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diseases are produced, accompanied by copious sweats. And oftentimes when
the flesh is dissolved in the body, wind, generated within and unable to
escape, is the source of quite as much pain as the air coming in from without;
but the greatest pain is felt when the wind gets about the sinews and the veins
of the shoulders, and swells them up, and so twists back the great tendons and
the sinews which are connected with them. These disorders are called tetanus
and opisthotonus, by reason of the tension which accompanies them. The cure
of them is difficult; relief is in most cases given by fever supervening. The
white phlegm, though dangerous when detained within by reason of the air-
bubbles, yet if it can communicate with the outside air, is less severe, and
only discolours the body, generating leprous eruptions and similar diseases.
When it is mingled with black bile and dispersed about the courses of the
head, which are the divinest part of us, the attack if coming on in sleep, is not
so severe; but when assailing those who are awake it is hard to be got rid of,
and being an affection of a sacred part, is most justly called sacred. An acid
and salt phlegm, again, is the source of all those diseases which take the form
of catarrh, but they have many names because the places into which they flow
are manifold.
Inflammations of the body come from burnings and inflamings, and all of
them originate in bile. When bile finds a means of discharge, it boils up and
sends forth all sorts of tumours; but when imprisoned within, it generates
many inflammatory diseases, above all when mingled with pure blood; since
it then displaces the fibres which are scattered about in the blood and are
designed to maintain the balance of rare and dense, in order that the blood
may not be so liquefied by heat as to exude from the pores of the body, nor
again become too dense and thus find a difficulty in circulating through the
veins. The fibres are so constituted as to maintain this balance; and if any one
brings them all together when the blood is dead and in process of cooling,
then the blood which remains becomes fluid, but if they are left alone, they
soon congeal by reason of the surrounding cold. The fibres having this power
over the blood, bile, which is only stale blood, and which from being flesh is
dissolved again into blood, at the first influx coming in little by little, hot and
liquid, is congealed by the power of the fibres; and so congealing and made to
cool, it produces internal cold and shuddering. When it enters with more of a
flood and overcomes the fibres by its heat, and boiling up throws them into
disorder, if it have power enough to maintain its supremacy, it penetrates the
marrow and burns up what may be termed the cables of the soul, and sets her
free; but when there is not so much of it, and the body though wasted still
holds out, the bile is itself mastered, and is either utterly banished, or is thrust
through the veins into the lower or upper belly, and is driven out of the body
like an exile from a state in which there has been civil war; whence arise
990
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The Complete Plato
- Title
- The Complete Plato
- Author
- Plato
- Date
- ~347 B.C.
- Language
- English
- License
- PD
- Size
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Pages
- 1612
- Keywords
- Philosophy, Antique, Philosophie, Antike, Dialogues, Metaphysik, Metaphysics, Ideologie, Ideology, Englisch
- Categories
- Geisteswissenschaften
- International