ELIZABETH WYNNE, aged fifty-seven,
lived as a servant with a neighbouring Farmer thirty-eight
years ago. She was then a dairymaid, and the
Cow Pox broke out among the cows. She caught the
disease with the rest of the family, but, compared
with them, had it in a very slight degree, one very
small sore only breaking out on the little finger
of her left hand, and scarcely any perceptible indisposition
following it.
As the malady had shewn itself in
so slight a manner, and as it had taken place at so
distant a period of her life, I was happy with the
opportunity of trying the effects of variolous matter
upon her constitution, and on the 28th of March, 1797,
I inoculated her by making two superficial incisions
on the left arm, on which the matter was cautiously
rubbed. A little efflorescence soon appeared,
and a tingling sensation was felt about the parts
where the matter was inserted until the third day,
when both began to subside, and so early as the fifth
day it was evident that no indisposition would follow.