A proper Lazaretto in England, by increasing our shipping in the Levant, would afford a sustenance to many of those invaluable subjects, whom a perhaps too rigid public œconomy has bereft of bread.
But still the inconvenience to our own people is not lessened, nor ever will, till we have a complete Lazaretto of our own.
But since our manufactories must be supplied with silk and cotton, our merchants are obliged to employ the Dutch, who land their goods in a Lazaretto in Holland, and after a short quarantine performed there, send them over to us.
When I visited thelazaretto Damien was already in his resting grave.
The Giver of life and death had removed two of our company: one was left behind to die in Egypt, with a mother to bewail his loss, another we buried in the dismal lazaretto cemetery.
The body was accompanied by the whole of his lordship's attendants, who conveyed it to the lazaretto on the following morning.
The Florida fired minute-guns from the time of our leaving the lazaretto until we got alongside, when the body was taken on board, and placed in a space prepared for that purpose.
Then, by the irony of fate, they departed in the Florida--the vessel that bore the dead body of their protector to the inhospitable lazaretto at Zante.
Blaise stands in his usual place, the road passes over a stone bridge which replaces the original drawbridge, and through the outer gates to the lazaretto and Turkish bazaar.
The land fort remained untouched; the sea fort, the dogana, and the lazaretto were partially damaged, but can be repaired in a short time.
Farther on is Meljina, with a lazaretto of the seventeenth century.
Quarantine Harbor has at its mouth Fort Tigne, while within is Fort Mangel and Lazaretto Island.
The lazaretto is the most perfect of any arrangement of the kind in Europe.
Sir Walter Scott, in describing his detention at the lazaretto in Malta, tells us of an accident which occurred, illustrating the rigid enforcement of quarantine rules.
We lengthen our breakfasts and dinners, go to sleep early and get up late, but a lazaretto is a dull place after all.
The health-magistrate arrived at an early hour, on the morning of our departure from the lazaretto of Villa Franca.
Our seven days expire to-morrow, and we are preparing to eat our last dinner in the lazaretto with great glee.
On the fourth day our range was extended, we were allowed to walk as far as the hills surrounding the lazarettounder the care of a guard.
My fate had been very unfortunate; twelve days I had patiently endured being shut up in the lazaretto at AEgina, in order to be able to see the classic country, and now I was so anxious to leave it that I had neither rest nor peace.
Learning the supposed death of his child, while in the lazarettoor pest-house near Marseilles, he was plunged in desperate grief.
When his disappearance from the lazaretto was discovered, it was believed and currently reported that the Count de Montreuil, frenzied by grief over the loss of his child, had thrown himself into the sea.
His appearance therefore at the lazaretto had not ceased to be a happy exception to the rule.
Previously to the two families becoming allied by marriage, the keepers of the powder-magazine and of the lazaretto had known each other in the navy, wherein one was a quarter-master and the other a sergeant of artillery.
Confined to the lazaretto of Treberon, he had brought thither a few favourite books, and his violin, on which he played for hours at a time, with no other end than the listening to its melodious vibrations.
Mathieu in the meantime had gone to receive the persons placed in quarantine, and to open the lazaretto for them.
The lazaretto being almost always deserted, he was left with ample leisure for frequent visits to the powder-magazine, and for becoming well known there and thoroughly appreciated.
It was obvious that the keeper of the lazaretto (for he it was) gave but casual attention to the sight, with which his long residence at Treberon had familiarized him.
This brought us to the second feature of our position; for a window whose shutter was padlocked up, was unfastened; a bell was rung, and at a casement grated like our own appeared the Restaurateur of the Lazaretto to receive his instructions.
Battipaglia, in his rage, called Marina a harlot, and said that she had arranged beforehand with Fastidio to violate the rules of the lazaretto in order to compel me to choose their troupe.
Thinking of poor Marina who would have to remain in the lazaretto before she could reappear on the stage at Otranto, I told Fastidio to get the contract ready, as I wanted to go away immediately.
You would not want to send a man to a cholera or yellow fever hospital for his health; and the great lazaretto of the next world, containing the diseased and plague-struck, will be a poor place for moral recovery.
She does not need them; for all charitable men will unite with the crackling lips of fever-struck hospital and plague-blotched lazaretto in greeting her as she passes: "Hail!
The officer of the Lazaretto came, and advised us to remain on board that day and the next.
The captain of the Lazaretto was there before five o'clock in the morning to give us pratique.
On getting into the Lazaretto we found that the guardian and officers had left for the night, and there were but two miserably dark rooms for the whole party.
We all quitted the Lazaretto on the 1st of October, grateful to the Almighty for permitting us to pass the ten days we spent there so pleasantly.
And I began to feel that, so far from experiencing fatigue, each mile I travelled supplied me with greater energy, and that my strength rose each hour as I left the Lazarettofarther behind me.
And thus did I bear about with me the horrid badge of that dreary time when I dwelt within the Lazaretto of Bexar.
If I often felt fatigue stealing over me, a thought of theLazaretto and its fearful inmates nerved me to new efforts.
And her mention of the Lazaretto then leads her on to the final, still vivid and yet self-restrained, account of her father’s death.
To be observed by all Persons performing Quarantine in the Lazaretto of Malta.
Those travellers who prefer visiting France via Marseilles, will find the lazaretto there, comparatively speaking, a sort of purgatory.
A trattoria has been established at the lazaretto for the convenience of passengers who wish to avail themselves of it, from whence they can be supplied with dinners, wines, &c.
Washing costs about one shilling per dozen pieces, and sevenpence per diem for the diet of the blanchisseuse, who must come into the lazaretto to perform her functions.
The regulations to be observed in the lazarettoare given on the following page.
Passengers must pay a strict attention to all the instructions they may receive from the captain of the lazaretto and from the health guardians, and particularly in every point that regards their baggage, clothes, &c.
A daily report of all circumstances is to be made by the captain of the lazaretto to the superintendent of quarantine and marine police.
The expense of living in the Malta lazarettois about eleven shillings per diem, as thus:-- s.
Lazaretto Physician of the Port of Phila, which post I held until 1816, when indisposition compelled me to resign.
Our last day in the lazarettois not to be forgotten.
I was soon initiated into the routine of lazaretto ceremonies and restrictions.
I afterward passed a month with him in the lazaretto at Malta, and I trust he will not consider me presuming when I say that our acquaintance ripened into friendship.
The lazaretto is a wretched building, with a flagstaff and two houses projecting on the two sides.
From the lazaretto we proceeded in the afternoon towards the sea, which is beyond the beautiful palm plantations, and not more than half-an-hour's ride from El Harish.
Further, I asked guilelessly for leave to carry on my ship's firing drill in the Lazaretto Bay, and I took care to open fire so close to the Lazaretto itself that I heard all the glass in the windows fall out with a crash.
He then despatched monatti from the lazaretto to collect the dead.
He begged from Lucy a recital of all her woes, and availed himself of the account of the lazaretto to draw the stranger into the conversation.
If thelazaretto did not restore to the living all the living it still contained, at least from that day it received no more into its vast abyss.
Meanwhile the immense ditch which had been dug near the lazaretto was filled with dead bodies; a number still remained without sepulture, as hands were wanting for the work.
At one time the lazaretto was left without physicians, and it was only after much trouble and time, and great offers of money and honours, that others could be prevailed on to supply their place.
When Renzo saw her in the miserable cabin at the lazaretto, he could not have believed her to be of so facile and gay a disposition; but the lazaretto and the country, death and a wedding, are not at all the same things.
The number of deaths in the lazaretto soon amounted to a hundred daily.
Fear of the lazarettokept all on the alert; the sick were concealed, and false certificates were obtained from some subaltern officers of health, who were deputed to inspect the dead bodies.
In the lazaretto all was confusion, bad arrangement, and anarchy.
It was necessary to keep the lazaretto furnished with medicine, surgeons, food, and all the requisites of an infirmary; and it was also necessary to find and prepare new habitations for new cases.
Wait till I go to the lazaretto before you put up your hands like that!
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "lazaretto" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.