Search for: comfort
18941 Health, or, How to Live, p. 180.1 (James Springer White)
… be comforted.
18942 Health, or, How to Live, p. 205.1 (James Springer White)
… physical comfort, or to the operation of any of the laws of physical health, as to render these more or less inefficient, they, by these very conditions, rear …
18943 Health, or, How to Live, p. 211.1 (James Springer White)
… and comfort of the inhabitants and inmates, prejudiced to a greater or less extent. A free circulation of air, in and about a building, is of too much importance …
18944 Health, or, How to Live, p. 212.3 (James Springer White)
… to comfort, to constitute us Christians, and to protect us against pollution. Unclean clothing, unwholesome food and drink, prepare the way to a life of impurity …
18945 Health, or, How to Live, p. 217.1 (James Springer White)
… many comfortable draughts he had from my sleeves. No Bristol water could be more soft or pleasant than what arose from perspiration.
18946 Health, or, How to Live, p. 228.4 (James Springer White)
… , apparently comfortable in a furnace-heated, unventilated house, in which she must almost gasp for breath.
18947 Health, or, How to Live, p. 233.2 (James Springer White)
We must all have observed, that, while the air of a hot kitchen is comfortable, that of a parlor at the same heat, from an air-tight stove, is almost suffocating. The kitchen has a hot stove, but the steam of its boiling kettles moistens the air.
18948 Health, or, How to Live, p. 233.4 (James Springer White)
… the comfort which phthisical persons derive from that condition of the atmosphere which accompanies a rain-storm in the summer, and again, by the relief …
18949 Health, or, How to Live, p. 235.1 (James Springer White)
… and comfort in their homes. Who would not go miles to visit an old-fashioned log house with its great roaring fire? In whose childish reminiscences is not that …
18950 Health, or, How to Live, p. 238.3 (James Springer White)
… a comfortable house with open windows and an open fire.
18951 Health, or, How to Live, p. 239.2 (James Springer White)
… and comforts. — Weak Lungs by Dio Lewis .
18952 Health, or, How to Live, p. 246.4 (James Springer White)
… only comfortable in a room which to another would be uncomfortably warm. And if each of these are at liberty to arrange the fires, to suit their ideas of proper …
18953 Health, or, How to Live, p. 254.1 (James Springer White)
… the comfort, convenience and health of the family. The best rooms are kept dark. The light and air are shut out, lest the light of heaven may injure the rich furniture …
18954 Health, or, How to Live, p. 257.1 (James Springer White)
… that comfort is very much a matter of habit, and make a due discrimination between the natural sensation of health and the morbid sensitiveness produced …
18955 Health, or, How to Live, p. 257.2 (James Springer White)
… body comfortable, while cotton or linen only comes in contact with the skin. The discrepancies among medical authors on this subject, are almost ludicrous …
18956 Health, or, How to Live, p. 258.1 (James Springer White)
… more comfortable and sanatory in warm weather than dark-colored, because the former repels the heat, and the latter readily receives and retains it. Various …
18957 Health, or, How to Live, p. 260.4 (James Springer White)
… bodily comfort, and as will admit of the most perfect freedom in the exercise of every muscle of the body. The second is, to observe regularity and uniformity …
18958 Health, or, How to Live, p. 263.1 (James Springer White)
… more comfortable for the child; there should be no other fashion than what is dictated by convenience and comfort. The fashion of long clothing or skirts …
18959 Health, or, How to Live, p. 264.1 (James Springer White)
… of comfort, and the health of the child, is entirely overlooked. On the contrary, a course nearly opposite is pursued by those filling the humbler walks of life …
18960 Health, or, How to Live, p. 266.1 (James Springer White)
… the comfort, but also exerts a salutary influence on the health of the child, so much so, that its adoption cannot but be considered an important, if not an indispensable …