The ratio of some crisis days and comparing them with diseases

Among the crisis days, there are extremely strong days, in which a crisis almost always occurs, but there are also very weak ones, as well as average ones. We will talk about this in detail shortly, but first we will say this: the first crisis day is the fourth day of illness, but on this day a crisis occurs infrequently, and it rather foreshadows the crisis on the seventh day. As for the seventh day, it is a good and strong day and is foreshadowed by the fourth day; the seventh day can be classified as the first, highest category. The eleventh day is not as strong as the fourteenth, and in diseases whose attacks occur on odd days, such as three-day fever, it is very strong and even stronger than the fourteenth. The fourteenth day is strong, and its strength is such that among those correlative with the fourteenth day there is not a day that would not be inferior to it in strength in relation to the qualities of the crisis and its beneficence, not to mention its completeness. The seventeenth day is also strong, but the days corresponding to it are stronger; The seventeenth day is to the twentieth as the eleventh is to the fourteenth. The eighteenth day is one of the rare days of crisis; in the rarest cases it corresponds to the twenty-first day. The twenty-fourth day and the thirty-first day are also rare days of crisis. It’s even rarer to have a crisis on the thirty-seventh day, and it’s as if it’s not a crisis day at all. The fortieth day is stronger than the thirty-fourth, although the thirty-fourth day has a fair amount of strength, and is also stronger than the thirty-first day.

Know that diseases that attack on odd days, such as three-day fever and most acute fevers, are more likely to be resolved by a crisis, and the crisis then occurs on odd days. Therefore, with a three-day fever, expect a crisis on the eleventh day and do not expect it on the fourteenth: on the fourteenth it rarely occurs, although in most cases the seventh attack subsides shortly before the fourteenth day. As for diseases that have attacks on even days, they are resolved more slowly by the crisis, and the crisis occurs more often on even days.

Crisis days of the highest level are, for example, the seventh, eleventh, fourteenth, seventeenth, twentieth. The periods of illness in most cases correspond to the ordinal number of the crisis day, so that, for example, seven periods of three-day fever are similar to seven Burning Days. The number of months and years in chronic fevers also sometimes coincides with the number of days in acute ones, so that, for example, a four-day fever lasts seven months before the crisis. Months-precursors are then calculated in the same order as precursor days, and at the same time there can be such advances and lags as in days. We'll talk about this soon.