Search Images Maps Play YouTube News Gmail Drive More »
Sign in
Books Books
" I returned to Paris with my gentleman whose leg I had cut off ; I dressed him, and God healed him. I sent him to his house merry with a wooden leg ; and he was content, saying he had got off cheap, not to have been miserably burned to stop the blood,... "
Life and times of Ambroise Paré, 1510-1590 - Page 181
by Ambroise Paré - 1921 - 297 pages
Full view - About this book

Retrospective Review, Volume 11

Henry Southern, Sir Nicholas Harris Nicolas - Bibliography - 1825 - 392 pages
...chief of them were prisoners, and the soldiers sent away without arms. " The camp being broken up, I returned to Paris, with my gentleman, whose leg I had cut off. I dresssd him, and God cured him. I sent him to his house merry, with his wooden leg, and was content,...
Full view - About this book

The Retrospective Review, Volume 11

Books - 1825 - 392 pages
...chief of them were prisoners, and the soldiers sent away without arms. " The camp being broken up, I returned to Paris, with my gentleman, whose leg I had cut off. I dresssd him, and God cured him. I sent him to his house merry, with his wooden leg, and was content,...
Full view - About this book

The Retrospective Review.., Volume 11

Henry Southern - 1825 - 388 pages
...chief of them were prisoners, and the soldiers sent away without arms. " The camp being broken up, I returned to Paris, with my gentleman, whose leg I had cut off. I dresssd him, and God cured him. I sent him to his house merry, with his wooden leg, and was content,...
Full view - About this book

The Retrospective Review, Volume 11

Books - 1825 - 390 pages
...chief of them were prisoners, and the soldiers sent away without arms. " The camp being broken up, I returned to Paris, with my gentleman, whose leg I had cut off. I dresssd him, and God cured him. I sent him to his house merry, with his wooden leg, and was content,...
Full view - About this book

Chambers' Edinburgh Journal, Volume 9

Edinburgh (Scotland) - 1841 - 504 pages
...which he treated a foe in his writings. Speaking of a gentleman whose limb he had amputated, he says, " I dressed him, and God cured him. I sent him to his home merry, with his wooden leg, and content, saying, that he had escaped cheaply, not to have been...
Full view - About this book

All the Year Round, Volume 8; Volume 71

Charles Dickens - 1892 - 812 pages
...which was not done without good laughing and drinking." " The camp being broken up," concludes Par6, "I returned to Paris with my gentleman, whose leg...God cured him. I sent him to his house merry with his wooden leg, and was content, saying that he had escaped good cheap not to have been miserably burned."...
Full view - About this book

All the Year Round

1892 - 826 pages
...which was not done without good laughing and drinking." " The camp being broken up," concludes Par 6, " I returned to Paris with my gentleman, whose leg I...off. I dressed him, and God cured him. I sent him to hia house merry with his wooden leg, and was content, saying that he had escaped good cheap not to...
Full view - About this book

Ambroise Paré and His Times, 1510-1590

Stephen Paget - 1897 - 404 pages
...leaders were taken prisoners, and their soldiers were sent away without arms. The camp being dispersed, I returned to Paris with my gentleman whose leg I had cut off ; I dressed him, and God healed him. I sent him to his house merry with a wooden leg ; and he was content, saying he had got...
Full view - About this book

Ambroise Paré and his times, 1510-1590

Stephen Paget - 1897 - 408 pages
...dispersed, I returned to Paris with my gentleman whose leg I had cut off ; I dressed him, and God healed him. I sent him to his house merry with a wooden leg ; and he was content, saying he had got off cheap, not to have been miserably burned to stop the blood, as you write in your book,...
Full view - About this book

Confessio Medici

Stephen Paget - Medicine - 1908 - 184 pages
...physician, surgeon, apothecary, and cook. I dressed him, to the end of the case, and God cured him. I returned to Paris, with my gentleman whose leg I...off: I dressed him, and God cured him. I sent him home happy with a wooden leg, and he was well satisfied, saying that he had got off cheap. I reduced...
Full view - About this book




  1. My library
  2. Help
  3. Advanced Book Search
  4. Download EPUB
  5. Download PDF