from affections of the belly, for it was the belly which carried
them all off.
9. All persons had an aversion to food in all the afore-mentioned
complaints to a degree such as I never met with before, and persons in
these complaints most especially, and those recovering from them,
and in all other diseases of a mortal nature. Some were troubled
with thirst, and some not; and both in febrile complaints and in
others no one drank unseasonably or disobeyed injunctions.
10. The urine in many cases was not in proportion to the drink
administered, but greatly in excess; and the badness of the urine
voided was great, for it had not the proper thickness, nor concoction,
nor purged properly; for in many cases purgings by the bladder
indicate favorably, but in the greatest number they indicated a
melting of the body, disorder of the bowels, pains, and a want of
crisis.
11. Persons laboring under phrenitis and causus were particularly
disposed to coma; but also in all other great diseases which
occurred along with fever. In the main, most cases were attended
either by heavy coma, or by short and light sleep.
12. And many other forms of fevers were then epidemic, of tertian,
of quartan, of nocturnal, of continual, of chronic, of erratic, of
fevers attended with nausea, and of irregular fevers. All these were
attended with much disorder, for the bowels in most cases were
disordered, accompanied with rigors, sweats not of a critical
character, and with the state of the urine as described. In most
instances the disease was protracted, for neither did the deposits
which took place prove critical as in other cases; for in all
complaints and in all cases there was difficulty of crisis, want of
crisis, and protraction of the disease, but most especially in
these. A few had the crisis about the eightieth day, but in most
instances it (the disease?) left them irregularly. A few of them
died of dropsy without being confined to bed. And in many other