|
§ 281 Fifth Edition
Every patient is, especially in his diseased point, capable of
being influenced in an incredible degree by medicinal agents corresponding
by similarity of action; and there is no person, be he ever so robust,
and even though he be affected only with a chronic or so-called
local disease, who will not soon experience the desired change in
the affected part, if he take the salutary, homoeopathically suited
medicine in the smallest conceivable dose, who, in a word, will
not thereby be much more altered in his health than a healthy infant
of but a day old would be. How insignificant and ridiculous is
mere theoretical scepticism in opposition to this unerring, infallible
experimental proof!
§ 281 Sixth Edition
In order to be convinced of this, the patient is left without any
medicine for eight, ten of fifteen days, meanwhile giving him only
some powders of sugar of milk. If the few last complaints are due
to the medicine simulating the former original disease symptoms,
then these complaints will disappear in a few days or hours. If
during these days without medicine, while continuing good hygienic
regulations nothing more of the original disease is seen, he is
probably cured. But if in the later days traces of the former morbid
symptoms should show themselves, they are remnants of the original
disease not wholly extinguished, which must be treated with renewed
higher potencies of the remedy as directed before. If a cure is
to follow, the first small doses must likewise be again gradually
raised higher, but less and more slowly in patients where considerable
irritability is evident than in those of less susceptibility, where
the advance to higher dosage may be more rapid. There are patients
whose impressionability compared to that of the insusceptible ones
is like the ratio as 1000 to 1.
§ 282 Fifth Edition
The smallest possible dose of homoeopathic medicine capable of
producing only the very slightest homoeopathic aggravation, will,
because it has the power of exciting symptoms bearing the greatest
possible resemblance to the original disease (but yet stronger even
in the minute dose), attack principally and almost solely the parts
in the organism that are already affected, highly irritated, and
rendered excessively susceptible to such a similar stimulus, and
will alter the vital force that rules in them to a state of very
similar artificial disease, somewhat greater in degree than the
natural one was; this artificial disease will substitute itself
for the natural (the original) disease, so that the living organism
now suffers from the artificial medicinal disease alone, which,
from its nature and owing to the minuteness of the dose, will soon
be extinguished by the vital force that is striving to return to
the normal state, and (if the disease were only an acute one) the
body is left perfectly free from disease - that is to say, quite
well.
§ 282 Sixth Edition
It would be a certain sign that the doses were altogether too large,
if during treatment, especially in chronic disease, the first dose
should bring forth a so-called homoeopathic aggravation, that is,
a marked increase of the original morbid symptoms first discovered
and in the same way every repeated dose (§ 247) however modified
somewhat by shaking before its administration (i.e., more highly
dynamized).1
1 The rule to commence the homoeopathic treatment if
chronic diseases with the smallest possible doses and only gradually
to augment them is subject to a notable exception in the treatment
of the three great miasms while they still effloresce on the skin,
i.e., recently erupted itch, the untouched chancre (on the sexual
organs, labia, mouth or lips, and so forth), and the figwarts. These
not only tolerate, but indeed require, from the very beginning large
doses of their specific remedies of ever higher and higher degrees
of dynamization daily (possibly also several times daily). If this
course be pursued, there is no danger to be feared as is the case
in the treatment of diseases hidden within, that the excessive dose
while it extinguishes the disease, initiates and by continued usage
possible produces a chronic medicinal disease. During external manifestations
of these three miasms this is not the case; for from the daily progress
of their treatment it can be observed and judged to what degree
the large dose withdraws the sensation of the disease from the vital
principle day by day; for none of these three can be cured without
giving the physician the conviction through their disappearance
that there is no longer any further need of these medicines.
Since diseases in general are but dynamic attacks upon the life
principle and nothing material - no materia peccans - as their basis
(as the old school in its delusion has fabulated for a thousand
years and treated the sick accordingly to their ruin) there is also
in these cases nothing material to take away, nothing to smear away,
to burn or tie or cut away, without making the patient endlessly
sicker and more incurable (Chron. Dis. Part 1), than he was before
local treatment of these three miasms was instituted. The dynamic,
inimical principle exerting its influence upon the vital energy
is the essence of these external signs of the inner malignant miasms
that can be extinguished solely by the action of a homoeopathic
medicine upon the vital principle which affects it in a similar
but stronger manner and thus extracts the sensation of internal
and external spirit-like (conceptual) disease enemy in such a way
that it no longer exists for the life principle (for the organism)
and thus releases the patient of his illness and he is cured.
Experience, however, teaches that the itch, plus its external manifestations,
as well as the chancre, together with the inner venereal miasm,
can and must be cured only by means of specific medicines taken
internally. But the figwarts, if they have existed for some time
without treatment, have need for their perfect cure, the external
application of their specific medicines as well as their internal
use at the same time.
§ 283 Fifth Edition
Now, in order to act really in conformity with nature, the true
physician will prescribe his well-selected homoeopathic medicine
only in exactly as small a dose as will just suffice to over power
and annihilate the disease before him - in a dose of such minuteness,
that if human fallibility should betray him into administering an
inappropriate medicine, the injury, accruing from its nature being
unsuited to the disease will be diminished to a mere trifle; moreover
the harm done by the smallest possible dose is so slight, that it
may be immediately extinguished and repaired by the natural vital
powers, and by the speedy administration of a remedy more suitable
selected according to similarity of action, and given also in the
smallest dose.
§ 283 Sixth Edition
In order to work wholly according to nature, the true healing artist
will prescribe the accurately chosen homoeopathic medicine most
suitable in all respects in so small a dose on account of this alone.
For should he be misled by human weakness to employ an unsuitable
medicine, the disadvantage of its wrong relation to the disease
would be so small that the patient could through his own vital powers
and by means of early opposition (§ 249) of the correctly chosen
remedy according to symptom similarly (and this also in the smallest
dose) rapidly extinguish and repair it.
§ 284 Fifth Edition
The action of a dose, moreover, dose not diminish in the direct
ratio of the quantity of material medicine contained in the dilutions
used in homoeopathic practice. Eight drops of the tincture of a
medicine to the dose do not produce four times as much effect on
the human body as two drops, but only about twice the effect that
is produced by two drops to the dose. In like manner, one drop of
a mixture of a drop of the tincture with ten drops of some unmedicinal
fluid, when taken, will not produce ten times more effect than one
drop of mixture ten times more attenuated, but only about (scarcely)
twice as strong an effect, and so on, in the same ratio - so that
a drop of the lowest dilution must, and really does, display still
a very considerable action.1
1 Supposing one drop of a mixture that contains 1/10
of a grain of medicine produces an effect = a; one drop of a more
diluted mixture containing 1/100th of a grain of the medicine will
only produce an effect = a/2; if it contain 1/10000th of a grain
of medicine, about = a/4; if it contain 1/100000000th of a grain
of medicine it will produce and effect = a/8; and thus it goes on,
the volume of the doses being equal, with every (perhaps more than)
quadratic diminution of the quantity of medicine, the action on
the human body will be diminished each time to only about one-half.
I have very often seen a drop of the decillion-fold dilution of
tincture of nux vomica produce pretty nearly just half as much effect
as a drop of the quintillion-fold dilution, under the same circumstances
and in the same individual.
§ 284 Sixth Edition
Besides the tongue, mouth and stomach, which are most commonly
affected by the administration of medicine, the nose and respiratory
organs are receptive of the action of medicines in fluid form by
means of olfaction and inhalation through the mouth. But the whole
remaining skin of the body clothed with epidermis, is adapted to
the action of medicinal solutions, especially if the inunction is
connected with simultaneous internal administration.1
1 The power of medicines acting upon the infant through
the milk of the mother or wet nurse is wonderfully helpful. Every
disease in a child yields to the rightly chosen homoeopathic medicines
given in moderate doses to the nursing mother and so administered,
is more easily and certainly utilized by these new world-citizens
than is possible in later years. Since most infants usually have
imparted to them psora through the milk of the nurse, if they do
not already possess it through heredity from the mother, they may
be at the same time protected antipsorically by means of the milk
of the nurse rendered medicinally in this manner. But the case of
mothers in their (first) pregnancy by means of a mild antipsoric
treatment, especially with sulphur dynamizations prepared according
to the directions in this edition (§ 270), is indispensable in order
to destroy the psora - that producer of most chronic diseases -
which is given them hereditarily; destroy it both within themselves
and in the foetus, thereby protecting posterity in advance. This
is true of pregnant women thus treated; they have given birth to
children usually more healthy and stronger, to the astonishment
of everybody. A new confirmation of the great truth of the psora
theory discovered by me.
§ 285 Fifth Edition
The diminution of the dose essential for homoeopathic use, will
also be promoted by diminishing its volume, so that, if, instead
of a drop of a medicinal dilution, we take but quite a small part1
of such a drop for a dose, the object of diminishing the effect
still further will be very effectually attained; and that this will
be the case may be readily conceived for this reason, because with
the smaller volume of the dose but few nerves of the living organism
can be touched, whereby the power of the medicine is certainly also
communicated to the whole organism, but it is a weaker power.
1 For this purpose it is most convenient to employ fine
sugar globules of the size of poppy seeds, one of which imbibed
with the medicine and put into the dispensing vehicle constitutes
a medicinal dose, which contains about the three hundredth part
of a drop, for three hundred such small globules will be adequately
moistened by one drop of alcohol. The dose is vastly diminished
by laying one such globule alone upon the tongue and giving nothing
to drink. If it be necessary, in the case of a very sensitive patient,
to employ the smallest possible dose and to bring about the most
rapid result, one single olfaction merely will suffice (see note
to §288).
§ 285 Sixth Edition
In this way, the cure of very old disease may be furthered by the
physician applying externally, rubbing it in the back, arms, extremities,
the same medicine he gives internally and which showed itself curatively.
In doing so, he must avoid parts subject to pain or spasm or skin
eruption.1
1 From this fact may be explained those marvellous cures,
however infrequent, where chronic deformed patients, whose skin
nevertheless was sound and clean, were cured quickly and permanently
after a few baths whose medicinal constituents (by, chance) were
homoeopathically related. On the other hand, the mineral baths very
often brought on increased injury with patients, whose eruptions
on the skin were suppressed. After a brief period of well-being,
the life principle allowed the inner, uncured malady to appear elsewhere,
more important for life and health.
At times, instead, the ocular nerve would become paralyzed and
produce amaurosis, sometimes the crystalline lens would become clouded,
hearing lost, mania or suffocating asthma would follow or an apoplexy
would end the sufferings of the deluded patient.
A fundamental principle of the homoeopathic physician (which distinguishes
him from every physician of all older schools) is this, that he
never employs for any patient a medicine, whose effects on the healthy
human has not previously been carefully proven and thus made known
to him (§§ 20,21). To prescribe for the sick on mere conjecture
of some possible usefulness for some similar disease or from hearsay
“that a remedy has helped in such and such a disease” - such conscienceless
venture the philanthropic homoeopathist will leave to the allopath.
A genuine physician and practitioner or our art will therefore never
send the sick to any of the numerous mineral baths, because almost
all are unknown so far as their accurate, positive effects on the
healthy human organism is concerned, and when misused, must be counted
among the most violent and dangerous drugs. In this way, out of
a thousand sent to the most celebrated of these baths by ignorant
physicians allopathically uncured and blindly sent there perhaps
one or two are cured by chance more often return only apparently
cured and the miracle is proclaimed aloud. Hundreds, meanwhile sneak
quietly away, more or less worse and the rest remain to prepare
themselves for their eternal resting place, a fact that is verified
by the presence of numerous well-filled graveyards surrounding the
most celebrated of these spas.*
* A true homoeopathic physician, one who never acts without correct
fundamental principles, never gambles with the life of the sick
entrusted to him as in a lottery where the winner is in the ratio
of 1 to 500 or 1000 (blanks here consisting of aggravation or death),
will never expose any one of his patients to such danger and send
him for good luck to a mineral bath, as is done so frequently by
allopaths in order to get rid of the sick in an acceptable manner
spoiled by him or others.
§ 286 Fifth Edition
For the same reason the effect of a homoeopathic dose of medicine
increases, the greater the quantity of fluid in which it is dissolved
when administered to the patient, although the actual amount of
medicine it contains remains the same. For in this case, when the
medicine is taken, it comes in contact with a much larger surface
of sensitive nerves responsive to the medicinal action. Although
theorists may imagine there should be a weakening of the action
of dose of medicine by its dilution with a large quantity of liquid,
experience asserts exactly the opposite, at all events when the
medicines are employed homoeopathically.1
1 It is only the most simple of stimulants, wine and
alcohol, that have their heating and intoxicating action diminished
by dilution with much water.
§ 286 Sixth Edition
The dynamic force of minerals magnets, electricity and galvanism
act no less powerfully upon our life principle and they are not
less homoeopathic than the properly so-called medicines which neutralize
disease by taking them through the mouth, or by rubbing them on
the skin or by olfaction. There may be diseases, especially diseases
of sensibility and irritability, abnormal sensations, and involuntary
muscular movements which may be cured by those means. But the more
certain way of applying the last two as well as that of the so-called
electromagnetic lies still very much in the dark to make homoeopathic
use of them. So far both electricity and Galvanism have been used
only for palliation to the great damage of the sick. The positive,
pure action of both upon the healthy human body have until the present
time been but little tested.
§ 287 Fifth Edition
But in this increase of action by the mixture of the dose of medicine
with a larger quantity of liquid (before its ingestion), the result
is vastly different whether the mixture of the dose of medicine
with a certain quantity of liquid is performed merely superficially
and imperfectly, or so uniformly and intimately1 that the smallest portion of the diluting fluid received the same
quantity of medicine in proportion as all the rest; for the latter
becomes much more medicinally powerful by the diluting mixture than
the former. From this every one will be able to judge for himself
how to proceed with the regulation of the homoeopathic medicinal
doses when he desires to diminish their medicinal action as much
as possible, in order to make them suitable for the most sensitive
patients.2
1 By the word intimately I mean this: that when, for instance,
the drop of a medicinal fluid has been shaken up once with one hundred
drops of spirits of wine; that is to say, the phial containing both,
held in the hand, has been rapidly moved from above downwards with
a single smart jerk of the arm, there certainly ensues a thorough
mixture of the whole, but with two, three, ten and more such strokes,
this mixture becomes much more intimate; that is to say, the medicinal
power becomes much more potentized, and the spirit of this medicine,
so to speak, becomes much more unfolded, developed and rendered
much more penetrating in its action on the nerves. If, then, the
required object we wish to attain with the low dilutions be the
diminution of the doses for the purpose of moderating their powers
upon the organism, we would do well to give no more than two such
succussion-jerks to each of the twenty, thirty, etc., dilution phials,
and thus to develop the medicinal power only moderately. It is also
advisable, in attenuating the medicine in the state of dry powder
by trituration in a porcelain mortar, to keep within certain limits,
and, for example, to triturate strongly, for one hour only, one
grain of the crude entire medical substance, mixed with the first
hundred grains of milk-sugar (to the 1/10000th attenuation) likewise
only for one hour, and to make the third attenuation (to 1/1000000)
also by one hour of strong trituration of one grain of the previous
mixture with one hundred grains of milk-sugar, in order to bring
the medicine to such an attenuation that its development of power
shall remain moderate. A more exact description of this process
will be found in the prefaces to Arsenic and Pulsatilla in the Materia
Medica Pura.
2 The higher we carry the attenuation accompanied by dynamization
(by two succussion strokes), with so much the more rapid and penetrating
action does the preparation seem to affect the vital force and to
alter the health, with but slight diminution of strength even when
this operation is carried very far, - in place, as is usual (and
generally sufficient) to X when it is carried up to XX, L, C, and
higher; only that then the action always appears to last a shorter
time.
§ 287 Sixth Edition
The powers of the magnet for healing purposes can be employed with
more certainty according to the positive effects detailed in the
Materia Medica Pura under north and south pole of a powerful magnetic
bar. Though both poles are alike powerful, they nevertheless oppose
each other in the manner of their respective action. The doses may
be modified by the length of time of contact with one or the other
pole, according as the symptoms of either north or south pole are
indicated. As antidote to a too violent action the application of
a plate of polished zinc will suffice.
§ 288 Fifth Edition
The action of medicines in the liquid from1 upon the living
human body takes place in such a penetrating manner, spreads out
from the point of the sensitive fibers provided with nerves whereto
the medicine is first applied with such inconceivable rapidity and
so universally through all parts of the living body, that this action
of the medicine must be denominated a spirit-like (a dynamic, virtual)
action.
1 It is especially in the form of vapour, by olfaction
and inhalation of the medicinal aura that is always emanating from
a globule impregnated with a medicinal fluid in a high development
of power, and placed, dry, in a small phial, that the homoeopathic
remedies act most surely and most powerfully. The homoeopathic physician
allows the patient to hold the open mouth of the phial first in
one nostril, and in the act of inspiration draw the air out of it
into himself and then if he wished to give a stronger dose, smell
in the same manner with the other nostril, more or less strongly,
according to the strength it is intended the dose should be, he
then corks up the phial and replaces it in his pocket case to prevent
any misuse of it, and unless he wishes it he has no occasion for
an apothecary’s assistance in his practice. A globule of which ten,
twenty or one hundred weigh one grain, impregnated with the thirtieth
potentized dilution, and then dried, retains for this purpose all
its power undiminished for at least eighteen or twenty years (my
experience extends this length of time), even though the phial be
opened a thousand times during that period, if it be but protected
from heat and the sun’s light. Should both nostrils be stopped up
by coryza or polypus, the patient should inhale by the mouth, holding
the orifice of the phial betwixt his lips. In little children it
may be applied close to their nostrils whilst they are asleep with
the certainty of producing an effect. The medicinal aura thus inhaled
comes in contact with the nerves in the walls of the spacious cavities
it traverses without obstruction, and thus produces a salutary influence
on the vital force, in the mildest yet most powerful manner, and
this is much preferable to every other mode of administering the
medicament in substance by the mouth. All that homoeopathy is capable
of curing (and what can it not cure beyond the domain of mere manual
surgery affections?) among the most severe chronic diseases that
have not been quite ruined by allopathy, as also among acute disease,
will be most safely and certainly cured by this olfaction. I can
scarcely name one in a hundred out of the many patients that have
sought the advice of myself and my assistant during the past year,
whose chronic or acute disease we have not treated with the most
happy results, solely by means of this olfaction; during the latter
half of this year, moreover, I have become convinced (of what I
never could previously have believed) that by this olfaction the
power of the medicines is exercised upon the patient in, at least,
the same degree of strength, and that more quietly and yet just
as long as when the dose of medicine is taken by the mouth, and
that, consequently, the intervals at which the olfaction should
be repeated should not be shorter than in the ingestion of the material
dose by the mouth.
§ 288 Sixth Edition
I find it yet necessary to allude here to animal magnetism, as it
is termed, or rather Mesmerism (as it should be called in deference
to Mesmer, its first founder) which differs so much in its nature
from all other therapeutic agents. This curative force, often so
stupidly denied and disdained for a century, acts in different ways.
It is a marvellous, priceless gift of God to mankind by means of
which the strong will of a well intentioned person upon a sick one
by contact and even without this and even at some distance, can
bring the vital energy of the healthy mesmerizer endowed with this
power into another person dynamically (just as one of the poles
of a powerful magnetic rod upon a bar of steel).
It acts in part by replacing in the sick whose vital force within
the organism is deficient here and there, in part also in other
parts where the vital force has accumulated too much and keeps up
irritating nervous disorders it turns it aside, diminishes and distributes
it equally and in general extinguishes the morbid condition of the
life principle of the patient and substitutes in its place the normal
of the mesmerist acting powerfully upon him, for instance, old ulcers,
amaurosis, paralysis of single organs and so forth. Many rapid apparent
cures performed in all ages, by mesmerizers endowed with great natural
power, belong to this class. The effect of communicated human power
upon the whole human organism was most brilliantly shown, in the
resuscitation of persons who had lain some time apparently dead,
by the most powerful sympathetic will of a man in full vigor of
vital energy,1 and of this kind of resurrection history
records many undeniable examples.
If the mesmerizing person of either sex capable at the same time of
a good-natured enthusiasm (even its degeneration into bigotry, fanaticism,
mysticism or philanthropic dreaming) will be empowered all the more
with this philanthropic self-sacrificing performance to direct exclusively
the power of his commanding good will to the recipient requiring
his help and at the same time to concentrate these, he may at times
perform apparent miracles.
1 Especially of one of such persons, of whom there are
not many, who, along with great kindness of disposition and perfect
bodily powers, possesses but a very moderate desire for sexual intercourse,
which it would give him very little trouble wholly to suppress,
in whom, consequently, all the fine vital spirits that would otherwise
be employed in the production of the semen, are ready to be communicated
to others, by touching them and powerfully exerting the will. Some
powerful mesmerisers, with whom I have become aquatinted, had all
this peculiar character.
§ 289 Fifth Edition
Every part of our body that possesses the sense of touch is also capable
of receiving the influences, and of propagating their power to all
other parts.1
1 A patient even destitute of the sense of smell may expect
an equally perfect action and cure from the medicine by olfaction.
§ 289 Sixth Edition
All the above-mentioned methods of practicing mesmerism depend upon
influx of more or less vital force into the patient, and hence are
termed positive mesmerism.1 An opposite mode of employing
mesmerism, however, as it produces just the contrary effect, deserves
to be termed negative mesmerism. To this belong the passes which
are used to rouse from the somnambulic sleep, as also all the manual
processes known by the names of soothing and ventilating. This discharge
by means of negative mesmerism of the vital force accumulated to
excess in individual parts of the system of undebilitated persons
is most surely and simply performed by making a very rapid motion
or the flat extended hand, held parallel to, and about an inch distant
from the body, from the top of the head to the tips of the toes.2
The more rapidly this pass is made, so much the more effectually
will the discharge be effected. Thus, for instance, in the case
where a previously healthy woman,3 from the sudden suppression
of her catamenia by a violent mental shock, lies to all appearance
dead, the vital force which is probably accumulated in the precordial
region, will, by such a rapid negative pass, be discharged and its
equilibrium throughout the whole organism restored. So that the
resuscitation generally follows, immediately.4 In like
manner, a gentle, less rapid, negative pass diminishes the excessive
restlessness and sleeplessness accompanied with anxiety sometimes
produced in very irritable persons by a too powerful positive pass,
etc.
1 When I here speak of the decided and certain curative
power of positive mesmerism, I most assuredly do not mean that abuse
of it, where, by repeated passes of this kind, continued for half
an hour or a whole hour at a time, and, even day after day, performed
on weak, nervous patients, that monstrous revolution of the whole
human system is effected which is termed somnambulism, wherein the
human being is ravished from the world of sense and seems to belong
more to the world of spirits - a highly unnatural and dangerous
state, by means of which it has not infrequently been attempted
to cure chronic diseases.
2 It is a well known rule that a person who is either to
be positively or negatively mesmerised, should not wear silk on
any part of the body.
3 Hence a negative pass, especially if it be very rapid,
is extremely injurious to a delicate person affected with a chronic
ailment and deficient in vital force.
4 A strong country lad, ten years of age, received in the
morning, on account of slight indisposition, from a professed female
mesmeriser, several very powerful passes with the points of both
thumbs, from the pit of the stomach along the lower edge of the
ribs, and he instantly grew deathly pale, and fell into such a state
of unconsciousness and immobility that no effort could arouse him,
and he was almost given up for dead. I made his eldest brother give
him a very rapid negative pass from the crown of the head over the
body to the feet, and in one instance he recovered his consciousness
and became lively and well.
§ 290 Fifth Edition*
Besides the stomach, the tongue and the mouth are the parts most susceptible
to the medicinal influences; but the interior of the nose is more
especially so, and the rectum, the genitals, as also all particularly
sensitive parts of our body are almost equally capable of receiving
the medicinal action; hence also, parts that are destitute of skin,
wounded or ulcerated spots permit the powers of medicines to exercise
almost as penetrating an action upon the organism as if the medicine
had been taken by the mouth or still better by olfaction and inhalation.
* § 290 corresponds to some extent to § 284 of the Sixth Edition.
§ 290 Sixth Edition
Here belongs also the so-called massage of vigorous good-natured person
given to a chronic invalid, who, though cured, still suffers from
loss of flesh, weakness of digestion and lack of sleep due to slow
convalescence. The muscles of the limbs, breast and back, separately
grasped and moderately pressed and kneaded arouse the life principle
to reach and restore the tone of the muscles and blood and lymph
vessels. The mesmeric influences of this procedure is the chief
feature and it must not be used to excess in patients still hypersensitive.
|