| Jonathan Swift - 1903 - 440 pages
...human bodies ; for they could not be fewer than five or six hundred spread over every limb and joint; in short, every part, external and intestine, having diseases appropriated to each. To remedy which, there was a sort of people bred up among us, in the profession, or pretence of curing... | |
| Raymond Macdonald Alden - 1911 - 744 pages
...human bodies, for they could not be fewer than five or six hundred, spread over every limb and joint; in short, every part, external and intestine, having diseases appropriated to each. To remedy which, there was a sort of people bred up among us, in the profession, or pretence, of curing... | |
| Raymond Macdonald Alden - 1911 - 752 pages
...human bodies, for they could not be fewer than five or six hundred, spread over every limb and joint; in short, every part, external and intestine, having diseases appropriated to each. To remedy which, there was a sort of people bred up among us, in the profession, or pretence, of curing... | |
| Raymond Macdonald Alden - 1911 - 754 pages
...human bodies, for they could not be fewer than five or six hundred, spread over every limb and joint; in short, every part, external and intestine, having diseases appropriated to each. To remedy which, there was a sort of people bred up among us, in the profession, or pretence, of curing... | |
| Jonathan Swift - 1922 - 354 pages
...human bodies ; for they would not be fewer than five or six hundred, spread over every limb and joint ; in short, every part, external and intestine, having diseases appropriated to each. To remedy which, there was a sort of people bred up among us, in the profession or pretence of curing... | |
| Jonathan Swift - 1922 - 358 pages
...human bodies ; for they would not be fewer than five or six hundred, spread over every limb and joint ; in short, every part, external and intestine, having diseases appropriated to each. To remedy which, there was a sort of people bred up among us, in the profession or pretence of curing... | |
| Jonathan Swift - 1992 - 290 pages
...human bodies; for they could not be fewer than five or six hundred, spread over every limb, and joint: in short, every part, external and intestine, having diseases appropriated to each. To remedy which, there was a sort of people bred up among us, in the profession or pretence of curing... | |
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