... and anxiety about the heart not to be described; and it may be said to paralyze the soul in such a manner as to render it insensible to everything but its own misery. Inertness and torpor pervade the whole system, united with a constriction of the... A Philosophical Treatise on the Passions - Pàgina 98per Thomas Cogan - 1802 - 369 pàginesVisualització completa - Sobre aquest llibre
| 1801 - 734 pàgines
...united with a conftriftion of the integuments of the body, and alio a certain fenfe of being filtered, or of being rendered incapable of motion. The eyes...; the countenance is contracted and wan ; the hair (lands erect, or at leaft excites the fenfation, which every-child experiences as oftca г» he "is... | |
| 1801 - 552 pàgines
...the whole fyftem, united with a conftricHon of the integuments of the body, and alfo a certain fcnfe of being fettered, or of being rendered incapable...motion. The eyes are pallid, wild, and funk in their fockcts ; the countenance is contracted and wan ; the hair ftands ereil, or at leaft excites the fenfation,... | |
| Thomas Cogan - 1813 - 428 pàgines
...the whole system, united with a constriction of the integuments of the body, and also a certain sense of being fettered, or of being rendered incapable of motion. The eyes are pallid, wild, and sunk in their sockets ; the countenance is contracted and wan ; the hair stands erect, or at least... | |
| Sir Alexander Morison - 1848 - 600 pàgines
...the whole system, united with a constriction of the integuments of the body, and also a certain sense of being fettered, or of being rendered incapable of motion. The eyes are wild, and the countenance contracted and wan, and the hair stands erect. Perspiration is excited by... | |
| James McCosh - 1880 - 276 pàgines
...the whole system, united with a constriction of the integuments of the body, and also a certain sense of being fettered, or of being rendered incapable of motion. The eyes are pallid, wild, and sunk in their sockets ; the countenance is contracted and wan, the hair stands erect, or at least this... | |
| James McCosh - 1887 - 294 pàgines
...the whole system, united with a constriction of the integuments of the body, and also a certain sense of being fettered, or of being rendered incapable of motion. The eyes are pallid, wild, and sunk in their sockets ; the countenance is contracted and wan, the hnir stands erect, or at least this... | |
| |