[2] First Lines, sect. 32 of the chapter on arteries.

[3] Perhaps there is no greater enemy to the life of man than cold. Dr. Sydenham ascribes nearly all fevers to it, particularly to leaving off winter clothes too soon, and to exposing the body to cold after it has been heated. These sources of fever, he adds, destroy more than the plague, sword, or famine.—Wallis's edition, vol. I. p. 357.

[4] See the Comparative View of the Diseases of the Indians and of Civilized Nations. Vol. I.

[5] Inaugural dissertation, entitled, “An Attempt to disprove the Putrefaction of the Blood in Living Animals.”

[6] Epidemics, book iv.

[7] Treatise on the Cold Bath.

[8] Treatise on Inflammation. chap. I. 8.

[9] Account of the Intestinal Remitting Fever of Bengal.

[10] On Dropsies, vol. II.

[11] Essay on the Spasmodic Affections in India, p. 53, 54, 55.