[4^7] 
10 He fays the fafeft time to Bleed in Feavors, is at 
the declination. 
1 1 He propofes fome problems for the finding out the 
juft quantity of Blood, which may be taken from any 
perfon without injury. 
In his difcourfe of Feavers, he gives the feveral di- 
vifions ot them , then defcribes them as , they ap- 
pear to the fenfes, giving an account of the Antece- 
dentiaj the Co7ijunBa, and the Succedentia of each of 
them y after which he enquires into the nature and 
caufeSj of Feavors / proving thar they arile from fome 
fault of the Blood ; either as to its Motion, Quantity, 
or Quality, but moft commonly from a vifcid Ma ter, 
iodgd in the Capillary Veflels, and fo caufing a Cold- 
ne(s, fhakings, ^^c. afterwards finking into the greater 
VeflTels, and there caufing heats, ^c, iometimes return- 
in to, and lodging again in, the Capillaries as in Agues. 
In his tradt de Morbis Capitis^ he fpeaks of the Apo- 
plexy ^ of which he gives the Antecedentia , the Con-^ 
]unHa^ and the Succedentia 5 he explains the Symptoms, 
enquires into the caufes, and at lalt gives the definition 
of the diftemper : In like manner he dilcourfes of the 
Carusy Coma Somnolentum^ Lethargus, Coma Vigil, Phre-^ 
nitisy Pdirapbrenitis, Mania, Melancholia^ Paralyjis^ Con- 
vulfioy ( where he explains the nature of Horrors and 
'Rigors ) and of the Epilepjy i He difcourfes of Pain in 
general, the feveral forts of it, and in particular of the 
Pain of the Head 5 of the Vertigo, Catoche, Incubus, and 
of Catarrhs, 1 
In his treatife de Morbis PeBoris, he writes of the In* 
termijjto Pulfus, jifphyxia, Leipothymia , Syncope, Virium 
Inbecillitas, Palpitatto Cordis^ Peripneumonia, PleuntiSy 
Ififlamatio htaphragmati^ , Empyema, TuJJis , Vomica Pul- 
monis^ ( where he mentions a Vomica Sympathica, pro- 
ceeding from a thick glutinous blood, letled in the 
Lungs 5 with which diftemper ( the Author fays/he him- 
fclf 
