Or Amogabriel. See Cinnabaris.

A' Mor, love, (from hamah, Hebrew, to burn; or am, a mother; because love is the natural passion of mothers to their children). Though not itself a disease, it produces diseases.

The symptoms produced by love are as follow: the eye-lids often twinkle, the eyes are hollow, and yet appear as if full with pleasure; the pulse is not peculiar to the passion, but the same with that which attends solicitude and care; when the object of this affection is thought of, particularly if the idea is sudden, the spirits are confused, the pulse changes, and its force and celerity are very variable: in some instances the person is sad and watchful; in others, not conscious of his state, he pines away, is slothful, and regardless of food; though, the wiser, when they find themselves in love, seek pleasant company and active entertainments.

As the force of love prevails, sighs grow deeper, a tremor affects the heart and pulse, the countenance is alternately pale and red, the voice is suppressed in the fauces, the eyes grow dim, cold sweats break out, sleep absents itself, at least until the morning, the secretions become disturbed, and a loss of appetite, a hectic fever, melancholy, or perhaps madness, if not death, constitute the sad catastrophe.

AEginet. lib. iii. cap. 17. Oribas. Synop. lib. vii. cap. 9. or a treatise professedly written on love, as it is a distemper, by James Ferrard, Oxford, printed 1640.