falling into a state of insomnolency. There were many cases of failure
of crisis, and many of unfavorable crisis; many of dropsy and of
phthisis. Such were the diseases then epidemic. There were patients
affected with every one of the species which have been mentioned,
and many died. The symptoms in each of these cases were as follows:
4. In many cases erysipelas, from some obvious cause, such as an
accident, and sometimes from even a very small wound, broke out all
over the body, especially, in persons about sixty years of age,
about the head, if such an accident was neglected in the slightest
degree; and this happened in some who were under treatment; great
inflammation took place, and the erysipelas quickly spread all over.
in the most of them abscessed ended in suppurations, and there were
great fallings off (sloughing) of the flesh, tendons, and bones; and
the defluxion which seated in the part was not like pus, but a sort of
putrefaction, and the running was large and of various characters.
Those cases in which any of these things happened about the head
were accompanied with falling off of the hairs of the head and chin,
the bones were laid bare and separated, and there were excessive
runnings; and these symptoms happened in fevers and without fevers.
But these things were more formidable in appearance than dangerous;
for when the concoction in these cases turned to a these cases
turned to a suppuration, most of them recovered; but when the
inflammation and erysipelas disappeared, and when no abscess was
formed, a great number of these died. In like manner, the same
things happened to whatever part of the body the disease wandered, for
in many cases both forearm and arm dropped off; and in those cases
in which it fell upon the sides, the parts there, either before or
behind, got into a bad state; and in some cases the whole femur and
bones of the leg and whole foot were laid bare. But of all such cases,
the most formidable were those which took place about the pubes and
genital organs. Such was the nature of these cases when attended
with sores, and proceeding from an external cause; but the same things