| Samuel Latham Mitchill - Medicine - 1802 - 514 pages
...which is requisite to render it unsusceptible of the variolous contagion : so that it became evident a person might milk a cow one day, and having caught...next day, might feel the influence of the virus in sucli a way as to produce a sore or sores, and, in consequence of this, might experience an indisposition... | |
| George C. Jenner - Smallpox - 1805 - 262 pages
...unsusceptible of the variolous contagion; so that it becameevident a person might milk a cow one dayy and,-, having caught the disease," be for ever secure;• while another person, milking the saina cow the; next day, might feel the influence of the virus in" •such a way as to produce a sore... | |
| John Redman Coxe - Medicine - 1806 - 528 pages
...one day, and, having caught the difeafe, be for ever fecure; while another perfon, milking the fame cow the next day, might feel, the influence of the virus in fuch a way as to produce a fore or fores, and in confequence of this, might experience an indifpofition... | |
| 1823 - 626 pages
...which is requisite to render it unsusceptible of the variolous contagion: so that it became evident a person might milk a cow one day, and having caught...influence of the virus in such a way, as to produce sores, and yet the constitution remain unchanged and therefore unprotected. During this investigation... | |
| Great Britain - 1824 - 498 pages
...which is requisite to render it unsusceptible of the variolous contagion : so that it became evident a person might milk a cow one day, and having caught the disease, be for ever secure ; while on another person, milking the same cow the next day, the virus might act in such a way, as to produce... | |
| 1824 - 494 pages
...which is requisite to render it unsusceptible of the variolous contagion : so that it became evident a person might milk a cow one day, and having caught the disease, be for ever secure ; while on another person, milking the same cow the next day, the virus might act in such a way, as to produce... | |
| 1838 - 1050 pages
...which is requisite to render tt unsusceptible of the variolous contagion ; so that it became evident a person might milk a cow one day, and having caught the distemper, be for ever secure; while on another person milking the same cow the next day, the virus... | |
| Daniel Kimball Whitaker, Milton Clapp, William Gilmore Simms, James Henley Thornwell - 1843 - 552 pages
...protection from the small-pox was not always the case, and closer observation enabled him to detect, that "A person might milk a cow one day, and, having caught the disease, li<- forever secure ; while, on another person, milking the same cow, the next day, the virus might... | |
| Edward Jenner - Manuscripts - 1863 - 82 pages
...one day, and having caught the difeafe, be for ever fecure; while another perfon, milking the fame Cow the next day, might feel the influence of the Virus in fuch a way, as to produce a fore or fores, and in coniequence of this might experience an indiipofition... | |
| 1864 - 584 pages
...vaccinifer, may be gathered from another " obstacle" which Jenner's industry surmounted : 1 Vol. ip 121. "It became evident that a person might milk a cow...experience an indisposition to a considerable extent ; yet, the specific quality being lost, the constitution would receive no peculiar impression." The disregard... | |
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