392 collocations for cure

"When I was here before, I remember a physician, who acquired great celebrity by affecting to cure diseases by examining a lock of the patient's hair; and, not content with merely pronouncing on the nature of the disease, and suggesting the remedy, he would enter into an elaborate, and often plausible course of reasoning, in defence of his system.

I cured the dog's wounds.

There was an Old Man of the West, Who never could get any rest; So they set him to spin on his nose and his chin, Which cured that Old Man of the West.

It did not pretend to bring any positive good, but only to cure some evil; and I am not well enough acquainted with the country to know what degree of evil the heritable jurisdictions occasioned.'

Mrs. Ward shows us the people of England in the act of curing their own ills, of making good, by gigantic and self-sacrificing exertion in the present, the folly and selfishness and greed and soft slackness of the past.

" "There's no fear of that," said Willie; "it's our business, you know, to try to cure people.

Has he not lived with the Thunder Birds, did he not learn from them to cure the sick, and to destroy his enemies?

After all, I owe you much and know something about curing malarial fever.

Big wigs, gold-headed canes, Latin prescriptions, shops full of abominations, recipes a yard long, "curing" patients by drugging as sailors bring a wind by whistling, selling lies at a guinea apiece,a routine, in short, of giving unfortunate sick people a mess of things either too odious to swallow or too acrid to hold, or, if that were possible, both at once.

Unjustly of the Innocent you complain, 'Tis Bulkers give, and Tubs must cure your pain.

And now hath our Lord sent me for to cure thee, and Sara the wife of thy son I have delivered from the devil.

her prejudice against doctors would vanishhe would cure the headaches, and everything would be happy again.

Furneaux reported at this time that he had cured two very bad cases with the Rob. SHIPS PARTED.

Nearly every farrier and blacksmith has a way of his own for curing diseased feet, and shoeing.

But how to cure the malady of love?

It is making the viper cure its own bite.

As for the author of the author of A Message to Garcia, he holds, esoterically, to the idea that the hot pedaluvia and small doses of hop tea will cure most ailments that are curable, and so far all of his own ails have been curablea point he can prove.

FOR CURING HAMS (Mons.

It is not easy to overcome the prejudices and cure the habits of thousands of years, but progress is being made surely if slowly, and already there is a gratifying improvement in the condition of the people which is patent to any observer.

"However, the report won't cure your toothache," continued Dr. Mackenzie in a milder tone.

The king at length consented to try it, and in two days time Helena was to lose her life if the king did not recover; but if she succeeded, he promised to give her the choice of any man throughout all France (the princes only excepted) whom she could like for an husband; the choice of an husband being the fee Helena demanded, if she cured the king of his disease.

Laban cured that ham.

The doctor, by God's help, was able to cure the poor young wife completely.

In the court yard was the smoke house where she cured meat and fish.

Be it known, there can be no such thing invented by man as an universal remedy to prevent or cure all kinds of diseases; because that which would agree with one constitution would disagree with another differently organised; and a quack nostrum, such as we see daily advertised, may certainly agree at one stage of a disease, but might go far in killing the patient at another.

392 collocations for  cure