منابع مشابه
Charles Dickens' Consultation with Mr. Syme *The Life of Charles Dickens, by John Forster, page 417.
us believe) in any dialect in Scotland; in fact the tendency in all Scotch dialects is to pronounce it "jest." And as regards the alleged difference of opinion between Mr. Syme and Sir Henry Thompson, I heard Mr. Syme describe his interview with Dickens on the day it took place, and remember that he not only took a serious view of the condition of Dickens' foot, but also spoke of Sir Henry Thom...
متن کاملJohn Tweedie and Charles Darwin in Buenos Aires.
The journey of exploration undertaken by Charles Darwin FRS during the voyage of HMS Beagle has a central place within the historical development of evolutionary theory and has been intensively studied. Despite this, new facts continue to emerge about some of the details of Darwin's activities. Drawing on recently published Darwin material and unpublished letters in the archives of the Royal Bo...
متن کاملSamuel Barrow, M.D. physician to Charles II and admirer of John Milton.
ON THE north bank of the Thames, close to Putney Bridge, the parish church of Fulham still preserves a faintly rural air, despite the encroachment of modern industrial building and traffic. In the Tower Chapel a monument in marble is dedicated to the memory of Lady Dorothy Clarke and her second husband Dr. Samuel Barrow. The monument, said to be the work of Grinling Gibbons, was erected by Geor...
متن کاملIllustrations from the Wellcome Institute Library. John Monro MD and Charles James Fox: etching by Thomas Rowlandson.
THE picture reproduced in Fig. 1 is an unsigned etching dated 4 April 1784, which is firmly attributed on stylistic grounds to Thomas Rowlandson (1756-1827).' The two figures depicted are identified as, on the left the Bethlem mad-doctor John Monro (1715-1791), and on the right the politician Charles James Fox (1749-1806). Dr Monro screws up his right eye as he raises a lens to his left and dec...
متن کاملCharles Spence
Working at the Crossmodal Research Laboratory in Oxford, Charles Spence tries to apply the latest insights from our growing neuroscience understanding of the rules governing multisensory integration to the design of better products, packages, places, interfaces, and foods, an area that can perhaps best be captured under the title of neuroscience-inspired multisensory design.
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ژورنال
عنوان ژورنال: British Dental Journal
سال: 2012
ISSN: 0007-0610,1476-5373
DOI: 10.1038/sj.bdj.2012.611