Edward Jenner — "The most beautiful part of the human frame is the eye; and yet it is the most li…"
The most beautiful part of the human frame is the eye; and yet it is the most liable to disease.
The most beautiful part of the human frame is the eye; and yet it is the most liable to disease.
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"The true philosopher is he who is always learning, and who is never ashamed to confess his ignorance."
"The most important lesson that I have learned in life is, that we should always endeavour to do our duty."
"It is a great satisfaction to me to reflect, that I have been instrumental in saving so many lives."
"I have never been a lover of controversy; but when truth is concerned, I am not afraid to speak out."
"I've dispatc'd, my dear madam, this scrap of a letter, To say that Miss — — is very much better. A Regular Doctor no longer she lacks, And therefore I've sent her a couple of Quacks."
General observation, possibly from a lecture or personal notes
Date: c. 1790s
Art & CreativityFound in 1 providers: grok
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The eye, widely considered humanity's most striking and expressive feature, is paradoxically among its most vulnerable organs. Beauty and fragility coexist in the same structure. What we prize most aesthetically can be the thing most easily damaged or destroyed by illness, injury, or age — a reminder that nature does not protect what it makes precious.
Jenner was a physician who spent decades observing the human body's contradictions. His work on smallpox vaccination arose from noticing that milkmaids who contracted cowpox were spared smallpox's disfiguring effects — including blindness. Smallpox frequently destroyed vision. This observation about the eye's vulnerability reflects his clinical habit of seeing where nature's designs most cruelly betray human beings.
In late 18th-century Britain, smallpox was the era's most feared disease, blinding and killing millions annually. Ophthalmology was primitive; trachoma, iritis, and smallpox-related corneal scarring caused widespread blindness with no effective treatment. Jenner practiced in an era when beauty was prized in Enlightenment aesthetics while disease ravaged the very features — faces, eyes — that defined that beauty, making his observation culturally resonant.
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