Quick Search


Tibetan singing bowl music,sound healing, remove negative energy.

528hz solfreggio music -  Attract Wealth and Abundance, Manifest Money and Increase Luck



 
Your forum announcement here!

  Free Advertising Forums | Free Advertising Board | Post Free Ads Forum | Free Advertising Forums Directory | Best Free Advertising Methods | Advertising Forums > Post Your Free Ads Here in English for Advertising .Adult and gambling websites NOT accepted. > Other

Other Post anything that does not fit in the above categories here.

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 08-03-2011, 02:50 AM   #1
718176985
 
Posts: n/a
Default R J Graves (1797-1853) - Irish Physician_4172

Robert Graves, the son of an episcopal clergyman was born in Dublin in 1797,cheap Milwaukee Brewers Hats, the same year that Napoleon was leading his armies over the Alps to threaten the citizens of Vienna. He was a brilliant student and graduated with a first class medical degree in the fall of 1818 as Abraham Lincoln's mother Nancy, lay dying of 'milk fever' in a small wooden hut in the untamed forestlands of Indiana. It appears that as well as being an excellent scholar, Graves was also a passionate adventurer and often told his medical friends that 'there was always something waiting to be discovered if we only took the time to look for it'. It is therefore of no surprise that when Graves completed his medical studies he decided to further his knowledge of the Arts by travelling overland on the continent. Let us remember that this was the European mainland of the 1820's and a lot of the continent was still considered alien to most people on these islands. The perception of the ancient palaces of Rome or maybe the evening mist settling on the sleepy canals of Venice were often images snatched from lines of poetry or from the canvases of travelling painters.
Many people of this period were highly suspicious of strangers who were often considered to be displaced soldiers wandering around after the recent battle of Waterloo. It was in a little lakeside Austrian village that Graves eventually aroused the distrust of the locals and he was arrested and held as a Prussian spy. It appears that the local authorities refused to believe that an Irishman could speak German so well and the unfortunate scholar had to stay in jail for ten days before he could get verification of his identity sent from Dublin. In 1821, Graves was travelling alone in Switzerland and found himself staying in the same hotel as the famous English painter,Wholesale Oakely sunglasses, J.M.W. Turner. Both men struck up a friendship and they travelled and painted together for many months before finally parting company outside the Vatican in Rome. Many of Turner's famous storm scenes come from that period of his life and often show dreary afternoon skies heavily streaked with dark cautioning thunderclouds. It is surmised by some that Robert Graves may have been the physical inspiration for one of Turners more imposing storm paintings, The Fishermen at Sea.
In this picture the inky blackness of the night is gathering fast and a sliver of a white moon shows a fishing vessel being tossed and thrown about at sea. It is known that Graves once was caught in a violent storm while on a sailing ship on the Mediterranean. The vessel was at the mercy of a raging tempest and suddenly began to take on water and sink. The bilge pumps were leaking and the crew found themselves unable to save the stricken craft. Amidst the frenzy of the thunderous storm the crew mutinied and abandoned ship by stealing the only lifeboat that was aboard the stricken vessel. Graves was incensed and refused to allow himself or his fellow passengers to be left to the peril of the seas. He ran forward and grabbed a nearby fire axe and holed the lifeboat as the mutinous sailors lowered it into the turbulent waters. He then gathered leather from the shoes of the passengers and proceeded to fix the bilge pumps. The ship was sailed into port the next morning and everybody on board was saved.
Graves returned to Dublin in 1821, in the year that Napoleon died on a small British outcrop of rock in the south Atlantic, and he became chief physician at the Meath Hospital. He continued his idea of believing that 'everything was waiting to be discovered if you only look for it' and before long he had described hyperthyroidism, scleroderma, pontine haemorrhages, angioneurotic oedema as well as pathological fractures and the paraneoplastic syndrome, erythromelalgia. He was also a great teacher and taught in English, which was unusual and most medical classes in the 1820's still taught their pupils in a sort of Latin and his clinical notes were used by Trousseau (Trousseau's sign) in Paris in 1825. When Trousseau wrote a clinical text some years later it was translated into English and used in Dublin. Graves became a good friend of William Stokes and also became passionate about the introduction of the stethoscope into clinical examination of the chest and abdomen.
They both shared ward rounds in the Meath Hospital and often spent long hours teaching medical students the signs of illness. In the midst of a busy round Graves once joked to his residents that Stoke's' epitaph should be 'He fed fevers'. He died in 1853, as Guiseppe Verdi's Il Traviata was having its premiere in La Scala in Milan. I often feel sad that people like Robert Graves are not alive today as they certainly would brighten the world of Irish medicine and enjoy the clinical benefits we now possess. Maybe somebody will remember one of our present consultants in a century and a half from now in the highly technologised society our own children will help to create.
The first-second combination allows for easy maneuvering and nice "zippy" moves on the streets. If you're expecting the slouched-over, "lone, unloved and apathetic biker" riding position that many cruisers offer, you're going to be disappointed. The best position on this bike is a standard straight up and down, nearly cop-like. It's comfortable, gives you tons of visibility - you're eye-to-eye with drivers in all but the tallest SUVs. Friends that see me on the road say that I look better on this bike than the others that I've ridden - time to have a chat with the wife and see if she likes white or black.The controls have a nice "retro" look, but they are most definitely modern. Italian bike owners will be familiar with this layout. The clutch is butter smooth, allows for a lot of feathering and never gives a hint of any wooden or binary grabbiness. The instruments all have a slightly retro character, and this is also attractive, down to the speedometer that reads about 10% optimistic.
Looks like Guzzi had some left over parts from my old one, as they read almost identically. Brakes took a little getting used to. I'm more of a "front braker" person,cheap Paco Chicano t-shirts, so I usually apply the fronts and then ease the back brake in for a settling effect. Turns out that the Guzzi Linked brakes work well for this, although I adjusted my technique slightly to just use the front brake lever to peel off speed,cheap Los Angeles Angels Hats, and the rear lever to get down to business. For those of you unfamiliar, the linked brakes on equipped Moto Guzzi bikes operate the left front disc in conjunction with the rear disc. The front brake lever operates only the front right Brembo.The combination is both effective and safe. Hard to high-side a bike with linked brakes when used correctly, since you can modulate the speed of both wheels with the rear lever.
  Reply With Quote
Reply


Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is On


All times are GMT. The time now is 09:16 AM.

 

Powered by vBulletin Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Free Advertising Forums | Free Advertising Message Boards | Post Free Ads Forum