PHYSICAL AND LITERARY. 417 



termittents, and were cured by the bark." 

 A like obfervation I find in an account: 

 of a fimilar conilitution jn 1742. The 

 author thus exprefTes himfelf: ** Some 

 iiad a mixrure of the late malignant fpoc- 

 ted tever with it. Such, befide the (ig«s 

 of catarrh had a wretched, low. weak, 

 fmall, ricking pulfe ; a pale or ghaftly 

 look; and leis heat and third:." Whe- 

 ther th^fe fymp'oms are conftant, and 

 charadlenftic of fuch complications, ex- 

 perience muft determine. 



bOMETlMts there was a tranflition of 

 the difeaie. The degree of peripneumo- 

 ny, which fo often happened, tliews how 

 readily it was tranflated to the lungs, 

 where the fimple inflammation caufed by 

 it was, when timely attended to, eafily re- 

 moved. But, when it falls upon the 

 glandular fyftem of the lungs, fhe mat- 

 ter becomes more fixed, and tubercles 

 are formed. Only in two inftances, in- 

 deed, did I obierve it terminating fatally 

 in a confumption. 



From great irregularities after feifure, 



a boy had the fever protradied to the 



Vol. in, Ggg four- 



