Certain It Is, In The Last Stages Of The
Sea-Scurvy, The Blood Often Bursts From The Pores; And This
Phaenomenon Is Imputed To A High Degree Of Putrefaction:
Sure
enough it is attended with putrefaction.
We know that a certain
quantity of salt is required to preserve the animal juices from
going putrid: but, how a greater quantity should produce
putrefaction, I leave to wiser heads to explain. Many people here
have scorbutical complaints, though their teeth are not affected.
They are subject to eruptions on the skin, putrid gums, pains in
the bones, lassitude, indigestion, and low spirits; but the
reigning distemper is a marasmus, or consumption, which proceeds
gradually, without any pulmonary complaint, the complexion
growing more and more florid, 'till the very last scene of the
tragedy. This I would impute to the effects of a very dry, saline
atmosphere, upon a thin habit, in which there is an extraordinary
waste by perspiration. The air is remarkably salt in this
district, because the mountains that hem it in, prevent its
communication with the circumambient atmosphere, in which the
saline particles would otherwise be diffused; and there is no
rain, nor dew, to precipitate or dissolve them. Such an air as I
have described, should have no bad effect upon a moist,
phlegmatic constitution, such as mine; and yet it must be owned,
I have been visibly wasting since I came hither, though this
decay I considered as the progress of the tabes which began in
England.
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