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Where they are wounded, there remains running sores during the distemper, which I don’t doubt is a great relief to it. They have very rarely above twenty or thirty in their faces, which never mark, and in eight days time they are as well as before their illness. Then the fever begins to seize them, and they keep their beds two days, very seldom three. The children or young patients play together all the rest of the day, and are in perfect health to the eighth.
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She immediately rips open that you offer to her, with a large needle (which gives you no more pain than a common scratch) and puts into the vein as much matter as can lie upon the head of her needle, and after that, binds up the little wound with a hollow bit of shell, and in this manner opens four or five veins…
SECRETS OF FASCINATING WOMANHOOD PAMPHLETS 1963 FULL
People send to one another to know if any of their family has a mind to have the small-pox they make parties for this purpose, and when they are met (commonly fifteen or sixteen together) the old woman comes with a nut-shell full of the matter of the best sort of small-pox, and asks what vein you please to have opened. There is a set of old women, who make it their business to perform the operation, every autumn, in the month of September, when the great heat is abated. The small-pox, so fatal, and so general amongst us, is here entirely harmless, by the invention of engrafting, which is the term they give it. “I am going to tell you a thing that will make you wish yourself here. She wrote to her dear friend, Sarah Chiswell: In a letter dated Ap– 300 years ago - Lady Mary Wortley Montagu (1689–1762), the wife of the British ambassador to Turkey, provided the first report from an elite European patient’s perspective of the middle-eastern practice of inoculation, or ingrafting, to prevent smallpox. On Thursday, April 6, Lisa will give her talk, “Lady Mary’s Legacy: Vaccine Advocacy from The Turkish Embassy Letters to Video Games.” To read more about this lecture and to register, go HERE.
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She is the project director and game developer for The Pox Hunter, funded by an NEH Digital Projects for the Public grant. Recent publications include The Anatomy Murders (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2009) and Vaccination and Its Critics (ABC-Clio, 2017). Today’s guest post is written by Lisa Rosner, Ph.D., Distinguished Professor of History at Stockton University.