," Letters for Literary Ladies (1795) 3 Alarmed successively by every fashionable medical...was publicly advertised or privately recommended. ..The consequence was, that the dangers, which had at first been imaginary, became real: these little... | |
| Janet M. Todd, Janet Todd - 2005 - 516 strani
...nineteenth century. Like many others, a mother in Patronage 'dosed her children with every specific that was publicly advertised, or privately recommended....age had taken such quantities of Ching's lozenges, Goldbold 's elixir, or Dixon's antibilious pills' (ch. 20). In Austen, the amateur lady doctor is presented... | |
| |