the sixth, towards night, talked much incoherently; had no sleep.
About the eleventh day was seized with wild delirium, and again became
collected; urine black, thin, and again deficient, and of an oily
appearance; copious, thin, and disordered evacuations from the bowels.
On the fourteenth, frequent convulsions;extremities cold; not in
anywise collected; suppression of urine. On the sixteenth loss of
speech. On the seventeenth, she died. Phrenitis.
Explanation of the characters. It is probable that death was caused,
on the seventeenth day, by the affection of the brain consequent
upon her accouchement.
CASE XV. In Thasus, the wife of Dealces, who was lodged upon the
Plain, from sorrow was seized with an acute fever, attended with
chills. From first to last she wrapped herself up in her bedclothes;
still silent, she fumbled, picked, bored, and gathered hairs (from
them); tears, and again laughter; no sleep; bowels irritable, but
passed nothing; when directed, drank a little; urine thin and
scanty; to the touch of the hand the fever was slight; coldness of the
extremities. On the ninth, talked much incoherently, and again
became composed and silent. On the fourteenth, breathing rare,
large, at intervals; and again hurried respiration. On the
sixteenth, looseness of the bowels from a stimulant clyster;
afterwards she passed her drink, nor could retain anything, for she
was completely insensible; skin parched and tense. On the twentieth,
much talk, and again became composed; loss of speech; respiration
hurried. On the twenty-first she died. Her respiration throughout
was rare and large; she was totally insensible; always wrapped up in
her bedclothes; either much talk, or completely silent throughout.
Phrenitis.
CASE XVI. In Meliboea, a young man having become heated by
drinking and much venery, was confined to bed; he was affected with
rigors and nausea; insomnolency and absence of thirst. On the first
day much faeces passed from the bowels along with a copious flux;