|
Address delivered before the Meeting of the Homeopathic Physicians
of Rhineland and Westphalia, at Dortmund, July 28, 1859.
The choice of the remedy in any concrete case of disease can not
be made too carefully or too cautiously. No less in the healing
art than in morals, the motto holds good : "Bonum ex omni parte,
malum ex quorumque defectu." Many failures occur, especially
with unpracticed beginners, because in examining the symptoms the
one or the other was overlooked. Even with the older and more experienced
homeopathic physicians, especially such as are very busy, such an
occurrence occasionally takes place.
This cannot, however, prove either the insufficiency of Homeopathy
in general nor the inadequacy of the small and rare doses, and the
experienced practitioner, who always looks with suspicion on such
excuses, will in such cases first of all subject the image of the
disease which he has formed to a new revision, and look for the
lack of his success in his medication first in this direction.
It is not, inndeed, my intention to offer anything new here to
the practised and experienced physicians. But it does seem to me
as if an incidental warning to such as are about to eneter on this
field might not be altogether superflous, and I consider it on that
account allowable to introduce a case that happened lately, and
which will put what I desire to say into its proper light. I donot
intend to speak here of curing merely by the name of the disease,
the so called "Medicina nominalis", which is altogether
a different matter, and which is still doing untold mischief, for
such a treatment is very acme of irrartional and unconcionable routine,
and warning against such a practise would justlt be considered an
insult even by the youngest of our collegues.
Merchant Ph. M., thirty years of age, had caught a cold last winter
while travelling; he didnot at first pay any attention to it, but
the increasing ailment demanded medical assistance. Treatment by
an allopath had remained without effect; in fact, during this treatment,
lasting three months, nearly all the symptoms had grown considerably
worse, so that now, as is so frequently done, the homeopath was
called for aid. The following symptom formed the image of the disease:
For the last three or four weeks there has been a hollow, dry cough
with hoarseness and much toughness in the larynx, most violent during
night. Constriction of the chest with stitches in the left side
while lying on that side. Internal heat, without thirst. Severe
exhausting perspiration. Striking timidity. great drowsiness, but
restless sleep, waking up frequently, while an internal anxiety
prevents his going to sleep again. The face pale and collapsed,
with a circumscribed redness of cheeks. Pressure in the stomach
after eating especially after eating, especially after milk, often
with vomiting, first of ingesta and then of gall. Augmented, watery
urine. Extraordinary emaciation. He prefers warmth, and it agrees
best with him. he feels better in moderate motion than in continuous
rest. He had never been unwell much, and had never been actually
sick He could take a deep breath without any trouble, and frequently
he felt impelled thereto. I could not find out anything about the
allopathic remedies which he had used.
After carful consideration and a protracted comparison of all the
symptoms present with our matera medica, every homeopath will agree
with me that Phosphorus seemed most indiacted of all the remedies,
and this so decidedly that none of the other remedies could at all
compare with it. I, therefore, felt no hesitation at all to give
to my patient mu usual dose( ahigh potency) of this very efficient
remedy, and to direct its administartion in the usual manner (dissolved
in water), recommending to him the usual diet, and directing him
to report to me in person in two weeks.
But I was cruelly and painfully disappointed when the patient after
this period appeared before me, for he was not improved in any respect;
on the contrary, his sickly appearance and the threatening redness
of the cheeks had increased and the feverish symptoms had been suspiciously
augmented. In the meantime the remedy had been used exactly according
to my directions, and nothing had been overlooked either in diet
or in his mode of life. What then had been the reason for my total
failure? Under such circumstances the only reson could be the defective
or incorrect examination of the symptoms, so I went over them again
carefully, one by one. The mistake then appeared in the feverish
symptoms, which were only superficially indiacted, and which in
the patient had an unusual and, therfore, unrecognised form, which
was at the same time very characteristic. For while sleeping he
was suffering continually from a dry, burning heat, which
on his waking up immediately passed into a very profuse pespiration,
which continued without interruption while he was awake, until he
fell asleep again, when at once the dry heat reappeared. Thus the
conundrum was solved. This symtpom is found only in Sambucus, while
in Phosphorus just the opposite is found. Since all the other symptoms
coincided my patient recieved at once a dose of the high potency
I usually employ, and the result was then so complete that in two
weeks he was freed from all his ailments and felt as well as ever
before.
|