Vibices and extensive ecchymoses sometimes appear shortly before death.

4. The stage of convalescence sets in between the sixth and tenth days. It is often protracted by prolonged suppuration of the bubonic enlargements. Both relapses and distinct second attacks have been noted by recent as well as the older observers.

In addition to the foregoing sketch of the course of the disease in its ordinary form it is necessary to describe certain other symptoms.

The attack has sometimes begun with a convulsive tremor, at other times with a prolonged shaking, which has lasted from six hours to three days, the patient remaining free from fever and not complaining of cold. This condition has terminated in coma, followed speedily by death.

Sometimes the attack has come upon the patient with great confusion of mind, so that he appears dazed, or else a curious distraction has befallen him in the midst of his ordinary avocations. If absent from home, such patients commonly at once set out to return, either trembling and staggering as though tipsy, or else rushing wildly through the streets with frantic gestures and outcries.

The vomited matters are usually at first gastric mucus with bile, afterward dark coffee-colored fluid; in certain cases blood is vomited. Bleeding from the nose, lungs, bowels, vagina, and urethra have also been observed. Cases attended by hemorrhages have in almost all instances terminated fatally.

Constipation has been, as a rule, present during the acute stages; later in the attack diarrhoea has occasionally occurred. It has been looked upon as a favorable symptom.

The urine has been diminished and suppressed in grave cases. Trustworthy observations, both as to its quantity and its chemical composition, are wanting. It has been observed to contain blood.

As has been already pointed out, the Máhámari of North-western India has been especially characterized by lung symptoms. Other regions also have been visited by epidemics in which acute pulmonary lesions formed a prominent part of the morbid complexus.

(b) The Fulminant Form.—Chiefly in the early days or weeks of epidemics, but to some extent also later, cases occur in which the intensity of the sickness is so great that the patient dies before its usual manifestations have time to develop. The duration of the whole attack, which ends fatally, is often not more than a few hours; its symptoms, which differ but little if at all from those of similar cases of other epidemic diseases—such, for example, as epidemic cerebro-spinal fever in its fulminant form—are of the most aggravated character, and the patient perishes overwhelmed by the infection as though struck by a thunderbolt. Profound disturbance of the nervous centres, convulsions, coma, the rapid formation of vibices and petechiæ, collapse, are the speedy forerunners of the fatal issue.