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malady and was
It was said that Amy Robsart, his wife, was suffering from a " malady in one of her breasts ", and that the Queen would like to marry Dudley if his wife should die.
Pius II was unaware he was nearing his end, and his malady probably prompted the feverish impatience with which on 18 June 1464 he assumed the cross and departed for Ancona to conduct the crusade in person.
In November 1898 Hearst, with Lua Getsinger and others, stopped off at Paris briefly on their way to Palestine and was shocked to see May Bolles ( later Maxwell ) bedridden with the chronic malady which had afflicted her.
The area deemed to be infected was limited to the actual district or village where the disease prevailed, and no locality was deemed to be infected merely because of the importation into it of a few cases of plague while there has been no diffusion of the malady.
) The first act was called for, owing to an alarm, lest plague should be imported from Poland and the Baltics ; the second act of 1721 was due to the disastrous prevalence of plague at Marseille and other places in Provence, France ; it was renewed in 1733 owing to a fresh outbreak of the malady on the continent of Europe, and again in 1743, owing to the disastrous epidemic at Messina.
The instantaneous revulsion of public feeling was somewhat unreasonable, for Pitt's health seems now to have been beyond doubt so shattered by his hereditary malady, that he was already in old age though only fifty-eight.
It has been insinuated both by contemporary and by later critics that being disappointed at his loss of popularity, and convinced of the impossibility of co-operating with his colleagues, he exaggerated his malady as a pretext for the inaction that was forced upon him by circumstances.
The magical texts that use Horus ' childhood as the basis for their healing spells give him different ailments, from scorpion stings to simple stomachaches, adapting the tradition to fit the malady that each spell was intended to treat.
Formerly, this was the only way to confirm a diagnosis of haemochromatosis but measures of transferrin and ferritin along with a history are considered adequate in determining the presence of the malady.
It has been suggested that his malady was a defect of sight caused the dazzling light which shone around him at his conversion.
The building was used as a hospital in 1885 when the typhoid epidemic visited that town and scores of people died of the malady.
" For ( Henry ) Beecher, sinfulness was a temporary malady, which the love of God could burn away as a fierce noonday sun dries up a noxious mold ," according to Kazin.
Any time one of the Cartwrights seriously courted a woman, she died from a malady, was slain, or left with someone else.
Late in February the malady from which he was suffering grew worse.
In April 1989, the Civil Cooperation Bureau attempted to assassinate the Reverend Frank Chikane with poison during a trip he was making to Namibia. 14 The Civil Cooperation Bureau made another attempt to poison Chikane during a trip to the United States, where one doctor finally diagnosed his malady as organophosphate poisoning.
While editing these volumes, he was suffering from a painful internal malady, to which he succumbed on 26 January 1895, in the 74th year of his age.
That he was able to do so much may well be a subject of wonder when it is known that his labors had long been impeded by a painful and depressing malady, from which he suffered severely at intervals, whilst he never felt secure from its recurring attacks.
In 1788 he was appointed Solicitor General, and was knighted, and at the close of this year he attracted attention by his speeches in support of Pitt's resolutions on the state of the king ( George III, who then labored under a mental malady ) and the delegation of his authority.

malady and known
In 2011, according to the United States Department of Agriculture, it seems clear that no single factor alone is responsible for the malady, however honey bees are thought to possibly be affected by such chemicals which are known to work their way through the plant up into the flowers and leave residues in the nectar and pollen which bees forage on.
This alarming malady soon became known as the sweating sickness.
The Female Malady: Women, Madness, and English Culture, 1830 – 1980 ( 1985 ) discusses hysteria, which was once known as the “ female malady ” and according to Showalter, is called depression today.

malady and from
After this, the senior priest ( or bishop ) pours pure olive oil and a small amount of wine into the shrine lamp, and says the " Prayer of the Oil ", which calls upon God to "... sanctify this Oil, that it may be effectual for those who shall be anointed therewith, unto healing, and unto relief from every passion, every malady of the flesh and of the spirit, and every ill ..." Then follow seven series of epistles, gospels, long prayers, Ektenias ( litanies ) and anointings.
Thus the principles of AA have been used to form many numbers of other fellowships for those recovering from various pathologies, each of which in turn emphasizes recovery from the specific malady which brought the sufferer into the fellowship.
Towards the end of his life, Eadred suffered from a digestive malady which would prove fatal.
The king offered a reward for anybody that could heal his son, who suffered from a strange malady.
The prince, Anaxagoras ' son, suffered from a strange malady and the king offered a reward for anybody that could heal him.
Conrad Black's 1977 encomium, Duplessis, painted a sympathetic portrait of the man as a transitional figure towards modernism, and the victim of partisan attack and personal malady ( Black revealed, for instance, that Duplessis suffered from hypospadias ).
For example, love potions make a person fall in love ( or become deeply infatuated ) with another ( the love potion figures tragically into most versions of the tale of Tristan and Iseult, including Richard Wagner's opera Tristan und Isolde ); sleeping potions cause a person to fall asleep ( in folklore, this can range from normal sleep to a deathlike trance ); and elixirs heal / cure any wound / malady ( as in C. S.
Malan died in 1963 from Parkinson's Disease, at the time a rare and essentially mysterious malady.
A common category with the greatest number of injuries is traumatic brain injury ( TBI ) following physical trauma or head injury from an outside source, and the term acquired brain injury ( ABI ) is used in appropriate circles, to differentiate brain injuries occurring after birth, from injury due to a disorder or congenital malady.
On Hénault ' srecovery in his eightieth year from a dangerous malady ( 1765 ) he professed to have undergone religious conversion and retired into private life, devoting the remainder of his days to study and devotion.
Harvey, a century after Vesalius, poignantly remarks that there is more to be learned from the dissection of one person who had died of tuberculosis or other chronic malady than from the bodies of ten persons who had been hanged.
The symptoms during the course of the malady and other antecedent circumstances are always prefixed with more or less fullness, and discussed from the point of view of the conditions found after death.
The rest of his life was uneventful ; he died at Caen on February 7, 1834, after suffering from a mental malady for two years.

malady and its
Historically chiropractic strongly opposed vaccination based on its belief that all diseases were traceable to causes in the spine, and therefore could not be affected by vaccines ; Daniel D. Palmer, the founder of chiropractic, wrote, " It is the very height of absurdity to strive to ' protect ' any person from smallpox or any other malady by inoculating them with a filthy animal poison.

malady and origin
Stroud stated that although he was not sure of the origin of the malady he believes that the source was from Georgia swamp turtle meat ( 1. 04 ).

malady and .
Therefore we always called it an illness, or a malady — a far safer term for us to use.
Though the malady faded away, he would be plagued with bouts of illness for the rest of his life.
:: ' I believe she has a serious malady — self-edification — and that it will be well to have one of the experts demonstrate over her.
Vitamin A depletion had been suggested as a cause of the malady, but this hypothesis has not been proven.
The others panic at the sight of Macbeth raging at an empty chair, until a desperate Lady Macbeth tells them that her husband is merely afflicted with a familiar and harmless malady.
It is also apparent that Timothy had some type of stomach malady, owing to Paul's advice in 1 Timothy 5: 23, counseling Timothy to " No longer drink water exclusively, but use a little wine for the sake of your stomach and your frequent ailments.
The victim would be subjected to long periods of physical activity in the hope of being purged of the malady.
This can be seen with Perdiccas III, slain by the Illyrians, Philip II assassinated by Pausanias of Orestis, Alexander the Great, suddenly died of malady, etc.
A few months after his arrival, however, he fell ill with an unknown malady.

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