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1. Attacks of great anguish, as if the heart would break, with complete discouragement, excessive inquietude, agitation and tossing, groans and tears, accompanied often by drawing colic, and pressure at the pit of the stomach.
2. Disposition to weep, and to be angry, with great sensitiveness to the offense.
3. Crying and howling.
4. The child cries and wants to be carried on the arm.
5. Quarrelsome and choleric humor.
6. Mischievous disposition in children.
7. Mental excitement, with a strong tendency to be frightened.
8. Hypochondriacal humor.
9. Patients neither endure to be addressed by others, nor to be interrupted when conversing.
10. Peevishness, ill-humour, absence of mind, taciturnity, and repugnance to the conversation.
11. State of mental abstraction and inadvertence, as if plunged in meditation, with diminished comprehension.
12. A sort of stupidity, and apathy to pleasure and to external objects.
13. Desire for different things, which, when once possessed, are no longer cared for.
14. Tendency to misapply words when speaking or writing.
15. Frantic and furious delirium.