Some reasons given against an opinion that a person infected with the small-pox may be cured by antidote without incurring the distemper With An attempt to explain the manner of the propagation and eruption of the Small-Pox from the practice of Inoculation; and why this distemper, taken, by common infection, in the natural way, proves so much more fatal than that which is given by Inoculation. By Thomas Frewen, M.D.
Title
Some reasons given against an opinion that a person infected with the small-pox may be cured by antidote without incurring the distemper [electronic resource] : With An attempt to explain the manner of the propagation and eruption of the Small-Pox from the practice of Inoculation; and why this distemper, taken, by common infection, in the natural way, proves so much more fatal than that which is given by Inoculation. By Thomas Frewen, M.D.
Published by
London : printed for J. Wilkie, at the Bible, in St. Paul's Church-Yard, MDCCLIX. [1759]
Some reasons given against an opinion that a person infected with the small-pox may be cured by antidote without incurring the distemper [electronic resource] : With An attempt to explain the manner of the propagation and eruption of the Small-Pox from the practice of Inoculation; and why this distemper, taken, by common infection, in the natural way, proves so much more fatal than that which is given by Inoculation. By Thomas Frewen, M.D.
Imprint
London : printed for J. Wilkie, at the Bible, in St. Paul's Church-Yard, MDCCLIX. [1759]
Reproduction
Electronic reproduction. Farmington Hills, Mich. : Cengage Gale, 2009. Available via the World Wide Web. Access limited by licensing agreements.