[1885] The Story of a Great Delusion by William White

web: http://whale.to/a/white.html

CONTENTS.

INTRODUCTION. 3
Prefatory 3

Variolation 3
The Precursor of Vaccination 4

Immediate Triumph of Vaccination 5

Jenner's Procedure 5

Horsegrease Cowpox 5

Rejection of Jenner's Prescription 6

Jenner's Transformation 6

Horsegrease Cowpox kept out of Sight 7

Spurious Cowpox, 7

Horse Virus Vindicated 7

Which shall it be ? 8

Smallpox Cowpox, 8

Condemnation of Smallpox Cowpox 9

Cowpox Revived 10

A Cowpox Charlatan 10

A Decorous Unanimity 10

Jenner's Successive Disclaimers 11

Smallpox made milder 12

Punctures, one or several 12

Mr. Rigby's Protest 12

Mr. (Marks) Marson 13

Mr. Alexander Wheeler's Researches 14

Mr. Enoch Robinson's Opinion 14

Cruelty of Marking 14

Revaccination Introduced 15

Vaccinisation 15
Absurdity of Revaccination 16

The Reduction of Smallpox 16

Has Vaccination saved Life 16

Who are the Unvaccinated 17

Unvaccinated Death-rates 17

Nurses exempt from Smallpox 18

Pock-marked Faces 18

Vaccinia a real Disease 19

Vaccinal Fatalities 20

Vaccinia Modified in its Recipients 20

Vaccinia plus other Disease 21

Statistical Evidence of extra Disease 21

Vaccinia aggravates Disease 22

Origin of Compulsory Vaccination 23

Resistance, Inflexible Resistance 23

Compulsory Education and Vaccination 24

Conditions of the Conflict 24
A Word for the Author 25

L'Envoi, 25

Dr. Garth Wilkinson's Catechism 26

I.—VARIOLATION. 27

1.—Cotton Mather and Zabdiel Boylston 27
2 —Lady Mary Wortley Montagu 31
3.—Maitland's Experiments 34

4.—The First Opponents of Inoculation 39

5.—Collapse of Inoculation 44

6.—Revival of Inoculation 48

7.—Triumph of Inoculation 53

8. —Inoculation Abroad 60

9.—Inoculation superseded and suppressed 65

10.—As to the Prevalence of Smallpox in the 18th Century 72

II.—VACCINATION 80

1.—Jenner's Earlier Years 80

2.— Jenner's Inquiry, 1798 87

3.—Jenner in 1798 101

4.—Pearson's Inquiry 106

5.—Woodville, Pearson, and Jenner 112

6.—Jenner's Further Observations 116

7.—Operations in London, 1800 120

8.—Triumph of the New Inoculation 128

9.—A Dishonourable Transformation 131

10.—Jenner before Parliament, 1802 135

11.—Pearson's Examination 142

12.—Observations on the Position in 1802 149

13.—The Royal Jennerian Society 154

14. —Application to Parliament for Jenner's Belief, 1806 162

15.—Report of the Royal College of Physicans 164

16. -Jenner Relieved, 1807 170

17.—Vaccination Established and Endowed 173

18.—Horsegrease as a source of Vaccine 178
19.—John Birch 187

20.—Goldson and Brown 192

21.—Moseley, Rowley and Squirrel 196

22.—William Cobbett 204

23.—The Grosvenor Case 212

24.—Dr. John Walker 215

25.—Jenner's Later Writings 221

26.—Baron's Life of Jenner 230

27— The Medical Position in 1823 239

28.—Introduction of Vaccination to the United States 243

29.—Introduction of Vaccination to India and the East 250
30.—Diffusion of Vaccination throughout Europe 258

31.—Sweden, Denmark and Iceland 265

32.—Newcastle Smallpox : a Common Story 276

33.—The Norwich Epidemic—1819 280

34.—Smallpox Displaced and Replaced: Dr. Watt's Discovery—Glasgow, 1813 285

35.—The National Vaccine Establishment—1808-40 293

36.—The National Vaccine Establishment—1841-50 303

37.—Vaccination Enforced—1853 307

38.—Universal Compulsion Demanded—1855 316
39.—John Gibbs's Letter—1855 321
40.—Simon's Defence and Hameruik's Judgment 327

41.—Compulsion Intensified—1861 and 1867 336

42.—The Gathering Movement, 1867-70 344

43.—House of Commons Committee, 1871 351

44.—The Struggle for Freedom 363

NOTES—Origin of the Term Vaccination 161

Vaccination a Statistical Question 376

Drawing of John Gibbs 326

INTRODUCTION.

PREFATORY.

THERE are few matters among educated people upon which opinion is so absolute and so ill-informed as vaccination. They will tell you it has stopped smallpox and does no harm, and if you venture to question either assertion you are set down as an abettor of " those ignorant and fanatical anti-vaccinators." If undeterred you inquire when smallpox was stopped, and which is the harmless variety of vaccination, you will probably be told that these are medical questions, whilst the facts are indisputable; the answer running in the line of Old Kaspar's to Little Peterkin, inquisitive as to the good of Blenheim—

Why that I cannot tell, said he,
But 'twas a famous victory.

I am not complaining of this attitude of mind. We all accept more or less on bare authority. In the multiplicity and unsearchableness of knowledge, it is unavoidable. Some years ago a venerable friend urged me to write against vaccination, which, he said, was working endless mischief to the public health. He would have the book published, and provide whatever was requisite for my satisfaction. I pleaded prior engagements, and turned the conversation, thinking how sad it was that one so good, and, in other respects, so enlightened should be subject to so strange an illusion—I, then, taking vaccination on trust as one of the numerous blessings conferred upon mankind in the course of the present century.

I am therefore disposed to make large allowance for the credulous attitude of the public toward vaccination whilst at the same time insisting on its correction : and for this reason especially, that vaccination is no longer a matter of private concern. We are free to entertain what notions we please, but if we proceed to enforce them on unbelievers, we cannot complain if we are required to answer for our aggression or encounter rough usage. Enforced by the law of England, vaccination is related to the life and intelligence of every citizen, and it is consequently vain to claim for it exemption from vulgar discussion. Apart from its compulsory infliction, vaccination might be and remain an esoteric rite, the very mystery of mysteries; but with compulsion the privilege of sanctity is impossible.

VARIOLATION.

It has been said that beliefs and observances in themselves most irrational wear a different aspect when viewed in the light of their origin and history. It is so with vaccination. Had it come upon the world as we know it, with failure and disaster, equivocation and apology, rejection would have been inevitable; but when we turn to the past we discover that our damnosa hoereditas has a tradition that goes far to account for, if not to excuse, the folly which remains.

Vaccination was the successor of Inoculation (or, more precisely, Variolation), entering into a possession already acquired in the human mind.

It had been observed from of old that some forms of disease rarely recur in the same person in a lifetime; and thus when scarlet fever, or measles, or smallpox broke out in a family, it was considered prudent to let the disease have its course, and thereby obtain immunity from fear of future infection.

It was this confidence, that smallpox once undergone was finally disposed of, that was the justification of the practice of inoculating the disease when introduced from the East in the first quarter of last century. Inasmuch, it was argued, as none can have smallpox more than once, why not induce it artificially, and pass through the illness at a convenient season ? But Nature, though compliant, does not always accept the course we ingeniously prescribe for her. Smallpox as naturally developed (so to speak) is a crisis of impurity in the blood, and if the requisite conditions are absent, it cannot be adequately exited. Hence variolation was an uncertain and hazardous operation. It took with some and was indistinguishable from an attack of ordinary smallpox; it took partially, or not at all with others; and the operation was frequently followed by malaise, disorders of the skin, and grave constitutional derangements. Nor were the variolated secure from smallpox. They occasionally had smallpox with their neighbours, and then it was said, "There must have been some mistake about the "inoculation; for it is impossible that anyone can be successfully inoculated and have smallpox." Further, the variolated, while labouring under the induced malady, conveyed the disease to their attendants and visitors; and thus smallpox was propagated by the means intended to avert it.

THE PRECURSOR OF VACCINATION.

At the close of last century, variolation had become the custom of the upper and middle classes of England. The trouble and the peril were disliked, but were accepted in the name of duty. The variolation of their children was an anxiety that weighed like lead on the hearts of affectionate parents; and glad and grateful they were when the operation was accomplished without serious mishap. Patients designed for variolation were dieted, purged, and bled; and smallpox from sufferers of sound constitution was diligently inquired for. Mild smallpox was in great demand and was propagated from arm to arm. When Dr. Dimsdale operated on the Empress Catharine he did not venture to convey smallpox direct to the imperial person. He looked out a case of "benign smallpox " with which he inoculated a strong young man, and from the young man the Empress. Unless we realise the inconveniences, the uncertainties, the disasters and the horrors of the practice of variolation, albeit minimised, excused and denied by its professors, we can never understand the enthusiasm with which vaccination was received as its substitute. The promise conveyed in vaccination was a relief inexpressible, bearing with it a show of reason that was well nigh irresistible. The argument ran thus : No one can have smallpox twice, and the mildest attack is as protective from subsequent attack as the severest. Therefore it is that in inoculation with smallpox we find security. But inoculation with smallpox is an uncertain operation with dangerous issues. Here, however, in cowpox is discovered a mild variety of smallpox, which may be inoculated with perfect ease, and with no possibility of harm. And inasmuch as the mildest smallpox is as preventive of future smallpox as the severest, it follows that this gentle cowpox must serve as a full equivalent for smallpox itself.

IMMEDIATE TRIUMPH OF VACCINATION.

It was in this plausible shape that vaccination had an immediate triumph. The way was made straight for it and every difficulty removed by the existing practice of variolation. Dr. W. B. Carpenter says that vaccination was more strenuously resisted at the beginning of the century than it is at this day. He is completely mistaken. Vaccination came upon a generation prepared for it—which saw in it a prescription in full accord with common-sense. The entire medical profession, with a few exceptions, the King, Queen and court, were converted straight off, and parliament and society followed suit. It was, I confess, a natural development of opinion; and we need have little doubt that had we lived in those days we should have found ourselves shouting with the genteel mob. The limited resistance offered to vaccination was not based on physiological or sanitary science: such science did not then exist. It was the resistance of variolators who were satisfied with the established practice and resented its disturbance; professing at the same time immeasurable horror at the profanation to humanity by infection with bovine disease. Whilst we have no reason to identify ourselves with that resistance, we have to recognise the service rendered by the variolators in observing the results of vaccination—the peristency with which they traced and exposed its failure to prevent smallpox and the injuries and deaths it caused. So far as the maintenance of variolous inoculation was concerned, they fought a losing battle; but drove the vaccinators from post to post (cursed as they did so as malignant false witnesses possessed by the devil) and at last compelled the admission that their infallible preventive could not be guaranteed to prevent, but only to make smallpox milder—a safe assertion because unverifiable, as disputable as indisputable in particular instances.

JENNER'S PROCEDURE.

About the matter of this prophylactic there was from the first a curious confusion which continues to this day.

Jenner was a country doctor at Berkeley in Gloucestershire, a dairy country, where the maids believed that if they caught cowpox in milking they could never afterwards catch smallpox. Jenner when a young man was inclined to accept the dairymaids' faith; but when he discussed it with his medical acquaintance, they ridiculed him. They said, "We know that such is the dairymaids' faith, but we also know that it is untrue; for we know dairymaids who have had cowpox, and afterwards had smallpox notwithstanding their cowpox." Jenner was convinced and said no more about cowpox.

To this point let me draw special attention. No man knew better than Jenner that cowpox as cowpox was no preventive of smallpox.

Toward middle-life he had what he conceived to be a happy thought. Cowpox as cowpox he had dismissed as impracticable; but there was a variety of cowpox which he resolved to recommend.

Cows in Gloucestershire were milked by men as well as by women; and men would sometimes milk cows with hands foul from dressing the heels of horses afflicted with what was called grease. With this grease they infected the cows, and the pox which followed was pronounced by Jenner to have all the virtue against smallpox which the dairymaids claimed for cowpox.

HORSEGREASE COWPOX.

According to Jenner, then, the dairymaids were right, and they were wrong. They were right when the pox they caught was derived from the horse through the cow, they were wrong when the pox they caught originated on the cow without the horse. He thus discriminated a double pox—cowpox of no efficacy against smallpox, and horsegrease cowpox of sure efficacy.

Further, in this connection, it is to be observed, that farriers believed that when they got poisoned in handling horses with greasy heels, they too, like the dairymaids, were safe from smallpox.

It is not therefore for cowpox, but for horsegrease cowpox that Jenner is answerable. In cowpox he had not, and could have no faith.

In 1798 Jenner published his famous Inquiry, treatise much more spoken of than read, wherein he distinctly set forth the origin of his chosen prophylactic. If was not, I repeat, cowpox: it was horsegrease cowpox. He carefully discriminated it from spontaneous cowpox which, he said, had no protective virtue, being attended with no inflammation and erysipelas, the essential sequences of inoculation with effective virus.

REJECTION OF JENNER'S PRESCRIPTION.

I have said that the world gave a cordial and unhesitating welcome to Jenner's revelation, but the observation requires a startling qualification. Jenner's revelation as conveyed in his Inquiry was summarily and ignominiously rejected—was absolutely rejected. I wish emphasise this point. Jenner published his Inquiry in order to recommend horsegrease cowpox, and what I have to say is, that the public declined to have anything to do with horsegrease cowpox.