Page:Lives of British Physicians.djvu/36

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

20 BRITISH PHYSICIANS. tion, though it is very amusing to read his learned discourse upon these famihar articles of daily con- sumption, interlarded with Greek terms, and re- ference to the oivo's icpidipo9 of Atlienaeus and Herodotus. The symptoms of the sweating sickness were as follows : — it affected some particular part, attended with inward heat and burning, unquenchable thirst, restlessness, sickness at stomach and heart (though seldom vomiting), headache, delirium, then faint- ness and drowsiness ; the pulse quick and vehe- ment, and the breath short and labouring. Chil- dren, poor and old women were less subject to it — of others scarce any escaped the attack, and most died : in Shrewsbury, where it lasted seven months^ about a thousand perished. Even by travelling into France, or Flanders, the English, according to Caius, did not escape ; and what is stranger, " even the Scotch were free, and abroad, English only affected, and foreigners not aflTected in Eng- land." None recovered under twenty-four hours. It has been mentioned before that it first shewed itself in England in 1485 — it appeared again in 1506 — afterwards in 1517, when it was so violent that it killed in the space of three hours ; so that many of the nobility died, and of the vulgar sort in several towns half often perished. It appeared also in 1548, ^nd proved mortal then in the space of six hours : many of the courtiers died of it, and Henry VIII. himself was in danger. In 1529, and only then, it infested the Netherlands and Germany ; in which last country it did much mis- chief, and destroyed many, and particularly was the occasion of interrupting a conference at Mar-