juices, &c. more fit for penetrating and paling their feveral 
e of their fu- 
by promoting perfpiration and 
evaporation. It is {till further a@tive in th 
It may likewife ‘be obferved, in addition to the above, that 
fenfible "4 
P 
ed. ANURE. 
It = at in thefe feveral ways that heat produces 
a beneficial infl i 
uence, in the procefs of vegetation and the 
prejudicial or even fatal to the conftitution of plants, when 
_ admitted'in too great a degree, and for too great a length of 
petty it may oceafion a too rapid digeftion and perfpiration 
— of this nature, plants are 
t * ii 4 * + a, Ae 
rither' by occafio 
ance in the confideration of the phylician, v 
viewed asa caufe of certain di 
rulati ich, in the latter cafe, 
he medium of con- 
troul over feveral functions of the fyftem. We thall firit - 
of w 
{peak of it as a caufe of 
a - 
we have already remarke in the article laft referred to, is of 
dire operation on the body; but by much the greater num, 
ber proceeding from its remote or indired operation, We 
re {hewn, at great length, the connection. of the moft 
frequent and fatal epidemics.of former times, with this indi- 
i the mia 
which it engendered in fwampy countries, in filthy, ill-paved, 
and crowded towns, in camps, &c.,e pecially wh bined 
f ob- 
| maladies, 
in thofe cities and countries of the temperate zone, in which 
cantoned in the marfhes, where a confiderable degree of pu- 
trefaction and moifture being joined, the ardent, remitting, 
and intermitting fevers and fluxes were only the remoter et- 
fects of that heat.” On Difeafes of the Army, part IL. 
c 
pechicysy fates of heat. The following obfervations, 
Sa : : ; 
thera Euro 
' tar er parts of Spain, where 
ey winters are warm, and oe fpontaneoutly 
heats in the north of Europe. 
« This is 
-gtovernt of 
order to remove any groundlefs fears, with regard to the daa- 
. 
to be apprehended to the {tates of his majeity from this 
nfetous dione It is an obfervation whi weep ag 4 
