( ?9 ) 
continued ill without any Remiflion till after the ele- 
venth ;many not till the eighth or ninth Day 5 and the Fe- 
ver in ihele was mote moderate with great Intcrmiflions; 
and feme have karce had any illnefs at all. During 
all this time the Places of Incihon continued to be very 
fore and fweli very much, fo as to appear very large 
and deep, and to difeharge a great deal of Matter. 
On the tenth Day the Small Pox moO: commonly 
did appear, foroetimes cn the ninth, and fometimes 
not till the ’ eleventh ; but I never found that any 
difference of Age, Conftitution, or any other Caule 
ever made them vary above one Day from the tenth. 
The Number was very different, in fome not above 
Ten or Twenty, moll frequently from Fifty to two 
Hundred, and fome have had more than could well 
be numbered ; but never of the confluent Sort. Their 
Appearance was the fame with thofe of the diftinc^ 
Kind, they commonly came out very round and 
florid, and many times rofe as large as any 1 have 
obferved of the natural Sort, going off with a yel- 
low Cruft or Scab as ufual ; tho’ it fometimes hap- 
pens, efpccially when the Sores difeharge a very great 
quantity of Matter, that they are both few in Num* 
ber, and do not rife to any Bulk; but having made 
their Appearance for Four or Five Days they waft 
infenfibly away. 
After the Small Pox come out, the Feverilh Symp* 
toms gradually abate, and when the Eruption is com- 
pleted, they ufually ceafe, without any fecond Fever, 
or any farther trouble in any refpeeft. 
While the Puftules were rifing, and for fome time 
after they were gone, the Sores continued to fwel) and 
to run very much, the longer they did fo the bet- 
ter ; but they never fail’d to heal up of themfeives 
after a certain Time. 
F 1 
