Part,  Chapter

 1     I,       I|      had with him an attendant physician, a nursery governess, a
 2     I,       I|         The little gentleman's physician would also like to accompany
 3     I,       I|   himself as Dr. Mayer, family physician at the house of the so-called "
 4     I,     VII|       well-qualified assistant physician, and at two-and-thirty the
 5     I,    VIII|       I am going to study as a physician," I replied.~ ~"What? Do
 6     I,    VIII|      that I was an established physician when my father died, and
 7     I,    VIII|        are really in need of a physician, and want me in that capacity,
 8     I,    VIII|      believe in your wanting a physician at all. You do not look
 9     I,    VIII|        the priest, and not the physician. I can cure bodily diseases,
10     I,      IX|    have a skilled and renowned physician living with me and looking
11     I,      IX|        win his confidence as a physician, so that he may trust me
12    II,      II|        said I at last, "I am a physician, and I know of no bodily
13    II,      II|       fatum of my life.~ ~As a physician, I had given very much attention
14    II,     III|     professional treatment. No physician had ever entered her bed-room
15    II,     III|     that treatment from a male physician."~ ~"And do you know that
16    II,     III|  physical weaknesses to a male physician, yet you are by no means
17    II,     III|        is a man as well as the physician, and the sins you confess
18    II,      IV|      and, as she never calls a physician and never takes any remedies
19    II,      IV|        you in your capacity as physician to persuade Diodora to swallow
20    II,      VI|   Surely I, who was formerly a physician in Vienna, had no right
21    II,     VII|  grumbling, "but if you have a physician as your marriage witness,
22    II,     VII|      Aunt Diodora consulting a physician! having a man enter her
23    II,     VII|       the reverberation of the physician's step is soothing to the
24    II,     VII|     and shoulders; but for the physician, in the execution of his
25    II,     VII|     executioner, not a healing physician, to the sufferer. Be patient,
26    II,     VII|        Be patient, milady, the physician at the bed of his patient
27    II,      IX|   explosion of her mirth. As a physician I knew that it impaired
28    II,      XI| offered my services as an army physician to the French Government,
29    II,     XIV|    like a conscientious family physician, I questioned her about
30    II,    XVII|      that, in my capacity as a physician, conscientious scruples
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