by Stephen Morgan » Sun Mar 21, 2010 6:02 pm
Sometimes it is my notion that there never has been a case of hydrophobia, as anything but an instance of personal witchcraft: but there are so very many data for thinking that a disease in general is very much like an individual case of the disease, in that it runs its course and then disappears -- quite independently of treatment, whether by the poisoned teat of a cow, or the dried sore of a mummy -- that I suspect that once upon a time there was, to some degree, hydrophobia. When I was a boy, pitted faces were [277/278] common. What has become of smallpox? Where are yellow fever and cholera? I'm not supposed to answer my own questions, am I? But serums, say the doctors. But there are enormous areas in the Americas and Europe, where vaccines have never penetrated. But they did it, say the doctors.
Eclipses occur, and savages are frightened. The medicine men wave wands -- the sun is cured -- they did it.
The story of diseases reads like human history -- the rise and fall of Black Death -- and the appearance and rule of Smallpox -- the Tubercular Empire -- and the United Afflictions of Yellow Fever and Cholera. Some of them passed away before serums were thought of, and in times when sanitation was unpopular. Several hundred years ago there was a lepers' house in every good-sized city in England. A hundred years ago there had not been much of what is called improvement in medicine and sanitation, but leprosy had virtually disappeared, in England. Possibly the origin of leprosy in England was in personal witchcraft -- or that if the Bible had never devastated England, nobody there would have had the idea of leprosy -- that when wicked doubts arose, the nasty suspicions of people made them clean.(7)
-- Charles Fort
Those who dream by night in the dusty recesses of their minds wake in the day to find that all was vanity; but the dreamers of the day are dangerous men, for they may act their dream with open eyes, and make it possible. -- Lawrence of Arabia