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         Mitchell S Weir:     more books (100)
  1. The Youth of Washington: Told in the Form of an Autobiography by S. Weir 1829-1914 Mitchell, 2010-05
  2. Characteristics by S Weir 1829-1914 Mitchell, 2010-08-01
  3. A venture in 1777 by S Weir 1829-1914 Mitchell, JJ Gould, 2010-09-10
  4. When all the woods are green; a novel by S Weir 1829-1914 Mitchell, 2010-08-09
  5. The cup of youth and other poems by S Weir 1829-1914 Mitchell, 2010-09-08
  6. The youth of Washington, told in the form of an autobiography by S Weir 1829-1914 Mitchell, 2010-05-18
  7. Hugh Wynne; free Quaker, sometime brevet lieutenant-colonel on the staff of His Excellency General Washington by S Weir 1829-1914 Mitchell, Howard Pyle, 2010-08-02
  8. Mr. Kris Kringle: a Christmas tale by S Weir 1829-1914 Mitchell, 2010-08-04
  9. A diplomatic adventure by S Weir 1829-1914 Mitchell, Decorative Designers. bdd, et all 2010-08-18
  10. The youth of Washington: told in the form of an autobiography by S Weir 1829-1914 Mitchell, De Vinne Press. prt, 2010-06-25
  11. Constance Trescot; a novel by S Weir 1829-1914 Mitchell, 2010-09-09
  12. The adventures of Francois, foundling, thief, juggler, and fencing master, during the French revolution by S Weir 1829-1914 Mitchell, 2010-09-08
  13. Circumstance by S Weir 1829-1914 Mitchell, 2010-09-08
  14. In war time by S Weir 1829-1914 Mitchell, 2010-09-09

41. Lady Guinevere ~s~
I must go now.See! there fell, Molten into purple light, HOW LANCELOT CAMETO THE NUNNERY IN SEARCH OF THE QUEEN. by. S. Weir Mitchell(18291914).
http://greenfield.fortunecity.com/maple/253/ladyguine.html
web hosting domain names email addresses
My Favorite Story is of Camelot, Especially Sir,Lance ~§~ Lady Guinevere.
It is not complete without a few lines By Lord Alfred Tennyson, especially from his "Guinevere" So here are just a Few lines From "Guinevere" Some of the ones that have touched my very soul, As if he written them of my deepest secrets, My deepest fears, My Darkest Nightmares.
..Or If She Slept she Dream'd an awful dream.
And...For if there ever come a grief to me I cry my cry in silence, and have done;None knows it.
I also Must mention Geoffrey of Monmouth, His "Vita Merlini".....Now, Wornout with weeping, she is not what she was...
// IE 3.0 Message - document.writeln("", "To voice chat with others using Hearme's VoicePresence, ", "you will need Internet Explorer 4.0 or above");
LADY GUINEVERE TO SIR, LANCELOT.
by
H.C.C.1869
The night is here, and thou art with me still, Loved one, although beyond the reach of hands Eager to clasp thee; and I long to fill Again this soul more dry than desert sands Now thou art gone, with the deep-flowing streams Of thy most gracious prescence. Soon it will Return all life-like in the land of dreams.

42. Neurostimulation And The Nervous System: Theories Of Pain
S. Weir Mitchell (18291914) a Union army surgeon from Philadelphia specializingin neurology recognized that many soldiers with partial severing of
http://www.aboutarachnoiditis.org/content/theories_of_pain/theories_of_pain.html
Neurostimulation and the Nervous System: Theories of Pain Charles V. Burton, M.D., for the Burton Report The means by which neurostimulation influences the intact nervous system to produce pain relief is not known. The reason for this is that our understanding of the neurochemistry and neurophysiology of the nervous system remains at a primitive level and isn't much more advanced than the "phlogiston" theories.. There do exist, however, a number of plausible assumptions which we accept. These presently serve as a reasonable framework upon which we can build. In the early days when chemical theories were first being advanced the phenomenon of fire (combustion, now known to be oxidation) was elucidated by the sages as representing the liberation of a substance referred to as "phlogiston". This term, which derives from the Greek language, means "burned". In early times pain was thought to be a reflection of the body part receiving "phlogiston" from its proximity to fire. In this illustration, published by Ren Descates (1596-1650) in 1644, the "phlogiston" is said to set a spot on the skin in motion, pulling then on a thread traveling through the body to the brain where a bell strikes. This theory was not challenged until the work of Antoine Lavoiser between 1770 and 1790.

43. Search Result
Mitchell, Silas Weir (18291914) Analysis of 3000 Cases of Melancholia no place1897 Repritned from the _Transactions of the Associatoin of American
http://www.ilabdatabase.com/member/search.php3?membernr=1572&ordernr=GACH064979

44. Search Result
Mitchell, Silas Weir (18291914) Hysterical Rapid Respiration, with Cases; PeculiarForm of Rupial Skin Disease in an Hysterical Woman Philadelphia 1893
http://www.ilabdatabase.com/member/search.php3?membernr=1572&ordernr=GACH067317

45. Philadelphia Tour Topics
computer (ENIAC). S. Weir Mitchell (18291914), physician and novelist.Cecil B. Moore, lawyer and civil rights activist. Robert
http://www47.homepage.villanova.edu/charlene.mires/philtopics.html
Philadelphia Tour Topics You may choose any individual who has lived in Philadelphia (or visited frequently). Your choice does not have to be a famous person, as long as you can find historical sources for your research. You could even choose someone in your own family, if your family is from Philadelphia. For other ideas, consult The Encyclopedia of Philadelphia (1926) , which is in the Falvey Library reference collection, or the biographical volume of Oberholtzer's History of Philadelphia
  • Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander (1898-1989), first African American woman to practice law in Pennsylvania. Richard Allen, founder of the African Methodist Episcopal church. Marian Anderson (1902-93), singer. Walter Annenberg (1908- ), former publisher of Inquirer and TV Guide. John Barry (1745-1803), Irish naval officer in the American Revolution. One of the Barrymores (Ethel, John, Lionel), actors in the late 19th through mid-20th centuries. John Bartram (1699-1777), naturalist. Mary Alice Bennett (1851-1925), physician, first woman to earn a degree from the University of Pennsylvania. Nicholas Biddle (1750-78), banker who fought the "bank war" with Andrew Jackson.

46. Neurosurgery At Penn: History Of Penn Neurosurgery
Some of the leading neurologists, including S. Weir Mitchell (18291914), CharlesK. Mills (1845-1931), and William Gibson Spiller (1863-1940), all worked
http://www.uphs.upenn.edu/neursurg/history/
History of Neurosurgery at Penn
John A Boockvar, M.D.
University of Pennsylvania Medical School (1765)
The University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine was the first and only medical school in the thirteen American colonies to open its doors to students in the fall of 1765. The founder of the School of Medicine was a young Philadelphia physician, John Morgan. The early faculty, including Morgan, had earned medical degrees at the University of Edinburgh and in advanced courses in London. With the University of Edinburgh as their model, they built the School within an institution of higher learning. They emphasized the need to supplement medical lectures with bedside teaching. For more than a century, the pattern of medical education remained relatively unchanged and the standards and procedures introduced by the University of Pennsylvania remained the guiding force in medical education.
University of Pennsylvania Medical School (1830)
University of Pennsylvania Medical School (1870)
The Legacy of Charles Harrison Frazier, M.D.

that the neurosurgeon could relieve lower-body pain by severing the anterolateral tracts. Frazier was inherently skeptical and refused to attempt such an experimental operation. Instead, Edward Martin, John Rhea Barton Professor of Surgery at that time, performed this operation in 1911. Three years later, Frazier devised a more practicable operation and soon placed cordotomy among the routine surgical procedures. In 1920, he reported that the optimal site for surgical section of the cord was in the upper thoracic region (3). Additionally, Frazier, with Mills and others, reported on the surgical removal of tumors of the cerebellum, citing six cases with five recoveries, an unusual report of success at that time. His fundamental contributions to the problems of pituitary and parasellar tumors and of neoplasms of the sphenoidal ridge should not be overlooked.

47. S.Weir Mitchell(1829-1914) ?
English Literature M S.Weir Mitchell(18291914). .
http://res3.pudong-edu.sh.cn/Special/Subject/CZYY/YYDW/English Literature/M/S.We

48. English Literature
Bishop s Carriage John Milton (16081674) Paradise Lost Paradise RegainedFour Poems S. Weir Mitchell (1829-1914) The Autobiography
http://come.6to23.com/fayu/english/english_literature/m/m.html

49. RBML Collections: Johnson, Robert Underwood, 1853-1937.
18491928.; Jackson, Helen Hunt, 1830-1885.; Kipling, Rudyard, 1865-1936.; Lazarue,Emma, 1849-1887.; Mitchell, S. Weir (Silas Weir), 1829-1914.; Muir, John
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/libraries/inside/projects/findingaids/rbml_collection
Columbia University Rare Books and Manuscript Library - Manuscript and Archival Collections
Description
Creator: Johnson, Robert Underwood, 1853-1937. Title: Papers,1848-1937. Physical Description: ca. 1,600 items (15 boxes) Call Number: Location: Columbia University.Rare Book and Manuscript Library, New York, NY. Subjects:
Biographical Note
Editor of the CENTURY MAGAZINE and American Ambassador to Italy, 1920-1921.
Scope and Contents

50. RBML Collections:
Elliott, Charles (Charles W.).; Hawthorne, Julian, 18461934.; Ingram, John Henry,1842-1916.; Mitchell, S. Weir (Silas Weir), 1829-1914.; Moore, Clement Clarke
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/libraries/inside/projects/findingaids/rbml_collection
Columbia University Rare Books and Manuscript Library - Manuscript and Archival Collections
Description
Creator: Title: Friends of the Columbia University Libraries collection,1828-1953. Physical Description: 0.5 linear ft. (23 items in 1 box). Call Number: Location: Columbia University.Rare Book and Manuscript Library. 535 West 114th St., New York, NY, 10027. Subjects: Ainsworth, William Harrison, 1805-1882.; Birrell, Augustine, 1850-1933.; Broughton, Rhoda, 1840-1920.; Campbell, Thomas, 1777-1844.; Cooper, James Fenimore, 1789-1851.; Elliott, Charles (Charles W.).; Hawthorne, Julian, 1846-1934.; Ingram, John Henry, 1842-1916.; Mitchell, S. Weir (Silas Weir), 1829-1914.; Moore, Clement Clarke, 1779-1863.; Sandburg, Carl, 1878-1967.; Swinburne, Algernon Charles, 1837-1909.; Thomas, Dylan, 1914-1953.; Trollope, Anthony, 1815-1882.; Williams, Talcott, 1849-1928.; Literature.; Authors.; Essays.; Fiction.; Poems.; Novelists.; Poets.
Biographical Note
Scope and Contents
Correspondence and manuscripts of various literary figures, occasionally brought for this library by the Friends of the Columbia University Libraries. Authors include William Harrison Ainsworth, Augustine Birrell, Thomas Campbell, James Fenimore Cooper, Clement Clarke Moore, Carl Sandburg, A. C. Swinburne, Dylan Thomas, Anthony Trollope, and Talcott Williams.

51. Index
Misseldon, Edward (16081654) Free Trade Mitchell, S. Weir (1829-1914)The Autobiography of a Quack Mitford, Mary Russell (1787-1855
http://book.nankai.edu.cn/book/english/m.html
English Classics 3000 M ( Listed by Author )

52. Rare Books: List Of Illustrators
M678, Miro, Joan, 1893. M695, Mitchell, S. Weir (Silas Weir), 1829-1914.M738, Molne, Lluis Vidal, 1907. M753, Monnet, Charles, b. 1732.
http://www.dartmouth.edu/~speccoll/IllustratorsList.html
Totalling more than 100,000 volumes, Dartmouth's rare book collections constitute a resource of major importance to the institution and the scholarly world at large.
Search the
Theatre Clippings Collection (Thespis)

Search the
Theatre Program

Collection (Playbills)
Index of Illustrators Represented in Special Collections
A
B C D ... Z Abbey, Edwin Austin, 1852-1911 Dall'Acqua, Cristoforo, 1734-1787 Plaisted, Elenore, 1879 or 80-1938 Abshear, Jeff Addams, Chris Aldridge, Alan Alastair Alix, Yves, 1890- Alken, Henry Thomas, 1784-1851 Alken, Samuel, fl. 1780-1796 Amman, Jost, 1539-1591 Amsden, Harriet Anderson, Alexander, 1775-1870 Ando, Hiroshige, 1797-1858 Andre, R. (Richard), 1834-1907 Angelo, Valenti, 1897- Anthony, A. V. S. (Andrew Varick Stout), 1838-1906 Atkinson, Allen Austen, John Back to TOP! Bacon, Peggy, 1895-1987 Bakewell, Robert, 1768-1843 Baldjian, Ardaches Barbier, George, 1882-1932 Barklem, Jill Barlach, Ernst, 1870-1938 Barnard, Frederick, 1846-1896 Bartlett, W. H. (William Henry), 1809-1854 Bartolozzi, Francesco, 1727-1815

53. LANCELOT: TEXTS, IMAGES, BASIC INFORMATION
The Song of Arthur (Part 2 Lancelot) (from the S. Fowler Wright 18341896), AGood Knight in Prison (1858); Mitchell, W. Weir (1829-1914), How Lancelot
http://www.lib.rochester.edu/camelot/lanmenu.htm
Return to the Main Menu of The Camelot Project at the University of Rochester
LANCELOT
Lancelot is the greatest of Arthur's knights. Son of King Ban of Benwick, he is known as Lancelot of the Lake or Lancelot du Lac because he was raised by the Lady of the Lake. Among his many adventures are the rescue of the abducted Queen Guinevere from Meleagant, an unsuccessful quest for the Holy Grail and the rescue of the queen after she is condemned to be burned to death for adultery. Lancelot is loved by Elaine of Astolat, who dies because her love is unrequited. Elaine, the daugher of King Pelles, tricks Lancelot into sleeping with her and from that union Galahad is born. His love for Guinevere ultimately brings about the downfall of Arthur's realm.
TEXTS:
Medieval:

Modern:

54. THE CAMELOT PROJECT: MENU OF AUTHORS
The History of Britain The Third Book (1670). Mitchell, S. Weir (18291914) How Lancelot Came to the Nunnery in Search of the Queen (1887);
http://www.lib.rochester.edu/camelot/AUTHMENU.htm
Return to the Home Page of The Camelot Project at the University of Rochester
AUTHORS
A B C D ... P Q R S T U ... W X Y Z
AUTHORS:
Adams, Oscar Fay (1855-1919)
Adeler, Max (pseudonym of Charles Heber Clark) (1841-1915)
Alford, Henry (1810-1871) Anonymous

55. Letters And Documents Collection - M | Special Collections | Bryn Mawr College L
Poughkeepsie, thoughts on education of women. Adelman Fund Mitchell, S.Weir (Silas Weir), 18291914 2 ANsS, 1907 Mar. 30, to Dear Sir, ny
http://www.brynmawr.edu/library/speccoll/guides/letterboxm.shtml
Bryn Mawr College Library Special Collections
Guide to the Letters and Documents Collection
Part II: Box and Folder List, M
Special Collections Department, Bryn Mawr College Library
February 2000
Last Updated: May 16, 2003
A
B C D ... Z
Maas, Henry, 1929-
TLS 1971 Sept. 5, to John Carter Removed from The Letters of A. E. Housman Library Purchase
Mabie, Hamilton Wright, 1846-1916
TLS, 1899 Mar. 17, to Sylvie Scudder Removed from the scrapbook of Sylvie Scudder
McCarthy, Justin, 1830-1912
ALS, 1886 Dec. 13, to "My Dear Sir"
McCarthy, Mary, 1912-
TLS 1987 May 2 to Mabel L. Lang Agrees that "Mrs. Keator" in her book How I Grew was probably the student who Lang knew at Bryn Mawr College. Gift of Mabel L. Lang
McClellan, George Brinton, 1826-1885
ALS, 1870 Jan. 17, to William Redmond
McClure, Alexander K. (Alexander Kelly), 1828-1909
TLS, 1894 Dec. 19, to Samuel W. Pennypacker Recollects events in the Pennsylvania's Legislature in 1861, and quotes his speech of 1865, concerning the inability to have Democrats vote to support the defense of Fort Sumter, but despite this opposition, having Pennsylvania become the first state to appropriate funds for "defense of the Government ". "Slavery reckoned but too truly on the powers of the Democracy in this fearful conflict." as he wrote in his support of a constitutional amendment abolishing slavery.
Macfall, Haldane, 1860-1928

56. Smithsonian Catalogue Of Work
82400090. TitleS. Weir Mitchell, Dr (18291914), (painting). OwnerMutualAssurance Company, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 82410036.
http://www.jssgallery.org/Resources/Catalogue_of_Work/Smithsonian_Catalogue/481.
John Singer Sargent Catalogue of Work: compiled by the Smithsonian Institution Research Information System
Frontpage
Index of Catalogues Thumbnail Index Index
Editor's Note You can access the SIRIS site and then do a search for dimensions and more info.
Natasha Wallace

Title Owner Call Number Title :Joseph Joachim, (painting). Owner :Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto, Ontario Canada Title :Antonio Mancini, (painting). Owner :Museum of Modern Art, Rome, Italy Title :Garden Study of the Vickers Children, (painting). Owner :Flint Institute of Arts, Flint, Michigan Title :Unknown Lady, (painting). Owner :Howe, Donald, Ware, Massachusetts Title :Rev. Endicott Peabody, (painting). Owner :Groton School, Groton, Massachusetts Title :Lizzie Bliss Dewey, (painting). Owner :Restricted. Title :Katharine Chase Pratt (1876-1942), (painting). Owner :Restricted Owner, Amherst, Massachusetts Title :Hydrangeas, (painting). Owner Title :Ruins, (painting). Owner :Anderson, Lee B., New York, New York Title :Vicomtesse de Poilloue de Saint-Perier, La, (painting). Owner :Musee Du Louvre, Paris, France

57. Columns
S. Weir Mitchell (18291914) Silas Weir Mitchell was born in Philadelphiain 1829. He was of Scottish descent, and a third-generation doctor.
http://www.amtamassage.org/journal/winter03_journal/alookback.htm
A Look Back S. Weir Mitchell And The Rest Cure This method drew the attention of the medical community in America and Europe to the potential of massage in the treatment of mental and emotional disorders. By Patricia J. Benjamin
I n the late 19th century, S. Weir Mitchell's "Rest Cure" was all the rage among upper-middle-class American women. It was a treatment for a nervous condition called neurasthenia, and consisted of seclusion, rest, overfeeding, electric stimulation and massage. Patients were not allowed to read, write or otherwise strain themselves for the duration of the treatment, which went on for several weeks. Massage was used to diminish some of the "evil and pernicious results" of the prolonged rest and seclusion that were considered essential to the treatment (Dowse, 1906). The Rest Cure, later called the Weir Mitchell Treatment, was considered a miraculous cure by some, and was successful in enough cases to gain national and international acclaim. It was also defamed by feminist writer Charlotte Perkins Gilman as leading to insanity. If nothing else it created quite a stir in its time. Figure 1.

58. Autoren/M - Wikipedia
Translate this page H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U Mistral (1889-1957) MargaretMitchell (1900-1949) Silas Weir Mitchell (1829-1914) Anna Mitgutsch
http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autoren/M
Autoren/M
aus Wikipedia, der freien Enzyklopädie
Übersicht A B C ... L M N O P Q ... bearbeiten
M
Paul Maar Joachim Maas Nicolò Machiavelli John Henry Mackay ... L M N O P Q ... deutschsprachige literarische Gruppen
Views Persönliche Werkzeuge Navigation Suche Werkzeuge Andere Sprachen

59. Biografie Charlotte Perkins Gilman
Neurologen S(ilas) Weir Mitchell (1829-1914) in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
http://www.kfunigraz.ac.at/sozwww/agsoe/lexikon/klassiker/gilman/19bio.htm

Biografie Charlotte Perkins Gilman
i.e. Charlotte Anna Perkins, verheiratete Stetson, verheiratete Gilman
*Hartford, Connecticut 3. Juli 1860
Vater:
Mutter: Mary Ann Fitch Westcott Perkins, geborene Fitch (?-1893), Gelegenheitsarbeiterin; 1869 geschieden
Geschwister: 2 Totgeburten; Thomas Adie Perkins (1859-)
1. Ehe: Charles Walter Stetson (1858-1911), Kunstmaler; 1894 geschieden (seit 1888 getrennt)
Kinder: Katherine Beecher Stetson, verheiratete Chamberlin (1885-1979), Kunstmalerin und Bildhauerin
2. Ehe:
Religion: protestantisch
Biografie
Geboren als zweites von zwei Kindern in Hartford, Connecticut.
Catherine Esther Beecher
(1800-1878), der Frauenrechtlerin Isabella Beecher Hooker (1822-1907) und der Schriftstellerin Harriet Beecher Stowe (1811-1896). Lebte unter anderem in verschiedenen Orten in Connecticut, Massachusetts und New York. Zwischen 1867 und 1874 nur vier Jahre Schulbesuch. Lebte mit ihrer Mutter und ihrem Bruder in Providence, Rhode Island.

60. Stories, Listed By Author
Mitchell, S(ilas) Weir (18291914) Was He Dead?, (nv) Atlantic MonthlyJan, 1870 Future Perfect, ed. H. Bruce Franklin, Oxford Book Co., 1966.
http://contento.best.vwh.net/s157.html
Index to Science Fiction Anthologies and Collections: Combined Edition
Stories, Listed by Author
Previous Table-of-Contents
MILMORE, SUSAN

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