CASE XI.
Two men were inoculated at the same time, the one about 40 years of age, corpulent, and subject to the rheumatism; the other between 50 and 60, very thin and healthy.
I saw both these patients on the third day, when the places of insertion were in each so very much inflamed, that I was pretty certain they would scarce have any eruption, and acquainted them with my opinion. Both made complaints of itching and uneasiness in the part; there was however this difference, the elder said he had felt a numbness and smarting from the time of inoculation, particularly the following night; that his head had been in pain, and that he had had several chilly fits: the other complained that his arms felt hot, and itched, but said he was very well. They both came to me on the sixth day, when the inflammation on the arm of the elder was considerably abated; and he said that from the time that I saw him last, he had remained free from any complaint, except a slight uneasiness at the parts infected. The incisions of the other were still in an inflamed state; he said that his head had ached, and that he was very chilly the preceding night: both these symptoms continued for two days more; but the attacks were irregular, lasted but a very short time, and there was not the least appearance of fever. The other held perfectly well, and all signs of inflammation on the arms of both soon disappeared.
They both remained several days in the same house, and kept company with others in different stages of the disease; the elder of the two was inoculated again, but without the least signs of the infection taking place, and both remain in good health.