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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of An Account of the Diseases which were most
+frequent in the British military hospitals in Germany, by Donald Monro
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: An Account of the Diseases which were most frequent in the British military hospitals in Germany
+
+Author: Donald Monro
+
+Release Date: February 21, 2010 [EBook #31338]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BRITISH MILITARY HOSPITALS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Irma Spehar and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ AN
+ ACCOUNT
+ OF THE
+ DISEASES
+
+ Which were most frequent in the
+
+ BRITISH MILITARY HOSPITALS
+
+ in Germany,
+
+ From January 1761 to the Return of the Troops
+ to England in March 1763.
+
+ To which is added,
+
+ An ESSAY on the Means of Preserving the Health
+ of Soldiers, and conducting Military Hospitals.
+
+
+ By DONALD MONRO, M.D.
+
+ PHYSICIAN to his MAJESTY'S ARMY, and to
+ ST. GEORGE's Hospital.
+
+
+ LONDON:
+
+ Printed for A. MILLAR, D. WILSON, and T. DURHAM,
+ in the Strand; and T. PAYNE, at the Mews-Gate.
+
+ MDCCLXIV.
+
+
+
+
+TO THE KING.
+
+
+May it please Your MAJESTY,
+
+To permit me to lay at your Feet the following Sheets, published with
+a View to be useful to those, who hereafter may have the Care of the
+Health of your MAJESTY's Troops.
+
+YOUR MAJESTY's particular Inquiries into the State of Your Military
+Hospitals, in every Quarter of the World, in the Time of the late
+glorious and successful War; Your Concern for every Officer and
+Soldier who suffered either by Sickness or by Wounds in the Cause of
+their King and Country; and Your Solicitude to procure them every
+possible Assistance and Relief, cannot fail to excite the highest
+Admiration of Your MAJESTY's Goodness in the Breast of every Subject,
+and the warmest Gratitude in the Heart of every Soldier.
+
+The Knowledge of these Circumstances induced me to flatter myself,
+that a Work of this Kind would be agreeable to Your MAJESTY; and
+should this Attempt towards pointing out the Means of alleviating
+those Miseries, which necessarily attend a Military Life in the Time
+of Service, be acceptable, I shall obtain the utmost of my Wishes; it
+being the greatest Ambition of my Heart ever so to act as to merit
+Your MAJESTY's Approbation, and to subscribe myself,
+
+ May it please Your MAJESTY,
+
+ Your MAJESTY's most dutiful Subject,
+
+ And most faithful
+
+ and humble Servant,
+
+ DONALD MONRO.
+
+
+
+
+THE PREFACE.
+
+Among the numerous Authors of Observations in the Art of Physick,
+there are but few who have expressly written on the Treatment of those
+Distempers, most generally incident to an Army in the Field: The
+following Work, therefore, seems to have a fair Claim to be acceptable
+to the Publick, having been compiled during the Author's Attendance on
+the _British_ Military Hospitals in _Germany_ in the late War; and in
+order to render it of still further Use, he has occasionally added, by
+Way of Note, the Practice of some of the most eminent Physicians in
+similar Diseases, as well as a few Histories of Cases which passed
+under his own Care at _St. George_'s Hospital, _London_.
+
+To avoid the Repetition of the Composition of particular Medicines,
+and the Interruption that would be given by their being inserted in
+the Body of the Work, a small Pharmacopoeia is added, to which his
+Practice in the Army Hospitals was chiefly confined.
+
+In a commercial Country like our own, where Numbers of Hands are
+constantly wanted for the carrying on our Manufactories, we have a
+strong political Argument to add to that drawn from the Dictates of
+Humanity, why the Life of every individual should be most carefully
+attended to.
+
+The Preservation of the Lives of Soldiers is then with us a Matter of
+the highest Importance, in order to make as low as possible the Number
+of Recruits who must be perpetually drawn off for the Service of War.
+The Author has, therefore, in this Treatise, endeavoured to point out
+the Means most likely to keep Men healthy when employed in different
+Services; and also the Manner in which Military Hospitals ought to be
+fitted up, and conducted.--As he was never in any of the warm
+Climates, nor ever at Sea along with Troops aboard of Transports,
+whatever is mentioned relative to such Situations, is to be understood
+as taken from printed Accounts of these Subjects, or collected from
+the Conversation of physical Gentlemen, who were employed on such
+Services during the two last Wars.
+
+It is but Justice here to observe, that the Marquis of _Granby_,
+Commander in Chief of the _British_ Troops in _Germany_, as well as
+the Rest of the General Officers employed on the _German_ Service,
+always paid the greatest Attention to the Soldiers when sick in
+Hospitals; and were particularly ready in giving Orders for all such
+Things as were necessary or proper for them.
+
+ JERMYN-STREET,
+ April 15, 1764.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+ PAGE.
+
+Of the Malignant and Petechial Fever, 1
+
+Of the Dysentery, 57
+
+Of the Cholera Morbus, 97
+
+Of the Inflammatory Fever, 104
+
+Of the Angina, 109
+
+Of the Pleurisy, 111
+
+Of the Peripneumony, 115
+
+Of the Cough and Consumption, 124
+
+Of the Epidemical Catarrhal Fever of _April_ 1762, 137
+
+Of the Rheumatism, 141
+
+Of the Autumnal Remitting Fever, 154
+
+Of the Intermitting Fever, or Ague, 179
+
+Of the Jaundice, 206
+
+Of Tumours of the Breast, 216
+
+Of Paralytic Complaints, 219
+
+Of an Incontinency of Urine, 223
+
+Of a Stoppage of Urine, 227
+
+Of the Epilepsy, 237
+
+Of the Small-Pox, 243
+
+Of Erisypilatous Swellings, 245
+
+Of the Scurvy, 250
+
+Of the Itch, 265
+
+Table of Diet used in the _British_ Military Hospitals in _Germany_, 273
+
+
+PHARMACOPOEIA in usum Nosocomii militaris regii Britannici 1761, 275
+
+
+OF THE MEANS of Preserving the Health of Soldiers on Service, 309
+
+---- in Winter, and in cold Climates, 313
+
+---- aboard of Transport Ships, 323
+
+---- in warm Climates, 331
+
+Of healthful and unhealthful Grounds for the Encampment of Troops, 338
+
+Of keeping Camps clean, 344
+
+Of supplying an Army with Straw and with Provisions, and obliging
+ the Soldiers to buy a certain Quantity of Meat daily, 346
+
+Of Water, and the Means of correcting its bad Qualities in Camps, 348
+
+Of vinous and spirituous Liquors, 350
+
+Of keeping Men healthful in Quarters after an active Campaign, 354
+
+
+Of MILITARY HOSPITALS, 355
+
+Of the Manner in which the Antients disposed of their Sick
+ and Wounded, 356
+
+Of the Hospitals wanted for an Army acting on a Continent, 357
+
+Of the Houses most fit for Hospitals, 361
+
+Of fitting them up, and distributing the Sick in them, 363
+
+Of preventing infectious Disorders from being generated or
+ spreading among the Sick, 366
+
+Of the Diet of Military Hospitals, 372
+
+Of providing the Flying Hospital, 380
+
+Of Hospitals on Expedition Service, 380
+
+Of a Guard for Hospitals, 382
+
+Of the Nurses and Patients, and Orders for them, 383
+
+Of a convalescent Hospital, 389
+
+Of the Physicians, Surgeons, Apothecaries, and Mates, 393
+
+Of the Direction of Military Hospitals, 394
+
+Of the Purveyor or Commissary of the Hospital, 396
+
+Orders for the Mates, 397
+
+Of Precautions for guarding against infectious Disorders, 400
+
+Of a Military Inspector and Officers on convalescent Duty, 403
+
+
+ERRATA CORRIGENDA.
+
+Page 13, line 11, for _Pleuretic_, read _Pleuritic_.
+
+ 18, 10, of Notes, for _Acadamy_, read _Academy_.
+
+ 28, 22, for _Cinamon_, read _Cinnamon_.
+
+ 35, 5, of Notes, for _Calomile_, read _Calomel_.
+
+ 51, 12, dele _used in this Way_.
+
+ 166, 12, of Notes, for _which almost depend_, read _which almost
+ always depend_.
+
+ 207, 13, of Notes, for _Vena postarum_, read _Vena portarum_.
+
+ 259, 4, for _appeared_, read _appear_.
+
+ 261, 1, of Notes, for _became_, read _become_.
+
+ 280, 20, for _Chamamel_, read _Chamaemel_.
+
+ 290, 4, for _3tis 4tiis_, read _3tiis 4tis_.
+
+ 293, 13, for _Mithridatum_, read _Mithridatium_.
+
+ 336, 12 & 13, for _bathe themselves as often_, read _bathe early
+ in the Morning as often_.
+
+ 352, 7, for _in Bilanders_, read _and were to go in Bilanders_.
+
+ 353, 2, for _the least Appearance of the Malignant Fever_, read
+ _the Malignant Fever appearing_.
+
+
+
+
+OF THE MALIGNANT and PETECHIAL FEVER.
+
+
+A Malignant Fever, and Fluxes, began to appear among the Soldiers in
+Autumn, 1760, while the Allied Army remained encamped about
+_Warbourg_, from the Beginning of _August_ till the 13th of
+_December_, when they went into Cantonments. During that Time, there
+had been a continued Rain for some Months, and the Camp and
+neighbouring Fields, and Villages, were not only filled with the
+Excrements of such a numerous Army, but likewise with infinite Numbers
+of dead Horses, and other dead Animals, which had died in doing the
+necessary military Duties, and in bringing Forage, Provisions, and
+other Necessaries, to the Camp: besides this, the Field where there
+had been an Action on the 31st of _July_, and where many of the Dead
+were scarce covered with Earth, was in the Neighbourhood of the Camp.
+
+Not only the Soldiers, but the Inhabitants of the Country, who were
+reduced to the greatest Misery and Want, were infected with the
+Malignant Fever, and whole Villages almost laid waste by it.
+
+Such a Number of Soldiers was sent to _Paderborn_ as crowded the
+Hospitals there, and increased the Malignancy of the Distempers so
+that a great many died.
+
+When I arrived at _Paderborn_, in the Beginning of _January_ 1761, the
+Fever was upon the Decline in the General Hospitals, though it was
+still rife; but by sending off a Party of Convalescents to
+_Hervorden_, which thinned the Hospitals, it became less frequent, and
+but few died. The Guards marched upon the Expedition into _Hesse_, on
+the eleventh of _February_, which gave us full Room for billetting all
+our Convalescents, and thinning the Wards; by which Means the Fever
+almost entirely ceased in all the Hospitals we had before they went
+away; though there still remained about four hundred sick.
+
+When the Guards marched out of _Paderborn_, they left the Care of
+their Sick to us, who belonged to the General Hospital: the first
+Regiment of Guards left sixty sick; the second, twenty-nine; the
+third, twenty-eight; and the Granadiers, fifteen, in their regimental
+Infirmaries; who were mostly ill of the Malignant Fever: amongst whom
+the Infection was so very strong, that, although I procured the Sick
+new airy Houses for Hospitals, which were kept as clean and well-aired
+as possible, and procured clean Bedding, and clean Linen for every
+Man, and had the Sick laid thin, yet several died, and it was some
+Time before we got entirely free of the Infection. The first and third
+Regiments suffered most, owing to all the Sick of each Regiment being
+put into a particular Hospital by themselves, which kept up the
+Infection, so that they lost one-third of those left ill of this
+Fever; and many of the Nurses, and People who attended them, were
+seized with it. But not being able to procure particular Houses for
+the Sick of the _Coldstream_ or Second Regiment, and for the
+Granadiers, I distributed them through the different Hospitals we had
+then in Town, where the Contagion had ceased; and by their being thus
+scattered, while they were kept very clean, and at as great a Distance
+as possible, from the other Patients in the Wards where they were put,
+they lost few in Proportion to the first and third Regiments, and the
+Disorder did not spread.
+
+About the End of _May_, the Weather was very warm at _Osnabruck_; when
+this Fever began to make its Appearance in the Corner of a large Ward,
+which was next to one kept for salivating venereal Patients; and only
+divided from it by means of a few thin Deals. Perceiving a strong
+Smell in this Place, I suspected that the Fever arose from the foul
+Steams coming from the next Ward, and therefore ordered the salivating
+Ward to be thinned, and removed all the Sick from the Places near that
+Ward; and ordered those that had catched the Fever to be put into
+large airy Places; by which means the Infection spread no further,
+and only one, out of six or seven who had got the Fever, died.
+
+At the End of _June_, the Weather was very hot at _Bilifield_, and the
+Fever began to shew itself by the Hospital being overcrowded, by a
+greater Number of Sick being sent from the Army than we had proper
+Places to put them in; but it was put a Stop to in a few Days, by the
+Removal of the Hospital. Seventy Sick were left behind to the Care of
+a Mate, most of them ill of the Fever, of whom twelve died.
+
+In the Beginning of _August_, a few Men were taken ill of the same
+Fever at _Munster_, in one of the Hospitals which was too much
+crowded; but its further Progress was stopped by sending a Number of
+recovered Men to Billet.
+
+In _November_ and _December_ 1761, and _January_, _February_, and
+_March_ 1762, we had several Men sent from Quarters in the Town of
+_Bremen_ to the Hospital, sick of the Petechial Fever: they were
+quartered on the Ground-floors of low damp Houses, and fresh Meat and
+Vegetables so dear that they could not afford to buy them; but were
+obliged to live mostly on salt Provisions. I was told likewise that
+the spotted Fever was frequent among the lower Class of the
+Inhabitants. Some few were seized with this Fever in the Hospital
+itself; yet as the House was not crowded, and we had a Number of small
+airy Wards, the Infection did not spread; and we had but one or two
+who died of this Fever during the Winter, in the Hospital I attended.
+
+In Summer 1762, we had only ten or eleven ill of this Fever in the
+Hospital at _Natzungen_, and only one died.
+
+When the Troops marched from their Cantonments, in _December_ 1762,
+towards the Borders of _Holland_, the twentieth and twenty-fifth
+Regiments of Foot left behind them, at _Osnabruck_, thirty sick; five
+of whom had Symptoms of the Hospital Fever, though no Petechiae
+appeared; three recovered, and two died suddenly, being lodged in
+large open Wards (the only Places we had to put them in) with the
+Windows all broke, in very cold frosty Weather.
+
+In _January_ 1763, we had only three Patients in this Fever, with the
+Petechiae upon them, who all recovered. After this we had none taken
+ill of it at _Osnabruck_, while I remained there, which was till the
+twenty-fifth of _March_.
+
+This Malignant Fever begun variously in different Subjects; for the
+most part with Cold and Shivering, Pain in the Head, and other
+Symptoms, commonly described as peculiar to this Fever. In some, it
+begun with a sharp Pain of the Side, or other Parts, attended with
+acute inflammatory Symptoms; in others, it put on the Appearance of
+the common, low, or nervous Fever, for a Day or two. Blood drawn in
+the Beginning from some Patients did not seem much altered; from
+others it threw up a strong inflammatory Buff[1]; but where the Fever
+had continued some time, it was commonly of a loose Texture, and of a
+livid Colour; unless when the Sick were accidentally seized with
+pleuritic Stitches, or other Disorders of this kind.
+
+ [1] Dr. _Huxham_, in his _Treatise on the ulcerous sore
+ Throat_, p. 36, says, "I have very often met with this buffy
+ or sizy Appearance of the Blood in the Beginning of Malignant
+ Fevers; and yet, Blood drawn two or three Days afterwards,
+ from the same Persons, hath been quite loose, dissolved, and
+ sanious as it were." And in his _Essay on Fevers_, chap.
+ viii. p. 108. says, "The first Blood frequently appears
+ florid; what is drawn twenty four Hours after, is commonly
+ livid, black, and too thin; a third quantity, livid,
+ dissolved, and sanious. I have sometimes observed the Crasis
+ of the Blood so broke as to deposite a black Powder, like
+ Soot, at the Bottom, the superior Part being either a livid
+ Gore, or a dark green, and exceedingly soft Jelly."
+
+The Reason of this Difference of Symptoms in the Beginning, and of
+these different Appearances of the Blood, seemed to be, that such
+Patients as laboured under Pleurisies, low or other Fevers, being
+brought into Hospitals where the Malignant Fever was frequent, had
+their original Disorders changed into this Fever by breathing a foul
+infected Air, and by their Communication with those ill of the Fever,
+and of Fluxes; at other Times, a mere Acrimony of the Blood, set in
+Motion by a supervening Fever, determined the Disorder to be of this
+kind: and I always observed, that those Men were most apt to catch
+this Fever, whose Constitutions had been broke down by previous
+Disorders.
+
+The Fever appeared in different Forms. Some had only a Quickness of
+the Pulse, attended with a slight Head-ach and Sickness, Whiteness of
+the Tongue and Thirst, and a Lowness and Languor; which continued for
+a Week or more, and then went off, either insensibly, or with a
+profuse Sweat, succeeded by a plentiful Sediment in the Urine. Most of
+those who fell into profuse kindly-warm Sweats recovered, the Sweat
+carrying off the Fever. These profuse Sweats continued for twelve or
+twenty-four Hours, and sometimes for two, three, or four Days. In
+those who had the Fever in this slight Degree, the Petechiae seldom
+appeared; and it was only known to be this sort of Fever by the other
+Symptoms, and the Malignant Fever being frequent at that time in the
+Hospitals. Dr. _Pringle_[2] very justly observes, "That these low
+Degrees of this Fever are hardly to be characterised, and are only to
+be discovered, in full Hospitals, by observing Men languish; though
+the Nature of the Illness, for which they come in, should seem to
+admit of a speedier Cure."
+
+ [2] _Observations on the Diseases of the Army_, part III.
+ chap. vii. sect. 3. third Edition, 1761.
+
+For the most Part the Fever appeared with more violent Symptoms, the
+Tongue became more parched and dry, more or less of a Delirium came
+on, attended with the other Symptoms commonly described as peculiar to
+this Fever.
+
+When the Petechiae appeared, they came out on the fourth, fifth, sixth,
+or seventh Day; seldom after the eleventh or twelfth[3]. They appeared
+mostly on the Breast, Back, Arms, and Legs, and sometimes, tho'
+rarely, on the Face. They had exactly the Appearance described by Dr.
+_Pringle_, either like small distinct Spots of a reddish Colour, or
+the Skin looked sometimes as if it had been marbled, or variegated as
+in the Measles, but of a Colour more dull and lured. As they began to
+disappear, they inclined to a dun or brown Colour, and looked like so
+many dirty Spots. I never saw them rise above the Skin; nor did I once
+see any miliary Eruptions in this Fever; which agreed exactly with
+what Dr. _Pringle_ had observed in the former War, and in the
+Beginning of this; however, we ought not to conclude from thence that
+miliary Eruptions are never observed in Fevers of this kind; for Dr.
+_Huxham_[4], Dr. _Hasenohrl_[5] and Dr. _Lind_[6], besides many other
+good Practitioners, mention their having seen them.
+
+ [3] _Ramazini_, in his Treatise _De Constitutionibus
+ annorum_, 1692, 3, 4, _in Mutinensi civitate_, Sect. 19.
+ mentions the Petechial Fever which had been frequent the
+ three foregoing Years; in which the Petechiae appeared
+ commonly on the fourth or seventh Days, and almost all those
+ died in whom they appeared on the first Day. These Spots came
+ out first on the Neck, the Back and Breast; and it was
+ observed that none escaped unless these Spots extended
+ themselves as far as the Nails of the Toes, vanishing by
+ Degrees on the upper Parts. He tells us likewise, that this
+ Fever was attended with an Inflammation of the Throat, which,
+ about the Height of this Disorder, terminated in a white
+ ulcerous Crust. This sore Throat should seem to be the same
+ which we now call _the malignant ulcerous sore Throat_, which
+ I never once saw while I was with the Troops in _Germany_.
+
+ [4] Dr. _Huxham_, in his _Essay on Fevers_, ch. viii. p. 97,
+ tells us, that sometimes, about the eleventh or twelfth Day,
+ on the coming on of profuse Sweats, the Petechiae disappear,
+ and vast Quantities of small white miliary pustules break
+ out.
+
+ [5] Dr. _Hasenohrl_, in his Treatise _De Febre Petechiali_,
+ cap. i. p. 12. relates a very particular Case, where the
+ Petechiae appeared on the fourth, and the white miliary
+ Eruptions on the seventeenth Day of the Fever.
+
+ [6] Dr. _Lind_, in his _second Paper on Fevers_, p. 105.
+ mentions Spots which rise above the Surface of the Skin, and
+ are of the miliary kind, as common in contagious Fevers, as
+ he observed among the _French_ Prisoners in _Winchester_
+ Castle, in the Beginning of the Year 1761.
+
+Many had no Petechiae through the whole Course of the Disorder; but in
+all who were very bad, the Countenance looked bloated, and the Eyes
+reddish and somewhat inflamed; and though the Skin was commonly dry,
+yet the _Perspiration from the Lungs_ was strong. By these
+Circumstances one might frequently discover that the Patient laboured
+under the malignant Fever, without asking any Questions.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When Men were taken ill of a Fever, which we suspected to be of the
+malignant kind, our first Care was to lay them in airy Places,
+separate as much as possible from the other Men, and to keep them
+extremely clean; and they were put on low Diet, and allowed as much
+Barley or Rice-water as they chose to drink, which was commonly
+ordered to be acidulated with the _Spiritus Vitrioli_.
+
+For the first two or three Days we could seldom distinguish, with
+Certainty, that the Fever was of the malignant kind, though we had
+often Reason to suspect it. The Pain of the Head, the Fulness and
+Quickness of the Pulse, and other Symptoms, led us commonly to take
+away more or less Blood, which the Patient bore easily, and for the
+most part it gave Relief[7]. We seldom repeated this Evacuation where
+we suspected the Fever to be of the malignant kind, unless a pleuritic
+Stitch, an acute Pain of the Bowels, or some other accidental Symptom,
+required it; or the Patient was strong, and there were evident
+Symptoms of Fullness immediately before we intended giving the Bark,
+as shall be mentioned afterwards; for under other Circumstances, if
+the Blooding was repeated, and other Evacuations used freely, I always
+observed that it did Harm, and was apt to sink the Patient too much;
+as Dr. _Huxham_, Dr. _Pringle_, and other good Practitioners, have
+remarked.
+
+ [7] Dr. _Huxham_, tho' he says "yet Bleeding to some Degree
+ is most commonly requisite, nay necessary, in the strong and
+ plethoric;" yet he afterwards makes the following Remark:
+ "Besides, the Pulse in these Cases sinks oftentimes
+ surprisingly after a second Bleeding, nay sometimes after the
+ first, and that even where I thought I had sufficient
+ Indications from the Pulse to draw Blood a second time." See
+ his _Essay on Fevers_, chap. viii. And Dr. _Pringle_
+ observes, that in the second Stage of the Disorder large
+ Bleedings have generally proved fatal, by sinking the Pulse,
+ and bringing on a Delirium. _Observations on the Diseases of
+ the Army_, part III. chap. vii. sect. V.
+
+After Bleeding, if the Patient was costive, or complained of Gripes,
+he had a Dose of Rhubarb, or Salts, or a laxative Clyster; but where
+there was much Sickness of the Stomach, we gave a gentle Emetic[8] in
+the Evening, and the Purge next Morning. And if in the Course of the
+Disorder the Sickness and Nausea returned, attended with Griping and
+Costiveness, or very fetid loose Stools, these Medicines were
+repeated, and a gentle Opiate given in the Evening after their
+Operation.
+
+ [8] Dr. _Pringle_ advises giving a Vomit, by way of
+ Prevention, on the first Appearance of the Symptoms, and at
+ Night to force a Sweat, by giving a Drachm of Theriac with
+ ten Grains _Sal volat. Corn. cervi_, and some Draughts of
+ Vinegar-whey, and to repeat the same the following Night; and
+ says, he has often seen those Symptoms removed which he
+ apprehended to be Forerunners of this Fever received by
+ Contagion; but previous to Vomits, or Sweats, if the Person
+ be plethoric, it will be necessary to take away some Blood.
+ _Observ._ part III. ch. vii. sect. 5. Dr. _Lind_, in his
+ _second Paper on Fevers_, p. 66. says, "To all who are
+ supposed to be infected by Fevers, during this Stage of
+ Rigours, a gentle Vomit is immediately to be exhibited before
+ the Fever be formed, and before the Fulness or Hardness of
+ the Pulse renders its Operation dangerous. If the Vomit be
+ delayed too long, and especially if Bleeding must precede it,
+ the most certain and favourable Opportunity of procuring
+ Safety for the Patient is past.--That he has found it equally
+ serviceable in preventing Relapses, when it is given at the
+ Return of the Shiverings." A loose Stool, or two, should be
+ procured by the Emetic or Clysters, and he advises Sweating
+ immediately after, in the manner recommended by Dr.
+ _Pringle_. At other times "he gave five Grains of Camphire
+ every four Hours, with large Draughts of Vinegar-whey. Eight
+ Persons in ten, he says, got quite well by this Treatment."
+
+ I have never had sufficient Opportunities of trying this
+ Method of Prevention, to determine any thing certain about
+ it; but it may be worth while to practise it.
+
+After Evacuations, if the Pulse kept up, we commonly gave nothing but
+the saline Draughts, with the _Pulvis contrayervae_, or some temperate
+Medicine, for the first Day or two. As soon as we could distinguish
+the Fever to be of the malignant kind, and that the Pulse rather sunk,
+we joined some of the Cordials to the saline Medicines, and allowed
+the Patient more or less Wine, according to the Degree of the Fever.
+Dr. _De Haen_ has found Fault with Dr. _Pringle_ and Dr. _Huxham_, for
+administering cordial Medicines and Wine in the low State of this
+Fever; but nothing answered so well with us as these Remedies under
+such Circumstances; and I have frequently seen every Symptom changed
+for the better by their Use; and even when I gave the Bark, in the
+Manner recommended by _De Haen_, I often found it necessary to join
+the free Use of Wine[9], Cordials and Blisters[10], in order to
+support the Patient's Strength.
+
+ [9] _Petrus a Castro_, in his Account of a Petechial Fever,
+ which was frequent at _Verona_, tells us, that the Sick had a
+ great Thirst, and an Aversion to Meat, but all of them had
+ the strongest Desire for Wine, and were perpetually asking
+ for it, even those who at other Times used to be very
+ temperate; and that this proceeded from an Instinct of
+ Nature, which wanted something to support the Strength. _De
+ Feb. Malig._ sect. iii. chap. 26. Dr. _Huxham_, in his _Essay
+ on Fevers_, has the following very judicious Remark on the
+ Use of Wine: "In this View, and in those above-mentioned, I
+ cannot but recommend a generous red Wine as a most noble,
+ natural sub-astringent Cordial, and perhaps Art can scarce
+ supply a better. Of this I am confident, that sometimes at
+ the State, and more frequently in the Decline of putrid
+ Malignant Fevers, it is of the highest Service, especially
+ when acidulated with Juice of _Seville_ Orange or Lemon. It
+ may be also impregnated with some Aromatics, as Cinnamon,
+ _Seville_ Orange Rhind, red Roses, or the like, as may be
+ indicated, and a few Drops of _Elix. Vitrioli_ may be added.
+ Rhenish and French White Wines, diluted, make a most salutary
+ Drink in several Kinds of Fevers, and generous Cyder is
+ little inferior to either. The _Asiatics_, and other Nations,
+ where pestilential Disorders are much more rife than with us,
+ lay more Stress on the Juice of Lemons in these Fevers than
+ on the most celebrated _Alexipharmac._" Chap, viii. second
+ Edit. p. 123, 4.
+
+ Acid and acescent Liquors have very justly been recommended
+ and used by most late Practitioners, in this as well as in
+ other malignant Diseases. Vinegar-whey, Barley-water
+ acidulated with Lemon-juice, and such other Liquors, make
+ good Drinks for the Sick; but we were obliged, for the most
+ part, to use the vitriolic Acid for acidulating the Patient's
+ Drink, as it was the easiest procured and carried about with
+ the Flying Hospital.
+
+ [10] If the preventive Method does not succeed, Dr. _Lind_
+ advises to have recourse to Blisters; and says, that sixteen
+ out of twenty will next Morning be free of the Fever. But
+ adds, this is said, provided the Source of their Infection be
+ not so highly poisonous as it was in the Garland Ship, or in
+ other such violent Contagions. Dr. _Pringle_ mentions his
+ having applied Blisters early, but without relieving the
+ Head, or preventing any of the usual Symptoms. I have often
+ ordered Blisters pretty early in the Disorder; and though I
+ have frequently found them of use in keeping up the Pulse,
+ and relieving the Head, and other Symptoms, yet I never saw
+ them have such an immediate Effect as Dr. _Lind_ mentions.
+
+After reading the Treatises of Dr. _De Haen_ and Dr. _Hasenohrl_, on
+this Fever, I resolved on giving the Bark[11] in large Quantities, and
+found it to answer the Recommendations given by these Gentlemen; and
+shall relate here two or three Cases, out of above a hundred and
+fifty, in which I gave it.
+
+ [11] It is long since the _Peruvian_ Bark has been used by
+ Practitioners in Malignant Disorders, though I do not know
+ that any body gave it in this Fever to the Amount of an Ounce
+ per Day, before Dr. _Haen_ and Dr. _Hasenohrl_. Dr.
+ _Ramazini_ mentions its having been tried in the Petechial
+ Fever, in the Years 1692, 3, 4. And in a Treatise on the
+ Plague in the _Ucrane_, published at _Petersburgh_, in the
+ Year 1750, we are told, that in the _French_ Translation of
+ the Philosophical Transactions for the Year 1732, there is a
+ Note to p. 264, telling, that Mr. _Amyand_ informed the
+ Academy of Surgery at _Paris_, that Mr. _Rushworth_, Surgeon,
+ had wrote to Sir _Hans Sloane_, on the 23d of _May_ 1723,
+ that when he was Surgeon to a Ship, in the Year 1694, he had
+ cured some Men ill of the Malignant Fever, attended with
+ pestilential Buboes, by means of the _Peruvian_ Bark. Dr.
+ _Huxham_ has recommended a Tincture of the Bark; and Dr.
+ _Pringle_, a strong Decoction of it, with some of the
+ Tincture, in these Malignant Fevers.
+
+I. _Robert Wilson_, of the Second Regiment of Foot Guards, on the 19th
+of _February_ 1761, was seized with a Shivering and Coldness,
+succeeded with Heat, Thirst, a short dry Cough, Difficulty of
+Breathing, Head-ach, and slight Stitches in his Breast; some Blood was
+taken away, which was sizy, and he was ordered two Ounces of the
+_Sperma Ceti_ Mixture, with the _spiritus mindereri_, every two or
+three Hours. He continued without any manifest Alteration in the
+Symptoms, till the 21st, when a Number of dun Petechiae appeared all
+over his Body, particularly on his Breast. The Stitches and Cough were
+then much easier, and he had his Medicines as before. On the 22d, he
+was seized with a Delirium, and was somewhat comatose; when he was
+ordered a Drachm of the Bark every six Hours. The 23d, the comatose
+Symptoms had increased, and he had slight Twitchings of the Tendons, a
+dry brown-coloured Tongue, and a Faultering in his Speech. The Bark
+was continued, with the Addition of two Spoonfuls of Mountain Wine
+every two Hours. On the 24th, he had several loose Stools. The 25th,
+he was still loose, and went on as before, with the Addition of six
+Grains of the _Pilulae saponaceae_ in the Evening. The 26th, the
+Petechiae were not so apparent as before, but he had still the nervous
+Symptoms, and his Breathing grew more difficult; and therefore a
+Blister was applied between his Shoulders, and his Medicines
+continued; as they were likewise on the 27th, without any Alteration
+in the Symptoms. On the 28th, his Tongue became moister, and the
+Pulse, which had been low and quick the four preceding Days, became
+fuller and slower. On the 29th, he was much more sensible, his Tongue
+more moist, and the Twitchings of the Tendons much less; and in the
+Evening he fell into a profuse Sweat, which lasted all the 30th. On
+the 1st of _March_, his feverish Symptoms were much abated, his Pulse
+was calmer, his Skin moist, his Drought less, and his Urine dropt a
+plentiful Sediment. On the 2d, his Fever was almost entirely gone, but
+he had still a Cough, and spit up a viscid Matter. He was ordered to
+go on as before, with the Addition of two Spoonfuls of the _Sperma
+Ceti_ Mixture, and the _Spiritus Mindereri_, when his Cough was
+troublesome. He followed this Course till the 7th, when, his Cough and
+Fever being gone, he was ordered a Dose of Tincture of Rhubarb; after
+which he recruited his Strength daily, without the Assistance of any
+more Medicines.
+
+II. On the 5th of _March_ 1761, _Thomas Stagg_, of the Second Regiment
+of Foot Guards, was seized with the same Symptoms as _Robert Wilson_
+had been in the Beginning of his Fever, but in a more violent Degree.
+He was blooded to about twelve Ounces, and was ordered a saline
+Draught every six Hours. On the 6th, the Blood, which had been drawn
+the Day before, had thrown up a slight Buff; it appeared to contain
+but a small Proportion of Serum, and the Crassamentum was of a loose
+Texture. The feverish Symptoms had increased, with the Addition of a
+Delirium: pergat. On the 7th, the Delirium was grown more violent, so
+that he could scarce be kept in Bed; his Breathing was difficult, his
+Eyes red and florid: A Blister was applied to his Back, and the saline
+Mixture continued. On the 8th, there was no Alteration in the Course
+of that Day; but being lower towards Night, Blisters were applied to
+his Legs, and he was ordered to have a Pint of Wine allowed him in
+twenty-four Hours. On the 9th, the Petechiae appeared over his whole
+Body, of a broad dunnish kind; his Breathing became easier, and his
+Pulse stronger, though the Delirium was still as bad as before: He was
+ordered a Drachm of the Bark every fourth Hour in a saline Draught. On
+the 10th, the Bark gave him several loose Stools, but the Petechiae
+were of a more florid Colour; the Delirium was less, and his Tongue
+moist, and therefore he was ordered to continue the same Medicines as
+the Day before, with the Addition of ten Grains of the _Pilulae
+saponaceae_ in the Evening. The 11th Day, he fell into a fine breathing
+Sweat, his Pulse became fuller and slower, and the Delirium abated: p.
+The 12th, his Pulse was regular, and the Delirium gone, and he was
+much inclined to sleep. The 13th, after a calm Sleep, which had lasted
+twelve or fourteen Hours, he became quite free of Fever. After this he
+continued the Use of his Medicines for some Days, and recovered his
+Health and Strength daily.
+
+III. On the 23d of _May_ 1761, _Lionel Thompson_, of the First
+Regiment of Foot Guards, was seized with all the Symptoms of a
+Peripneumony, attended with a high Fever, for which he was ordered to
+be blooded. After losing eight Ounces of Blood, he fell into a
+fainting Fit; on recovering out of which, his Breathing being still
+much affected, he had a Mixture made of four Ounces of the _Lac
+Ammoniacum_, and one of the _spiritus mindereri_, of which he was
+desired to take two Spoonfuls every four Hours. The 24th, the Symptoms
+the same: He complained of having had no Stool for some Days, and took
+half an Ounce of the _sal catharticum amarum_, which gave him two
+loose Stools. On the 25th, his Pulse was small and quick, his
+Breathing difficult; he was low, and had a slight Delirium: A large
+Blister was applied between his Shoulders, and the Medicines
+continued. On the 26th, in the Morning, the Petechiae appeared, and his
+Breathing was freer: He was ordered a Drachm of the Bark, in a saline
+Draught, every four Hours. The 27th, the Pulse better: p. The 28th,
+was more sensible, and had a kindly warm Moisture all over the Skin.
+The 29th, the Fever was much abated, and his Tongue, which was before
+parched and dry, became moist and white: He continued the Use of the
+Cortex for three Days more, which removed the Fever; and being
+costive, he took a Dose of the Tincture of Rhubarb. After this he used
+the Bark for a few Days longer, and got perfectly well.
+
+After giving the Bark[12] with Success, in the two first of the Cases
+mentioned, and to two young Gentlemen, Mates of the Hospital, who had
+caught the Fever from their Attendance on the Sick, I gave it to above
+a hundred and fifty at _Paderborn_, and elsewhere, during my
+Attendance in the Military Hospitals in _Germany_; and although it did
+not answer in every Case, yet it was found to have a better Effect
+than any other Remedy that was tried. We joined different Medicines
+with it, according to the State of the Patient. We gave the _Confectio
+cardiaca_, _Rad. serpent. Virg._ and other cordial Medicines, and
+Wine, when the Pulse was low; _Oxymel scilliticum_, and other
+Pectorals, when the Breathing was difficult; Opiates, where the
+Patient was inclined to be too loose; the _spiritus mindereri_, and
+other Diaphoretics, when we wanted to promote a free Perspiration; and
+we applied Blisters as Occasion required.
+
+ [12] The _Peruvian_ Bark has not only been found useful in
+ this Malignant Fever, but has likewise been recommended in
+ the Plague. See _Morton Oper. Append. secund. Exercitat.
+ Hist. Febr. Ann. 1658, ad. an. 1691. complexa_. In the Small
+ Pox, see _Medical Essays_, vol. V. art. x. and has been found
+ serviceable in the putrid Disorders of the _West Indies_, as
+ taken Notice of by Dr. _Hillary_; and in the malignant
+ ulcerous sore Throat in this Country, as Dr. _Wall_ and
+ others have observed. And in thirty-five Cases of the
+ malignant ulcerous sore Throat, in which I gave it, joined
+ with Cordials, and the Use of Acids, I did not lose one
+ Patient. Nine of them were strong People, and had plethoric
+ Symptoms, and were blooded in the Beginning; and seven of
+ them were costive, and took a Dose of gentle laxative Physic
+ before taking the Bark. The rest had no Symptoms which seemed
+ to require these Evacuations. However, it ought to be
+ observed, that this is a Disorder of the malignant kind; and
+ that although some well-timed gentle Evacuations may be
+ serviceable in the Beginning, before giving the Bark; yet too
+ free, or even gentle Evacuations, injudiciously made, will
+ sink the Patient, and infallibly do Mischief.
+
+ The free Use of the Bark has long been found serviceable in
+ Mortifications and foul Sores, where the Juices tend too much
+ to the Putrescent; and has been strongly recommended by Mr.
+ _Ranby_, Serjeant Surgeon to his Majesty, in the Cure of
+ Gunshot Wounds. See his _Treatise on Gunshot Wounds_.
+
+When the Patient was strong, the Pulse quick and full, the Eyes looked
+red, and the Breathing was difficult, after the Petechiae appeared; I
+took away more or less Blood before giving the Bark. Most
+Practitioners of late Years have been against Bleeding in this Stage
+of the Disorder; but trusting to the Assurances given by Dr.
+_Hasenohrl_ of its being safe, nay of Advantage to bleed at this Time,
+if the Symptoms required it, I ventured upon it, and found it to be of
+the greatest Service, in many Cases, in the Hospitals at _Paderborn_
+and elsewhere; and particularly in two Cases at _Bremen_, and one at
+_Osnabruck_, where it gave immediate Relief, and seemed to shorten the
+Disease much. One of the Patients at _Bremen_, _Robert Ellis_,
+belonged to an Independant Company; the other, _Francis Hamstan_, of
+the 24th Regiment, had formerly had his Skull fractured, and took the
+Fever, while he was in the Hospital, for violent Head-achs, which he
+had been subject to, at times, ever after his Skull had been
+fractured. The Case at _Osnabruck_ was a Nurse of the Hospital, whose
+Name was ---- _Andrews_, a Woman about twenty-five Years of Age, who,
+after attending a Dragoon in the Small Pox, and suckling at the same
+time her own Child, then in the same Disorder, was, on the 18th of
+_January_ 1763, attacked with a Fever. I saw her for the first time on
+the 20th, and found her Pulse quick, full, and strong. She complained
+of a violent Head-ach; for which she was blooded, and took the saline
+Mixture, with Nitre and Contrayerva. Next Day, the 21st, her Blood
+appeared very sizy, and she complained of having been costive for some
+Days. We gave her immediately an Ounce of the _sal catharticum
+amarum_, which operated well. She continued much in the same Way the
+22d, and had some loose Stools that Day. Being still inclined to be
+loose the 23d, instead of her former Medicines, she was ordered the
+_spiritus mindereri_ Mixture, with Mithridate. This checked the
+Purging, but did not stop it entirely. The Fever went on, without any
+remarkable Change, till the 27th; at which time the Petechiae appeared
+all over her Body, attended with a Redness of the Eyes, and a violent
+Oppression and Pain of her Head, and a quick Pulse. I ordered six
+Ounces of Blood to be taken away immediately, and a large Blister to
+be applied to her Back, and, at the same time, ordered her a cordial
+Mixture, with half an Ounce of the Extract of the Bark in it, to be
+taken every twenty-four Hours. The 28th, her Pulse was not so hard,
+her Head was much easier, the Redness of her Eyes was much less, and
+the Petechiae had begun to die away. The Blood which was taken away the
+Day before, had a thin Buff at the Top, but the _Crassamentum_
+underneath was of a dark Colour, and of a loose Texture: p. On the
+29th, she told me that she had had two or three loose Stools, and she
+was lower than the Day before; and therefore a Drachm of Mithridate,
+and two Drachms of the Tincture of Cinnamon, were added to her cordial
+Mixture, with the Cortex; and she was allowed half a Pint of Red Wine,
+mulled with Cinnamon, _per_ Day. 30th, Her Tongue rather moister than
+the Day before; and she not so low, but she was still inclined to be
+loose; and therefore was ordered the anodyne Draught at Nights, and to
+continue the other Medicines. 31st, She was still inclined to be
+loose; but her Pulse kept up, her Tongue was moister, and she found
+herself pretty easy: p. _Feb._ 1st, Her Pulse pretty strong, and she
+found herself much cooler, and freer from the Fever, and complained of
+a Dullness of Hearing. On the 2d, in the Morning, she felt a warm
+Moisture all over her Skin, which, about Noon, broke out into a
+profuse Sweat, and continued till the 4th; when it went off, and her
+Urine let fall a copious whitish Sediment. She had then little or no
+Fever. The Dullness of Hearing still continued, though it was much
+less than before. After this the Deafness went gradually away. She
+continued the Use of the cordial Mixture, with the Cortex, till the
+12th, and recovered Strength daily. After this, she had no other
+Medicine, except two Doses of the Tincture of Rhubarb, and was soon
+in good Health, and able to discharge her Duty as a Nurse.
+
+However, it ought to be observed, that we must not bleed so freely, in
+this or any other Stage of the Malignant Fever, as in acute
+inflammatory Disorders, otherwise we shall sink the Patient, and hurry
+him to his Grave; and that Bleeding can only take place with Safety
+and Advantage, under the Circumstances above-mentioned, immediately
+before giving the Bark freely; or where some accidental sharp Pain in
+the Breast, or Bowels, or some other violent Symptom, may require it.
+They err equally, who recommend Bleeding freely in this Fever, with
+those who entirely forbid its Use.
+
+Although we found the Bark to be in general the best Remedy in this
+malignant Petechial Fever, yet it did not answer in every Case; for in
+some we found other Remedies had a better Effect: And therefore, when
+we observed that, notwithstanding the Use of the Bark, the Patient
+sunk, and the Symptoms grew worse, we did not persist obstinately in
+its Use, but tried the Effect of other Medicines.
+
+Towards the End of _May_ 1761, two Soldiers in the Hospital, at
+_Osnabruck_, were taken ill of this Fever; who, after using the Bark
+freely, and being allowed a Pint of Red Wine _per_ Day, for some Days
+together, began to sink, and had a Delirium and other bad Symptoms
+hastening on: upon which I laid aside the Use of the Bark, and ordered
+each of them a Blister to the Back, and to take a cordial Draught,
+with fifteen Grains of Musk in it, every four Hours; and to have their
+Wine mulled with Cinnamon; and although at that Time they were both so
+low that I scarce imagined they would live twenty-four Hours, yet next
+Day I found them greatly mended; and they had a kindly warm Moisture
+all over their Skin, and the Pulse had rose considerably in both. By
+the Continuance of the same Medicine the feverish Symptoms gradually
+abated, and they both got well.
+
+About the same time, having given the Bark freely for some Days, and
+applied a Blister, to another Patient, after the Petechiae had
+appeared, I found him one Morning so low that his Pulse could scarce
+be felt. He could not speak; he had a Delirium, and rather a Tremor
+than a _subsultus tendinum_, and he had all the Appearance of a dying
+Man. However, as he still swallowed whatever was put in his Mouth, I
+changed the Bark Mixture for Draughts, which contained a Scruple of
+the _confectio cardiaca_, and seven Grains of the _sal vol. corn.
+cerv._[13] each, and ordered one to be given immediately, and
+afterwards to be repeated every four Hours; and, in the Intervals, to
+give him frequently a Tea-cup full of Red Wine, mulled with Cinnamon;
+and to apply two large Blisters to his Legs. Next Day, his Pulse had
+rose; and by the Continuance of the same Remedies it became gradually
+fuller and stronger, and the third Day after he recovered his Voice;
+and a warm kindly Moisture which ended in a profuse Sweat coming on,
+the feverish Symptoms went off soon after, and he recovered his
+Health.
+
+ [13] Dr. _Huxham_, in his _Treatise on the ulcerous sore
+ Throat_, p. 54, &c. condemns the Use of the volatile alcaline
+ Salts, in Fevers of the putrid, pestilential, or petechial
+ kind, as being apt to heat too much, and to hasten the
+ Dissolution and consequent Putrefaction of the Blood.
+ However, I cannot help thinking that they are the best
+ Remedies we can use on some particular Occasions, even in
+ this Fever; for we have no Remedy which gives such a sudden
+ and brisk _Stimulus_ to the Fibres as they do. And I have
+ known many Cases of Patients who were extremely low, and
+ whose Pulse was scarce to be felt, and others who were apt to
+ fail into fainting Fits, who have been preserved by large and
+ repeated Doses of these Salts, and the free Use of Wine, and
+ acescent Liquors, to correct their alcaline Acrimony in the
+ Blood. Though as soon as such Patients had recovered from
+ this low State, I laid these Medicines aside; because I
+ cannot help agreeing with the Doctor in the Belief, that
+ their continued Use will produce the Effects he mentions. For
+ although it be true, that these Salts, when mixed with
+ putrescent Liquors, or with dead animal Substances, resist
+ Putrefaction, and, like ardent Spirits and Vinegar (the other
+ Products of Fermentation) check and put a Stop to that very
+ Process which produced them: Yet it is also true, that, when
+ mixed with the Blood of living Animals, they stimulate the
+ Vessels, and increase the Heat and _Momentum_ of the Blood,
+ and dissolve it; and therefore I cannot but disapprove the
+ continuing their Use longer than is immediately necessary.
+
+At _Bremen_ there were two Men, one in _January_, and the other in
+_February_ 1762, on whom the Cortex had but little Effect, who
+recovered by the free Use of Mixtures, with the _confectio cardiaca_
+and _rad. serpentariae_, and of Wine, with the Application of large
+Blisters. Several Cases of this kind occurred in the Hospitals, where
+the Bark did not answer.
+
+There is one thing to be observed with respect to Malignant Fevers,
+which is, that if ever they appear in large crowded Hospitals, unless
+we can thin the Wards, and procure a free Circulation of Air, and keep
+the Hospital and Sick extremely clean, the Fevers will continue to
+spread, and great Numbers will die; and even the most efficacious
+Remedies will have little or no Effect. And that when once the
+Infection is grown strong, it requires the greatest Care, and some
+Time, before it can be entirely got the better of. And that if a great
+number of Men, ill of this Fever, be kept in the same Ward, they will
+help to keep up the Infection; and therefore it is always proper, when
+it can possibly be done, to lay but a few of them in one Ward; not
+above one-third of the Number generally admitted.
+
+Many of the Patients, towards the Height of this Fever, sooner or
+later, had a Purging, which seldom proved critical; and some were
+seized with the Flux. A gentle _diarrhoea_, such as did not sink the
+Patient, was commonly of Service; but when violent, or a Dysentery
+came on, the Case was always dangerous; for whatever stopped the Flux
+increased the Fever; and, if the Purging or Flux continued, it sunk
+the Patient. Such Fluxes we treated in the Manner to be mentioned
+afterwards, when we come to the History of the Dysentery.
+
+In this Fever, it was common for Patients to vomit Worms[14], or to
+pass them by Stool, or, what was more frequent, to have them come up
+into their Throat and Mouth, or sometimes into their Nostrils, while
+they were asleep in Bed, and to pull them out with their Fingers. The
+same Thing happened to most of the _British_ Soldiers, brought to the
+Hospitals for other feverish Disorders as well as this. Dr.
+_Pringle_[15] when he mentions Worms being observed in this Fever,
+seems to embrace _Lancisius_'s Opinion; and believes that these Worms
+are not the Cause of the Fever; but being lodged in the Intestines,
+before the Fever comes on, they are annoyed by the Increase of the
+Heat, and the Corruption of the Humours, in the Cavity of the
+Intestines of Persons labouring under Fevers, especially of the putrid
+Kind; and so they begin to move and struggle to get out. This seemed
+evidently to be the Case with many of the Patients we had; though in
+some the Worms seemed to have given Rise to the Fever, which the bad
+State of the Patient's Humours, or the infected Air of Hospitals,
+determined to be of this Kind. In many, the Fever lessened, or went
+off entirely, soon after; and they were no more affected with Symptoms
+of Worms. But some notwithstanding were subject to frequent Sickness,
+Pain of the Stomach, and Uneasiness in the Bowels, and discharged some
+Worms from Time to Time. Others had frequent Relapses into Fevers,
+which seemed to be owing to the Irritation of these Insects.
+
+ [14] Some Men passed only one Worm; others, two or three;
+ some, six or seven; and one Man, of the Guards, in _January_
+ 1763, after passing three by Stools in the Course of a Fever
+ of this Kind, discharged fourteen more upon taking a Dose of
+ Rhubarb and Calomel after the Fever was over.
+
+ [15] _Observations on the Diseases of the Army_, part iii.
+ chap. iv. Note to p. 213. third Edition.
+
+It is no Wonder that Worms of the round Kind should be productive of
+troublesome Symptoms, and occasion these Relapses; since we know that
+they have sometimes perforated the Intestines, and been found in the
+Cavity of the Abdomen[16].
+
+ [16] See _Hoffman_'s Works, vol. III. chap. x. _River.
+ Observ. commun._ Obs. 13. _of Observations found in a
+ Library._ _Bonetus's Sepulchret. anatom._ tom. II. _Gualther
+ van Doeveren's Inaugural Dissertation de Vermibus
+ intestinalibus_, published at _Leyden_, 1753; and _Lancisi_'s
+ Works; for Cases where the internal Coats of the Stomach, and
+ Intestines, have been eroded, and all the Coats perforated by
+ Worms of the round Kind.
+
+As soon as we observed a Patient to be troubled with Worms, if his
+present Situation did not prevent it, we gave twenty-five or thirty
+Grains of Rhubarb, with five or six Grains of Calomel; and if there
+was much Sickness, we likewise gave an Emetic; which, in more than one
+Case, brought up two or three Worms of the round Kind, and gave great
+Relief. But where the Fever was violent, we were obliged to neglect
+this Symptom of Worms for the present; and when the Fever was over, if
+there still remained any Symptoms of Worms, we gave the purgative
+Medicine once or oftener, and in the Intervals gave the _pulvis
+stanni_, or an Infusion of Camomile Flowers; and in some Cases, oily
+Medicines. By these Means most of the Patients got well and recovered
+their Health, and seemed to be freed, at least for the present, from
+these troublesome Insects; though a few continued to complain of
+Sickness, and other Symptoms of Worms, for some Time afterwards.
+
+What was the Cause of the Army's being so much troubled with Worms of
+the round Kind, is not easy to ascertain; unless it was owing to the
+great Quantity of crude Vegetables, and Fruits, which the Soldiers eat
+in the Course of the Summer and Autumn, and to the bad Water they were
+often obliged to drink.
+
+In the Malignant Fever at _Paderborn_, many complained of a Dysuria,
+and some of a Suppression of Urine, especially towards the Decline of
+the Fever; and others, of a Scalding and Pain in making Water, though
+they had no venereal Complaint. These Symptoms appeared in other
+Places, but not near so frequently as at _Paderborn_. Decoctions of
+Gum Arabic, with some of the _spiritus nitri dulcis_, and oily
+Mixtures, and Opiates, commonly gave immediate Relief, and soon
+removed this Complaint.
+
+One of the first salutary Symptoms which most generally appeared in
+those who recovered, was a Dullness of Hearing, or Deafness[17]; which
+came on about the Height of the Fever, and continued a longer or
+shorter Time, generally till the Fever was entirely gone; and
+sometimes for a considerable Time afterwards. For the most Part we
+did nothing for this Complaint, and it went off as the Patient
+recovered his Strength. When it continued long, Blisters applied
+behind the Ears, or on the Neck, and washing the _meatus auditorius_
+with the emollient Decoction, in which a small Quantity of Soap was
+dissolved, proved of Service.
+
+ [17] _Riverius_ tells us, that, according to _Hippocrates_'s
+ Doctrine, Deafness is a very dangerous Symptom in the
+ Beginning of acute Disorders, though it be a good Omen, and
+ portends Health, when it does not appear till the Height of
+ Fevers, especially those of a malignant Kind; and adds, that
+ he himself has a thousand Times observed, that those
+ labouring under this Fever have recovered, when this Symptom
+ of Deafness came on at the Height (_in statu_) though the
+ other Symptoms threatened much Danger. _Prax. Medic._ lib.
+ XVII. sect. iii. cap. i. p. 451.
+
+ This Symptom of Deafness occurs in other Fevers as well as in
+ this, and often proves a good Symptom in them likewise, as I
+ have frequently observed. Two remarkable Examples of which I
+ had under my Care in St. _George_'s Hospital, in the Year
+ 1759. On the 17th of _January_ 1759, _James Donaldson_, a
+ young Man of nineteen Years of Age, was admitted into the
+ Hospital for a Fever, attended with a Stupor and a Delirium,
+ a parched dry Tongue, and other Symptoms of a Fever of the
+ inflammatory Kind, for which he had been blooded, and used
+ other Evacuations. On the 19th, after the Application of a
+ Blister, he was seized with almost an entire Deafness; after
+ which, all his other Symptoms became milder, and he mended
+ daily, and was entirely free from the Fever by the 30th. On
+ the 10th of _April_ 1759, a Youth, _John Young_, fifteen
+ Years of Age, was admitted into the same Hospital for a
+ Fever, which had already continued fourteen Days. His Speech
+ was affected, and he had entirely lost the Use of his Limbs,
+ was delirious, and had other bad Symptoms. On the 12th, his
+ Hearing became exceedingly dull, and he recovered daily
+ afterwards, and was discharged, cured, the 2d of _May_,
+ having recovered the Use of his Legs as well as got free of
+ the Fever.
+
+Swellings of the parotid Glands appeared in many Subjects, towards the
+Decline of the Fever, which came to Suppuration, and proved critical.
+In two only, out of those I attended while in _Germany_, they came on
+early in the Fever, but did not suppurate. Both Patients died; all
+the rest recovered, except one old Man, an Invalid at _Bremen_; who,
+after having one Swelling appear on the right Side, which came to
+Suppuration, and seemed critical, relapsed into the Fever; and another
+formed on the other Side, which came likewise to Suppuration, and the
+Fever ceased, after having reduced him very low; but the great
+Discharge from the Sores wasted him gradually, and he died hectic in
+about a Month after the Fever had left him[18].
+
+ [18] But although these parotid Swellings were in general so
+ favourable with us, we are not to imagine that this will
+ always be the Case: for _Riverius_, though he speaks of these
+ Swellings proving for the most part critical; yet he tells
+ us, that, in the Year 1623, this Fever was epidemic at
+ _Montpelier_, and that almost one half of the Sick died; and
+ particularly, that most of those who had Swellings of the
+ parotid Glands appearing about the 9th or 11th Day, were
+ carried off within two Days of their Appearance. Having
+ attended several who died from the Swellings not coming to
+ Suppuration, he began to consider in his own Mind, what might
+ be the Cause of their Death, and concluded, that it was owing
+ to there being a greater Quantity of morbid Matter in the
+ Blood than the Part was able to contain, and that Evacuations
+ by blooding and purging were the only Remedies which were
+ likely to give Relief; and therefore, in the first Case of
+ this Kind, in which he was afterwards consulted, he ordered
+ three Ounces of Blood to be taken away, notwithstanding the
+ Patient was so low that the Surgeon was afraid he would have
+ died in the Operation: The Pulse rose on bleeding, and he
+ ordered four Ounces more to be taken in three or four Hours
+ afterwards: The Pulse rose still more, and he ordered a Dose
+ of Sena and Rhubarb to be taken next Day, and the Patient
+ recovered. And he adds, that all those who were treated in
+ this manner got well. _Prax. Med. Lib._ XVII. _sect._ iii.
+ _cap._ 1.
+
+As soon as these Swellings of the parotid Glands appeared, we
+endeavoured to bring them forward to Suppuration, by the Application
+of emollient Cataplasms, or of gummous Plaisters; and had them opened
+as soon as a Fluctuation of Matter was to be felt, and afterwards
+treated them as common Abscesses. _Riverius_[19] very justly observes,
+that when such Tumours encrease in such a Manner as to endanger
+Suffocation, they ought to be opened before they come to Maturation;
+and Dr. _Pringle_[20] desires us not to wait for a Fluctuation of
+Matter, but to open the Abscess as soon as it can be supposed to have
+formed.
+
+ [19] Ibid.
+
+ [20] _Pringle's Observations on the Diseases of the Army_,
+ Part III. chap. vii.
+
+In _February_ 1761, three Patients in the Decline of this Fever had
+Buboes formed in the Groin, which proved critical. At first, on
+observing them, I suspected them to be venereal; but on examining the
+Patients, they obstinately denied their having any Reason to suspect
+any such Cause; and the favourable Manner in which they healed without
+the Appearance of any other venereal Symptom, made me believe what
+they asserted to be true; especially as such People are not shy in
+owning Complaints of that Kind. The first Patient I saw who had a Bubo
+in the Decline of one of these Malignant Fevers, was a Woman, Wife to
+a Soldier of the thirty-seventh Regiment of Foot; she had a Child at
+her Breast, and her Husband was living with her at the Time she was
+taken ill of the Fever, and neither of them had the least venereal
+Complaint. In a few Days afterwards, two Soldiers in other Hospitals,
+towards the Decline of very bad Petechial Fevers, had likewise Buboes
+formed in the Groin, without any Suspicion of a venereal Taint. Except
+in these three, I did not see any critical Buboes appear in this Fever
+while I was with the Troops in _Germany_; tho' Mr. _Lovet_, who
+served as a Mate to the Hospitals, and who was at _Hoxter_, where we
+had another Hospital established, while I was at _Paderborn_, told me,
+that, in the Beginning of the Year 1761, they had several Men in the
+Hospital ill of this Fever, who had critical Buboes formed in the
+Groins and Armpits[21].
+
+ [21] This Symptom of Buboes is taken Notice of by Authors,
+ but does not seem to be so frequent as many of them would
+ make us believe. Neither Dr. _Huxham_ nor Dr. _Pringle_
+ mention their having seen such Buboes; and Dr. _Lind_ says,
+ that he never saw them till the Beginning of the Year 1763.
+
+About the same Time that these Buboes appeared, severals towards the
+Decline of this Fever complained of a Pain all along the Spermatic
+Chord; and soon after a Swelling of the Testicle appeared[22].
+However, this Complaint was not peculiar to those who had the Fever;
+for others recovering from Fluxes, and other Disorders, were likewise
+affected with such Swellings. I did not observe any Symptom of this
+Kind in Fevers while I was with the Troops in _Germany_, except in
+_January_, _February_, _March_, and _April_ 1761. By Bleeding, and
+applying emollient Fomentations and Cataplasms, and bathing the Parts
+with _spiritus mindereri_ on the first Attack of the Pain, the
+Swelling of the Testicle was prevented; but where no Mention was made
+of this Pain till the Swelling had already begun, it commonly ended in
+a Suppuration of the Scrotum or Testicle, which healed very kindly. We
+had no Reason to suspect any venereal Taint in any of them.
+
+ [22] _Hippocrates_ takes Notice of Swellings of the Testicles
+ in Fevers. He tells us, that a Man from Alcibiades had his
+ left Testicle swell before the Crisis of a Fever. _See his
+ Second Book on Epidemics_, sect. ii. And he mentions this
+ Symptom as a Crisis in the ardent Fever. _See his Book on
+ Crises_, sect. xi.--And Dr. _Antonio Lizzari_, in a Treatise
+ which he published on the _Acute Diseases which were frequent
+ at Venice, and all over Italy, in the Years 1761, 62_, tells
+ us, that Abscesses of the Scrotum and Testicles frequently
+ followed the Measles.
+
+Many, while recovering from this Fever, were seized with an
+Ophthalmia, or Inflammation of the Eye; for the most part of one Eye
+only, sometimes of both. When the Patients were strong, they were
+blooded, and had Blisters applied behind the Ears; and sometimes,
+where the Pain was great, had Poultices of Bread and Milk applied to
+the inflamed Eye; which, with the Assistance of some cooling Physick,
+commonly removed this Complaint; tho' in some obstinate Cases we were
+obliged to repeat the Evacuations, to apply Leeches to the Temples;
+and after the acute State of the Disorder was passed, to order the Eye
+to be washed frequently with the Collyrium vitriolicum, or Collyrium
+Saturninum, before we got the better of this Complaint. However, it
+ought to be observed, that if these astringent Collyria were used too
+soon, they did hurt. When these Ophthalmias were neglected in the
+Beginning, the Inflammation frequently rose to a great Height, and
+left an Obscurity or Philm over the Cornea, which remained an
+Impediment to the Sight not to be removed.
+
+Towards the Decline of these Fevers, and very often during the Course
+of them, many complained of Pains in their Feet and Toes, which
+sometimes ended in Mortifications, especially where the Patients lay
+in very cold Wards. For the most Part, the Mortification extended no
+further than the Ends of the Toes, tho' in some it spread over the
+Feet, and in two or three advanced up the Leg. Several lost one or
+more Toes; and in _February_ 1761, one Man lost Half of each Foot;
+another lost both Feet, and Part of each Leg. Both got the better of
+the Fever, tho' the Man who lost both Feet languished a long time
+afterwards. These Pains of the Feet and Toes, and the Mortifications
+which followed, were for the most part owing to the Patients being
+exposed to too much Cold while they were very weak, the Circulation
+languid, and the Juices vitiated by a putrid Distemper; by which means
+the Vessels were rendered incapable of carrying on the Circulation in
+their extreme Branches[23].
+
+ [23] These Pains and Mortifications of the Feet and Toes were
+ not confined to those who were brought low by malignant
+ Fevers; for, during the very hard Frost in the Beginning of
+ the Year 1763, many of the Patients who lay in very large
+ open Wards in the Hospital at _Osnabruck_, were affected in
+ the same Way. One Man had both Feet, and Part of each Leg,
+ compleatly mortified, and died in about nine Days after the
+ first Appearance of the Mortification. One lost half of one
+ Foot, and some Toes of the other; and the third lost the
+ first Joint of some of his Toes, and the Ends of others.
+
+As soon as the Sick began to complain of these Pains of the Toes and
+Feet, I found the best Remedy to be, the Bathing of the Feet in warm
+Water, or in warm aromatic Fomentations; and, after keeping the Feet
+for some time in these warm Liquors, to dry them well, and then rub
+them with the _linimentum saponaceum_, or _linimentum volatile_, and
+wrap them up in Flannel. And if ever any Lividness or Redness appeared
+on the Parts, we gave plentifully of the Cortex and Cordials, if not
+contra-indicated by the other Symptoms. When Vesicles arose on the
+Part, and a Gangrene formed, we directed the Parts to be scarified,
+and proper Dressings to be applied, while warm aromatic Fomentations
+and Cataplasms were used.
+
+In _January_ 1762, one Patient, ill of the Petechial Fever at
+_Bremen_, had a Lividness and Blackness, threatning a Mortification,
+which appeared at the End of his Nose. I expected for some Days, that,
+if he recovered, he would lose Part of his Nose; but, by giving him
+large and repeated Doses of the _cortex_ and _confectio cardiaca_, in
+a Mindereri Mixture, and allowing him the free Use of Wine, its
+further Progress was prevented; and as the Patient got clear of the
+Fever, the Nose recovered its natural Colour, and only the scarf Skin
+peeled off from the End of it.
+
+When the Fever continued long, and reduced the Patients low, it was
+very common for the Back, and Parts on which the Weight of the Body
+rested, to mortify. As soon as any thing of this Kind was observed, we
+ordered such Parts to be covered with proper Dressings, and gave the
+Bark and Cordials freely; and took care to make the Patient change his
+Posture; and by Pillows prevented as much as possible the Weight of
+the Body from resting on that Part. By this Treatment, many recovered,
+where the Fever was on the Decline, and the Strength not too much
+exhausted; even tho' a very large Surface of the Skin had mortified;
+but where the Patients were very low, and the Fever still continued,
+or where it was complicated with a Flux, which kept them perpetually
+nasty, and exhausted the Strength, it generally proved fatal.
+
+Patients, who were reduced very low by this Fever, or by repeated
+Relapses, were subject to oedematous Swellings; especially of the
+Feet, towards the Evening, after sitting up all the Day. These
+Swellings generally went away as the Sick recovered their Strength;
+but in some Cases they continued obstinate, and ascended towards the
+Thighs; and in some spread all over the Body, and terminated in an
+universal Anasarca.
+
+When these Swellings were recent, and confined to the Feet and Legs,
+commonly the Bark joined to the lixivial Salts, or the Oxymel of
+Squills, or other Diuretics, and a Purgative once or twice a Week,
+removed them. In some, an Infusion of Horse-radish had a good Effect;
+in others, Sweats brought out by means of _Dover_'s Powder, or of the
+_guttae antimoniales anodynae_.
+
+Sometimes these Swellings were very obstinate, and resisted the Force
+of all internal Remedies. In such Cases, Punctures made in the Feet,
+or lower Part of the Legs, which furnished a Drain for the Water, had
+a good Effect. Blisters applied to the Legs were of Service to some.
+When the Punctures were made, or the Blisters applied, before the
+Patient's Strength was exhausted, provided that he laboured under no
+other Disorder but these oedematous Swellings, which proceeded from
+Weakness, I never observed any bad Effects from them; tho' I used them
+both repeatedly in a Variety of Cases. But if the Patient was very
+weak; or had a Hectic Fever or Purging; or other Disorders, and the
+oedematous Swellings large; then oftentimes the great Discharge
+exhausted his Strength, and a Gangrene and Death were the Consequence.
+
+One of the most remarkable Instances of the good Effects of Blisters,
+was in the Case of a Soldier at _Paderborn_; _Thomas Hope_, of the
+Second Regiment of Foot Guards, after a Fever of this Kind, was
+swelled all over, especially about the Face and Neck, and had a
+Difficulty of Breathing: after having tried Variety of Medicines for
+this Complaint, without any Effect, he had a large Blister applied to
+his Back, and took the Cortex in a Mixture, with the Oxymel of
+Squills. As soon as the Blister began to discharge, the Swellings
+decreased; and were afterwards entirely removed by the Help of one or
+two Doses of Physic, and the continued Use of the Medicines before
+prescribed. Three other Men in the Hospital at _Osnabruck_, in _May_
+1761, having oedematous Swellings of the Feet and Legs, which yielded
+to no internal Remedies, had Blisters applied to their Legs, used the
+Cortex, with the lixivial Salts, two or three Times a Day, and a Purge
+every fourth Day; which removed the Swellings in a short Time.
+
+Some of the Soldiers, who had repeated Hospital Fevers, had their
+Blood so much broke down, as to be subject to profuse Haemorrhages from
+the Nose; and some of them passed Blood likewise by Stool; which
+reduced them to a very low State, sometimes attended with imminent
+Danger. In such Cases we found nothing to answer so well as to give
+freely of the Bark; to acidulate their Drinks with the _spiritus
+vitrioli_; to allow them as much Red Wine as the Strength and present
+Circumstances could bear; and at the same Time to support the
+Patient's Strength by a mild Diet, of light Digestion; as Water or
+Rice Gruel, Panado, weak Broth, and the like. When there was a
+Tendency to a Diarrhoea, we were obliged to add some of the
+_electuarium diascordii_ to the Cortex, and frequently to give an
+Opiate in the Evening. One Case, where this Method of Cure had a very
+remarkable good Effect, I had under my Care at _Paderborn_. A Soldier
+who lay in one of the lower Wards of the Jesuits Hospital, after a
+Malignant Fever, attended with a Flux, used to bleed at the Nose, to
+four, five, or six Ounces at a Time; and once or twice lost near a
+Pint of Blood, of a dark Colour, very thin and watery, and of so loose
+a Texture, that the grumous Part scarcely coagulated. This Evacuation
+brought him so low, that he could scarce turn himself in Bed; and his
+Pulse might be said rather to flutter than beat: By the continued Use
+of the Bark, and of Cordials, and Drinks acidulated with _spiritus
+vitrioli_, and some Spoonfulls of mulled Red Wine every two or three
+Hours, he was restored to Health and Strength. The only Accident which
+happened during the Cure, was a Threatening of a Looseness, and the
+Return of his Flux; which however was stopt by a Dose of the
+_tinctura rhei_; by joining some of the _electuarium diascordii_ with
+the Bark, and giving an Opiate in the Evening.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Putrid Malignant Fevers, attended with Eruptions, are taken Notice of
+by _Hippocrates_[24], and other antient Authors[25]; but whether they
+meant that particular Sort of Eruption which we now call Petechiae, is
+uncertain; as their Descriptions are not clear enough to distinguish
+it from the Miliary and other Kinds. But since the Year 1500, we have
+had many accurate Accounts of Fevers of this Kind, which have appeared
+in different Parts of the World: from all which it appears that such
+Fevers generally take their Rise either from some antecedent Acrimony
+of the Blood; or, what is more frequent, from some Source of
+Corruption or Contagion; from the Use of putrescent animal Food, and a
+Want of fresh Vegetables and acescent Liquors; from the putrid Steams
+of corrupted animal Substances; from the moist putrid Vapour of low
+marshy Places in Summer, where there is stagnating Water, which
+corrupts by the Heat; from the foul Air of crowded Hospitals, Jails,
+and Ships; and from such like Causes[26].
+
+ [24] _Hippocrat._ lib ii. popul. sect. iii. text. 2.
+
+ [25] _Aetius Tetrab._ ii. sect. i. cap. 129. _Actuar._ lib.
+ i. cap. 23.
+
+ [26] See these Causes mentioned by _Riverius_, and since more
+ fully explained by Dr. _Pringle_, _Observations on the
+ Diseases of the Army_, part iii. chap. vii.
+
+When once this Fever begins, it is observed to be of a contagious
+Nature, and (if proper Care is not taken) to affect those who attend
+the Sick, or who live in the same Room, and breathe the same Air with
+them.
+
+Many Authors have reckoned the Malignant, Petechial, and Pestilential,
+to be distinct Species of Fevers; and have treated each of them under
+a particular Head. But _Riverius_[27] has very justly observed, that
+they all belong to the same pestilential Tribe, and only differ from
+one another in the Degree of Infection, and the Violence of the
+Symptoms[28]; and that they are to be cured by the same general
+Treatment, and the same Medicines.
+
+ [27] _River. Prax. Med._ lib. xvi. sect. iii. Praefat.
+
+ [28] The Malignant or Hospital Fever, and Petechial, seemed
+ to me to be entirely the same Disorder, and the Petechial
+ Spots to be only a Symptom which appeared sometimes, but not
+ always. And _Riverius_ says, the Petechiae do not always
+ appear; but when they do, it is a most certain Sign of a
+ Pestilential Fever. See his _Prax. Med._ cap. xvi. sect. iii.
+
+
+
+
+OF THE DYSENTERY.
+
+
+The Dysentery generally began to appear soon after the Army took the
+Field; and became frequent about the End of _July_, and continued so
+till the Army went into Winter-Quarters; and through the Winter, many
+of those, who had this Disorder in Autumn, relapsed, upon returning to
+their Duty; or by drinking too freely of spirituous Liquors, and being
+irregular in their Living.
+
+It is now generally agreed upon, that this Disorder is entirely
+produced by such Causes as make the Juices become too putrescent, and
+turn the Flow of Humours to the Bowels; and in the Camp it seemed to
+arise principally from an obstructed Perspiration caused by the Men's
+lying in the Field, and doing the necessary Military Duties in all
+Sorts of Weather; at the same Time being often exposed to the putrid
+Steams of dead Horses, of the Privies, and of other corrupted Animal
+or Vegetable Substances[29], after their Juices had been highly
+exalted by the Heat of Summer.
+
+ [29] The Dysentery has been long alledged to arise from a
+ putrescent Cause in Camps; from the Smell of corrupted dead
+ Animals, and of Excrements, during the Heat of Summer.
+ _Ramazini_, in his Chapter on Camp-Diseases, informs us, that
+ Dr. G. _Erric Barnstorff_, Physician to the Duke of
+ _Brunswick_, who served five Campaigns with the _Brunswick_
+ and _Lunenburg_ Troops in _Hungary_, told him, that the Camp
+ Diseases, particularly the Malignant Fever and Dysentery,
+ took their Rise from the Troops remaining long encamped on
+ the same Ground, and being exposed to the corrupted Steams of
+ the Bodies of dead Men, Horses, and other Animals, which lay
+ unburied; and of Excrements, which were not covered with
+ Earth. And these Causes have since been particularly taken
+ notice of by Dr. _Pringle_, in his _Observation on the
+ Diseases of the Army_.
+
+ Many have imputed the Cause of this Disorder to the eating of
+ Fruit in excess, because it generally appears about the
+ Middle of Summer, the Time the Fruit begins to be in Season,
+ and continues through the Autumn. But from later Observations
+ this should seem to be a vulgar Error. Dr. _Pringle_ (part i.
+ ch. iii. p. 20.) tells us, that, in the Year 1743, this
+ Sickness began and raged before any Fruit was in Season,
+ except Strawberries, (which from their high Price the Men
+ never tasted) and ended about the Time the Grapes were ripe;
+ which growing in open Vineyards were freely eat by every
+ body. And Dr. _Tissot_, in a Treatise which he published,
+ called _Avis au Peuple sur la Sante_, in his Chapter on the
+ _Dysentery_, Sec. 320, says, that ripe Fruit, especially the
+ Summer-Fruits, are so far from being the Cause of the
+ Disorder, that they are the great Preservatives against it:
+ he says, that, in the Years which the Fruit is most
+ plentiful, the Dysentery is least frequent; and he relates
+ several Instances where the Use of ripe Grapes proved a Cure
+ for the Disorder. Eleven People were attacked by the
+ Dysentery, nine eat Fruit, and all recovered; the other two,
+ a Grandmother and Child, from Prejudice, eat none, and both
+ died. A Regiment of _Swiss_ Soldiers, in Garrison in the
+ South of _France_, had the Dysentery very frequent among
+ them. The Captains purchased some Acres of a Vineyard, and
+ carried the sick Soldiers to the Field, and gave them the
+ Grapes to eat; and ordered the Men in Health to live upon
+ them chiefly. After this not one Person died, nor was any one
+ seized with the Distemper.--In an Account of a Treatise on
+ the Dysentery, published at _Hamburg_ in 1753, which was
+ epidemical the Year before, in _August_ and _September_, we
+ are told, that it did not proceed, as is commonly believed,
+ from the eating of Fruit; for it was observed, that those who
+ eat Fruit freely escaped better than those who abstained from
+ it altogether. _Vide Comment. de Rebus in Hist. Nat. &
+ Medecin. Gestis_, vol. II. par. iv. sect. v.
+
+ Generally in _August_ and _September_ we have People admitted
+ into _St. George_'s Hospital for the Dysentery; who have
+ certainly not catched the Disorder from eating of Fruit, but
+ from working in the Fields, and being exposed to Causes
+ similar to those which produce the Dysentery in Camps.
+
+At the Time the Petechial Fever was frequent at _Paderborn_ in
+_January_, _February_, and _March_ 1761, the Flux frequently
+accompanied it; and we had in the Hospitals likewise a Number of old
+Cases of this Kind, the Remains of the preceding Campaign about
+_Warbourg_; besides some Men who had relapsed during the Winter, and
+were sent to us when the Troops marched, upon the Winter-Expedition,
+into the Country of _Hesse_. In _May_ and _June_, what Fluxes we had
+at _Osnabruck_, were the remaining old Cases of the Hospitals of
+_Munster_, _Paderborn_, _Hoxter_, and _Niehms_. Some few recent ones
+were sent to _Bilifield_ about the End of _June_, and above 300 to
+_Munster_, in _July_ and _August_. Those sent to _Bremen_, in
+_November_ and _December_, had continued for some time before they
+reached us; but a good many of the Soldiers in the Garrison were taken
+ill of this Disorder, and sent immediately to the Hospital. In the
+Beginning of _May_ we had but four ill of this Complaint in the
+Hospital I attended; and there were not above six or seven, among the
+Sick sent down from the Army, in the Middle of this Month. In _June_
+there were but two sent to the Hospital at _Minden_; and not above ten
+among the Sick sent to _Natzungen_ in the Beginning of _July_; tho'
+towards the Middle of this Month they began to be more frequent; and
+continued to be more so in _August_ and _September_; and in the
+Hospital at _Osnabruck_ we had not above five or six ill of this
+Disorder, in _December_ 1762, and in _January_, _February_ and _March_
+1763.
+
+The Dysentery commonly begun with Sickness and Gripes, succeeded by a
+Purging, and attended with more or less Fever. Very soon the Gripes
+became more severe, attended with a Flatulency in the Bowels, and
+often with a Tenesmus. The Stools were chiefly composed of Mucus,
+mixed with Bile, and more or less Blood: tho' sometimes no Blood could
+be observed in them; and then the Soldiers used to say they had the
+White Flux.
+
+After eight, ten, or twelve, Days, if the Disorder was not complicated
+with any other, there remained little or no Fever, unless where some
+Accident supervened; tho' in Cases which terminated fatally, towards
+the latter End came on a Fever of a low malignant Kind, attended with
+black fetid Stools, Lientery, Hiccup, Stupor, and other bad Symptoms.
+
+It often happened, that, after the Dysentery had continued for some
+Time, the Sick complained for a Day or two of severe Gripes; and then
+discharged along with the Stools little Pieces of hardened Excrements;
+at other Times, tho' more rarely, little Pieces of white Stuff like
+Tallow or Suet: Frequently small Filaments, and little Pieces of
+Membranes, were found floating in the Stools; and it was very common
+for the Sick to vomit up Worms of the round Kind, or discharge them by
+Stool[30].
+
+ [30] Most Authors, who treat of the Dysentery, mention this
+ Symptom of Worms; and Dr. _Huxham_ tells us, that, in some
+ Seasons, he has seen round Worms in the Stools of most of the
+ Dysenteric Patients. _De Aere_, vol. II. p. 98.
+
+In the Course of the Disorder, the Men often complained of a violent
+Pain of the Rectum, near the Fundament, which was most excruciating
+when they went to Stool; it continued for some Days, sometimes for a
+Week or more; and then they passed more or less of a Yellow Pus with
+their Excrements, and the violent Pain ceased. Mr. _A. Tough_, one of
+the Apothecaries to the Military Hospital in _Germany_, was the first
+who told me that I should find Pus mixed with the Stools: on my
+mentioning a Case of this Kind, which had been relieved by Bleeding,
+and Clysters often repeated; he told me he had observed it frequently
+at _Gibraltar_; and was at a Loss to understand the Nature of the
+Symptom, till he observed the Matter in the Stools; which at once
+shewed him that it had been originally an acute Inflammation of the
+Part, and pointed out to him the proper Method of Cure.
+
+Oftentimes the Bilious and Malignant Fevers terminated in the
+Dysentery; or were accompanied with it, when it might be looked upon
+as a Symptom of these Fevers.
+
+The Appearances we found after Death in the Bodies of some Patients,
+who died of old Fluxes at _Bremen_, were: In all of them the Rectum
+was inflamed, and partly gangrened, especially the internal Coat. In
+two the lower Part of the Colon was inflamed, and there were several
+livid Spots on its great Arcade. In one whose Body was much emaciated,
+and who had been seized with a violent Pain of the Bowels two Days
+before his Death, all the small Guts were red and inflamed; and in
+another there were livid gangrened Spots on the Stomach[31].
+
+ [31] From the Accounts we have in Authors, of the Dissection
+ of the Bodies of Persons who died of the Dysentery, it would
+ appear; that there is no Part of the alimentary Canal which
+ has not some time or other been found inflamed, or in a state
+ of Suppuration or Gangrene; and the Liver, Spleen, and other
+ Viscera, have likewise been found diseased, but the Rectum
+ and Colon have almost in all been more or less affected. The
+ following Account I had, in the Year 1748, from the late Dr.
+ _L. Fraser_, who afterwards practised in the Island of
+ _Nevis_, two Days after the Patient died. _Mary Reid_, a
+ Woman thirty Years of Age, was taken ill of a Dysentery,
+ which in Three Weeks Time killed her. In her Life-time she
+ complained, more than ordinary, of Gripes in her Belly,
+ especially in her Left Side. Her Body was opened in Presence
+ of Dr. _Dundas_, who had attended her, during her Illness.
+ All the Intestines and Mesentery were inflamed, especially
+ the Colon and Rectum; the internal Side of which was quite in
+ a mortified State, and contained little Vesicles full of a
+ putrid fetid Liquor, Numbers of which she had evacuated by
+ Stool some Days before her Death.
+
+There was no Disorder we were more successful in the Cure of, than
+recent Fluxes; but after they had continued for Weeks, and were become
+in a manner chronic, they often foiled all our Endeavours, and a great
+Number died[32].
+
+ [32] While this Sheet was in the Press, I received Dr.
+ _Pringle_'s 4th Edition of his _Observations on the Diseases
+ of the Army_, and Dr. _Baker_'s Treatise on the _Dysentery
+ which was epidemic in London in the Year 1762_. Both these
+ Gentlemen give an Account of the Dissection of the Bodies of
+ some People who died of the Dysentery; where, besides the
+ common Appearances of the inner Surface of the Rectum and
+ Colon being covered with a bloody Slime, and their internal
+ Coats being inflamed, gangrened, or in a putrid State, there
+ were observed on the Inside of the lower Part of the Colon,
+ and upper Part of the Rectum, a Number of little Tubercles,
+ or Excrescences, which resembled the Small Pox, of a flat
+ Sort at the Height of the Disorder; but differed from them in
+ this, that they were of a firm Consistence, without any
+ Cavity: they were believed to take their Rise from the
+ cellular Membrane, which lies immediately above the villous
+ Coat. Perhaps such Tubercles might have been found in the
+ Colon and Rectum of those Bodies we opened; but not looking
+ for them, they may have passed unobserved.
+
+ _Morgagni_, in his Book lately published, _de Sede & Causis
+ Morborum_, epist. xxxi. is of Opinion, that the Filaments,
+ and Pieces of Membranes, which are frequently observed in the
+ Stools, are often formed of inspissated Mucus and Lymph, and
+ other Liquors; and not the Fibres, or Pieces of the villous
+ Coat of the Intestines, as alledged by many Authors.
+
+Upon my first being employed in the Military Hospitals in _Germany_,
+I was surprised to see so many of the old Dysenteric Cases end
+fatally; and imagined I had not fallen upon the Right Method of
+treating them: but upon consulting the other Physical People[33]
+employed in the same Service, I found them as unsuccessful, as myself,
+after having tried a Variety of Remedies: And at last, I was
+convinced, that when once the Flux had continued long, and injured the
+Structure of the Intestines to a certain Length, a Gangrene will
+often form by slow Degrees; and the Disorder end fatally,
+notwithstanding the Use of what are esteemed the most efficacious
+Remedies; and that, when this Disorder is violent, the Cure
+principally depends upon an early and speedy Application of proper
+Remedies, before the Strength be exhausted, or the Structure of the
+Bowels too much hurt. The bad Success we had in treating these old
+Cases, may perhaps surprise those who have never practised except in
+healthful Cities, where the Disease is commonly mild, and People apply
+soon for Advice. But all those Gentlemen who have had the Care of
+Military Hospitals, where the Dysentery has been frequent, and where
+the Sick have been often sent a great Way, before they reached the
+Hospitals, must be convinced of the Truth of what is here asserted.
+
+ [33] Mr. _Cleghorn_, in his _Account of the Diseases of the
+ Island of Minorca_, says, "That almost all the Dysenteries
+ which fell under my Observation, unless they were speedily
+ cured in the Beginning, at best proved obstinate, and too
+ frequently fatal, in spite of the many boasted Specificks for
+ this Distemper." chap. v. p. 228.--The physical Gentlemen
+ employed on the _American_ Service have told me, that the old
+ Flux Cases were as fatal in _America_, as we found them in
+ _Germany_. I would not from thence have it believed, that
+ every old Flux was to be looked on as a lost Case; and for
+ that Reason given up, and no Attempts be made to cure it; for
+ many, by great Care, and Strength of Constitution, have
+ gradually surmounted the Disorder, and recovered their
+ Health; especially when they got over the Winter, and lived
+ till the warm Weather began.
+
+In the Treatment of this Disorder, as well as of the Malignant Fever,
+nothing contributed more to the Cure, than keeping the Sick as clean
+as possible, and in large airy Wards.
+
+Most of the recent Fluxes, which I saw, were at first attended with a
+good deal of Fever, and Pain in the Bowels; and required more or less
+Blood to be taken away, according to the Strength of the Patient, and
+the Violence of the Symptoms.
+
+When the Patients were strong, and complained of sharp Pain of the
+Bowels, attended with a Fever, we used the Lancet freely, nor were we
+discouraged from bleeding in the Beginning by the low quick Pulse
+which often attended the Disorder; and we frequently found the Pulse
+rise as the Blood flowed from the Vein. But when the Sick were low and
+weak, without much Pain or Fever, and the Pulse was soft, we were more
+sparing of the vital Fluid[34].
+
+ [34] Although Bleeding, in the Beginning, has been
+ recommended by _Sydenham_, _Huxham_, _Pringle_, and other
+ Practitioners; yet it has been reckoned unnecessary in this
+ Disorder by some late Authors. But in most of the recent
+ Cases I saw, it was extremely necessary, and contributed
+ greatly to the Relief as well as the Cure of the Patient;
+ indeed where the Disorder had already continued some time,
+ and the Fever was gone off before the Patient was sent to us;
+ and the Disorder had become in a manner chronic, and the
+ Patient low, then bleeding was unnecessary, and would have
+ probably done Hurt. Mr. _Francis Russel_ told me, that when
+ the Dysentery was epidemical at _Gibraltar_, in Summer 1756,
+ he found that by bleeding such Patients as he met with at the
+ first coming on of the Symptoms, and by giving them
+ immediately a Vomit, and afterwards a sudorific Draught, the
+ Disorder was rendered mild, and few of those died.
+
+As the Disorder was for the most part attended with Sickness in the
+Beginning, we gave a Vomit after bleeding; which not only discharged
+the Contents of the Stomach, and a Quantity of Bile, but relieved the
+Sickness, and frequently threw the Patient into a breathing Sweat; and
+made the Purgatives which were given next Day operate more freely, and
+with more evident good Effects than where no Vomit had been
+administered.--If in the Course of the Disease the Sickness returned,
+the Emetic was repeated; and we often observed, when the Flux was
+obstinate, that well-timed Vomits greatly promoted the Cure.--The
+Vomit we commonly employed was the Powder of Ipecacuana, which we gave
+from ten to twenty Grains; and where the Patient was strong, and we
+wanted to make a free Evacuation, we added one, two, or three Grains
+of the Tartar Emetic; which encreased the Strength of the Vomit, and
+commonly operated likewise by Stool[35], as Dr. _Pringle_ has
+observed.
+
+ [35] Mr. _W. Russel_, who was with the Hospital at
+ _Martinico_, told me, that, when he was there, he found the
+ Vomit with the Tartar Emetic to be far preferable to any
+ other, in all Cases where there was much putrid Bile lodged
+ in the alimentary Canal; as it speedily carried off those
+ corrupt Humours, which were often productive of the greatest
+ Mischiefs, if they remained, but for a short Time, pent up
+ within the Bowels.
+
+Next Day we ordered a Purge to empty the other Parts of the alimentary
+Canal. The Purgative, that at first was most employed for this
+Purpose, was Rhubarb; but upon repeated Trials we did not find, that,
+in general, it answered so well, in this first Stage of the Disorder,
+as the _sal catharticum amarum_, with Manna and Oil; which operated
+without griping or disturbing the Patient, procured a freer
+Evacuation, and gave greater Relief than any other purgative Medicine
+we tried. Mr. _Francis Russel_, Surgeon to the _British_ Military
+Hospital in _America_, who was formerly Surgeon to the Island of
+_Minorca_, was the first Person who informed me (in the Year 1757) of
+the Use of the _sal catharticum amarum_ in the Dysentery; he told me,
+that the Year before (1756) the Dysentery had been very frequent and
+very fatal at _Gibraltar_; and, after trying Variety of Medicines, he
+had found nothing give more Relief, or contribute more to the Cure,
+than repeated Doses of these Salts.
+
+As a great Part of the Cure depended on the frequent Use of gentle
+Purges[36] in the Beginning, to carry off the corrupted Humours; the
+Purgative was repeated every second, third, or fourth Day, as the Case
+required; the Operation of the former Purge, and the Symptoms,
+determining the Frequency of the Repetition. It was surprising with
+how little Loss of Strength the Sick bore the Operation of these
+Purges; I have sometimes given them to strong People every Day, for
+two, three, or four Days successively; and observed that the Patient,
+instead of being weakened, seemed stronger, and more brisk and lively,
+after the Operation of each, from the Relief it gave; by evacuating
+those putrid, corrupted Humours, which kept him perpetually sick and
+uneasy, while they remained within the Bowels.
+
+ [36] Variety of Medicines have been recommended to answer
+ this Purpose.
+
+ The _vitrum ceratum antimonii_ proved often too rough a
+ Medicine, and therefore we laid it almost entirely aside.
+
+ Repeated small Doses of the Ipecacuana, from four to six
+ Grains, operated both as an Emetic, and kept up a Purging;
+ but they made the Men so sick, that we could not prevail upon
+ them to continue their Use. Mr. _Francis Russel_ told me,
+ that, in the Year 1756, he found a few Grains of Rhubarb
+ added to each Dose, made it operate more as a Purgative, and
+ did not make the Men so sick.--Dr. _Akenside_ proposes giving
+ the Ipecacuana in so small Doses as one or two Grains every
+ six Hours, in a Draught made of Mint-water, and Half a Drachm
+ of _confectio cardiaca_; and, after bleeding and vomiting
+ once, seems to depend almost entirely on the Use of this
+ Medicine for the Cure of the Dysentery. See his _Comment. de
+ Dysenteria_, cap. 2.
+
+ The watery Tincture of Rhubarb, recommended by _Degnerus_, we
+ tried in some Cases at Bremen; and found it to be a good mild
+ Purge, but not to answer so well as the Salts and Manna in
+ recent Cases. Mr. _William Russel_ told me that they found
+ this watery Tincture of Rhubarb to answer better in _America_
+ than any other of the Preparations of Rhubarb.
+
+ Calomel has been recommended by many as a Purge in
+ Dysenteries; and Dr. _Huxham_ (_de Aere_, Vol. II. P. 100)
+ assures us, that he has often experienced the good Effects of
+ it, especially when the Patient at the same time had Worms;
+ in such Cases we joined it to Rhubarb as mentioned in the
+ Text, or gave a Calomel Bolus over Night, and a Purge next
+ Morning. Dr. _Duncan_, Physician to his Majesty, told me,
+ that he found the following Method of Cure always successful
+ in the Dysentery, which was epidemic in _London_ in the Year
+ 1762.
+
+ If the Patient was Plethoric, or had much Fever, he ordered
+ more or less Blood to be taken away; and then gave four
+ Ounces of the following Julep, every Half Hour, till it both
+ vomited and purged. Rx _Tartar. emetic. gr._ iij _Mannae elect.
+ Unc._ ij _solve in Aq. hordeat. Lib._ 1.--The next Day, and
+ for five or six Days more, the Patient took so much of a
+ Decoction, of Manna, Tamarinds, and soluble Tartar, as kept
+ up a free Discharge by Stool.--If the Irritation and Griping
+ were severe, he found that a Solution of Manna, in the common
+ Almond Emulsion, was sufficient.
+
+ When the Pain, or Tenesmus, was violent, a Clyster, of
+ Chicken Broth, or of an Infusion of Linseed, with an Ounce or
+ two of Oil of sweet Almonds dissolved in the Yolk of an Egg,
+ injected once or twice a Day, was of great Use.
+
+ Upon the whole, he was always pleased when he saw large
+ excrementitious Stools come away; and when that could be
+ procured by a gentle Method, he was the more pleased.
+
+ This Disorder was very often cured in a few Days, and in that
+ Case he dropt the further Use of Medicines; but when it
+ exceeded the Period of six or seven Days, he then added
+ thirty or forty Drops of the _tinctura thebaica_ to the
+ Clysters; and ordered a Scruple of the Extract of the Logwood
+ to be taken thrice a Day in some proper Vehicle.
+
+ The Patient's Diet was Rice-Gruel, Sago, Panado, and such
+ like; no Animal Food, not so much as Chicken-Broth, was
+ allowed in the Beginning of the Distemper, nor even Oil,
+ Butter, or Fat of any Kind. The common Drink was Almond
+ Emulsion, Rice-Water, or Barley-Water with Gum Arabic.
+
+ Dr. _Duncan_ lost but one Patient out of Eighty, whom he had
+ under his Care that Season; and he was delirious, had a high
+ Fever, and a _subsultus tendinum_ before the Doctor was
+ called to him, and he died the next Day.
+
+ The late Dr. _Young_, of _Edinburgh_, seems to have had a
+ very just Notion of this Disorder, and of the proper Method
+ of treating it; for, in his Treatise on Opium, sect. vii. he
+ says, "I am convinced from Experience, that most of the
+ Dysenteries I have hitherto met with, might have been cured
+ by purging mildly, but constantly; and at the same time
+ abating the Acrimony in the great Guts by emollient Clysters,
+ and in the small ones by Plenty of Absorbents, and a Diet of
+ Chicken Broth: But it must be observed with regard to
+ Purgatives, that Manna agrees best with some, Rhubarb with
+ others, Jalap, Mercury, and toasted Rhubarb with others;
+ while others are sooner cured by emollient Clysters. I use
+ Opium only when the Disease is mild, or after its Violence is
+ abated by Evacuants and Emollients."
+
+ Scammony, Aloes, and the other strong resinous and hydragogue
+ Purges, are hurtful, and occasion Pain. I always observed,
+ that those Purges answered best which made the freest
+ Evacuation, and acted with the greatest Ease to the Patient;
+ of which the Salts and Manna answered best of any I have
+ hitherto used.
+
+Though Rhubarb did not answer so well in the Beginning as the saline
+Purges; yet afterwards in the Course of the Distemper, when the
+Patient did not complain much of Gripes, half a Drachm of Rhubarb,
+either by itself or in a saline Draught, proved a good gentle Purge;
+and given with six or seven Grains of Calomel, was found to be a good
+Medicine, when the Disorder was attended with Worms.
+
+In the Evening, after the Operation of the Purge, we gave an Opiate;
+and repeated it at Nights, in the Intervals between the Purges; but
+were obliged to be very sparing of the Dose, while the Disorder
+continued in its acute State; the Opiate was only given in a Quantity
+sufficient to mitigate the Pain, and to procure Rest, but never so as
+to stupify the Patient, or prevent a due Discharge by Stool; though we
+were often obliged to encrease the Dose, as Use made it familiar to
+the Patient.
+
+In the Intervals between the Purges, we gave in the Day, the Mindereri
+Draughts with the Mithridate; or the saline Draughts with the Addition
+of four Drops of the _tinctura thebaica_; or some such mild
+diaphoretic, every four or six Hours; which helped to keep up a free
+Perspiration, without any Danger of stopping the Purging; and for the
+most part answered much better than the Diascord, or Philonium, or
+other strong Astringents and Opiates commonly prescribed for this
+Purpose; which were always liable to check the Purging too much, and
+bring on severe Gripes attended with Heat and Fever[37]; and therefore
+we seldom made Use of them in this first Stage of the Disorder.
+
+ [37] _Sydenham_, _Huxham_, and all good Practitioners, have
+ taken Notice of the bad Effects of the too free Use of
+ Astringents, and given Cautions against it.
+
+If the Patient was attacked with severe Gripes[38], and a Tenesmus,
+which the Purgatives and gentle Opiates did not relieve, we ordered
+the Abdomen to be fomented with warm Stupes; and the Patient to drink
+freely of warm Barley or Rice-water, or of weak Broth[39], or an
+Infusion of Camomile Flowers, as recommended by Dr. _Pringle_; and
+ordered first Clysters of large Quantities of the plain emollient
+Decoction to be given; and if the Gripes still continued, to be
+repeated in small Quantities, with the Addition of a Drachm or two of
+the _tinctura thebaica_; for we observed that Opiate Clysters often
+gave more Relief, than Anodynes administered in any other Way; and
+sometimes, when a Tenesmus was very troublesome, the common oily
+Clyster, with a little Diascord, and _tinctura thebaica_, or the
+Starch Clyster, gave more Ease than any other.--In some Cases, where
+the Pain was sharp, attended with a Fever, we were obliged to take
+away more or less Blood; and sometimes also to apply a Blister to that
+Part of the Abdomen where the Patient felt most Pain.
+
+ [38] If the Patient was suddenly attacked with sharp Pain of
+ the Bowels and Gripes, on a Day in which he had not Physic, a
+ Dose of the Salts and Manna was commonly given immediately,
+ to empty thoroughly the first Passages.
+
+ [39] Mr. _W. Russel_ told me, that he and Dr. _Huck_ found
+ the free Use of the following Emulsion, made of Bees Wax, to
+ be of great Use after Evacuations, where there was much Pain
+ of the Bowels, in recent Cases of Fluxes in the Hospitals in
+ _America_. Rx. Cerae alb. vel flavae drachmes tres. Sapon. alb.
+ Hispan. drachmam unam. Aquae fontanae, unciam unam, liquefiant
+ super ignem in vase ferreo, agitando spatula, & dein infunde
+ in mortarium marmoreum, & adde paulatim aq. fontanae, libras
+ duas syrupi sacchari. spiritus vini gallici tenuis, vel aquae
+ alicujus spirituosae ana unciam unam, terendo optime ut fiat
+ emulsio.
+
+ This Method of dissolving Bees Wax, in a Watery Liquor, is
+ entirely new; for before this we knew of no Way of making it
+ miscible with Water.
+
+During this Course, the Patients used the common low Diet of the
+Hospital; when they loathed the Rice-Gruel, they had Panado with a
+little Red Wine and Sugar; or Water-gruel, when it could be got, in
+its Place.--Their common Drink was Barley or Rice-water; of which it
+was recommended to them to drink plentifully; as nothing contributed
+more to the Cure than the free Use of such Liquors, to dilute and
+blunt the Acrimony of the Fluids[40]. In some Cases, when the Purging
+was violent, and not accompanied with the malignant Fever, the
+_decoctum album_ was found to be a good Drink; and we added
+occasionally a few Drops of the _tinctura thebaica_.
+
+ [40] Dr. _Huxham_ (_de Aere_, Vol. II. p. 107.) says, there
+ is no Disorder in which a diluting, sweetening Drink is more
+ necessary than in this; that he has done great Service among
+ the Poor by luke-warm Water; that, after emptying the Bowels
+ thoroughly, he has sometimes cured this Disorder by the Use
+ of pure Water, and a small Quantity of Opium. And _Baglivi_
+ (_Prax. Med._ lib. i.) tells us, that the drinking of common
+ Whey, and throwing up frequent Clysters of it, had cured
+ many, and that this was looked upon as a Specific, and kept a
+ Secret by some.
+
+Such were the chief Remedies we used in the first Stage of this
+Disorder; but after some Weeks, when the Fever had abated, and free
+Evacuations had been made, and the Complaint become in a manner
+chronic, we were obliged to try other Methods; and found that the best
+Way of treating this Disorder, was, to endeavour to brace and restore
+the Tone of the Intestines, by means of the corroborating and gentle
+astringent Medicines, mixed with Opiates; while mild Purgatives were
+given at proper Intervals.
+
+The Patients were kept to the same low Diet as before, with the
+Addition of a little Wine or Brandy. They were allowed from a Gill to
+a Pint of red Wine _per_ Day, which was commonly mulled before it was
+given them; when the Wine griped them, which it frequently did, they
+took in its Stead Half a Gill or a Gill of Brandy, mixed with a Pint
+or a Quart of Barley or Rice-water, or of the _decoctum album_.
+
+In this Stage of the Disorder we found, that the same Medicines would
+not answer with all, and therefore we were obliged to try Variety[41];
+and indeed, unless where the Violence of the Disorder had abated by
+the Use of Evacuations, the Event was always very doubtful; for when
+the Complaint had continued long and become chronic, and the Structure
+of the Intestines was much hurt, before the Sick were sent to us; or
+when it continued obstinate, and yielded but little to Evacuations,
+and the other Methods used in the first Stage, even Remedies esteemed
+the most efficacious oftentimes proved unsuccessful, and at length
+the Patient died.
+
+ [41] Dr. _Pringle_, in the _fourth Edition of his
+ Observations_, just published, in treating of the third or
+ last Stage of the Dysentery, remarks, that this is the Time
+ for Astringents, which ought not to be given sooner, or at
+ least very sparingly. And he tells us, that, in the former
+ Editions of his Work, he mentioned those Compositions which
+ he had most frequently used, but that he had now laid most of
+ them aside; and at present trusts to Vomits, and to a Milk
+ Diet, for the perfect Cure.
+
+ He says, "Whenever therefore the Patient is in this State,
+ and especially when his Pulse is quick, and he complains of
+ inward Heat, I began with giving him a Scruple of Ipecacuana;
+ and the next Day I put him upon the Milk-Diet; which I
+ continue till all the hectic Symptoms are gone, and till the
+ Bowels have recovered their Tone. During this Course I have
+ seldom had Occasion for any other Medicine, excepting the
+ Chalk Julep mentioned before, which I use for correcting that
+ strong Acid so incident to relaxed Stomachs. Sometimes also I
+ add an Opiate to procure Rest at Night; but after a few Days
+ these are likewise laid aside. All that I require (which
+ indeed is often hard to obtain) is a strict Perseverance in
+ the low Diet: and now and then a Repetition of the Vomit,
+ upon any new Disorder of the Stomach, or great Laxity of the
+ Bowels.
+
+ "Whilst the Patient continues in this Course, I forbid all
+ animal Food and fermented Liquors; and besides Milk, I allow
+ only the Preparations of Grain, Sago and Salop." See Part
+ iii. ch. vi. p. 289, 290.
+
+A Spoonful of the _mixtura fracastorii_, taken after every loose
+Stool; and an anodyne Draught at Night, had a good Effect with
+some--Repeated Doses of the _philonium Londinense_ answered better
+with others, who were low, and required a Remedy that was warm and
+cordial--And others found more Benefit from the Mindereri Draughts,
+with Mithridate, or the _confectio cardiaca_, or the Theriac anodyne
+Boluses.
+
+The _mixtura Campechensis_, both alone and with _tinctura thebaica_,
+checked the Purging, and gave Relief sometimes; and the Addition of
+some of the Extract of Bark and Tincture of Cinnamon, seemed to
+encrease its Efficacy in one or two old Cases, at _Bremen_; but it
+afterwards occasioned such Sickness, that we did not continue its Use.
+
+In other inveterate Dysenteries, where we thought that a strong
+Astringent was wanted, we added a small Proportion of Allum to the
+_Campechense_ Julep, which on first using seemed to be serviceable;
+but at other Times it occasioned a Tenesmus and Gripes; and therefore
+we were obliged to be very cautious how we used it.
+
+Equal Parts of the _electuarium diascordii_ and _electuarium
+corticis_, taken in the Quantity of a Drachm twice or thrice a Day,
+was of Use in many old Fluxes[42], though it made other Patients so
+sick, that they were obliged to lay it aside.
+
+ [42] I had lately a very remarkable Instance of the Effects
+ of this Medicine, in the Case of one _Gilchrist_, a
+ middle-aged Man, by Trade a Taylor; who was admitted into
+ _St. George_'s Hospital the 20th of _July_, 1763, for an old
+ Flux, which had continued above six Months, and reduced him
+ very low: He had taken a great many Medicines without any
+ Effect. After giving him a Vomit and two Doses of Tincture of
+ Rhubarb, I gave him four Grains of the Powder of Ipecacuana
+ with Opium three Times a Day; but that having no Effect,
+ after using it for above a Fortnight, I ordered him the
+ Electuary of Diascord and Cortex; from the Time he began to
+ use this Medicine, he mended daily; and was dismissed in good
+ Health the 26th of _September_.
+
+We tried likewise in this Stage of the Disorder, repeated small Doses
+of the Ipecacuana; but it occasioned such Sickness, that we did not
+persist in its Use.
+
+In other Cases, we gave from two to five Grains of the Ipecacuana,
+mixed with Opium, in different Proportions (from three Grains to ten
+of the Ipecacuana to one of the Opium), every four or six Hours; it
+gave sometimes a little present Ease, at other Times it occasioned
+Sickness; we often continued its Use for ten, twelve, or fourteen
+Days; but it seldom produced any remarkable Change for the better, and
+we were obliged to have Recourse to other Remedies.
+
+_Dover_'s Powder was given in large Doses, from one Scruple to two;
+and proved a good Sudorific and Anodyne in some Cases; though in
+others it made the Patients sick, without producing any good
+Effect.--It commonly answered better, when used occasionally as a
+Sudorific, than when constantly continued.
+
+During the Use of these Remedies, it was necessary to repeat the
+Purgatives from Time to Time; or to mix them occasionally with the
+other Medicines, in order to carry off any corrupted Humours, or
+Excrements that might be lodged In the Cavity of the Intestines; for
+when this was neglected, the Patients were often seized with Sickness
+and Gripes, and a more violent Purging than before:--And if at any
+Time they complained of Gripes, and passed little Pieces of hardened
+Excrements, it was mostly a certain Sign that a Purge was indicated;
+and, on such Occasions, it generally gave Relief; and when attended
+with Sickness, a Vomit was given before the Purge.--Clysters were used
+as in recent Cases, where the Sick were low, or had much Pain of the
+Bowels[43], or complained of a Tenesmus.
+
+ [43] On the 21st of _November_, 1759, _Hanah Meredith_, a
+ middle-aged Woman, was admitted into _St. George_'s Hospital
+ for a Flux, which she had six or seven Weeks; she had no
+ Fever, but complained much of Sickness and Gripes, and her
+ Disorder had reduced her very low. During the two first Weeks
+ of her being in the Hospital, she had two Vomits of
+ Ipecacuana and four Doses of Rhubarb; and in the Intervals
+ anodyne and astringent Medicines, which made no Alteration in
+ her Complaints. On the 2d of _December_, she told me, that
+ two Years before she had had a Flux for above three Months,
+ which had yielded to no Remedies till she was ordered
+ repeated Clysters, and that they had made a Cure in a short
+ Time. I then ordered an emollient Clyster with a drachm of
+ the _electuarium diascordii_, and a Scruple of the _tinctura
+ thebaica_, to be given twice a Day, which gave her almost
+ immediate Relief; and with the Assistance of some Doses of
+ Rhubarb, and one or two Vomits and occasional Opiates,
+ removed her Disorder by the Middle of _January_; though she
+ remained long weak, and troubled at Times with Gripes; but
+ these Complaints were at last got the better of by her taking
+ some Doses of Rhubarb, and drinking daily a Pint of Lime
+ Water mixed with Half a Pint of Milk.
+
+ _Sarah Spencer_, a middle-aged Woman, was admitted into _St.
+ George_'s Hospital the 9th of _November_, 1763, for a Flux,
+ which had continued for two Months, and reduced her very low.
+ She complained much of Sickness and Gripes; her Stools were
+ mostly composed of Mucus and Blood; her Pulse was low, and
+ she had no Fever, but a Whiteness of the Tongue, and
+ complained of Thirst.--The first Day she had a Vomit, and
+ next Day a Dose of the purging saline oily Draught.--She was
+ ordered to have an emollient Clyster, with a Drachm of
+ Diascord, and as much _tinctura thebaica_, given her every
+ Evening; and to have a Dose of the saline oily Purge twice a
+ Week, and Opiates occasionally; by following this Course, and
+ drinking at Times the Chalk Julep, her Disorder was removed,
+ and she was discharged the Hospital on the 30th of the same
+ Month.
+
+In some old Dysenteries, where the villous Coat of the Intestines was
+much injured, I gave the Cordial Draughts, with the Addition of Half a
+Drachm of the _balsamum copaivi_, a Scruple of the Extract of the
+Bark, and five Drops of the _tinctura thebaica_, three Times a Day.
+At first, this Medicine seemed to promise much, particularly in the
+Case of an old Invalid, _William Brookes_; who had been long ill of a
+Flux, attended with Gripes and a Tenesmus. He had used Variety of
+Remedies, without receiving any Benefit. For the first Fortnight,
+after he began the Use of this Medicine, he rested well, and found
+great Relief; and seemed to be in a fair Way of doing well. But the
+Disorder being too far advanced before he began to use it, he
+relapsed, and died. On opening his Body, the inner Coats of the Rectum
+and the lower Part of the Colon seemed to be reduced almost to a
+gelatinous Substance, and the other Coats were black, approaching to a
+Gangrene.--The same Medicine gave Relief in other Cases, but they were
+too far advanced before it was administered. In these Cases, when the
+villous Coat of the Intestines was inflamed and very irritable, the
+mucilaginous Medicines, the _pulvis e tragacantha_, and such others,
+were of Service; and frequently Starch Clysters and Anodynes gave
+Relief, when other Remedies had little Effect. Flower, boiled with
+Milk, and sweetened with Sugar, and given for Breakfast, as mentioned
+by Dr. _Pringle_, proved a good Palliative to some; and the Starch and
+Gum Arabic, dissolved in Water, a good Drink to others.--Lime Water
+and Milk, drank to the Quantity of a Pint or a Quart a Day, was of use
+to a few, though it did not agree with all.
+
+It was very common for Patients bad in the malignant Fever to be
+seized likewise with the Flux. Such Cases were always extremely
+dangerous; and when the Fever was bad, we were often obliged to
+neglect the Flux, and only attend to the Fever.--When the Purging was
+violent, and appeared very early in the Fever, it often sunk the
+Patients, and soon carried them off: but where it was moderate, and
+did not appear till towards the Height or the Decline of the Fever, it
+often proved a Crisis to the Disorder.
+
+When such Fluxes appeared early attended with sharp Pain of the
+Bowels, and Signs of Inflammation; if the Patient was strong, we
+began the Cure with opening a Vein, which the Patient bore easily, and
+it gave Relief; but when the Symptoms were mild, without any acute
+Pain, the Bleeding was omitted.--Commonly the Bowels were loaded with
+corrupted Humours, when this Symptom appeared; and, therefore, we
+found it of Advantage to give a Dose of the Salts with Manna and Oil,
+or some other gentle Purge, to carry them off; and in the Evening an
+Opiate to ease the Pain and procure the Patient Rest.
+
+After this we gave the Mindereri Draughts with Mithridate; and as soon
+as the Petechiae appeared, or we observed any Remissions in the Fever,
+the Patient took every four or six Hours, a Drachm of an Electuary,
+composed of equal Parts of the _electuarium corticis_ and the
+_electuarium diascordii_[44]; or Half a Drachm of the Powder of the
+Bark, or a Scruple of the Extract, in the Mindereri Draughts, with
+four or five Drops of the _tinctura thebaica_; and we repeated the
+Opiate in the Evening, always proportioning the Quantity of it to the
+Effects of the former Dose, and the Violence of the Purging.
+
+ [44] This Practice of giving the Cortex with Opiates in the
+ Dysentery is not new; for Dr. R. _Morton_, in his Appendix to
+ his second Exercise on the Fevers, which appeared from 1658
+ to 1691, observes, that after the Plague of 1666 had ceased,
+ a Fever from a milder Poison, attended with Gripes and
+ Dysentery, began to make its Appearance. As the common
+ Methods of Cure proved unsuccessful, and Dr. _Morton_
+ observed Exacerbations and Remissions, he resolved to give
+ the Bark mixed with Laudanum; and found it answer his
+ Expectation. The first Patient to whom he gave it, was a man
+ in _Long Lane_, who laboured under a Tertian Dysentery; upon
+ observing a Remission, he ordered a Drachm of the Bark, mixed
+ with a Grain of Opium, to be given every four Hours for six
+ Times; and this removed both the Fever and Dysentery.--He
+ says, he afterwards gave it, with equal Success, in the
+ Quotidian Dysenteries, where he observed Exacerbations or
+ Remissions; and he adds, that he does not doubt but that it
+ will answer as well in Epidemical Diarrhoea's, and Camp Fevers
+ attended with such Symptoms.
+
+ Dr. _Whytt_ of _Edinburgh_ has given with Success a strong
+ Decoction of the Bark, mixed with the _confectio japonica_ of
+ the _Edinburgh_ Dispensatory, in the bad State of the
+ Dysentery, when the Mouth and alimentary Canal were
+ threatened with Aphthae, and even sometimes after they had
+ appeared. And Dr. _Pringle_ mentions his having given the
+ Decoction of the Bark, with Snake-Root and some Drops of
+ Laudanum, in the Dysentery complicated with the malignant
+ Fever. See _Note to Page 245 of his third Edition on the
+ Diseases of the Army_.
+
+On the second or third Day, we repeated the Purge; or, if the Patient
+was weak, ordered a Clyster to be administered in its Place; in order
+to prevent the putrid Fluids and Excrements from being accumulated in
+the Bowels:--In other respects we treated it as when the Disorder was
+not complicated with the malignant Fever.
+
+This Method, though it did not succeed with all, yet it answered
+better than any other I tried;--and it ought to be remarked, that
+although it had such a good Effect in Cases attended with the
+malignant Fever, or where the Fever inclined to the intermittent Kind,
+it did not answer so well in other recent Cases, but often made the
+Patient sick.
+
+In military Hospitals, Fluxes are liable to be complicated with other
+Disorders, as well as with the malignant Fever; especially with
+Coughs, and pleuritic and peripneumonic Symptoms, when the Weather
+begins to be cold, in _October_ and _November_.--In such Cases, when
+the Patients were strong, we were often obliged to bleed freely, to
+apply Blisters, and in the Beginning treat the Disorder as
+inflammatory; having at the same Time an Eye towards the Flux, in the
+other Medicines we prescribed.
+
+Patients, who have had the Flux long, are apt to have their Legs swell
+at Nights; or to swell all over as soon as the Flux has stopped. Such
+oedematous or anasarcous Swellings, we treated nearly in the same
+Manner as those which followed the petechial Fever; only that we durst
+not at first be so free with the Use of Purgatives; for as the Bowels
+remained weak and easily irritated, such Medicines were apt to bring
+back the Flux; and therefore, in the Beginning, we were for the most
+part obliged to attempt the Cure by Diuretics and Diaphoretics; and to
+be sparing of the Use of Purgatives, especially of those of the
+hydragogue Kind; though if the Swellings continued for some Time after
+the Flux was gone off, and the Patients were strong, we then ventured
+to give Purges at proper Intervals:--And Blisters and Scarifications
+removed them in several Instances both at _Paderborn_ and
+_Osnabruck_.
+
+In _December_, 1761, we had a Case of this Kind where the _oxymel
+scilliticum_ was of remarkable Service. A Soldier, belonging to the
+Guards, after a Flux, swelled all over, and made but a very small
+Quantity of Water. He took Medicines of different Sorts for some
+Weeks, but received no Benefit till we gave him the Oxymel Mixture;
+after taking a few Doses he made Water very freely, and in large
+Quantities, and the Swellings of his Body and Scrotum began
+immediately to subside; and by continuing its Use for a Fortnight, the
+Swellings entirely disappeared, and he recovered his Health and
+Strength.--The Oxymel, at the same Time that it promoted a Flow of
+Urine, kept his Body gently open, but did not occasion any Return of
+the Flux.
+
+At the Beginning of _January_, 1762, one _Carter_, a Soldier of the
+Eleventh Regiment of Foot, laboured under an universal Anasarca; which
+about two Months before had succeeded a Flux. He made but very little
+Water, and that of a high red Colour. He took Variety of Medicines,
+as Purges, Vomits, _Dover_'s Powder, lixivial and neutral Salts with
+Opiates, Infusions of Horse-Radish, all without Effect; till he was
+ordered small Doses of Calomel, three Grains Morning and Evening.
+After the third Dose he began to make Water freely; and by the 24th of
+_January_ the Swellings were all gone, and he was shipped off for
+_England_ the 8th of _February_; having been discharged from his
+Regiment. The Ship, he went aboard of, was detained in the River
+_Weser_ for above six Weeks, and the malignant Fever broke out aboard
+the Transport: He took the Distemper, and got well of it; but towards
+the Decline was seized with a Return of the Flux, which carried him
+off.
+
+When these oedematous Swellings came after the Purging was stopt, if
+the Patient's Strength was not much exhausted, and he laboured under
+no other Disorder, he commonly got the better of it:--But when the
+Strength was gone before the Swellings appeared, the Disorder often
+ended in a confirmed Dropsy, and at last in Death; and when the
+Swellings were universal over the Body, while the Flux yet continued,
+it was a Sign of great Weakness, and they did not survive it long[45].
+
+ [45] Many other Medicines have been used for the Cure of old
+ Dysenteries,--The _Conessi Bark_, recommended as a Specific
+ in Diarrhoeas, cured a Dysentery which had yielded nothing to
+ a Variety of Medicines. _Edinburgh Medical Essays_, _Vol._
+ III. _Art._ iv.--The _cortex eleutheriae vel cascarillae_ is
+ much recommended for the Cure of Dysenteries in the _Memoir.
+ de L'Academie des Sciences a Paris_ 1719, and is still in
+ great Repute among the _Germans_.--The Decoction of the
+ _semiruba_ Bark was found to have a good Effect in the
+ Dysentery, where the Patient continued to void Blood with his
+ Stools; and when the Stools were only liquid, without a
+ Mixture of Blood, some of the Cascarilla added to the
+ Decoction encreased its Efficacy. See _Degnerus_'s Treatise
+ _de Dysenteria_, _cap._ iii. _sect._ 55. These and many other
+ Remedies have been tried in obstinate Dysenteries.
+
+ From what I have observed myself, and from the Accounts of
+ others, I am now convinced, that such Cases as are not
+ already too far gone, are most likely to be cured,
+
+ 1. By keeping the Patients on a low Diet, composed
+ principally of Milk, Sago, Rice, Salop, and such other Things
+ as are recommended by Dr. _Pringle_; allowing weak Broths,
+ and a small Quantity of white Meat, as they recover their
+ Strength. The common Drink to be Barley or Rice-Water, Toast
+ and Water, _Bristol_ Water, Almond Emulsion, and such
+ like.--By making them wear some additional Cloathing, and
+ guarding carefully against catching cold.--Errors of Diet and
+ Exposure to Cold being the most frequent Causes of Relapses
+ into this Disorder.
+
+ 2. By giving from Time to Time a Dose of some mild Purge;
+ such as a little Manna and Salts; a Solution of Manna in
+ Almond Emulsion; twenty or thirty Grains of Rhubarb, in a
+ saline Draught, or such like; and occasionally gentle
+ Emetics.
+
+ 3. By the Use of some of the mild Astringents and
+ Corroborants.--The Bark, with Astringents and Opiates,
+ agreeing best with some--Decoctions of the Semiruba with
+ others--Chalk in Electuaries, or Juleps, with others--anodyne
+ and astringent Clysters with others--while others receive
+ more Benefit from other Remedies--and severals find
+ themselves better when they use no Medicines of this Kind.
+
+ 4. And by the occasional Use of Opiates, and a free Air: And
+ by moderate Exercise on Horseback, or in a Machine in the
+ convalescent State.
+
+ I ought not to omit mentioning, that I have seen some Cases
+ where Evacuations had been used in the Beginning, which,
+ after they had continued for some Time, were cured by a
+ regular Diet of Broths, and white Meats; riding daily on
+ Horseback; and drinking a generous good Claret Wine. However,
+ it ought to be remarked, that this Method only succeeded
+ where the Disorder was mild, and its Violence had abated by
+ previous Evacuations.
+
+
+
+
+OF THE CHOLERA MORBUS.
+
+
+The Cholera Morbus, or a sudden and violent Vomiting and Purging, was
+very frequent in _July_ and _August_ 1701; and several were attacked
+with it at _Munster_.--It was attended with great Sickness, with Pain,
+and Inflation of the Abdomen, Thirst, and a small quick Pulse: Some
+had it in a pretty violent Degree, but in general it was mild; and
+although the Sickness, Vomiting, and Purging, continued, in one or two
+Cases, for above a Day; yet none of those died whom I saw.
+
+This Disorder weakens the Patient much, in a short Space of Time; and
+sometimes, when violent, kills in less than twenty-four Hours. It is
+always most frequent in Summer and the Beginning of Autumn; and is
+taken Notice of by _Hippocrates_, _Aretaeus_, _Celsus_, and other
+antient Authors; and is very accurately described by many of them.--It
+is of the bilious Kind; and the Cure principally depends upon the free
+Use of warm mild Liquors in the Beginning; to dilute and blunt the
+Acrimony of the Bile, and other Fluids, and to promote their
+Discharge; and afterwards of gentle Cordials to support the Strength;
+and warm Fomentations to allay the Pain when violent; and mild Opiates
+to procure Rest; and if the Sickness or Griping remains next Day after
+the Cholera is stopt, to give a Dose of Physic and an Opiate in the
+Evening.
+
+An Officer, who had been wounded on the 15th of _July_, at the Battle
+of _Fillinghausen_, began afterwards to live very freely, and was on
+the 4th of _August_ seized in the Night with the Cholera.--About ten
+o'Clock next Day I was sent for; and found him in violent Agony, with
+sharp Pain in the Bowels, Reachings, and Strainings to Vomit, and
+Spasms and Cramps in the Bowels, Legs, and Arms.--He had large red
+Blotches on his Extremities, and no Pulse was to be felt at the Wrist,
+and rather a Fluttering than a Beating at the Heart.--He had vomited
+and purged much in the Night before I saw him, but the Purging had
+begun to abate.--I immediately ordered him an emollient Clyster, and a
+saline Draught, with the _confectio cardiaca_, and five Drops of
+liquid Laudanum; which, if he vomited up, was to be repeated soon
+after; if not, only once in four Hours: And he was directed to drink
+freely of weak Chicken Broth, warm.--Two Hours afterwards we found him
+in the same Situation; still no Pulse to be felt, which prevented us
+from bleeding him; and the violent Pain of the Stomach and Bowels, and
+the Cramps, continued. We then ordered Flannels, dipped in a warm
+emollient Decoction, to be kept constantly applied to his Belly,
+dipping them in the warm Decoction as soon as they began to grow cool;
+his Clyster to be repeated with the Addition of a Drachm of the
+_electuarium e baccis lauri_, and Half a Drachm of the _tinctura
+thebaica_; a Scruple of Castor, and Half a Drachm of Spirit of
+Lavender, to be added to each of his Draughts; and a Blister to be
+prepared, in case these Medicines gave no Relief.--Soon after,
+beginning to use the Fomentations, the Cramps and Pains began to
+abate; about four o'Clock in the Afternoon we could perceive a
+Fluttering of the Pulse at the Wrist, and all the Pains and Cramps
+were much easier; so that there was no occasion for the Blister.--Next
+Morning he was very easy, but low, and inclined to be sick; for which
+his Cordial Draughts were repeated every six Hours.--The third Day, as
+he complained of a little Griping in the Bowels, we ordered him a Dose
+of Tincture of Rhubarb, and an Opiate in the Evening, which entirely
+removed these Complaints, and he was abroad and well next Day.
+
+One Soldier, who had a good deal of Fever, and complained of acute
+Pain in the Bowels, along with the Vomiting and Purging, was blooded;
+and drank freely of warm Barley-Water while the Vomiting
+continued.--After throwing up a Quantity of green bilious Matter, the
+Vomiting ceased; and the Gripes and Purging became less violent.--In
+an Hour after, being able to retain some very weak Broth in his
+Stomach, he drank plentifully of it through the Day; and the Purging
+being abated towards Night, he took an anodyne Draught; and next Day,
+having still a little Sickness remaining, had a Dose of Physic and an
+Opiate at Night, which removed all his Complaints.
+
+The Rest, who were attacked with the Cholera at _Munster_, were
+treated much in the same Way; only as they had not such acute Pain and
+Fever as this Man, it was thought unnecessary to bleed them.
+
+The Antients[46] recommended drinking freely of warm Water in the
+Beginning, and the Use of both cold and hot Fomentations of the
+Stomach and Belly;--and in the low State, the Use of Wine, mixed with
+Water, and Polenta[47]; and to apply Rue, with Vinegar, and other
+strong smelling Things, to the Nostrils; besides Variety of other
+Remedies.--When Convulsions happen, _Celsus_[48] advises to anoint the
+Belly with warm Oil; and if that does not remove them, to apply
+Cupping-Glasses or Mustard to the Stomach; and, after sleeping, to
+abstain the second Day from Drink; and the third, to go into the Bath;
+and if any thing of a Fever remains after the Cholera is suppressed,
+to give a Purge.
+
+ [46] See _Aretaeus_, Lib. ii. Cap. 4. and _Celsus_, Lib. iv.
+ Cap. 11.
+
+ [47] The Polenta seems to have been nothing but toasted
+ Barley Meal. See _Plinii Hist. Natural._ Lib. xxii. Cap. 25.
+
+ [48] _Celsus loco citato._
+
+Dr. _Sydenham_[49] trusts principally to drinking freely of Chicken
+Broth, and throwing up Clysters of the same, and afterwards giving
+Opiates.
+
+ [49] _Processus integ. de Cholera._
+
+Dr. _Ayton Douglas_, in the sixth Volume of the _Edinburgh_ Medical
+Essays[50], recommends a Decoction of Oat Bread, baked without Leaven
+or Yest, and carefully toasted as brown as Coffee, but not burnt; as a
+Remedy very grateful to the Stomach, and useful in stopping the
+Vomiting, and sometimes the Purging too: And he relates several Cases
+where it had a good Effect. After the Vomiting was stopped, he added
+the Use of mild Opiates; and, where the Patient was low, Wine and
+other Cordials.
+
+ [50] Art. 65.
+
+
+
+
+OF THE INFLAMMATORY FEVER.
+
+
+On the Return of the Troops from the Winter Expedition into the
+Country of _Hesse_, in the Year 1761, we had several Men seized with
+Inflammatory Fevers without any topical Inflammation; and at the
+Opening of each Campaign had always Numbers sent to the Hospitals ill
+of this Disorder. Towards the End of the Campaigns, and throughout the
+Winter, many were seized with Inflammatory Fevers; but these were
+mostly complicated, with pleuritic, or peripneumonic Symptoms, or
+other topical Inflammations, or with rheumatic Complaints.
+
+In the Inflammatory Fever, the Sick were seized at first with cold and
+hot Fits, succeeded by Pain in the Head and all over the Body. The
+Pulse was strong and quick, and the Blood sizy; attended with other
+Appearances commonly observed in such Fevers.
+
+As the Summer advanced, this Fever was often accompanied with bilious
+Symptoms, with Sickness, and vomiting of bilious Matter, and very
+frequently with a Purging: Towards the End of Summer it ceased, and
+was succeeded by the bilious remittent Fever.--And it was no uncommon
+Thing to see those Fevers, which originally were entirely of an
+inflammatory Nature, after the sick had been some Days in a crowded
+Hospital, partake a good deal of the Nature of the Malignant Fever, or
+be changed entirely into it.
+
+We treated these Fevers in the common antiphlogistic Method.--We
+blooded freely in the Beginning; gave the saline Draughts with Nitre
+and other cooling Medicines; and made the Patients drink plentifully
+of small Liquors:--And when they were inclined to be costive, gave
+mild Purges, or emollient laxative Clysters. We afterwards applied
+Blisters; and if the Pulse began to sink, gave Cordials, Wine, and
+other Remedies commonly employed in such Cases;--and towards the
+Decline of the Fever endeavoured to promote such Evacuations as were
+pointed out by Nature, and likely to prove critical.
+
+When the Case was complicated with bilious Symptoms in the Beginning,
+we were obliged to have particular Regard to the first Passages. If
+the Patient complained much of Sickness, we gave a gentle Vomit in the
+Evening, after bleeding; and a Purge next Day, to carry off any
+bilious or corrupted Humours that might be lodged in the Stomach or
+Intestines; and we found that these Evacuations gave Relief, and
+generally mitigated all the Symptoms.
+
+If at any Time during the Fever a Looseness came on, especially when
+attended with Gripes, we gave a Dose of some gentle Physic, which made
+a free Evacuation; and an Opiate in the Evening after its Operation;
+and afterwards we found it answer better to attempt rather to
+moderate, than wholly stop the Purging by strong Astringents, and
+Opiates; unless where the Evacuation by Stool was so great as to be in
+Danger of sinking the Patient.
+
+The _pulvis antimonialis_, composed of ten Parts of the _pulvis e
+chelis_, and one Part of the Tartar emetic, given in small Doses, was
+serviceable in many of these Fevers, after free Evacuations had been
+made.
+
+Two Patients, one a Soldier of the Twentieth Regiment, the other a
+_German_ Waggoner, were taken ill of this Fever about the 25th of
+_December_, 1762: They were both blooded freely, and had a Dose of
+Physic in the Beginning; and the saline Draughts with Nitre and other
+cooling Remedies; and had Blisters applied without producing any
+considerable Change in their Disorder.--On the 5th of _January_, 1763,
+they both complained much of Thirst, and were inclined to be costive;
+their Tongues were parched, their Pulses quick and small, and their
+Skins dry; they were restless at Nights, and the Soldier had a slight
+Delirium.--I ordered each of them four Grains of the _pulvis
+antimonialis_ every four Hours.
+
+6th. Next Day the Soldier told me, he had had four loose Stools; his
+Senses were much clearer, the Pulse calmer and slower, and he said he
+found himself lighter and easier, and less feverish, than he had been
+since he was first taken ill. The Medicine was continued, with the
+Addition of an anodyne Draught at Night.--7th. I found him in a fine
+breathing Sweat, and he told me he had slept well in the Night:
+p.--8th. The Sweat continued till this Morning, and on going off his
+Urine let fall a copious white Sediment, and left him free from the
+Fever; after which he mended daily.
+
+The Waggoner, after taking the third Dose of the Powders, had a warm
+Moisture upon the Skin.--On the 6th was cooler and without much Fever,
+and had had one Stool.--7th. The warm Moisture ended in a profuse
+Sweat, which carried off the Fever, and he continued to recover
+daily.
+
+
+
+
+OF THE ANGINA; OR, SORE THROAT.
+
+
+Many of the Soldiers during the Campaign were seized with
+Inflammations of the Throat, especially when the Nights were cold and
+moist after warm Days; and when they did Duty in cold wet Nights in
+the Winter Season.--All of them I saw in _Germany_ were of the
+inflammatory Kind; I did not observe any that were malignant.
+
+They were treated in the antiphlogistic Method.--The Patients were
+blooded liberally in the Beginning--took the cooling nitrous and
+saline Medicines--gentle Diaphoretics and Purgatives--and used
+frequent Gargarisms.
+
+Sometimes a Flannel rubbed with camphorated Oil, or the _linimentum
+volatile_, and applied round the Neck, was of Service.--And frequently
+after bleeding sufficiently, where the Breathing or Swallowing was
+difficult, the Application of a large Blister to the Neck gave speedy
+Relief.
+
+
+
+
+OF THE PLEURISY.
+
+
+The Pleurisy, or an acute Inflammation of the Side, was most frequent
+among the Soldiers towards the latter End of the Campaigns; though
+some were attacked with it at all Times of the Year, from doing Duty
+in all Sorts of Weather.
+
+We followed the antiphlogistic Method of Cure; and ordered plentiful
+Bleeding in the Beginning, till the Violence of the Pain began to
+abate, or the Patient grew faint;--and the Side to be fomented with
+Flannels dipped in warm emollient Decoctions, and afterwards rubbed
+with volatile Liniments: At the same Time the Patient drank freely of
+warm diluting Liquors, as Barley Water, the pectoral Decoction, and
+such like; and took the saline and other cooling Medicines, mixed
+occasionally with Sperma Ceti, or some other soft Pectorals, if there
+was a tickling Cough.--When the Patient was costive, we gave a Dose of
+Salts, or some other mild Physic, or laxative Clysters.
+
+If the Pain continued very acute, we repeated the Bleeding as often as
+Necessity seemed to require, and the Pulse could bear; and immediately
+after the second Bleeding ordered a large Blister to be applied to the
+Part affected.
+
+Physicians formerly used to forbid Bleeding after the fourth Day, if
+it had been omitted so long; but when no Symptoms of Suppuration had
+already appeared, on whatever Day of the Disorder it happened, I
+ordered plentiful Bleeding, the same as in recent Cases; and never
+found any Disadvantage, but often great Service from this Practice.
+
+When the Sharpness of the Pain was gone, and the Pulse became soft,
+very often a dull Pain remained for some Time in the Part.--In some
+Cases a brisk Purge removed it;--in others, cupping above the Part,
+and afterwards rubbing it with the volatile Liniments, did
+Service;--in others, gentle Opiates at Night, especially where there
+was a tickling Cough;--and in one or two Cases, this Pain did not go
+away, till the Patient was ordered to drink every Day for some Time, a
+Quart of the Decoction of Sarsaparilla with the antimonial Wine.
+
+In the Course of this Disorder, if a kindly Moisture broke out on the
+Skin, which gave Relief, this was encouraged by the Use of mild warm
+Liquors; or if the Patient began to spit up a viscid or yellowish
+Mucus, we endeavoured to keep up the Expectoration by the Use of mild
+Pectorals; and if a Purging came on, we were careful not to check it
+too soon, unless it was so violent as to be in Danger of sinking the
+Patient.
+
+When an Inflammation of the Side came to Suppuration, which happened
+in one or two Cases at _Osnabruck_, in _May_ 1761; as soon as a
+Fluctuation of Matter was to be felt, an Incision was was made in the
+Part, and the Matter discharged; after which the Sore healed kindly,
+and the Patients recovered[51]. I am persuaded, was this Operation
+oftener performed, many would recover who die consumptive.
+
+ [51] Dr. _Mead_ advises, where the Lungs and Pleura grow
+ together, and an Abscess forms, to open it with Caustic; and
+ afterwards to keep the Ulcer open during the Patient's Life:
+ For he says, he has often seen, where such Sores were healed
+ up, that the Patient died soon after by an Efflux of Matter
+ upon the Breast. _Monita Medica_, Cap. i. Sect. 7.
+
+
+
+
+OF THE PERIPNEUMONY.
+
+
+The Soldiers were subject at all Times to the Peripneumony, or
+Inflammation of the Lungs, from doing Duty in cold wet Weather, and
+from their irregular Way of living; but more particularly towards the
+End of the Campaigns, and in Winter.
+
+This Disorder was much more dangerous and fatal than the Pleurisy,
+especially when neglected in the Beginning; for then Bleeding had
+seldom any Effect; the Difficulty of Breathing encreased, the Patient
+was seized with an Orthopnea, and such an Anxiety and Sense of
+Suffocation, that he could not sleep; and the Pulse sunk; and in these
+Cases Death only afforded Relief. This we experienced in many Men who
+had lain neglected in Quarters, for two, three, four, or five Days,
+before they were brought to the Hospital.
+
+In most of the Bodies of those who died of this Disorder, and were
+opened after Death; we found the Lungs violently inflamed, with livid
+or gangrenous Spots on their Surface; and more or less of a watery
+Serum extravasated into the Cavity of the Chest.
+
+Three had Suppurations in the Lungs. In one, who had lain sick in
+Quarters for ten Days or upwards, before he was sent to the Hospital,
+the right Cavity of the Thorax was found full of a watery Serum; and
+the Lobes of the Lungs on the same Side almost entirely wasted; and
+what remained seemed as it were composed of thickened Membranes,
+resembling those formed by the coagulable Lymph, or what is called by
+some (though improperly) the fibrous Part of the Blood. The Lobes in
+the left Side seemed to be in a sound State, or at most but slightly
+inflamed. From the right Lobes of the Lungs being so much wasted, I
+suspected that the Patient had probably laboured long under some
+Disorder of the Breast; but I could not from Enquiry obtain any
+Information in this Particular; nor did he ever mention such a Thing
+during the few Days he lived after being brought into the Hospital; he
+said, he had only been ill for eight or ten Days before; but Soldiers
+afflicted with chronic Distempers, when they are seized with violent
+Symptoms, or acute Diseases, are apt to reckon the Beginning of their
+Disorder, only from the Time they are taken ill in a violent Manner;
+and never to take any Notice of their former Complaints.
+
+Another Soldier, about the Middle of _February_, 1762, remained in
+Quarters five Days after being taken ill with a Pain of the Breast,
+and a Difficulty of Breathing; the sixth Day he was brought to the
+Hospital in the Morning, and I saw him about eleven o'Clock; he then
+had all the Symptoms of the true Peripneumony, attended with a strong
+hard Pulse. He was immediately blooded as freely as his Pulse would
+bear, had Blisters applied, and other Remedies used; notwithstanding
+which, on the eighth Day from that Time, he began to throw up a
+purulent Matter in great Quantity, attended with a constant hectic
+Heat, and Fever; which sunk him so fast, that he died the tenth Day,
+after he first began to expectorate.
+
+On the 2d of _March_, a Soldier, of the Fifty-first Regiment of Foot,
+was brought to the Hospital, with a violent Pain in the left Side, and
+a great Difficulty of Breathing. Upon examining him, he told me, that
+about two Years before he had had a violent Stitch in his left Side,
+towards the lower Part of the Thorax; that ever since he had been
+subject to a Difficulty of Breathing; and at Times to a Pain in the
+Side; but that he had only been seized with the violent Pain and
+Difficulty of Breathing he then complained of, about five Days before,
+occasioned by catching Cold, on being billeted in a low, cold, and
+damp House.--His Pulse was quick, the Pain of his Side and Difficulty
+of Breathing so great, that he could not sleep, nor lie down, but was
+obliged to sit constantly in an erect Posture; his Tongue was white
+and furred, and he had had no Stools for three Days: He was ordered to
+be blooded immediately; and to take a Dose of Salts; and his Side to
+be rubbed with the _linimentum volatile_. 3d. His Breathing and Pain
+of the Side were easier; he had slept a little in the Night, and could
+lie on his right side, but not on his left. He was ordered the Squill
+Mixture. 4th. His Breathing was worse; he was blooded a second Time;
+had a large Blister applied to his Side, and was ordered to continue
+the Use of the Squill Mixture. On the 5th, 6th, and 7th, he seemed
+easier, though the Breathing was still much affected, and his Pulse
+quick and low, attended with a hectic Heat. On the 8th, he told me
+that his left Side was swelled: On examining, I observed a Fullness in
+that Side of the Thorax; and on pressing with my Fingers between the
+Ribs, I thought I felt an obscure Fluctuation of a deep-seated Fluid.
+From these Appearances, and the History of the Case, I judged that
+there was a Collection of some Fluid within the Cavity of the Chest;
+and that the only Means left to give Relief, was to make an Opening
+into the Cavity, and so evacuate the Fluid. I therefore proposed to
+him the Operation of the Empyema, to be performed immediately; which
+he several Times obstinately refused to submit to: He allowed a Seton
+to be put in his Side, but that did not answer the End proposed: He
+languished six Days longer; and died the 14th of _March_. Next Day an
+Opening was made in the Thorax, in the Part where the Operation was
+proposed to have been performed; as soon as the Pleura was cut
+through, some Quarts of Water rushed out. We then opened the Thorax,
+and found still some Water in the left Cavity. The Pericardium was
+thickened, and slightly inflamed, and adhered to the Diaphragm; which
+was likewise a little thickened and inflamed in the adhering Part; the
+Lungs on that Side were much compressed, and contracted by the
+Pressure of the Water; but on being inflated and cut, seemed in a
+sound State, except that they were slightly inflamed. The Lungs of
+the left Side adhered every-where firmly to the Thorax, but seemed
+otherwise sound; having no Tubercles, Suppuration, or other Disorder,
+that we could observe in cutting them. The Heart and Blood Vessels
+were sound, and no other polypous Concretions were observed within
+their Cavities, but such as we find in most dead Bodies; which seem to
+be formed of the coagulable Lymph in _articulo mortis_. The Viscera of
+the Abdomen were in a sound State.
+
+We treated the Peripneumony nearly as the Pleurisy. We bled freely in
+the Beginning, till the Breathing became easier, or the Pulse began to
+sink; taking Care not to be deceived by a low oppressive Pulse, which
+generally rose upon Bleeding. We applied large Blisters; gave the mild
+Pectorals freely, and plenty of warm diluting Liquors, Barley Water,
+the pectoral Decoction, and such like; which afforded more Relief than
+any other Medicines. We gave too saline Purges, and laxative Clysters
+occasionally; and in some Cases ordered the Steams of warm emollient
+Decoctions with Vinegar to be drawn into the Lungs.
+
+By this Treatment most of them, who applied early for Relief, got the
+better of the Disorder.
+
+When the Expectoration began, the Patient continued the free Use of
+the mild Pectorals, and diluting Liquors; and no Medicines were given
+that might in the least tend to stop it; other Evacuations were
+omitted, unless where the Pain of the Breast, or the Difficulty of
+Breathing increased; in which Case, if the Pulse kept up, I ordered a
+Vein to be opened, and a suitable Quantity of Blood to be taken away;
+no other Remedy affording any Relief, till this Evacuation was made.
+Where the Patient was costive, we frequently ordered laxative
+Clysters, or a mild Purge, and found them beneficial: But where no
+such Symptoms occurred, it was best, for the most part, to omit all
+Evacuations of this Kind, after a free Expectoration had begun, and to
+trust to it for carrying off the Disorder.
+
+In some Cases, where the Expectoration stopt suddenly after bleeding,
+we gave with Advantage a gentle Vomit, as recommended by Dr.
+_Huxham_[52].
+
+ [52] Some late Authors seem to look upon the _Pleurisy_ and
+ _Peripneumony_ as the same Disorder: However, though it be
+ true, that when the _Pleura_ is inflamed, the Surface of the
+ contiguous Lungs is generally in the same State; and that,
+ when the _Lungs_ are inflamed, the Pleura is often affected;
+ yet as I have frequently seen the true Peripneumony without
+ that sharp Pain of the Side which characterizes the Pleurisy;
+ and upon opening the Bodies of People who have died of the
+ Peripneumony, have found the Lungs violently inflamed and
+ livid, and so filled with Blood as to sink in Water, without
+ the Pleura being much diseased; and upon opening the Thorax
+ of others who died of the Pleurisy, have found the
+ intercostal Muscles and Pleura violently inflamed with livid
+ Spots, and only a small Portion of the Surface of the
+ contiguous Lungs affected; I cannot help still looking upon
+ them as distinct Disorders; though they require nearly the
+ same Treatment, and are often complicated together.
+
+
+
+
+OF THE COUGH and CONSUMPTION.
+
+
+Coughs were very frequent during the Winter, and when the Weather was
+wet and cold. They were often accompanied with Pains of the Breast;
+and, when neglected, Obstructions, Tubercles, and Suppurations, were
+apt to form in the Lungs, and the Disease to end in a Consumption, or
+_Phthisis Pulmonalis_.
+
+When Coughs were slight, guarding against further Cold, and the Use of
+mild Pectorals and warm Drinks, removed them. But when the Patient
+complained of a Pain and Tightness about the Breast, it was always
+necessary to take away more or less Blood; and after Bleeding to give
+some of the mild Pectorals, such as the Sperma Ceti or oily Mixtures;
+and, if a Fever attended, to join the Use of Nitre, or of the saline
+or mindereri Draughts; and, if a tickling Cough was troublesome, to
+give frequently a Tea Spoonful of the oily Linctus, acidulated either
+with the Spirit of Vitriol, or the _oxymel scilliticum_. The mild
+Diaphoretics, such as the mindereri Draughts, given along with warm
+Drinks, to promote a free Perspiration, or Sweat, were used with
+Advantage; when the Patients kept in Bed, and lay in Wards which had
+Stoves in them.
+
+If the Cough and Pain of the Breast were not relieved by these Means,
+the Patient was bled a second Time, and a Blister applied to the Side
+immediately after; which often removed most of the Complaints. When it
+did not, we gave the pectoral Decoction for common Drink; and if there
+was a Shortness or Difficulty of Breathing, the squill Mixture, or
+_lac ammoniacum_, with Oxymel; and occasionally gentle Purges: And if
+at any Time of the Disorder the Tightness and Pain of the Breast
+returned violent, we took away some Blood, no other Remedy affording
+Relief.
+
+When there was little or no Fever, and a thin Rheum kept up a tickling
+Cough, nothing had a better Effect than to add some Drops of the
+_tinctura thebaica_, or some of the _elixir paregoricum_, to the
+oleagenous or squill Mixtures; or to give an Opiate Draught or Pill at
+Bed-Time, which eased the Cough, and procured the Patient Rest.
+
+At all Times it was necessary, when the Cough was violent, attended
+with Pains of the Breast, to keep the Patients on low Diet; and in as
+free and pure Air as the Nature of the Hospitals would admit of; for
+we often found that those Men who had laboured long under obstinate
+Coughs, which threatened Consumptions in small crowded Wards,
+recovered surprisingly on being removed to a freer Air; of which we
+had a remarkable Instance in the Hospital at _Bremen_, in _January_
+1762; upon removing some Men, afflicted with very bad Coughs, out of
+small Wards, which were damp, into one large one, which was dry and
+airy.
+
+When the Weather was good, we made the Patients walk out a little in
+the Day-Time; for we observed, that remaining always in the Hospital,
+and breathing nothing but a foul Air, helped to encrease the
+Disorder.--When we knew the Men to be sober, and not apt to commit
+Irregularities, we used to procure them good Billets, and make them
+come daily to the Hospital for their Medicines.
+
+Equal Parts of Lime-Water and Milk, drank to the Quantity of a Quart a
+Day, was of Use to some; and the _infusum amarum_, and other gentle
+Bitters, taken to the Quantity of an Ounce or two, Morning and
+Evening, to others[53].
+
+ [53] Asses Milk, and _Bristol_ and _Seltzer_ Waters, which
+ are found so serviceable in pulmonic Disorders, could not be
+ had in the military Hospitals; and riding on Horseback was
+ too expensive a Remedy for a Soldier.
+
+ In chronic Cases, where we suspect Obstructions and Tubercles
+ to be formed in the Lungs, which have not already come to
+ Suppuration, Dr. _Russel_ recommends the Use of Sea Water for
+ resolving them; but we were at too great a Distance from the
+ Sea to try this Remedy. See his _Treatise on Sea Water_, Page
+ 17.
+
+A Decoction of the Cortex removed some Coughs which had continued for
+a considerable Time. In one or two of these Cases, slight hectic
+Symptoms had already appeared[54]. However, for the most part,
+where-ever Obstructions of the Lungs were confirmed, or there were
+evident hectic Symptoms without a free Discharge of purulent Matter,
+the Bark did no Service; but rather heated and increased the Fever,
+and made the Sick more restless and uneasy.--It was of most Use where
+there seemed to be no confirmed Obstructions, but the Vessels much
+relaxed; which we judged to be the Case from the Patients having no
+fixed Pain, nor the Breathing much affected. If the Sick were
+plethoric, or in the least feverish, we ordered a little Blood to be
+taken away, before we began the Use of this Medicine.
+
+ [54] _Mary Shepperd_, a Woman twenty-six Years of Age, was
+ admitted into _St. George_'s Hospital the 6th of _June_,
+ 1759, for a Cough; attended with a constant hectic Fever and
+ Night Sweats, which had begun in the Month of _April_, after
+ the Measles. She complained likewise of having the _fluor
+ albus_, and she had been blooded more than once before she
+ came to the Hospital.--I at first gave her some of the mild
+ Pectorals; and a Solution of White Vitriol in Water, _utenda
+ pro inject. uterina_. After a Week, finding no Alteration in
+ her Complaints, I advised her to become an Out-patient; and
+ to go down to her Friends in the Country, to live upon a Milk
+ Diet; to take gentle Exercise, and continue the Use of her
+ Medicines; which she did, but without any Alteration in her
+ Disorder, till the 6th of _July_, when I ordered her to take
+ thrice a Day two Ounces of the Decoction of the Cortex, along
+ with a saline Draught. Immediately, on beginning to use this
+ Medicine, her Disorder began to take a favourable Turn; her
+ Fever and Night Sweats left her, her Cough became easier, and
+ she recovered Health and Strength daily. She came to the
+ Hospital the 15th of _August_, seemingly in good Health, to
+ return Thanks for her Cure.
+
+In similar Cases, I have sometimes observed good Effects from the Use
+of the Balsam _Copaivy_, or _Peru_; given either in Juleps or made up
+into an Electuary, as in the _electuarium e spermate ceti cum
+balsamo_; but in whatever Form they were given, if there were
+confirmed Obstructions of the Lungs, they rather heated and inflamed,
+than did any real Service.
+
+When Coughs continued long, attended with Pain in the Side, Difficulty
+of Breathing, and Hectic Fever and Night Sweats, we always had Reason
+to suspect, that the Disorder would terminate in a confirmed
+Consumption. When this was threatened, we found, that the principal
+Thing to be done, was to keep the Patients cool; and to endeavour to
+allay the hectic Heat and Fever; and to retard, as much as possible,
+the Progress of the Disorder. When the Case was recent, we were
+sometimes so lucky as to make a Cure; but after it was confirmed, it
+for the most part ended fatally.
+
+We kept the Patients upon a low Diet; and where-ever Milk was to be
+got easily, we allowed them a Pint a Day[55]; which was either mixed
+with Water and given for Drink, or they took it to Breakfast or
+Supper.--Their common Drink was either Barley Water or the pectoral
+Decoction; which was occasionally acidulated with a few Drops of
+Spirit of Vitriol; and we gave at the same Time the cooling
+Medicines, such as Nitre, the saline or mindereri Draughts, mixed at
+Times with Sperma Ceti, or some other of the mild Pectorals.
+
+ [55] In private Practice, at this Stage of the Disorder, the
+ Use of Asses Milk, and drinking the _Bristol_ Water at the
+ _Bristol_ Wells, and riding on Horseback daily, are justly
+ ranked amongst the most efficacious Remedies; and going into
+ the more southern Climates, as the South of _France_,
+ _Portugal_, or _Italy_, where the Air is warmer, more
+ constant, and dry, than in _England_, has often been found to
+ produce good Effects.
+
+The opening a Vein, and taking away from four to eight Ounces of
+Blood[56], whenever the Pain of the Breast was troublesome, or the
+Patient was hot and restless at Nights from the Hectic Fever, gave the
+greatest Relief of any Thing we tried; and these repeated small
+Bleedings were so far from wasting the Patient's Strength, that they
+rather seemed to prevent its being exhausted so fast as otherwise it
+would have been, by allaying the Force of the Hectic Fever.
+
+ [56] This Practice has been strongly recommended by Dr.
+ _Mead_, in his _Monita Medica_, Sect. x. and by an anonymous
+ Author in the _Edinburgh Medical Essays_, Vol. IV. Art. 28.
+ and Dr. _Mead_ says, when Things have not been quite
+ desperate, he has seen good Success from it.
+
+At this Stage of the Disorder, we put in Setons, or ordered Issues, to
+serve as a Drain to carry off the Matter, and found them of Advantage
+in some Cases. When the Patients complained of any fixed Pain, we
+always made the Issues as near the Part affected as possible[57]. On
+the 5th of _May_, 1762, a Man, belonging to the Eighty-eighth Regiment
+of Foot, was sent to the Hospital at _Bremen_ for an Haemoptoe,
+attended with a constant hectic Heat and Fever.--After being blooded,
+and using the cooling Remedies without Success, he had four Pea Issues
+made in his Back; and had a slight Decoction of the Cortex, acidulated
+with Spirit of Vitriol. As soon as the Issues began to discharge
+freely, the hectic Heat, Fever, and Spitting of Blood, diminished
+daily; and he recovered his Health and Strength in a short Time.
+However, it ought to be observed, that although these Drains are
+sometimes efficacious, yet, when the Disease is far advanced, the
+Mischief is generally too deep rooted for them to be of any Service.
+
+ [57] In _June_, 1748, a Servant Girl came to ask my Advice
+ for a Cough, attended with a constant Hectic Fever and Night
+ Sweats, which had begun some Months before, on catching Cold.
+ The Matter she spit up was yellow, and had the Appearance of
+ Pus; and she complained of a Pain in the left Side of the
+ Thorax. I ordered her the saline Mixture with Sperma Ceti to
+ be taken thrice a Day, to lose a little Blood, to drink an
+ Infusion of Linseed sweetened with Honey, and to have a Seton
+ put in her Side at the Part where she complained of Pain;
+ advising her to go home to her Father, who was a Farmer in
+ the Country, and to live upon a Milk and Vegetable Diet, and
+ ride on Horseback whenever she could conveniently. She seemed
+ so far gone in a Consumption, that I scarce expected to see
+ her again; but, in the Month of _December_, she came to
+ return me Thanks for her Cure, seeming then to be in good
+ Health. She told me, that, as soon as the Seton began to
+ discharge freely, she found Relief; and mended afterwards
+ daily, by following the Directions I had given her.
+
+The Bark, and natural Balsams, for the most part were prejudicial, and
+encreased the Hectic Heat and Fever; except in one or two Cases, where
+the Disorder seemed to depend on a Vomica of the Lungs, and the
+Patient coughed up the Matter freely.--In one Case they were of
+considerable Service; the Patient was very low, and had the Night
+Sweats, but coughed up the Matter freely: On using the Decoction of
+the Bark, and the _electuarium e spermate ceti cum balsamo_, the
+Matter expectorated became thicker, and of a more balmy Consistence,
+without any Increase of Heat or Fever; after which the Symptoms became
+gradually milder, and the Patient recovered.
+
+In the Course of this Disorder the Patients often became very hot and
+restless, and were troubled with Gripes, succeeded by a Purging: These
+Symptoms were most readily removed by a Dose of Rhubarb, or of some
+other mild Purge; for they generally proceeded from corrupted Humours
+lodged in the Intestines. In the Evening, after the Operation of the
+Purge, we gave an Opiate to procure the Patient Rest.--When the first
+Dose of Physic did not stop the Purging, we repeated the Opiates at
+Nights, and in a Day or two gave another Purge; and if there was much
+Sickness, or Load at the Stomach, gave likewise a gentle Emetic.
+
+If the Purging still continued, we were obliged to join the Use of
+Astringents along with the Opiates. In some Cases, I found good
+Effects from equal Parts of Milk and Water boiled with Rose Leaves,
+Pomegranate Bark, Balaustine Flowers, and Cinnamon, as recommended by
+Dr. _Mead_ in his _Monita Medica_[58]; it served both for Food and
+Medicine.--When Opiates and Astringents were given to stop the Purging
+at its first Appearance, before the Bowels were emptied, they always
+did Mischief; and increased the Heat and Fever: And although they
+stopt the Purging for a few Hours, it always broke out with greater
+Violence afterwards.
+
+ [58] _Sect._ x. _de Febrib. lentis sive Hecticis._
+
+When the Sick were attacked with a Shortness and Difficulty of
+Breathing, which was not relieved by Evacuations, and the Use of
+cooling Medicines, and Pectorals, and Blisters, nothing gave so much
+Ease, or had such a good Effect, as a gentle Vomit; for it often
+removed the immediate Oppression from the Breast, and helped to pump
+up the Matter from the Lungs.
+
+In the advanced State of the Consumption, the Cough was always very
+troublesome; and the Sick found no Relief but from Opiate Medicines,
+which, in such Cases, cannot be expected to do more than give a little
+present Ease.--As they were apt to obstruct the free Expectoration, we
+generally mixed them with some _oxymel scilliticum_, or _tinctura
+foetida_, which took off a good deal of their suffocating Quality.
+
+Dr. _Barry_[59] advises for the Cure of a Consumption, to make an
+Incision or Aperture into the Side; where-ever there is a fixed Pain
+attended with a Weight, a Hectic Fever, and other Symptoms of an
+evident Suppuration: He says the Pleura is thickened, and the Lungs
+adhere at the Part where they are exulcerated; and that by the
+Operation the Pus may be evacuated, and a Cure made; and he gives
+several Instances of the Success of the Operation, when performed in
+Time.
+
+ [59] _Treatise on the Digestions_, p. 410.
+
+
+
+
+OF THE Epidemical CATARRHAL FEVER Of APRIL, 1762; CALLED, THE
+INFLUENZA.
+
+
+After a very cold severe Winter at _Bremen_, the Weather, from being
+very cold, became of a sudden extremely hot, about the 10th of
+_April_. In a few Days after, many People were seized with a violent
+Catarrhal Disorder. It often began with such a Cold and Shivering,
+that many imagined at first that they were going to have Agues; but
+soon after they were attacked with a Cough, and a Difficulty of
+Breathing, and Pain of the Breast, with a Head-Ach, and Pains all over
+the Body, especially in the Limbs.--The first Nights they commonly had
+profuse Sweats.--In several, it had the Appearance of a remitting
+Fever, for the two or three first Days.--Many had a slight
+Inflammation of the Throat, and a Hoarseness. In all it was attended
+with an acute Fever in the Beginning, and the Urine was of a high
+Colour; and when the Disorder had put on the Appearance of a Remittent
+Fever in the Beginning, it dropt a Sediment towards Morning after the
+second Day; and did the same in all, when the Disorder was going
+off.--Some had a Purging, but the greater Number were rather inclined
+to be costive.--The Cough in many was very violent; and the Patients,
+after each Fit of Coughing, had Reachings, or Strainings to vomit,
+exactly resembling those which come after violent Fits of the Hooping
+Cough.--At first the Patients spit up only a little Phlegm; but in the
+Decline of the Disorder, they expectorated freely.--The violent Cough
+and Feverishness generally continued for four, five, or six Days;
+with others it continued longer; and some had a Cough for two or three
+Weeks after the Fever left them.
+
+This Catarrhal Fever seized most of the People of the Town of
+_Bremen_; and there were very few of the _British_ who escaped it; at
+the same Time, it was epidemical in most Countries in _Europe_.
+
+We treated it entirely as an inflammatory Disorder, and none died who
+applied early for Relief.--Most People recovered by one plentiful
+Bleeding, and taking the mild cooling Medicines, such as the _mixtura
+e spermate ceti cum nitro_, the saline or mindereri Draughts, or such
+like. When the Fever and Difficulty of Breathing continued after the
+first Bleeding, in a Day or two a Vein was opened a second Time; and
+immediately after a Blister was applied to the Back, which commonly
+removed the Fever, and relieved the Breathing.--When the Patients were
+inclined to be costive, a Dose of Physic was of Service.
+
+None of the _British_ died, except one or two of the Soldiers, who
+remained in Quarters after being taken ill; and, instead of bleeding
+and living low, indulged in the Use of spirituous Liquors; and were
+not brought to the Hospital, till they were in the last Stage of a
+Peripneumony.--Many of the Inhabitants of the Town died of this
+Disorder, which was probably owing to Want of Care.
+
+
+
+
+OF THE RHEUMATISM.
+
+
+The Rheumatism is one of the Disorders most generally to be met with
+in military Hospitals. There were at all Times some Men in our
+Hospitals labouring under Rheumatic Fevers, or other rheumatic
+Complaints; though we never had at any one Time a great Number; owing
+probably to the Weather being very favourable in both the Campaigns of
+1761 and 1762.--It was always most frequent when the Weather was wet
+and cold; both during the Campaign, and when we were in Winter
+Quarters.
+
+It commonly began either, 1. With an acute Fever, and Pains all over
+their Body: or, 2. With Pains in particular Parts, as the Shoulders,
+Legs, Arms, Knees, and sometimes of the Side, attended with some
+Degree of a Fever.--The first was the most common Form it assumed,
+when Men were attacked with it in the Field or in Garrison; owing to
+their doing Duty in cold wet Weather.--The other Causes generally took
+place when they had been formerly subject to rheumatic Complaints, and
+had caught Cold; or after they had been weakened and reduced low by
+Fevers, Fluxes, or other Disorders.
+
+We had but very few Rheumatisms accompanied with Swelling, Pain, and
+Inflammation of the Joints of the Knees and Wrists, &c. which are so
+common in our Hospitals about _London_. I did not meet with above a
+Dozen Cases, of this Kind, whilst in _Germany_ with the Army.
+
+When the Rheumatism began with Pains all over the Body, attended with
+a High Fever, we treated it at first entirely as an Inflammatory
+Fever[60]. We blooded freely, and repeated this Evacuation often[61],
+if the Blood continued sizy, and the Pains violent; provided the Pulse
+was strong. When the Pleura, the Lungs, or any other of the Viscera
+were affected, we blooded as freely as we should have done in acute
+Inflammations of these Parts: We gave the saline Draughts with
+Nitre[62]; and Plenty of Barley Water and other weak diluting Liquors;
+and gentle Physic once or twice a Week; and afterwards applied
+Blisters, which often relieved both the Pains and Fever.
+
+ [60] _Sydenham_, in treating of this Disease, orders
+ Bleeding, and that to be repeated next Day; and afterwards
+ every other Day, two, three, or four Times, or more, as the
+ Patients Strength can bear it; and on the intermediate Days
+ to give a purgative Clyster. But in young People, and those
+ who have lived regularly, he says, that a very low Diet will
+ cure as effectually as Bleeding and Medicines; That the
+ Patients must live four Days on Whey alone, but after this
+ may eat Bread for Dinner; and on the last Days for Supper
+ also; and when the Symptoms begin to abate, he allows them to
+ eat boiled Chicken, or other light Food; but says they must
+ live every third Day on Whey, till their Strength returns.
+ _Precess. Integr. de Rheumatismo_.
+
+ [61] A Remark of Dr. _Huxham_'s deserves to be taken Notice
+ of here: He tells us, that there are some Kinds of
+ Rheumatisms, _viz._ those which come from a sharp serous
+ Rheum, which do not bear the free Use of the Lancet; that
+ plentiful Bleeding does more Hurt than Good; and that, in
+ such Cases, the Medicines which bring out breathing Sweats,
+ and at the same Time correct the Acrimony of the Blood,
+ joined with gentle Opiates, have a much better Effect. _De
+ Aere_, Vol. II. p. 185.
+
+ [62] Dr. _Brocklesby_, in his _Observations on military
+ Diseases_, recommends the Use of large Quantities of Nitre
+ dissolved in Water Gruel, or Sage Tea, (in the Proportion of
+ two Drachms of the Nitre to a Quart of the Liquor) in acute
+ Rheumatisms. He says, "I am assured from numberless
+ Instances, that in stout young Men, by taking six hundred
+ Grains (ten Drachms) daily, for four or five Days
+ successively, and diluting plentifully, as before
+ recommended, plain Nitre proves the most powerful and best
+ Sudorific, in such Complaints, that I have ever tried; and
+ this Quantity, and even more, may be retained in the Stomach,
+ and pass through the Course of the Circulation, by only
+ diluting properly with those thin attenuating Beverages as
+ before recommended. Such Quantities, in three or four Days,
+ seldom failed wonderfully to relieve the Patient, and very
+ often to cure him entirely, by the most plentiful and profuse
+ Sweats." _See from p. 116, to p. 124._
+
+ I have never hitherto given Nitre in such large Quantities as
+ here recommended by Dr. _Brocklesby_.
+
+After some Days, if the Pains still remained, we continued the saline
+Draughts with Nitre throughout the Day; and in the Evening endeavoured
+to promote a free Perspiration by Means of the mild Diaphoretics,
+such as the mindereri Draughts with Mithridate, in Doses frequently
+repeated; at the same Time, the Patient kept in Bed, and drank freely
+of mild diluting Liquors. Sometimes we gave twenty, thirty, or forty
+Drops of Spirits of Hartshorn, in repeated Draughts of warm Barley
+Water: or a like Quantity of the Antimonial Wine, used in the same
+Manner: or from sixty to a hundred Drops of the Antimonial Wine, mixed
+with one-fourth Part of the _tinctura thebaica_, in a large Draught of
+some warm Liquor; which I have observed, in many Cases, to have a
+better Effect, than most other Medicines used for this Purpose; as it
+acts both as an Opiate in easing the Pain, and procuring Rest; at the
+same Time that it promotes a free Perspiration, or gentle Sweat, to
+carry off the Distemper.
+
+But it should be observed, that, in the Beginning of Rheumatic Fevers,
+forced Sweats generally did Hurt, and often increased both the Pain
+and Fever; and that in general we had greater Success, and made
+speedier Cures, when we did not attempt to promote Sweating, till
+after other Evacuations had been sufficiently made, and the Fever had
+begun to abate; and that in this Fever, when we did attempt to procure
+Sweats, the milder Diaphoretics, with Plenty of weak diluting Liquors,
+answered better than those of a more heating Nature; though after the
+Fever was gone, and the Pains still continued, sometimes the stronger
+Sudorifics, such as G. Guaiac, and its volatile Tincture, _Dover_'s
+Powder, and the like, best answered the Purpose, and carried off the
+Distemper, when the milder ones had little Effect.
+
+I have often observed, where Sweating made no Change in the Distemper,
+that keeping up a free Perspiration by Means of the Decoction of the
+Sarsaparilla with the Antimonial Wine, or small Doses of the _pulvis
+antimonialis_ (_gr._ v.), given twice or thrice a Day, removed
+Rheumatisms, which had resisted the Force of other Remedies.
+
+Sometimes the cold Bath[63] removed Pains which had not yielded to
+internal Medicines; but it ought to be observed, that when Patients
+went into the cold Bath while the Feverishness still remained, and the
+Blood continued sizy, or before free Evacuations had been made,
+oftentimes, instead of giving Relief, it made the Disorder worse, and
+more obstinate[64].
+
+ [63] I have frequently ordered the warm Bath with Advantage
+ in Rheumatic Cases in _St. George_'s Hospital; but we had no
+ Convenience of this Kind with the flying Hospital in
+ _Germany_.
+
+ [64] This I have seen many Instances of, particularly in the
+ Case of _Ann Walker_, a Woman of twenty three Years of Age,
+ who was under my Care in _St. George_'s Hospital, in _May_,
+ 1759. Before she came to the Hospital, she had been blooded,
+ and had gone into the cold Bath four Times, which, she told
+ me, had increased her Pains to a violent Degree; in which
+ State she had continued for some Weeks before she came to the
+ Hospital; but by being blooded, and taking the cooling saline
+ Medicines, with gentle Purges, and mild Diaphoretics, she got
+ well in a Month's Time.
+
+When the Rheumatism was confined to a particular Part, attended with
+Fever, we treated it as the acute Rheumatism. Fomenting the Part with
+warm emollient Decoctions, and rubbing it afterwards with the
+volatile, or saponaceous Liniments, often gave Ease; and the
+Application of Cupping-Glasses and Blisters frequently removed the
+Disorder. In some Cases, where the first Blister did not relieve, the
+Application of a second, and afterwards keeping up a Discharge from
+the Part by Means of the Epispastic Ointment, carried off the Pain. In
+others, where the mild Diaphoretics were ineffectual, Sweating, with
+the G. Guaiac, or _Dover_'s Powder, and such other Medicines, after
+the Fever was gone, removed the Complaints[65].
+
+ [65] Warm Water, pumped upon the Part, often removes such
+ rheumatic Pains as have resisted the Force of internal and
+ other Remedies. On the 29th of _August_, 1759, _Mary Ward_
+ was admitted into _St. George_'s Hospital for rheumatic Pains
+ of the Arms, Legs, and Knees, attended with Fever, which all
+ yielded to Evacuations, and the Use of cooling Medicines,
+ mild Diaphoretics, and of the warm Bath, except the Pain of
+ the Knee; which, after it had resisted the Course
+ above-mentioned, was at last removed by pumping warm Water on
+ the Part, three Times a Week; joined to the Use of
+ Fomentations and volatile Liniments.
+
+When the Rheumatism was attended with Inflammation and Swelling of the
+Joints, we blooded freely, gave cooling Purges, and the saline
+Draughts with Nitre, along with Plenty of weak diluting Liquors, and
+prescribed a cool low Diet.
+
+After the Violence of the Fever and Inflammation was abated, fomenting
+the Parts, and rubbing them with the saponaceous or volatile
+Liniments, sometimes hastened the Discussion of the Swelling; as did
+likewise the Application of Blisters[66], after the Inflammation was
+entirely gone; but it ought to be noticed, that if volatile Liniments
+or Blisters are used too soon, they will sometimes occasion violent
+Inflammation and Pain[67].
+
+ [66] _Ann Ragen_, a Woman about thirty-three Years of Age,
+ was admitted into _St. George_'s Hospital the 17th of
+ _January_, 1759, for rheumatic Pains of her Legs and Arms,
+ and a Swelling of her right Knee. Free Evacuations, and the
+ Use of cooling Medicines, and mild Diaphoretics, removed all
+ her other Complaints, except the Swelling of the Knee, by the
+ Middle of _February_, when I ordered a Blister to be applied
+ to it; after which the Swelling gradually decreased, and she
+ was discharged, cured, the 20th of _March_.--_Rachael Hyde_,
+ a Woman twenty-four Years of Age, was admitted into _St.
+ George_'s Hospital the 9th of _May_, 1759, for similar
+ Complaints, which were removed by the same Means, all except
+ the Swelling of the Knee. A Blister was applied, and most of
+ the Swelling went away, but returned soon after: It was at
+ last removed by the Use of the warm Pump three Times a Week,
+ and drinking a Pint of the Guaiac Decoction daily.
+
+ [67] I have sometimes ordered Leetches to be applied to such
+ Swellings (as recommended by Dr. _Pringle_), and found them
+ to be of Service; and, at other Times, I have applied
+ emollient Fomentations and Poultices, which have given great
+ Ease to the Patient.--I have seen Setons or Issues, made near
+ the Part affected, afford considerable Relief.
+
+Rheumatic Cases of this Kind are often very obstinate, and require a
+considerable Length of Time before they are got the better of; and
+frequently more or less of the Swelling, especially of the Wrists and
+Joints of the Fingers, remains ever after; and Patients, who have once
+had the Rheumatism in this violent Degree, are always subject to
+Relapses; as are even those who have had the Rheumatism but slightly.
+
+Mercury[68] has been recommended in the Cure of Rheumatisms; but I
+never found it do any Service by itself, except in Cases complicated
+with venereal Symptoms; though I have often given it, and even
+sometimes gone so far as to raise a Salivation, where the Pains were
+most severe in the Night; and the Patient, at the same Time, thought
+he had some Reason to suspect a venereal Taint, though no external
+Symptom appeared. However, many good Practitioners have recommended
+small Doses of Calomel to be given at Nights, and next Morning a
+Purge; in which Way, I think, I have observed good Effects from its
+Use.
+
+ [68] Dr. _Musgrave_, in his Treatise _de Arthritide
+ Symptomat._ p. 30, cap. ii. sect. 10, says, he has known a
+ Salivation, raised by Mercury, cure the Rheumatism.
+
+The Bark was frequently of Use in restoring the Strength, and removing
+those rheumatic Pains which remained after Fevers, and other
+Disorders; but, in other Cases, it had little Effect.
+
+When the Rheumatism continues long, and has taken deep Root,
+_Sydenham_[69] advises to bleed from Time to Time, at some Weeks
+Distance; which, he says, will either entirely remove the Disease, or
+bring it to that Condition, that the Remains of it will be easily
+extirpated by an Issue; and giving some of the volatile Salts in
+_Canary_ Wine, Morning and Evening. I have always observed in
+rheumatic Cases, which continued long, that, after free Evacuations,
+the Patients received more Benefit from a mild low Diet, continued for
+some Time, and the Use of diluting Decoctions with mild Diaphoretics,
+while they took gentle Purges once or twice a Week, than from any
+other Remedies.
+
+ [69] Vide _Sydenham. Opera._ sect. vi. cap. 5.
+
+I have given Half an Ounce of Soap a Day, for a considerable Time, in
+some old rheumatic Cases, in the Manner recommended by the late Dr.
+_John Clerk_ of _Edinburgh_, as mentioned by Dr. _Pringle_; and, I
+think, with Advantage; but have not had sufficient Trials to ascertain
+the Merits of this Medicine.
+
+Dr. _Sydenham_, in treating of the Rheumatism, which he calls
+scorbutic, says; that after it had resisted Bleeding, Purging, low
+Diet, and other Remedies, he has cured it by giving thrice a Day two
+Drachms of an Electuary made of _conserv. cochlear. horten. recent.
+unc._ ij. _lujul. unc._ i. _pulv. ar. comp. drachm_ vi. _cum syrup.
+aurant._ q. s. drinking after it three Ounces of a Water drawn from
+_Brunswick_ Beer, and some of the antiscorbutic Plants.
+
+There is no Disorder which Soldiers are so apt to counterfeit as the
+Rheumatism, when ever the Duty in the Field is severe; but while there
+is no Fever or Size in the Blood, or other evident Marks of the
+Distemper, and the Men look healthy, there is always Reason to suspect
+Imposture.
+
+
+
+
+OF THE Autumnal Remitting Fever.
+
+
+The Remitting Autumnal Fever, called by the Antients [Greek: syneches],
+was also one of the most frequent Disorders during the Campaign.
+
+This Fever is observed in most Countries, after the Juices have been
+highly exalted by the Heat of Summer; and People are exposed to the
+Heats of Mid-Day, and to the cold Damps of the Night. We observe it
+every Year in the Neighbourhood of _London_, especially among the
+labouring People, who work in the Fields, towards the End of Summer,
+and in Autumn; but it is generally in a milder Degree than in Armies,
+where Men are more exposed to the Vicissitudes of the Weather.
+
+As we go further towards the South, this, as well as other bilious
+Disorders, becomes more frequent.
+
+This Fever is reckoned the endemic Distemper of the _West Indies_, of
+the Coast of _Guinea_, and other Places in the Torrid Zone; but in
+those warm Countries it appears in a more violent Degree; makes a much
+more rapid Progress; and proves far more fatal than in our cooler and
+more temperate Climate. And it is observed to be always most frequent
+and most fatal where a Country is covered with Wood, or is marshy; and
+where there are frequent Fogs, and much stagnating Water, which
+corrupts by the Heat of Summer.
+
+In _January_, _February_, and _March_ 1761, we had none of those
+Remitting Fevers at _Paderborn_. In _April_, some few of the Soldiers,
+on their Return from the Winter-Expedition into _Hesse-Cassel_, had
+Fevers attended with bilious Symptoms; but they were rather of the
+continued, inflammatory Kind, and tending to malignant, than such as
+could be called remitting.
+
+The first Time that I saw much of this Fever, was among the Sick sent
+to _Bilifield_ in the End of _June_ 1761; soon after the Army took the
+Field. The Remissions were short, and it partook much of the Nature of
+the common Inflammatory Fever; and most of them were cured by the
+antiphlogistic Method. A Day or two before we left this Place, it
+began to change into the Malignant Hospital Fever, from the Sick being
+too much crowded.
+
+In the Middle of _July_, about Twelve Hundred Sick were sent to the
+Hospital at _Munster_; and about one-third Part were ill of this
+Remitting Fever. It did not partake near so much of the inflammatory
+Nature as at _Bilifield_; the Remissions became much more evident; and
+it was attended much oftener in the Beginning with bilious Vomiting
+and Purging; and in some few the Disorder turned to a Dysentery. About
+eight or nine had it changed into the Hospital Fever, from the Wards
+in one of the Hospitals being too much crowded; and in some few the
+Disorder terminated in regular Agues. In _November_ severals were
+taken ill of it in the Garrison of _Bremen_, which mostly ended in a
+regular Intermittent, the endemic Distemper of the Place. Towards the
+End of _December_ we had none of these Remitting Fevers, the Disorders
+turning more to the inflammatory Kind.
+
+In _June_ 1762, this Fever began to appear again among the Sick, sent
+from the Army, to the Hospital at _Natzungen_; and it continued to be
+frequent through the Summer and Autumn; and the greatest Part of these
+Fevers this Year terminated in regular Agues, mostly in Tertians, and
+were cured by the Bark; whereas the Year before very few terminated
+this Way.
+
+This Disorder in the Beginning had commonly the Appearance of a
+continued Fever; and many had a Sickness and Vomiting, and threw up a
+Quantity of yellow Bile, mixed with the Contents of the Stomach. In a
+few Days, especially after Bleeding, the Remissions became clear; tho'
+on its first Appearance in _June_ 1761 they were short, and rather
+obscure; and it seemed still to partake a good deal of the Nature of
+the common Inflammatory Fever, the Blood being very sizy; but as the
+Season advanced, the Remissions became more evident, and the Paroxysms
+more like those of an Ague; and the Blood less sizy, tho' at all
+Seasons of the Year it had some Appearance of an inflammatory Buff in
+this Disorder. The Sick were restless and uneasy at Night; but
+commonly felt themselves cooler and lighter in the Day-Time: and
+although they had no cold Fit, as the Fever came on at Nights, and
+many of them no Breathing Sweat, as they became cooler and freer from
+the Fever in the Morning; yet the Fits were so remarkable, that many
+of the Patients used to say they had a regular Fit of an Ague every
+Night, or towards the Morning; and some few, that they had the Fit
+every second Night. As the Season advanced, the Remissions appeared
+more distinct. However, there was always a good Number in whom the
+Fever went on in a continued Form, through its whole Course, without
+any Signs of Remission; tho' they had all the other Symptoms of this
+Fever. In a few Instances the Fever, after it came to remit, changed
+again into a continued Form.
+
+The Heat in the Time of the Paroxysms rose high, and several were
+delirious during its Continuance[70]; but were quite sensible in the
+Intervals, though never wholly without the Fever.
+
+ [70] I did not see the Delirium rise so high, nor the
+ Paroxysms so severe, as in the Marsh Fever described by Dr.
+ _Pringle_.
+
+At the End of _July_ 1761, four or five were attacked with a Bleeding
+at the Nose, in the Time of the Paroxysms, and became cooler
+afterwards; but it did not prove a Crisis in any of them.
+
+The Urine in the Beginning was commonly of a high Colour, though
+sometimes it was pale and limpid: At first it deposited no Sediment;
+but when the Fever came to remit, there was often a small Sediment
+after each Paroxysm; and as the Fever was going off, it let fall a
+Sediment in all[71].
+
+ [71] Dr. _Hillary_ says the Symptoms of this Fever in
+ _Barbadoes_ were much the same as those of the [Greek: syneches],
+ or continued Remitting Fever in England; except only that the
+ Urine in this hot Climate never deposits any lateritious
+ Sediment, nor very rarely in any intermitting or any other
+ Fever, except when a Crisis happens that Way. _Observations
+ on the Diseases of Barbadoes_, p. 23.
+
+Some at first were inclined to be costive; others had a Sickness and
+Purging; and several of those who were costive in the Beginning, were
+in the Course of the Disorder attacked with a Purging; and others,
+after some previous Complaint of the Stomach, were seized with both
+Vomiting and Purging. In general, after the Sick continued some Days
+in the Hospital, they were inclined to be loose; which was a
+favourable Circumstance, when this Evacuation was not so great as to
+be in Danger of sinking the Patient. Some were attacked with a
+Dysentery.
+
+In this, as well as in most other Fevers, the Sick frequently passed
+by Stool Worms of the round Kind; and sometimes they vomited them up,
+or the Worms came up into their Mouth or Nostrils while they lay
+asleep in Bed; and some towards the Height were afflicted with
+Deafness, which was commonly a favourable Symptom.
+
+Most of those ill of this Disorder had a yellowish Colour of the
+Countenance, which went off with the Fever. It was more observable in
+some than in others; in general, it was slight; some few became yellow
+all over[72]; particularly one Man, in the Hospital at _Munster_, who,
+after being seized with violent Vomiting and Purging, Convulsions, and
+Twitchings of the Tendons, and Hiccup, became yellow, as in the
+deepest Jaundice. This Symptom of Yellowness arises from a Redundancy
+and Absorption of Bile; and is sometimes observed in other Fevers as
+well as this[73]; for while we were at _Paderborn_ in _February_
+1761, two Men were brought to the Hospital in Fevers, attended with
+this Symptom. They were both delirious, with parched dry Tongues,
+slight Twitchings of the Tendons, and other bad Symptoms; and one of
+them had a continual Vomiting and Purging. They both died, and the
+Body of him who had the Purging was opened. All the Bowels, especially
+the Colon, were tinged with a yellow Bile, and had a slight Degree of
+Inflammation all over their Surface; the Gall-Bladder was distended
+with a very dark-coloured Bile; but no Concretions were found in its
+Cavity, or in the bilious Ducts; nor Mucus, or any other Thing
+obstructing these Passages. The Surface of the Lungs seemed slightly
+inflamed; and there was a small Quantity of greenish Serum in the
+Cavities of the Thorax. I could not learn the Histories of these two
+Mens Disorders, before they were brought to the Hospital; but, from
+the Symptoms, was inclined to believe, that the Fevers had been of the
+malignant or petechial Kind; and that the yellow Colour was only an
+accidental Symptom of it; for on one of the Men we could perceive
+obscure Traces of dun petechial Spots on his Breast and Arms; and the
+malignant Fever was frequent at this Time among the Troops, and the
+bilious autumnal Fevers had ceased long before.
+
+ [72] Dr. _Pringle_ takes Notice of this yellow Colour or
+ Jaundice. He says, "some grow yellow, as in the Jaundice.
+ This was found more frequent during the first Campaign than
+ afterwards; it was an unfavourable, but not a mortal
+ Symptom." _Observ._ part iii. ch. 4.--_Hippocrates_ mentions
+ the Jaundice occurring in Fevers, _Aphor._ iv. Sec. 62 & 64; and
+ he reckons it a favourable Symptom in ardent Fevers, where it
+ happens on the seventh Day. See _Book on Crises_'s, sect. 3.
+
+ [73] Does this Fever, when accompanied with this universal
+ Yellowness of the Skin, approach to the Nature of the yellow
+ Fever of the _West Indies_? As I had so few Cases of this
+ Kind under my Care, I cannot determine any thing about it
+ from my own Experience; but, from the Accounts of others, I
+ should believe them to be very different Disorders.--In the
+ yellow Fever of the _West Indies_, the Blood appears quite
+ loose and dissolved, without the least Appearance of Size,
+ even on the first Day; and the general Yellowness appears on
+ the third or fourth, with Signs of a total Dissolution, and
+ gangrenous Diathesis of the Blood: Whereas, in the Remitting
+ Fever of _Jamaica_, Mr. _Nasmith_ tells us, (See Dr. _Lind_'s
+ first Paper on Fevers), there is always an inflammatory
+ Diathesis of the Blood. The Yellowness in both depends on a
+ Redundancy and Absorption of Bile; but in the yellow Fever of
+ the _West Indies_, the Bile is in a much more putrescent
+ State, and a great Part of the Cure depends on the early and
+ speedy Evacuation of it.--In the yellow Fevers which appeared
+ in _Haslar_ Hospital, which are taken Notice of by Dr.
+ _Lind_, in his _Two Papers on Fevers_, the Blood was in quite
+ a different State from what it is in the Yellow Fever of the
+ _West Indies_; the Blood drawn from two of these Patients
+ became covered with a thick yellow Gluten, and the Serum was
+ of the Consistence of a thin Syrup, and of a deep yellow
+ Tinge, and tasted bitter; and in another who was bled two
+ Days before his Death, it threw up the same thick yellow
+ Gluten, tho' the red Part below was quite loose.
+
+I could not observe any certain critical Days, or Periods, when this
+Disorder terminated.--Some, who had it slightly, got well in a few
+Days; with others, it continued longer: Some continued long feverish,
+and would seem cooler and freer from Fever for a Day or two, and then
+grow worse again; and many had repeated Relapses.
+
+Neither could I observe any regular Crisis in this Fever. Sweat was
+the Discharge which oftenest proved critical. Many seemed to be
+relieved by a Purging; but as the greater Part had a Looseness after
+some Days, which continued often through the Disorder, without
+producing any very sudden Change in the Symptoms, it seemed to be a
+favourable Circumstance; though it seldom carried off the Fever so
+suddenly as to be manifestly critical. The Urine broke, and dropt a
+Sediment, for the most part, as the Fever took a favourable Turn.
+
+When this Fever proved mortal, it commonly assumed a continued Form;
+the Tongue became parched and dry, the Patient delirious, with
+Twitchings of the Tendons, Hiccup, and other fatal Presages; while
+others were seized with a violent Diarrhoea, or Dysentery, which sunk
+them irrecoverably.
+
+In the Beginning, it was absolutely necessary to bleed the Patients
+freely; and frequently to repeat the Evacuation, where the Symptoms
+required it. The Blood was of a florid Colour, and commonly threw up
+more or less of an inflammatory Buff.
+
+In these Fevers, we were obliged to have particular Regard to the
+first Passages, especially in the Beginning of the Disorder; for they
+were generally loaded with bilious Humours[74]; which, if suffered to
+remain in the Bowels; were either absorbed, and increased the Heat
+and Fever, or brought on a violent Diarrhoea; and therefore, after
+Bleeding, we gave a Vomit in the Evening, and next Day a Dose of some
+gentle Purge, as Rhubarb or Salts; to carry off these putrid, bilious
+Humours: And afterwards, in the Course of the Disorder, if the Patient
+was costive, and grew hot, restless, and uneasy, we either repeated
+the Purge, or gave laxative Clysters, which generally removed these
+Symptoms.--Frequently after the Operation of the Emetic, the Patient
+had some loose Stools, from the Gall Bladder's being emptied in the
+Strainings to vomit. Such Stools were always bilious, as were commonly
+those procured by purgative Medicines.
+
+ [74] According to Dr. _Hillary_'s Account of the Yellow Fever
+ in the _West Indies_, which is attended with bilious
+ Vomiting, it bears bleeding once or twice, but not a third
+ Time, before the third Day, but not at all after that Time;
+ and after Bleeding a great Part of the Cure depends on
+ carrying off as much of the putrid Bile as expeditiously and
+ safely as possible, which he says is to be done by making the
+ Patients drink freely of warm Water (sometimes mixed with a
+ little simple Oxymel or Green Tea) so as to vomit seven or
+ eight Times; and then to give a grain, or a Grain and a half
+ of Opium, to procure Rest, and to settle the Stomach; to make
+ the Patient take nothing for two Hours after; and then, if he
+ has not had a Stool, to give a laxative Clyster; after six
+ Hours Rest, to give a gentle Purge, to carry off as much as
+ possible of the bilious corrupted Humours; and in the Course
+ of the Disorder to repeat the Purge, as often as the Patient
+ is attacked with an Anxiety, and a painful burning Heat about
+ the Praecordia; which almost always depend on bilious
+ corrupted Humours pent up within the Bowels; and to endeavour
+ to support the Patient's Strength, and stop the putrescent
+ Diathesis of the Fluids by suitable Antiseptics, of which he
+ found a watery Infusion of Snake Root, mixed with _Madeira_
+ Wine and Syrup of Poppies, to answer the best of any Thing he
+ tried, and to sit easiest on the Stomach; and to this he
+ added the Use of Cordials, and of strong Wine Whey as the
+ Patient became lower.
+
+ Dr. _Hillary_'s Purge was: Rx. Mannae sescunc. vel unc. ij.
+ Tamarind. cond. unc. i. Tartar vitriolat. gr. x. solve in
+ seri lactis praeparat. cum Vin. Maderiens. unc. vi. Colaturae
+ adde Tinct. Senae unciam dimidiam. Divide in Partes quatuor, &
+ capt. aeger unam omni hora donec laxetur alvus.
+
+ His Infusion of Snake-Root was prepared in the following
+ Manner:
+
+ Rx. Rad. Serpent. Virgin. drachm. ij. Croci Angl. drachmam
+ dimidiam, infunde per horam vase clauso in aq. bull. q. s. &
+ dein unc. vi. Colaturae, adde aq. Menth. simp. unc. ij. Vin.
+ Maderiensis, unc. iv. Syrup. Croci vel Syr. e Mecon. unc. i.
+ Elix. Vitriol. acid. q. s. ad gratum saporem M. capiat aeger
+ cochlear. ij. vel iij. omni hora vel secunda quaq; hora vel
+ saepius pro re nata.
+
+ The Stomach is so irritable in the Beginning of this
+ Disorder, as to reject the saline Draughts, Nitre, and such
+ other Medicines. Nor will the Bark, which might be judged a
+ very proper Medicine in the second Stage of the Disorder, lie
+ upon the Stomach, but is thrown up immediately, in whatever
+ Form it is given. However, a Gentleman who had practised long
+ in the _West Indies_ told me, that although the Patient could
+ not retain it in his Stomach, yet that he had found great
+ Service, after the Bowels were emptied, from the Bark used
+ freely in Clysters.
+
+ Dr. _Hillary_ disapproves of the Use of Blisters in the
+ advanced State of these Fevers.
+
+After emptying the Bowels, we gave the cooling, and mild Diaphoretics,
+such as the saline and mindereri Draughts, joined occasionally with
+Nitre, or the Contrayerva Powders; while we made the Patient drink
+plentifully of warm diluting Liquors; which we found to answer in
+general better than any other Remedies: They brought the Remissions to
+be more evident, and the Paroxysms to be milder, at the same Time that
+they kept up a free Perspiration, as a Means to carry off the
+Distemper.
+
+In some Cases we gave the Antimonial Powder, made of one Part of
+Tartar Emetic, and ten of the _pulvis e chelis_, in small Doses, from
+two to four Grains every four or six Hours. The first Doses of this
+Powder sometimes made the Patient sick, and acted as a Purgative, and
+kept up a free Perspiration; at other Times, it produced no visible
+Effect. In some Cases, where it was given early, it operated both by
+Stool, and as a Diaphoretic, and removed the Fever[75]; and it was of
+Use in others, towards the Decline of the Fever; but we were often
+obliged to lay it aside; for it either acted too roughly, or produced
+no visible Effect or Alteration in the Disorder.
+
+ [75] Dr. _Millar_, one of the Physicians to the Army, told me
+ in _Germany_, that he had given this antimonial Powder with
+ great Success in the Remitting Fever, while the Eighth
+ Regiment of Foot (to which he was formerly Surgeon) lay in
+ _England_.--Dr. _Pringle_, in his fourth Edition of his
+ _Observations_, Part iii. ch. iv. tells us, that having given
+ a mild Purge immediately after Bleeding, he next Morning,
+ when there was almost always a Remission, gave a Grain of the
+ Tartar Emetic, with twelve Grains of Crabs-Eyes, and repeated
+ the Dose in two Hours, if the first had little or no Effect;
+ at any Rate, in four Hours. This Medicine not only vomited,
+ but generally opened the Body, and raised a Sweat. By these
+ Evacuations, the Fever was sometimes quite removed, but
+ always became easier.--This Medicine he usually repeated the
+ second or third Day; if not, he opened the Body with some
+ mild Laxative, or a Clyster; and continued this Medicine,
+ till the Fever went gradually off, or intermitted.--Dr.
+ _Pringle_ says, that Dr. _Huck_ treated this Fever in a
+ Method similar to this, both in _North America_ and in the
+ _West Indies_. In the Beginning he let Blood; and in the
+ first Remission, gave four or five Grains of Ipecacuana, with
+ Half a Grain of Tartar Emetic: This Medicine he repeated in
+ two Hours, taking Care that the Patient should not drink
+ before the second Dose; for by that Means the Medicine passed
+ more readily into the Bowels, before it operated by vomiting.
+ If, after two Hours more, the Operation either Way was small,
+ he gave a third Dose; which commonly had a good Effect in
+ carrying off the Bile; and then the Fever either went quite
+ off, or intermitted so far as to admit the Bark. On the
+ Continent he found no Difficulty after the Intermission; but
+ in the Islands, unless he gave the Bark upon the first
+ Intermission, though imperfect, the Fever was apt to assume a
+ continual and dangerous Form. Dr. _Huck_ never varied this
+ Method, but upon a stronger Indication to purge, than to
+ vomit. In which Case he made an eight Ounce Decoction, with
+ Half an Ounce of _Tamarinds_, two Ounces of _Manna_, and two
+ Grains of _Emetic Tartar_; and dividing this into four Parts,
+ he gave one every Hour, till the Medicine operated by Stool.
+
+When the Fever came to remit, we were obliged, for the most part, to
+continue the Use of the mild Diaphoretics, as before; for, although
+the Disorder put on a remitting Form, the Bark had very little Effect
+in stopping it[76], unless where the Fever changed into a regular
+Quotidian or Tertian Ague.--In the Year 1761, very few of these Fevers
+turned to regular Intermittents; but, in the Year 1762, the greater
+Part of them terminated in regular Agues, and were cured by the
+Bark[77].
+
+ [76] Dr. _Hillary_, in mentioning the Remitting Fever of the
+ Island of _Barbadoes_, says: In those who were blooded, and
+ took an Emetic afterwards, and then the saline Draughts, the
+ Fever was generally carried quite off by a critical Sweat on
+ the seventh or ninth Day; in some few it came to intermit
+ regularly after that Time; and was soon cured by the _cortex
+ Peruviana_, given with the saline Draughts, and seldom
+ effectually without them; though these irregular ingeminated
+ Fevers often remitted, and sometimes seemed to intermit; yet
+ if the _cortex Peruviana_ was given too soon in the Disease,
+ before it intermitted regularly (as I have more than once
+ seen, where it had been injudiciously given), it generally
+ caused the Fever to become continual and malignant.
+ _Observat. on the epidemic Diseases of Barbadoes_, p. 22.
+
+ [77] Mr. _Cleghorn_, after giving a very accurate Account of
+ Tertian Fevers, as they appeared in their various Forms of
+ true, of double, and triple Tertians, and of Semi-Tertians,
+ in the Island of _Minorca_, tells us, that he first attempted
+ the Cure by profuse Evacuations; but afterwards learnt from
+ Experience, that they were unnecessary; and that Bleeding and
+ Purging once or twice in the Beginning, was all that was in
+ general requisite; and if on the fifth Day the third
+ Revolution was not attended with more threatening Symptoms
+ than the second, and the Patient bore it easily, he
+ frequently trusted the whole Business to Nature; which
+ commonly terminated the Fever about the fourth or fifth
+ Revolution; and for the most part with an Increase of some
+ natural Evacuation.--But if the Paroxysm on the fifth Day was
+ the longest and most severe that happened, attended with any
+ doubtful or dangerous Symptom, he ordered two Scruples of the
+ Cortex to be given every two or three Hours; so that five or
+ six Drachms may be taken before next Day at Noon; lest, if
+ this Interval escaped, he should not have found a favourable
+ Opportunity of giving a sufficient Quantity of the Medicine
+ afterwards; as the Fits about this Period are wont to become
+ double, subintrant, or continual.--This did not always put an
+ immediate Stop to the Fever, but it invigorated the Powers of
+ the Body, and prevented or removed the dangerous Symptoms.
+ Having given the Bark on the fifth Day, if a Fit came on the
+ sixth, and declined the same Evening, he gave some more Doses
+ of the Bark to mitigate the Fit on the seventh; yet sometimes
+ this Fit of the sixth united with that of the seventh, and
+ the Patient had the Heat, Restlessness, Raving, and other
+ Complaints, greatly augmented, and the Case seemed more
+ desperate than ever; which, however, were more dangerous in
+ Appearance than Reality, and went off with a profuse Sweat
+ next Morning; after which he gave the Bark freely as before;
+ and this either stopt the Fits, or made them so moderate, as
+ that they yielded quickly to the same Sort of Management.--By
+ this Method, when Assistance is called timely, Mr. _Cleghorn_
+ says, the most formidable Intermitting and Remitting
+ Tertians, may be certainly and speedily brought to a happy
+ Conclusion about the End of the first Week, or Beginning of
+ the second. See _Observ. on the epidemic Diseases in
+ Minorca_, chap. iii. p. 187, &c.
+
+In the Year 1761, we tried the Bark in various Forms in many Cases,
+where the Patient had been blooded and purged in the Beginning, and
+used the cooling Medicines; and where the Remissions were very clear:
+Yet it had no Effect in removing the Disorder, except in two or three
+Cases at _Munster_, where the Paroxysms assumed a tertian Form; for
+the most part, it made the Patients more hot and feverish, and we were
+obliged to leave off using it, as it was in Danger of changing the
+remittent into a continued Fever. However, it was of Service after the
+Fever came to a Crisis, and was going off; and Dr. _Pringle_ has very
+justly observed, that it hastened the Recovery, and that those who
+used it were less subject to Relapses than such as did not; and
+therefore we commonly gave it in a convalescent State.--Before giving
+the Bark, I always found it of Advantage to give a Dose of Rhubarb, or
+of some other Purgative, or to mix some Rhubarb with the first Doses,
+so as to procure the Patient some loose Stools.
+
+When either the Fever went on without Intermission, or changed into a
+continued Form, or the Patient continued hot and feverish through the
+Day, with a Head-Ach, and other feverish Symptoms, nothing answered
+better, after free Evacuations had been made, than to apply a large
+Blister to the Back; and to make the Patient drink freely of cooling
+diluting Liquors; which generally relieved the Head, and abated the
+Violence of the other Symptoms.
+
+When a Purging came on in the Course of this Disorder, if there was
+much Fever, with a strong throbbing Pulse, Gripes and Pain of the
+Bowels, some Blood was taken away; and immediately after the Patient
+took a Dose of Salts and Manna, or of Rhubarb; and an Opiate in the
+Evening after its Operation: But if there was little or no Fever, or
+sharp Pain, Bleeding was omitted; and if the Patient complained of
+Sickness, a few Grains of Ipecacuana were given previous to the Purge.
+
+After this, if the Purging was moderate, and did not sink the Patient,
+we did nothing to stop it; but if it was violent, we gave the
+mindereri Draughts with Mithridate, and the Chalk Julep in the Day,
+and an Opiate at going to Rest; and occasionally used the emollient
+and anodyne Clyster; and, if necessary, repeated the Emetic and Purge.
+
+The Hiccup seldom appeared in this Fever till the Patient was reduced
+very low, and was commonly the Forerunner of Death. Some few, who had
+a Purging and Vomiting, were taken with a Hiccup, attended with
+Sickness, and Load at the Stomach, which seemed to depend on bilious
+Humours lodged in the Stomach and Bowels. This induced me to give a
+few Grains of the Ipecacuana; and to make the Patients drink an
+Infusion of Camomile Flowers till they vomited freely, and afterwards
+to take some mild Purge, or use laxative Clysters; after which they
+found themselves easier, and an anodyne Draught, with twenty or
+twenty-five Drops of the _tinctura thebaica_, put an End to the
+Hiccup. Others required the Use of Cordial Draughts, mixed with
+Opiates; and repeated Clysters and Fomentations, before they found
+Relief.--The Application of a Blister removed the Hiccup in one,
+after the above Remedies had proved ineffectual; as did the Musk Julep
+with Opium, and the Application of an aromatic Plaister to the
+Stomach, in another Patient.
+
+Several of them complained of a burning Heat and Pain in making Water;
+which commonly went off by drinking freely of the Gum Arabic
+Decoction, with the dulcified Spirit of Nitre, and the Use of oily
+Draughts; though in some it required the Assistance of Opiates, and of
+Fomentations and Clysters, before it was got the better of.
+
+The Symptom of Worms we were often obliged to neglect till the Fever
+was over, and then we treated it as formerly mentioned.
+
+The Deafness, though not near so frequent in this as the Malignant
+Fever, was rather a favourable Symptom, and mostly went away of
+itself; though in a few Cases, where it continued long, we applied
+Blisters behind the Ears, or to the Neck, with Advantage.
+
+Many, especially those who were brought low, complained, after the
+Crisis of the Fever, of Restlessness, and Want of Sleep; which,
+however, went off as their Strength returned: Where it fatigued them
+much, and kept them low, we gave a Cordial anodyne Draught at Night;
+and if that did not answer, commonly the Addition of a few Glasses of
+Wine in the Afternoon had the desired Effect.
+
+Others, in their convalescent State, complained of such a Giddiness,
+and Lightness of the Head, that they could neither walk nor stand;
+others, of a Dimness of the Eyes. These Symptoms, for the most part,
+went off as the Patients gathered Strength: The Use of the Bark, with
+now and then a Glass of Wine, hastened the Cure; and in two or three
+Cases we were obliged to give a Dose or two of some gentle Physic, and
+to apply a Blister, before the Patient got the better of them.
+
+As the Sick were recovering, it was common for them to complain of
+Pains of the Shoulders, Arms, and Legs, which also left them as they
+recovered their Strength; where they did not, the saline Draughts, and
+a low Diet, generally had a good Effect; and where it had not, we
+treated them as rheumatic Complaints.
+
+When the yellowish Colour of the Countenance remained after the Fever,
+we kept the Patient on a low Diet; and his Body open by Means of the
+saline Draughts, with a few Grains of Rhubarb, or by giving Half a
+Drachm, or two Scruples of the Soap Pills with Rhubarb daily; which,
+for the most part, removed the Yellowness soon. Two only had a
+Jaundice remain after the Fever, and both were cured in a short Time.
+
+In other Respects, the Treatment of this Fever, when it degenerated
+into a continued Form, had nothing particular in it; nor differed from
+the common Practice of giving cooling Medicines when the Fever was
+high, and supporting Nature by the Use of Cordials and Wine, and the
+Application of Blisters, &c. when low; and promoting such Evacuations
+as Nature pointed out for a Crisis.
+
+
+
+
+OF THE Intermitting Fever, or Ague.
+
+
+This Disorder belongs to the same Tribe of Diseases as the Remitting
+Fever. We call it an Intermitting Fever, or Ague, when the Paroxysms
+are distinct, begin with a cold and hot Fit, and go off with a Sweat;
+and the Patient is cool, and free from the Fever in the Intervals
+between the Fits.
+
+Many have been the Causes alledged to produce this Disorder. The great
+Quantity of Bile that is often thrown up in the Fit, has caused it to
+be ranked among the bilious Diseases; and the Seasons of the Year in
+which it is most frequent, and the low moist Situation of the Places
+where it is endemic, have made Practitioners suspect, that an
+obstructed Perspiration, and a Tendency in the Juices to the
+Putrescent, are the Cause of it.
+
+But whatever Cause we may suppose to give Rise to the first feverish
+Fit, it is difficult from hence to account for the regular Returns of
+the Paroxysms and Intermissions: For my own Part, after considering
+Intermittents, which observed a regular _Type_ in the Course of a
+Salivation[78]; their being so easily stopt by the Bark without any
+sensible Evacuation; their being sometimes put away by a Stimulus
+externally applied[79], or by a Fright, or sudden Plunge into cold
+Water[80]; their returning after slight Errors in Diet, and sometimes
+by the Operation of a Purge, or of Bleeding; their attacking sometimes
+only particular Parts, and many such Accidents in these Fevers, I must
+confess, that I am unable to form any Idea, either of their Origin,
+Seat, or Cause[81].
+
+ [78] See _Van Swieten_, Vol. II. p. 537.
+
+ [79] A Gentleman told me, that he was once cured of an Ague
+ in the Country, by applying a Poultice of Garlic to his
+ Wrists, and letting it lie on till it inflamed and blistered
+ the Part.--I have seen Blisters cure an Ague.--In the
+ _Edinburgh Med. Essays_, Vol. II. Art. v. we have an Account
+ of Agues being cured by the Application of Poultices of
+ recent Erigerum (Groundsel) applied to the Stomach on the
+ Days free from the Paroxysm, which caused strong Vomiting.
+
+ [80] See an Account of an Ague being cured by the Patient
+ being pushed into a Pool of Water without any previous
+ Notice, and being much frightened, in _Mason's Account of
+ Agues_, p. 222.
+
+ [81] The common Account given of the Cause of Agues, and of
+ the regular Return of their Paroxysms, has been: That the
+ Ague takes its Rise from some Sort of Matter, bilious, or
+ whatever it may be, either mixed with the Blood, or lodged in
+ the Bowels, or in some other Part of the Body; that a great
+ Part of this Matter is thrown out of the Body, in the Time of
+ the Paroxysm; but that so much remains as serves by Way of a
+ Ferment to assimilate other Particles to its own Nature;
+ which, when collected in a certain Quantity, produce a new
+ Fit; and, according to the Time that it takes to produce this
+ Quantity, the Disorder assumes the Form of a Quotidian,
+ Tertian, or Quartan Ague.
+
+The Soldiers were subject to this Disorder, particularly in Spring, if
+they took the Field soon, and in Autumn: The Frequency of it was in a
+great Measure determined by the Nature of the Ground on which they
+were encamped, or the Situation of the Garrison or Town in which they
+were quartered; for the lower and moister the Camp or Garrison, and
+the more moist the Season, the more subject an Army is to Agues; and
+the drier the Situation of the Camp or Garrison, and the finer and
+drier the Weather is, the freer they are from Disorders of this Kind.
+
+In Winter 1761, we had but very few Agues in the Hospitals; but on the
+Return of the Troops from the Expedition into _Hesse-Cassel_, and
+during the Spring, some (though not many) were attacked with Quotidian
+and Tertian Agues, and but very few with Quartans.--In _July_ and
+_August_ they were more frequent, and accompanied with more bilious
+Symptoms. At _Bremen_, during the latter End of Autumn, and throughout
+the Winter and Spring 1762, we had Agues of all Sorts, and many
+inveterate Cases; and all this Spring, and during the Summer and
+Autumn, the Ague was the epidemic Disorder all over _Westphalia_, as
+well as among the Troops.
+
+In Spring 1761, what Agues we had were mostly Tertian, some Quotidian,
+and but two or three of the Quartan Kind. They were, for the most
+part, mild, and yielded to the Bark.--Some of them began in the Form
+of a continued Fever; but after Bleeding, and the Use of the cooling
+Medicines for a few Days, they began to remit, and at last ended in
+regular Quotidian or Tertian Agues: Others, at first, appeared in Form
+of Remittent Fevers, attended with a strong throbbing Pulse; but
+changed to regular Intermittents by pursuing the antiphlogistic Method
+of Cure; and some from the Beginning assumed the Type of Quotidian or
+Tertian Agues, but often attended with a good deal of Fever, for the
+first two or three Days; and some had a slight Delirium in the Time of
+the Paroxysms, and the Pulse was not quite settled in the Intervals.
+In such Cases, where the Patient was strong, nothing answered so well
+as to take away some Blood; and to give the saline Draughts with Nitre
+till the Fever was moderated, before we gave the Bark.
+
+In general, there is a Prejudice against bleeding in Agues, after they
+become regular; but I have always observed, both in _England_ and in
+_Germany_, that where Patients are strong and plethoric, and the
+Fever in the Paroxysms rises high, or the Pulse remains quick in the
+Intervals, that taking away more or less Blood, and giving the
+antiphlogistic Medicines in the Beginning, eased the Patient,
+moderated the Fever, and made it safer to give the Bark soon; and I
+never saw the least Inconvenience from the Practice; but, on the
+contrary, have seen several Intermittent Fevers change into continued
+ones from the Neglect of this Evacuation; and have seen Cases where
+the Bark, instead of stopping the Ague, rather increased the Fever,
+till the Patient was blooded, and had pursued the antiphlogistic
+Method for some Time; after which the Bark had its proper Effect, and
+put an End to the Disorder.
+
+As soon as these Agues became regular, and the Patient was quite cool,
+and free from any Fever in the Intervals, we gave the Bark; which soon
+put a Stop to the Paroxysms, without the least bad Consequences; but,
+before giving the Bark, we always took Care to empty the first
+Passages by the Use of Emetics and Purgatives, where there was no
+Symptom to forbid their Use: In Cases where the Patient was weak, and
+the Fits so violent as to make it necessary to stop the Ague, before
+we had Time to administer Emetics or Purgatives, we added so much
+Rhubarb to the first Doses of the Bark as procured the Patient some
+loose Stools, as recommended by Dr. _Mead_[82]; which did not prevent
+its stopping the Ague, at the same Time that it answered the End
+proposed of carrying off any putrid Humours that might be lodged in
+the Intestines.
+
+ [82] Mr. _Cleghorn_, while at _Minorca_, after Evacuations,
+ gave the Bark at the End of the third Period, as we observed
+ before; but where the Fever had been neglected till about the
+ third or fourth Period, or badly treated in the Beginning,
+ and the Bowels were inflamed or overcharged with corrupted
+ Gall, he was obliged to endeavour to palliate the most
+ pressing Complaints, and to watch Evening, Night, and Morning
+ for a Remission, and then immediately to fly to the Bark, as
+ the only Remedy that could avert the Danger. If the Patient
+ was strong, he gave Half an Ounce of the Bark, with six
+ Drachms of the _sal catharticum amarum_, divided into four
+ equal Parts, of which the Patient took one every two Hours;
+ the Effect of which was, that the next Fit was mitigated, and
+ an Intermission commonly ensued, in which the Bark was
+ repeated without the Purgative, to finish the Cure.--But
+ where the Patient was excessively feeble, and there was a
+ manifest Risk of his dying in next Fit, he gave Cordials with
+ the Bark, instead of the _sal catharticum_; and endeavoured
+ to throw in six or seven Drachms in the Space of ten or
+ twelve Hours; he having found by Experience, that if a
+ smaller Quantity is given, the Paroxysms come on earlier than
+ usual, and make all Attempts to preserve Life unsuccessful.
+ See his _Account of the epidemic Diseases of Minorca_, cap.
+ iii. 2d edit. p. 192.
+
+In _England_, Vernal, Quotidian, and Tertian Agues, frequently go off
+after Bleeding, and taking some Emetics and Purges, and the saline
+Draughts, and cooling Medicines, for some Time, without the Use of the
+Bark; but in _Germany_ very few yielded to this Treatment, and we were
+obliged to give the Bark[83] before we could put a Stop to them.
+
+ [83] Sometimes, when Patients are reduced low by Agues, the
+ Stomach becomes so squeamish as to reject the Bark in every
+ Shape it can be given; in such Cases, when the Ague cannot be
+ stopped by other Means, it may be administered with great
+ Advantage in Clysters, of which the following is a very
+ remarkable Instance.--_William Hadderell_, a Lad seventeen
+ Years of Age, in the End of the Year 1761, was attacked with
+ a severe Tertian Ague, in which a Mortification came on his
+ left Foot, and one-half of it dropt off; notwithstanding, his
+ Ague continued to attack him every second Day, and the Sore
+ continued running on the 12th of _October_ 1763, when he was
+ admitted into _St. George_'s Hospital. He was reduced
+ extremely low; and the Sore of his Foot looked so bad, that
+ it was at first imagined he must lose his Leg. He was ordered
+ some Vomits, and a Purge, and cooling Medicines, and
+ afterwards to take the Bark freely; but his Stomach rejected
+ it, in whatever Form it was given. Other Means were then
+ tried to stop his Ague, but with no Effect, till the 7th of
+ _November_, that I ordered two Drachms of the Powder of the
+ Bark to be given him twice a Day in an emollient Clyster,
+ with Half a Drachm of the _tinctura thebaica_, which stopt
+ his Ague in three Days; and he had had no Return of it on the
+ 28th of _January_ 1764, and had recruited his Health and
+ Strength, and the Sore of his Foot was greatly lessened. Dr.
+ _Harvey_ (who teaches Midwifery in _London_) told me, that he
+ has cured Children of Agues by Bark Clysters, after the Bark
+ Waistcoats, and other Means used, had proved unsuccessful.
+
+In the End of _July_, and Beginning of _August_, the aguish Cases we
+had at _Munster_ continued to be of the Quotidian or Tertian Kind. The
+greatest Part of them began in the Form of continued Fevers, tending
+more to the bilious Kind than the preceding Months, and many of the
+Sick had bilious Vomitings in the cold Fits; and the Agues we had in
+Spring, and during the Campaign 1762, were of the same Nature, and
+required the same Treatment.
+
+Those Cases, which began in the Form of continued Fevers, were
+treated as such till they began to have regular Intermissions; they
+then yielded to the Bark.
+
+Some were attended with the Dysentery; and the Purging and Gripes were
+most severe on the Days of the aguish Paroxysms. In such Cases, we
+were frequently obliged at first to neglect the Ague, and to treat the
+Disorder entirely as a Flux. Where there was much Fever, the Patient
+strong, and the Pains in the Bowels acute, we ordered Bleeding; and
+after it a gentle Emetic, and some Doses of the saline oily Purge, or
+of Rhubarb; and gentle Opiates in the Evening, and other Medicines
+proper in the Dysentery, till its Violence was abated, before we gave
+the Bark: though in some Cases, where the aguish Paroxysms were very
+severe, and helped to increase the Purging, and the Patient was in
+Danger of sinking, we gave the Bark, notwithstanding the Flux still
+continued; and the Method we followed was the same as that I formerly
+mentioned, where it was complicated with the Malignant Fever; which
+was to give the Bark, mixed with Diascord, and Opiates, or other
+Medicines proper for the Dysentery, in the Intervals between the
+Purges.
+
+By this Treatment, very often both the Flux and Ague went off.
+However, it ought to be observed, that unless the aguish Paroxysms
+were severe, and in Danger of sinking the Patient, or that the
+Disorder had continued for some Time, and the Paroxysms were distinct,
+we seldom gave the Bark till the Violence of the Flux was abated: And
+where-ever much Griping and Pain in the Bowels attended the Flux and
+Ague, there Bleeding as well as Purgatives were necessary, before
+exhibiting the Bark; which seldom or ever agreed with them, till there
+was an evident _Apurexia_, or Absence of Fever in the Intervals
+between the Fits. Where these Cautions were neglected, the Bark
+generally made the Patients worse; and we were obliged to omit it,
+till the Violence of the Purging was over.
+
+Some Agues were accompanied with the Jaundice, though not in such a
+high Degree as in the confirmed State of that Disorder; and commonly
+in the Beginning the Pulse continued rather quick, in the Intervals
+between the Paroxysms; and the Patients complained of some Degree of
+Sickness for the first two or three Days. With those the Bark always
+disagreed, till the Feverishness between the aguish Paroxysms was
+gone; and we found, that the best Method of treating them, was to
+bleed in the Beginning, if there was much Fever; and then to give a
+Vomit and Purge, and to repeat them, if necessary; and where there was
+no Purging, to give the saline Draughts, and other cooling Medicines;
+and to add a few Grains of Rhubarb, or to give so much of the _pilulae
+saponacae cum rheo_, daily, as procured one or two loose Stools.
+
+After the Ague had regular Intermissions, and the Patient was quite
+cool, and without Fever in the Intervals, if the Disorder did not
+yield to the above Treatment, which it seldom did, we then gave the
+Bark freely; even though the slight icteric Symptoms still remained;
+and it put an End to the Ague, and removed the Jaundice at the same
+Time, without the least Inconvenience to the Patient. In such Cases,
+we generally used to add a few Grains of Rhubarb to the first Doses of
+the Bark; or gave the Bark made up into Pills with Soap, and added
+occasionally a few Grains of Rhubarb.
+
+Several of those who had the icteric Symptoms along with the Ague, had
+bilious Vomitings in the Time of the cold Fit; they found themselves
+sick, with a bitter Taste in their Mouth, before the Approach of the
+aguish Paroxysm; and many of them, though they took Emetics, which
+operated freely at this Time, yet did not vomit up the Bile; but the
+Sickness and bitter Taste continued till the cold Fit came on, when
+they vomited Bile in large Quantities. In such Cases, after the Use of
+Emetics and Purges, and the Ague was brought to have regular
+Paroxysms, with free Intermissions, the Bark, given as just now
+mentioned, removed the Ague and icteric Symptoms, without the least
+bad Consequences.
+
+Many Practitioners of great Repute have been prejudiced against the
+Bark; and tell us, that the free Use of this Medicine often lays the
+Foundation of Obstructions in the abdominal Viscera, especially when
+it has been given where there was an icteritious Colour in the Eyes
+and Countenance; and that, in such Cases, we ought not to give the
+Bark till these Icteric Symptoms are gone. At first, I was very
+cautious of giving it under such Circumstances; till meeting with some
+Cases where the Paroxysms were severe, and became more frequent, while
+the Patient was so low, as to be in Danger of sinking under the
+Disorder, I gave the Bark freely, as the only Remedy capable of
+preserving Life; which not only stopt the Ague, but carried off the
+icteritious Symptoms[84], and restored the Patients to perfect Health.
+
+ [84] This agrees with what Mr. _Cleghorn_ remarks of Tertian
+ Fevers in his _Observations on the epidemic Diseases of the
+ Island of Minorca_, who says, "where there is an icteritious
+ Colour of the Eyes, we are likewise told, that the Cortex
+ should not be administered; though, in my Opinion, it is for
+ the most part dangerous to delay it, after the first
+ Appearance of that Symptom." Chap. iii. 2d edit. p. 205.
+
+After this I gave it freely, in the Manner above mentioned, to some
+Hundreds, with great Success; and I never saw any Mischief follow from
+using it: Indeed sometimes, where it was given rather too soon, it did
+not sit easy on the Stomach; and made the Patients hot and restless;
+but, by laying it aside, these Effects immediately ceased; and
+generally, after a little Time, the Paroxysms became milder and more
+distinct, when the Bark was again administered, agreed with the
+Stomach, and put an End to the Disorder; and I am now convinced, from
+Experience, that the Cases in which the Bark has done Mischief, or
+given Rise to Obstructions of the abdomenal Viscera, are but very
+rare; and that these Mischiefs mostly arise from the Obstinacy of the
+Disorder, and not from the Use of this Drug; for I have oftener
+observed these Obstructions where little or no Bark had been used,
+than where it was given freely[85]. What probably has given Rise to
+the Belief of the Bark's doing so much Mischief, is, that in
+_Holland_, and other low fenny Countries, where Agues are endemic,
+they are oftentimes extremely obstinate, and yield hardly to any
+Remedies; and if they are stopt by the Bark, they often return soon
+after, and by their long Continuance give Rise to Obstructions of the
+abdomenal _viscera_, which have been attributed to the Use of this
+Specific.
+
+ [85] Dr. _Pringle_ takes Notice, that these Obstructions
+ happened as often without as with the Bark; and therefore
+ seemed to depend on the long Continuance and Obstinacy of the
+ Intermittent. _Observ._ part iii. chap. iv. sect. 2. p. 179.
+ 3d Edit.
+
+In some few Cases a Purging accompanied these icteric Symptoms, which
+we treated much in the same Manner as when the Ague was complicated
+with the Flux; we gave Emetics and Purgatives; and the mindereri
+Draughts with Mithridate, throughout the Day, and Opiates at Night, if
+the Purging was violent; if it continued, accompanied with regular
+aguish Fits, the Bark, with Astringents, generally removed both.
+
+In the latter Part of the Year 1761, and during Spring 1762, we had
+at _Bremen_ many Patients in Agues of all Sorts; as Quotidians,
+Tertians, Quartans, and irregular Agues of a very obstinate Nature.
+The Town of _Bremen_ is large and well built, situated in a low sandy
+Plain, with the _Weser_ dividing the old from the new Town; generally
+a considerable Part of the Environs is covered with Water in the
+Winter, and frequently the _Weser_ breaks down some of the Dikes, and
+overflows all the Country round; and every Time the River overflows
+its Banks, the Cellars of all the new Town, and of that Part of the
+old Town next the River, are filled with Water. All the Year round, on
+digging two or three Feet deep into the Ground, you come at Water.
+
+Agues are endemic in this Place, and great Numbers of the lower Class
+of People are afflicted with them at all Times of the Year, especially
+in Spring and Autumn.
+
+Some of the Sick sent down from the Army were bad of Agues; but the
+greatest Number we had in Hospitals was composed of such as took it
+in Town; either from doing Duty on the Ramparts, or from lying in bad
+Quarters, or getting drunk and exposing themselves to Wet and Cold;
+and many Men of the invalid Companies who had come from _Embden_
+brought with them old inveterate tertian and quartan Agues.
+
+Most of the recent Cases were easily cured by the Methods already
+mentioned; though they often continued longer, required a greater
+Quantity of the Bark to stop them, and a longer Continuance of its Use
+to make a Cure, than at other Places, which were more dry, and higher
+situated.
+
+The most obstinate of the recent Cases were the irregular
+Intermittents, which had regular Paroxysms, but where the Pulse was
+not settled in the Intervals; which we were obliged to treat as
+Remitting Fevers till the Paroxysms became quite distinct, and the
+Patient was cool and free from any Fever in the Intervals; after which
+they commonly yielded to the Bark.
+
+But many of those Agues which had continued for some Time, especially
+with those Invalids who came from _Embden_, or who had brought on
+frequent Relapses by their own Irregularities, were very obstinate.
+With many the Bark had no Effect; and its Use persisted in seeming
+rather to exasperate the Paroxysms, and to do Hurt. Nor had almost any
+Remedy we tried a better Effect. We gave the following Medicines to
+divers Patients; the saline Draughts and cooling Medicines; Infusions
+of Camomile Flowers and of other Bitters; Dr. _Morton_'s Powders of
+Camomile Flowers, Salt of Wormwood, and diaphoretic Antimony; Dr.
+_Mead_'s Powders of Camomile Flowers, Salt of Wormwood, Myrrh, and
+Alum; Alum and Nutmeg; large Doses of _sal ammoniac_; large Quantities
+of Spirits of Hartshorn; the antimonial Drops and Powders; to some we
+gave Emetics, both in the Intervals and immediately before the Fits.
+In some we tried to promote Sweats before the Approach of the Fits, by
+making them drink freely of warm Liquors while they kept in Bed, and
+took diaphoretic Medicines; and to others we applied Blisters.--But
+all did not put a Stop to some of those Agues.
+
+With some the Disorder continued till it broke down the Crasis of the
+Blood, and brought on a general Relaxation of the Fibres; and the
+Patients became cachectic, and fell into Dropsies, or were seized with
+Diarrhoeas, of which they died. Some had Obstructions formed in the
+Liver or Spleen, or other _viscera_, and fell into the Jaundice and
+Dropsies, which carried them off.--In the Bodies, of several whom we
+opened, we found Indurations of the Liver and Spleen--in two of them
+Suppurations of the Liver--and in one, who had had the Ague at
+_Embden_, and had long complained of one of those Swellings towards
+the left Side of the _abdomen_, called the _Ague Cake_[86], the Spleen
+was so much enlarged as to weigh above four Pounds.
+
+ [86] I have seen the dead Bodies of four People opened, who
+ had those Swellings of the left Side, commonly called the
+ _Ague Cake_, which had come after Agues; and in all the
+ Swelling was owing to an Enlargement of the Spleen.
+
+Some, whose Constitutions were worn out by these obstinate Agues, fell
+into Consumptions and other pulmonic Disorders in the Winter, of which
+they died. One Man died in the cold Fit[87].
+
+ [87] The cold Fit is the most dangerous Time of the Paroxysm,
+ and the greatest Part of those who die of Agues die at this
+ Time; one or two Instances of which I saw in the Military
+ Hospital at _Edinburgh_ in the Year 1746.--_Van Swieten_ says
+ he has seen the trembling and shaking so great in the Time of
+ the cold Fit of Quartans, that the Teeth have dropt out of
+ the Head. _Comment. in sect._ 749. _Aphorism. Boerhaav._ vol.
+ II. p. 511.
+
+Where-ever the Ague continued long, and the Bark had no Effect, we
+were obliged to lay it aside, and to try other Remedies adapted to the
+present Circumstances of the Patient.
+
+The mild Methods succeeded best; giving the saline Draughts and gentle
+cooling Medicines to such as were strong and plethoric, and had the
+aguish Paroxysms violent; and the gentle Aromatics and Bitters, or
+Chalybeats, to those of a weakly Habit, or whose Fibres had been much
+relaxed, and their Constitutions greatly injured by this or any other
+preceding Disorder.
+
+During these Courses, we gave at Times gentle Emetics; and if the
+Patient complained of Gripes and Purging, which they frequently did,
+in the Course of this Disorder, we gave a Dose of Rhubarb, or of some
+other mild Purge; and after it other Medicines proper for this
+Complaint.
+
+By these Methods frequently the aguish Paroxysms became gradually
+milder, and at last vanished. At other Times, after they had continued
+for five or six Weeks, we again gave the Bark, and found it to have
+the proper Effect. With others they continued thro' the Winter, and
+went off of themselves in the Spring. With others they still
+continued; and as no Medicines nor Time seemed to have any Effect in
+that Country, we recommended their being sent over to _England_ for
+Change of Air, as the only Means likely to remove the Disorder.
+
+Two Agues which had resisted the Use of the Bark were cured by Powder
+of Camomile-Flowers, Salt of Wormwood, and diaphoretic Antimony; and
+one by the Use of the aluminous Powders, with Myrrh.--One Invalid, who
+had long been ill of an obstinate Tertian, on catching Cold, was
+seized with an Inflammation of his Throat, for which he was blooded,
+and took a mild Purge; next Day there appeared a Swelling of one of
+the parotid Glands, which we endeavoured to bring to Maturation, by
+the Application of emollient Cataplasms; after some Days it went
+entirely away, without coming to Suppuration; but as there remained
+still a Confusion of the Head, and a Quickness of the Pulse, a large
+Blister was applied to the Back, which continued running for some
+Days; after it dried up he fell into a Fit resembling that of an
+Epilepsy, and next Day had another Fit of the same kind; from the Time
+the Swelling first appeared till the Time he had the first Fit, he had
+no Ague, but it returned the second Day after the second epileptic
+Fit; another Blister was applied, and he had no Return of the
+epileptic Fits, though his Ague continued obstinate till _March_, at
+which Time he was sent to _England_[88].--About the same Time the
+aguish Fits of two others were stopt by the Application of Blisters,
+though they returned in both soon after.
+
+ [88] On the 29th of _August_ 1759, a Man (_Murdoch Brinnen_)
+ about thirty Years of Age, was admitted into _St. George_'s
+ Hospital for a very large Swelling of the parotid Glands and
+ neighbouring Parts, which had come three Days before, after a
+ Fit of the Tertian Ague, which did not return afterwards. The
+ Swelling was discussed by the Application of emollient
+ Cataplasms, which were intended to have brought it to
+ Suppuration. He had no Return of the Ague, nor did any bad
+ Consequence follow the Discussion of the Tumour, and the Cure
+ was completed by a few Doses of Physic, and a Decoction of
+ the Bark, which restored him to his Strength, and carried off
+ the little Heat and Feverishness which remained.
+
+Excepting in these few Cases, I found no Medicines effectual in
+stopping those Agues, which had resisted the Bark when properly given,
+though we tried a vast Variety in different Cases. The _cortex
+cascarillae_, or _eleutheriae_, was given freely, both in Decoction and
+Substance, in four Cases, which had not yielded to the Bark, but
+without producing any good Effect; we had not an Opportunity of
+trying this Bark in more Cases of this kind, nor in Fluxes, the small
+Quantity of it which had come from _England_ being all expended.
+
+A Soldier of one of the Regiments of Guards, who was admitted into the
+Hospital for oedematous Legs, and the Remains of a very bad Flux, which
+he had had ever since the preceding Autumn; after being cured of the
+Flux, and most of the oedematous Swellings, was seized with an
+intermitting Complaint in _February_. He had no regular hot and cold
+Fits; but every second Day, after a slight Shivering and Cold, he was
+seized with Gripes and a Purging. In one or two of the Fits his Pulse
+was very quick, and the Pain of the Bowels very acute and severe;
+which obliged us to blood him, and give him a Dose of the saline oily
+Purge; after which we treated the Disorder as a Flux complicated with
+the Ague, and gave the Bark mixed with Diascord, and gentle Opiates at
+Nights, and at Times gentle Purgatives; the Ague and Diarrhoea stopt
+very soon, and in a few Weeks he got free of all Complaints, though he
+still continued weak, till he was sent to _England_, about the
+Beginning of _April_.
+
+Many, especially those whose Constitution had been shaken by this or
+some other Disorder, complained of flatulent Swellings of the Stomach
+and Bowels, which affected them either while the Ague continued, or
+soon after it was stopped, and were very troublesome and uneasy. For
+the most part, these Swellings were removed by the Use of cordial
+Medicines mixed with the Bark, or a Course of Bitters, and some Doses
+of Rhubarb given at proper Intervals. In some Cases, where they were
+attended with Sickness, and the Stomach seemed to be loaded, a Vomit
+gave Relief. Very often these Symptoms continued for Weeks after the
+Ague had left them, and did not go entirely off, till the Patient
+recovered his Strength.
+
+In _February_, _March_, and _April_, 1761, severals of the Soldiers in
+the Hospital at _Paderborn_ complained of periodical Head-Achs, which
+returned in most, every Day; in others, only every second; and
+afterwards Cases of this Kind occurred at different Times as long as
+the Army continued in _Germany_. These Head-Achs generally began in
+the Forenoon, were very violent while they lasted, and confined the
+Patient to his Bed for some Hours. During the Pain, the Pulse was
+quick; but in the Intervals the Patients were quite cool, and without
+Fever. Sometimes, tho' not always, the Urine deposited a little
+Sediment as the Head-Ach was going off. Commonly the Pain was all over
+the Head, but most severe in the Forehead; though sometimes it was
+confined to one Side only.
+
+These Head-Achs we treated entirely as Agues of the same Type. When
+the Patient was strong, some Blood was taken away, and afterwards we
+prescribed an Emetic and Purge, and then gave the Bark liberally,
+which generally put an End to the Complaint, without any bad
+Consequences attending.
+
+
+
+
+OF THE JAUNDICE.
+
+
+The Jaundice, or a yellow Colour of the Eyes and Skin, occasioned by
+an Absorption of Bile into the Blood, was another Distemper which
+appeared towards the End of each Campaign.
+
+This Disorder, for the most part, takes its Rise[89] from Calculi
+lodged in the biliary Ducts[90]; and sometimes from a viscid Mucus or
+Pituita obstructing those Passages[91]; and it may be brought on by a
+Tumour, or any other Cause[92], compressing these Ducts, so as to
+prevent the free Flow of the Bile into the Cavity of the Intestines.
+
+ [89] Obstructions and Scirrhi of the Liver have been assigned
+ as the Cause of the Jaundice; but as we have so many Cases of
+ this Kind related where no Jaundice appeared, it is now much
+ doubted, whether such Obstructions, which do not affect the
+ Ducts, are capable of producing this Disorder.
+
+ [90] We have numerous Cases in _Bonetus_, and other physical
+ Observations, where Calculi have been found in the Gall
+ Bladder, and Ducts of People who have died of the Jaundice;
+ and I have frequently found two, three, and sometimes twelve,
+ fifteen, or twenty, such bilious Calculi in these Cavities.
+
+ [91] Viscid Mucus or Pituita, or viscid Bile, has been
+ observed frequently to obstruct the Ducts. Dr. _Coe_ says,
+ sometimes icteric Patients discharge very thick Bile, almost
+ as viscid as Bird-Lime. See his _Treatise on biliary
+ Concretions_, chap. ii. where he has collected a great Number
+ of icteric Cases, in which the Bile has been found quite
+ viscid after Death.
+
+ [92] See the Case of a Jaundice in _Bonetus's Sepulchretum
+ Anatomicum_, tom. II. p. 326, where the Sides of the common
+ biliary Duct were compressed by an Enlargement of the Glands
+ about the _vena portarum_; and we sometimes meet with a
+ Jaundice in pregnant Women which goes off after Delivery, and
+ seems to have been caused by the Pressure of the Uterus and
+ indurated Foeces in the Colon. _Van Swieten_ says, he has seen
+ this very frequently, vol. III. sect. 918, p. 95.
+
+The yellow Colour, or Jaundice, observed in the Ague, and some other
+bilious Disorders, seems to arise sometimes from Spasms of the Ducts;
+or from too great a Quantity of Bile secreted and absorbed into the
+Blood, which seems evidently to be the Case where large Quantities of
+Bile are either vomited or discharged by Stool; a Proof that the
+biliary Ducts are clear, and free from Obstructions.
+
+In the End of the Campaign of 1760, after a continued Rain for many
+Weeks, the Jaundice had been very frequent, and in a Manner
+epidemical, among the Troops, for some Time before they left the
+Field; and in passing thro' _Munster_, about the End of _December_, I
+observed several ill of that Distemper in Hospitals, and met with a
+few Cases of this Kind in the Hospitals at _Paderborn_ in _January_
+1761; but during the Spring and Summer, we had only one or two now and
+then sent to the Hospitals for this Complaint; though towards the End
+of the Campaign it became more frequent, and several were sent down to
+_Bremen_; and some of the Garrison were likewise affected with it.
+During the Winter not above four or five were sent to the Hospitals I
+attended, and but a few to the flying Hospital, during the Campaign
+1762. It frequently appeared in dropsical Cases, depending on
+obstructed Viscera.
+
+Those in whom the Jaundice was the original Disorder, and not
+complicated with any other, generally got well soon; but where it
+appeared in dropsical Cases, depending on obstructed Viscera, it was
+commonly fatal.
+
+In the Beginning of this Disease, Patients usually complained of
+Sickness, Heat, Thirst, and other feverish Symptoms; and some had a
+Vomiting, and Pain of the Stomach, for a Day or two before the
+Jaundice appeared; the Urine was always of a deep Colour from the
+first; and about the second or third Day the Skin, and the Whites of
+the Eyes, began to be tinged with a yellow Colour, attended with the
+common Symptoms of this Disorder.
+
+Such was the Manner in which the Jaundice began in those who were
+taken ill in Garrison; but those sent us from the Army could seldom
+give any accurate Account of their own Cases.
+
+In the Course of this Disorder, the Sick were inclined to be costive,
+though some few had a Diarrhoea; several, who had been reduced by
+Fevers, or other Complaints, before the Jaundice appeared, were
+attacked with violent Haemorrhages from the Nose; and two had like to
+have died of them before the Bleeding was stopped. The Haemorrhages did
+not prove critical, but seemed to depend on a dissolved State of the
+Blood.
+
+On the Patient's being first taken ill, if he was plethoric or
+feverish, or complained of Pain, attended with Sickness and Vomiting,
+some Blood was taken away. Next Day we gave twenty-five or thirty
+Grains of Rhubarb in a saline Draught, and afterwards the common
+saline and other cooling Medicines, till the Fever was abated. If the
+Pain and Fever did not abate, a Vein was opened a second Time, and a
+few Drops of the _tinctura thebaica_ were added to the saline
+Draughts, while emollient Clysters were frequently administered, and
+the Stomach and Belly fomented with Flannels dipped in warm emollient
+Decoctions.
+
+When the Pain and Fever were gone, we then gave a gentle Vomit in the
+Evening, and next Day a Dose of Rhubarb; and afterwards so much of
+the _pilulae saponaceae cum rheo_ daily as kept the Body open; or the
+saline Draughts with five or six Grains of Rhubarb in each, or such a
+Quantity as answered the same Purpose as the Pills; and from Time to
+Time repeated the Emetic[93] and Purge.
+
+ [93] Vomits are reckoned amongst the most efficacious
+ Remedies in this Disorder, and I have often seen good Effects
+ follow their Use.--_Janet Crags_, a Woman thirty Years of
+ Age, was, on the 21st of _December_ 1758 admitted into _St.
+ George_'s Hospital for a Jaundice of some Months Continuance.
+ Her Eyes and Skin were not of the common icteric Colour, but
+ of a dark livid yellow, for which Reason both she and the
+ Nurses termed her Disorder the Black Jaundice. She at first
+ complained of a Difficulty of Breathing, and a Weight and
+ Oppression about the Region of the Liver, for which she was
+ blooded, took some Doses of Physick, and the Soap Pills with
+ Rhubarb; but these produced no Change in her Complaints. On
+ the 29th she had a Cough, and complained much of Sickness and
+ Difficulty of Breathing, for which she was ordered a Vomit,
+ and afterwards to take the Squill Draught Morning and
+ Evening, which occasioned a Purging and Gripes. On the 5th of
+ _January_ 1759, the Looseness still continuing, I ordered her
+ to leave off the Use of the Squill Draughts, and to take only
+ some Rhubarb in an oily Draught every Night at Bed-Time. On
+ the 8th, tho' the Purging had increased, I did not chuse to
+ check it, as I suspected it would prove a Crisis to the
+ Disorder, and therefore only ordered her the Cordial Draughts
+ and Wine to support her Strength. The Looseness continued
+ till the 15th, when most of the icteric Symptoms were gone,
+ and by the 30th they entirely disappeared. However, she
+ continued low, and subject to Flatulencies for some Months
+ afterwards, which were at last removed by the continued Use
+ of Cordials, gentle Bitters, a nourishing Diet, and repeated
+ Doses of Rhubarb; and on the 2d of _May_ she was discharged
+ in a firm State of Health.
+
+ Dr. _Coe_ says, "I have more Reason to be satisfied of the
+ Effect of Vomits in dislodging these Calculi, than of any
+ other, or indeed of all other Medicines." _Treatise on
+ biliary Concretions_, chap. ii. p. 253. Besides viscid
+ Humours, which Vomits bring away from the biliary Passages,
+ how often are Gall Stones likewise found in the Stools after
+ the Operation of a Vomit? _Ibid._ p. 256.
+
+Most of the icteric Cases we had, which were not complicated with
+other Disorders, yielded to the above Treatment in about twelve or
+fourteen Days. Two or three remained obstinate for a longer Time. To
+one I ordered a Quart of the pectoral Decoction, made with Parsly
+Roots instead of the Linseed, to be drunk daily along with the Soap
+Pills; and the Jaundice disappeared in about eight or ten Days. One
+who had the Disease more obstinate than the rest, and complained for
+some Time of a Tension and Uneasiness about the Liver, was ordered to
+have the right Side fomented Morning and Evening, and to rub it for
+some Time after with the _linimentum saponaceum_ and to drink the
+Decoction of Sarsaparilla after the Soap Pills; and by continuing this
+Course for about three Weeks, the Disorder went off[94].
+
+ [94] Sometimes the warm Bath has a good Effect after other
+ Remedies have afforded no Relief. In the Year 1743, a young
+ Gentleman, a Student of Physic at _Edinburgh_, had a Jaundice
+ for which he had taken Variety of Medicines, and rode daily
+ on Horseback for some Weeks, without receiving any Benefit:
+ At last, by my Father's Advice, he took a brisk Dose of
+ Physic, and before it began to operate had a large Quantity
+ of warm Whey thrown up by way of a Clyster, and went
+ immediately into the warm Bath. In the Bath he was taken with
+ a violent Inclination to go to Stool; and after coming out,
+ had a great Number of bilious Stools that Day, and next
+ Morning was still inclined to be loose; and in a few Days all
+ the icteric Symptoms vanished. On the 20th of _July_ 1763, a
+ middle aged Woman, _Elizabeth Hosier_, was admitted into _St.
+ George_'s Hospital for a Jaundice, which came about a
+ Fortnight before. She had been blooded, and had taken some
+ Medicines, before I saw her. I ordered her a Vomit and Purge,
+ and to take too Scruples of the Soap Pills and Rhubarb daily;
+ and four Days afterwards the Vomit and Purge were repeated,
+ but without making any Change in her Disorder. On the 29th
+ she went into the warm Bath, and took a Vomit immediately on
+ coming out. After the Vomit she had some loose Stools, and
+ the icteric Symptoms went all off in a few Days. She
+ continued well for some Months; but I have been told, that
+ she has since relapsed.
+
+ When the Jaundice continues obstinate, there is hardly any
+ Thing has often a better Effect than the continued Use of
+ Decoctions of the Juices of succulent Plants, of Whey in the
+ Spring, Soap, and such like Medicines. The Baron _Van
+ Swieten_ tells us, that he has cured many obstinate Jaundices
+ by making the Patients drink daily a Pint or two Pints of a
+ Decoction of Grass, Dandelion, Fumaria, Succory, and such
+ like, prepared in Whey; to each Pint of which he added Half
+ an Ounce of _sal polychrest_, and an Ounce or two of Syrup of
+ the five aperient Roots; and by ordering them to drink the
+ Spa Water in Summer, and take freely of Soap, along with a
+ Decoction of the aperient Roots, in Winter. In those who were
+ cured by these Remedies, he says, Stones, or a kind of a
+ grumous calculous Matter, were always found in the Stools, as
+ the Jaundice was going off. He relates one very particular
+ Case of a Lady of sixty Years of Age, who had had a black
+ Jaundice for twelve Years, and was cured by continuing the
+ Use of these Medicines for eighteen Months; during the last
+ six Months of which she had a Looseness, and constantly
+ discharged by Stool a fetid granulated Matter of the Colour
+ of Clay;--and another singular Case of a Man who was cured by
+ living mostly upon Grass, and a Decoction of it, for two
+ Years together. The Man came at last to devour such
+ Quantities of it, and could distinguish the good Sort from
+ the bad so well, that the Farmers often used to drive him out
+ of their Fields. Vol. III. Sec.. 950.
+
+ _Glisson_ tells us, that Cattle are subject to bilious
+ Concretions in Winter, which are dissolved and evacuated in
+ the Spring, when they begin to move much about, and to eat
+ the new Grass, which purges them. _Oper._ vol. II. _Anat.
+ Hepat._ chap. vii. p. 104.
+
+ Dr. _Russel_ greatly recommends the Use of Sea Water along
+ with the saponaceous Medicines. See his _Treatise on the Use
+ of Sea Water_.
+
+The Haemorrhage from the Nose commonly stopped soon. Where it was
+violent, we kept the Patient cool, and applied Cloths dipped in
+Vinegar and Water to the Nose.--In two Cases, one at _Munster_, the
+other at _Bremen_, the Patients were hot and feverish, and a Vein was
+opened, and eight or ten Ounces of Blood taken away; and in one Case
+nothing took Effect till we gave repeated Doses of the _tinctura
+saturnina_ in a common acid Julep.
+
+
+
+
+OF TUMOURS of the BREAST.
+
+
+In _May_ 1761, a great many of the Patients, who had been in Hospitals
+the preceding Winter, had Tumours formed on the external Part of the
+Breast, which they shewed me at _Osnabruck_. They began in the Form of
+indolent Tumours, and came slowly to Suppuration. For the most part,
+the Suppuration was only partial, and the Tumour, on being opened,
+discharged a very small Quantity of Matter. Some of them, though they
+felt soft, and seemed to contain Matter, yet, upon being opened,
+discharged only a small Quantity of black Blood. None of them melted
+down entirely into Pus, or came fully to Suppuration, and healed
+kindly as Abscesses which succeed acute Inflammations. But after a
+small Quantity of Matter was discharged, for the most part, there
+still remained a hard Tumour, which felt as if it was a Swelling of
+the Bone, or Cartilage below; and in some the Surface of the Bone was
+found rough at the Bottom of the Abscess.
+
+These Tumours seldom rose high, and were most of them situated at the
+lower Part of the Sternum, or a little to one Side of it, commonly on
+the left Side, above the _cartilago ensiformis_. Some Patients had
+only one, others two, and some three such Tumours. The first of them I
+saw was on the left Side, which, on being felt, gave exactly the same
+Sensation as when the Cartilages of the Sternum are begun to be raised
+by an Aneurism of the Aorta; only no Pulsation was to be perceived;
+and most of them had the same Appearance.
+
+The Patients, who had such Tumours, commonly complained of Pains of
+their Breast. One or two, after these Tumours came to Suppuration,
+seemed to recover their Health, and to feel no Uneasiness, tho' some
+of the Swelling remained: But many of them were inclined to be
+hectic, and seemed likely to grow consumptive.
+
+Being ordered up to the flying Hospital in _June_, and the Sick going
+down to _Bremen_, I had no Opportunity of seeing the Event of these
+Tumours, or of examining the Bodies of those who died with them. One I
+accidentally met with the following Winter at _Bremen_, who died of a
+Consumption and Diarrhoea. He had a large Abscess, which penetrated
+into the Cavity of the Chest, and discharged a great Quantity of very
+fetid Matter, at the Part where one of these Tumours had been seated,
+and the Sternum and Ribs were carious all round the Abscess.
+
+
+
+
+OF PARALYTIC COMPLAINTS.
+
+
+Some of the Soldiers, from lying out in the Nights on the wet Ground,
+and from doing Duty in cold rainy Weather, were seized with a Pain and
+Numbness all over, and lost the Use of their Limbs, which in some was
+succeeded with a Palsy of these Parts: But the greatest Number of
+those afflicted with Paralytic Symptoms were seized with them either
+in Fevers, or after feverish and other Disorders. The Number, who were
+attacked with Complaints of this Kind, were but few.
+
+When Men were suddenly taken with Pain and Numbness all over, we found
+that the best Method of treating them was to put them to Bed, and give
+them Plenty of mild warm diluting Liquors for Drink; and if there was
+much of a Fever, to open a Vein, to give the cooling antiphlogistic
+Medicines, and apply Blisters; and if these Complaints still remained,
+to endeavour to promote a breathing Sweat, by means of Diaphoretics
+and warm Drinks. Several who were brought to the Hospital, soon after
+being seized in this Manner, got well; but in some few, one or other
+of the Limbs would begin to waste, and remain paralytic afterwards.
+
+Those who had the true confirmed Palsy seldom remained long enough
+with us to be cured. Two or three received Benefit from Blisters
+applied to the Parts, and from Issues; drinking at the same time the
+Decoction of the Woods, or of Sarsaparilla, and taking the volatile
+Tincture of Guaiac or Valerian[95], and being sweated by the Use of
+_Dover_'s Powder, or other Diaphoretics.
+
+ [95] On _Wednesday_ the 1st of _February_ 1764, _Margaret
+ Julion_, a Woman between fifty and sixty Years of Age, was
+ admitted into _St. George_'s Hospital for an entire Loss of
+ Speech, which seemed to depend on a paralytic Disorder of the
+ Parts about the Larynx. The Account her Friends who came with
+ her to the Hospital gave of her Case was, that she had been
+ for five Months troubled at Times with Pains of her Bowels,
+ and a Purging; that on _Sunday_ se'night before coming to the
+ Hospital, she had suddenly lost the Use of her Speech, and
+ had not spoke since that Time, though she seemed to hear and
+ understand whatever was said to her. I asked her some
+ Questions, which she answered distinctly by Signs. She had no
+ paralytic Complaint of her Face, Arms, Legs, or any other
+ Part of her Body, and swallowed both Fluids and Solids with
+ Ease. She had no Fever, and seemed to complain of nothing but
+ the Loss of Speech.--A Blister was applied to her Neck, and
+ she was ordered the saline Draughts, with a Scruple of Powder
+ of Valerian in each, to be taken three Times a-day, and a
+ Dose of sacred Tincture, to be taken twice a-Week. She
+ followed this Course for a Fortnight, when another Blister
+ was applied to the Fore-part of the Neck, and the Powder of
+ Valerian in the Draughts was changed for two Drachms of the
+ _tinctura valeriana volatilis_. At the End of three Weeks she
+ could pronounce the two Words _Why_, _What_. She continued
+ the same Course till this Day, the 16th of _March_, and can
+ now pronounce many Words and short Sentences.
+
+One Man of the 51st Regiment of Foot, after doing Duty in very cold
+wet Weather, in the Beginning of the Year 1762, was seized with a
+Palsy of one Side of his Face, which prevented him from speaking
+distinctly, and was an Impediment to his eating. He mended much after
+being blooded, and having a large Blister to his Neck, kept open for
+some time by means of the epispastic Ointment.
+
+
+
+
+OF AN INCONTINENCY of URINE.
+
+
+An Incontinency of Urine was another Complaint frequent among the
+Soldiers; but it seemed to me to be counterfeited by many. All, who
+had it, said that they had received some Hurt[96] or Sprain of the
+Back, or a Kick from a Horse, or that a Carriage had run over them.
+
+ [96] A Soldier in the Hospital at _Paderborn_ used to
+ discharge his Water involuntarily, and mixed with Pus, which
+ came from some violent Blows he had received on the Back.
+
+ _John Pearce_, a young Man about eighteen Years of Age, was
+ admitted into _St. George_'s Hospital, the 10th of _April_
+ 1759, for a Pain of his Side, and a Complaint of the Bladder.
+ The Account which he gave of his own Case was, that, some
+ Months before, he had received a violent Blow with a
+ Cricket-Bat on the left Side, on the Region of the Kidney;
+ and that ever since he had had a sharp Pain in that Part, and
+ sometimes had a Stoppage of Urine, and at other Times it came
+ away insensibly. His Pulse was rather quick, but low, and he
+ had a feverish Heat. He at first took some cooling Medicines;
+ but on the 20th, being low and faint, he had some of the
+ foetid Julep. On the 23d he was attacked with a sharp Pain in
+ the Belly and Side, had a Stoppage in making Water, a quick
+ and full Pulse, and most of the Symptoms of the Stone. He was
+ ordered to be blooded immediately, to take the saline
+ Draughts every four Hours; and as he was inclined to be
+ costive, to take as much lenitive Electuary as to procure him
+ a loose Stool; and it was recommended that he should be
+ sounded as soon as the Violence of the Fever was over. On the
+ 25th he continued much in the same Way, and had made some
+ Water, which was intolerably foetid. Half a Drachm of the
+ dulcified Spirit of Nitre, and five Drops of the _tinctura
+ thebaica_, were added to each of his Draughts, as the Pain
+ and Difficulty of making Water had increased. On the 26th his
+ Pulse rose, and became very hard and quick; the Pain in his
+ Side, and the Dysuria, became more violent; and about Twelve
+ o'Clock he had a convulsive Fit, resembling that of an
+ Epilepsy; after coming out of the Fit, as the Fever and Pain
+ had increased, he was blooded; the Belly was fomented and
+ embrocated, and he took the oily Draughts four Times a-Day;
+ his Blood immediately threw up a very thick Buff. He remained
+ pretty easy the rest of the Day; but about the same Time next
+ Day, he had another convulsive Fit, and died.
+
+ On opening his Body, we found about two or three Pints of a
+ dark-coloured foetid Water in the Abdomen; on cutting through,
+ and squeezing the right Kidney, there came out a thin
+ purulent Matter every where from its Substance, though it
+ appeared sound; on raising and cutting through the
+ Peritoneum, covering the left Kidney, there was a Discharge
+ of about a Pint of black and very foetid Water, which had
+ every where surrounded this Kidney; and there were six
+ mortified Spots on its Surface, as large as the End of one's
+ Finger, with a Depression in each about a Quarter or Half an
+ Inch deep; most of the Substance of this Kidney seemed
+ diseased, and it was full of Suppurations. The Bladder was
+ contracted and thickened, and contained a rough Stone, which
+ weighed three Ounces. The rest of the _viscera_ were sound.
+ This Stone had certainly been in the Bladder long before the
+ young Fellow received the Blow with the Cricket-Bat; but the
+ Injury done the Kidney had probably aggravated the Symptoms.
+
+ I do not remember ever to have seen convulsive Fits, such as
+ this young Man had, in acute Diseases, except in one Case of
+ a slow Fever, which came by taking Cold after a Salivation,
+ and which I attended, along with Dr. _Pringle_. The Gentleman
+ had three Fits exactly of the same kind as this young Man, at
+ twenty-four Hours Distance from one another, and he died of
+ the third.
+
+Those who really had the Disorder seemed to have received such an
+Injury of the Bladder, or Kidneys as required a considerable Space of
+Time to get the better of; and by reason of the short Time we had them
+under our Care at the flying Hospital, they seldom received much
+Benefit. One or two thought they grew better on taking the Bark and
+Balsam of _Peru_; at the same Time they bathed Morning and Evening the
+lower Part of the Abdomen and Perinaeum, with Flannels dipped in gentle
+astringent Liquors, applied cold. Blisters applied to the _os sacrum_
+had no Effect.
+
+
+
+
+OF A STOPPAGE of URINE.
+
+
+We formerly mentioned, that in acute Diseases many complained of a
+Stoppage or Difficulty of making Water; and others had this Complaint
+from Strictures of the Urethra, or Disorders of the Bladder or
+Kidneys[97].
+
+ [97] It is often very difficult to judge of the Cause, or to
+ be able to determine exactly the Seat of these Disorders
+ before Death; as the following Cases will shew.
+
+ _John Waden_, a middle-aged Man, was admitted into _St.
+ George_'s Hospital the 10th of _April_ 1759, for a Swelling
+ of the Abdomen, and a Difficulty of making Water, which he
+ said begun about two Months before, with a violent Pain in
+ his Back and Belly, occasioned by his being employed in
+ making of Cyder in a very cold Cellar. He had not had a Stool
+ for some Days: at first he took a Dose of Physic, and some of
+ the saline Draughts; but in a Day or two complained that his
+ Belly had grown to a monstrous Size, and that he had not made
+ Water for above twenty-four Hours; on examining, we found the
+ Bladder so much distended as to reach up to the Navel; and
+ upon a Catheter's being introduced, above two Quarts of Water
+ were drawn off, and the Swelling immediately subsided; but in
+ the Afternoon was as large as before, the Bladder seeming to
+ be in a paralytic State. During the Months of _May_ and
+ _June_, his Water was drawn off twice a-Day; he had his Belly
+ fomented with emollient, astringent, and other Decoctions,
+ and embrocated with Liniments; was blooded once when
+ feverish, took Cordials, the Bark, Myrrh, and a Variety of
+ Medicines, without any Effect. On the 3d of _July_, a
+ flexible Catheter was introduced into the Bladder, and left
+ there, in order that the Urine might drain away as fast as it
+ was secreted, and the Bladder be allowed to contract, and
+ recover its Tone. The Catheter gave him no Pain, and he
+ thought himself much easier by the Bladder's never being too
+ much stretched; but on taking out the Catheter some Days
+ after, he had the same Stoppage of Water as before. On
+ consulting with Dr. _Batt_ and the other Physicians, it was
+ agreed to give two Grains of the Powder of Cantharides, with
+ three Grains of Camphor and ten of Sugar, rubbed well
+ together in a Mortar, twice a-Day; and to continue the Use of
+ the flexible Catheter. He found no Uneasiness or Strangury
+ from the Use of the Cantharides, and thought he passed his
+ Water more freely, when the Catheter was taken out; but after
+ fourteen Days, finding no Change for the better, and being
+ free from any Fever, he was ordered into the cold Bath; the
+ two first Days he found himself more lively and brisk; but
+ the third Day was chilly and cold after coming out of it, and
+ therefore was desired to leave it off; some Days after he
+ became hectic, and I observed Pus in his Water, which he said
+ he had passed with his Urine for above three Months; after
+ this he languished for near a Month, and died upon the 25th
+ of _August_.--Upon examining his Body next Day, we found the
+ thoracic Viscera in a sound State, except that the Lungs
+ adhered a little on the right Side. Both Kidneys were
+ diseased; they were inflamed, and seemed enlarged; and on
+ cutting them, had Tubercles dispersed every where through
+ their Substance, which had come to Suppuration, and contained
+ a good deal of Matter; the lower Part of the left Kidney was
+ mortified, and contained two or three Ounces of a black foetid
+ Liquor. The Bladder of Urine was contracted, and its Coats
+ greatly thickened, and the internal Coat much inflamed; and
+ there was a Cyst full of Matter, about Half the Size of a
+ Walnut, between the muscular and villous Coats, towards the
+ lower Part of the right Side of the Bladder; and there were
+ two large Cysts, containing a small Quantity of Matter,
+ though capable of containing near two Ounces each; one
+ situated between the _vesiculae seminales_ and Rectum, the
+ other between the _vesiculae_ and Bladder, which opened into
+ the Urethra by one common Orifice, capable of admitting a
+ large Quill, at the Side of the _caput galinaginis_. The rest
+ of the Viscera were in a sound State.
+
+ _Mary Hibbard_, a Woman twenty-four Years of Age, was
+ admitted into _St. George_'s Hospital, the 6th _June_ 1759,
+ for a Complaint of her Bladder. The Account she gave of
+ herself was, that, about _Christmas_ 1758, she had parted
+ with some Gravel; and about fourteen Days before coming to
+ the Hospital, she was seized with a violent Pain in her Back
+ and Loins, attended with a Sickness and Nausea; and very soon
+ after complained of a violent Pain in the lower Part of her
+ Belly, and with a perpetual Inclination to make Water, though
+ she felt a sharp Pain and Difficulty in doing it; and that
+ these Complaints still remained. Her Pulse was quick and
+ strong, and she was inclined to be costive. She was
+ immediately blooded, took the oily Draughts three Times
+ a-Day, the _decoctum furfuris_ for common Drink, and so much
+ lenitive Electuary as procured her a Stool next Day. As there
+ was a strong Suspicion of her having a Stone, she was
+ sounded; but nothing at all was to be felt in the Bladder.
+ Her Medicines eased her Pain in making Water, but not the
+ Pain in her Back. On the 16th her Water was thick and turbid,
+ and deposited a brown Sediment; and the Difficulty in making
+ Water still remained; instead of the lenitive Electuary she
+ was ordered the Rhubarb oily Draught to be taken every Night.
+ On the 18th, there being no Change in her Disorder, she had
+ Draughts made of an Ounce and a Half of simple Mint Water,
+ Half a Drachm of the dulcified Spirit of Nitre, and five
+ Drops of the _tinctura thebaica_, and Syrup three Times
+ a-Day; but on the 22d she complained, that since she left off
+ the oily Medicines, her Pain and Difficulty in making Water
+ had grown worse; she was therefore ordered the saline and
+ oily Draughts alternately, and to take the Rhubarb oily
+ Draught occasionally when costive, which removed these
+ Complaints; and they did not return while she remained in the
+ House; but on the 4th of _July_, the Day before she was to
+ have been discharged as cured, she was attacked with a sharp
+ Pain in her Hip and Loins, and about the _os coccygis_; which
+ increased till the 9th, and extended itself all along the
+ Outside of the right Thigh; it was most acute about the _os
+ coccygis_; but on examining, nothing was to be observed
+ externally: This Pain continued more or less all that Month,
+ and till the End of the next, and so obstinate as not to be
+ altered by bleeding, and the Use of Liniments, Blisters,
+ cooling Medicines, Opiates, warm Baths, and other Remedies.
+ On the 20th of _August_, a strengthening Plaister was applied
+ to her Back, which gave immediate Relief, and she was
+ discharged cured the 29th. She continued well till _October_,
+ when she was attacked with a violent Fever at _Hounslow_, and
+ was brought to the Hospital on the 24th of that Month, and
+ the tenth Day of the Fever. She died the 3d of _November_.
+ During the Course of the Fever, she only complained once of a
+ Difficulty of making Water.--After Death I had her Body
+ opened, when the only Thing particular which we could
+ observe, was the urinary Bladder about four times the natural
+ Size; it seemed to be flaccid, and in a State of Relaxation;
+ the Kidneys were sound, and no Signs of any Distemper could
+ be observed about the Uterus or Rectum, or near the _os
+ coccygis_.--When she was first in the Hospital, I desired her
+ always to examine her Urine; but she never observed that she
+ passed any Sand, Gravel, or any thing of that kind.
+
+ _Thomas Jacey_, an elderly Man, was admitted into _St.
+ George_'s Hospital the 14th of _March_ 1759, for a Pain in
+ his Back, and a Difficulty and Pain in making Water, which
+ was often mixed with grumous Blood; but he had never observed
+ any Sand or Gravel in it. His Pulse was quick and full,
+ attended with Heat and Thirst; and he was inclined to be
+ costive; he was at first blooded, and took a Dose of laxative
+ Mixture, and two Ounces of the Tincture of Roses, four Times
+ a Day, and the _decoctum malvae_ for common Drink. At first he
+ seemed relieved, and passed no grumous Blood for some Days;
+ but on the 26th, as he complained much of a Pain in making
+ Water, the Tincture of Roses was changed for the oily
+ Draughts, and he was ordered the Rhubarb oily Draught
+ occasionally. On the 9th of _April_ he fell suddenly into a
+ comatose Way, and remained so till the 12th, when he died,
+ notwithstanding the Use of divers Remedies.--Upon examining
+ his Body, both Kidneys were found in a sound State; the
+ Intestines covered with slight inflammatory Spots, the
+ Bladder of Urine quite contracted, schirrhous, and greatly
+ thickened; and its internal Surface rough and eroded, with
+ one or two black Spots on it, and some grumous Blood lying on
+ its Surface. The other viscera were sound.
+
+ In Ulcers of these Organs, the natural Balsams, mixed with
+ soft Things, are often of great Service; of which the
+ following Case is an Example.--_William Lumley_, a Boy nine
+ Years of Age, was admitted into _St. George_'s Hospital, the
+ 6th of _September_ 1759, for a Pain in the Bladder, and a
+ Difficulty in making Water, which was always more or less
+ mixed with Matter. At first there was a Suspicion of his
+ having the Stone; but on sounding, none was to be found. From
+ the Symptoms, it appeared as if there was an Ulcer in the
+ Bladder near to its Neck; the Boy had a Cough, was very low,
+ and inclined to be costive; at first he took three Spoonfuls
+ of the Sperma Ceti Mixture four Times a-Day, and a Dose of
+ Physic; but the Symptoms still remaining, on the 2d of
+ _October_ he was ordered to take a Scruple of the
+ _electuarium e spermate ceti_ three or four Times a Day, and
+ to have the Gum-Arabic Decoction for his common Drink. By
+ continuing the Use of these Things, and taking some opiate
+ and laxative Medicines occasionally, he mended by slow
+ Degrees, and all his Symptoms went off; and he recovered his
+ Health and Strength, and returned Thanks for his Cure the
+ 18th of _January_ 1760.
+
+ The following Account of a remarkable Suppression of Urine I
+ had in a Letter, dated the 25th of _November_ 1757, from Mr.
+ _Pearson_, one of the Surgeons to his Majesty's Military
+ Hospitals, who then served as a Mate.
+
+ _James Ruffendal_, aged Twenty, of a delicate Habit, was, in
+ the Middle of _July_ last, seized with a violent Pain in both
+ Kidneys, which extended along the Ureters to the Bladder, and
+ remained in the same Situation for about three Weeks; during
+ which Period his Urine began to decrease in Quantity, and the
+ voiding of it was attended with acute Pain about the Neck of
+ the Bladder. The Secretion then totally stopt; he remained
+ for upwards of five Weeks in the Hospital at _Dorchester_,
+ and made no Water; at the End of which Time I first visited
+ him along with Mr. _Adair_. He complained then of a slight
+ Pain in his Kidneys, and told us he had a tolerable Appetite,
+ sweated little, and voided every Day four or five Liquid
+ Stools. He was ordered Boluses of Camphor, and _sal. vol. c.
+ cervi_, and every Night a Dose of _tinctura cantharidum_;
+ which he continued to take for a Fortnight without receiving
+ the least Benefit. I then blooded him to the Quantity of ten
+ Ounces, and gave him an Emetic of six Drachms of the _vinum
+ ipecacoanhae_, and two Ounces of the Oxymel of Squills, which
+ operated very well; and afterwards ordered him to take one of
+ the following Boluses every four Hours. Rx Sapon. dur. Hispan.
+ drachm. i. Sal. Absynth. gr. vi. Calc. Viv. gr. x. Balsam.
+ Peruv. q. s. ut fiat Bolus. These he continued to take for
+ twelve Days. On the Morning of the 14th of _October_, he was
+ suddenly seized with an acute Pain in both Kidneys, and about
+ Noon voided upwards of Half a Pint of straw-coloured Urine,
+ which let fall a clay-coloured Sediment. As he was feverish,
+ I took away twelve Ounces of Blood, and ordered him
+ Barley-Water with Nitre for Drink. He was easy in the Night,
+ and made upwards of two Pints of Urine, which deposited a
+ Sediment of a gelatinous Consistence. Next Morning the Pain
+ increased, especially in his Right Side, and ten Ounces more
+ of Blood was taken away. This lowered the Pulse, and
+ considerably abated the Pain. Both this and the Blood taken
+ away the Day before threw up an inflammatory Buff. He was
+ ordered to continue the Use of the Barley Water with Nitre,
+ and to take three Spoonfuls of a Mixture with _spiritus
+ mindereri_ every two Hours. He had an easy Night, and was
+ next Day free from Fever; but complained of an Uneasiness in
+ his Stomach and Nausea. He was ordered a Scruple of the
+ Powder of Ipecacoanha, which vomited him, and procured him a
+ Stool. He was easy in the Night; but in the Morning was hot,
+ and complained of a Pain in his Right Kidney, and all over
+ his Bones, as he expressed it. I then gave him a Mixture,
+ with _spiritus mindereri_, and the _pulvis contrayerva comp._
+ of which I desired him to take some Spoonfuls frequently.
+ This procured him a plentiful Sweat, which removed the Fever
+ and Pain: these Symptoms returned next Day, but were removed
+ by the same Means. I remained at _Dorchester_ for a Week
+ after, and he recovered his Strength and Appetite as much as
+ could be expected in so short a Time; but he still complained
+ of Pain in his Right Kidney, tho' he made Water freely. By a
+ Letter I received from the Gentleman whose Care I left him
+ under, I understood he had a Relapse, which he has since got
+ the better of.
+
+ I forgot to inform you, that his Father died of the same
+ Complaints, after being six Months without secreting a Drop
+ of Urine; and his Brother died of the same in about ten
+ Weeks.
+
+Where it depended on Strictures of the Urethra, Bougies introduced
+into that Passage, and worn for some Time, were of great Service. The
+Patients were at the same time ordered to live on a cool Diet, and to
+drink the _decoctum Arabicum_, or an Infusion of Linseed, or such
+other mild mucilaginous Liquors; and to take oily Medicines and
+Opiates occasionally, and gentle Laxatives, to keep the Body open;
+which Method of Treatment generally gave Relief. Where the Patients
+were plethoric, or complained of Pain, or the Disorder was attended
+with a Fever, Bleeding was often necessary.
+
+When the Stoppage of Urine seemed to arise from an Inflammation of
+the Kidneys or Bladder, or other Diseases of these Parts, we treated
+it accordingly; and where the Fever was considerable, we made
+Evacuations, and gave plenty of diluting Liquors, and the cooling
+saline Medicines, and afterwards those of the soft, mucilaginous, and
+oily Nature, and mild Diuretics and Opiates.
+
+When the Disorder, in its Progress, became chronical, the Sick were
+commonly sent down to the fixed Hospital, so that we had no
+Opportunity of examining the Bodies of such as might die of this
+Complaint.
+
+
+
+
+OF THE EPILEPSY.
+
+
+The Epilepsy, or Falling Sickness, attacked a Number of Men, from the
+severe Duty of long Marches in hot Weather, and afterwards lying out
+on the cold Ground, exposed to the Damps of the Night[98].
+
+ [98] I saw above twenty Men, while I was in _Germany_, who
+ attributed the Epileptic Fits they were attacked with to
+ these Causes, and said they had never had the Epilepsy
+ before; besides others, who had been formerly subject to
+ these Fits, who declared, that the Disorder was brought back
+ by the same Means.
+
+It was very seldom that Men were cured of this Disorder in the
+military Hospitals. We had some few Instances, indeed, where Relief
+seemed to be obtained by Rest, a regular Diet, gentle Evacuations,
+and Issues[99]; but even those Men generally relapsed as soon as they
+were sent to their Regiments, and began to do Duty. All who had these
+Fits after being some Time with their Regiments, were at last
+discharged, and sent home. However, before Men are discharged for
+Fits, they should be watched very narrowly for some Time; for there is
+no Disorder which Soldiers are more apt to counterfeit than this.
+
+ [99] _William Wilson_, a Boy fourteen Years of Age, was
+ admitted into _St. George_'s Hospital, _Sept._ 20, 1758, for
+ Epileptic Fits, which he had been subject to for some Time,
+ and which generally seized him three or four Times a Week. He
+ took Variety of Medicines without any Effect till the 6th of
+ _November_, when I ordered him to take eight Grains of the
+ _pilulae foetidae_ Morning and Evening, and Physic twice a Week,
+ and a Seton to be made in his Neck. After the Seton began to
+ run, he had but three or four slight Fits in _November_, and
+ none the following Month; and he was discharged the Hospital
+ the 3d of _January_ 1759, seemingly in good Health, with
+ Directions to keep the Seton running at least for some Months
+ after he went home, and to come again to the Hospital if he
+ should have any Return of his Fits; but we never heard more
+ of him.
+
+ _Mary Hacket_, a Girl of nineteen Years of Age, was admitted
+ into _St. George_'s Hospital the 14th of _February_ 1759, for
+ Fits. The Account she gave of her Case, was, that about five
+ Years before she was seized with the first Fit, after a
+ Fright; three Years afterwards she had a second Fit, and for
+ some Time after had a Fit commonly once a Month, about the
+ Time of the full Moon; and since had them more frequently;
+ that the Fits began with a Trembling and Shaking of the right
+ Foot, and she had frequent pricking Pains in the right Thigh,
+ and what she called convulsive Tremors in the right Leg and
+ Foot. She was regular in her menstrual Discharge. At the Time
+ she came into the Hospital, she was feverish, and complained
+ much of a sharp Pain in the right Thigh: She was blooded, and
+ took some cooling Medicine, and had no Fit till the 9th of
+ _March_: She then took the fetid Pills and camphorated Julep
+ twice a Day; but still the Fits returned frequently. She then
+ had the Bark, Valerian and Purging Doses successively, and
+ used the warm Bath; but without any Effect. On the 7th of
+ _May_ a Blister was applied to her right Foot, which was
+ intended to be kept open; but an Inflammation coming on that
+ Leg and Foot, it was suffered to dry up, and an Issue made in
+ the same Leg. From the Time the Blister was applied, she had
+ no Fit while she remained in the Hospital. She was discharged
+ the 15th of _July_, seemingly in good Health; though during
+ that Period she had some little Tremors in her Foot, and was
+ subject to be low and faintish, which was always relieved by
+ cordial anodyne Medicines. After going out of the Hospital,
+ she remained in good Health for seven or eight Months, when I
+ was told her Disease had returned as violent as ever.
+
+It is no Wonder that Soldiers, during the Time of Service, should
+seldom be cured of these Fits; for in Adults it is not often cured
+even in private Practice, with all the Conveniencies and Advantages
+to be wished for; and generally the few that do get well, require a
+considerable Length of Time to accomplish the Cure; and we find from
+daily Experience, as well as from examining the Records of Medicine,
+that the Cures that have been made, have mostly been performed either
+by a Change of Air, such as going from a cold to a hot Climate[100],
+by some remarkable Change of Life[101], or some accidental
+Disorder;[102] or by Issues or Drains[103]; or by the Removal of some
+acrid or irritating Substance, or such like[104]; or by preventing
+the Cause[105]; and that those Medicines called Specifics have in
+general had but little Share in the Cure.
+
+ [100] _Hippocrates_ lays the chief Stress of the Cure upon
+ Change of Air, Aphor. 4, 5, sect. ii. The Baron _Van Swieten_
+ says, he has known a great Number cured by going to the _East
+ Indies_; many of whom have remained well ever after, while
+ others had a Return of the Disorder when they came back to
+ _Holland_. _Comment._ vol. III. p. 436. sect. 1080.
+
+ [101] _Celsus_ has long ago observed, that the Appearance of
+ the Menses in Girls, and of Puberty in Boys, often removes
+ this Disorder, lib. iii. cap. xxiii.--On the 22d of
+ _November_ 1758, _Mary Evans_, a Girl of eighteen Years of
+ Age, was admitted into _St. George_'s Hospital for Fits. She
+ had never had the Menstrua; but, for above two Years, found
+ regularly, once a Month, a Fulness in her Breasts, and had a
+ slight Head Ach, and other Symptoms which generally precede
+ this Discharge; and were succeeded with violent Epileptic
+ Fits, which continued returning frequently for two or three
+ Days, and then went off; and she had no more Symptoms of
+ them, till about the same Time next Month. She was ordered to
+ take ten Grains of the _pilulae foetidae_ Morning and Evening,
+ and a Dose of Physic twice a Week; and as I found that she
+ became plethoric near the Time her Fits used to return, I
+ began to imagine, that both the Fits and Stoppage of the
+ Menstrua were owing to too great a Fullness of the Vessels,
+ which prevented the Heart and vascular System from having
+ such free Play, as to drive the Blood through the extreme
+ uterine Vessels: I therefore ordered seven Ounces of Blood to
+ be taken away from her immediately. In three Days Time the
+ menstrual Discharge began to make its Appearance; and on the
+ 10th of _January_ she was discharged the Hospital, seemingly
+ in good Health, after the menstrual Discharge had returned
+ for two regular Periods, without any Appearance of Epileptic
+ Fits. She was desired to come back to the Hospital, if the
+ Fits returned; but I never heard more of her.
+
+ [102] _William Glen_, a Patient in the _Royal Infirmary_ at
+ _Edinburgh_ in _September_ 1747, was freed from Epileptic
+ Fits, which used to return ten or twelve Times a Day, for a
+ Quarter of a Year, by a Diarrhoea coming on; but they
+ afterwards returned.
+
+ _A Man_ subject to the Epilepsy was cured of it by a Quartan
+ Ague, and had afterwards no Return of the Disorder. _Miscell.
+ Curios. Dec. 3. Ann. 3._ p. 34.
+
+ [103] There are numerous Instances of the good Effects of
+ Issues and Drains in diverse Authors. _Tulpius_, _Van
+ Swieten_, &c.
+
+ [104] _La Motte_ gives one Instance of a Person being cured
+ of the Epilepsy by voiding five Stones, _Chirurg._ vol. II.
+ p. 20; and of another who died of the Fits from a triangular
+ Stone remaining in the Kidneys, _ibid._ p. 416. Dr. _Short_
+ cured a Woman of an Epilepsy of twelve Years standing, by
+ extirpating a cartilagenous Substance, about the Bigness of a
+ large Pea, seated on the gastronemei Muscles, above a Nerve
+ which he cut asunder. _Edin. Medic. Essays_, vol. IV. Art.
+ 27.
+
+ [105] _Galen_, tells us, of his having prevented the
+ Epileptic Fits in a Boy, who used to have one whenever he was
+ hungry, by making him carry Bread in his Pocket, and eat a
+ little as soon as he found the least Symptoms of Hunger. _De
+ Loc. Affect._ lib. v. cap. vi.--And _Van Swieten_ mentions
+ how he cured a Boy, who had a Fit every full Moon; whose
+ under Lip used to fall a Trembling before it began (a Symptom
+ which, he says, often precedes Vomiting); by giving a Vomit
+ every Month, for six Months successively, three Days before
+ the full Moon, and an Opiate in the Evening after its
+ Operation; and by putting him under a Course of strengthening
+ Medicines. It was observeable, that if he vomited in the Time
+ of the Paroxysm, it was soon at an End. See his _Comment._
+ vol. III. p. 439. sect. 1050.
+
+
+
+
+OF THE SMALL-POX.
+
+
+The Small-Pox appeared at _Paderborn_ in the Spring 1761, and five had
+the distinct Kind, who recovered. Six or seven had them at _Osnabruck_
+in _May_ and _June_, and one Man and a Child died of the confluent
+Kind. Four had the distinct Kind at _Munster_ in _July_ and _August_
+who all did well. During the Winter, we had sixteen in the Hospital I
+attended at _Bremen_; ten had the distinct Kind, and all recovered;
+five had the confluent Kind, of whom two died; as did also one who was
+brought to the Hospital with all the Symptoms of the most malignant
+Kind. Two were sent to _Natzungen_ in _July_, both ill of the
+confluent Kind; the one died two Hours after his Arrival; the other
+recovered: And we had only two in the Hospital at _Osnabruck_ in
+Winter 1762-63, and both did well.
+
+There was nothing particular either in the Course or Treatment of this
+Disorder, different from what we meet with in daily Practice; only as
+the Soldiers, who were attacked with it, were strong, and in full
+Health, they required Bleeding and gentle Evacuations, and a cooling
+Regimen, on the first Appearance of the Symptoms.
+
+The malignant Kind required the Use of Acids, and the Bark; which
+last, could often only be administered by Way of Clyster, as the Sick
+could not swallow it: In short, we treated the Patients much in the
+same Way as in the malignant Fever, Allowance only being made for the
+present Circumstances.
+
+Luckily this Disorder never spread much in the Army, while I was in
+_Germany_.
+
+
+
+
+OF ERISYPILATOUS SWELLINGS.
+
+
+In _January_ 1762, several Patients in the Hospitals I had the Care of
+at _Bremen_, had shining watery Swellings of the Face, or Extremities;
+which came suddenly, and were attended with a slight Degree of
+Inflammation, and watery Blisters rising above the Skin, and some
+Degree of Fever. The Blisters were not small, round, and angry, as in
+_St. Antony_'s Fire; but larger, and of an irregular Figure,
+resembling those raised when People are scalded by boiling Water. The
+Swellings did not pit on being pressed, as the oedematous Swellings
+commonly do: They gave Pain when pressed, but the Inflammation was not
+in that high Degree as it is in the common Phlegmon: The Blood was
+sizy, and the Water of a high Colour. The Disorder seemed to be a
+Species of the Erisypelas.
+
+Between the 9th and 12th of _January_, three Patients were seized with
+such Swellings.
+
+The first was a Dragoon, who had just recovered from a Flux, and a bad
+Cough. On the 9th, he was suddenly seized in the Night with a large
+Swelling of his Face, Hands, and Arms, which had a shining oedematous
+Appearance, with a small Degree of Redness, and was painful when
+pressed; and he had two or three watery Blisters rose on the Back of
+each Hand above the Division of the Fingers, attended with a quick
+full Pulse, a feverish Heat and Thirst, a Cough, and somewhat of a
+Difficulty of Breathing, and high-coloured Water; and he was inclined
+to be costive. He was immediately blooded, had a saline Mixture with
+Contrayerva and Nitre, and was ordered to take a Purge in the Morning.
+Next Day the Blood had thrown up an inflammatory Buff, the Fever was
+abated, and the Breathing easier; but the Cough and Swelling still
+remained. He then took a Julep made of equal Parts of the Saline and
+Sperma Ceti Mixtures, which eased the Cough. The fourth Day the Pulse
+was soft, and the Swellings still in the same Situation, and the
+Breathing a little affected. A large Blister was applied to his Back,
+which discharged plentifully, relieved the Breathing, and lessened the
+Swellings considerably. The Cough and some Degree of Swelling still
+remained; but were removed by the Use of the Sperma Ceti Mixture with
+Oxymel, gentle Opiates, and some Doses of Physic.
+
+The second was a Man of the Twentieth Regiment of Foot, who had been
+some Months in the Hospital for a hectic Complaint; he was taken ill,
+the same Night as the Dragoon, with a Swelling of his whole Face,
+particularly the Lips, which had a shining watery Appearance, and a
+slight Degree of Redness, attended with a strong Fever; and was cured
+by Bleeding, Purging, the Use of the saline Medicines, and the
+Application of a Blister.
+
+The third was an Invalid, who had been admitted for a pleuritic
+Complaint, which he had got the better of. He was attacked, the second
+Night after the other two, with a shineing, watery, reddish Swelling,
+of his right Hand and Arm, up as far as the Joint of the Shoulder;
+four large watery Bladders likewise appeared on the fore Part of his
+Arm, above the Joint of the Elbow. Bleeding, with the cooling
+Medicines, and two Doses of Salts, carried off the Fever, and lessened
+the Swelling, in about seven Days Time; but a little of it, with a
+Stiffness, still remained; which at last was removed by the Use of
+aromatic Fomentations, rubbing with the _linimentum saponaceum_, and
+taking two Doses of Physic.
+
+Within less than a Fortnight, five or six more were seized with
+Swellings of the same Kind on some of the Extremities, and all got
+well by nearly the same Treatment; excepting one Man, who was in a
+very low State, and had a large deep Ulcer on his Hip, where there had
+been a Mortification from his lying on that Part in a Fever. The
+Swelling at first seemed to give Way; but on the third or fourth Day,
+having got a severe Cough, the Swelling increased, and the
+Inflammation began to look livid, and the Discharge from the Sore to
+look bad; and, notwithstanding various Means were used, a
+Mortification of the Part came on, and he died the seventh Day.
+
+
+
+
+OF THE SCURVY.
+
+
+The true Scurvy, attended with spungy fetid Gums of a livid Colour,
+with livid Blotches, and Ulcers of the Legs, and other Symptoms, began
+to shew itself at _Bremen_ in _January_ 1762; tho' we had not the
+least Appearance of this Disorder in the Hospitals at any other Place,
+while I was with the Troops in _Germany_.
+
+A great Variety of Disorders have been called by the Name of Scurvy:
+and the Disease has been divided into hot and cold; into the Acid, the
+Alcaline; and the Muriatic, according to the different Fancies of
+Authors, and the Causes they imagined it took its Rise from; but, from
+later and more accurate Observations, Dr. _Lind_ has justly remarked,
+that the true Scurvy has been found to be the same in all the
+different Parts of the Globe, and to take its Rise from similar
+Causes; from Cold and Moisture, and living much upon salted
+Provisions, joined to a Want of fresh Vegetables, and of good generous
+fermented Liquors; and hence it is most frequent in low marshy Places
+in northern Climates, where there is a Scarcity of fresh Vegetables;
+and where the Inhabitants live much upon salted Provisions in Winter;
+and aboard of Ships in long Voyages or Cruizes, especially in the
+northern Seas; and hence this Disorder was so frequent at _Quebec_ the
+first Winter it was in our Possession; and in some of the other Forts
+in _North America_, which were taken so late in the Year, that the
+Troops had not sufficient Time to lay in a Stock of Vegetables, and of
+fresh Meat to be preserved by the Frost[106]; but were obliged to live
+mostly on Ship Provisions.
+
+ [106] In _Quebec_, and other northern Parts of _North
+ America_, as soon as the Frost sets in, they kill their Meat
+ intended for their Winter Store, and hang it up: It soon
+ freezes, and will keep in this Manner all through the Winter.
+ They preserve Vegetables in the same Way; and when they
+ intend to make Use of either, they put so much as they want
+ into cold Water for some Time, which draws the Frost out of
+ it; and then they boil or roast it, as they think proper.
+
+It is observed, both at Sea and Land, that where the Scurvy rages,
+those People are least subject to it who are well cloathed; who live
+in dry Habitations, or lie in dry Births; who take proper Exercise,
+without being too much exposed to the Inclemency of the Weather; and
+who live well, and drink good Beer, Cyder, or Wine; as has been
+remarked by Dr. _Pringle_, Dr. _Lind_, and others.
+
+At _Bremen_ the Disorder was only observed among the Soldiers; not one
+of the Gentlemen belonging to the Hospital, or to the Commissariate,
+nor one of the military Officers, not even of the Serjeants, having
+the least Symptom of it. The Reason of its being frequent among the
+Soldiers was, that the Place is situated on a Plain naturally very
+damp; and the Soldiers were quartered in very low damp Houses; at the
+same Time, no Vegetables or Greens were to be bought in the Market;
+and fresh Meat, and other fresh Provisions, were at so high a Price,
+that the Soldiers could not afford to buy them; but were obliged to
+live on salted Meat, and salted Herrings, during the Winter; and what
+little Money they had remaining, they laid out on spirituous Liquors,
+which were sold cheap.
+
+The Cure of this Disorder requires--living in a dry comfortable
+Place--good Cloathing--light Food of easy Digestion, such as good
+Bread, Panado, Milk, Whey, Broths made of fresh Meats--white Meats,
+with Greens, or other Vegetable, &c.--the Use of Liquors of the acid
+or acescent Kind, or the moderate Use of Beer, Cyder, good Wine, or
+weak Punch[107]--And, by Way of Medicine, gentle Purges, mild
+Diaphoretics; the free Use of acid or acescent Fruits, Lemons,
+Oranges, Apples, Pears, Currans, Grapes, &c. and of the antiscorbutic
+Plants and their Juices, as Succory, Endive, Water-Cresses,
+Scurvy-Grass[108], &c. on which a great Part of the Cure principally
+depends; and the Use of some of the strengthening Bitters[109], of
+which the Bark is not the least efficacious.
+
+ [107] The free Use of raw Spirits is found to be very
+ prejudicial; but a moderate Quantity of these Spirits,
+ diluted with Water, and acidulated with Lemons or Oranges (or
+ with Cream of Tartar, or Tamarinds, when the former cannot be
+ got), and made into Punch, is found to be a good
+ Antiscorbutic.
+
+ [108] Most ripe Fruits, particularly Lemons and Oranges, and
+ esculent Herbs, and many Kinds of Roots, such as
+ Horse-Radish, Onions, Leeks, and many others, have been found
+ the most useful Remedies in the Cure of the Scurvy.
+ Decoctions and Infusions of Fir-Tops, of Spruce, and of other
+ Species of the Pine-Tree; and Beer made of these Infusions,
+ by fermenting them with Molasses, are approved
+ Antiscorbutics: and when such Remedies cannot be got,
+ Infusions of the common Bitters, and weak Punch, made with
+ Tamarinds or Cream of Tartar, have proved serviceable; and
+ where these Acids cannot be had, the Mineral Acids may be
+ used for acidulating the Drink. However, it ought always to
+ be remembered, that fresh Vegetables and Fruits, and
+ vegetable Acids, produce much better Effects in the Scurvy,
+ than any other Sorts of Remedies; and ought always to be
+ used, when they can be got.
+
+ [109] Most of the common Bitters have been strongly
+ recommended in this Disorder, Gentian, Trifoil, Wormwood,
+ &c.--as likewise aromatic Bitters and Aromatics; such as
+ _calamus aromaticus_, Carvi Seeds, Winters Bark, Cinnamon,
+ and many others.
+
+Bleeding is seldom requisite, except where there is much Heat or
+Fever; or a sharp Pain of the Side, or Difficulty of Breathing, or
+some Symptom of the like Kind; it is then sometimes necessary to take
+away some Blood: And in obstinate Cases, it is often found of Use to
+promote Sweats, by making the Patient, while in Bed, drink freely of
+warm Whey, or Sack Whey, mixed with the scorbutic Juices; or warm
+Barley Water, or the like, mixed with a small Quantity of the
+Antimonial Wine, or some other mild Diaphoretic.
+
+And where the Patient is strong, and there is no Danger of
+Haemorrhages, warm aromatic Baths have sometimes been found
+serviceable; but they are not to be used where the Patient is weak.
+
+The first Time I saw this Disorder at _Bremen_, was in an old Invalid,
+_James Long_, who had come from _Bristol_ to _Embden_, and from thence
+to _Bremen_. He was some Weeks in the Hospital before I discovered his
+Disorder to be the Scurvy. He at first complained only of great
+Weakness, and such a Giddiness, when he got out of Bed, that he could
+not walk, and of what he called flying rheumatic Pains of his Legs.
+He had no other visible Complaint; all which, I imagined, proceeded
+from Old-Age, and being worn out in the Service. At last, on the 25th
+of _January_, he complained of his Gums being sore; and, on examining
+him, I found his Breath fetid, his Gums swelled, soft, and spungy, his
+Legs covered with scorbutic Blotches, and other Symptoms, which
+evidently proved his Disorder to be the true Scurvy.
+
+Upon which, I ordered him a low Diet, with the Addition of Greens for
+Dinner, and a Quart of Lemonade, with a Gill of Brandy in it, _per_
+Day, for his common Drink; and, by Way of Medicine, a Decoction of the
+Bark, with the Elixir of Vitriol; and, at the same Time, ordered his
+Gums to be scarified, where they were most swelled and spungy; and to
+be washed frequently with an astringent Gargle; and to be rubbed now
+and then with burnt Alum[110]. By these Means, in a Fortnight's Time,
+his Gums became firmer, and his scorbutic Symptoms decreased. During
+that Course he took cold, and had a Stitch in his Side, for which he
+was blooded. The Blood threw up a very thin Buff, which was not of a
+firm Consistence[111]; the Crassamentum below was of a blackish
+Colour and of a loose Texture, and the Serum in a large Proportion. By
+the 2d of _March_ his Gums had recovered their natural Firmness and
+Texture, and the scorbutic Spots and Pains of the Legs were gone, and
+he had recovered his Strength; the only remaining Complaint was a
+little Swelling about the Ankles, for which he continued the same
+Course, and took a Dose or two of Physic. By the 16th of _March_ all
+these Symptoms were gone, and he was dismissed the Hospital free from
+all Complaints. I saw him well the last Week in _May_; and he told me,
+he had had no scorbutic Symptom since he left the Hospital.
+
+ [110] Dr. _Lind_, who has wrote one of the best Treatises on
+ this Disorder, and who had a great Deal of Practice himself,
+ says, "When first the Patient complains of an Itching and a
+ Spunginess of the Gums, with loose Teeth, either a Tincture
+ of the Bark in Brandy, or aluminous Medicines, will be found
+ serviceable in putting a Stop to the Beginning Laxity of
+ these Parts." When the Putrefaction increases, he recommends
+ the Use of some of the mineral Acids. See his _Treatise on
+ the Scurvy_, part ii. chap. v. p. 201.--_Van Swieten_ says,
+ he never found any Thing answer better than a Gargle made of
+ four Ounces of Elder or Rose Water, acidulated with a Drachm
+ of the Spirit of Sea Salt; and where the Gums were very
+ putrid and gangrened, he has been obliged to touch them
+ slightly with the pure Acid Spirit, and some Hours after to
+ have them washed with the Gargle just mentioned. Vide
+ _Comment._ vol. III. p. 629, sect. 1163.
+
+ If the Spunginess of the Gums sprout out into a luxuriant
+ Fungus, it is sometimes requisite to cut such Funguses away,
+ and to wash the Sores frequently with gentle astringent or
+ acid Liquors.
+
+ [111] Dr. _Huxham_ observes, that, after the Disease has
+ continued some Time, the Blood appears a mere Gore as it
+ were, not separating into Serum and Crassamentum as usual,
+ but remaining an uniform half-coagulated Mass, generally of a
+ more livid or darker Colour than common; though sometimes it
+ continues long very florid; but it always putrifies soon. See
+ his _Essay on Fevers_, chap. v.
+
+ There is something very particular in the Nature of this
+ Disorder, according to an Observation of Dr. _Lind_'s; who
+ says, "That the Scurvy is a Disease in its Nature very
+ opposite to that of a Fever; insomuch, that even an Infection
+ is long resisted by a scorbutic Habit; and those of a
+ scorbutic Habit being seized with the Fever, was a Proof of
+ its proceeding entirely from Infection." See his _First Paper
+ on Fevers_, p. 4.
+
+In the Beginning of _February_, another of the Invalids, who had been
+in the Hospital for a Fever and rheumatic Complaints, had Blotches
+appear on his Legs, complained of great Weakness, and fainted away in
+attempting to walk; which made me suspect his Disorder to be the
+Scurvy; and, on examining him, I found his Gums soft and spongy,
+attended with the other Symptoms of the true Scurvy. I put him nearly
+on the same Course as in the last-mentioned Case: He used a low Diet,
+with the Addition of Greens for Dinner, which he eat with a little
+Butter and Vinegar; and he had a Quart of Lemonade, with two Ounces of
+Brandy, for his common Drink during the Day; and, by Way of Medicine,
+a Decoction of the Bark, with two Drachms of the _confectio cordiaca_
+to each Half Pint, which he took by Spoonfuls. Next Day he complained
+of a Pain in his Leg; and, on examining it more particularly, I found
+a large livid Blotch, yellow all round the Edges, on the fore Part,
+and a Tension all over that Leg. As he was so extremely low, as to be
+in Danger of fainting whenever he sat up, I was afraid lest a
+Mortification should ensue; and therefore ordered his Leg to be bathed
+Morning and Evening with a warm aromatic Fomentation, and a Poultice
+of Theriaca to be applied after it; and desired him to take as much of
+the Decoction of the Bark with the Cordial as possible; and allowed
+him a Glass of Mountain Wine every two or three Hours. By the
+Continuance of this Course for some Weeks, the livid Blotches, Pain,
+and Stiffness of his Leg, and most of the other scorbutic Symptoms,
+went away; his Gums were restored to their natural Firmness; and he
+recovered his Strength so much as to be able to sit up all Day long;
+though he still remained very weak when he was sent to _England_, in
+_March_.
+
+In _February_ and _March_, seven or eight more scorbutic Patients were
+sent to the Hospital I attended, who were all treated in the same
+Manner; and all did well. About the Middle of _February_ this
+Distemper began to shew itself in the other Hospital attended by Dr.
+_Miller_, who treated the Patients nearly in the same Way, and they
+all recovered.
+
+On the 5th of _April_, a young Man, belonging to the Eighth Regiment
+of Foot, came to the Hospital with all the Symptoms of the true
+Scurvy; his Gums were spungy and foetid; he had livid Blotches on his
+Legs, and Contractions of the Hams, and a Stiffness and Hardness in
+the Calves of both Legs[112]. By following the same Course as the
+others, and the Use of frequent Fomentations, and rubbing the
+contracted Parts with soft Liniments, he mended daily; and, after
+taking a Dose or two of Physic, was dismissed perfectly recovered on
+the 10th of _May_. At his first Admission into the Hospital, he was
+taken with a severe Cough, attended with Pain of the Breast, and a
+Spitting of Blood for a Day or two, for which he was blooded. His
+Blood threw up a little Buff; the Crassamentum was of a blackish
+Colour and of a loose Texture, with a good Proportion of a yellowish
+Serum. This Bleeding relieved the Complaints of his Breast, and he had
+no Return of them while he remained in the Hospital.
+
+ [112] If the Swellings become large, stiff, and painful, Dr.
+ _Lind_ recommends that the Legs should be frequently bathed
+ and fomented; or, what he has found preferable, to be exposed
+ to their Steams, after being well covered with Blankets.
+ After this Operation, he advises the Limb to be rubbed with
+ some mild Oil, such as _oleum palmae_, or Salad Oil; and if
+ the Swellings resist both the general Cure and these
+ Applications, the Limbs to be sweated with Spirits. See his
+ _Treatise on the Scurvy_, part ii, chap. v.
+
+The first Week in _May_ four Invalids were admitted into the Hospital
+for this Disorder. The first had spungy Gums, a foetid Breath, his Legs
+swelled and hard, and of a deep purple Colour. The second was a Case
+at first of a more doubtful Kind; there were no spungy Gums, though an
+offensive Breath; his Ancles and Feet were swelled, attended with Pain
+and Uneasiness, and a great Weakness and Lassitude; but no Fever, nor
+any livid Blotches. The Swelling of the Feet and Ancles seemed at
+first Sight rather gouty or rheumatic, than of the scorbutic Kind; but
+from the Man's Way of Life, and the Disorder being so frequent, we
+discovered it to be the Scurvy. The third had a very foetid Breath and
+spungy Gums, livid Spots and fungous Ulcers[113] on his Legs, with
+Pains and Weakness all over. The fourth had also spungy Gums and a
+foetid Breath, Pains of the Legs and Arms, livid Blotches on his Legs,
+great Hardness and Contraction of the right Ham, and a livid hard
+Swelling on the Outside of the left Thigh, immediately above the Knee.
+
+ [113] "Ulcers on the Legs, or any other Part of the Body,
+ require pretty much the same Treatment, _viz._ very gentle
+ Compression, in order to keep under the Fungus, and such
+ antiseptic Applications as have been recommended for putrid
+ Gums, _viz. mel rosat._ acidulated with _spiritus vitrioli_,
+ _ung. AEgiptiacum_, &c. but nothing will avail where the
+ Patient cannot have Vegetables and Fruits." _Dr. Lind's
+ Treatise on Scurvy_, part ii. chap. v. p. 204. And he
+ recommends, if the Swellings and Ulcers of the Legs neither
+ yield to the general Cure nor to the Methods here proposed,
+ that a slow and gentle Course of Mercury should be tried,
+ after the scorbutic Taint is a good deal removed, and the
+ Gums are sufficiently firm; and to give along with it a
+ Decoction of the Woods, or of Sarsaparilla; but this Method
+ ought not to be attempted till the Gums have acquired a
+ proper Firmness. See _ibid._ part ii. chap. v.
+
+We treated them all four in the Method above-mentioned, adding a Mess
+of Greens to Dinner, giving Lemonade for Drink, and the Bark, with
+Elixir of Vitriol, by Way of Medicine. The Parts that were hard and
+swelled, were fomented, and rubbed with soft Liniments, and Poultices
+were applied to the hard Swelling on the Outside of the left Thigh;
+and the Ulcers of the Legs dressed with Digestives, and occasionally
+washed with spirituous Tinctures, and touched with Escharotics. Before
+I left _Bremen_, the first Week in _June_, the first and second
+Patients were perfectly recovered, and the third and fourth almost
+well. All of them had had the Disorder some Months before they came to
+the Hospital.
+
+
+
+
+OF THE ITCH.
+
+
+There was no Disorder so common in the military Hospitals as the Itch.
+It is of an infectious Nature, and now most commonly believed to be
+entirely owing to little Insects lodged in the Skin, which many
+Authors affirm they have seen in the Pustules by the Help of a
+Microscope; and that the Disorder is entirely communicated by
+Infection, and does not arise from any Fault in the Fluids or Solids.
+
+It has been found by Experience, that internal Medicines have little
+or no Effect in removing this Disorder; and that only external
+Remedies, which come immediately in contact with the Parts affected,
+are capable of making a Cure; which has been brought as a farther
+Proof, that the Itch is owing to Animalcules or Insects; as it is
+alledged, that no Remedies will cure the Distemper, but such as are
+capable of killing them.
+
+The Medicines, which are most commonly used for the Cure, are
+_Mercury_, _White Helebore_, and _Sulphur_.
+
+Mercurial Frictions on the Part are often made use of, and sometimes
+with Success, though they are by no Means to be depended upon for a
+Cure; besides that, they are liable to throw the Patients into a
+Salivation, as I have seen happen more than once; for which Reasons I
+would never recommend this Method where the Patient labours under no
+other Disorder which requires the Use of Mercury, and would confine it
+entirely to Cases where Patients, having the Itch, labour, at the same
+Time, under the _Lues venerea_, and require the free Use of mercurial
+Frictions; under such Circumstances the mercurial Ointment may be as
+well rubbed on the Parts affected with the Itch as upon any other.
+
+The Powder of the Root of _White Helebore_, made up into an Ointment
+with Hogs Lard, or a strong Decoction of it in Water, rubbed on the
+Parts, will often cure the Itch; but it is a sharp Medicine, and
+generally smarts, and sometimes inflames the Parts on which it is
+rubbed; and therefore it is not so commonly used, as we know a much
+surer and milder Remedy. Though I have cured some People with the
+Helebore Lotion without any Inconvenience, who would not use the
+Sulphur on Account of its Smell.
+
+_Sulphur_ is the most certain and easy Cure for the Itch of any we
+know, and perhaps is more certain in the Cure of this Disorder than
+almost any other Medicine in any other Disorder whatever. We used it
+in Form of the Sulphur Ointment of the _London Dispensatory_, of which
+one, two, or more Drachms were rubbed in every Night, in Proportion to
+the Extent of the Parts affected. These Unctions were continued from
+four or five to ten or twelve Nights, according to the Violence and
+Continuance of the Disorder. Most were cured in a few Days; others
+required a longer Time. As the sulphureous Unctions tend to obstruct
+the Perspiration, we generally ordered a Purge to be given before
+rubbing the Sulphur Ointment, and in full Habits sometimes ordered a
+little Blood to be taken away; and put them all under a low Diet.
+After the Disorder seemed to be removed, they took another Dose or two
+of Physic to carry off any Impurities that might have been thrown upon
+the Bowels, during the Use of the Sulphur Ointment. In inveterate
+Cases, the Sulphur was given internally at the same Time that the
+Patient rubbed with the Ointment.
+
+It is generally believed (though denied by some) that Sulphur, taken
+internally, enters the Blood; and its Steams are thrown off by the
+perspiratory Vessels, and assists more effectually to destroy the
+Insects and their Ovula, which give Rise to the Itch; but whether this
+Effect be true or not, I found it to answer another very good Purpose;
+which was to keep the Belly rather loose, while the Patient used the
+Unction; and by this Way it carried off those Humours, which ought to
+have passed off by the Skin; and for that Reason, when it had not that
+Effect, we joined some Lenitive Electuary to it.
+
+There is one Thing to be observed with regard to sulphureous Unctions,
+which is, that we ought not to use them too soon with People
+recovering out of Fevers, or other Disorders which bring them low;
+otherwise there will be Danger of bringing on a Relapse, which I have
+often observed to happen in military Hospitals, where the Itch has
+appeared as the Patients were recovering from Fevers and other
+Disorders, and the Unctions were used too soon: But whether these
+Relapses were owing to the sulphureous Unction's stopping up the Pores
+of the Skin, and obstructing a free Perspiration, or to the Patient's
+being more apt to take Cold while they used the Sulphur Ointment, than
+at any other Time, is what I cannot determine; but to me it seems most
+probable, that these Unctions rather obstruct the Perspiration; and
+that when they are used too soon with People recovering from Fevers,
+especially those of the putrid Kind, they prevent those Particles
+from passing off by the Skin, which it was necessary should be
+evacuated, in order to free the Body from the Seeds of the Fever, or
+other Disorders the Patients laboured under. But however this be,
+Experience has shewn, that we ought not to attempt the Cure of the
+Itch, in Patients so circumstanced, till their Strength be in a great
+Measure re-established, otherwise there will be Danger of a Relapse;
+and likewise, that Patients using Sulphur externally, ought to be
+particularly on their Guard against Cold.
+
+This Observation of Peoples being so apt to relapse after Fevers by
+the too early Use of sulphureous Unction, is a strong Proof of the
+Usefulness of keeping the Body open during the Time of Rubbing and of
+Purging the Patient afterwards; as by these Means we may carry off by
+the Bowels those Particles which could not pass by the Skin; and I
+think, so far as I have been able to observe, those People have been
+less subject to relapse into Fevers where this Caution has been used,
+than where it has been neglected.
+
+That Species of the Itch where it forms small Ulcers or Pustules in
+the Skin, is the worst Kind, and most contagious, and seems to take
+its Rise from the common Itch continuing long, and making its Way
+deeper into the Skin. The Cure is the same, only this requires more
+frequent Unctions, and those to be continued longer, than before the
+Disorder has taken such deep Root.
+
+It is no uncommon Thing to see the Itch appear again, some Weeks after
+it has seemingly been cured by the Use of sulphureous Unctions; which
+most commonly happened to those who were in too great a Hurry to get
+well, and left off the Use of the Unctions too soon. Such Returns of
+the Itch were generally cured by the Repetition of the same Treatment
+as before.
+
+
+
+
+TABLE of DIET.
+
+
+The following is a Copy of the Table of Diet which was used in the
+Hospital all the Time I was with the Troops in _Germany_:
+
+ _Breakfast._ | _Dinner._ | _Supper._
+ | |
+ One Pint of Rice | |
+ Gruel; made with two | |
+ Ounces of Rice, one | |
+ Full Diet, Spoonful of fine | One Pound of | As Breakfast.
+ Flower, a little | Meat. |
+ common Salt, and fine | |
+ Sugar. | |
+ ______________________________________________________________________
+ | One Pint of |
+ Middle Diet, As above. | Broth, Half a | As above.
+ | Pound of Meat. |
+ ______________________________________________________________________
+ | One Pint of |
+ | Broth; or Half |
+ As above, or | a Pint of |
+ according to | Panado, with two |
+ Low Diet, the Patient's | Spoonfuls of | As Breakfast.
+ Stomach or | Wine, and a |
+ Indisposition. | Quarter of an |
+ | Ounce of fine |
+ | Sugar. |
+
+The daily Allowance of Bread was a Pound to those on full and middle
+Diet, and Half a Pound to those on low Diet, or a Pound, if so ordered
+by the Physician.
+
+Those on full and middle Diet were allowed daily three Pints of Barley
+or Rice Water; to each Pint of which were added two Spoonfuls of
+Brandy, and a Quarter of an Ounce of Lump Sugar. Small Beer was
+mentioned in the Diet Table; but this we could never have good; and
+therefore was not used.
+
+Those on low Diet were allowed Barley or Rice Water; to which some
+Wine or Brandy was occasionally added, if ordered so by the Physician.
+
+Besides this, the Physician might order an additional Quantity of
+Wine, Brandy, or Milk, or Water Gruel, or any other Articles which he
+thought proper for the Sick under his Care, and which could be got
+easily.
+
+
+
+
+PHARMACOPOEIA IN USUM
+
+Nosocomii Regii Militaris Britanici.
+
+MDCCLXI.
+
+
+
+
+PHARMACOPOEIA IN USUM
+
+Nosocomii Regii Militaris.
+
+Ann. MDCCLXI.
+
+
+AQUAE SIMPLICES ET SPIRITUOSAE.
+
+ AQUA Alexeteria.
+ ---- Bacc. Juniperi.
+ ---- Cinnamomi.
+ ---- Menthae vulgaris.
+ ---- Menthae piperitidis.
+ ---- Nucis moschatae.
+ ---- Pulegii.
+ ---- Rutae.
+
+ Vel aliae aquae hujus generis praeparari possint, terendo in
+ mortario vitreo elaeosacchara praeparata, cum oleis
+ essentialibus, et sacchari albi 12la quantitate; et dein
+ addendo aquae fontanae vel spiritus vini tenuis quantitatem
+ sufficientem[114].
+
+ [114] Such _Elaeosacchara_ (as they are called), made by
+ rubbing the essential Oils with twelve Times the Quantity of
+ Sugar, may at all Times be prepared at the fixed Hospital,
+ and carried about with the flying Hospital, much more
+ conveniently than the simple or compound Waters themselves.
+
+Aqua calcis simp. Ph. Lond.
+
+ Dosis a lib. i. ad lib. ij. in die.
+
+Aqua Hordeata. Ph. Lond.
+
+ Utenda pro potu.
+
+
+BOLUS.
+
+Bolus anodynus astringens.
+
+ Rx Theriacae andromachi, drachm. dimid. opii, gr. i. M. pro
+ dosi semel vel bis die.
+
+Bolus e rheo cum mercurio.
+
+ Rx Pulv. rhei, gr. xxv. calomel, gr. v. syrup sacchari, q. s.
+
+Bolus e calomel.
+
+ Rx Calomel gr. v. conserv. rosar. scrup. i. M.
+
+Bolus mercurialis.
+
+ Rx Argenti vivi, gr. x. extingue in balsam copaivi, q. s. et
+ adde conserv. rosar. q. s.
+
+Bolus e scordio cum rheo.
+
+ Rx Elect. e scordio, scrup. i. pulv. Rhei, gr. x. syrup, q. s.
+ ut fiat bolus sumendus semel, bis, terve die.
+
+
+COLLYRIA.
+
+Collyrium saturninum.
+
+ Rx Sacchari saturni, salis ammoniaci crudi ana gr. vi. solve
+ in aq. fontanae, unc. xij. adde pro re nata tinct. thebaicae,
+ drachm. i.
+
+Collyrium vitriolicum.
+
+ Rx Vitrioli albi, drachm. ss. solve in aq. fontanae, lib. i.
+
+Confectio cardiaca. Ph. Lond.
+
+Conserva cynosbat. Ph. Lond.
+
+Conserva rosar. Ph. Lond.
+
+
+DECOCTA.
+
+Decoctum album. Ph. Lond. utendum pro potu.
+
+Decoctum arabicum.
+
+ Rx Gum. arabici, unc. dimid. coque in aq. hordeatae bullientis,
+ lib. ij. ad solutionem Gummi. utend. pro potu.--addi possit
+ pro re nata spirit. nitri dulcis, drachm. ij.
+
+Dococtum corticis Peruviani.
+
+ Rx Cort. Peruv. crass. pulv. unc. i. coque in aq. fontan. lib.
+ iij. ad lib. ij. Colaturae adde tinct. cort. Peruv. unc. i.
+ spirit vini Gallici sescunc. Dosis ab uncia i. ad unc. iv.
+ bis ter. quaterve die.
+
+Decoctum cort. cum serpentaria.
+
+ Fit addendo decocto cort. Peruv. sub sinem coctionis, rad.
+ serpentariae virgin. contus. unc. dimid. Dosis ab unc. i. ad
+ unc. iij. ter quaterve die.
+
+Decoct. commun. pro clyster.
+
+ Rx Flor. vel herb. chamaemel. unc. i. coque in aq. fontan. lib.
+ i.ss. ad lib. i. & cola.
+
+Decoctum ligni guaiaci.
+
+ Rx Ligni guaiaci ras. lib. ss. aq. fontanae bullientis, cong.
+ ij. macera per noctem; mane coque ad congium. i. & cola;
+ Capiat a lib. ss. ad lib. ij. die.
+
+Decoctum nitrosum.
+
+ Rx Coccinel. scrupul. i. coque in aq. fontan. lib. ijss. ad
+ lib. ij. & dein adde salis nitri, unc. i. sacchar. albi
+ sescunc. Colaturae addi possit pro re nata aq. alicujus
+ spirit. unc. ij. Dosis ab unc. i. ad unc. iv. 4tis vel 6tis
+ horis.
+
+Decoctum pectorale.
+
+ Rx Fol. herb. malvae, unc. ij. feminum lini, unc. dimid. coque
+ in aq. fontan. lib. ivss. ad lib. iv. addendo sub finem
+ coctionis rad glycyrrhiz sescunc. vel mellis optimi, unc. i.
+ Cola pro potu.--Adde pro re nata aceti, sescunc.
+
+Decoctum rad. sarsaparillae.
+
+ Rx Rad. sarsaparillae, unc. iij. coque in aq. fontan. lib. iij.
+ ad lib. ij. adde sub finem coctionis ligni sasafras, drachm.
+ i. rad. glycyrrhizae, drachm. ij. Colaturae capiat a lib. i.
+ ad lib. ij. in die.--Adde pro re nata vini antimonialis,
+ drachm. ij.
+
+
+ELECTARIA.
+
+Elect. astringens balsamicum.
+
+ Rx Specier. e scordio, pulv. e tragacanth. comp. ana unc. i.
+ tincturae thebaicae, drachm. ij. syrup sacchari, q. s. ut fiat
+ elect. Dosis ad molem N. M. bis, ter. quaterve in die.
+
+Elect. corticis Peruviani.
+
+ Rx Pulv. cort. Peruv. unc. iv. syrup sacchari, q. s. Dosis a
+ scrup. i. ad drachm. unam, bis, ter, 4r. 6ties. vel decies
+ die.
+
+Elect. corticis anodynum.
+
+ Rx Elect. cort. Peruv. unc. 1nam. elect. e scordio unciam
+ dimidiam, vel tinct. thebaicae scrup. ij.
+
+Elect. corticis astringens.
+
+ Rx Elect. cort. Peruv. semunc. pulv. rad. tormentil, lapidis
+ cancror. ppt. singulorum, drachm. i. syrup, q. s.
+
+Elect. cort. cum serpentaria.
+
+ Rx Elect. cort. Peruv. unc. i. pulv. rad. serpentar. virgin.
+ cort. canel. alb. ana, drachm ij. syrup. q. s.
+
+Elect. cort. cum sale ammoniac.
+
+ Rx Elect. cort. Peruv. sescunciam. sal. ammon. crud. drachm. i.
+
+Elect. e baccis lauri. Ph. Lond.
+
+Elect. lenitiv. Ph. Lond.
+
+Elect. lenitivum cum sulphure.
+
+ Rx Elect. lenitiv. lib. ss. flor. sulphuris, unc. ij. Dosis,
+ moles, N. M. vel ad semunc. pro re nata.
+
+Elect. lenitivum compositum.
+
+ Rx Elect. lenitiv. lib. i. pulv. jalap. unc. i. sal. nitri,
+ drachm. ij. syrup. q. s. Dosis a drach. i. ad drach. iv. pro
+ r. n.
+
+Elect. lenitivum balsamicum.
+
+ Rx Elect. lenitiv. comp. unc. ij. bals. copaiv. unc. i. gum
+ guaiac. unc. ss. M. Dosis, cochleare theae, h. s. vel mane &
+ vesperi.
+
+Electuar. e scordio vel diascordium. Ph. Lond.
+
+Elect. e spermat. ceti.
+
+ Rx Balsam Peruv. unc. im. misce optime cum mucilag. gum arab.
+ sescunciam & adde spermat. ceti, conserv. rosar. ana unc.
+ xij. syrup sacchar. q. s. dosis, a dimidia drachma bis die ad
+ drachm. im. quater vel sexties die.
+
+Elect. stomachicum.
+
+ Rx Conserv. cynosbat. unc. iv. pulv. rad. zinziber. drachm.
+ ij. canell. alb. unc. i. rubigin. martis, drachm. ij. syrup.
+ q. s. dosis a scrup. i. bis terve die ad semidrach. 4tis
+ horis.
+
+Elect. e scammon. Ph. Lond.
+
+
+ELIXIR.
+
+Elix. aloes. Ph. Lond.
+
+Elix. paregoricum. Ph. Lond.
+
+Elix. vitrioli acid. Ph. Lond.
+
+
+ENEMATA.
+
+Enema commune laxativ.
+
+ Rx Aq. fontan. calid. unc. xij. elect. lenitiv. semunc. sal.
+ cathartici amari, unc. i. M.
+
+Enema commun. oleos.
+
+ Rx Aq. fontan. bullient. unc. x. mucilag. gum arabic. unc. im.
+ olei olivar. unc. ij. adde pro re nata elect. e scord.
+ drachm. ij. vel. tinct. thebaic. drachm. i.
+
+Enema ex amylo.
+
+ Rx Aq. fontan. calid. unc. iv. gelatin. amyli, unc. v. elect.
+ e scord. drachm. i. M.
+
+Enema terebinth.
+
+ Rx Terebinth commun. drachm. vi. solve in vitello ovi & adde
+ enemat. oleos. unc. x.
+
+Emplastrum vesicatorium. Ph. Lond.
+
+
+FOTUS.
+
+Fotus communis.
+
+ Rx Fol. malv. flor. chamaemel. singulorum, m. i. coque in aq.
+ fontan. q. s.
+
+Fotus commun. spirit.
+
+ Rx Fotus commun. lib. ij. aceti, lib. i. spirit. vini tenuis,
+ lib. ss. M. pro fotu.
+
+Fotus cum sale ammoniac.
+
+ Rx Fotus commun. lib. ij. sal ammoniac crud. unc. i.
+
+Fotus volatilis.
+
+ Rx Fotus commun. q. s. asperge panno statim ante applicationem
+ spiritus sal. ammoniac, q. s.
+
+
+GARGARISMATA.
+
+Gargarisma commune.
+
+ Rx Aq. hordeat. unc. xij. sal. nitri, drachm. i. mellis
+ semunc. M. adde pro re nata spirit. vin. unciam i.
+
+Gargarisma acidum.
+
+ Rx Aq. hordeat. unc. xij. spirit. vini gallici, unc. i. aceti
+ sescunc. tinct. myrrhae, drachm. ij. M.
+
+Gargarisma volatile.
+
+ Rx Aq. hordeat. unc. xij. spirit. vin gallic. unc. ij. sal.
+ vol. ammoniaci, drachm. i. M.
+
+
+GUTTAE ANTIMONIALES ANODYNAE.
+
+ Rx Vini antimonialis, unc. im tinct. thebaic. drachm. ij.
+ dosis a gutt. 30 ad 40 bis terve die, vel a gutt. 60 ad 140,
+ h. s. in potu tepido.
+
+
+HAUSTUS.
+
+Haustus simplex.
+
+ Rx Aq. fontan. sescunc. spirit. vini gallici drachm. i. ss.
+ sacchar alb. drachm. dimidiam M.--Haustus praeparari possit
+ aqua aliqua simp. et spirit. loco aq fontan. & spirit. vini
+ gallici pro re nata.
+
+Haustus anodynus.
+
+ Rx Haust. simp. sescunc. tinct. thebaic. gutt. xx. M.
+
+Haustus camphoratus.
+
+ Rx Camphorae, gr. iij. tere in mortario cum sacchar. alb.
+ drach. dimid. & dein adde mucilag. gum arabici, drachm. ij.
+ haust. simp. sescunciam. M. s. a. Dosis repetenda, 4ta vel
+ 6ta. quaque hora.
+
+Haust. emetic. antimonialis.
+
+ Rx Vini antimonialis semunciam. Dari possit ad drachm. x. pro r. n.
+
+Haust. emeticus scilliticus.
+
+ Rx Oxymel. scillit. drachm. x. aq. fontan. semunc. pulv. rad.
+ ipecacoan. gr. vi.
+
+Haustus cardiacus.
+
+ Rx Haust. simp. sescunciam confect. cardiac. scrup. im. M. f.
+ haustus repetendus 4tis. vel 6tis. horis--adde pro re nata
+ sp. lavend. comp. dr. i.
+
+Haustus cardiacus oleosus.
+
+ Rx Ol. essential. menth. gutt. ij. tere in mortario vitreo cum
+ sacchar. alb. drachm. dimid. & adde haust. simplicis sescunc.
+ tinct. stomachic. drachm. i. M.--adde pro re nata tinctur.
+ thebaic. gutt. x.
+
+Haustus lixiviosus anodynus.
+
+ Rx Haust. simp. sescunciam, lixivii tartari, drachmam dimidiam
+ tincturae thebaicae, gutt. xx. cap. h. s. vel mane & vesperi.
+
+Haustus e mithridatio.
+
+ Rx Haust. simp. sescunc. mithridat. scrup. i. aceti vin.
+ drachm. iij. dosis repetenda 4tis. vel 6tis. horis.
+
+Haustus oleosus communis.
+
+ Rx Mucilagin. gum arabici, drachm, iv. ol. olivar, drachm. v.
+ misce s. a. & adde haust. simp. sescunciam. Repet. 4tis. vel
+ 6tis. horis.
+
+Haustus oleosus cum rheo.
+
+ Rx Haust. oleos. communis, unc. ij. tinct. rhei sescunc. vel
+ pulv. rhei, gr. xxv. tinct. thebaic. gutt. xv. M. fiat
+ haustus sumendus vel h. s. vel primo mane.
+
+Haustus purgans.
+
+ Rx Infus. senae. unc. iij. sal. glauber. drachm. iij. spirit.
+ vin. gallici, drachm. ij. sacchar. alb. drachm. dimid. capiat mane.
+
+Haustus salinus communis.
+
+ Rx Aceti vinosi vel succ. limonum semunciam, sal. absynth.
+ scrup. i. vel ad saturationem, haust. simp. sescunciam adde
+ pro re nata pulv. contrayerv. comp. scrup. i. vel pulv.
+ contrayerv. cum nitro, scrup. ij.--Haustus praeparari possit
+ cum salis diuretici drachma dimid. loco acidi & salis
+ absynthii. Dosis repetend. 3tiis. 4tis. vel 6tis.
+ horis--Eodem modo sit haustus cum spirit. mindereri uncia
+ dimidia.
+
+Haust. salin. cum confect. cardiaca.
+
+ Rx Haust. salin. commun. unc. ij. confect. cardiac. scrup. i.
+ M. repet. 4tis. vel 6tis. horis.
+
+Haust. salin. cum mithridatio.
+
+ Rx Haust. salin. commun. unc. ij. mithridatii, scrup. i. M.
+ sumend. 4tis. vel 6tis. horis.
+
+Haustus salin. cum rheo.
+
+ Rx Haust. salin. com. uncias ij. pulv. rhei, gr. xxv. M.
+ capiat mane.
+
+Haustus salin. cum phu.
+
+ Rx Haust. salin. commun. unc. ij. pulv. rad. valerian.
+ sylvestris, scrup. ij. Dosis repetend. 2dis. 4tis. vel 6tis.
+ horis.
+
+Haust. salinus succinatus.
+
+ Rx Haust. salin. commun. unc. ij. sal succini, pulv. castorei
+ singulorum, gr. x. H. repetend. 4tis. vel 6tis. horis.
+
+Haust. salinus purg. oleosus.
+
+ Rx Mannae opt. semunc. olei olivar. drachm. vi. vitelli ovi q.
+ s. tere in mortario, addendo paulatim sal cathartici amari,
+ unc. i. solutam in aq. fontan. calid. unc. iij. spirit. vini
+ gallici vel aq. alicujus spirituosae, drachm. iij. M. s. a pro
+ dosi matutino.
+
+Haustus volatilis.
+
+ Rx Haust. simp. sescunciam sal. vol. c. cervi, gr. x. M. H.
+ repet. 4tis. vel 6tis. horis.
+
+
+INFUSA.
+
+ Infusum amarum. Ph. Lond. Addi possit pro re nata in
+ praeparando spirit. vini tenuis, lib. ss. ad lib. ij. infusi.
+ Dosis ab unc. ina. bis die ad unc. ij. ter. die.
+
+Infusum raphani rusticani.
+
+ Rx Rad. raphani rusticani, unc. ij. baccar. juniper, unc.
+ inam. cort. canell. alb. drachm. ij. aq. fontan. bullient,
+ lib. iv. infunde per noctem leni calore. Colaturae adde
+ spirit. vini gallici unc. iv. Dosis ab. unc. i. bis terve die
+ ad unc. iv. 6tis. horis.
+
+Infusum senae commun. Ph. Lond.
+
+
+JULEPUM E MOSCHO.
+
+ Rx Mosch. drachmam im. tere optime in mortario cum sacchar.
+ alb. drachm. iij. & adde mucilagin. gum arab. dr. iv. Haust.
+ simp. unc. vi. Dosis unc. ij. 4tis. vel 6tis. horis.
+
+
+LINCTUS.
+
+ Rx Conserv. cynosbat. unc. iv. ol. olivar. syrup. sacchari vel
+ mellis ana unc. ij. adde pro re nata spirit. vitrioli tenuis,
+ drachm. iv. Dosis cochleare theae urgente tussi.
+
+
+LINIMENTA.
+
+Liniment. saponaceum. Ph. Lond.
+
+Linimentum camphoratum.
+
+ Rx Olei olivar. unc. ij. camphorae, drachm. ij. M.
+
+Linimentum volatile. Ph. Lond.
+
+Linimentum volatile commune.
+
+ Rx Olei olivar. unc. iij. spiritus salis ammoniaci, dr. vi. M.
+
+
+MELLA.
+
+Mel cum borace.
+
+ Rx Mellis optimi, unc. i. pulv. subtilissim. boracis, dr. i. M.
+
+Mel AEgyptiacum. Ph. Lond.
+
+Mel rosaceum. Ph. Lond.
+
+MITHRIDATIUM. Ph. Lond.
+
+
+MIXTURAE.
+
+Mixtura acida communis.
+
+ Rx Haust. simp. unc: viij. spirit. vitrioli tenuis, scrup. ij.
+ vel ad gratam aciditatem. Dosis ab. unc. ij. ad unc iv. 4tis.
+ vel 6tis. horis.
+
+Mixtura ammoniaca.
+
+ Rx Gum ammoniaci, drachm. i. solve in haust. simp. unc. vi.
+ Dosis ab. unc. i. ad unc. ij. bis terve in die.
+
+Mixtura ammon. cum oxymel.
+
+ Rx Mixt. ammoniac. unc. vi. oxymel scillit. drachm. vi. Dosis
+ a cochlear. i. ad unc. ii. ter. 4rve. die.
+
+Mixtura ammoniac. anodyna.
+
+ Rx Mixt. ammoniac. cum oxymel. unc. vi. tinct. thebaic.
+ drachm. dimid. Dosis a cochlear. i. ad iv. 4tis. vel 6tis.
+ horis.
+
+Mixtura Campechensis.
+
+ Rx Extract. ligni Campechensis, drachm. iij. solve in haust.
+ simplic. unc. vi. adde pro re nata tinct. thebaic. gutt. xxx.
+ vel Philon. Londinen. drachm. i. Dosis ab. unc. i. ad unc.
+ iij. bis, ter, 4rve. die.
+
+Mixtura faetida.
+
+ Rx G. asafaetid. drachm. i. solve in haust. simp. unc. vi.
+ Dosis ab. unc. i. ad unc. iij. 4r. die.
+
+Mixtura faetida volatilis.
+
+ Rx Mixt. faetid. unc. vi. spirit. volat. sal. ammon. drachm. i.
+ Dosis ab. unc. i. ad unc. ij. bis, ter, 4rve. die.
+
+Mixtura fracastorii.
+
+ Rx Haust. simp. unc. viij. Elect. e scordio, drachm. iv. Dosis
+ ab. unc. i. ad unc. ij. 4tis. vel 6tis. horis.
+
+Mixtura japonica.
+
+ Rx Haust. simp. unc. vi. Tinct. japonic. unc. i. adde pro re
+ nata tinct. thebaic. dr. i.
+
+Mixtura laxativa.
+
+ Rx Elect. lenitiv. unc. i. Mannae semunc. coque in aq fontan.
+ unc. xvi. ad unc. xij. Colaturae adde sal. cathartici amari.
+ sescunciam. spirit. vini gallici, unc. i. Dosis ab. unc. ij.
+ ad unc. xij.
+
+Mixtura purg. antimonial.
+
+ Rx Elect. lenitiv. sescunc. mannae semunc. coque in aq. fontan.
+ unc. xx. ad unc. xvi. & dein solve tartar. emetici, gr. x.
+ Colaturae dosis ab. unc. i. ad unc. iv. omni hora vel omni
+ 2da. vel 3tia. vel 4ta. hora, donec laxetur alvus.
+
+Mixtura oleosa volatilis.
+
+ Rx Haust. simp. unc. vi. ol. olivar. unc. iij. spirit.
+ volatil. salis ammoniaci drachmam inam. M. Dosis ab. unc. i.
+ ad unc. iij. 3tiis. vel 4tis. horis.
+
+Mixtura scillitica.
+
+ Rx Haust. simp. unc. vi. oxymel scillitic. drachm. vi. Dosis a
+ drachm. iv. ad unc. ij. bis, ter, 4rve. die.
+
+Mixtura e spermat. ceti.
+
+ Rx Spermat. ceti, drachm. ij. solve in vitello ovi & adde
+ haust. simp. unc. vi. adde, pro re nata, tinct. thebaic.
+ scrup. ij. Dosis ab. unc. i. ad unc. ij. 4tis. vel 6tis.
+ horis.
+
+Mixtura e spermat. ceti cum balsamo.
+
+ Rx Balsam. copaiv. drachm. ij. tere in mortario cum mucilag.
+ gum arabici, drachm. iij. & dein adde mixtur. e spermat.
+ ceti, unc. vi. Dosis ab. unc. i. ad unc. iij. 4tis. vel 6tis.
+ horis.
+
+
+MUCILAGO. G. ARABICI.
+
+ Rx G. arabici pulv. unc. iv. solve in aq. purae bullient. unc. x.
+
+Oxymel scillit. Ph. Lond.
+
+Philonium Londinen. Ph. Lond.
+
+
+PILULAE.
+
+Pilulae faetidae.
+
+ Rx Gum asafaetid. myrrh. ana drachm. i. sapon. alb. hispan.
+ drachm. ij. Tinct. fuliginis q. s. Dosis a gr. x. ad drachm.
+ dimid. bis terve die.
+
+Pilulae guaiac.
+
+ Rx Sapon. albi hispanici semunc. gum guaiac, scrup. iv. syrup.
+ q. s. Dosis a scrup. i. ad drachmam dimidiam bis terve die.
+
+Pilulae gummosae. Ph. Lond.
+
+Pilulae mercuriales.
+
+ Rx Argenti vivi semunc. extingue in balsam. copaiv. q. s. &
+ adde pulv. glycyrrhiz. gum guaiac. singulorum, drachm. vi.
+ syrup. q. s. ut fiat massa. Dosis a scrup. ss. ad drachmam
+ dimidiam semel vel bis die.
+
+Pilulae rufi. Ph. Lond.
+
+Pilulae saponaceae. Ph. Lond.
+
+Pilulae saponaceae cum rheo.
+
+ Rx Sapon. alb. hispanici, drachm. vi. pulv. rhei, drachm. ij.
+ syrup. sacchari q. s. Dosis a scrup. i. ad scrup. ij. bis
+ terve die.
+
+Pilulae scilliticae.
+
+ Rx Pulv. glycyrhiz. rad. scill. exsiccat ana drachm. dimid.
+ rad. zinziber. drachm. i. sapon. alb. hispan. drachm. ij.
+ syrup. q. s. Dosis a gr. iv. ad. gr. xvi. bis terve die.
+
+Pilulae stomachicae.
+
+ Rx Pulv. canell. alb. drachm. ij. extract. rad. gentian. dr.
+ i. mucilag. gum arabici q. s. Dosis a scrup. i. ad drachmam
+ dimid. bis die--adde pro re nata rubigin. martis drachmam
+ dimid.
+
+
+PULVERES.
+
+Pulvis astringens.
+
+ Rx Pulv. canell. alb. rad. tormentill. singulorum, drachm. i.
+ M. Dosis a scrup. i. ad drachm. i.
+
+Pulvis aluminosus.
+
+ Rx Alumin. crud. terrae japonicae ana partes aequales dosis a gr.
+ viij. ad drachmam dimidiam.
+
+Pulv. anodynus Doveri.
+
+ Rx Sal. nitri, tartari vitriolati singulorum, unc. iv. in
+ crucibulum candens injice, agitetur donec deflagratio &
+ scintillatio desinat, & adde opii concisi, unc. i. & in
+ pulverem redige addendo rad. glycyrrhiz. ipecacoanhae
+ subtilissime pulver. ana, unc. i. & dein probe misceantur
+ omnia. Dosis a gr. x. ad scrup. ij. vel ad drachmam 1nam.
+
+Pulvis antimonialis.
+
+ Rx Pulv. e chel. cancror. drachm. x. tartari emetici, dr. i.
+ M. fiat pulv. subtilissimus. Dosis a gr. iij. ad gr. x. 4ta.
+ vel 6ta. quaque hora.
+
+Pulvis cardiacus.
+
+ Rx Pulv. canell. alb. drachm. i. rad. zedoariae, drachm. ij.
+ rad. serpentar. drachm. i. M. dosis a scrup. i. ad drachm. i.
+ 4tis. vel 6tis. horis.
+
+Pulvis chamaemelinus.
+
+ Rx Pulv. flor. chamaemel. drachm. iij. aluminis, g. myrrh. ana
+ drachm. i. Dosis a scrup. i. ad scrup. ij.
+
+Pulv. contrayerv. comp. Ph. Lond.
+
+Pulv. contrayerv. cum nitro.
+
+ Rx Pulv. contrayerv. comp. unc. iv. salis nitri, drachm. i. M.
+ Dosis a scrup. i. ad drachm. i. 4tis. vel 6tis. horis.
+
+Pulvis emeticus.
+
+ Rx Pulv. ipecacoanhae, scrup. i. tartar emetici, gr. ij. Dosis
+ a gr. xi. ad gr. xxii.
+
+Hiera picra. Ph. Lond.
+
+Pulv. Ipecacuanhae cum opio.
+
+ Rx Pulv. rad. ipecacoan. gr. x. opii, gr. ij. dosis a gr. iij.
+ ad gr. xij.
+
+Pulv. e jalapio.
+
+ Rx Pulv. rad. jalapii, drachm. vi. rad. zinzib. drachm. ij.
+ Dosis a scrup. i. ad scrup. ij.
+
+Pulv. jalapii cum nitro.
+
+ Rx Pulv. rad. jalap. drachm. iv. salis nitri drachm. im. Dosis
+ a scrup. i. ad scrup. ij.
+
+Magnesia alba.
+
+Pulv. nitrosus.
+
+ Rx Pulv. e chel. cancror. drachm. iij. nitri, drachm. i. M.
+ Dosis a scrup. i. ad scrup. ij. vel ad drachmam. i.
+
+Pulv. nitrosus camphoratus.
+
+ Rx Pulv. nitros, scrup. ij. camphorae, gr. v. M. Dosis a scrup.
+ i. ad scrup. ij.
+
+Pulv. nitrosus cum gum guaiac.
+
+ Rx Sal. nitri, drachm. ij. gum guaiac. drachm. dimid. Dosis a
+ gr. v. ad drachm. dimid.
+
+Pulv. plummeri.
+
+ Rx Calomel, sulph. aurat antimonii ana dr. ij. tere in
+ mortario ut fiat pulv. subtilissimus. Dosis a gr. ij. ad gr.
+ x. vel ad scrup. im.
+
+Pulvis stanni. Ph. Lond.
+
+Pulv. e spermat. ceti cum nitro.
+
+ Rx Spermat. ceti, drachm. ij. sacchar. albi sal. nitri ana
+ unc. im. Dosis a scrup. dimid. ad drachmam i.
+
+Pulv. e tragacanth. Ph. Lond.
+
+
+SALES ACIDI.
+
+ PRAEPARATIONES.
+ Spir. vitrioli fortis | |
+ Acida ---- tenuis |Spir. vitrioli dulcis |
+ mineralis Spiritus nitri |Spir. nitri dulcis | AEther.
+ Spir. salis marini |Spir. salis dulcis. |
+
+ Varietat. acid. Acetum.
+ vegit. Spiritus aceti vel acetum distillatum.
+ Succus limonum.
+ Chrystalli tartari.
+
+ Acid. anomal. Sal. succini.
+ Sal. sedativus Hombergeri.
+
+
+SALES ALCALINI.
+
+ Alcal. vegit. Sal. absynthii.
+ Sal. tartari.
+
+ Alcal. min. Sal. alcali mineral. seu soda, seu natrum.
+
+ Alcal. vol. Sal. volatilis c. cervi.
+ Sal. volatilis sal. ammoniaci.
+
+
+SALES NEUTRI.
+
+SALES NEUTRI, qui fiunt ex ALCALI et ACIDO.
+
+ Tartarus vitriol. | vegetab. |
+ Sal. glauberi | minerali | vitrioli.
+ Sal. am. vitrioli | volatili |
+
+ Sal. nit. com. | vegetab. |
+ Nit. cubicum | mineral. | nitri.
+ Sal. am. nitrosum | volatili. |
+
+ Sal. digest. sylvii| vegetabil. |
+ ---- marin. com. | minerali | Sal. marini.
+ ---- ammon. com. | volatili |
+
+Varietates Sal. diureticus | vegetab. | aceti.
+salis Tartar. tartar. | veget. | chryst. tartar.
+neutri | tartari |
+comp. ex Sal. citratus com. | veget. | succ. limonum. Vegetabil.
+alcal. & | absynth. |
+acid. Sal. de seignette | minerali | chryst. tartar.
+vegitab. Spir. mindereri. | volatili | acet. distillat.
+
+Hi omnes sales neutri praeparari possint pro usu medico admiscendo
+Alcali & acidum ad saturationem; alii vero in crystallos redacti, s.
+a. commodius circumferuntur pro usu militari; alii ut _sal. citratus
+comm._ et _spiritus mindereri_ facilius praeparantur ad miscendo alcali
+& acidum ad saturationem pro re nata[115].
+
+ [115] This Table of neutral Salts is nearly the same as one I
+ have seen, which was said to be a Copy of that given yearly
+ by Dr. _Cullen_, Professor of Chymistry in the University of
+ _Edinburgh_, to his Pupils; and as that published by Dr.
+ _Vogel_, in his _Institutiones Chymiae_, sect. 629. These
+ neutral Salts are likewise taken Notice of by _Macquer_, in
+ his _Elemens de Chymie_, and other late chymical Authors.
+
+Solutio mercurii corrosivi sublimati.
+
+ Rx Mercur. corrosiv. sublimat. gr. vi. spir. vini gallici,
+ unc. xii. M. fiat solutio. Dosis a semunc ad unc. i. die.
+
+ Species aromaticae. Ph. Lond.
+ ---- e scordio. Ph. Lond.
+
+Tartar. emetic. Ph. Lond.
+
+Theriaca andromachi. Ph. Lond.
+
+
+TINCTURAE.
+
+ Tinctura amara.
+ ---- corticis Puruv.
+ ---- martis in sp. sal.
+ ---- japonica.
+ ---- melampodii. Pharm. Lond.
+ ---- myrrhae.
+ ---- sacra.
+ ---- saturnina.
+ ---- serpentariae.
+ ---- thebaica.
+
+Tinctura rhei.
+
+ Rx Pulv. rad. rhei, unc. ij. semin. cardamom minor. decortic.
+ semunc. vini alb. hisp. lib. ij. sp. vini gallici, unc. viij.
+ digere sine calore & cola. Dosis ab. unc. i. ad unc. iij.
+
+Tinctura stomachica.
+
+ Rx Cort. canell. alb. semunc. cort. aurantior. unc. i. semin.
+ cardam. minor. decort. drachm. ij. spirit. vini gallici lib.
+ ij. digere sine calore & cola. Dosis a semunc ad unc. i. bis
+ terve die.--Adde pro re nata vin alb. hisp. lib. i.
+
+
+UNGUENTA.
+
+Unguenta caerulea vel mercurial. Ph. Lond.
+
+Unguentum sulphuratum. Ph. Lond.
+
+
+VINA.
+
+ Vinum amarum.
+ ---- antimoniale. Pharm. Lond.
+ ---- chalybeatum.
+
+
+VITRUM CERATUM ANTIMONII.
+
+
+
+
+AN ESSAY ON THE MEANS of Preserving the Health of SOLDIERS on SERVICE.
+AND Conducting MILITARY HOSPITALS.
+
+
+
+
+OF THE Means of Preserving the Health of Soldiers on Service.
+
+
+The Life of _British_ Soldiers on Service, in Time of War, is so very
+different from what they lead in Time of Peace, as to subject them to
+many Inconveniences and Diseases.
+
+In Time of Peace, Soldiers are quartered either in Towns or Garrisons,
+where they are under the Eye of their Officers, who take Care that
+they keep themselves clean, and provided with Necessaries; they lie
+either in private Houses or in Barracks, where they have a good Bed,
+regular Meals of wholesome Provisions, and enjoy most of the other
+Necessaries of Life in common with the lower Class of People, their
+Duty is easy, they mount Guard but seldom, and in other Nights enjoy
+an undisturbed Rest.
+
+Whereas, during the Time of an active Campaign, they are seldom in
+Houses; they lie in Tents upon the Ground, which is often bare, and at
+best covered only with Straw and a Blanket; and sometimes they are
+obliged, after fatiguing Marches in wet Weather, to lie on the bare
+Ground, without even a Tent to cover them; they must stand Centinel,
+and be upon Pikets and other Out-Posts in the Night, during all Kinds
+of Weather; besides performing long fatiguing Marches, and other
+military Duties; and when near an Enemy, they are perhaps on Duty
+every second or third Night, besides working Parties, and other Duties
+of Fatigue; and what Rest they have is interrupted by frequent Alarms.
+They have often but little Time or Convenience to make themselves
+clean. Provisions are sometimes scarce, and frequently on long Marches
+they have no Opportunity of dressing what they can get: Water is
+sometimes difficult to be come at, and what is to be got, is bad. And
+it frequently happens, that neither Beer, Wine, nor Spirits, can be
+purchased for Money. In fixed Camps, they are often exposed to the
+putrid Effluvia of dead Bodies, of dead Horses, and other Animals, and
+of the Privies and Dung of the Horses[116]; and, in some Encampments,
+likewise to the unwholesome Vapours of marshy Ground, and of corrupt
+stagnating Water: All which, joined to the other Hardships and
+Inconveniences unavoidably attending a military Life in Time of
+Service, often give Rise to numerous Diseases, which weaken an Army in
+a most surprising Manner; and therefore Commanders ought to use every
+Means in their Power, consistent with the necessary military
+Operations, to preserve the Health of the Soldiers.
+
+ [116] In the Year 1760, the Men, who remained in the fixed
+ Camp about _Warbourg_, were very unhealthy; while the
+ Regiments who were detached to the _Lower Rhine_, under the
+ Command of the Hereditary Prince of _Brunswick_, enjoyed a
+ much better State of Health; and notwithstanding their great
+ Fatigues, and the Loss they sustained at the Affair of
+ _Kampen_, were much stronger when they rejoined the Army to
+ go upon the Winter Expedition into the Country of _Hesse_,
+ than those Regiments which had remained in the fixed Camp.
+
+Diseases are more or less frequent in Armies according as the Season
+is hot or cold, wet or dry; according to the Nature of the Climate,
+and the Time of the Year in which military Operations are carried on;
+the Nature of the Ground on which the Army is encamped, or the
+Situation of the Towns or Villages in which they are cantonned; the
+Cleanness, Neatness, and Dryness of the Camp, and of the Tents or
+Houses in which the Soldiers are lodged; according as the Men are
+supplied with Provisions, and good Water, good Beer, Wine, or other
+fermented Liquors; or are well cloathed, and well furnished with Straw
+and Blankets; in proportion as the Duty is more or less severe; and to
+the Care taken of such as are attacked with Sickness.
+
+Soldiers generally enjoy good Health in cold dry Weather, even during
+the Time of severe Frost; if they be kept in Exercise, be well
+cloathed, and well supplied with Provisions and good Liquors, and
+with Wood; as the Troops, both in _Germany_ and _North America_,
+experienced during the late War; but Cold joined to Moisture was
+observed always to be productive of Diseases.
+
+Nor is mere Heat of itself such an Enemy to Health[117] as is
+generally apprehended; but when joined to Moisture, is observed to
+give Rise to the most fatal Disorders in the warm Climates.
+
+ [117] This Dr. _Pringle_ takes Notice of; and Mr. _Naesmith_
+ says, he observed it in Voyages to the _East Indies_, which
+ afford the fairest Trials of this Kind. See Dr. _Lind's Essay
+ on the Means of Preserving the Health of Seamen_, 2d edit.
+ note to page 5.
+
+In our northern Climates the Winters are cold, and the Weather
+variable; sometimes it is cold and rainy, at other Times thick and
+foggy; sometimes we have fair Weather and Sunshine, at other Times
+Frost and Snow; and sometimes it happens that we have all these
+different Sorts of Weather in the same Day. During this Season,
+Soldiers are subject to Coughs, Pleurisies, Peripneumonies,
+Rheumatisms, and other Disorders of the inflammatory Kind. And in
+very intense Frost, they are liable to have their Limbs benumbed with
+Cold, and their Extremities Frost bit (as it is called).
+
+And where there is a Want of fresh Provisions, and they are obliged to
+live on salted Meat, and cannot have Greens, Pot Herbs, Roots, or
+other fresh Vegetables, nor be properly supplied with Beer, Cyder,
+Wine, or other generous fermented Liquors, they, as well as Sailors,
+are subject to the Scurvy[118]; especially if they be encamped or
+quartered in low damp Places.
+
+ [118] Dr. _Joh. Valint. Willius_, Army Physician to the King
+ of _Denmark_, in his Treatise on Camp Diseases, says, you
+ scarce find a Camp in these northern Countries in which the
+ true Scurvy, attended with stinking Breath and eroded Gums,
+ is not to be observed. _Cap._ iii. _sect._ iii.
+
+The best Means of guarding against inflammatory Disorders, and other
+Mischiefs arising from Cold, whether in Camp or in Quarters, is, to
+take Care that the Soldiers be well cloathed; that they lie dry, and
+be well provided with Straw and Blankets, and with Wood; and to
+prevent, as much as possible, their exposing themselves to sudden
+changes from Heat to Cold.
+
+In these northern Climates, it would be right to allow every Soldier
+on Service a Flannel Waistcoat, a Pair of worsted Gloves, and a warm
+woollen Stock, or a Neckcloth, to wear when on Duty in cold and wet
+Weather, as soon as the Winter begins to set in[119]. Dr. _Pringle_
+mentions the Advantage the Troops received from the Flannel
+Waistcoats supplied by the Quakers, in the Winter Campaign of 1745-6,
+in _Britain_; and those Regiments who had them for their Men towards
+the End of the Campaigns in _Germany_, found that they contributed
+greatly to keep the Men in Health. Officers ought to take particular
+Care that the Men be well provided with good strong Shoes and
+Stockings; and where the Troops remain late in the Field, if the
+Government allowed a Pair or two extraordinary of each to every Foot
+Soldier, it would be of great Use to the Service.
+
+ [119] A Flannel Waistcoat, worsted Gloves, and woollen Stock,
+ or a Neckcloth, may be purchased for about Half a Crown _per_
+ Man, and would contribute to preserve the Lives of many; the
+ recruiting of others, to supply whose Places, if they die,
+ will cost the Government a great deal more than the Price of
+ the Articles mentioned; which for a Regiment of nine hundred
+ Men, at the Rate of two Shillings and Six-Pence _per_ Man,
+ comes only to 112_l._ 10_s._ _per Ann._ Every Recruit sent
+ from _England_ to the Army in _Germany_, cost the Government
+ at least twenty Guineas before he joined his Regiment; and
+ every sick Man sent to the general Hospital, cost the
+ Government at least sixteen Pence _per_ Day, which is ten
+ Pence above his Pay; so that, if we suppose the extraordinary
+ Cloathing here mentioned would preserve only the Lives of
+ nine Men to each Regiment yearly, and keep forty in Health
+ who would otherwise be sick, we see what great Gainers the
+ Government will be in Point of Money at the Year's End;
+ besides preserving the Lives and Health of so many Men.
+
+Blankets ought to be provided for each Tent, and those carried along
+with the Regiment, so as to be always ready for the Men when they come
+to their Ground. During the late War in _Germany_, a Couple of
+Blankets were allowed for each Tent of the _British_ Troops, and each
+Company carried their Blankets covered with an Oil Cloth on a Horse;
+so that they were always up with the Regiments when they came to their
+Ground.
+
+Each Regiment ought to be provided with a Number of Watch Coats
+sufficient to serve the Centinels who are to be on Camp Duty, or
+general Guards, in very cold and wet Weather. Some of the Regiments in
+_Germany_ had such Coats, and found great Service from them.
+
+In Winter Quarters, Soldiers are apt to make the Rooms in which they
+sit, and their Guard Rooms, as hot as possible; especially in
+_Germany_, where the Inhabitants use close Stoves, instead of open
+Fires; and continue in these warm Rooms till they are called out on
+Duty, when, by being exposed to sudden Cold, they are apt to be seized
+with Inflammations of the Breast; and therefore Officers ought to
+examine carefully the Quarters and Guard Rooms allotted for their Men,
+and chuse them dry and comfortable, if possible[120]; but never to
+allow the Men to keep them as hot as Ovens, by Means of close Stoves,
+or other such Contrivances; but to depend more on good warm Cloathing,
+and dry Quarters, for guarding against Diseases, than upon artificial
+Heat. Many of the Regiments in _Germany_ made the People in whose
+Houses their Men were quartered, take down their Stoves, and use only
+open Fires; when there was no Danger of the Soldiers making their
+Quarters too warm, as Wood was difficult to be got.
+
+ [120] Dr. _Pringle_ has very justly observed, that upper
+ Stories are preferable to Ground Floors; and that all
+ uninhabited large damp Houses ought to be rejected.
+ _Observat. on Diseases of the Army_, part ii. chap. iii.
+ sect. 2.
+
+ If Necessity obliges Officers to put up with such Places for
+ their Men, Care ought to be taken to clean them well, and to
+ air and dry them by Means of Fires, before the Soldiers go
+ into them; and to supply well the Men who are to lodge in
+ them with Straw and Blankets, and with Wood or Turf.
+
+But although close Stoves are prejudicial in small Rooms, yet when a
+Town is much crowded, and Men are obliged to be lodged, in Winter, in
+large Barns or Churches, or other large open Places, the _German_
+Stoves may be used with great Advantage in airing and drying such
+Places, and keeping them of a moderate Heat; especially if there be a
+Place in them for an open Fire, or if they be of that Kind which the
+_Germans_ call _wynd Stoves_, which have a Door opening into the
+Chamber where the People are lodged; or if there be broken Windows, or
+any other Opening by which a free Circulation of Air can be kept up
+in the Men's Apartments.
+
+In Winter, when the Weather is very cold or wet, a Glass of Brandy, or
+of the spirituous Tincture of the Bark, given to the Men as they went
+upon Duty, especially in the Night, has been found to be of great
+Use[121]. Dr. _Pringle_ has very justly observed, that the Times of
+standing Centinel, and being upon Out-posts, ought, if possible, to be
+shortened at such Seasons; and that Fires in the Rear of the Camp, for
+Men coming off Duty to warm and dry themselves at, were found to be of
+great Service.
+
+ [121] Dr. _Pringle_ has taken Notice, that it would be a
+ right Measure to make an Allowance of Spirits to the Infantry
+ on Service; which certainly would be of great Use, and save
+ many Mens Lives; and might be done at a small Expence to the
+ Government, if properly managed; as it would only be
+ requisite to make such an Allowance when the Troops are in
+ the Field, and to such Men as mount Guard in cold wet
+ Weather, or at Nights in Garrison Towns, during the Winter.
+ If ever such an Allowance be made, what Spirits are given to
+ the Men ought to be mixed with five or six Times the Quantity
+ of Water; except when Men are to stand Centinels, or to be
+ upon Out-Posts, in a frosty Season, or in cold wet Weather;
+ at which Time a small Glass of pure Spirits may be given them
+ in Presence of the Officer or Serjeant of the Guard.
+
+In Spring, and the latter End of Autumn, the Days are sometimes
+extremely hot, and the Nights cold and damp, and the Men exposed to
+these sudden Changes; at such Times, the Men who go upon Duty in the
+Night, ought to put on their Flannel Waistcoats, and be warmer
+cloathed than in the Day; and use many of the Precautions practised in
+Winter for the Preservation of their Health.
+
+In _North America_, when the Men were in the Field in very hard frosty
+Weather, Fires were lighted at the Ends of the Tents, and Centinels
+set over them to prevent their doing Mischief; and both in _Germany_
+and _North America_, when the Troops were in the Field without Tents,
+they cut down Wood and made large Fires, and the Soldiers lay down and
+slept round these Fires, with their Feet next to them; and Fires were
+lighted at all Out-posts, where it could be done with Safety.
+
+In _Germany_, when the Weather set in rainy or cold towards the End of
+the Campaigns, and the Army was in a fixed Position, his Serene
+Highness Prince _Ferdinand_ constantly ordered the Army to Hutt;
+which was done either by thatching their Tents, or building Hurdles,
+or digging Pitts, and covering and thatching them over. The Officers
+either built Hutts with Fire Places, or had Chimnies built to their
+Tents.
+
+If, notwithstanding all Precautions, Men upon Out-posts should be
+benumbed with Cold, or Frost bit, as soon as they are brought into
+Camp or Quarters, their Extremities ought to be rubbed with Snow, or
+put into cold Water[122]; and afterwards well dried, and wrapt up in
+Blankets; and warm mild Liquors given them to drink, and afterwards
+Cordials; and, after some Time, they may be brought near the Fire, or
+put to Bed. Dr. _Lind_[123] mentions one Caution to be used when Men
+are found in this Condition; which is, not to give them immediately
+strong spirituous Liquors, for that those often prove instantaneously
+fatal; but to put them to Bed, and give warm Water Gruel, or some
+other mild diluting Liquor, to drink; after which, he says, a Glass of
+Spirits will prove less dangerous and more beneficial.
+
+ [122] _Hildanus_ relates a very remarkable Instance of the
+ good Effects of this Treatment. A Man was found quite stiff
+ and frozen all over. He was put into cold Water, and
+ immediately the icy Spicula were discharged from all Parts of
+ his Body, so that he seemed covered with an icy Crust. He was
+ then put into a warm Bed, and took a Cordial Draught, and a
+ plentiful Sweat followed; after which he recovered with the
+ Loss of the last Joints of his Fingers and Toes. _De
+ Gangraena_, cap. xiii. People who are benumbed with Cold in
+ frosty Weather ought never to be brought immediately near a
+ Fire; for that has been found either to cause immediate Death
+ or Gangrenes of the Extremities; and even Apples and other
+ Fruits which have been frozen, if brought immediately near a
+ Fire, turn soft and rot; but if put into cold Water, throw
+ out the icy Spicula, and recover, so as to be almost as good
+ as before they were frozen.
+
+ [123] _Means of Preserving the Health of Seamen_, 2d edition,
+ page 19.
+
+When Men are quartered or cantonned in Towns or Villages, whose
+Situation is low and damp, and where fresh Meat and Vegetables are
+scarce in Winter, and the Scurvy frequent among the lower Class of
+People; Commanding Officers, at the Approach of Winter, ought to use
+their Endeavours to provide a Store of Potatoes, Onions, Cabbages,
+sour Crout; of pickled Cabbages, and other pickled Vegetables; of
+Apples and other Fruits, preserved in different Forms, to be laid up,
+and sold out to the Men at a cheap Rate during the Winter. They
+should contract, if possible, with Butchers to furnish the Men with
+fresh Meat[124], and endeavour to procure good small Beer, or Cyder or
+Wine in the Wine or Cyder Countries; or Spirits to be mixed with
+Water, and a small Proportion of Cream of Tartar or Vinegar; or some
+other wholesome fermented Liquor for their Drink[125]; and to put
+their Men into as dry comfortable Quarters as possible.
+
+ [124] The Regiments in _Germany_ who kept their Butchers in
+ Winter, and made Stoppages of the Mens Pay, and obliged them
+ to take a certain Quantity of Meat daily, were much more
+ healthy than those who used no Precaution of this Kind.
+
+ [125] In Places where the Articles here mentioned are at too
+ high a Price for a Soldier's Pay, a small Allowance, from the
+ Government, of such Things would contribute much to the
+ Preservation of the Mens Health in unwholesome Garrisons.
+
+In Times of War, when Men are sent upon Expeditions into warm
+Climates, great Care ought to be taken to embark such only as are in
+good Health; particular Regard ought to be paid to those who are
+picked up in the Streets, or have been taken out of the _Savoy_, or
+other Jails. All dirty Rags from off such People ought to be thrown
+away or burnt; and the Men, after being well washed, and new cloathed,
+ought to be kept for a Fortnight or three Weeks in some Garrison Town,
+or with their Regiments, in open airy Places, that it may be
+ascertained that they have no infectious Disorder before they be put
+aboard the Transports.
+
+All Ships allotted for Transports ought to be well aired and purified,
+and every Thing fitted up properly, before the Men are embarked. They
+ought to be provided with Ventilators, or Wind Sails, to make a free
+Circulation of Air through the Vessel[126]; and they ought never to be
+crowded; but full Room allowed for each Man, in Proportion to the
+Length of the Voyage[127].
+
+ [126] See Dr. _Lind's Treatise on the Means of Preserving the
+ Health of Seamen in the Royal Navy_, where he takes Notice of
+ most of the Articles here mentioned with regard to Transport
+ Ships in treating of Ships of War.
+
+ [127] When Ships are too much crowded with Men, if they meet
+ with a tedious Passage, and hot moist close Weather, they are
+ often attacked with Diseases which prove very fatal. Dr.
+ _Lind_, talking of Ships of War, says it is a Mistake
+ destructive to the Men to crowd too many of them together in
+ a southern Voyage, or in a hot Climate; as the Ship will be
+ found, before the End of the Voyage, in more Distress for
+ Want of Men, than she would have been, had she at first
+ carried out only her proper Compliment. An additional Number
+ is made, in order to supply an expected Mortality; but they
+ generally increase that Mortality to double or triple their
+ own Number. _Ibid. note to p. 48._
+
+In military Expeditions, Soldiers are put upon Ships Allowance;
+which, Dr. _Lind_ very justly observes, ought not, in Voyages to the
+warm Climates, be made up so much of salted Beef and salted Pork
+(which always tend to the Putrescent), as is the common Practice of
+the Navy; but that a greater Share of Biscuit, Flour, Oatmeal, Goarts,
+Rice, and other Stores of that Kind, ought to be laid in; and a
+greater Proportion of them, and a Less of the salted Meat, distributed
+among the Men: And he is certainly in the Right, when he says, that a
+full Animal Diet, and tenacious Malt Liquors, are well adapted to the
+Constitution of our own, and of other northern Climates; and that
+Sailors who visit the _Greenland_ Seas, and are remarkable for a
+voracious Appetite, and a strong Digestion of hard salted Meat, and
+the coarsest Fare, when sent to the _West Indies_, soon become
+sensible of a Decay of Appetite, and find a full gross salted Diet
+pernicious to Health. "Instinct (he says) has taught the Natives
+between the Tropics to live chiefly on a Vegetable Diet, of Grains,
+Roots, and subacid Fruits, with Plenty of diluting Liquors[128]."
+
+ [128] The following is the Diet established for the Seamen of
+ his Majesty's Navy.
+
+ Every Man is allowed a Pound of Biscuit, _Averdupoiz Weight_,
+ and a Gallon of Beer, _Wine Measure_, _per_ Day.
+
+ On _Sunday_ and _Thursday_, one Pound of Pork, and Half a
+ Pint of Peas, _Winchester Measure_.
+
+ On _Monday_, _Wednesday_, and _Friday_, one Pint of Oatmeal,
+ two Ounces of Butter, and four Ounces of Cheese.
+
+ On _Tuesday_ and _Saturday_ two Pounds of Beef.
+
+ It is left to the Commanders of Squadrons to shorten the
+ aforesaid Allowance of Provisions according to the Exigence
+ of the Service, taking Care that the Men be punctually paid
+ for the same. As it is thought for the Benefit of the Service
+ to alter some of the foregoing Particulars of Provisions in
+ Ships employed on foreign Voyages, it is to be observed, that
+
+ A Pint of Wine, or Half a Pint of Rum, Arrack, or Brandy,
+ hold Proportion to a Gallon of Beer.
+
+ Four Pounds of Flour, or three Pounds of the same with a
+ Pound of Raisins, Half a Pound of Currans, or Half a Pound of
+ Beef Suet pickled, are equal to a four Pound Piece of Beef,
+ or two Pound Piece of Pork with Peas.
+
+ Half a Pound of Rice is equal to a Pint of Oatmeal.
+
+ A Pint of Olive Oil is equal to a Pound of Butter, or two
+ Pounds of _Cheshire_ Cheese.
+
+ And Two-thirds of a Pound of _Cheshire_ Cheese is equal to a
+ Pound of _Suffolk_.
+
+ If Soldiers are sent as Passengers on board of King's Ships,
+ or on board of Transports, their Allowance is generally but
+ Two-thirds of the above.
+
+A Store of Vegetables, such as Mustard Seed, Garlick, Onions,
+Potatoes, pickled Cabbages and other pickled Vegetables, sour Crout
+and other Things of that Kind, which can be purchased at a cheap Rate,
+and preserved for some Months, ought to be laid in; which may be mixed
+with the Soops prepared for the Men, or given them to eat along with
+their salted Provisions.
+
+A Quantity of Beer, Cyder, or Wine, ought to be put aboard, and a
+certain Allowance distributed to each Man daily. When, for Want of
+these, Men are reduced to an Allowance of Spirits, they ought to be
+mixed with seven or eight Times the Quantity of Water, or made into
+Punch, by the Mixture of Water and Molosses, and the Juice of Lemons,
+before they are given to the Men; and, if Lemons cannot be got, Cream
+of Tartar, or Vinegar, ought to supply their Place; and it ought to be
+a Duty of one of the military Officers on board to see the Punch made,
+and distributed among the Men daily.
+
+It would be right, on all Expeditions into warm Climates, to send some
+Sloops of War, or other armed Vessels, before the grand Fleet, to take
+up a Quantity of Wine that will keep, either at the _Madeira_, or
+other Wine Countries; and afterwards to go to any of our Settlements
+that are nearest the Place of Destination, and to take in a Quantity
+of Limes, Lemons, Oranges, and other Fruits, and Vegetables which will
+keep for some little Time; and of Spirits, live Stock, and other
+Provisions proper for the Army; and then to meet the Fleet at the
+general Rendezvous. When once a Landing is made good, these Vessels,
+after having unloaded their Cargoes, may either be employed on other
+Services, or kept constantly going and coming for whatever Stores or
+Provisions are wanted for the Army or Fleet.
+
+A sufficient Quantity of Vinegar ought to be put on board of each
+Transport, both for the Men to eat with their Victuals, and likewise
+for fumigating and washing between Decks occasionally. And a Quantity
+of Molosses, or coarse brown Sugar, and of Lemons, or their
+inspissated Juice, or Cream of Tartar, ought to be allowed for making
+the Punch, as well as for other Purposes.
+
+If the Water become foetid, the Quantity to be used in the Day ought to
+be sweetened by Means of the Ventilator contrived by the ingenious Dr.
+_Hales_[129] for that Purpose.
+
+ [129] This Ventilator is no more than a long Tube, with a Tin
+ Box, about six Inches wide and four high, with a Number of
+ Holes at the Top, fixed at one End; and this Box is put down
+ to the Bottom of the Water, and the Nose of a Pair of Bellows
+ fixed to the other End of the Tube, which is above the Water;
+ by working the Bellows, fresh Air is driven through the whole
+ Body of Water, the putrid Effluvia are evaporated and
+ dispersed, and the Water becomes sweet in a very short Time.
+
+The Men ought to be brought upon Deck, and Roll called two or three
+Times a Day; they should be made to comb their Hair, and wash their
+Hands and Face every Day, and to shift themselves sometimes, if
+possible; and in every respect keep themselves as clean as the Nature
+of the Service will admit; and proper Exercises should be contrived,
+to keep them in Health.
+
+All the Parts of the Ship ought to be kept very neat and clean; and
+the Hold, and all between Decks, ought to be scraped and swept daily;
+and every Morning, in fair Weather, ought likewise to be washed, and
+afterwards sprinkled or washed with warm Vinegar, while the Men are
+upon Deck[130].
+
+ [130] This ought always to be done in the Morning, that all
+ the Parts of the Ship may have Time to dry before the Men go
+ to rest in their Births at Night; but it ought never to be
+ done after Sun-set.
+
+When the Weather will permit, Fires of dried Wood may be lighted in
+Iron Kettles between Decks, and Centinels set over them, and the Fires
+sprinkled with Rosin or Bits of Rope dipt in Tar, or with some cheap
+Aromatic; and these Fires may be carried into all the Parts of the
+Ship that Safety will permit, in order to dry and purify the Air[131].
+After this Operation all the Ports and Hatchways should be opened,
+and the Air in all the Parts of the Ship often renewed by working the
+Ventilators.
+
+ [131] It has been proposed, that the Air in Ships of War
+ should be purified in this Way both by Dr. _Lind_ and by
+ Mons. _de Hamel de Monceau_.
+
+The Mens Hammocks and Beds ought to be brought up upon Deck in fair
+Weather, and well aired, and afterwards put in their Places, and Fires
+lighted below Decks.
+
+When Troops, sent on an Expedition into warm Climates, arrive at the
+Place of their Destination, particular Care should be taken to guard
+them against the Diseases peculiar to such Climates, which are
+different from those common to our more northern Latitudes.
+
+Dr. _Lind_ says, that People coming first from a cold into a hot
+Climate are apt to have plethoric Symptoms; a Pain of the Head,
+Giddiness, a Sense of Weight, and Fulness of the Breast, and a slight
+Inflammation of the _tunica conjunctiva_; and that some are apt to be
+seized with ardent Fevers and Diarrhoeas. And all Practitioners have
+observed, that New-Comers into warm Climates are at first liable to
+Fevers tending to the Ardent, and are very subject to Fevers of the
+remitting and intermitting Kind, which are the Endemics of all warm
+Countries at certain Seasons of the Year; and after some Time they are
+apt to fall into Fluxes, the Yellow Fever, and other Diseases
+depending on a putrescent State of the Juices. In military Expeditions
+these Disorders are liable to be complicated with Fevers of the
+Malignant or Hospital Kind, if Care is not taken to prevent it. And
+nothing has been found to be more productive of Diseases in those warm
+Climates, than indulging freely in the Use of Spirits and other strong
+fermented Liquors; exposing one's self to the Damps, especially lying
+on the Ground after the Dews fall; and working hard, or using violent
+Exercise in the Heat of the Day.
+
+The best Preservatives against Diseases in warm Climates have been
+found to be,--1. Temperance; a Diet of light and easy Digestion,
+composed more of vegetable than of animal Food; such as a small
+Portion of fresh Meat, joined with a sufficient Quantity of
+Vegetables; Rice, _Indian_ Corn, and other Grains, and Roots of
+various Kinds, prepared in different Forms; well baked Bread; the
+moderate Use of ripe Fruits; and the free Use of mild cooling subacid
+Liquors, joined with a small Proportion of vinous or spirituous
+Liquors; carefully avoiding the too liberal Use of Wine, Spirits, or
+other strong fermented Liquors.--2. Great Care not to expose one's
+self to the Damps of the Night, nor lie down to sleep on the Grass, or
+in woody moist Places, in the Day; and to avoid all violent Exercise
+in the Heat of the Sun.--3. Such Means as tend to support the Spirits;
+for Chearfulness has been observed to contribute as much to the
+Preservation of Health, as Fear and Dejection of Spirits to the
+Production of Diseases.--4. Keeping the Body clean, and bathing
+frequently in the Sea, or in a River, in the Morning.
+
+And therefore, in warm Climates, Officers ought to be particularly
+careful to keep their Men sober and temperate; to procure them good
+Bread, and Plenty of Vegetables and fresh Meat, if possible; and
+where no other but salted Meat can be got, to make them boil a small
+Proportion of it in their Camp Kettles, along with Onions, Goarts,
+Rice, Carrots, Turnips, Greens, or any other wholesome Roots or Herbs
+which the Country affords, or they can get, and of these to prepare a
+good wholesome Soop for themselves; and where there is Plenty of the
+ripe acescent Fruits, which are reckoned wholesome, to distribute a
+moderate Quantity among the Soldiers daily, which will both help to
+preserve their Health, and prevent them from privately stealing and
+eating large Quantities to the Prejudice of their Health.--To
+encourage their Men, and keep up their Spirits.
+
+They should also prevent, as much as possible, the too free Use of
+Wine, Spirits, or other strong fermented Liquors; and in Wine
+Countries give every Man a daily Allowance of Wine, to be mixed with
+Water for his common Drink; and in Countries where nothing but Spirits
+can be got, make the Spirit be mixed with Water, or made into a very
+weak Punch, before it is given to the Men, as Lemons, Oranges, Limes,
+and other Fruits proper for this Purpose, are generally to be had in
+most warm Countries.
+
+They should be careful not to march their Men in the Heat of the Day,
+nor order them upon Duty where they must stand exposed to the Dews and
+Damps of the Night, unless where the military Operations absolutely
+require it.
+
+They should endeavour to make the Bottom of the Tents be covered with
+Straw, or dried Leaves of Trees, or dried Reeds, and with
+Blankets[132], for the Men to lie upon.
+
+ [132] A sufficient Store of Blankets has often been neglected
+ to be carried out in Expeditions into warm Climates; but
+ Blankets are no-where more necessary, as it is very
+ prejudicial to the Health of Soldiers to be obliged to lie
+ down on the bare Ground; and Straw, dried Reeds, and other
+ such Things, are often difficult to be got in the warm
+ Climates.
+
+The Time of standing Centinel, and being upon Out-posts, if possible,
+should be short, where Men are exposed to the scorching Heat of the
+Sun; and when Men are upon Out-posts in the Night, it should be
+recommended to them to lie down on the Ground as little as possible;
+and if they do it, to chuse a dry Place; and, where it can be done,
+to have it covered with Straw or a Blanket, and to have some light
+Covering to defend them from the Dews.
+
+The Tents should be covered with Boughs of Trees, and the Men should
+be ordered sometimes to strike them in the Middle of the Day, and air
+well every Thing within them.
+
+The Men should be obliged to keep themselves neat and clean; to comb
+their Hair, and change their Linen often; and if the Camp be near the
+Sea, or a large River, they ought to bathe early in the Morning as
+often as the Nature of the Service will permit. However the following
+Caution, mentioned by Dr. _Lind_, ought to be observed, which is, not
+to go into the cold Bath when overheated with Work or Liquor, or when
+the Stomach is full, or when a critical Eruption, called the prickly
+Heat, appears on the Skin[133].
+
+ [133] Dr. _Lind_ says, the Use of the cold Bath, either in
+ Tubs under the Forecastle, or to dip in the Sea early in the
+ Morning, has been found extremely beneficial in warm Weather
+ and hot Countries; and that he can affirm, from his own
+ Experience in hot Climates, that many Diarrhoeas and other
+ Complaints, the pure and sole Effect of an unusual and great
+ Heat (relaxing the System of the Solids, and occasioning a
+ Colliquation of the Animal Juices), have not only been cured
+ by cold Bathing; but their Return, and even the Attack of
+ such Diseases, effectually prevented by it. _Ibid._ p. 44,
+ &c.
+
+When Men are seized with inflammatory Symptoms on entering into warm
+Climates, they may be blooded freely: Afterwards they do not easily
+bear such copious Evacuations, but rather require to have them made in
+smaller Quantities, and very early and frequent, as Inflammations make
+a rapid Progress in warm Countries. Dr. _Lind_ says, many
+Practitioners disapprove of Blood-letting in the Countries lying under
+the Torrid Zone, on a Supposition that the Blood is too much
+dissolved; but he thinks that this Rule will admit of many Exceptions;
+and that Sailors (_and consequently Soldiers_), being strong and
+robust, and exposed to greater Vicissitudes of Heat and Cold, and more
+Excesses, and other Accidents in general, bear freer Bleeding than any
+other Set of People.
+
+After some Time, the Diseases in these warm Climates tend to the
+putrid Kind, and must be treated as such.
+
+In all Countries, and in all Climates, great Care ought to be taken in
+chusing the Ground on which Men are to encamp. Dry high Grounds,
+exposed to the Winds, where there is a free Current of Air, and which
+lie at a Distance from Marshes, stagnating Water, and large Woods, are
+generally healthful in very different Climates[134]. But Places
+situated low, where, on digging two or three Feet below the Surface of
+the Earth, you come to Water[135], and marshy Grounds, and Places
+surrounded with corrupt stagnating Water, are almost always the
+contrary, and very unhealthful; as are often those Grounds which are
+subject to be overflowed by large Rivers, and low Places covered with
+Wood, where there is no free Circulation of Air. However, it ought to
+be observed, that it is not the Neighbourhood of Water alone which is
+prejudicial, but the watery Vapours which keep the Air perpetually
+moist, and the Exhalations of corrupt Effluvia, which render such
+Places unwholesome; for the Neighbourhood of Rivers, and of the Sea,
+where the Tide ebbs and flows freely, has no such Effect, where the
+Situation is dry and airy; and those very unhealthy marshy Grounds
+often continue healthy in cold Weather, when their Waters are
+refreshed with Rains[136], and little or no moist putrid Exhalations
+rise from them; though, as Dr. _Pringle_ observes, in Summer and
+Autumn, when their Waters begin to corrupt, and the Exhalation is
+strong, they are always exposed to Diseases; and it is for this
+Reason that such Places are always very unhealthy in warm Climates.
+
+ [134] Mr. _du Hamel_ says, that the Air of the Island of _St.
+ Domingo_ is very fatal to _Europeans_; but it is observed
+ that those People who inhabit the rising Grounds are much
+ less exposed to Diseases than those who live in the Vallies.
+ _Sur la sante des Equipages_, art. i. p. 16.
+
+ [135] Ground may seem very dry and healthful, and yet be
+ quite the contrary, as Dr. _Pringle_ remarks is the Case in
+ the Neighbourhood of _Bois le Duc_, in _Flanders_, where
+ Water is found every where at the Depth of two or three Feet
+ from the Surface.
+
+ [136] Mr. _du Hamel_ remarks, that Places which were formerly
+ very subject to Diseases have become healthful when the Water
+ which surrounded them was refreshed by opening a
+ Communication with the Sea. _Ibid._ art. i. p. 18.
+
+Hence, where the military Operations will permit, Commanders, if
+possible, ought to chuse a dry Ground, whose Situation is high, and
+which admits a free Current of Air, such as on the Banks of Rivers,
+where there is generally a Stream of fresh Air, and Plenty of fresh
+Water to supply the Camp[137]; taking Care to avoid the Neighbourhood
+of low marshy Grounds, and corrupt stagnating Waters, especially in
+Summer, and in hot Climates.
+
+ [137] Dr. _Pringle_ observes, that where Grounds are equally
+ dry, that the Camps are always most healthful on the Banks of
+ large Rivers; because in the hot Season Situations of this
+ Kind have a Stream of fresh Air from the Water, tending to
+ carry off both the moist and putrid Exhalations.--And in
+ Cantonments we are not only to seek Villages removed from
+ marshy Grounds, but such as are least choaked with
+ Plantations, and stand highest above subterraneous Water. See
+ his _Observat. on Diseases of the Army_, 3d edit. p. 99.
+
+When Necessity obliges Commanders to take Post, or encamp in a wet or
+marshy Ground, they should endeavour to make it as dry as possible, by
+ordering Trenches to be cut for Drains across the Field and round the
+Mens Tents; to see that the Ground within the Tents be well covered
+with Straw; to order the Tents to be struck at Mid-Day, in dry warm
+Weather, and the Men to dry and air the Straw, and change it
+frequently; to have a proper Supply of Blankets for the Men, and to
+take Care that they be well cloathed, especially those who go upon
+Duty in the Nights; and, in the northern Climates, to have Fires in
+proper Places for warming the Men and drying their Cloaths, and for
+correcting the Dampness of the Air[138].
+
+ [138] The Negroes on the Coast of _Guinea_, and some of the
+ _Indians_, both of whom sleep on the Ground, have constantly
+ a Fire producing a little Smoak burning in the Hutts where
+ they sleep, which corrects the Moisture of the Night, and
+ renders the Damp of the Earth less noxious; and during the
+ Time of the very unwholesome Fogs on the Coast of _Guinea_,
+ called Harmattans, which lay waste whole Negroe Towns, the
+ Smoak of Wood, of pitched Staves, and such Things, are found
+ to be the best Correctors of this thick Air. See Dr. _Lind's
+ Means of preserving the Health of Seamen_.
+
+In Countries lying under the Torrid Zone, the Parts near the Sea Shore
+are often marshy, or close and covered with Wood, or have swampy
+Beaches, and are very unwholesome; and therefore where Soldiers aboard
+of Transports keep their Health, Commanders ought to be very careful
+not to allow them to land, till they come to the Place of their
+Destination. Dr. _Lind_ observes, that Men commonly live more healthy
+in warm Climates at Sea, where the Air is dry and serene, and the Heat
+moderated by refreshing Breezes, than when they arrive in Harbours, or
+get within Reach of the noxious Vapours which arise from many Parts of
+the Land[139].
+
+ [139] Dr. _Lind_ says, that it is constantly observed in
+ unhealthy Harbours, that the Boats Crews employed in wooding
+ and watering the Ships, who are obliged to lie on Shore,
+ suffer most. _Ibid._ p. 72.
+
+When Necessity requires Parties to be landed for Wood or Water, or on
+other Duties, they should always be obliged to return and lie aboard
+at Night; and if that cannot be done, they should be cautioned to
+avoid lying down to sleep on the Grass, where the Air is fresh, or
+they are exposed to the Dews; and to pitch their Tents on a rising
+Ground, covered with Straw or dried Reeds, and a Blanket; and to use
+the other Precautions necessary for encamping in these warm Climates;
+for where this Care has been neglected, the Consequences have
+frequently proved fatal[140].
+
+ [140] A very remarkable Instance of this we have related by
+ Dr. _Lind_. In the Year 1739, in _Mahon_ Harbour, a Party of
+ Men were sent with the Coopers from Admiral _Haddock_'s Fleet
+ to refit and fill the Water Casks, who, finding an artificial
+ Cave dug out of a soft sandy Stone, put their bedding into
+ it; every one who slept in this damp Place was infected with
+ the Tertian Fever, then epidemic in _Minorca_, and not one in
+ eight recovered. At the same Time the Men aboard the Ships
+ continued healthy; and others, who were afterwards sent on
+ the same Duty, enjoyed perfect Health by being obliged to
+ sleep in their respective Ships. He says, he has known a
+ whole Boat's Crew seized next Morning with bad Fevers by
+ sleeping near the Mangroves, with which the Sides of the
+ Rivers are frequently planted in the Torrid Zone. _Ibid._ p.
+ 74, 75.
+
+On unhealthful Coasts, the noxious Land Vapours often affect the Crews
+of Ships that run up into Rivers or Harbours, and cause great
+Sickness; and therefore in such Places Ships should anchor at as great
+a Distance from the Shore as can well be done, that they may be
+exposed to the Sea Breezes, and as much to the Windward of the Woods
+and Marshes as possible; and if the Anchorage is safe, one should
+prefer the open Sea to running up into Rivers or Creeks[141].
+
+ [141] The higher that Ships sail up the Rivers upon the Coast
+ of _Guinea_, the more sickly they become: Such, however, as
+ keep at Sea beyond the Reach of the Land Breezes (that is,
+ two or three Leagues at Sea), are for the most part healthy.
+ _Lind_, _ibid._ p. 65. The Malignity of these Land Vapours
+ often does not extend itself to any considerable Distance, as
+ we know by manifold Experience. The Troops in _Zealand_ were
+ very unhealthy when Admiral _Mitchel_'s Squadron, which lay
+ but a little Way from the Shore, enjoyed perfect Health.--Dr.
+ _Pringle's Observat. on the Diseases of the Army_, p. 1.
+ chap. vii.--In _July_ and _August_ 1744, two Ships, belonging
+ to Admiral _Long_'s Squadron in the _Mediterranean_, lying
+ near the Mouth of the River _Tyber_, began to be affected,
+ while others, though at a very small Distance, but further
+ out at Sea, had not a Man sick. _Lind_, _ibid._ p. 66.
+
+Cleanness and Neatness in the Camp is another Article that ought to be
+particularly regarded. _Portius_, _Ramazini_, and most other Authors
+who treat of Camp Diseases, attribute those of the putrid Kind in a
+great Measure to the Stench and putrid Effluvia arising from the
+Excrements of Men and Beasts, and from the dead Bodies of Men, Horses,
+and other Animals, lying unburied in the Neighbourhood of Camps, and
+have in a particular Manner mentioned the Necessity of burying such
+putrid Substances. Dr. _Pringle_ has very justly recommended the
+Digging of Deep Pits for Privies in Camp, and covering the Excrements
+with Earth daily[142] till the Pits are near full, and then to fill
+them up with Earth, and dig new ones; and to punish every Person who
+shall ease himself any where in Camp but in the Privies: And he
+remarks, that when the Camp begins to turn unhealthy, that often the
+only Means that will preserve the Health of the Men, is to change the
+Ground, and to leave behind all the Filth and Nastiness which gave
+Rise to those putrid Disorders.
+
+ [142] The divine Lawgiver _Moses_ has enjoined Cleanliness in
+ the Camp to the _Jews_ in a particular Manner, when he says,
+
+ "Thou shalt have a Place also without the Camp, whither thou
+ shalt go forth abroad; and thou shalt have a Paddle upon thy
+ Weapon, and it shall be when thou wilt ease thyself abroad
+ thou shalt dig therewith, and shalt turn back and cover that
+ which cometh from thee. For the Lord thy God walketh in the
+ Midst of thy Camp; therefore shall thy Camp be holy, that he
+ see no unclean Thing in thee, and turn away from thee."
+ _Deuteronomy_, chap. xxiii. verses 12, 13, 14.
+
+In fixed Camps, the striking the Tents at Mid-Day in fair Weather,
+and turning and airing the Straw, and changing it often, as
+recommended by Dr. _Pringle_, will contribute much to preserve the
+Health of the Men; and making the Men wash themselves daily, and
+change their Linen often, and keep themselves otherwise clean, ought
+never to be omitted by the Officers.
+
+All military Authors have recommended to Commanders always to have
+Straw for their Men when they come to their Ground, if possible; and
+to have the Army well supplied with Provisions; giving proper
+Encouragement to the Country People, and to Suttlers and Merchants of
+all Sorts, to bring in every Kind of Provisions and other Necessaries
+to Camp; and preventing, as much as possible, the Soldiers from
+moroding. And the Commanders of every Corps ought to take Care that
+their Men form themselves into Messes, and that Stoppages be made for
+buying them Provisions.
+
+In _Germany_ every Regiment of the _British_ Troops contracted with a
+Butcher, who was obliged to carry along with them, at all Times, a
+certain Number of live Sheep and Oxen to kill when wanted, and to sell
+the Meat at a fixed Price. Every Soldier was obliged to take a certain
+Quantity, which was paid for by Stoppages made in his Pay; and this
+Meat was boiled in the Camp Kettles, with such Roots and Greens as
+could be got; by which Means the Men, whenever they could use their
+Kettles, had always a good warm Soop, as well as Meat, to refresh them
+after their Fatigues, which, along with their Ammunition Bread, made a
+good wholesome Food.
+
+In Countries where Fruit is plentiful, a certain Quantity of what is
+fully ripe, distributed to the Men in warm Weather, and in hot
+Climates, will contribute to preserve their Health, though the Abuse
+of it will prove prejudicial; but unripe and acrid Fruits are always
+hurtful[143].
+
+ [143] The _British_ Soldiers in _Germany_ used sometimes to
+ hurt their Health by eating great Quantities of raw unripe
+ Apples, Plumbs, and other unripe Fruits; but the foreign
+ Troops had a much better Method of using such Fruits: They
+ commonly boiled or stewed them, and eat them with Bread, or
+ with their Meat, which in a great Measure corrected their bad
+ Qualities.
+
+ The Orders in the _French_ Camp, prohibiting the Men from
+ eating unripe Fruit, were strictly complied with every-where
+ in _Germany_ during the late War.
+
+Water is another Article which Commanders endeavour to have their Camp
+well supplied with, and therefore they generally encamp near Rivers or
+Rivulets. Where the Stream is small, Care ought to be taken that its
+Course be not interrupted, and that no Filth or Nastiness, or any
+Thing that will spoil or corrupt the Water, be thrown into it.
+
+When there are no Rivers or Rivulets near a Camp, and the Men are
+supplied from Wells, if the Water is not pure, very often the digging
+of deep Pits, and covering the Bottom and Sides with large Stones, and
+over these a Lay of Sand, Gravel, or Chalk, will make the Water pure
+in a few Hours.
+
+In fixed Camps, where the Water is bad, _Portius_[144] proposes
+straining it thro' Sand, and has given Figures of Machines to be used
+for that Purpose; but the Method proposed by Dr. _Lind_ is still more
+simple, which is, to get a broad Cask with one End struck out; then
+put a longer Cask, with both Ends struck out, in the Middle of it;
+fill the short Cask one-third with Sand, and the inner longer Cask
+above one-half; fill the Rest of the inner Cask with the Water, which
+will filter through the Sand, and rise above the Sand in the outer
+Cask, where it may be allowed to run off into Vessels placed to
+receive it, by Means of a Cock, put into the Side of the outer Cask,
+fifteen or twenty Inches above the Level of the Sand.
+
+ [144] See the Treatise published by Dr. _Luc. Anton. Portius_
+ in 1686, _de Militis in castris sanitate tuenda_, _part._ ii.
+ _cap._ vi. In this Book we have many useful Things mentioned
+ relative to the Health of Soldiers.
+
+Where there are no such Conveniences for purifying the Water, what is
+used for Drink ought to be mixed with a small Proportion of Spirits,
+or Wine, or with Vinegar, or Cream of Tartar, when neither of the
+other two can be got; and if the Water be previously boiled, it will
+be so much the better.
+
+In Expeditions into warm Countries, where fresh Water is difficult to
+be had, a few Stills, with a proper Apparatus, ought to be carried
+out; and after a Landing is made, the Stills ought to be set to work
+for distilling fresh Water from Sea Water in the Manner mentioned by
+Dr. _Lind_[145]; and although a sufficient Quantity cannot be
+distilled for serving the whole Army, yet enough may be got in this
+Way for the Use of the Sick.
+
+ [145] Dr. _Lind_ relates a Number of Experiments of his
+ having distilled Sea Water in different Manners, as
+ recommended by others; and concludes, that the best Way of
+ getting fresh Water from Salt, is to distil the Sea Water by
+ itself, without any Mixture; and he proposes having a Still
+ Head to the Coppers or Iron Pots in which the Meat is dressed
+ aboard a Ship. _Ibid. note to p. 84_, &c.
+
+When Men are very warm, after long Marches, and other hard Duties, in
+Summer; Officers should endeavour to prevent their swallowing
+immediately great Quantities of cold Water, and persuade them to wait
+a little till they cool; and at such Times, if Spirits can be got
+easily, to order a small Quantity to be mixed with the Water in each
+Man's Canteen.
+
+Though the Abuse of vinous and spirituous Liquors is very destructive
+to the Constitution, yet these same Liquors, given in Moderation to
+Soldiers on Service, during the Times of great Fatigues, are some of
+the best Preservatives of Health. Spirits, for common Use, ought to
+be mixed with Water; and in the hot Climates made into Punch; though
+in very cold and wet Weather, and in damp Nights, a Glass of pure
+Spirits, given to the Men going on Duty, is of great Service; for it
+is always observed, that Men are much less apt to catch Diseases from
+being wet when they are upon a March, or at hard Work, than when they
+stand Centinels, or are upon Out-Posts where they move but little, or
+when they lie down in their wet Cloaths; and that they are less liable
+to be affected by the Weather after a hearty Meal, or drinking a Glass
+of Spirits, or some generous Liquor, than when their Stomachs are
+empty.
+
+An Infusion of Bark or other Bitters, and of Garlick, in Spirits, has
+been found to encrease their Efficacy as Preservatives both against
+the Effects of Cold and malignant Distempers. Dr. _Lind_ has
+recommended an Infusion of Garlick in Spirits as one of the best
+Stomachics and Diaphoretics he knows in cold wet Weather. And many
+have recommended a Tincture of the Bark[146]: Towards the End of the
+Year 1743, Mr. _Tough_, one of the Apothecaries to the _British_
+military Hospital in the late War, then a Mate to a marching Regiment,
+was ordered to go down the _Rhine_ with a Party of Sick, who had the
+Seeds of the Hospital Fever among them, and were to go in Bilanders,
+from _Germany_ to _Flanders_. Having had a Cask or two of Brandy put
+aboard as Part of the Stores for the Sick, he was afraid lest the Men
+should make too free with the Spirits; to prevent which he threw in a
+Quantity of Bark into each Cask, and gave the Men regularly, Morning
+and Evening, a Glass of this bitter Tincture. At the same Time, the
+Men were kept extremely clean. By these Means most of the Sick mended
+upon the Passage, without the Malignant Fever appearing again amongst
+them; whereas, Dr. _Pringle_, who takes Notice of the other Parties
+who came from the same Hospitals in _Germany_, tells us, that the
+Malignant Fever broke out in a violent Degree, and Half the Number
+died by the Way, and federal others soon after their Arrival[147].
+
+ [146] During the Campaign in _Hungary_, in the Year 1717,
+ Count _Boneval_ preserved both himself and Family from
+ Disorders, by taking himself, and making all his Domesticks
+ take, two or three Times a Day, a small Quantity of Brandy,
+ in which Bark had been infused, at a Time when all the Rest
+ of the Army were infected with malignant Disorders. A
+ Regiment in _Italy_ continued healthy by the Use of the Bark,
+ when the Rest of the _Austrian_ Army, who did not pursue the
+ same Method, were greatly annoyed with Sickness. See
+ _Kramer._ quoted by Dr. _Lind_.
+
+ [147] _Observat._ part. i. chap. iii.
+
+Commanding Officers ought always to endeavour to proportion the Time
+the Men are to be upon Duty to the Weather and the Nature of the
+Climate. The Time of standing Centinel in very hard Frost, and in cold
+wet Weather, or in the Heat of the Day in Summer, when the Weather is
+very warm, and in hot Climates, ought to be shorter than when the
+Weather is dry and more temperate.
+
+The Marches of Troops ought, if possible, during the Time of very hot
+Weather, to be made either very early in the Morning, in the Evening,
+or at Night; and Officers, during the Course of an active Campaign,
+ought to spare their Men as much as possible.
+
+And when they are in Quarters, and have nothing to do, they should
+narrowly inspect into their Manner of living; and have them out daily,
+when the Weather will permit, and exercise them, or march them two or
+three _English_ Miles a-Day, in order to prevent their falling sick
+for want of Exercise; for Soldiers left to themselves are very subject
+to Diseases when they come into Quarters after an active Campaign, by
+leading too indolent a Life, if Officers do not take Care to prevent
+it. However, at such Times, the Exercise ought to be moderate, and the
+Men should not be brought out in wet Weather.
+
+
+
+
+OF MILITARY HOSPITALS.
+
+
+Whenever Men are seized with Distempers, they ought immediately to be
+separated from those in Health, and either sent to the Regimental[148]
+or General Hospital.
+
+ [148] Some of the regimental Surgeons in _Germany_, when they
+ took the Field, had always some spare Tents carried along
+ with their Medicine Chests; and when any of their Men fell
+ sick in Camp, and they could get no House for a regimental
+ Hospital in Villages, they ordered these Tents to be pitched,
+ and had the Ground within well covered with Straw and
+ Blankets, and then put the Sick into them, and there took
+ Care of them till they found an Opportunity of sending them
+ to the Flying Hospital.
+
+There is no Part of the Service that requires more to be regarded than
+the Choice of proper Places for Hospitals, and the right Management
+of them, on which the Health and Strength of an Army often depends;
+for in wet unwholesome Seasons, if infectious Disorders get into the
+Hospitals, which possibly might have been prevented by proper Care,
+they often weaken an Army in a very short Time far more than the Sword
+of the Enemy.
+
+We have no Account of the particular Manner in which the Antients took
+Care of their Sick and Wounded in Times of War; for although we read
+in _Homer_[149] of Surgeons or Physicians attending the _Grecian_
+Camp, and in _Xenophon_[150] of _Cyrus_'s having appointed Physicians
+to his Army; and we learn from _Tacitus_[151] and _Livy_[152], that
+the wounded _Romans_ were received into the Houses of the Nobility,
+and had Physicians to attend them, and were furnished with
+Fomentations and other proper Remedies; and from _Justin_[153], that
+the _Lacedemonians_ followed the same Method: yet these Authors make
+no Mention of the particular Oeconomy or Manner in which these
+Hospitals were conducted.
+
+ [149] _Homer_ mentions _Podalirius_ and _Machaon_, sons of
+ _AEsculapius_, as two excellent Physicians or Surgeons in the
+ _Grecian_ Army. Vid. _Iliad_, lib. ii. Physic and Surgery
+ were antiently exercised by the same Persons.
+
+ [150] Vid. _Xenophon. de Institut. Cyri._ lib. i. et viii.
+
+ [151] _Tacitus_, after giving an Account of 50,000 People
+ being killed by the Fall of an Amphitheatre at _Fidena_,
+ during the Time of a Shew of Gladiators, has these Words:
+ "Ceterum post recentem cladem, patuere procerum domus,
+ fomenta & medici passim praebiti; suit urbs per illos dies,
+ quanquam maesta facie veterum institutis similis, qui magna
+ post praelia saucios largitione & cura sustentabant." _Vid.
+ lib._ iv. _Annal._ Sec. 63.
+
+ [152] In _Livy_ we find the following Passage: "Neque immemor
+ ejus quod initio consulatus imbiberat, conciliandi animos
+ plebis, saucios milites curandos dividit patribus. Fabiis
+ plurimi dati, nec alibi majore cura habiti." _Vid. lib._ ii.
+ cap. xlvii.
+
+ [153] _Justin_ mentions the same Thing of the _Spartans_
+ after their Defeat at _Sellasia_--"Patentibus omnes domibus
+ saucios excipiebant, vulnera curabant, lapsos reficiebant."
+ _Vid. lib._ xxviii. cap. iv.
+
+The Hospitals commonly wanted for an Army acting on the Continent,
+are,
+
+1. One in the Rear, to follow their Motions, so as to be always ready
+to receive the Sick from Camp, which is called the Moveable or Flying
+Hospital. 2. One or more, at some Distance, in Towns, to receive such
+of the Sick as can be moved from the Flying Hospital, when they are
+obliged to go from one Place to another; or when a greater Number of
+Sick is sent to them than they can easily take Care of[154].
+
+ [154] When Parties of Sick or Wounded are to be sent from
+ Camp, or from one Hospital to another, Care ought to be taken
+ that they are placed properly in the Waggons; that they have
+ proper physical People, Nurses, &c. to attend them; as well
+ as Provisions, and other Necessaries, so as to be in no
+ Danger of wanting any Thing while they are on their Journey.
+
+Each of the Hospitals ought to be provided with Physicians, Surgeons
+Mates, Purveyors, or Commissaries, and others, to attend and take Care
+of the Sick.
+
+Besides the physical People who attend the Hospital, one or two
+Physicians ought to go along with the Army to attend the Commander in
+Chief, and the General and Staff Officers, in Case of Sickness; and an
+Apothecary, provided with a small Chest of Medicines, ought to attend
+at Head Quarters to make up the Prescriptions of the Physicians.
+
+A Number of Hospital Surgeons also, with Mates, ought to attend the
+Army, to be ready in Case of an Action. These ought to be attached to
+the Suite of the Commanders of the different Corps or Brigades, and to
+be quartered or encamped with them. And each Surgeon should be
+provided with a Waggon or some Horses loaded with a proper chirurgical
+Apparatus, as Instruments, Bandages, Lint, and other Things necessary
+for taking Care of the Wounded.
+
+A small Quantity of Medicines, some Wine, Rice, portable Soop, &c. and
+Utensils for a small Hospital, and two, three, or four hundred Sets of
+Bedding, should be carried about with the Army, in Case of an Action,
+for the Use of the Wounded, till they have Time to receive Assistance
+from the Flying Hospital. Some of the Bedding ought to be carried on
+Horseback, so as to be at Hand when any of the Surgeons are sent with
+Detachments that are going upon an Attack.
+
+To prevent crowding the General Hospitals in Winter Quarters, every
+Regiment ought to take Care of their own Sick, and to have proper
+Hospitals fitted up for them.
+
+Dr. _Pringle_ has laid down some very good Directions with regard to
+the Choice of Places fit for Hospitals, and the Method of preventing
+infectious Disorders in them; and we find many excellent Hints of this
+Kind in Dr. _Lind_ and Mons. _du Hamel_'s Treatises on the Means of
+Preserving the Health of Seamen, and some likewise in Dr.
+_Brocklesby_'s late Treatise on military Disorders.
+
+In the Time of Service the Commander in Chief generally orders the
+Hospitals to be established in Towns or Villages that least interfere
+with the military Operations, to which the Sick and Wounded can most
+easily be conveyed; and which he can best protect from the Insults of
+the Enemy[155].
+
+ [155] The _Roman_ Generals seem to have sent their Sick and
+ Wounded into Towns, in the same Manner as is done by those of
+ the present Time. For we read in _Caesar's Commentaries_ of
+ this Method having been practised on more Occasions than one.
+ In the sixty-second Chapter of the third Book, _de Bello
+ Civili_, we have the following Passage: "Itaque nulla
+ interposita mora, sauciorum modo & aegrorum habita ratione,
+ impedimenta omnia silentio prima nocte ex castris _Apolloniae_
+ praemisit, ac conquiescere ante iter confectum vetuit. His una
+ legio missa praesidio est."--And immediately after, in chap.
+ lxv. "Itaque praemissis nunciis ad Cn. Domitium Caesar
+ scripsit, & quid fieri vellet ostendit: praesidioque
+ _Apolloniae_ cohortibus iv. _Lissi_ i. tres _Orici_ relictis;
+ quique erant ex vulneribus aegri depositis; per Epirum atque
+ Arcarniam iter facere caepit."
+
+ And in the twentieth chapter, _de Bello Africano_, we read:
+ "_Labienus_ saucios suos, quorum numerus maximus fuit, jubet
+ in plaustris deligatos _Adrumentum_ deportari."
+
+ It would be a right Measure, in the Beginning of every War,
+ to settle by a Cartel that military Hospitals on both Sides
+ should be considered as Sanctuaries for the Sick, and
+ mutually protected; as was agreed upon between the late Earl
+ of _Stairs_, who commanded the _British_ Troops, and the Duke
+ _de Noailles_, who commanded the _French_ in the Campaign in
+ _Germany_ in the year 1743. See _Dr. Pringle's Preface_.
+
+In Towns, the Places fittest for Hospitals are public Buildings, which
+have large dry airy Apartments, situated on a high Ground, where there
+is a free Draught of Air, and a Command of Water.
+
+In Winter, those Houses, which have open Fire Places in the Rooms, are
+always preferable to such as have close Stoves, or no Fire Place at
+all; for an open Fire Place serves to keep up a free Circulation of
+Air in a Room, as well as to keep it warm. And for the same Reason,
+where nothing but Stoves can be got to warm the Wards, the Wynd
+Stoves, which open into the Room or Ward, are vastly preferable to the
+close ones.
+
+Where there are no public Buildings, private Houses answering nearest
+to the above Description are most proper for Hospitals. In general,
+Houses with small Rooms make but bad Hospitals; and very Damp and
+close Places ought by all Means to be avoided.
+
+In Summer, when the Moveable or Flying Hospital is ordered into
+Villages, large Barns, and the largest airy Houses, are the best.
+
+Churches, situated on a dry high Ground, make good Summer Hospitals;
+and in Winter, when Necessity obliged us sometimes to use them in
+_Germany_ for this Purpose, they were found to answer very well, when
+we had Bedsteads or Cradles for the Men to lie upon, and the Wynd
+Stoves to keep them of a moderate Heat.
+
+In making Choice of Houses for Hospitals, particular Regard ought to
+be had to the Privies or Necessaries; because, where their Smell is
+offensive, there is always Danger of infectious Disorders. If,
+therefore, there be no proper Conveniencies of this Kind about an
+Hospital, such ought to be contrived so as to prevent any Danger from
+their putrid Effluvia. If there be a River near the Hospital, the
+Necessaries may be made above it at a Place where there is a rapid
+Stream below. In Villages deep Pits may be dug in the Ground behind
+the Hospital, and Seats made over them, as in Camp; and a thick Lay of
+Earth be thrown above the Foeces every Morning, till the Pits are near
+full, and then they must be filled up, and others dug to supply their
+Place.
+
+When once the Places are fixed upon for Hospitals, every Ward ought to
+be made perfectly sweet and clean; first, by scraping and washing with
+Soap and Water, and afterwards with warm Vinegar; and then they ought
+to be fumigated with the Smoke of wetted Gunpowder and of Aromatics,
+and afterwards well dried and aired by lighting Fires, and opening
+the Windows, before any Sick are admitted.
+
+After this the Beds ought to be laid; in doing of which great Care
+should be taken not to crowd the Wards too much, as nothing corrupts
+the Air so much, or so soon brings on infectious Disorders. Dr.
+_Pringle_ says, the Beds ought to be laid so thin, that a Person
+unacquainted with the Danger of bad Air, might imagine there was Room
+for double or triple the Number. In high lofty Apartments, and in
+Churches, and other large Places, the Beds may be laid much closer
+together than in Rooms with low Cielings. In Churches, or such Places,
+thirty-six square Feet, or a Square of six Feet by six, may be allowed
+for each Man; but in common Wards we must allow from forty-two square
+Feet, _i. e._ six by seven Feet, to sixty-four square Feet, or eight
+by eight, according to the Height of the Cieling, the Airyness of the
+Place, and the Nature of the Diseases of the Patients.
+
+The Bedding most fit for Hospitals, is Palliasses and Bolsters filled
+with Straw, Sheets, and Blankets, as they can easily be washed.
+Feather Beds and Matrasses are apt to retain Infection, and cannot be
+easily cleansed. In the fixed Hospitals, Bedsteads or Cradles may be
+set up for laying the Bedding on: But in the Moveable or Flying
+Hospital the Bedding must be, for the most part, laid on the Floor.
+
+When once the Beds are laid, and the Sick arrive, some of the
+Gentlemen belonging to the physical Department ought to attend, to
+distribute the Sick properly through the Hospitals.
+
+All the Surgery Patients, such as have Wounds, Ulcers, Sores, the
+Venereal Disease, &c. should be separated from the Rest, and put
+either into particular Wards by themselves, or into an Hospital fitted
+up for that Purpose under the Direction of the Surgeons.
+
+Those labouring under infectious Fevers and Fluxes, should each of
+them be placed in good airy Wards by themselves, where the Beds are
+laid much thinner than in the other Wards of the Hospital. If the Flux
+Wards have a Privy near them, where the Men can ease themselves,
+without being offensive either to their own Ward, or any other Part of
+the Hospital, they are so much the fitter for such Patients. In the
+Hospital I attended at _Bremen_, the Flux Ward had a Necessary that
+opened into the River _Weser_, and at _Natzungen_ a deep Pit was dug
+in the Field about twenty Yards from the Barn where the Flux Men lay,
+which kept these Wards always sweet.
+
+Patients that have got the Itch, or any other infectious Distemper,
+ought likewise to be put into separate Wards by themselves; and at all
+Times a Place should be set apart for those who may be taken ill of
+the Measles or Small-Pox. A House separated from the other Hospitals,
+with a distinct Set of Nurses and other Attendants, bids fairest to
+prevent the Infection from spreading.
+
+When once the Sick are properly ranged, the next Care must be to
+prevent infectious and malignant Disorders from being generated, and
+from spreading amongst the Sick; which is principally to be effected
+by keeping the Sick and the Hospital extremely clean and well-aired,
+and the Wards as sweet, and free from putrid and offensive Smells, as
+possible.
+
+Every sick Man, as soon as he arrives at an Hospital, should be washed
+with warm Water, or if there is a warm Bath, or bathing Tub, to be put
+into it; and afterwards be supplied with a clean Shirt[156] well-aired
+before he be put to Bed; and his own dirty Linen should be immediately
+carried to the Wash-House: And every Morning each Nurse ought to carry
+a Bucket full of warm Water, and a Piece of Soap and a Towel, round to
+each of her Patients, and make them wash their Hands and Face, and
+their Feet, when dirty.
+
+ [156] Every military Hospital ought to have a Number of
+ Shirts belonging to it, for the Use of the Sick who arrive
+ without having clean Linen with them. As soon as their own
+ Shirts are washed and dried, or that new ones are provided by
+ their Regiments, the Hospital Shirts ought to be taken from
+ them.
+
+Every Morning all the Wards ought to be scraped and swept, and
+afterwards sprinkled with warm Vinegar; and when dirty, they ought to
+be washed after the Fires are lighted.
+
+Every Thing in the Wards, and about the Sick, should be kept as clean
+as possible; the Chamber-Pots and Close-Stools ought to be carried
+away as soon as used, and immediately emptied and washed before they
+be brought back.
+
+The Windows of the Wards ought to be kept open to admit fresh Air
+Morning and Evening, for a longer or shorter Time, according as the
+Weather will permit.
+
+If the Wards are close, and the Cieling too low, Dr. _Pringle_ advises
+to remove some Part of them, and to open the Garret Story to the
+Tiles[157]; and if the Opening of the Windows is not sufficient to
+air the Wards, Ventilators of different Kinds, such as those mentioned
+by Dr. _Hales_ and Dr. _Pringle_, may be used, especially when the
+Weather is hot.
+
+ [157] In Wards which are too close, it has been found that
+ one or two square Holes (of about six or eight, or ten Inches
+ diameter), cut in the Cieling, and a Tube made of Wood fitted
+ to it, and carried up into the Chimney of the Ward above, so
+ as to enter above the Grate, is one of the best Contrivances
+ for procuring a free Circulation of Air; as the foul Air,
+ which is lightest, and occupies the highest Part of the Ward,
+ finds a free Exit by these Tubes: We have such Tubes now
+ fixed in several of the Wards in _St. George_'s Hospital. A
+ Hole cut above the Door of the Ward, or in the upper Part of
+ the Windows, and one of what are called the _Chamber
+ Ventilators_ fixed in it, will answer, where Holes cannot be
+ conveniently cut in the Cieling.
+
+In Winter, Fires should be lighted in all the Wards where it can be
+done.
+
+In foreign Countries, when we meet with Hospitals where there are no
+Places for open Fires, but only close Stoves, different Contrivances
+may be used to renew the Air. Ventilators of different Kinds may be
+used, or Openings made in the Doors and Windows. In Winter 1761-62,
+some of the Wards in the Hospital at _Bremen_ which I attended had
+such Stoves. In order to keep up a free Circulation of Air in those
+Wards, I directed large Holes to be cut in the lower Part of the Door
+in each Ward, and two Grooves to be made on the Outside of the Door,
+above and below the Hole, parallel to each other, in which a Board
+slided; by means of which, the Hole could be either quite covered or
+only in Part, or left entirely open; and I directed a Casement, about
+eight or nine Inches square, to be made in the upper Corner of each
+Window. After the Fires were lighted, upon removing the Board which
+covered the Hole in the Door, and opening the little square Windows, a
+Current of fresh cool Air rushed into the Ward by the Door, while the
+heated foul Air found an Exit by the Windows. In very cold Weather,
+the Opening of the small Windows was sufficient; but in mild Weather,
+and in Summer, it was necessary to keep both open.
+
+The Wards should be daily fumigated by Means of Aromatics, or wetted
+Gunpowder thrown on burning Coals, put in an Iron Pot or Chaffern, or
+with the Steams of warm Vinegar placed in the Middle of the Ward. Dr.
+_Lind_ says, that although Cleanliness and a pure Air contribute much
+to prevent infectious Disorders, or to check them, yet that they of
+themselves are not always sufficient; but that he seldom or never knew
+a proper Application of Fire and Smoke to be unsuccessful in producing
+the happy Consequence of effectually purifying all tainted Places,
+Materials, and Substances[158].
+
+ [158] Dr. _Lind_ tells us, that the Ships of War in his
+ Majesty's Service are purified by Fire and Smoke, and gives
+ the Process by which it is done; and he says, that he never
+ heard of any Ship, which, after being carefully and properly
+ smoked, did not immediately become healthy for the Men.--See
+ _First Paper on Fevers and Infection_.--And he observes, that
+ these Steams and Smoke, which are inoffensive to the Lungs,
+ besides correcting the bad Quality of the Air, produce
+ another good Effect; which is, to make both the Patients and
+ Nurses desirous of opening the Doors and Windows for the
+ Admission of fresh Air. _Ibid._ p. 51.
+
+In all Military Hospitals, at least in the fixed ones, one Ward ought
+to be always kept empty; and whenever a malignant Fever, or any other
+infectious Disorder, breaks out in any Ward, the Men ought to be
+removed into this empty one; and the foul Ward purified, by washing
+and cleaning it well with Soap and Water, and then with warm Vinegar;
+and afterwards purifying it with Smoke, in the same Manner as is
+practised in his Majesty's Ships of War; and Fires should be lighted
+daily, and the Windows kept open for some Time, before any Sick be
+again admitted into it.
+
+As soon as any Patient dies, the Body ought to be removed to the Dead
+House; and the Bedding he lay upon should be carried away immediately,
+and not used again till it has been smoked, well-aired, and washed.
+
+All the Linen of Patients in Fevers, Fluxes, and other infectious
+Disorders, ought to be changed often; and all the foul Linen and foul
+Bedding of the Hospital should be smoked with the Fumes of Brimstone,
+or of wetted Gunpowder, in a Place set apart for that Purpose; and Dr.
+_Lind_ advises to steep them first in cold Water, or cold Soap Lees,
+before putting them in warm Water; as it is dangerous for any Person
+to receive the Steam that may at first arise, where this Precaution is
+not used.
+
+All the Cloaths, of Soldiers who die in Hospitals, ought to be sent to
+the Smoke House, and be well fumigated, and afterwards aired, before
+they are put up in the Store-House.
+
+The next Thing to be considered about a Military Hospital is the Diet
+of the Patients, which should consist of good wholesome Provisions,
+that can be purchased easily, and at a cheap Rate[159].
+
+ [159] The _French_, and many other Nations, give their
+ Patients Meat Soops in acute Diseases, and after capital
+ Operations; and they allow them but little Bread or other
+ Preparations of Vegetable Substances: But these Meat Soops
+ without Bread do not nourish the Patient sufficiently, and
+ tend too much to the Putrescent; and this is one Reason why
+ more Sick die in the _French_ than in the _British_
+ Hospitals.
+
+Good Bread[160] is a standing Article of Provisions for an Hospital in
+all Countries and in all Climates; and a certain Quantity of it ought
+to be distributed to each Man daily.
+
+ [160] On Expeditions where a Siege is expected, a Quantity of
+ Flour ought to be carried out, and a Number of portable Ovens
+ for baking bread for the Sick, which may be put up after the
+ Troops have made good their Landing.
+
+The Breakfast and Supper in most Military Hospitals must be made of
+Water Gruel or Rice Gruel; as either Rice or Oatmeal can be got in
+most Places, and are very portable.--Water Gruel is in general
+preferable to the Rice Gruel, because most Patients nauseate the Rice
+Gruel, after eating it for some Days, but not the Water Gruel, as
+every Person, who has attended the Military Hospitals, must have
+experienced. Where both Rice and Oatmeal can be had, Rice Gruel may
+be used two or three Times a Week by Way of Variety.
+
+But although Rice Gruel is not so proper for constant Use, yet Rice
+should always make an Article among the Stores for an Hospital, as it
+is useful for making Rice Water for Drink; and it can be boiled or
+ground, and made into a light Pudding, and in short may be used in a
+Variety of Forms to make a good and wholesome Food for the Sick.
+
+Oatmeal is cheaper than Rice, and can be procured almost every-where
+in _Europe_, where Armies make Campaigns; as Oats make such a great
+Article in the Forage for Horses. And a sufficient Quantity can at any
+Time be ground into Meal for the Use of the Sick, at the Mills which
+are employed for making Flour for the Bakery, if there be none nearer
+the Hospital.
+
+In Countries where neither Oatmeal nor Rice can be had, _Indian_ or
+some other Corn, which is known to be wholesome, and which the Country
+affords, may be employed in their Place.
+
+When fresh Meat can be got, the Men who are on full Diet, and the
+Nurses and other Servants about the Hospital, should have Meat for
+Dinner; and the Meat that is boiled for them ought to make Broth for
+the Sick who are kept on a low or middle Diet. Some Barley or Rice
+should be added to the Broth; and a small Quantity of Carrots,
+Turnips, or other Vegetables, boiled along with them, will make it
+more agreeable to the Taste.
+
+On Expeditions where nothing but salted Meat can be had, a Quantity of
+portable Soop should always be carried out for the Use of the Sick;
+which with Water and some Barley, and fresh Vegetables, when they can
+be got, will make a good Soop or Broth. On such Occasions, the Dinner
+ought to consist of Soop and Bread, or of light Puddings made of Flour
+or of Rice, of boiled Rice or Barley, or of Panado, &c.
+
+Nurses and recovered Men may be allowed salted Meat twice or thrice a
+Week.
+
+The common Drink of Military Hospitals ought to be Rice and Barley
+Water, with a small Proportion of Spirits and Sugar. Small Beer is a
+good Drink where it can be easily procured; as is Wine and Water, or a
+very small Negus, or very weak Punch in warm Climates.
+
+Besides this Diet, extraordinary Indulgences may be occasionally
+allowed to particular Patients, as Wine, Brandy, Sugar, Milk. And the
+Physicians and Surgeons ought to have a discretionary Power to order a
+Vegetable or any other proper Diet for Patients in the Scurvy, or any
+other particular Complaints.
+
+
+The Established Diet of a Military Hospital may be,
+
+ _Breakfast._ _Dinner._ _Supper._
+ One Pint of Water | |
+ or Rice Gruel. | |
+ | |
+ Water Gruel made | |
+ with 3 or 4 Ounces | |
+ of Oatmeal, a | |
+ little common Salt,|One Pound |
+ and with or without|of boiled fresh |
+ Full Diet, a little |Meat. | As Breakfast.
+ Sweet Oil, and | |
+ two Spoonfuls of | |
+ Wine. | |
+ | |
+ Rice Gruel made | |
+ with two Ounces of | |
+ Rice, one Spoonful | |
+ of fine Flour, a | |
+ little | |
+ common Salt and | |
+ Sugar. | |
+ -----------------------------------------------------------------
+ |One Pint of |
+ |Broth, half |
+ Middle Diet, Ditto. |Pound of boiled | Ditto.
+ |Meat. |
+ -----------------------------------------------------------------
+ |One Pint of |
+ |Broth, or |
+ Low Diet, Ditto, or according|half a Pint of |
+ to the Patient's |Panado, with |
+ Appetite. |two Spoonfulls | Ditto.
+ |of Wine, |
+ |and a Quarter |
+ |of an Ounce |
+ |of Sugar. |
+
+
+The daily Allowance of Bread to be one Pound to each Man.
+
+The common Drink for those on full and middle Diet to be Rice or
+Barley Water, with two Spoonfuls of Brandy to each Pint, and a Quarter
+of an Ounce of Lump Sugar; small Beer, or very weak Punch; or Wine and
+Water, two Ounces of Wine to a Pint of Water, and a Quarter of an
+Ounce of Sugar. The Quantity not to exceed three Pints _per_ Day.
+
+Those on low Diet to have Rice or Barley Water as above, with or
+without Wine or Brandy.
+
+
+The Diet Boards hung up in the Hospitals may be made with the
+following Columns, nearly as they were with us in _Germany_.
+
+ Regiments.|Mens | Diet |Wine. |Brandy.|Milk. |Sugar. |
+ |Names.|F.|M.|L.|1/2 Pints. |Ounces.|1/2 Pints. |Ounces.|
+ ----------+------+--+--+--+----------+-------+----------+-------+
+ | | | | | | | | |
+ | | | | | | | | |
+ | | | | | | | | |
+ | | | | | | | | |
+ | | | | | | | | |
+ | | | | | | | | |
+ | | | | | | | | |
+ | | | | | | | | |
+ | | | | | | | | |
+ | | | | | | | | |
+ | | | | | | | | |
+ ----------+------+--+--+--+----------+-------+----------+-------+
+
+When such Diet Boards are kept in an Hospital, and the Mens Names and
+Regiments are once wrote down, the Patients may with very little
+Trouble be put upon the full, middle, or low Diet, with so much of the
+above-mentioned Extraordinaries as may be judged proper.
+
+If any Thing else be wanted for the Sick, the Physician ought to give
+a particular Order in Writing for it, the Columns here marked being
+only for such Things as are most frequently wanted.
+
+It should be a general Rule in all Military Hospitals, that, when a
+Party of Sick arrives, every Man may have immediately a Mess of Water
+Gruel given him, and afterwards be put on low Diet till it is ordered
+otherwise by the Physician or Surgeon who attends him.
+
+It is not to be supposed that the Diet here mentioned can be strictly
+kept to in all Parts of the World; for it must often be varied
+according to the Difference of the Climates, and to the Provision of
+the Countries where the Scene of War may be.
+
+Whenever a Moveable or Flying Hospital is to attend an Army, a
+Quantity of Bedding, and of all Utensils for forming an Hospital,
+ought to be put up in the Waggons, together with Provisions of
+different Kinds, such as Oatmeal, Rice, Sago, Brandy, Wine, Sugar, &c.
+A Butcher with a Stock of live Cattle, and a Baker with a proper
+Quantity of Flour for making Bread ought constantly to attend; and a
+Number of empty Waggons should likewise be always in Readiness, to
+transport the Sick when the Hospital moves, or when a Party is to be
+sent to the fixed Hospitals.
+
+When Troops go upon an Expedition, besides the common Hospital Ships,
+another Ship ought to be properly fitted up for the Reception of sick
+Officers[161]; and every Hospital Ship ought to be supplied with all
+Sorts of Provisions, and other Necessaries fit for forming an
+Hospital, before they leave _England_.--And one or more armed Vessels
+loaded with Provisions, Wine, and all Sorts of Necessaries for the
+Sick, ought to attend them; or if the Expedition be intended for the
+warm Climates, these Vessels ought to go before the Fleet to take up
+Wine and Fruits, such as Lemons, Oranges, &c. Vegetables of different
+Kinds, and a live Stock for the Use of the Sick.
+
+ [161] If there be no Ship fitted up for the Reception of sick
+ Officers, those who are taken ill on Expeditions must be in a
+ most miserable Situation; as there is no Place to receive
+ them in the common Hospital Ships, they must remain almost
+ without Assistance in a crowded Cabin amongst People in
+ Health; as was the Case in some of our Expeditions during the
+ late War.
+
+All Hospitals attending Expeditions should carry out among their
+Stores a Number of large Tents for lodging the Sick and Wounded
+immediately on making good their Landing. Where a Siege is expected
+which will take up Time, and where no Accommodations for the Sick can
+be had till the Siege is over, a Ship or two, with Boards, and other
+Necessaries for building large Sheds, or temporary Hutts, for the
+Sick, as proposed by Dr. _Brocklesby_, ought to go along with the
+Fleet, or meet them at the Place of their Destination. Such thatched
+Sheds, or Hutts, are very necessary in the warm Climates, as the
+perpendicular Rays of the Sun, beating upon Canvass, make Tents
+intolerably hot. When any of our own Settlements happen to be near the
+Place attacked, a fixed Hospital may be established there; either in
+Houses, if proper ones can be found; or in temporary Sheds or Hutts
+erected for that Purpose; and some Vessels, properly fitted up, may be
+kept going with the Sick and Wounded, and bringing back the recovered
+Men.
+
+At every Military Hospital a Serjeant's Guard ought to mount; and
+Centinels be placed at the Doors of the Hospital, 1. To prevent all
+Visitors, who have not proper Leave, from coming into the Hospitals;
+as such People oftentimes crowd the Wards, disturb the Sick, and are
+apt to catch infectious Distempers, and to spread them among the
+Troops. 2. To take Care the Patients do not go out of the Hospital
+without having a Ticket[162] of Leave for that Purpose, signed by the
+Physician, Surgeon, or Apothecary, belonging to the Hospital. 3. To
+prevent spirituous Liquors, or other Things of that Kind, being
+clandestinely carried into the Hospital.
+
+ [162] At every Hospital there ought to be a Number of printed
+ Tickets lying ready to be filled up and signed by the
+ Physicians and Surgeons, and no Man ought to be allowed to go
+ out without a Ticket so signed.
+
+The Serjeant of the Guard, attended by the Ward Master, ought, every
+Morning, to go round the Wards to call a Roll, and see that every Man
+is in his Ward; and to do the same at Night before the Hospital Doors
+are shut, and at this Time to order every Person out of the Hospital
+who does not belong to it. And the Serjeant, every Morning, ought to
+report to the Physician, Surgeon, or Apothecary, every Man's Name who
+was found to be absent at Roll-calling; and whether he found every
+Thing regular and in good Order in going his Rounds.
+
+Every large Military Hospital ought to have one Head Nurse, and a
+sufficient Number of other Nurses, to attend and take Care of the
+Sick.
+
+Orders to the following Purport, hung up in every Military Hospital,
+would serve to shew the Nurses and Patients what their Duty is, and
+to maintain Regularity and good Order through the whole Hospital.
+
+
+_Matron, or Head Nurse._
+
+Every Matron, or Head Nurse, is to go round all the Wards of the
+Hospital at least twice a Day, Morning and Evening; to see that the
+Nurses keep their Wards clean; that they behave themselves soberly and
+regularly, and give due Attendance to their Patients; and to examine
+the Diet of the Patients, and see that it is good and well dressed;
+and if she finds any Thing amiss, to report the same to the Physician,
+Surgeon, or Apothecary, of the Hospital.
+
+
+_Common Nurses._
+
+1. The Nurses are to give due Attendance to their Patients; and to
+keep them always as neat and clean, as the Nature of their Distempers
+will admit of; to give them their Diet regularly; to be particularly
+careful to see them take the Medicines ordered by the Physicians,
+according to the Directions given; to report to the Physician,
+Surgeon, or Apothecary, any Faults or Irregularities which any of
+their Patients may have committed; and to acquaint the Ward Matter and
+Head Nurse of the Death of any of their Patients as soon as it
+happens, that proper Care may be taken of their Cloaths and Effects.
+
+2. They are to keep their Wards extremely clean, to sprinkle them
+every Morning with Vinegar, and to fumigate them with the Smoke of
+wetted Gunpowder, or of Frankincense, or any other Aromatics that may
+be thought proper; in fair Weather to keep open the Windows of their
+Wards, twice or thrice a Day; for a longer or shorter Time, as the
+Weather will permit; to attend at the Steward's Room for the
+Provisions of the Patients at the Hours appointed for that Purpose;
+and to pay implicit Obedience to the Matron, or Head Nurse, in what
+relates to their Duty; and punctually to obey all Orders they receive
+from the Physician, Surgeon, or Apothecary, of the Hospital.
+
+3. They are to keep themselves clean and decently dressed, and to
+observe the strictest Rules of Sobriety; remembering, that if any one
+is found intoxicated with Liquor, that she is immediately to be sent
+to the Guard, and afterwards discharged.
+
+4. They are not to absent themselves from their Wards, unless when
+employed in the Discharge of their Duty; nor to go out of the Hospital
+to which they belong, without having a Ticket of Leave signed by the
+Physician, Surgeon, Apothecary, or Head Nurse, belonging to the
+Hospital.
+
+5. They are not to throw Nastiness of any Kind out at the Windows, but
+to carry it to the common Necessaries, and to empty the Chamber Pots
+and Close-stools as soon as used, and be careful to wash them before
+they bring them back.
+
+6. They are not, upon any Pretence whatever, to alter the Diet ordered
+by the Physicians or Surgeons to the Patients on the Diet Boards; nor
+to suffer their Patients to use any other Diet than what is allowed by
+the Hospital; nor are they to bring, or allow others to bring, Meat,
+spirituous Liquors, or other Things of that Kind, into their Wards,
+except what is allowed by the Physicians or Surgeons. Whenever any
+Thing of this Kind is found in any of the Wards, it ought immediately
+to be thrown into the common Necessary; and if it be found in the
+Custody of a Nurse, she ought to be confined in the Guard, or
+discharged.
+
+7. Nurses guilty of great Neglect of Duty, or of getting drunk and
+using their Patients ill, or of stealing, or concealing or taking away
+the Effects of Men who die in the Hospital, are to be immediately sent
+to the Guard, and reported to the Commanding Officer of the Place,
+that they may be tried by a Court-Martial, and be confined, whipped,
+or otherwise punished, as the military Law directs; all Followers of
+Armies on foreign Service being equally subject to the military Law as
+the Soldiers themselves.
+
+
+_Patients._
+
+1. All sick Soldiers, on their Arrival at a Military Hospital, are to
+be washed all over with warm Water, or to go into a warm Bath; and
+afterwards to wash their Face and Hands every Morning, and their Feet
+occasionally, with warm Water and Soap, brought round every Morning by
+the Nurses for that Purpose; and they ought to comb their Head every
+Day. If they be too weak to wash and comb themselves, it is to be done
+by their Nurses.
+
+2. Every Patient is to be shaved and have clean Linen twice a Week, or
+oftener if requisite.
+
+3. They are punctually to obey the Directions given them, and to take
+the Medicines ordered by the Physician; and none to be allowed to go
+out of the Hospital without a Ticket of Leave signed by the Physician,
+Surgeon, or Apothecary, of the Hospital.
+
+4. They must commit no Disorder or Riot, but in all Respects behave
+themselves well.
+
+5. If any Man disobeys the Orders he receives from the Physicians or
+Surgeons, or is irregular in Conduct, gets drunk, and commits Riots in
+the Hospital, or is found guilty of Theft or other Crimes, the same
+is to be reported to the Commanding Officer of the Place, and he to be
+tried by a Court-Martial, and punished as soon as his Strength will
+permit.
+
+In conducting the Military Hospitals, we found that it was always
+right to discharge the Patients from the sick Hospitals as soon as
+they were recovered, and to send them either to Billet, or to a
+convalescent Hospital; because recovered Men are always the most
+riotous; besides they crowded the Hospitals, and were in Danger of
+catching fresh Disorders from those who were sick; and therefore the
+recovering Men in every Hospital ought to be reviewed once or twice a
+Week by the Physician or Surgeon, and the Names of such Men as are
+well enough, to be marked; in order that they may be sent the next Day
+to the convalescent Hospital, or to Billet. A Return of those marked
+for Billet ought immediately to be sent to the Officers on
+convalescent Duty.
+
+When a convalescent Hospital is established, it ought to be put under
+proper Regulations; the following are those which I drew up for that
+established at _Osnabruck_ in _April_ 1761, and which were found to
+answer the Purpose intended.
+
+
+_Regulations for a Convalescent Hospital._
+
+1. That this Hospital be entirely occupied by such Men as are
+recovered from Diseases; that no Men be sent there but those whose
+Names are returned to the Purveyor's Office by the Physician or
+Surgeon of the Hospital.
+
+2. That all the Patients shall be upon full Diet, unless in particular
+Cases it be ordered otherwise by the Physician or Surgeon.
+
+3. That all the Patients shall breakfast, dine, and sup, at regular
+stated Hours, in the Hall appointed for that Purpose: Breakfast to be
+ready at nine, Dinner at one, and Supper at seven o'Clock in the
+Evening.
+
+4. That no Patient shall carry up any Victuals into the Wards
+appointed for sleeping in; and if any Patient does not attend at the
+regular Hours of Meals, no Allowance of Victuals shall be made him in
+the Place of such Meals, unless he has been absent on Hospital
+Business, or been confined to Bed by Sickness.
+
+5. That as soon as the Men are come down Stairs to Breakfast, the
+Wards in which they sleep shall be cleaned out and sprinkled with
+Vinegar, and the Windows opened to air them.
+
+6. That the Doors of this Hospital shall be locked every Night at
+eight o'Clock, and no Man be allowed to come in or go out after that
+Time. The Doors to be opened again at seven o'Clock in the Morning.
+
+7. That the said Hospital is to be visited two or three Times a Week
+by the Physician, Surgeon, and Apothecary, who are to see that the
+above Orders are complied with; to examine the Diet, and take Care
+that every Thing is carried on properly; and to prescribe for any
+little Disorders the Men may be affected with.
+
+8. That one of the Hospital Mates be appointed to visit this Hospital
+daily, to administer any Medicines which may have been prescribed by
+the Physician; to apply any Dressings ordered by the Surgeon; and to
+acquaint the Physician or Surgeon if any of the Men be so bad as to
+require their Attendance, or to be sent back again to the Sick
+Hospital.
+
+9. That for the better executing these Regulations, orderly Serjeants
+or Corporals be appointed for the Care of the Men; who shall mount a
+Guard of six or more of such of the Patients of the said Hospital as
+are fit for this Duty--That the Serjeants are to call a Roll of all
+the Patients regularly three Times a Day, before Breakfast, Dinner,
+and Supper; to see that the Men behave themselves soberly and
+decently; and that they keep themselves clean, and commit no Riots;
+and to confine in the Guard such as commit Riots and other
+Irregularities, or whom they find drunk, or who stay out all Night;
+and to report the same to the Officer on Duty.
+
+10. That an Officer on convalescent Duty do visit the said Hospital
+daily at the Times of Roll-calling, to see that every Thing be carried
+on properly; and to receive the Reports from the Serjeants, and give
+what Orders he may think proper for the better regulating the said
+Hospital.
+
+11. That if at any Time it should happen that there are more
+Convalescents than the Hospital can hold conveniently, a Review be
+made of all the Patients, and the strongest and most healthy be sent
+to Billet.
+
+12. That a Review be always made, when any Party is going to join the
+Army, to pick out the Men who are fit to join their Regiments.
+
+The Physical Officers employed in the Military Hospitals, are
+Physicians, Surgeons, and Apothecaries.
+
+No Person ought to be appointed a Physician to the Army, or Military
+Hospitals, without previously undergoing the same Examination at the
+College of Physicians, as those do who enter Fellows and Licentiates
+of the College, that none but proper Persons may be employed. On such
+Examinations the Physician General to the Army ought to be allowed to
+sit as one of the Censors of the College.
+
+The Surgeons are all obliged to pass an Examination at Surgeons Hall
+before they are appointed, and the Apothecaries ought in like Manner
+to pass an Examination at Apothecaries Hall.
+
+The Mates employed in the Service ought, previous to their
+Appointment, to be examined both in Surgery and Pharmacy, as the
+Service commonly requires their acting in both Branches.
+
+The Direction of all Military Hospitals ought always to be committed
+to the Physicians, who have the immediate Care of Hospitals.
+
+When an Army is acting on a Continent, and there is a Number of
+Hospitals in different Places, the Physician who attends the Commander
+in Chief ought to be made Physician General and Director of the
+Hospitals, with proper Appointments; and all Orders from Head Quarters
+ought to go immediately thro' this Channel.
+
+Every other Physician at the different Hospitals ought to direct every
+Thing about the Hospital which he attends, and his Orders ought to be
+punctually obeyed; and he ought to keep up a constant Correspondence
+with the Physician General; acquainting him from Time to Time with the
+State of the Hospital, and what is wanted for it; and he ought
+punctually to obey whatever Orders he receives from the Physician
+General.
+
+If there be separate Hospitals for the Surgery Patients, the eldest
+Surgeon ought to direct every Thing in the Hospital he attends; and
+when any Thing is wanted for his Hospital, to report the same to the
+Physician General.
+
+The directing and purveying Branches ought never to be entrusted to
+the same Person, as the Temptation of accumulating Wealth has at all
+Times, and in all Services, given Rise to the grossest Abuses, which
+have been a great Detriment to the Service, as well as to the poor
+wounded and sick Soldiers, and has occasioned the Loss of many Lives.
+And therefore neither the Physician General, nor any of the Physicians
+or Surgeons of the Army, or any other Person concerned in the
+Direction of the Military Hospitals, ought ever to act as Purveyor or
+Commissary; nor ought they ever to have any Thing to do with the
+Accounts, Contracts, or any other Money Affairs relating to the
+Hospital; and if ever they be found to intermeddle in these Affairs,
+they ought to be immediately dismissed the Service.
+
+The purveying or commissariate Branch ought to be entirely distinct
+from the physical. The Purveyors or Commissaries ought punctually to
+obey whatever Orders they receive from the Physicians or Surgeons; to
+provide every Thing for the Hospital; to keep regular Accounts of all
+the Men who come into, or go out of the Hospitals; and from Time to
+Time to make Returns to Head Quarters of all the Men in Hospitals; and
+their Accounts ought to be controuled by such Persons as the
+Government may think proper.
+
+Every Physician and Surgeon of a Military Hospital ought to visit the
+Sick at regular stated Hours, and the Mates to attend and go round
+with them, and receive and execute their Orders.
+
+Every Mate ought to have a certain Number of Patients allotted him,
+for whom he is to make up all Medicines, dress all Sores, and execute
+whatever Orders he receives from the Physician, Surgeon, or
+Apothecary. That the Mates may know and execute their Duty, proper
+Orders in Writing should be hung up in the Apothecaries Shop for that
+Purpose. The following are those which I gave out at all the Hospitals
+I attended in _Germany_.
+
+
+_Orders for the Mates._
+
+1. That all the Gentlemen do attend at the Apothecaries Shop every
+Morning at eight o'Clock, to assist in making up the common Medicines
+of the Day, and afterwards to go round the Hospitals with the
+Physicians and Surgeons.
+
+2. That every Mate have a Book for writing the Prescriptions of the
+Physicians in, which is to be kept in the following Order.--First, to
+mark the Patient's Name and Regiment; then the Day of his Entry into
+the Hospital and his Disorder; then the Prescriptions of the
+Physician; and after all the Day of his Discharge, or of his Death.
+_Ex. gr._
+
+ _John Clarke_, 20th Regiment. _Jan._ 1. Fever.
+
+ _Jan._ 1. V. S. unc. x.--H. salin. cum pulv. contrayerv.
+ 4r. die.--2. Emplast. vesicat. dorso, &c.
+
+ Discharged or dead _Jan._ 28.
+
+3. That every Mate make up himself the Physician's Prescriptions for
+his own Patients, and afterwards go round and administer them, or give
+them to his Patients with proper Directions; that he bleed his own
+Patients, and dress any slight Sores they may have, which do not
+require their being sent to the Surgery Hospital.
+
+4. That every Mate go round amongst his Patients in the Evening, to
+see that every Thing is well conducted, and to report to the Physician
+or Apothecary if any Thing extraordinary happens.
+
+5. That two of the Mates attend all Day at the Apothecary's Shop to
+receive any Sick that may arrive, and to place them properly; to make
+up what Medicines they may immediately want; to order each of them a
+Mess of Water Gruel; and if any Thing extraordinary occurs, to send an
+orderly Man to acquaint the Physician or Apothecary with the same. The
+orderly Mates to make up likewise for Officers, or others, all
+Prescriptions sent to the Apothecary's Shop through the Day.
+
+A Joint of Meat, roasted or boiled, for Dinner, and a Bottle of Wine,
+was allowed to the orderly Mates, by Lord _Granby_'s Order, that they
+might not absent themselves from their Duty.--Where there was
+Conveniency for it, a Mate lodged in the Hospital.
+
+The Apothecary ought to take Care of the Medicines; to go round the
+Hospitals in the Morning before the Time of the Physician's visiting;
+to see that the Wards are in proper Order; that the Nurses and other
+Servants have done their Duty; to examine into the State of the Sick,
+and to see that the Provisions are good; and make a faithful Report
+of all these Things to the Physician when he arrives.--To take Care
+that the Mates prepare in the Morning the Medicines that are commonly
+wanted for the Day; and that they afterwards make up faithfully the
+Prescriptions of the Physician; to go round the Hospital again in the
+Evening, to see that the Sick have got their Medicines regularly; and
+to make the same Enquiries as in the Morning.
+
+The Apothecary should always be lodged near the Hospital, to assist in
+Case of any Accidents happening, or of Sick arriving at the Hospital.
+
+When there are any strong infectious Disorders in Military Hospitals,
+the physical Gentlemen may use the following Precautions to guard
+themselves against Infection.
+
+1. Never to visit the Sick with an empty Stomach; but to eat Breakfast
+before they go into the Hospital.
+
+2. To have a Suit of Cloaths reserved for visiting the Hospital, and a
+waxed Linen Coat to wear above them in going round the Wards; and as
+soon as they have come out of the Hospital, to wash and change their
+Linen and Cloaths.
+
+3. Before they go into the Wards, to order that they be well cleaned
+out, and sprinkled with Vinegar, and afterwards fumigated, and aired
+by opening the Windows, or by Working the Ventilators.
+
+4. If the Infection be very strong, to take a Glass of the spirituous
+Tincture of the Bark just before they go into the Hospital.
+
+5. To put small Rolls of Lint, dipped in camphorated Spirits, up the
+Nostrils, and to direct a Vessel, with warm camphorated Vinegar, to be
+carried round, and held near the Patients they are examining.
+
+6. In examining Patients affected with the Petechial Fever, or any
+other malignant Distempers, to stand at some little Distance, and ask
+what Questions they may think proper; and when they come near, to feel
+the Pulse, and examine the Skin, not to inspire while their Head is
+near the Patient's Body; but after being fully satisfied in these
+Points, to retire a little, and ask what other Questions may be
+necessary.
+
+It would be right to establish some military Rank for every
+commissioned Officer of the Hospital on Service, and to settle the
+same Subordination in the physical as in the military Department. By
+these Means, the Service would be carried on with greater Order, and
+more Advantage to the Sick.
+
+And it would be right, in Times of War, to add a Clause in the Mutiny
+Bill to allow any military Officer on convalescent Duty to call in the
+commissioned physical Officers to assist in making up a Court-Martial,
+when there are not a sufficient Number of military Officers in a
+Place, to try convalescent Soldiers guilty of Crimes. For in Times of
+Service, very often a sufficient Number of military Officers cannot be
+spared to be on Duty at the different Military Hospitals; and at all
+such Places the Convalescents are generally very disorderly, when they
+know that there is not a sufficient Number of Officers to form a
+Court-Martial for punishing them. Where-ever there are a sufficient
+Number of military Officers, no physical Officer ought ever to be
+called upon as a Member of a Court-Martial.
+
+Men, in Time of Service, are often apt to saunter in and about
+Hospitals, and there learn all Manner of Debaucheries, and lose all
+Sense of Discipline; and therefore, to keep up Order and Decorum,
+there ought to be, at every Fixed and every large Military Hospital, a
+military Inspector or Commander, an Officer of known Activity and
+Probity; and a Number of Officers on convalescent Duty sufficient to
+form a Court-Martial whenever required.
+
+The Duty of the Military Inspector, or Commander, should be, to take
+Care of all Convalescents on Billet; to see that the Officers under
+him do their Duty, and maintain the same Regularity and Discipline
+among the Men belonging to their respective Corps, as if they were
+with their Regiments; and that the Men attend the Parade and
+Roll-calling; and that they always appear neat and clean.
+
+He ought, from Time to Time, to visit the Hospitals; to see if they
+are kept clean; to enquire if the Men behave well, if the Diet is
+good, and the Officers, Nurses, and Servants, do their Duty; and if he
+finds any Thing amiss, to report the same to the Physicians and
+Surgeons of the Hospital, or to the Purveyor or Commissary, or others,
+under whose Department it may be, that the same may be immediately
+rectified; and if he finds that the superior Officers of the Hospital
+overlook such Abuses, notwithstanding his Representations, to report
+the same immediately to the Head Quarters.
+
+He ought to order one of the Officers on convalescent Duty to visit
+the Hospitals daily, to make the Enquiries above-mentioned, and to
+give him a Report of the same in Writing.
+
+The Purveyor or Commissary ought to make a Return to him twice or
+thrice a Week of every Man admitted into, or discharged from, the
+Hospitals, or who dies in them; marking in the Return the Name of
+every Man, and the Company and Regiment he belongs to; that he may
+report the same to the Officers of the different Brigades or
+Regiments.
+
+The Military Inspector ought to have the Power of providing Billets
+for all Officers and Soldiers about Hospitals; and the Names of all
+Men to be discharged from Hospitals should be sent to him the Day
+before they are discharged, that he may provide Billets for them; and
+next Day the Men ought to march from the Hospitals to the Parade, to
+receive their Billets, and the Orders of the Military Inspector, and
+of the Officers of the Corps they belong to.
+
+The Military Inspector ought to see that the Arms of the sick Men, and
+the Arms and Cloaths of those who die and are lodged in the Magazines,
+be properly taken Care of; and that the Stores of the different
+Regiments be properly looked after.
+
+As the Service often makes it necessary at Military Hospitals, where
+the Number of Sick is great, to employ the convalescent Soldiers[163]
+as orderly Men and Servants about Hospitals, all Men thus employed
+ought to have a special Leave from the Military Inspector for so
+doing; and no Man should be employed in any Capacity as a Servant
+about an Hospital, who at that Time is on the Books as a Patient. And
+all Men employed about the Hospital ought to be reviewed once a Week
+by the Military Inspector, and likewise whenever a Party of
+Convalescents is going to join the Army, or their Regiments; that no
+Man may be allowed to remain with the Hospital, after he is fit to do
+Duty in his Regiment.
+
+ [163] In the _French_ Hospitals there are always a Number of
+ Men who attend their Sick who belong to the Hospital, so that
+ they have no Occasion to employ their Convalescents, as we
+ are often obliged to do, where the Sick are attended by
+ Nurses, who are commonly Soldiers Wives, and not so capable
+ of doing such laborious Work as the Men.
+
+When the Military Inspector is absent, the eldest Officer on
+convalescent Duty ought to act in his Place.
+
+Every Officer sent on convalescent Duty ought, as soon as he arrives
+at the Place where the Hospital is, to wait on the Commandant, or
+Military Inspector; to acquaint him of his Arrival, and to receive his
+Commands. He ought then to go to the Purveyor or Commissary's Office,
+to get a List of all the Soldiers who are in or about the Hospital,
+and belong to the Regiment or Brigade he is employed for, wherein
+those on Billet are distinguished from those in Hospitals. The next
+Day he ought to parade all those marked on Billet, to see if the
+Number of Men agrees with the List given him, and to examine in what
+State each Man is, and how he is employed; and then he ought to go
+round the Hospitals, attended by an orderly Serjeant, to see all the
+Men in the Hospitals, and to know if the List given him at the
+Purveyor's Office was right; and afterwards he ought to send every Day
+a Serjeant or Corporal to see the Men in Hospitals, and to report to
+him when any Men are discharged or die.--And he ought to procure from
+the Military Inspector a Return of all the Men of his Corps, who are
+either admitted into, or discharged from Hospitals, on the Days when
+such Returns are made. He ought to make all his Men on Billet appear
+regularly on the Parade at Roll-calling, and to oblige them to keep
+themselves clean and their Arms in good Order, and to endeavour to
+preserve the same Regularity and Discipline as when they are with
+their Regiments. And whenever a Party is to be sent to join their
+Regiments, he ought to have all his Men particularly examined; and
+those Men who are found to be perfectly recovered, should be sent to
+their Regiments.
+
+If every Officer on convalescent Duty conform to these Directions, no
+Man can ever be detained without his Knowledge in or about Hospitals,
+as he must always know where every Man is, in what State of Health,
+and how he is employed; and may at any Time be able to make a Return
+to the Brigade or Regiment for which he is employed, of every Man who
+is admitted, discharged, or dies in the Hospital.
+
+
+FINIS.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of An Account of the Diseases which were
+most frequent in the British military hospitals in Germany, by Donald Monro
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BRITISH MILITARY HOSPITALS ***
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