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孟教授铁腰膏大大发挥血竭的神奇疗效,14味仙草的9层透腰奇效,药效高出80倍,血竭配防风能渗透皮下19毫米的病灶,祛除风寒湿毒,血竭配白芷巧借抹力9层化瘀,消散沉积在腰椎纤维环的多年脓肿,化解腰椎水肿黏连,孟教授铁腰膏中的血竭配红花、龙脑冰巧借抹力9层化突,软化腰椎增生骨刺,缓解腰椎神经压迫,彻底康复您的老腰突。
记者采访时了解到,电视栏目正在热销一款名为孟教授铁腰膏的产品,在国内掀起一轮抢购的热潮。由于孟教授铁腰膏治疗腰突效果明显,网络中一些不法之徒打着孟教授铁腰膏网站的旗号公然销售假药,欺诈消费者钱财,耽误病情的事件时有发生,在此,我们提醒广大消费者,孟教授铁腰膏电视购物直销,从未利用网络销售。
王老腰突选择14味道地药材,各个精益求精,血竭只选印尼麒麟竭,分泌化瘀奇方的大血竭,麝香只用西伯利亚熊麝香,还有苗山稀有龙脑冰,高原极品藏红花,长白山的野防风,鲜末药,大姜黄等稀有名贵药材。孟教授铁腰膏遵循古训,要求晨摘的比不过晌,要求晚酿的比不过宿,所有药材还要在长白山天池内浸泡八八六十四天,这样不仅能去掉药材的毒燥,而且还能提高孟教授铁腰膏的药效。
孟教授铁腰膏百年传承,不忘初心,依据清代名医王清任收录于名著【医林改错】的孟教授铁腰膏严尊孟家制药祖训:选药不离山,制药不离川,采药必求鲜,真正做到采用道地药材精制而成,对于各种骨关节病都有明显的效果,只要在疼痛部位轻轻摸一摸就能去病根,除病灶的神奇疗效。
孟教授铁腰膏大大发挥血竭的神奇疗效,14味仙草的9层透腰奇效,药效高出80倍,血竭配防风能渗透皮下19毫米的病灶,祛除风寒湿毒,血竭配白芷巧借抹力9层化瘀,消散沉积在腰椎纤维环的多年脓肿,化解腰椎水肿黏连,孟教授铁腰膏中的血竭配红花、龙脑冰巧借抹力9层化突,软化腰椎增生骨刺,缓解腰椎神经压迫,彻底康复您的老腰突。
记者采访时了解到,电视栏目正在热销一款名为孟教授铁腰膏的产品,在国内掀起一轮抢购的热潮。由于孟教授铁腰膏治疗腰突效果明显,网络中一些不法之徒打着孟教授铁腰膏网站的旗号公然销售假药,欺诈消费者钱财,耽误病情的事件时有发生,在此,我们提醒广大消费者,孟教授铁腰膏电视购物直销,从未利用网络销售。
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孟教授铁腰膏选择14味道地药材,各个精益求精,血竭只选印尼麒麟竭,分泌化瘀奇方的大血竭,麝香只用西伯利亚熊麝香,还有苗山稀有龙脑冰,高原极品藏红花,长白山的野防风,鲜末药,大姜黄等稀有名贵药材。孟教授铁腰膏遵循古训,要求晨摘的比不过晌,要求晚酿的比不过宿,所有药材还要在长白山天池内浸泡八八六十四天,这样不仅能去掉药材的毒燥,而且还能提高孟教授铁腰膏的药效。
Very prominent among the early regular buccaneers was a Frenchman who came to be called Peter the Great. This man seems to have been one of those adventurers who were not buccaneers in the earlier sense of the word (by which I mean they were not traders who touched at Spanish settlements to procure cattle and hides, and who were prepared to fight any Spaniards who might interfere with them), but they were men who came from Europe on purpose to prey upon Spanish possessions, whether on land or sea. Some of them made a rough sort of settlement on the island of Tortuga, and then it was that Peter the Great seems to have come into prominence. He gathered about him a body of adherents, but although he had a great reputation as an individual pirate, it seems to have been a good while before he achieved any success as a leader.
The fortunes of Peter and his men must have [Pg 24] been at a pretty low ebb when they found themselves cruising in a large, canoe-shaped boat not far from the island of Hispaniola. There were twenty-nine of them in all, and they were not able to procure a vessel suitable for their purpose. They had been a long time floating about in an aimless way, hoping to see some Spanish merchant-vessel which they might attack and possibly capture, but no such vessel appeared. Their provisions began to give out, the men were hungry, discontented, and grumbling. In fact, they were in almost as bad a condition as were the sailors of Columbus just before they discovered signs of land, after their long and weary voyage across the Atlantic.
When Peter and his men were almost on the point of despair, they perceived, far away upon the still waters, a large ship. With a great jump, hope sprang up in the breast of every man. They seized the oars and pulled in the direction of the distant craft. But when they were near enough, they saw that the vessel was not a merchantman, probably piled with gold and treasure, but a man-of-war belonging to the Spanish fleet. In fact, it was the vessel of the vice-admiral. This was an astonishing and disheartening state of things. It was very much as if a lion, hearing the approach of probable prey, had sprung from the thicket where he had been concealed, and had beheld before him, not a [Pg 25] fine, fat deer, but an immense and scrawny elephant.
But the twenty-nine buccaneers in the crew were very hungry. They had not come out upon those waters to attack men-of-war, but, more than that, they had not come out to perish by hunger and thirst. There could be no doubt that there was plenty to eat and to drink on that tall Spanish vessel, and if they could not get food and water they could not live more than a day or two longer.
Under the circumstances it was not long before Peter the Great made up his mind that if his men would stand by him, he would endeavor to capture that Spanish war-vessel; when he put the question to his crew they all swore that they would follow him and obey his orders as long as life was left in their bodies. To attack a vessel armed with cannon, and manned by a crew very much larger than their little party, seemed almost like throwing themselves upon certain death. But still, there was a chance that in some way they might get the better of the Spaniards; whereas, if they rowed away again into the solitudes of the ocean, they would give up all chance of saving themselves from death by starvation. Steadily, therefore, they pulled toward the Spanish vessel, and slowly—for there was but little wind—she approached them.
The people in the man-of-war did not fail to perceive [Pg 26] the little boat far out on the ocean, and some of them sent to the captain and reported the fact. The news, however, did not interest him, for he was engaged in playing cards in his cabin, and it was not until an hour afterward that he consented to come on deck and look out toward the boat which had been sighted, and which was now much nearer.
Taking a good look at the boat, and perceiving that it was nothing more than a canoe, the captain laughed at the advice of some of his officers, who thought it would be well to fire a few cannon-shot and sink the little craft. The captain thought it would be a useless proceeding. He did not know anything about the people in the boat, and he did not very much care, but he remarked that if they should come near enough, it might be a good thing to put out some tackle and haul them and their boat on deck, after which they might be examined and questioned whenever it should suit his convenience. Then he went down to his cards.
If Peter the Great and his men could have been sure that if they were to row alongside the Spanish vessel they would have been quietly hauled on deck and examined, they would have been delighted at the opportunity. With cutlasses, pistols, and knives, they were more than ready to demonstrate to the Spaniards what sort of fellows they were, and the [Pg 27] captain would have found hungry pirates uncomfortable persons to question.
But it seemed to Peter and his crew a very difficult thing indeed to get themselves on board the man-of-war, so they curbed their ardor and enthusiasm, and waited until nightfall before approaching nearer. As soon as it became dark enough they slowly and quietly paddled toward the great ship, which was now almost becalmed. There were no lights in the boat, and the people on the deck of the vessel saw and heard nothing on the dark waters around them.
When they were very near the man-of-war, the captain of the buccaneers—according to the ancient accounts of this adventure—ordered his chirurgeon, or surgeon, to bore a large hole in the bottom of their canoe. It is probable that this officer, with his saws and other surgical instruments, was expected to do carpenter work when there were no duties for him to perform in the regular line of his profession. At any rate, he went to work, and noiselessly bored the hole.
This remarkable proceeding showed the desperate character of these pirates. A great, almost impossible task was before them, and nothing but absolute recklessness could enable them to succeed. If his men should meet with strong opposition from the Spaniards in the proposed attack, and if any of them [Pg 28] should become frightened and try to retreat to the boat, Peter knew that all would be lost, and consequently he determined to make it impossible for any man to get away in that boat. If they could not conquer the Spanish vessel they must die on her decks.
When the half-sunken canoe touched the sides of the vessel, the pirates, seizing every rope or projection on which they could lay their hands, climbed up the sides of the man-of-war, as if they had been twenty-nine cats, and springing over the rail, dashed upon the sailors who were on deck. These men were utterly stupefied and astounded. They had seen nothing, they had heard nothing, and all of a sudden they were confronted with savage fellows with cutlasses and pistols.
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