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Titles
- A brief rule to guide the common people of New-England how to order themselves and theirs in the small-pox and measels1
- A letter from one in the country, to his friend in the city: in relation to their distresses occasioned by the doubtful and prevailing practice of the inocculation [sic] of the small-pox1
- A letter to a friend in the country, attempting a solution of the scruples and objections of conscientious or religious nature, commonly made against the new way of receiving the small-pox1
- Johannes Locke1
- Several arguments proving, that inoculating the small pox is not contained in the law of physick, either natural or divine, and therefore unlawful: together with a reply to two short pieces, one by the Rev. Dr. Increase Mather, and another by an anonymous author, intituled, Sentiments on the small pox inoculated ; and also, a short answer to a late letter in the New England courant1
- Some account of what is said of inoculating or transplanting the small pox1
- Some observations on the new method of receiving the small-pox by ingrafting or inoculating1
- The imposition of inoculation as a duty religiously considered in a leter [sic] to a gentleman in the country inclin'd to admit it1
- [Eighteenth century scientist using microscope]1
- [Smallpox: Brief rule to guide the common people of New England]1
- [Title page from Medicina Flagellata]1