Rather, the attendant physicians make the choice, for all is by rule here and no one moistens lip or finger without due prescription.
"A Midsummer Drive Through The Pyrenees"
Edwin Asa Dix
Now, day by day the patient loses a little strength, the friction sound disappears as the exudation moistens the pleural surfaces; percussion now shows a horizontal line of dullness, which day by day rises higher in the chest, the respiration grows more frequent and labored, the countenance is anxious and haggard, the eyes sink somewhat in their sockets, and in unfavorable cases death occurs during the second or third week, from either asphyxia or heart failure.
"Special Report on Diseases of Cattle"
U.S. Department of Agriculture J.R. Mohler
At any rate, those places which are dug over break more into springs and run more with water, in answer to this treatment of their surface, just as women's breasts respond to sucking, for it moistens and softens the vapour; whereas land which is not worked is incapable of producing water, not having the motion by which moisture is obtained.
"Plutarch's Lives, Volume I (of 4)"
Plutarch