more in summer, still more in autumn, but by far the most in winter;
then hemorrhages ceased.
Sect. III
1. With regard to diseases, the circumstances from which we form a
judgment of them are,- by attending to the general nature of all,
and the peculiar nature of each individual,- to the disease, the
patient, and the applications,- to the person who applies them, as
that makes a difference for better or for worse,- to the whole
constitution of the season, and particularly to the state of the
heavens, and the nature of each country;- to the patient's habits,
regimen, and pursuits;- to his conversation, manners, taciturnity,
thoughts, sleep, or absence of sleep, and sometimes his dreams, what
and when they occur;- to his picking and scratching;- to his tears;-
to the alvine discharges, urine, sputa, and vomitings; and to the
changes of diseases from the one into the other;- to the deposits,
whether of a deadly or critical character;- to the sweat, coldness,
rigor, cough, sneezing, hiccup, respiration, eructation, flatulence,
whether passed silently or with a noise;- to hemorrhages and
hemorrhoids;- from these, and their consequences, we must form our
judgment.
2. Fevers are,- the continual, some of which hold during the day and
have a remission at night, and others hold a remission during the day;
semi-tertians, tertians, quartans, quintans, septans, nonans. The most
acute, strongest, most dangerous, and fatal diseases, occur in the
continual fever. The least dangerous of all, and the mildest and
most protracted, is the quartan, for it is not only such from
itself, but it also carries off other great diseases. In what is
called the semi-tertian, other acute diseases are apt to occur, and it
is the most fatal of all others, and moreover phthisical persons,
and those laboring under other protracted diseases, are apt to be
attacked by it. The nocturnal fever is not very fatal, but protracted;