Book, Section
1 1, 2| and southerly winds. These things all continued so during
2 1, 2| mixture of fair weather. These things were all so, but the setting
3 1, 2| tempestuous and clouded; these things were protracted, and did
4 1, 2| without a crisis, and these things happened alike to those
5 1, 2| those before puberty. These things occurred to those affected
6 1, 2| future—must mediate these things, and have two special objects
7 1, 2| The art consists in three things—the disease, the patient,
8 1, 2| equinox.~8. In this state of things, during winter, paraplegia
9 1, 2| under this constitution of things, were affected in this manner,
10 2, 6| cases in which any of these things happened about the head
11 2, 6| without fevers. But these things were more formidable in
12 2, 6| In like manner, the same things happened to whatever part
13 2, 6| external cause; but the same things occurred in fevers, before
14 2, 6| according to the reason of things, that the coming on of summer
15 2, 6| makes a proper use of these things, would appear to me not
16 2, 6| who is skilled in these things, it is easy to know to whom,
17 2, 6| right thigh; none of the things which were administered
18 2, 6| occasioned by all these things; for the fever was exacerbated,
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