Selected quad for the lemma: spirit_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
spirit_n common_a deal_n great_a 143 3 2.1542 3 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A33550 An account of the nature, causes, symptoms, and cure of the distempers that are incident to seafaring people with observations on the diet of the sea-men in His Majesty's navy : illustrated with some remarkable instances of the sickness of the fleet during the last summer, historically related / by W.C. Cockburn, W. (William), 1669-1739. 1696 (1696) Wing C4815; ESTC R24229 70,196 195

There are 11 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

misfortune of the Patient or if neither of these happen given in the time of a Looseness to be immediately carried off by Stool and never reaching the blood to communicate its efficacy and vertue As to the way how its effect is produced I know not nor ever shall without a revelation from that Being who knows the determined motion size of the parts and the different cohesion of matter that produce the modified bodies we see and yet I think there may be sufficient certainty to assist us pretty exactly in doing such things as the support of our infirm nature may require For considering the nature of intermitting Fevers of which we are as certain as of any thing in Physicks and that we have a Medicin that alters the condition of the blood and makes it more fluxil and this fluxility being acquir'd in a certain way therefore the China China is endu'd with a like power to that which makes the blood fluxil This knowledge we have of the Barks efficacy without the knowledge of its constituent parts is so sure that we can deduce very certain and almost infallible Corollaries from it and this one for instance If this Powder be able to break divide and make fluxil our viscid blood then in a state where the blood is faulty thro its fluxility richness and extraordinary motion this Powder is never to be given so that in a containing Fever where the blood is such the Jesuits Powder must be very noxious and 't is very obvious to every mans Observation that the more the blood is in these circumstances the consequence is always the more fatal I cannot omit what that candid Relater of Medicinal cases Dr. Sydenham says in the 36 p. of of his Letters as they are printed in the Edition of his book in 1685 at London At in Peste atque Epidemicis continuis quae eandem ordine excipient debellandis non alios effectus ex ejus usu expectare licet quam eos quos hodie in Pleuritide Peripneumonia Anguina ac id genus Febribus inflammatoriis videmus quibus non tantum non prodest sed plane obest But in curing the Plague and continual Epidemicks which will orderly follow these no other effects are to be expected from it than these we now find it produces in a Pleurisie Peripneumonia Quinsey and such other inflammatory Fevers in which case 't is not only useless but evidently hurtful But whatever may be thought of my pretended certainty 't is at least as well grounded as a great many maxims in the Hydrostaticks c. which no Ship-Carpenter or Man of sense doubts of but on the contrary finds all his calculations and inferences orderly made to answer his expectation in his practice The Chymists at present are engag'd in an extraordinary bustle and smoak with their fire and menstrua to resolve by their Instruments which they do not understand the constituent parts of this Specifick and at last tell us that 't is a Rosin and that its power in curing Agues is lodg'd in its Rosin which is as much in plain English as the first question and we understand just as much when they tell us of its vertue being in its Rosin as if they had told us that it is in the Bark We know indeed that its tincture made with any spirituous liquor is the strongest and that because 't is the property of Rosins to be best dissolv'd in Spirits 't is plain that this Bark contains a great deal of Rosin which is all that can be concluded from this experiment But to proceed let us suppose that all the vertue is extracted in this Rosin which cannot be pretended because of a like experiment of its yielding its sanative power in common water yet we shall still be as much puzzled about the way of this Rosins working as the working of the Bark in Powder before it was a Rosin And if they think they have answered the question by telling us that it produces these effects as it is a Rosin then all other Rosins will do the same and therefore they may trust to the Rosin of Jalap or any other they 're oblig'd to by their principles and we shall have an opportunity to observe the conclusion The other way that has been taken to account for the vertue of the Bark is by imagining it to be astringent a power quite destructive of the requisits we have clearly laid down for curing an Ague and no less repugnant to common observation as I shall demonstrate What has been the foundation of this assertion I could no where find out so clearly as in a Discourse written by one of the Members of the Royal Society I think in the year 1678 where consuting the power of the Bark in curing Agues he says that if the Patient be troubled with a looseness while he is taking the Jesuits Powder it can have no success therefore says he the Bark has its power in a contrary way and is astringent then he subsumes for his own purpose that because it is astringent it must be very hurtful in a disease that must be cur'd by evacuation To pass by at this time our Author 's neglecting to prove that this disease must be cur'd ●y evacuation which I very much doubt for the reasons intimated before I have said enough already to evince the weakness of his Observation 'T is strange that one should expect that any kind of Medicins which produce not their effect in a minute but require some hours at least to affect the blood should exert their vertue when they never come thither and this being the case of the Jesuits Powder in a Looseness we may easily conclude that the Quinquina will not cure an Ague in that case whether it be astringent or not By the bye since I have had occasion to examine this argument against the Barks power of curing Agues I cannot forbear taking notice of another very good argument this Author brings for the poisonous qualities of the Bark and that is an experiment from its hindering the fermentation of Yest and Wort that because if a due quantity of the Jesuits Powder be cast into Wort before the Yest is added the Wort never ferments and therefore this Powder is poisonous I confess I know not how to answer an argument which I do not comprehend but if every thing that hinders the fermentation of Yest and Wort be poisonous what must become of us poor Mortals in the poisonous times either of a frosty or very hot season for the Brewers find their Ale and Beer ferment but very ill in such seasons and besides Sugar Spirit of Harts horn c. poured into Wort in a due quantity hinder its fermentation yet they were never reckon'd among the number of Poisons But on the contrary if I thought the Hypothesis of Acid and Alkali tolerable I should like the Bark the better for the experiment this Author has helpt me to for in that way the blood
c. While the blood is so viscid and the contraction of the muscles so weak so few animal spirits separated and all the secretions almost stopt the musculous Coat of the Stomach will lose a great deal of its force and the liquor of the Stomach will be separated in a less quantity the contraction of the Ventricle is not only weaker but our victuals that are lodged there are not dissolv'd attrited and turned to Chyle but putrifie and remain undigested and therefore the Stomach being constantly full there can be no sence of hunger as our experience tells us The same Unactivity and want of contraction we find in the muscles of the stomach are felt for the same reasons in the muscles of the intestines so that their vermicular contraction being much abated whatever is contained in their cavity will not be sufficiently comprest that it may be protruded thro the whole process of the guts besides their incapacity in respect of the excrements that are contained in them for these excrements being in a very small quantity both because of the small supply that is sent from the stomach and yet smaller from the blood by the known passages they want of that weight that is necessary to overcome the constriction of the muscles of the Anus and little or no secretion being made into the guts from the blood there 's somewhat wanting of that due fluxility for their easier propulsion thro the intestines besides what excrements so fluxil may be suppos'd to do by way of Stimulus so that upon all these accounts especially by the help of our Bisket as has been said there will be a vast disposition to costiveness Lastly if at any time the blood is so viscid that it is even interrupted or has a great deal slower motion in the brain than is usual and keeps the coats of the arteries bent outward then both because of the small secretion of spirits there and the arteries compressing the origin of the nerves there cannot be a sufficient quantity of spirits derived thro these nerves and consequently is produced that Stupor or Sleepiness we sometimes observe Now since the warm parts of the blood are confin'd and penn'd up in its viscid parts and if they be so prest that the force of this pression together with the natural force that the small hot and fiery particles have to extricate themselves be greater than the power that confines them these hot particles will at last break out and running along by the sensible parts excite the sense of heat and seeing this viscid blood stagnates and stops in the small arteries they are so stuff'd up with that constant supply that is made in the parts where it thus stagnates that this compression will be very considerable by the blood that is constantly added and by the power of contraction in the arteries that hinder this stuffing and bending outwards of their sides so that this compression being continually augmented at length its power will become greater than the power of cohesion betwixt the viscid and small parts of the blood and so the heat will be extricated and give its sense to the nerves and after that some part of it is set at liberty and moves to and fro with all freedom it must mightily facilitate the setting at liberty of the other small parts from the viscid parts of the blood by wedging themselves into them and breaking their continuity and making the viscid parts themselves more fluxil Now since the hot and warm parts of the blood are delivered from their confining viscid parts because the power of compression is greater than the power of cohesion which proceeds from that viscidity and since the power of compression is proportionable to the velocity of the blood and its velocity is greatest in these arteries that are next the heart the power then of compression in those arteries that are next the heart will be greater than in these that are more remote i. e. the heat will be felt in the parts that are more remote from the heart or the extremities a great while after 't is felt in the parts that are nearer the heart and they have been warm and the coldness in the remote limbs after the rest of the body has been warm may last even till the power of compression in their arteries be augmented by the continual afflux of blood and is able to subdue the force of the viscid and intangling parts and since these two powers are uncertain and undetermined there can be no time assigned wherein this coldness may last in the remote limbs after the rest of the body has been hot only we may assert that the coldness will last the longer in the extremities the more viscid the blood is and the more firmly and closely it envelopes and confines the heat Thus a great deal of heat being set at liberty it is derived with the other parts that can easily be dissolv'd and are more fluxile into the veins and therefore this heat being more free rarifies and warms the blood it meets with in the veins and excites a great sence and feeling of heat over all the body The heat then proceeding thus the blood is more free moveable warm and rarified and consequently the arteries are fuller and distend their sides further and so seem to rise up out of the flesh and to come nearer the skin and the vessels being fuller the pulse will also feel greater and because the blood is now more than naturally warm more perfectly dissolv'd and carried in a greater quantity to the Brain there is also a more plentiful secretion of animal spirits which coming into the heart in a greater quantity and degree of determination make its contraction the stronger and consequently propel the blood thro the vessels with more force and distend more strongly the sides of the arteries and produce that sort of Pulse we call strong so that tho the Pulse in the cold fit was not to be felt either because the blood was not propell'd thro these parts where we observe the Pulse or propell'd with lesser velocity than was necessary to affect our Touch yet the velocity being recovered the blood circulates thro these parts again affects our Touch and makes the Pulse great and strong as has been said If we consider in the next place the extraordinary warmth of which our Patients complain we shall not need to have recourse to any unnatural contraction of the muscles to account for their Restlessness and continual tossing about the Bed but if we remember either what incites our selves to it or what our Patients tell us induces them we may very fairly account for that symptom and this is nothing but a constant desire to remove into those places we had not lain in before for a relief to our scorching heat and so as we warm in one place we cast about and tumble into another which is truly that Restlessness we may observe
and all this happens while this lentor stops in the Arteries and this stoppage being in the Return 't is evident that Death will also happen in the Return I have been longer upon this consideration than any of the rest because the difficulties of Fevers and Agues are the greatest tho now I presume they are clearly demonstrated from the interruption of perspiration that great and most considerable inconvenience of their Lodging and now I shall proceed and reflect upon the other propositions in that order they come to hand and therefore the next thing comes to be considered is their life in respect of their temperance and debauches As to the first of these 't is certain as there is nothing more valuable than a temperate life so that is never more valuable than at Sea and if we look a little back and remember their salt Victuals Cheese and Bisket there will be no great Rhetoric requir'd to defend their innocent Saturday night's Cabals in drinking the Wives for without the temperate use of spiritous liquors their victualling with all their fatigue will be little enough to afford necessary Chyle gross enough to make their thick blood that cannot be so easily sent round their bodies without the help of a Bowl of Punch or a Can of Flip So that in short they are so far from being disswaded from such moderate drinking that 't is to be enjoyn'd for health's sake and I doubt not but this way of drinking will not only prevent in a great measure the sicknesses we have named but even keep them from falling into the Dropsie Jaundice and Melancholia Hypochondriaca Yet to speak truth for the honest Sailors they seldom fail in this point so long as they can have an occasion to exchange the base Metal for the noble Spirit of Wine but are oftner very ill husbands exchanging all at once and destroying the whole purchase at a down-sitting so that being got drunk and not being able to crawl into their Hammocks they spend the night fast asleep upon the cold Deck and contract those sicknesses that attend an interruption of Perspiration Only their blood being full of the Spirits of this liquor they do not lye so long under the Coldness that begins all Fevers as in Fevers otherwise gotten for the small parts of the liquor soone● break and divide the viscid parts o● blood than when it is without them and because of the comminution o● this lentor the small parts of th● blood are set at liberty and the hea● felt over all the body therefore whe● the perspiration is interrupted an● the blood full of these Spirits the attrition and comminution will be sooner perform'd i. e. the Coldness wil● be sooner at an end and so the Feverish heat begin a great deal th● sooner which according to the constitution and age of the patient th● time of the year and way of Cure will make the disease of greater di●ficulty Thus having ended the discover of these Diseases that are peculia● to people that use our narrow Seas which is the first part of my promise I proceed to give an account of thos● that may be got nearer or under th● line which it will be sufficient to hint at in short and leave that to be finished by others whose peculiar province it may be and 't is enough at this time to have given such necessary views that may help our curing in the Channel tho in my opinion the reasoning will hold somewhere else but to speak no more of this I say that since the Diet and Victualling here and in other places is much after the same way whatever proceeds from that may reasonably be suppos'd to hold since that is only to be thought a cause which when it is suppos'd the effect necessarily follows so that the only difference will be in the Air which we know is more se●ene and warm in those places and therefore because of its gravity which is always greatest in a serene Air the blood and all that 's carried along in it are more minutely broken and divided in the lungs as I have demonstrated in another place at great ●ength and therefore is more apt to separate its small and fine parts and so to have a greater motion and all the consequences that follow upon that besides the Air too being very warm the parts of the blood are extreamly rarify'd take up an infinite space and distend the sides of their channels to a great wideness compress the neighbouring parts induce weakness and ev'n break thro the smallest and thinnest of their channels overflow their banks and produce all the inconveniencies that might be made out according to the above-mention'd principles if it was proper in this place But as for those sicknesses that are not peculiar to the Sea but are also common to the Land I shall consider them as interloping diseases in the second part of this Treatise where I am to lay down the Indications for and Method of Cure but before I leave this part I shall give a short account why in this explication I have not us'd the accustomed story of Poyson the Chymical Principles and of Acid and Alkali and then proceed to the observations themselves which make up the second Part. And first as to that poyson which some assert to be in the spirits fit to produce these Fevers 't is altogether unexplain'd by its Patrons and is very unintelligible as yet neither is it allowable for us to run straight to the animal spirits for the solution of every Phenomenon and to neglect the blood it self of which they are made and which must be always supposed in demonstrating their nature and truly there can be nothing found in the most malignant Fevers that does really distinguish them from any other continued Fever for the whole difference that can be alledged is ad majus minus and I doubt not but that they may be naturally accounted for by a greater or lesser quantity of this lentor it s greater or lesser cohesion and its different solution 'T is better then to give laws to that boundless and unaccountable poyson so much spoken of by some Authors tho seldom more than by the name without so much as its counterpoyson for a Cure which would been very necessary considering how great differences there are betwixt poysons themselves But what seems the strangest and most surprizing to me is that if in a Family of ten or a dozen people there is one whom we should determine to have the best blood to be of the most athletick and robust habit of body before the invasion of this Malignant Fever yet this one shall catch it the soonest and run the greatest Risque in his Life while the more sickly aged c. shall never feel it or if he does recover without any great care or pains But in short those Fevers that are commonly reckon'd malignant are not really different from the containing Fevers and that they
his own Gauger wherein not only the Artist is shown a more ready and exact Method of Gauging than any hitherto extant But the most Ignorant who can but read English and tell twenty in Figures is taught to find the Content of any sort of Cask or Vessel either full or in part full and to know if they be right siz'd Also What a Pipe Hogshead c. amounts to at the common rate and measure they buy or fell at With several useful Tables to know the Content of any Vessel by Likewise a Table shewing the Price of any Commodity from one pound to an hundred weight and the contrary To which is added the true Art of Brewing Beer Ale Mum of Fining Preserving and Bottling Brew'd Liquors of making the most common Physical Ales now in use of making several fine English Wines The Vintners Art of Fining Curing Preserving all sorts of Wines of making Artificial Wines Distilling of Brandy and Spirits from Malt Malasses c. Together with the compleat Coffee-Man teaching how to make Coffee Tea Chocolate Content and the Richest Finest Cordials c. Of great use for common Brewers Victuallers Vintners Wine-Coopers Distillers Strong water-men Coffeemen and all other Traders Twelves price 1 s. P. Ovidij Nasonis Metamorphosem Libri XV. Interpretatione notis Illustravit Daniel Crispinus Helvetius ad usum Serenissimi Delphini Recensuit Joh. Freind Aedis Christi Alumn 80. Romae Antiquae Notitiae Or the Antiquities of Rome in 2 parts 1. A short History of the Rise Progress and Decay of the Commonwealth 2. A description of the City an account of the Religion Civil Government and Art of War with the remarkable Customs and Ceremonies publick and private with Copper Cuts of the principal Buildings c. To which are perfix'd two Essays Concerning the Roman Learning and the Roman Education By Basil Kennett of C. C. C. Oxon Dedicated to his Highness the Duke of Gloucester 80. FINIS Tractatum hunc cui Titulus An Account of the Nature Causes Symptoms and Cure of those Distempers that are incident to Sea-●aring People c. dignum judicamus qui imprimatur Samuel Collins Praeses Tho. Burwell Rich. Torlesse Gul. Dawes Tho. Gill Censores Datum in Comitiis Censoriis ex Aedibus Collegii Febr. 21. 1695. The usefulness of this Undertaking It s order Their Victuals The consequence of this victualling Is first th●● Scurvy With an extraordinary weakness And an unequal Pulse Their Gums inflam'd Rotten and stinking And Itching The Scurvy and Melanchol Hypochon are not the same Their Bread Their Burgoo Their Pease Their Lodging The Symptoms of our Fevers An Hypothesis The weight or heaviness Less Activity Sudden Weakness Coldness over the whole body A Coldness in all the extremities Except the Brain ●● Pain As when one is beat A weak Pulse A Pulse that 's rare And depressed A Want of Appetite And Costiveness Sometime● a Sleepiness They are very warm Their Pulse great and strong They are restless And very dry Their Tongue is rough And black The Respiration difficult Their Breath's like fire They are delirious and cannot sleep They end in Death Or the sickness cur'd by Sweating Hemor Looseness The Vindication of the Hypothesis Diarrhea's may be They feel a Coldness after Dinner Their Lips are pale They ●emble Their Pulse is weak They may be insens●ble the external senses being right Their Body like a Corpse A great Drought In place of Death comes warmth and heat And ends in sweating The Pulse stronger and more frequent They have beating in their head A great Drought The Pulse natural for some time It recurrs every day every third or fourth c. It ends sometimes in death and that in the Return Their Life as to what concerns their temper c. The diseases got nearer or c. Why I have neglected the common stories of Poyson c. Why Poyson Why the Chymical Principles Why Acid and Alkali Observ I. Hints for Curing Fevers The reason of unsuccessful practice What our thoughts are about the former intimations What of Bleeding Sweating and Purging Observ 2. Observ 3. Observ 4. Observ 5 ●●●erv 6. Observ 7. Observ 8. The General Cure observ 9. Obser 10● Places marked from this Author's Book p. 4. Obser 11. The Scurvy Obser 12. Obser 13. Obser 14. 4. Obser 15. Obser 16. Obser 17. Obser 18. Obser 19.
be more exact and the health of the Sailers will be more firm and upon the other side the less their work is the hardness of the food and its saltness will proportionably have their effects and the indigestion that follows upon the one and the fiery heat that attends the other will be the more sensible and considerable and so all this will fall more severely upon the Seamen of the Royal Navy than upon those in the Merchant Service because their labour and work is abundantly greater than that of the Men of War tho there is a sort of remedy against that in their other victualling as we shall see hereafter and in effect none find the smart of this so much as the Boatswains Favourites for the most of them especially of the press'd Land-men are very fit Theaters for this Tragedy which is acted indeed to the life and their case is just the same with that of the Ape 's Puppies in the Fable that which she hates comes to be a lusty strong Monkey while she overlays the other thro her fondness the Seamen whom the Boatswain turns out to their watch and who have the fatigue of the Ship are in perfect health while his Favourites are over-run with the Scurvy which appears first in red spots which afterwards become blue and then black upon the legs and other parts with an extraordinary weakness and besides attended with a redness itching and rottenness of the gums and a looseness of the teeth their pulse all this while being very unequal i. e. sometimes weak and sometimes very great and all these accompanied with a great many more severe symptoms singled out and describ'd by Riverius and our learned Doctor Willis which therefore I shall forbear to enumerate but especially since 't is none of my design to write a Treatise of the Scurvey but only to give such illustrations as may be useful for understanding our Sea Sicknesses and helping us in their Cure 'T is very evident from the heating properties of Salt and especially of its corrosive bittern that 't is that only which can produce such an extraordinary sense of heat as we find after a meal of such victuals and because that heat cannot be produc'd without a greater degree of velocity of the blood and a greater secretion of animal spirits which contract the heart and produce this velocity and they cannot be separated without a greater attrition of the blood therefore since this heat is felt it is this bittern of the S●lt that makes this attrition and produces this heat now in this production both the parts of the bittern that divide and break the particles of the blood and the parts of the blood thus broken and divided possess a greater space than when they were compact and before there were other bodies added So that in this greater possession of space rarefaction and artificial moles as we may say the thinner and more capillary vessels have not cohesion enough to resist this new bulk but the blood breaks over its banks and in as great a quantity as the force of the motion of the rarify'd blood the greatness of the emissary and the resistance of the place into which it breaks will allow so that if this be superficial if any great quantity is separated and the blood's motion so weak that there is not matter enough perspired which both by its quantity and force may keep it fluxile and carry off some of the smaller parts of the blood thus let out by its ow● common motion then the blood now fallen out will corrupt after the same manner we see it when out of the body having always respect to the quantity separated and the place where it is lodged i. e. the blood being thus separated is in a state of quiet and corrupts and in the different degrees and transitions in this corruption is blue black c. as we see in this and cases of the like nature only it is longer a corrupting because of its small quantity the fluxility of the perspiring steams and the temper of the place as we might particularly demonstrate if it would not prove too long And these mechaical intimations will take off the necessity of absorbing that is so much talkt of in this case Besides this way of the blood 's possessing greater space may still be augmented if we consider that their victuals we have just now spoke of must needs breed very thick blood which is not so easily broken in pieces but ra●ifying in bulk is more apt to stop and by its stoppage to make a greater pressure in its channels and to produce the abovemention'd effects And since the extraordinary space is possest by this viscid and rarify'd blood the blood vessels that are so fill'd compress those parts that are contiguous to them and have less power to resist than their sides have to go outward and therefore in this stuffing of the Arteries in the soft brain their sides thus bending outwards will especially press such vessels that are touch'd by 'em whether they are veins arteries or nerves if their resistance be less than the force that thrusts 'em out and so the liquors stagnating in all those must press the neighbouring vessels and hinder the transmission of their liquors in proportion to those powers by which they are prest Thus a smaller quantity will be carry'd along their cavity and by reason of this compression the quantity of animal spirits that glides into the cavity of the nerves with an extraordinary weakness is diminisht because their coats are deprest and their channels straitned so that since by their influx into the nerves and derivation into the muscles their contraction is perform'd and upon this the strength of the whole body depends then in this small distribution of the animal spirits which is less than what is natural the contraction of the muscles is not so powerful as naturally it ought to be and the weakness of the body extraordinary Moreover since the heart hath the same properties and is subject to the same laws with the other muscles and they being more weakly contracted because of a lesser quantity of animal spirits that are deriv'd into them so must the heart be more faintly contracted too and since by the consent of Physitians and the evidence of reason the motion of the blood depends upon the strength of the hearts contraction the contraction of the heart being weaker 't is plain that this confus'd mixture of viscid and rarify'd blood will have but a very weak motion which is continu'd in the blood till its return to the heart bating what it has communicated in its circulation to the arteries and blood to be propelled but since it is still losing part of its motion the further it goes from the heart the blood will be on all occasions apt to stagnate in the smaller and remoter vessels and so produce those red blue c. spots we have spoken of Besides since the Pulse
is only occasion'd by the greater quantity of blood propell'd into the narrower sections of the arteries and this impulsion depends upon the contraction of the heart as we have said therefore because in this heated and rarify'd blood there is sometimes a greater and sometimes a less quantity of animal spirits separated and since the contraction of the heart depends on their separation and influx that will be sometimes greater and sometimes weaker and so the protrusion of the blood being sometimes perform'd in a shorter time and sometimes in a longer and in a greater or smaller quantity consequently the Pulse will be quicker and slower greater and weaker as we find by experience Because the blood is thus viscid and rarify'd and apt to stagnate in the capillary vessels especially in the remotest parts and while 't is thus stopt by a greater power of obstruction than the following blood has power to drive it forwards the succeeding blood coming to the place and not being able to propel the sticking blood nor to recoil because of the Impetus of the blood that succeeds it it stagnates too and encreasing in quantity distends the sides of the vessels in which it stopt to their utmost extent If those vessels are superficial and visible to the eye the blood will shine thro in its ow● colour and because the Gums are such when they are thus stuff'd they appear swell'd and red And since the liquors that are thus slowly propell'd and subsist and are wholly obstructed in some parts the parts where this total obstruction happens are ulcerated and stink for the stagnating liquors are entirely corrupted and become too sharp and weighty for their channels and so break thro as inulcers But if before this total stoppage and obstruction the parts of the blood now greater than ordinary can be carried thro those parts by way of perspiration yet in their passage they effect the pores rub upon them and produce that sense of itching which sometimes provokes us to scratch those parts and by the bleeding that follows upon that we frequently prevent a more sudden obstruction Yet in all this misfortune the Teeth losing their security must needs become loose and fall out 'T is from this viscid and weaken'd state of the blood that we see such swellings of the legs in chronical diseases especially in the evening after it is somewhat weakned by the little exercise our bodies have in the day while it cannot climb up in its return to the ●eart the steep precipices of our legs out stops and begets that swelling we feel in the evening till by the adventitious warmth of the bed and the direct posture of our legs it goeth off again against morning After the same manner by considering the condition of our other liquors and their motion I could demonstrate their depravation and explain tho at too great a length for this place the other symptoms that appear But seeing they may be brought from these fountains which I have sufficiently dwelt upon I think I have said enough to explain the way how this sickness is produced with us and to show that 't is a necessary consequence of an idle life and of feeding on Salt Beef and Pork and therefore I shall proceed to the next proposition I laid down Only I must put you in mind that I am not for confounding this distemper with the Melancholia Hypochondriaca as Riverius and some other Authors do which makes us call every sickness a Scurvy or Scorbutical because there are some symptoms common to both For if this principle were allowed we could have no distinct notions of diseases but they would all be involv'd in one confus'd and inextricable Chaos Thus for example we frequently see vomiting in Fevers Scurvys the Iliac Passion the Stone in the Kidneys or Vreters a Fall and many more yet would it not be thought ridiculous to say that a Fever is an Iliac Passion the Stone a Fall c. tho they are both attended with vomiting And which is worse this would prove very fatal in the curing of diseases and therefore it were to be wisht that all diseases were exactly described brought under certain Classes and confin'd to their respective Families and Tribes I cannot upon this occasion omit what the most expert Physitian Dr. Sydenham says on that subject in the 307 page of his Practice of Physick printed at London in the year 1685 in the 5th Chapter of that Book of the Rheumatism Hic enim says he obiter sed libere tamen dicam quod licet nullus dubitemquin Scorbutus in his Plagis Borealibus revera inveniatur tamen eum morbum non tam frequentem quam vulgi fert opinio occurrere persuasum mihi habeo multos autem ex iis affectibus ne plurimos dicam quorum nomine Scorbutum incusamus vel morborum fientium nondum vero factorum quique nullum adhuc certum induerunt typum effe●tae esse vel etiam infelices reliquias morbi alicujus nondum penitus devicti a quibus sanguis caeterique humores contaminantur v. gr c. By the way I must observe that tho I doubt not but the Scurvy is really to be found in these Northern Countries yet I am perswaded it is not so very frequent as 't is commonly imagined but that many of those distempers if not the most we ascribe to the Scurvy are either the effects of approaching ills not yet form'd into diseases or the unhappy relicts of some unconquered sickness which still pollutes the blood and other humours v. gr c. 'T is true the learned Dr. Willis has spoke a little more distinctly when he calls the one a cold and the other a hot Scurvy but in this he has too much sacrific'd to the humour of the Ancients since the last only deserves that name and the other does not really differ from the Melanoholia Hypochondriaca Of all Men I have the least inclination to dispute about words but if things were better settled by proper definitions and names we should not fall into so many mistakes and there 's nothing more common than to see people catching hold of some words that are apt to mislead them in their practice for instance besides the Banter of Openers Malignant and the like who does not but at the name of Scurvy immediately fly to Scurvy-grass Water-●resses and Horse-radishes but to what advantage may be easily understood by our foregoing Theory and is fatally felt by such as are truly Scorbutical But I 'm afraid I have wander'd already too far from my subject And I shall proceed to the next thing to be consider'd in order which may be sufficiently and easily understood from what I have said of the preceeding two The next thing I shall consider is their bread of which every man is allow'd one pound a day Moderate eating of bread has in all ages been esteemed to contribute very much to the preservation of our
many fatal distempers which 't would be needless to insist upon in this place since the thing is generally agreed upon yet I cannot forbear observing that an untimely use of Sweating Medicines in some and thickning Lozenges in others is more frequently the productive cause of Fevers Phthisicks c. and of more fatal consequence than a Cold could have been if left to the strength of the blood and abstinence without employing any other Auxiliaries but more for the confirmation of this may be easily collected from what follows in this Discourse I say then since so far is already clear and because too the force of the perspiration is only kept up by a certain impetus and degree of the velocity of the blood and that is only interrupted by the falling or diminution of this 't would be an easy task to give a more genuine and conceivable account of catching cold than is generally assign'd to be done by I don't know what nitrosity or nitrous power in the Air which upon various occasions Authors make use of for making the blood fluxile and tenacious two very different effects tho 't is fit for neither as I have already prov'd in its proper place But I shall content my self at present with enumerating those symptoms that constitute the essence of a cold and then proceed to consider the effects of this by the different symptoms that naturally attend it Since then I find 't is agreed on by all Physicians that perspiration in a catch'd cold is not so free as in a natural state but is interrupted and a great deal of that substance that is usually sep●rated that way is detain d in the mass of blood That which is so detain'd will proportionably encrease its bulk and fill the vessels and so becomes the source of all those symptoms that are observed to attend a catch'd Cold by a necessary consequence I shall afterwards have occasion to demonstrate The Symptoms that usually appear in this case are these and in this order First a weight or heaviness a pain in the breast a less activity over all the body sudden weakness a coldness in all the extremities except the Brain Costiveness such a pain in the bones as when one is beat a weak sunk and depressed Pulse sometimes accompanied with a great inclination to sleep in a day or two the Pulse is great and strong they become very warm restless and thirsty the tongue is dry black and rough the breathing difficult the breath striking those that stand near the sick person like Fire they are delirious cannot sleep and their sickness is terminated in Death by Sweating Hemorrhagie Looseness c. Having thus enumerated these symptoms that appear constantly in our Fevers and in the same order in which I have rank'd them I shall now endeavour to evince the necessity of their attending an interruption of perspiration as I intimated before and hereafter I shall endeavour to demonstrate that that fulness which gives rise to all these appearances is more especially to be attributed to an interruption of perspiration than any other cause and so the Hypothesis tho own'd by every one will be more than one that is merely such First then an interruption of perspiration will encrease the Moles or bulk of the Fluids proportionably to what is left unexpell'd of the quantity which usually passeth thro the pores and because Sanctorius in his Statical Medicin has taught us that we perspire according to the different constitutions of our bodies about forty fifty or sixty ounces in 24 hours therefore if but a sixth part of this be detain'd as I could prove it to be it must needs produce a very great Plethora in a day or two in such that were in perfect health before besides the addition may be suppos'd to be made by our daily food and perhaps rarifying liquors The blood upon this consideration admitting of a vast augmentation distends the sides of its Channels is more unfit for motion and presseth the neighbouring parts and so may easily produce the sense we have and very often complain of an unnatural weight for in this weight or heaviness we have the same sensation as when loaded under a great burden and therefore in this the parts are the same way affected as when a weight presses our body but by this weight the Membranes Nerves and Muscles are so prest and the Bones so forc'd into their Joinings that they could not subsist if it were not for the violent Nisus of the Muscles neither could those Muscles be contracted but by a more abundant influx of the animal spirits overcoming this pressure nor could they be propell'd thro the compressed Nerves unless they were pusht on by a greater force and by this greater force is known that by which is meant to press and therefore 't is evident that the blood thus filling its vessels may easily produce that sense of Weight as was said The blood while in this fulness because of its bulk and the viscidity it contracts by this stagnating fulness both in its own nature and by reason of the diminution of its motion is not so capable to separate its subtile parts or animal spirits because it is not so well divided or broken into such small particles Now since the abundance and separation of the spirits in the brain are necessary for the motion of the muscles upon the contraction of which the strength and activity of the whole body depends 't is plain that in such a case where the motion of the blood is so languid and the secretion of the animal spirits so small there will be a laziness and a diminution of activity over all the body And because this artificial Plethora that lessens the activity is very sudden i. e. in two or three days this less activity will be sudden too or a sudden weakness will happen which was to be shown When the blood is thus stopt and become very viscid 't is evident that the body must proportionably want of its warmth since that is only an effect of the greater liberty the small parts of the blood that make the heat have to disperse themselves over the body and this liberty is procur'd by the parts of the blood in their motion justling and breaking each other into smaller parts But the blood being viscid or tough is not so easily in its nature broken and dissolved and therefore the warmth is still more violently lock'd up and confin'd Moreover while the blood is so viscid its motion is ev'n slower than naturally it should be and consequently the heat is lessen'd and the blood not so well divided because the breaking of it into smaller parts depends upon its motion So that according as the motion is diminished and the force of the viscidity greater the coldness is proportionably greater over the whole body and because the blood hath its motion from the heart and in its whole journey round the body
Moreover in this extraordinary heat there is a less secretion of spittle and that which is separated is immediately exhal'd by this unnatural heat and therefore the tongue and all that neighbourhood being very dry the sense of thirst is felt but because of this dryness and the particular contexture of the tongue which has its fibres running across in its composition These fibres rise stare are stiff and rough and appear to our touch as if we run our fingers over a grater so soon as it is depriv'd of its humidity and while the fibres and blood vessels stare thus they cannot be easily contracted and so the parts of the blood that are drier cannot move but stagnate under the surface of the tongue while its more fluid parts are press'd forward and the parts of the blood that are thus stopp'd being of a high red colour appear very easily to be black and a little inflam'd And if this heat increases naturally or by Art 't is evident that the blood will be mightily rarify'd and flowing thro the lungs in this great and rarify'd quantity 't will press them violently on all sides so that they will not be so easily expanded and therefore the Respiration will be also difficult and the small quantity of Air that is received into the unexpanded lungs being warmed with the hot blood which then circulates thro that part affects us so when expir'd as the Air of a Chamber that is agitated by the small parts of our fires that move among it and this affects us with heat so the breath of those sick strikes those that stand near like fire Seeing he blood is driven about in such a hu●●y the animal spirits separated i● so great abundance the blood so very fluxile and these spirits running thro a great many different Tracts in the Brain present to us so many different Ideas according to which we express our selves and they being different and of several sorts our thoughts are found very incoherent and unconnected which is to Rave or to be Delirious That watchfulness too we daily observe proceeds from these live representations and velocity of the blood and spirits And since in all the stages of this Illness there either may be too great a distension of the blood-vessels in the Brain and so no spirits deriv'd into the Nerves which will entirely destroy the contraction of the Heart and bring Death or the blood may be in such a condition that it can give no supply of such spirits and upon this account too there can be no contraction of the heart no motion of the blood which is the want of life it self and in both these respects 't is evident how Death may be the fatal consequence of this sickness for in the first the blood being either very viscid in the cold fit or extremely rarify'd in the hot by the patients own constitution the heat of the place where he liveth or warming Medicins is so interrupted in the Arteries of the Brain and being augmented by the succeeding blood it may distend the sides of the Arteries and produce the named effect or if the blood in the cold fit is so viscid and confines the spirits that they cannot be separated or there be a real want of spirits in the blood which turn to the same account there can be no secretion of spirits where there are none and therefore there will none be derived into the Nerves for the motion of the muscles and contraction of the heart By the by 't is no less evident that when the blood is thus infinitely comminuted and still broken down into parts lesser and lesser by an indiscreet management and want of drinking of something that may be a body to the spirits the blood is not only depriv'd of that Serum that should have preserv'd its fluxility and been that Body but of its spirits too and so must needs produce the fore-going effect and make this melancholy tragedy end at last in Death Lastly since the sick must continue in this condition so long as the state of the blood is in this way and seeing those parts which are thus broken in this motion may be carried off by the Glandules of the Skin breaking open of the pipes by the Intestins c. and by these means the blood may be rendered more compact and equal in its motion therefore 't is plain that this Sickness may be judged by Sweating Hemorrhages Looseness c. Thus having demonstrated the necessity of these Symptoms from the supposition of an Interruption of Perspiration I would proceed to considerations of the like nature if I were not first oblig'd to vindicate this Hypothesis from one that is merely such as I but lately promised If therefore any one will take one more or all of these Symptoms and let him have no respect to any hypothesis but read them backward according to the known and familiar rules of Nature he shall find them necessarily proceeding from a real or factitious Fulness which are the same as to their effects and since we come by this fulness in our ordinary way of living 't is plain that 't is not that that is its cause but there 's no way else we can acquire it except by retaining somewhat for some time we usually lose and since 't is not the first the last is either by the suppression of the secretions made by Stool by Urine in the Respiration or by the Skin or Perspiration now we see the foregoing symptoms rendezvous'd into a great number while neither the Evacuations by Stool Urine or Respiration the others I name not they being very inconsiderable seem to be much altered from what we see them in a natural state and therefore 't is Perspiration only that is able to produce these effects and this Fulness as I justly supposed Moreover Sanctorius has taught us by making out the proportions of secretions in the 5 6 21 59 60th Aphorisms of the first sect of his Statical Medicin that secretion by Perspiration is at least double of all the other secretions and therefore when that is interrupted it can produce that fulness in as short a time as all the secretions together could and since they or the most of them are good while the named symptoms have grown into a great number therefore this fulness has its rise from an Interrupted Perspiration and so the supposition was just and a great deal more than a mere Hypothesis as I was oblig'd to prove The Perspiration thus interrupted in hotter constitutious hot Countries or a warmer season these Fevers do not begin with so long a continued coldness but the heat succeeds a great deal sooner as may be collected from what I 'm to say hereafter when I give some intimations of the sickness of hotter Countries Yet the blood having sometimes that velocity we assign'd it to have in another place when it is most apt to make secretions by
the Stomach Intestines and Pancrea's which secretions being sent into the guts in a greater or less quantity and finding them less constricted and the humour thus separated not so viscid as to subsist it must needs get out the natural way and produce a Looseness and tho the guts were very firmly shut yet if there be such a quantity that the power of its Moles is greater than the force whereby they are constracted it will make way to it self by the intestines as before But supposing the guts thus shut up and the quantity so small that it cannot make its way by the intestines because of its moles yet if it 's very thin sharp and forced forward either by its own motion or the compression of the neighbouring parts or both so that it can dilate the guts there will be a Looseness as is evident But since in our way of living and in the Channel where the Air is seldom very sultrie 't is but rare for our blood to be in these circumstances here required and almost never but in scorbutical cases therefore we shall trouble you no further about this affair but mind you we are to account our Diarrhea's amongst our accidental sicknesses and to be treated as such in these observations that make the second part of this Since we have seen very plainly these two different ways of the bloods being affected in an interrupted Perspiration or a catcht Cold there 's a third that in a colder season with the blood a little weakned wherein not only the blood but the rest of the humours contract such a lentor and viscidity as we spoke of just now yet when 't is comminuted and has past the several stages as before returns again by a fresh supply of such matter that is able to produce the same or like effects and in the discovering of this I shall use the same method I did in the former i. e. I shall endeavour to give a plain and genuine History of the symptoms or appearances in that order they affect and I shall unfold them in a natural familiar and conceivable way that we may be the better able to make such inferences that may be useful in our Practice First then they feel a coldness after Dinner their lips are pale they tremble their Pulse is weak while they are thus affected they have an insensibleness and trouble of mind while all the external senses are right and sometimes the external senses are faulty when the mind is serene and thinks very clearly their whole body like a dead Corpse and have a great drought yet instead of death comes warmth and heat which lasts for some time and ends in sweating at this time the Pulse is strong and more frequent than is usual they have a beating in their head a great drought and after the sweating the Pulse becomes sometimes natural It recurrs every day every third or fourth day inclusive and acts over the same Tragedy it ends sometimes in death and that in the return We have seen very clearly in the foregoing part of this discourse that this viscidity of the blood that confines the hot and small parts and makes it so apt to stagnate in the extremities and afterwards in the other parts is the true and genuine cause of that coldness we observe but the blood thus dispos'd and not actually stagnating and producing this coldness is reduc'd to act by any thing that has greater parts than the parts of the blood so that they cannot be intimately mixed with the blood and become one homogeneous body and since the chyle is of such a substance as is here requisite as I have plainly shown in another place therefore this viscidity will have its power to make the blood stagnate after the chyle has entered the blood and not throughly comminuted by the lungs so that the parts of the chyle may glide along equally with the parts of the blood And since the chyle is separated from the other mass into the lacteal vessels in an hour and an half or two hours after dinner therefore in an hour and a half or two hours after dinner this coldness is felt Now in this viscid state of the blood it is more compact and distends not its channels sufficiently and they as 't were withdraw and disappear and because the vessels of the lips are more superficial and are only covered with a very thin skin so that the blood in a natural state may almost be seen running in these vessels and give that fine red we daily see yet when the vessels thus subside and withdraw the blood is thicker and more compact and nothing remains to be seen but the genuine colour of the membranes and fibres that compose these muscles and they being of a pale and Clay like colour the Lips will be pale as was said The blood then being so viscid weak and having the spirits so confin'd must needs separate very few animal spirits for the reasons often assign'd and so the Nerves will be but not perfectly empty now the motion of the spirits I have already prov'd to be alternate and the continual efflux to proceed only from the abundance of these spirits in the Nerves and therefore when at this time there are so few spirits separated this fulness of the Nerves ceases and so must the continual efflux too and their alternate influx must be more sensible i. e. because their motion is alternate the motion of their propelling power being alternate they flow alternately into the muscles these weights which they are to sustain and because of that alternate influx they are contracted alternately and this alternate contraction of the Antagonistial Muscles being that which Physicians call trembling 't is plain that there must be a trembling in this want of animal spirits tho Physicians have thought fit to express it quite another way Now supposing that this viscidity was so great that it could even fill up the vessels in the brain and therefore the viscid blood thus filling those vessels being not so fit to separate animal spirits and in this distention of the full vessels they do so compress the origin of the Nerves that those spirits are not derived into the Nerves and propell'd in that quantity into the heart that 's fit to make its contraction able to force out the blood into the Arteries that they may affect our touch as usually and their sides neither being distended so much as in a natural state nor with so great a force make that sort of Pulse which is called a weak Pulse In the midst of all this viscidity the spirits are both in a lesser quantity and more confin'd therefore in this real want of spirits the mind cannot execute its office they being necessary for the functions of the soul Thus the Patient is insensible while all the external senses may be in a good state tho the converse of this may be true that viz. any one or
all the external senses may be faulty when the mind is in a thinking condition supposing that this viscid stuff is huddled up by chance in a greater quantity about any Artery or plexus of Arteries and if these Arteries involve or go round the Nerve that serves for Hearing Seeing Tasting c. These Arteries then being stuff'd up and fill'd by the continual afflux of new blood their sides will be more distended and bent outwards so that the Nerve that touches with them shall be comprest till at length by this continual stuffing the Nerve is so totally comprest that it hinders the motion of the animal spirits or at least interrupts their motion tho the sides of the Nerve are not quite squeez d together and therefore it may very well happen that one may be thick of hearing or perfectly deaf may not see taste c. and yet recover of a sudden the coldness being over and this lentor protruded into the veins And if this stoppage of the blood in the brain be so great and its cohesion so firm ●hat it cannot be dissolv'd by a thousand justlings in the plexus of the Pia Mater so that almost no animal spirits flow thro the Nerves either because there can be no spirits made out of this viscid blood or that those few that are made cannot be deriv'd in the Nerves that are shut up by the force of this stagnating blood then those spirits equally distributed into the muscles keep them equally pois'd and in this equilibration and viscidity there will be a want of motion and sense with an intense coldness and these being the conditions of a dead body or Corpse 't is evident at this time our bodies will be like a Corpse This lentor being so great over all the body 't is so too in the Arteries that furnish matter for the Spittle that is separated in the Glands about the mouth and throat and no Spittle can be separated from the Arteries in these Glands so that in this lesser secretion there can be no afflux of that moisture to these parts and the want of that occasioning a driness and drought therefore this stoppage is attended with a drought Yet tho there is but a small quantity of animal spirits separated in the brain and they deriv'd into the comprest nerves and muscles very sparingly and disorderly so that the actions of the body seem at an end and the muscles in equilibrio the heart which has no antagonistical muscle shall have its contraction continued and if that motion thus continued can dissolve and attrite this blood not quite stagnating the body that seem'd dead and a Corpse shall become warm as before and have its life prolong'd So the blood being once more free and fluxil and the body hot in the way we demonstrated before the attrition and comminution that produce this heat depending very much upon the velocity of the blood so that the greater it is the greater is the solution of heat and the greater the solution of heat is the velocity is the greater too because there 's a greater quantity of animal spirits separated by this solution of heat and so successively til● the viscid blood thus subsisting is so comminuted and attrited and acquires that degree of velocity we determined it to have when fit for perspiring and in that the small parts of the blood will be propell'd thro the neighbouring pores in a great quantity and produce that appearance we call Sweat so that this warmth is continu'd and ends in Sweat as we shall see more clearly in the sequel Yet before this sweating while the blood is thus commiuuted there 's both a greater quantity of animal spirits and this quantity is faster convey'd to the heart and the heart is oftner contracted and that with greater force and therefore the Pulse will be stronger and more frequent than in a natural state And because of the great rarifaction and comminution of the blood and its rapid motion the sides of the Arteries are distended to a greater pitch and very strongly therefore the more superficial Arteries going outward with a great deal of force affect the parts that are touch'd by them and produce that feeling and noise that 's convey'd to us upon the beating of one body upon another While the blood is thus hurry'd about in this rapid and impetuous motion and no great secretions of any sort there is a great driness in our mouth because of the small quantity of Spittle that is separated and that little is so divided into insinite parts by the force and warmth of the circulating blood that these parts are left perfectly dry and they dispoil'd of their moisture produce that insatiable drought And since this lentor is at length entirely carried out of the Arteries they will be of their natural wideness after it is carried out and so the blood may be propell'd thro them without its being more attrited comminuted or dissolved or the heat of the blood will not encrease in its progress thro the vessels and since the blood thus dissolv'd perspires very easily this heat shall not only not encrease but be diminisht the Perspiration lessening its quantity Moreover the heat thus dissolv'd partly perspires as was said and is partly mixt with the rest of the blood and is not comminuted the slowness in which the blood moves thro the veins giving sufficient time for this mixture and the heat may easily insinuate it self into the grosser parts and they may somewhat confine this heat and restrain its force by opposing this Penetration Besides since there 's an abundance of time betwixt both Excursus the blood must frequently flow thro the Lungs and so be frequently dissolv'd and have its hot parts conveniently mixt with the other parts and for this reason will be more natural from which every thing that 's natural will come and therefore the body will be in perfect health at least for some time Tho then the paroxism is thus judg'd by the assigned perspiration yet if that viscidity that produc'd the first is not consum'd but returns in a certain time or if that is consum'd and purg'd off by some of the known ways of Excretion or so comminuted that it is chang'd into the nature of sincere blood yet the cause that produc'd the first viscidity produces its like that can last out the same time affect with the like symptoms and be reduc'd to sincere blood like it and so there are two ways of making these returns as we see Let us suppose then that there are two returns every day and at the same hour there may be assigned the same reason for the rest that recurr in the same difference of time and the first is produced by a lentor that lasts for one day and threafter is either purg'd out of the body or chang'd into sincere blood and the second by a piece of viscidity of the same quantity and
quality with that which occasioned the first then I say that either of these lentors or any other that can invade a● the same hour and takes up a whole day before it is consumed may successively and by degrees be stored up in the blood vessels so that it eithe● flows thither insensibly or constantly in the smallest particles or be bre● within the same till it can produce ● sense of cold and the other symptom that attend that And because before that this cold and its attendan● can seize us 't is necessary that thi● lentor subsist in the capillary Arteries which cannot be unless its quantity i● so great that it cannot be mixed with the blood so that it may flow freely thro the Arteries Therefore eithe● this great quantity of lentor is bred a● once in the blood vessels which i● possible or is at once derived into them from somewhere else which i● not unconceiveable but even this i● evident that this very quantity ma● flow into the vessels by degrees or b●bre● by degrees in the same and therefore 't is possible that in the space of one day either some lentor or something that may breed this lentor may get into the vessels yet in so small a quantity that only after one day there be such a quantity collected that is able to produce that coldness with its attendants And therefore in the end of the day this coldness will begin again and will make a new return by this lentor that was stored up in the space of a whole day which lentor if consumed in the space of the next day and in the mean while an equal quantity of another lentor be stored up in the blood 't will make a third return and so it may be said of the rest not made by the same lentor returning oftner tho slowly but made by a new one the former being quite consumed but this consumption may be sooner or later in the same day according to the different nature of that lentor the bodies that are mixt with it and their dissolution in the encrease and height of the disease It can be no objection that this lentor or viscidity of the blood is collected gradually and therefore may be exterminated or comminuted as soo● as it can be collected since it circulates thro the lungs and other part● some thousands of times in one day but this will seem not so difficult o● hard to be granted if we conside● some examples of as great difficulty and yet most certain for there 's non● that can be ignorant how Nurse● Milk and our Urine retain mor● than one day the ● colour an● smell of Asparagus Onions Ca●sia Rhubarb Turpentine c. ● certain argument that there are some what of these bodies carried into th● breasts and kidneys without ever losing of its nature tho it has bee● carried often and even some thousands of times thro the lungs so that i● may be highly probable that this visci● stuff may be very often carry'd roun● the body without any considerable alteration What is better known than that the poyson of a mad do● shews not itself before the thirtieth o● fortieth day and sometimes longer so that before its appearing in these forty days it has circulated some thousands of times thro the lungs without suffering any diminution of its ●trength and therefore if some such ●hing be suppos'd of this viscidity ●hat is mixt with the blood there will be no place left for our further doubting Now this lentor may be ●upplied by every thing that gives us ●ourishment passions c. which are ●oo remote to be of any great use to us in knowing them and therefore I ●hall confine my self to consider this ●entor either coming from the primae viae in our Chyle or otherwise or else being supplied by such viscera that are said to contain liquors and first if the Chyle or any other humor to be mixed with the blood should be generated according to nature in the unnatural state of the blood which is hard to be suppos'd yet this natural humour mixing with the blood would be chang'd into its nature and consequently become viscid that is a liquor fit to produce that lentor which if mixt with the blood confusedly and without order the returns too can have no order but if it be carried into the blood in an exact order the returns will be very exact and orderly for if the blood have still that unnatural power and the humour brought into it still retain its natura● power there will be always the sam● time required to change that natura● humour into that which is not natural and this time may be one two or three days but if any one or all o● them are of a different nature th● proportion of time will be chang'● and the Returns disorderly but ●● this natural humor is deriv'd at different times from the same or differen● parts and immediately or in th● same distance and interval of time acquires an unnatural power from th● unnatural blood there may be abundauce of Returns orderly and disor●ly as the Derivations are orderly o● confus'd and if those humors are o● different natures consisting of par●● of different sorts every one of the● requiring a different interval of time before they can degenerate into th● kind of lentor the variety of Return will be altogether uncertain and kee● no order Next let us suppose that i● the Viscera that are said to have considerable secretions made in them th● liquors being viscid are return'd b● their veins into the Cava and in th● order of the former viscid parts circulate with the blood thro the whole ●ody till they acquire such a thick●ess or quantity of viscidity that may make them fit to stagnate in the small ●apillary Arteries and to produce ●hat Coldness and other Symptoms ●s before 't is evident not to resume our former reasoning that their Returns will happen in certain intervals of time orderly and disorderly accord●ng as the supply is made from all ●hose Viscera or from any one of them and as that is mixt in a greater or less quantity orderly or confus'dly But if there is so great a quantity of this lentor mix'd with the blood that it cannot be propell'd from the small Arteries into the Veins or tho the quantity be less yet if its adhesion to the vessels be stronger than can be broken off so that it cannot be carried thro them then the blood cannot be propell'd and in a short time the body will be cold there will be no blood deriv'd into the Muscles it either comes not to or totally stagnates in the Brain so that there can be no animal spirits separated in the nerves and consequently there will be an irrecoverable deprivation of sense and motion or which is the same thing there can nothing happen but Death since that lentor is suppos'd to be so great that it cannot be protruded and carried thro the Arteries