It is not desired to prove, that atmospheric contagion does not exist, because it cannot be detected by the senses.
Many agencies exist, which, under ordinary circumstances, are beyond the cognizance of the external senses; but in general they make themselves manifest to one, or other, under some conditions. The electricity of the air is neither seen nor felt under ordinary circumstances; but that agent is capable of being collected from the atmosphere in such quantities as are cognizable to the eye. Now, under any manner of circumstances, contagion has never been recognised by the senses—and it has never been detected by chemical experiments.
It is surely not unfair to expect, that, if a contagious poison, a palpable matter such as is contained in a small-pox pustule, is transformed to the vaporic state, or taken into the atmosphere, that the air so impregnated will be marked by some qualities, beyond those of simple, pure air. Perhaps air in which it is disseminated should have an odour, and perhaps that odour should be of a peculiar kind, in each disease. Should it not also be marked by some effects, constant and uniform, upon the human body, such as mark the career of such like agents in a palpable form, when applied either immediately, as by touch, or mediately, as by fomites? Perhaps it may not be deemed unreasonable to expect, that atmospheric contagion, did it exist, would produce its peculiar effects, as constantly, or nearly so, as a palpable contagious poison. But how different is the fact. If a hundred persons not formerly vaccinated, have the palpable contagion of cow-pox matter inserted under the skin, the probability is, that, if the matter is good, and the operation is skilfully done, 90 or 95 will be duly affected with the specific effects; whereas, when a hundred persons are exposed to the atmosphere of fever, and when these persons, too, have not before had the disease, perhaps not one, or at most not above two or three will take the distemper, unless the air has become extremely vitiated; and then the probability is, that it is so, not in consequence of the presence of specific contagious virus, but of gross impurities, and the consumption of the more vital parts, as in the case of the Black Hole of Calcutta, where putrid fever attacked all who survived their confinement, certainly not from the action of contagious poison.
CHAPTER V.
CONTAGIOUS POISONS—NON-SOLUTION IN THE AIR—RESULTS OF EXPERIMENTS.
Animal substances are the results of still more delicate processes, and of a more refined organization (than vegetables); and the balance of affinities, by which they exist, is disturbed by still slighter causes.
Henry.
For the present, the argument drawn from the actual observation of the origin and propagation of disease, against the doctrine of atmospheric contagion, will be waived, and it is proposed here, before going farther, to inquire, whether the case may not be settled by a reference to the history of analogous agents, and to the results of experiment.
It is proposed here to inquire if it is likely, judging from their chemical constitution, that palpable contagious poisons, such as the matter of small-pox, may be disseminated through the air, without chemical changes being effected upon them, that must be destructive of their peculiar properties.
The palpable contagious poisons are products of the blood, formed therefrom, by the nicest processes. They partake of the nature common to all animal products; are, like them, prone to putrefaction,—and, like them, are of a very compound nature.
They are animal products: now it is a well known fact that almost all animal products are fixed—that is, incapable of being volatilized or disseminated in air, unchanged in chemical constitution.