Louis Pasteur — "My dearest wife, I have arrived at the conclusion that the disease of silkworms …"
My dearest wife, I have arrived at the conclusion that the disease of silkworms is caused by a microbe.
My dearest wife, I have arrived at the conclusion that the disease of silkworms is caused by a microbe.
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"I am often scolded by Madame Pasteur, but I tell her I shall lead her to fame."
"The more I study nature, the more I stand amazed at the work of the Creator."
"Let me tell you the secret that has led me to my goal: my strength lies solely in my tenacity."
"The universe is asymmetric and I am persuaded that life, as it is known to us, is a direct result of the asymmetry of the universe."
"When I approach a child, he inspires in me two sentiments: tenderness for what he is, and respect for what he may become."
Letter to his wife, Marie Pasteur, during his research on silkworm disease.
Date: 1865
Love & RelationshipsFound in 1 providers: grok
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Pasteur tells his wife he has figured out that a tiny living organism is responsible for the sickness killing silkworms. In plain modern terms, he is saying the illness is not bad luck, bad air, or spontaneous decay, but an actual germ that can be identified, tracked, and fought. It is a confident announcement that an invisible microbe is the real culprit behind a devastating outbreak.
Pasteur spent years in the 1860s studying the silkworm plague ravaging France's silk industry, living in Alès and dissecting worms daily. The letter fits his pattern of sharing breakthroughs first with Marie, his scientific partner and lab assistant. It also captures his signature method: suspect a microbe, isolate it, prove causation. This work directly fed germ theory, pasteurization, and later his rabies and anthrax vaccines.
In the 1860s France's silk trade was collapsing from pebrine, threatening a major national industry. Most scientists still blamed miasmas, heredity, or spontaneous generation for disease. Pasteur's microbial explanation was radical and contested, yet it arrived as railways, microscopes, and industrial agriculture were amplifying epidemics in livestock and humans. Identifying a specific microbe as cause reframed medicine, farming, and public health for the coming germ-theory revolution.
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