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The Works of Aristotle

By: Aristotle

...mplete Masterpiece and Family Physician; his Experienced Midwife, his Book of Problems and his Remarks on Physiognomy A PENN STATE ELECTRONIC CLASSICS... ...Physiognomy A PENN STATE ELECTRONIC CLASSICS SERIES PUBLICATION The Works of Aristotle, trans. Anon. is a publication of the Pennsylvania State Unive... ...uor will be of the same colour, taste and con- sistency, with the taste of birds’ eggs. If any object that they have no shells, that signifies nothing... ...g man void of understanding, who turned aside to the harlot’s house, “as a bird to the snare of the fowler, or as an ox to the slaughter, till a dart ... ...ty in all things; but a proud, imperi- ous harlot will do no more than she lists, in the sunshine of prosperity; and like a horse-leech, ever craving,... ...ibly, hinders the functions of the womb, and predisposes the whole body to listlessness. CAUSE One cause of this disease may be ascribed to want of ju... ...its genus, because a mole cannot be said to be an animal: secondly, in the species, because it has not a human figure and has not the character of a m... ... the point of it towards it, for fear of hurting the womb; and having thus introduced it, let him turn it towards the head to strike ei- ther in an ey... ...a- 11 T ent (surgical). A bunch of some fibre such as sponge or horsehair introduced into an opening, natural or artificial, to keep it open, or incr...

...Excerpt: The Famous Philosopher. Containing his Complete Masterpiece and Family Physician; his Experienced Midwife, his Book of Problems and his Remarks on Physiognomy...

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