Medical Jurisprudence, Volume 3W. Phillips, 1823 - Medical jurisprudence |
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Results 1-5 of 55
Page 5
... committed suicide . - What was his occupation.— Had he lately met with any disappointment or mis- fortune . Had he appeared dejected or melancholy . -Are there any persons with whom he associated , who had any remarkable interest in his ...
... committed suicide . - What was his occupation.— Had he lately met with any disappointment or mis- fortune . Had he appeared dejected or melancholy . -Are there any persons with whom he associated , who had any remarkable interest in his ...
Page 27
... committed by the hand , irregular patches corresponding in some places with the fingers and nails of the assailant ; traces of violence will be frequently also discoverable on the chest which will answer to the impression of the knees ...
... committed by the hand , irregular patches corresponding in some places with the fingers and nails of the assailant ; traces of violence will be frequently also discoverable on the chest which will answer to the impression of the knees ...
Page 35
... committed in Hyde Park , a base sixpence was found in the pocket of the deceased ; had he been plundered , the robber would not have left the base coin , which in the dark and hurry he could not have distinguished . In the instance of a ...
... committed in Hyde Park , a base sixpence was found in the pocket of the deceased ; had he been plundered , the robber would not have left the base coin , which in the dark and hurry he could not have distinguished . In the instance of a ...
Page 52
... committed the dissection has lost much of its value . The inte- guments of the breast are then to be carefully dis- sected so as to expose the cartilaginous articulations of the ribs , which must be cut through on both sides ; the ...
... committed the dissection has lost much of its value . The inte- guments of the breast are then to be carefully dis- sected so as to expose the cartilaginous articulations of the ribs , which must be cut through on both sides ; the ...
Page 73
... committed to the grave ; but should it not have been satisfactorily identified , the head ought to be preserved in spirits , in as natural a state as possible , that it may be recognised by the friends of the deceased . A curious ...
... committed to the grave ; but should it not have been satisfactorily identified , the head ought to be preserved in spirits , in as natural a state as possible , that it may be recognised by the friends of the deceased . A curious ...
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Common terms and phrases
Act of Parliament admitted aliquo apoplexy Apothecaries appearance appointed arsenic Barbers of London blood body bones Brownl bye-laws cause cavity censors charter child Cholera Morbus circumstances City of London Civitat College of Physicians commissioners committed common seal Commonalty Company of Surgeons Court of Assistants death deceased defendants disease dissection ejusdem elected eorum epilepsy evidence examined exercise further enacted granted hereby house or place imprisonment inflammation judgment jury Justice Abbott King's laurel water Letters Patents licence Lord Lord Coke lunar caustic Lunaticks lungs Majesty manner Masters or Governors medicine murder myster nobis nostris observed occasion offender officers opinion parish pericardium Person or Persons Pharmacopol plaintiff poison practising physic præd present produced punish quantity quod shew Sir Theodosius Boughton sive societatis predict Society of Apothecaries Statute stomach successor Surgery symptoms tempore existen thereof thing tion uterus violent volumus Wardens woman
Popular passages
Page 62 - Issue, and give this Act and the special Matter in Evidence at any Trial to be had thereupon, and that the same was done in pursuance and by the Authority of this Act...
Page 99 - And it appears in our books, that in many cases, the common law will control acts of parliament, and sometimes adjudge them to be utterly void; for when an act of parliament is against common right and reason, or repugnant, or impossible to be performed, the common law will control it, and adjudge such act to be void; and therefore in 8 E.
Page 63 - And be it further enacted, that this act shall be deemed and taken to be a public act, and shall be judicially taken notice of as such by all judges, justices, and others, without being specially pleaded.
Page 51 - Seal of the Society of the Art and Mystery of Apothecaries of the City of London...
Page 82 - If men strive, and hurt a woman with child, so that her fruit depart from her, and yet no mischief follow : he shall be surely punished, according as the woman's husband will lay upon him ; and he shall pay as the judges determine. 23 And if any mischief follow, then thou shalt give life for life...
Page 174 - ... and in any such action the defendant may plead the general issue, and give this Act and the special matter in evidence at any trial to be had thereupon...
Page 301 - ... some attention; because, my lord, that any person, after a temperate use of life, a series of thinking and acting regularly, and without one single deviation from sobriety, should plunge into the very depth of profligacy precipitately and at once, is altogether improbable and unprecedented, and absolutely inconsistent with the course of things.
Page 301 - I had never said this, did not my present circumstances extort it from me, and seem to make it necessary. Permit me here, my lord, to call upon malignity itself, so long and cruelly busied in this prosecution, to charge upon me any immorality, of which prejudice was not the author. No, my lord, I concerted no schemes of fraud, projected no violence, injured no man's person or property. My days were honestly laborious, my nights intensely studious.
Page 305 - ... the learning, and the integrity of this place, to impute to the living what zeal in its fury may have done ; what nature may have taken off, and piety interred; or what war alone may have destroyed, alone deposited.