irregularities and seeming caprices in its transmission.
It makes full allowance for other causes besides personal
transmission, especially for epidemic influences.
It allows for the possibility of different modes of
conveyance of the destructive principle. It recognizes
and supports the belief that a series of cases may
originate from a single primitive source which affects
each new patient in turn; and especially from cases
of Erysipelas. It does not undertake to discuss
the theoretical aspect of the subject; that is a secondary
matter of consideration. Where facts are numerous,
and unquestionable, and unequivocal in their significance,
theory must follow them as it best may, keeping time
with their step, and not go before them, marching
to the sound of its own drum and trumpet. Having
thus narrowed its area to a limited practical platform
of discussion, a matter of life and death, and not
of phrases or theories, it covers every inch of it
with a mass of evidence which I conceive a Committee
of Husbands, who can count coincidences and draw conclusions
as well as a Synod of Accoucheurs, would justly consider
as affording ample reasons for an unceremonious dismissal
of a practitioner (if it is conceivable that such
a step could be waited for), after five or six funerals
had marked the path of his daily visits, while other
practitioners were not thus escorted. To the Profession,
therefore, I submit the paper in its original form,
and leave it to take care of itself.
To the medical students, into whose hands
this Essay may fall, some words of introduction may
be appropriate, and perhaps, to a small number of
them, necessary. There are some among them who,
from youth, or want of training, are easily bewildered
and confused in any conflict of opinions into which
their studies lead them. They are liable to lose
sight of the main question in collateral issues, and
to be run away with by suggestive speculations.
They confound belief with evidence, often trusting
the first because it is expressed with energy, and
slighting the latter because it is calm and unimpassioned.
They are not satisfied with proof; they cannot believe
a point is settled so long as everybody is not silenced.
They have not learned that error is got out of the
minds that cherish it, as the taenia is removed from
the body, one joint, or a few joints at a time, for
the most part, rarely the whole evil at once.
They naturally have faith in their instructors, turning
to them for truth, and taking what they may choose
to give them; babes in knowledge, not yet able to
tell the breast from the bottle, pumping away for the
milk of truth at all that offers, were it nothing
better than a Professor’s shrivelled forefinger.