tailieunhanh - The Plague at Marseilles Consider'd
The Contagious Distemper, which has become the Reproach of our Faculty here for above a Month past, is more violent than that at Marseilles; it breaks out in Carbuncles, Buboes, livid Blisters, and purple Spots; the first Symptoms are grievous Pains in the Head, Consternations, wild Looks, a trembling Voice, a cadaverous Face, a Coldness in all the extreme Parts, a low unequal Pulse, great Pains in the Stomach, Reachings to Vomit, and these are follow'd by Sleepiness, Deliriums, Convulsions, or Fluxes of Blood, the Forerunners of sudden Death. In the Bodies that are open'd, we find gangrenous Inflammations in all the lower Parts of. | Plague at Marseilles Consider d by Richard Bradley 1 THE PLAGUE AT MARSEILLES CONSIDER D RICHARD BRADLEY Plague at Marseilles Consider d by Richard Bradley Project Gutenberg s The Plague at Marseilles Consider d by Richard Bradley 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 Title The Plague at Marseilles Consider d Author Richard Bradley Release Date March 28 2010 EBook 31807 Language English Character set encoding ISO-8859-1 START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PLAGUE AT MARSEILLES Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http . This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive Canadian Libraries. THE PLAGUE AT MARSEILLES CONSIDER D With REMARKS upon the PLAGUE in General shewing its Cause and Nature of INFECTION with necessary Precautions to prevent the spreading of that DIREFUL DISTEMPER. Publish d for the Plague at Marseilles Consider d by Richard Bradley 2 PRESERVATION of the People of GREAT-BRITAIN. Also some Observations taken from an Original Manuscript of a Graduate Physician who resided in LONDON during the whole Time of the late Plague Anno 1665. By RICHARD BRADLEY F. R. S. The THIRD EDITION. LONDON Printed for W. MEARS at the Lamb without Temple-Bar. 1721. Price 1a. TO Sir ISAAC NEWTON President of the Royal Society c. SIR To Act under Your Influence is to do Good and to Study the Laws of Nature is the Obligation I owe to the Royal Society who have so wisely placed Sir Isaac Newton at their Head. The following Piece therefore as I design it for the Publick Good naturally claims Your Patronage and as it depends chiefly upon Rules in Nature I am doubly obliged to offer it to the President of that Learned Assembly whose Institution was for the Improvement of Natural Knowledge. I am Sir With
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