( nr) 
like manner ^ but the middle was the wofft, and moft 
violent. For at firft the Bubo's were more common than 
the Furuncles , Carbuncles and Vibices : Afterwards again 
the Petechiss were more common than thefe 5 though 
during the whole time of the Contagion, they were ne- 
ver wholly feperated, fo as to appear fometimes one 
without the other. At laft the Petechia and Carbuncles 
went off 3 but the Bubo's continued laft of all. 
The Bubo's, which are to be reckon’d the firft of the 
External Signs, lye very deep in the Skin, and ar§at the 
beginning hard, unmoveable and round 3 afterwards 
they grow longer, and may be moved. Outwardly they 
do not look red, till they are drawn ahd brought to ma- 
turity. They are generally found in the Groins, Arm- 
pits, and about the Neck. Moft of them come with a 
very violent, cutting and pricking Pain, accompanied 
with heavy Symptoms, (which I call Internal Signs^ as 
Pain in the Head and Back, fhivering Colds interchang’d 
with Heat, Anxieties, Faintnefs, and frequently alfo 
bilious Vomitings. According as there is more or lefs 
Malignity, the Symptoms are proporiionably more or lefs 
violent : Sometimes they are very mild, and the Bubo 
proceeds without any great Pain. 
Furuncles differ from the common Bubo's in this, That 
they appear moftly in the flelhy Parts, to the Number 
of five, feven, or nine on one Body. They are fome- 
times red, and fwell to a greater Height than the Bubo's : 
Their Pain is very violent, and therefore difturbs the 
Patient’s Reft. The other Symptoms are much the fame 
as in Bubo's ^ and tho* they are not always alike, yet they 
are never without a Fever, and are attended with Pain 
in the Back and Belly. 
Carbuncles and Anthraces are much more pernicious, and 
of various kinds : And I dare affirm, that if they had 
been rightly taken Notice of, one might have obferved^ 
araongft them many ftrange Figures and Species* I fhal! 
only 
