It does not follow that these genera would be insusceptible under all conditions. Yet the failure to immunize against each other would argue a wider divergence of sheeppox and cowpox, than of smallpox and cowpox, or than of bovine and avian tuberculosis.

Galtier failed to inoculate sheeppox on rabbits or Guinea pigs, yet Jourdan, records a destructive outbreak in the Alps, in hares, kept in the same places with variolous sheep.

Accessory External Causes. All unwholesome conditions of life, and especially overcrowding, filth, starvation, and neglect contribute to the extension of the infection. Still more so, the importation of sheep, whether in the parks of armies, or in the channels of trade, by rail, or steamboat, through stockyards or markets.

The virus is possessed of unusual vitality, and in the dried condition, secluded from air and light will remain virulent for an indefinite period. Hence the danger of wool, and dried sheepskins. Even in the moisture of an ordinary shed it has retained its infectiveness for five or six months. The sheep that has recovered from the affection may transmit the disease to others for a period of six weeks. The virulence is rapidly destroyed by exposure to free air and sunshine, by a high temperature (140° F.), by dilute HCl (2:100), by carbolic acid (2:100), by zinc chloride (5:100), by potassæ permanganas (10:100), by lime chloride (4:100), or indeed by any of the strong antiseptics.

Incubation. This extends from four to seven days on an average, with a minimum of two and a maximum of twenty days. The conditions favoring an early eruption are youth, high condition, and a hot season, or close warm building, with overcrowding. Those favoring a tardy eruption are old age, debility, and above all a cold or wet season with exposure in the open air. Simonds, who inoculated in England in the cold months (October and November) never saw it exceed 13 days. In certain cases, however when the eruption had already commenced in mild weather, the sudden occurrence of a week of cold and wet, would stop it short to start anew on the return of warm weather a week later. In inoculated cases the incubation is shortened, while it is prolonged when the virus is introduced by the digestive or respiratory passages.

Symptoms. During the last two or three days of a prolonged incubation and especially in old sheep, there may be some impairment of appetite and rumination, dulness, a stiffness of movement of the hind limbs, and a disposition to lag behind the flock. The temperature may even have risen (104.5° F.), yet Simonds has never seen the febrile symptoms precede the eruption.

There follow, trembling, or rigors, accelerated pulse (80 to 90) and breathing, arched back, anorexia, suspension of rumination, costiveness, redness of the eyes, epiphora, a watery discharge from the nose, gradually becoming more viscid, and a marked hyperthermia (105°, 106° or 107° F.) If the skin is white, a blush, with some heat, is shown in the seat of the future eruption, usually on the parts uncovered by wool, the axillæ, sternum, abdomen, udder, inner sides of the thighs, lower surface of the tail, and the face—especially the eyelids, nostrils and lips.

In two days more, deep red points, like flea bites, appear more or less numerously, in the congested parts of the skin, and in twenty-four hours these have increased to firm rounded papules which are felt to extend into the true skin. These vary in size from 3 to 12 mm. or more. In two or three days the papule has become firmer and less tender, and shows in the centre a paler area where the exudation has resolved it into a vesicle. The characteristic sheeppox vesicle is rounded or flattened on its summit, being rarely pointed as in smallpox, or umbilicated as in cowpox. It is usually surrounded by a pink zone, which is at times infiltrated, firm and resistant. After about the sixth day, the vesicle becomes yellowish from the formation of pus. The pustules, with the surrounding tumefaction, encrease for about three days, when if they have not become confluent nor infected, they begin to dry up, acquiring a grayish crust on the surface which gradually encreases to a thick scab, which in five or six days more is detached leaving a pink, pitted spot covered by forming epidermis. Sometimes no distinct scab forms, but the crust dries, cracks up, and falls off in scales.

All the vesicles do not appear at once, but some earlier and some later, so that the successive stages of the eruption may be often seen together on the same subject, and the case is thereby materially prolonged.

As in other forms of variola the hyperthermia usually subsides with the appearance of the eruption, but as often reappears in some measure with pustulation (secondary fever of reaction), and becomes more severe in proportion to the extent and confluence of the eruption and the occurrence of complex infection.