English writer and essayist Lady Mary Wortley Montagu ( 1689 − 1762 ) traveled extensively and was fascinated by the customs in other countries. While in Turkey, she observed the practice of "engrafting” wherein people were inoculated against smallpox by intentional exposure to a mild form of the disease. She was so convinced of the efficacy and the safety of engrafting, that she had both of her children inoculated. She herself had survived smallpox as a child. Lady Montagu campaigned for the practice when she returned to England, and despite opposition from doctors and religious leaders, inoculation came into common use. It remained the primary defense against the scourge of smallpox for decades—until Jenner developed the practice of vaccination. Based on the passage, the author most likely thinks that Lady Montagu was a) educated and influential. b) inconsequential in the prevention of smallpox in England. c) trained in science and medicine. d) married to the British ambassador to Turkey.
English writer and essayist Lady Mary Wortley Montagu ( 1689 − 1762 ) traveled extensively and was fascinated by the customs in other countries. While in Turkey, she observed the practice of "engrafting” wherein people were inoculated against smallpox by intentional exposure to a mild form of the disease. She was so convinced of the efficacy and the safety of engrafting, that she had both of her children inoculated. She herself had survived smallpox as a child. Lady Montagu campaigned for the practice when she returned to England, and despite opposition from doctors and religious leaders, inoculation came into common use. It remained the primary defense against the scourge of smallpox for decades—until Jenner developed the practice of vaccination. Based on the passage, the author most likely thinks that Lady Montagu was a) educated and influential. b) inconsequential in the prevention of smallpox in England. c) trained in science and medicine. d) married to the British ambassador to Turkey.
Solution Summary: The author explains that Lady Montagu was an English writer and essayist, who inoculated her children against small-pox in Turkey and campaigned in England.
English writer and essayist Lady Mary Wortley Montagu
(
1689
−
1762
)
traveled extensively and was fascinated by the customs in other countries. While in Turkey, she observed the practice of "engrafting” wherein people were inoculated against smallpox by intentional exposure to a mild form of the disease. She was so convinced of the efficacy and the safety of engrafting, that she had both of her children inoculated. She herself had survived smallpox as a child. Lady Montagu campaigned for the practice when she returned to England, and despite opposition from doctors and religious leaders, inoculation came into common use. It remained the primary defense against the scourge of smallpox for decades—until Jenner developed the practice of vaccination.
Based on the passage, the author most likely thinks that Lady Montagu was
a)
educated and influential.
b)
inconsequential in the prevention of smallpox in England.
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