[The Black Death and The Dancing Mania by Justus Friedrich Karl Hecker]@TWC D-Link book
The Black Death and The Dancing Mania

CHAPTER II--THE DISEASE
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In many, one alone was sufficient to cause death, while some patients recovered, contrary to expectation, though afflicted with all.

Symptoms of cephalic affection were frequent; many patients became stupefied and fell into a deep sleep, losing also their speech from palsy of the tongue; others remained sleepless and without rest.

The fauces and tongue were black, and as if suffused with blood; no beverage could assuage their burning thirst, so that their sufferings continued without alleviation until terminated by death, which many in their despair accelerated with their own hands.
Contagion was evident, for attendants caught the disease of their relations and friends, and many houses in the capital were bereft even of their last inhabitant.

Thus far the ordinary circumstances only of the oriental plague occurred.

Still deeper sufferings, however, were connected with this pestilence, such as have not been felt at other times; the organs of respiration were seized with a putrid inflammation; a violent pain in the chest attacked the patient; blood was expectorated, and the breath diffused a pestiferous odour.
In the West, the following were the predominating symptoms on the eruption of this disease.


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