Part
1 1 | know beforehand without being informed of them by the
2 3 | especially deserving of being consigned to writing which
3 5 | or still earlier, some being seized with delirium, and
4 5 | before the pain is resolved, being seized with difficulty of
5 5 | cannot be brought up, but, being retained in the bronchi
6 5 | inevitable; for the sputa being retained prevent the breath
7 5 | prevent the breath from being drawn in, and force it speedily
8 5 | together to aggravate the sputa being retained renders the respiration
9 5 | frequent, while the respiration being frequent thickens the sputa,
10 5 | and prevents them from being evacuated. These symptoms
11 7 | vapor will be prevented from being carried up to the patient’
12 7 | much redder, or instead of being pure red, it turns livid,
13 9 | they suffer the least from being restricted to one meal in
14 12| other of the joints, if, being unaccustomed to labor, they
15 12| nor very trifling, and he being neither in a condition very
16 15| appearance than the unboiled, being clear, thin, white, and
17 16| be nothing to prevent its being taken. But to those who
18 16| and turned to phlegm, by being suspended in it; whereas
19 17| passes slowly downwards, as being of a coldish and indigestible
20 18| takes place when the veins, being dried up in the summer season,
21 18| protracted thirst, when the veins being dried up attract acrid and
22 22| are pained, and the veins being pinched and dried become
23 22| parts, whence the blood being vitiated, and the airs collected
24 22| airs collected there not being able to find their natural
25 23| when owing to the defluxion being of a cold and viscid nature
26 23| motionless and stationary, it being naturally cold and disposed
27 23| assuming a rounded shape, and being vent owing to the veins
28 23| it grows hard, instead of being flexible it becomes inflexible,
29 23| and acrid by the season), being of such a nature it corrodes
30 23| from the patient’s not being able to draw in the external
31 24| that the feet become cold, being devoid of flesh, and tendinous;
32 27| takes place, the one eyelid being tumefied overtops the other,
33 28| fomentations and cerates being applied for the other pains
34 31| when they have been long of being moved. If there be any remission
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