Page:The story of my childhood (1907).djvu/96

86 of the patient; that it was simply unequal animal warmth and vigor—that people did not have too much blood any more than they had too much bone, and could as ill afford to lose it; that if the blood were too thick, or too thin, or of a bad quality, taking away a portion of it would not rectify or purify the remainder. That a blister was not likely to soothe a nervous patient to sleep, or to extract a pain, save by creating a greater. But that a better way to treat disturbances was to open the pores generally, by a vapor bath—designated "Thompson's Steam Box," and greatly to be feared. He and his few followers were known as "Steam Doctors"—and the public warned against them.

It happened that one of his disciples, a "Steam Doctor," residing in a