Until a few decades ago, bacteria were a genuine household threat, and although most of us
survived them, we were always aware of the nearness of death. We moved, with our families, in and out of death. We had
lobar pneumonia, meningococcal meningitis, streptococcal infections, diphtheria, endocarditis, enteric fevers, various
septicemias, syphilis, and, always, everywhere, tuberculosis. Most of these have now left most of us, thanks to antibiotics,
plumbing, civilization, and money, but we remember.
L. Thomas, 'Germs', The Lives of a Cell (1974), 76
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