If the patient seems to be picking up fluff or is constantly taking things off himself or from the wall, this is a bad sign. The reason for this is bad vapors rising to the brain, and the patient imagines something that is not there, since they descend into the eye and into the albuminous humor.
Severe pain in the viscera during acute fevers is a bad sign, indicating severe combustion of juices, a large tumor or abscess. If you feel severe pain in any organ and then immediately, for no reason, completely calms down, this is not good.
A strong voice is a good sign, and coherent speech is also a good sign, but the opposite is not good. Long silence in most cases indicates obsession or relaxation or spasm of the muscles of the tongue and larynx, as well as loss of imagination, which is the source of speech; if a patient talks during a crisis, this is good, but in general, the silence of a talkative person indicates the beginning of obsession or other phenomena that we talked about, and the volubility of a silent person is a sign of beginning delirium and clouding of the mind.
Delirium accompanied by movements and beating in the head and nostrils is safe, but calm, unhurried delirium is deadly.
If the patient often rushes about and worries, this is not a good sign, indicating an abundance of vapors rising to the head, and if he jumps up and sits down every minute, then this is also not good and occurs either from melancholy, or from clouding of mind, difficulty breathing, suffocation and inflammation lungs; in the latter case it is worse, and such phenomena most often occur precisely from suffocation and shortness of breath, although they also occur from other causes. If the members of the body become heavy and cannot move, this is also a bad sign, and if the nails turn gray, it means death has come. Trembling is a bad sign if it doesn't. comes from a good crisis.
If the patient is very afraid of death, this is dangerous.