434 Mr. nourse’s Cafe 
had at all increafed. The opening draughts were con- 
tinued, once in fix hours only, through the courfe of this 
day, which kept him fufficiently open ; and the anodyne 
was repeated at ten o’clock this night. 
30th, This morning things wore but a melancholy 
afpedt. His night had been refilefs, and his head con- 
fufed, and he talked fornetimes incoherently ; his pulfe 
was increafed, though exceedingly irregular, and the 
Ikin felt hot and dry ; he was thirfty, and complained of 
a great tightnefs, particularly about the region of the 
ftomach; his countenance was hollow, the eyes being 
funk, with a deadnefs in them not eafily to be exprelfed. 
The wound had difcharged very much, and it was ex- 
tremely offenlive. The edges of it were inverted, much 
■ 
fwollen, and feparated from each other conliderably 
more than the preceding day. He likewife complained 
of a lharp, burning pain, deep in the wound, but could 
not exprefs precifely where. As foon as the wound was 
dreffed, the anodyne clyfter was adminiltered ; and I de- 
ilred, he might have a fmall bafon of the infulion of 
mint, with a knob of fine fugar, got ready for him as 
foon as poffible, and that he would fip it down as warm 
as he could. At two o’clock this afternoon he was 
feized fuddenly with a moft violent vomiting, and brought 
up a large quantity of bile. This I the more wondered 
at, as he had never made the lead: complaint of licknefs, 
or naufea , from the time of his accident; for every thing 
he had taken had fat eafy and well upon his ftomach. 
What he had brought up was of fo dark a colour, that I 
imagined 
