THE BIOLOGY OF DAILY LIFE. 103 



end will, as we trust and believe, aid in the deliver- 

 ance of a people, and not of one nation only, but 

 in the establishment of a rational as well as truly 

 philanthropic method of healing throughout the 

 world. 



The patience and credulity of the world is nearly 

 inexhaustible, but even credulity has its limits, and 

 patience may be at last exhausted. 



Men have stood to have their children inoculated 

 with a cultivated small-pox, to procure immunity from 

 natural small-pox, but now, when all supporters of 

 vaccination are bound to own that to be true to the 

 principles of this mighty method of combating disease 

 by propagating it in a milder form, there ought to be a 

 separate vaccination or inoculation for every known or 

 at least prevalent form of disease. Milder dog-madness 

 as a prophylactic against hydrophobia, cultivated 

 cholera to cure cholera, typhoid to cure typhoid, and 

 so on through the category. 



The nightmare weight of this result of modern 

 teaching in medicine must rouse the public even out 

 of their drugged and charmed sleep, and once roused 

 to thought, action will be swift, and deliverance will 

 come at last. 



I now give an outline of the opposite method, taking 

 extracts which bear upon my subject. Once again I 

 remind the reader that neither in this work of mine, 

 nor in any work which has yet been published, is there 

 anything approaching a satisfactory account of these 

 discoveries and the scientific system of healing founded 

 upon them. 



