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+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of Apis Mellifica, by C. W. Wolf
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Apis Mellifica, by C. W. Wolf
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Apis Mellifica
+ or, The Poison of the Honey-Bee, Considered as a Therapeutic Agent
+
+Author: C. W. Wolf
+
+Release Date: July 10, 2008 [EBook #26020]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK APIS MELLIFICA ***
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+
+
+<div class="bk1">
+<img src="images/001.png" width="342" height="600" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h1>APIS MELLIFICA;<br />
+<span class="fss">OR,</span><br />
+<small>THE POISON OF THE HONEY-BEE,</small><br />
+<span class="fsl">Considered as a Therapeutic Agent.</span></h1>
+
+<h2>BY C. W. WOLF, M.D.,<br />
+<span class="fss">Ex-District Physician in Berlin.</span></h2>
+
+<p class="p1">PUBLISHED AND FOR SALE BY<br />
+<big>WILLIAM RADDE, 635 ARCH STREET.</big><br />
+<big>1858.</big></p>
+
+<hr /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span></p>
+<h2>PREFACE.</h2>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Every</span> physician who has spent years of an
+active life in prescribing for large numbers of
+patients, is morally bound to publish his experience
+to the world, provided he is satisfied,
+in his interior conscience, that such a publication
+might be useful to the general interests
+of humanity.</p>
+
+<p>In offering the following essay to my readers,
+I simply desire to fulfil an obligation recognised
+as valid by the inner sense. This essay
+contains every thing that an experience
+of forty years in the conscientious and
+philanthropic exercise of my profession has
+sanctioned and confirmed as truth. Nor have
+I adopted a single fact, suggested by my own
+observation, as correct, without contrasting it
+with the most approved records of medicine.
+To every true friend of man, and more
+particularly to every physician who considers
+the business of healing disease as the highest<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>
+office of medical art, I offer this essay for
+further trial and examination. May the
+statements expressed in it either be confirmed
+or else corrected and improved by
+those who excel in more thorough knowledge
+and ability.</p>
+
+<div class="rgt"><span class="smcap">The Author.</span></div>
+
+<p><i>Berlin, Oct., 1857.</i></p>
+
+<hr /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span></p>
+<h2>APIS MELLIFICA.</h2>
+
+<div class="bk1"><p>"The bee helps to heal all thy internal and external maladies,
+and is the best little friend whom man possesses in this world."&mdash;More
+in Cotton's <i>Book of the Bee</i>, p. 138.</p></div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Since</span> Hahnemann's successful attempt to develop
+the medicinal nature of Aconite, no other
+discovery has been made in the domain of practical
+medicine, as comprehensive and universally useful
+as the discovery of the medicinal virtues of the
+poison of the bee. It is of the utmost importance
+to the interests of humanity to become as intimately
+acquainted with the efficacy of this poison as possible.
+It is the object of these papers to contribute
+my mite to this work.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as Dr. Hering had published the provings
+of the bee poison, in his "American Provings," I
+at once submitted them to the test of experience in
+an extensive practice. I prepared the drug which
+I used for this purpose, by pouring half an ounce
+of alcohol on five living bees, and shaking them
+during the space of eight days, three times a-day,
+with one hundred vigorous strokes of the arm.
+From this preparation, which I used as the mother-tincture,
+I obtained attenuations up to the thirties
+centesimal scale. So far, the effects which I have<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>
+obtained with this preparation, have been uniformly
+satisfactory. It has seemed to me that the lower
+potencies lose in power as they are kept for a
+longer period; hence, I consider it safer to prepare
+them fresh every year. As a general rule, I have
+found either the third or the thirtieth potency,
+sufficient.</p>
+
+<p>Day after day I have obtained more satisfactory
+results, and now I look upon Apis mellifica as the
+greatest polychrest, next to Aconite, which we
+possess.</p>
+
+<p>The introduction of this poison to the medical
+profession, will be looked upon as the most brilliant
+merit of one of the most deserving apostles of
+hom&#339;opathy, and will secure immortality to the
+honored name of Constantine Hering. The following
+statements will show how far this faith of a
+grateful heart is founded upon facts:</p>
+
+<p><i>Apis mellifica is the most satisfactory remedy for
+acute hydrocephalus of children.</i></p>
+
+<p>The more acute and dangerous the attack, the
+more readily will it yield to the action of Apis.
+Sudden convulsions, followed by general fever, loss
+of consciousness, delirium, sopor while the child is
+lying in bed, interrupted more or less by sudden
+cries; boring of the head into the pillow, with
+copious sweat about the head, having the odor of
+musk; inability to hold the head erect; squinting
+of one or both eyes; dilatation of the pupils; gritting
+of the teeth; protrusion of the tongue; desire
+to vomit; nausea, retching and vomiting; collapse
+of the abdominal walls; scanty urine, which is<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span>
+sometimes milky; costiveness; trembling of the
+limbs; occasional twitching of the limbs on one
+side of the body, and apparent paralysis of those
+of the other side; painful turning inwards of the
+big toes, extorting cries from the patient; accelerated
+pulse, which soon becomes slower, irregular,
+intermittent and rather hard; these symptoms inform
+us that life is in danger, the more so the
+more numerous they are grouped together.</p>
+
+<p>In comparing with these symptoms the following
+symptoms from Hering's American Provings, Part I.,
+3d Num., p. 294: "40, 41, muttering during sleep;
+muttering and delirium during sleep; 83, 84, he
+had lost all consciousness of the things around him;
+he sank into a state of insensibility; 140, 144, sense
+of weight and fulness in the fore part of the head;
+heaviness and fulness in the vertex; dull pain in
+the occiput, aggravated by shaking the head; pressure,
+fulness and heaviness in the occiput; 170, her
+whole brain feels tired, as if gone to sleep; tingling;
+she experiences the same sensation in both
+arms, especially in the left, and from the left knee
+down to the foot; 175, 176, sensation as if the head
+were too large; swelling of the head; 391, when
+biting the teeth together, swallowing; after gaping
+or at other times, a sort of gritting the teeth; only
+a single, involuntary jerk frequently repeated; 501,
+nausea and vomiting; 506, nausea, as if one would
+vomit, with fainting; 512, vomiting of the ingesta;
+619, retention of stool; 640, retention of urine;
+665, scanty and dark-colored urine; 980, 984, 985,
+trembling, convulsions, starting during sleep as if<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>
+in affright; 1020, sudden weakness, compelling him
+to lie down; he lost all recollection; 1032, great
+desire for sleep, he felt extremely drowsy." If we
+compare these effects of Apis to the above-mentioned
+symptoms of hydrocephalus, we shall find
+the hom&#339;opathicity of Apis to this disease more
+than superficially indicated. If we consider, moreover,
+that the known effects of Apis show that it
+possesses the power of exciting inflammatory irritation
+and &#339;dematous swellings, we are justified, by
+our law of similarity, in expecting curative results
+from the use of Apis in all such diseases.</p>
+
+<p>The experiments which I have instituted for the
+last four years, have convinced me of the correctness
+of this observation. Whenever I had an
+opportunity of giving Apis at the commencement
+of the diseases, it would produce within twelve to
+twenty-four hours quiet sleep; general perspiration,
+affording relief; the feverish and nervous symptoms,
+together with the delirium, would disappear from
+hour to hour, and on waking, the little patient's
+consciousness was lucid, the appetite good and recovery
+fully established. This is a triumph of art
+which inspires us with admiration for our science.
+Less surprising, but equally certain, is the relief, if
+Apis is given after the disease has lasted for some
+time. In such a case, the medicine first excites a
+combat between the morbific force and the conservative
+reaction. The greater the hostile force, the
+longer the struggle between momentary improvement
+and aggravation of the symptoms; it may
+sometimes continue for one, two, or three days. It<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
+is not until now, that a progressive and permanent
+improvement sets in. The desire to vomit is gone;
+the twitching, trembling, and the struggle, generally
+diminish from hour to hour; consciousness returns;
+the squinting and the dilatation of the pupils abate;
+gritting of the teeth and protrusion of the tongue
+cease; the position and movements of the head and
+limbs become more natural; the pulse becomes more
+regular; its slowness yields to a more normal frequency;
+the feverish heat terminates in sweat which
+affords great relief, and the retention of stool and
+urine is succeeded by a more copious action of both
+the bowels and bladder. The natural appetite returns;
+the reproductive process is restored; sleep is quiet and
+refreshing, and recovery is perfectly established in an
+incredibly short period. A cure of this kind generally
+requires five, seven, eleven, and fourteen days. This
+result is so favorable, that those who have not witnessed it,
+or who are too ignorant and egotistical to
+investigate the facts, may reject it as incredible.</p>
+
+<p>Such brilliant results are obtained by means of
+a single drop of Apis, third attenuation. I mix a
+drop with seven tablespoonfuls of water, and give a
+dessert-spoonful every hour, or every two or three
+hours; the more acute the attack, the more frequently
+the dose is repeated; this method generally
+suffices to effect a cure more or less rapidly. As
+long as the improvement progresses satisfactorily,
+all we have to do is to let the medicine act without
+interfering. If the improvement is arrested, or the
+patient gets worse, which sometimes happens in the
+more intense grades of this malady, the best course<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
+is to give a globule of Apis 30, and to watch the
+result for some twenty-four hours. After the lapse
+of this period the improvement will either have
+resumed its course, or else it will continue unsatisfactory.
+In the latter case we should give another
+dose of the above-mentioned solution of Apis 3.
+Not unfrequently I have met with patients upon
+whom Apis acts too powerfully, causing pains in
+the bowels, interminable diarrh&#339;a, of a dysenteric
+character, extreme prostration and a sense of fainting.
+In such cases the tumultuous action of Apis
+is mitigated, and the continued use of this drug,
+rendered possible by giving Apis in alternation
+with Aconite in water, every hour or two hours.</p>
+
+<p>Except such cases, I have never been obliged to
+resort to other accessory means.</p>
+
+<p><i>Apis is no less efficacious against the higher grades
+of ophthalmia.</i></p>
+
+<p>It is particularly rheumatic, catarrhal, erysipelatous,
+and &#339;dematous ophthalmia, which is most
+rapidly, easily, and safely cured by Apis, no matter
+what part of the eye may be the seat of the disease.</p>
+
+<p>The symptoms 188-307 distinctly point to the
+curative virtues of Apis in ophthalmia: "Sensitiveness
+to light, with headache, redness of the eyes; he
+keeps his eyes closed, light is intolerable, the eyes
+are painful and feel sore and irritated if he uses
+them; weakness of sight, with feeling of fullness
+in the eyes; twitching of the left eyeball; feeling
+of heaviness in the eyelids and eyes; aching, sore-pressing,
+tensive, shooting, boring, stinging, burning
+pains in and around the eyes, and above the eyes in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
+the forehead; redness of the eyes and lids; secretion
+of mucus and agglutination of the lids; the lids are
+swollen, dark-red, everted; the conjunctiva is reddened,
+full of dark blood-vessels which gradually
+lose themselves in the cornea; the cornea is obscured,
+smoky, showing a few little ulcers here and
+there; profuse lachrymation; stinging itching in
+the left eye, in the lids and around the eye; sensation
+of a quantity of mucus in the left eye; sensation
+of a foreign little body in the eye; soreness of
+the canthi; styes; &#339;dema of the lids; erysipelatous
+inflammation of the lids."</p>
+
+<p>I have found the correctness of these observations
+uniformly confirmed by the most satisfactory
+cures of such affections. I use the medicine in the
+same manner as for acute hydrocephalus. In some
+cases I found the eye so sensitive to the action of
+Apis, that an exceedingly violent aggravation of
+the inflammatory symptoms ensued, which might
+have proved dangerous to the preservation of such
+a delicate organ as the eye. Inasmuch as it is impossible
+to determine beforehand the degree of sensitiveness,
+I obviate all danger by exhibiting Apis
+in alternation with Aconite in the manner indicated
+for hydrocephalus. By means of this alternate exhibition
+of two drugs, we not only prevent every
+aggravating primary effect, but we at the same
+time act in accordance with the important law,
+that, in order to secure the effective and undisturbed
+repetition of a drug, we have first to interrupt
+its action by some appropriate intermediate
+remedy. All repetitions should cease as soon as a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
+general improvement sets in; if the medicine is
+continued beyond the point where the organism is
+saturated with the drug, it acts as a hostile agent,
+not as a curative remedy. This important point is
+known by the fact, that the improvement which
+had already commenced, seems to remain stationary;
+the patient experiences a distressing urging to
+stool, a burning diarrh&#339;a sets in, and a disproportionate
+feeling of malaise develops itself. Under
+these circumstances, a globule of Apis 30 will quiet
+the patient, and the action of the drug will achieve
+the cure without any further difficulty, and without
+much loss of time, unless psora, sycosis, syphilis, or
+vaccine-virus prevail in the organism, or sulphur,
+iodine or mercury had been previously given in
+large doses. In the presence of such complications
+Apis will prove ineffectual until they have
+been removed by some specific antidote. After
+having made a most careful diagnosis, a single dose
+of the highest potency of the specific remedy be
+given, and be allowed to act as long as a trace of
+improvement is still perceptible. As soon as the
+improvement ceases, or an aggravation of the symptoms
+sets in, Apis is in its place and will act most
+satisfactorily. We then give Apis 3 in water,
+as mentioned above, with the most satisfactory
+success.</p>
+
+<p><i>Apis is the most appropriate remedy for inflammation
+of the tongue, mouth, and throat.</i></p>
+
+<p>The following symptoms may be looked upon as
+striking curative indications: 378-380, 383, 384,
+399, 400, 405, 406, 409, 410, 413, 419, 436, 437,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>
+439, 443, 444, 449, 455, 458, 459, 463, 470, 471:
+"Burning of the lips; the upper lip is swollen to
+such a degree that the inside seems turned outside;
+swelling of the lips and tongue; swelling of the
+upper lip, it becomes hot and red, almost brown;
+dark streaks along the vermilion border, particularly
+on the upper lip, rough, cracked, peeling off;
+violent pains spreading through the gums, the
+gums bleed readily; the tongue feels as if burnt;
+tongue and palate are sore; raw feeling, burning,
+blisters along the margin of the tongue, very painful,
+stinging; at the tip of the tongue a row of
+small vesicles which cause a pain as if sore and
+raw; dry tongue; the inner cheeks look red and
+fiery, with painful sensitiveness; inflammation of
+the tongue; inflammation and swelling of the
+palate; burning, stinging sensation in the mouth
+and throat; pressure in the fauces as of a foreign
+body; ptyalism; copious accumulation of a soapy
+mucus in the mouth and throat; dryness and heat
+in the throat; inability to swallow a drop, with
+swelling of the tongue; sensation of gnawing and
+contraction in the throat, increasing after four
+hours so as to render deglutition difficult; sensation
+of fulness, constriction and suffocation in the throat;
+deglutition painful and impeded, stinging pains
+during deglutition; swelling and redness of the
+tonsils, impeding deglutition; angina faucium; chilliness
+followed by heat; violent pain in the temples;
+redness and swelling of the tonsils; uvula
+and fauces, painful and impeded deglutition, and
+stinging pains when attempting to swallow."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The more frequently we make use of Apis in the
+treatment of these very common forms of angina,
+and of the inflammation of the salivary glands,
+which are so closely connected with the other parts
+of the throat, the more we become convinced by
+the most striking success, that this drug is by far
+the speediest, safest and easiest remedy which we
+possess for the treatment of these exceedingly common
+and yet so very distressing affections. Not
+only in common affections of this sort, but also in
+the most acute and dangerous forms of angina
+faucium, will Apis be found efficient; even where
+these affections are hereditary, or have become habitual,
+and generally terminate in suppuration,
+Apis will still afford help. In these affections
+likewise Apis acts most promptly and efficiently,
+if given in alternation with Aconite, both remedies
+in the third dilution, a few drops dissolved in
+twelve tablespoonfuls of water, in alternate hourly
+doses. After taking a few doses, the patient begins
+to feel relieved, enjoys a quiet sleep, and the resolution
+of the inflammation takes place, accompanied
+by the breaking out of a general perspiration.
+If there should be a natural tendency to
+suppuration, this treatment will hasten it from hour
+to hour, and after the pus is discharged, a cure
+will soon be accomplished. In the most inveterate
+cases, which had been previously treated in a different
+manner, the same curative process takes
+place gradually; first one outbreak of the disease
+is hushed; next, if another portion of the throat
+becomes inflamed, this inflammation is controlled,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
+and this proceeding is continued with an increasingly
+rapid success and a continued abatement of
+all sufferings, until, finally, a perfect recovery is
+obtained, even under these disadvantageous circumstances.</p>
+
+<p>Apis is not sufficient to prevent the recurrence of
+such inflammatory attacks; this object has to be
+accomplished by means of the appropriate antidotal
+specific.</p>
+
+<p><i>Apis becomes an exceedingly useful remedy in consequence
+of the specific power which it possesses over
+the whole internal mucous membrane and its appendages.</i></p>
+
+<p>It is particularly the mucous membrane of the
+alimentary canal upon which Apis has a striking
+influence. It excites an inflammatory irritation,
+which not only disturbs the secretion of mucus,
+but also disintegrates the intestinal juices so essential
+to the process of sanguification, thus disqualifying
+the blood from properly contributing to the
+reproduction of the nervous tissue. By thus altering
+the blood and nerves, these two principal
+vehicles of vitality, it develops a group of symptoms
+which is exceedingly similar to our abdominal
+typhus that seems to have become stationary
+among us for the last twenty years. This similarity,
+in its totality, results from the following
+symptoms contained in the "American Provings."</p>
+
+<p>"398: troublesome pains in the gums. 400: the
+gums bleed readily. 402: bitterish taste in the
+back part of the tongue and in the throat. 405:
+tongue as if burnt. 406: tongue and palate feel<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
+sore. 411: a number of vesicles and small, sore,
+somewhat red spots at the tip of the tongue and
+along the left margin of the tongue. 413: dry
+tongue, the inner cheeks look red, fiery, are painfully
+sensitive. 416: burning from the tongue down
+the &#339;sophagus, as far as the stomach, eructations
+every four or five minutes, with flow of tasteless
+water in the mouth; eructations became worse after
+drinking water, she almost felt as if choked. 420:
+swelling of the tongue, the tongue is dry, shining,
+yellowish. 421: tenacious saliva adhering to the
+tongue. 424: tongue dry and white. 427: feeling
+of dryness in the mouth and throat. 441: fetid
+breath, with gastritis. 445: quantity of thick, tenacious
+mucus deep in the throat, obliging him to
+hawk. 447: tenacious, frothy saliva. 450: dryness
+in the throat, without thirst. 452: loathing,
+as if out of the throat. 459: sense of fulness, constriction
+and choking in the throat. 474: loss of
+taste. 475: complete loss of appetite. 488: no
+thirst, with heat. 492: very thirsty when waking
+at night, after diarrh&#339;a. 495: eructations tasting
+of white of eggs. 501: nausea and vomiting. 504:
+fainting sort of nausea from the short ribs across
+the whole abdomen. 512: vomiting of the ingesta.
+513: vomiting of bile. 516: vomiting and diarrh&#339;a.
+517: nausea, vomiting of the ingesta, and
+diarrh&#339;a; repeated vomiting, first of bile, afterwards
+a thin, watery fluid, having a very bitter taste, with
+violent pains across the abdomen. 518 to 525:
+oppression, pressing, creeping, drawing and gnawing,
+pricking, soreness, heat and burning in the stomach.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
+528: painful sensitiveness in the pit of the
+stomach, with burning, like heartburn, with bilious
+diarrh&#339;a, rather greenish, and almost painless. 530:
+violent pain and sensitiveness in the region of the
+stomach and epigastrium, with vomiting, coated
+tongue, fetid breath, costiveness, and sleep disturbed
+by muttering and dreams, with frequent, wiry pulse.
+533: sense of numbness under the right ribs. 532:
+sense of compression, squeezing, bruising, under the
+ribs, worse on the left side. 535: violent burning
+pains under the short ribs on both sides, worst and
+most permanent on the left side, <i>where the pain is
+felt for weeks, preventing sleep</i>. 543: rumbling in the
+abdomen, with violent urging to stool. 545: nausea
+in the abdomen, has to lie down. 546: weight in
+the abdomen. 547: dull pain in the bowels. 552:
+occasional attacks of colic, with a feverish, tremulous
+sensation. 553: violent, cutting pains in the
+abdomen. 555: slowly pulsating, boring pain above
+the left crest of the ilium, relieved by eructations.
+556: pain in the abdomen, from the hips to the
+umbilical region. 560: soreness and pressure in the
+lower abdomen. 563: <i>feeling of soreness, burning
+and numbness below and on the side of the right hip,
+deep-seated</i>. 566: the inner abdomen feels sore and
+as if excoriated, painful when pressed upon. 567:
+feeling as if the bowels had been squeezed, with
+tenesmus during stool. 576: fulness and sense of
+distension in the abdomen, as if bloated. 589:
+frequent urging to stool, with pain in the anus on
+account of the frequent pressing. 590: violent
+tenesmus. 593: several thin, yellow evacuations,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
+accompanied by excessive prostration; the stools set
+in at every motion of the body, as if the anus were
+wide open. 598: copious discharges of dark brown,
+green and whitish excrements. 599: dysenteric
+stools. 608: blood and mucus with stool. 611
+and 612: painful and also painless diarrh&#339;a, especially
+in the morning. 617: retention of stool for
+one week. 646: disagreeable sensation in the bladder,
+with pressing downwards in the region of the
+sphincter, and frequent urging, so that he voids
+urine frequently in the day-time, and ten or twelve
+times at night; burning and cutting during urination.
+668: the urine is dark colored. 730: hoarseness
+and distress of breathing. 733: roughness and
+sensitiveness in the larynx. 738: violent cough,
+especially after lying down and sleeping. 754: hurried
+and difficult breathing, with heat and headache.
+803: sense of soreness, lameness, bruised and contusive
+feeling in the chest. 812: trembling and
+pressure in the chest, with embarrassed breathing.
+818: pulse scarcely perceptible. 822: pulse accelerated.
+833: swelling of the cervical glands on the
+injured side. 968: extreme sensitiveness of the
+whole body to contact, every hair is painful when
+touched. 971: excessive nervousness. 979: general
+lassitude, with trembling. 994: in the afternoon
+he becomes extremely restless and exhausted. 1011:
+paroxysms of great weakness. 1021: sudden weakness,
+he had to lie down, and lost his senses. 1025:
+complete loss of recollection, with vomiting, desire
+for sleep and rest, slow beating of the heart and
+scarcely perceptible pulse. 1032: excessive drowsiness.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
+1039: starting during sleep, as if in affright,
+with some cough. 1046: sleeplessness. 1047:
+restless sleep, frequent waking and constant <i>dreaming</i>.
+1064: chattering during sleep (in the case of
+a child). 1081: chilly every afternoon at three or
+four o'clock, she feels a shivering, worse during
+warmth; chilly creepings across the back, the hands
+feel numb; an hour after, feverish heat, with rough
+cough, hot cheeks and hands, no thirst; these symptoms
+pass off gradually, but she feels heavy and
+prostrated. 1089: chill after a heat of thirty-six
+hours. 1090: sudden chilliness, afterwards heat
+and sweat. 1124: alternate sweat and dry skin.
+1198: thick urticaria, itching a great deal (very
+soon). 1224: swelling and erysipelatous redness.
+54: unable to concentrate his thoughts. 57: dulness
+of the head, it feels compressed. 62: vertigo
+and weakness. 79: dizziness."</p>
+
+<p>Whosoever compares the totality of these effects
+of Apis to the symptoms of the prevailing abdominal
+typhus, will admit that Apis is hom&#339;opathic to
+this disease. He will even admit that this hom&#339;opathicity
+of Apis to abdominal typhus extends to
+the minute particulars of the disease <i>in their totality</i>.
+Even the course which Apis pursues, in developing
+its effects in the organism, is similar to the progressive
+development of typhus. Any one who has
+witnessed, as I have, the course which this disease
+pursues, will admit that mucous membrane of
+the alimentary canal is first affected by the disease,
+in the same manner as Apis affects it; that this irritation
+of the mucous membrane is followed by<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
+gastric catarrhal symptoms, which are speedily
+succeeded by symptoms of disintegration of the
+animal fluids and typhoid phenomena; that the gastric
+irritation is generally characterized by boils,
+urticaria, erysipelas of the skin, and the nervous
+irritation by symptoms of abdominal typhus; that
+the internal and external development of the disease
+is determined by a striking sympathetic derangement
+of the organic functions of the liver, and still
+more of the spleen, and likewise by a more striking
+prominence of the intermittent type of the fever;
+and that all these varied disturbances finally culminate
+in abdominal typhus.</p>
+
+<p>Owing to this remarkable similarity, Apis will
+effect striking cures of all these different derangements.</p>
+
+<p>If, after more or less distinctly felt premonitory
+symptoms&mdash;after a sudden cold, excessive exertions,
+prostrating emotions or enjoyments&mdash;a more or less
+violent fever is developed, accompanied by dulness
+and painfulness of the head, retching and vomiting,
+distention and sensitiveness of the pit of the stomach,
+and soon after of the whole abdomen, with
+urging diarrh&#339;a, pappy and foul taste in the mouth,
+loss of appetite and thirst, feeling of dryness in the
+mouth and throat, tongue sore, as if burnt and
+swollen, with antagonistic change of symptoms, suspicious
+and extraordinary prostration, and feeling
+of fainting; a few spoonfuls of the above-mentioned
+solution of Apis 3, will afford such speedy relief,
+that it may seem incredible to those who have not
+witnessed it. The nausea, the vomiting, the diarrh&#339;a,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>
+and the painfulness of the abdomen, disappear;
+quiet sleep sets in, with general perspiration,
+which terminates the fever, and affords great relief;
+after waking, the patient is comforted by the internal
+sensation of returning health; a natural appetite
+is again felt, the strength returns, and in a few
+days the healthy look of the tongue and buccal
+cavity shows that the mucous membrane of the stomach
+and bowels has recovered its normal quality.
+The longer help is deferred, the longer time the
+morbid process has had in making its inroads upon
+the system, the more frequently will it be necessary
+to repeat the medicine, until a cure is achieved.</p>
+
+<p>The same good result is perceived, if the morbid
+process is accompanied by furuncles, urticaria,
+erysipelas&mdash;the latter principally on the head and in
+the face, less frequently upon the extremities, and
+inclining to shift from one place to another. Such
+a combination of symptoms not only shows a higher
+degree of intensity of the disease, but also shows
+that the organism is still capable of battling against
+the internal disease, by compelling it to leave the
+interior tissue, and to develop itself externally. It
+is the first business of the physician to support the
+organism in this tendency, and to guard the brain
+and bowels from every destructive relapse. Apis,
+employed as above, accomplishes this result more
+speedily than any other drug. Of course, a few
+days are required for this purpose, although the
+rules of using the drug and the course of treatment
+are the same.</p>
+
+<p>The same observation applies to the not unfrequent<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
+complication with organic disease of the
+spleen and consequent dropsy. Apis, used in the
+same manner, effects, in as short a period as the
+intensity of the symptoms will permit, a mitigation
+and gradual disappearance of the painfulness of the
+spleen, restores the normal action of the spleen more
+and more, and neutralises the tendency to dropsical
+effusion at the same time as it expels the accumulated
+fluid by increasing the secretions from the
+bladder and bowels, and the cutaneous exhalation.</p>
+
+<p>If the liver is organically diseased, Apis is no
+longer sufficient. In such a case, the action of the
+liver has first to be restored to its normal standard.
+In dropsical diseases, I have effected this result most
+frequently, for years past, by means of Carduus
+mari&aelig;, less frequently by Quassia, still less frequently
+by Nux vomica, and only in a few cases by
+Chelidonium: according as one or the other of
+these agents seemed indicated by the epidemic character
+of the disease. In all non-malignant cases,
+if the medicine was permitted to act in time, the
+whole disease was often cut short by the use of these
+drugs, and the development of typhoid symptoms
+prevented. Not, however, in all more inveterate
+cases, where the prevailing character of the disease,
+by its more penetrating action upon the tissues, induced
+a slower and more threatening course of
+development. As soon as the pains in the right
+hypochondrium had disappeared, the bilious quality
+of the f&aelig;ces had been restored, and the urine had
+become lighter colored, but the fever still continued,
+tongue, throat, pit of the stomach and abdomen had<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
+become more sensitive; the head duller and tighter,
+and the prostration more overpowering. In such a
+case, Apis, prepared as above, became indispensable,
+in order to remove all danger to life. Its curative
+action soon became manifest in two different ways.</p>
+
+<p>If the reactive force of the organism was still
+sufficient, the medicine succeeded very speedily in
+preventing the supervention of the typhoid stage,
+in changing the fever-type from a remittent or even
+continuous to an intermittent type, during which
+the convalescence of the patient, aided by a suitable
+diet, was more and more firmly established and
+generally completely secured after the lapse of a
+week.</p>
+
+<p>If the typhoid stage could not be prevented and
+set in with the following symptoms: the patient
+lies on his bed in a state of apathy, with loss of recollection,
+sopor, muttering delirium, hardness of
+hearing, inability to protrude the tongue or to
+articulate; dry, cracked, sore, blistered, ulcerated
+tongue; difficult deglutition; painful distention of
+the abdomen, which is sensitive to contact or pressure;
+retention of stool, or else frequent, painful,
+foul, bloody, involuntary diarrh&#339;a; fermentous
+urine, which is sometimes discharged involuntarily;
+the skin is at times and partially dry,
+burning, at times and partially clammy, cool;
+trembling and twitching of the limbs; white miliaria
+on the chest and abdomen; extreme debility,
+with settling towards the foot-end of the bed;
+changing pulse, which is at times slow, at others
+accelerated, feeble, intermittent: in such a case<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
+Apis requires more time to heal the mucous membrane
+of the alimentary canal; to restore the normal
+action of the bowels; to regulate the digestive
+functions; to procure quiet and refreshing sleep,
+and to gradually effect a complete restoration of
+health. If the mucous membrane of the respiratory
+organs was invaded by the morbid process,
+the cure was nevertheless completed as soon as the
+mucous lining of the intestinal canal was restored
+to its natural condition.</p>
+
+<p>So far, the only obstacle to a cure which I have
+witnessed, has been tuberculosis of the chest or
+abdominal viscera, or of both at the same time, and
+still more the vaccine-virus; likewise a tendency
+to paralysis in persons who were otherwise morbidly
+affected. Tuberculosis has often been combated
+by a single dose of a high potence of Sulphur
+between the doses of Apis, no Apis being
+given after the Sulphur, as long as the course of
+the typhoid symptoms would render it safe to postpone
+this medicine. I have found it much more
+difficult to conquer the vaccine-poison, <i>which I
+have become satisfied by years of observation, constitutes
+the most universal and most powerful generator of
+the typhus which is prevailing in our age and which
+seems unwilling to leave us</i>. Tartar emetic proves
+in this, as in other cases, its antidotal power against
+the vaccine-virus; but under no circumstances is
+more caution required in the use of tartar emetic
+than in typhus, where the vaccine-virus seeks to
+develop its characteristic pustules with a tendency
+inherent in each pustule to terminate in the destruction<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
+of the mucous membrane. It may seem
+hazardous to add to this combination of destructive
+forces another similarly-acting element; but a careful
+consideration of the circumstances of the case
+will justify such a proceeding, although death may
+be the inevitable result of the morbid process.
+Experience has satisfied me that the alternate use
+of tartar emetic and Apis, a drop of the third
+potency of each, every three, six or twelve hours,
+according as the symptoms are more or less violent,
+or, in very sensitive organisms, in tablespoonful
+doses of a watery solution of a drop, will accomplish
+all that can be expected; for these two
+drugs, thus administered, seem to compensate or
+complete each other. I am unable to say how far
+this proceeding requires to be modified in particular
+cases; all I desire to do, is to submit this important
+subject to my colleagues for further inquiry and
+trial.</p>
+
+<p>If a tendency to paralysis prevails, the danger is
+less threatening, although equally momentous. In
+such cases I use Apis and Moschus in alternation,
+although I am unable to assert, on account of deficient
+experience, that this treatment will always
+prove satisfactory. Such cases hardly ever arise
+under hom&#339;opathic treatment; and if they come
+to us out of the hands of all&#339;opathic practitioners,
+they generally prove incurable.</p>
+
+<p>If these three obstacles to a cure appear combined,
+I have never found it possible to effect any
+thing. All that I have found it possible to do, has
+been to prevent such a dreadful combination by<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>
+carefully attending to my patients in previous
+diseases.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes in typhus, the affection of the spleen
+shows itself again, even after recovery has fairly set
+in; the intermittent type again breaks forth, and
+recovery finally takes place, as the intermissions
+become more and more distinct and lengthened.
+As long as the intermittent type continues, Apis
+has to be given; the action of the spleen becomes
+more and more normal, the fever paroxysms become
+shorter and less marked, and the restoration of
+health is effected without any more treatment than
+a single dose of Apis 30, one globule, which is permitted
+to act until the patient is well.</p>
+
+<p>Observations of this kind, which I have made
+under the most diversified circumstances, have
+taught me that Apis is <i>the most sovereign remedy
+for all those morbid processes which we designate as</i>
+<span class="smcapl">INTERMITTENT FEVER</span>.</p>
+
+<p>The following symptoms indicate the hom&#339;opathicity
+of Apis to intermittent fever:</p>
+
+<p>"1081: every afternoon about three or four
+o'clock she feels chilly, shivering, worse in warmth;
+a chilly creeping along the back, the hands seem
+dead; in about an hour she feels feverish and hot,
+with rough cough, hot hands and cheeks, without
+thirst; these symptoms pass off gradually, after
+which she feels heavy and prostrate. 1088: chilliness
+all over, recurring periodically, with an
+undulating sensation. 1089: chill after a heat of thirty-six
+hours. 1090: sudden chilliness, followed by
+heat and sweat. 499: loathing, with chilliness and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
+coldness of the limbs. 534: pains on the left side,
+below the last ribs. 535: violent burning pain below
+the short ribs, on both sides, worst and most
+permanent on the left side, where it continues for
+weeks, preventing sleep. 577: enlargement of the
+abdomen, with swelling of the feet, scanty urine."</p>
+
+<p>The provings of Apis show that this drug affects
+every portion of the nervous system&mdash;the cerebral,
+spinal and ganglionic nerves&mdash;and the process of
+sanguification, in the same general and characteristic
+manner as is the case in fever and ague.</p>
+
+<p>In comparing the symptoms of Apis with those
+of any other known drug, there is no medicine that
+bears as close an affinity to fever and ague as Apis.
+Howsoever useful other remedies may have proved,
+in the treatment of fever and ague, they are only
+hom&#339;opathic to isolated conditions, in comparison
+with Apis. In practice, it was often found very
+difficult, even for the most experienced physician,
+to decide in which of these exceptional cases the
+specifically hom&#339;opathic agent should have been
+employed. Sometimes no properly hom&#339;opathic
+remedy could be found, in which case the treatment
+had to be conducted in a round-about way.</p>
+
+<p>All these difficulties have been effectually removed
+by Apis, and the treatment of intermittent
+fever may henceforth be said to constitute one of
+the most certain and positive achievements of the
+hom&#339;opathic domain. For the last three years,
+during which period I have experimented with
+Apis, I have not come across a single case of intermittent
+fever that did not yield satisfactorily to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
+Apis. I have treated a pretty fair share of obstinate
+and complicated cases of this disease, and have,
+therefore, had an opportunity of testing the curative
+virtues of Apis in a satisfactory manner. Here are
+the results of my observations:</p>
+
+<p>Apis is the natural remedy for the pathological
+process which is characterized by periodical paroxysms
+of chill, heat and sweat; the other morbid
+symptoms being common to this process, as they
+are to all other diseases.</p>
+
+<p>All the symptoms which have hitherto been observed
+in intermittent fever, will be found, with
+striking similarity, among the provings of Apis.
+For a confirmation of this statement, we refer to
+Hering's American Provings, and to B&#339;nninghausen's
+Essay on Intermittent Fevers.</p>
+
+<p>In making use of Apis in every form of intermittent
+fever, we not only act in strict accordance
+with the hom&#339;opathic law generally, but we fulfil
+all the requirements of the individualizing method.
+Apis is the universal remedy in intermittent fevers,
+for which every hom&#339;opathic physician has been
+longing, and which pure experiments, conducted
+according to the rules of hom&#339;opathy, have revealed
+to us;&mdash;another shining light on the sublime path
+of the healing artist!</p>
+
+<p>The beneficent action of Apis, in intermittent
+fever, is still increased by the fact that it prevents
+the supervention of typhus, disorganizations of the
+spleen, dropsy, china-cachexia. In using Apis
+from the commencement, all such consequences are
+avoided, and if they should have been induced by<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
+different treatment, Apis removes them as speedily
+as possible.</p>
+
+<p>In all lighter cases, it is sufficient to give a drop
+of Apis 3, morning and evening, during the apyrexia,
+and to continue this treatment until the
+attacks cease; very often no other paroxysm sets in
+after the first dose; there are scarcely ever more
+than two or three paroxysms. In a few days the
+cure is accomplished, provided the action of the
+medicine is not disturbed.</p>
+
+<p>In more obstinate cases, which had been coming
+on for a longer period, or had been caused by more
+noxious influences, had lasted longer, had invaded
+the organism with more intensity, or where the
+paroxysms last longer and the intermissions are
+shorter, or where two paroxysms occur in succession,
+or the life of the organism is endangered by
+some cause or other,&mdash;the organism has to be saturated
+with the medicine in the shortest possible
+period, in order to ensure victory to the curative
+agent. Under these circumstances, we prepare a
+solution of from two to four drops of the third
+potency in twelve tablespoonfuls of water, shake it
+well in a closed bottle, and give a tablespoonful of
+this solution every hour. If the case should be
+urgent, we may give a drop of Apis 3, on sugar,
+every three or six hours. This treatment is to be
+continued until the patient is decidedly better; after
+which the medicine should be discontinued. If the
+improvement is not quite satisfactory, the last dose
+is continued several times every twelve or twenty-four
+hours, after which the proper effect will have<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
+been obtained. If the progressive improvement of
+the patient should be attended with distinct morbid
+symptoms, it would be injurious to continue the
+repetition of the drug. Nevertheless, a globule of
+Apis 30 may sometimes hasten the convalescence
+of the patient, and otherwise afford relief. Signs of
+reaction, even if more or less violent, should not
+deceive one. If left to themselves, they are often
+and speedily followed by a refreshing calm, and
+cannot be interfered with, as an aggravation of the
+symptoms, without damaging the case.</p>
+
+<p>These are all the rules which I have so far been
+able to infer from my use of Apis. Further experience
+will have to decide whether they apply to all
+periods, or only to the prevailing type of fever.</p>
+
+<p>I am unable to say whether Apis will prove
+effectual against epidemic marsh-intermittents, and
+if so, how the use of it will have to be modified.
+May it please those, who can shed light on this subject,
+to communicate their experience!</p>
+
+<p>Two other exceptions to Apis, as a universal
+febrifuge, have occurred to me in my practice:
+<i>The development of fever and ague in poisoned soil,
+and fever and ague complicated with China-cachexia.</i></p>
+
+<p>It is peculiar to intermittent fever to excite the
+morbid germs which are slumbering in the organism.
+This is more particularly true in reference to
+psora. In proportion to universality of the
+psoric miasm, fever and ague will develop and
+complicate itself with psoric affections; and it is
+such complications that give rise to the inveterate<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>
+character of intermittents and their disorganizing
+tendency.</p>
+
+<p>In such cases, a cure cannot be effected without
+some suitable anti-psoric. During the prevailing
+fever, Natrum muriaticum has proved such an anti-psoric,
+provided it was used as follows: If the signs
+of psoric complication became visible at the outset,
+I gave a pellet of Natrum mur. 30, and awaited
+the result until after the third paroxysm. If symptoms
+of improvement had become manifest, no other
+remedy was given, and the improvement was permitted
+to progress from day to day. If the signs
+of psoric complication were obscure at the beginning
+of the attack, Apis was at once given. If no
+improvement became visible after the third paroxysm,
+or if other symptoms developed themselves,
+this was looked upon as a proof of the existence of
+psora, and Natrum mur. 30 was given, and no other
+remedy, until after the third paroxysm. Either the
+disease had ceased, or it required further treatment.
+In the latter case, Apis 3 was continued in drop-doses,
+morning and evening, until the patient was
+decidedly convalescent. No further medicine was
+given after this, and the Natrum mur. was permitted
+to act undisturbed, without a single repetition.
+Every such repetition is hurtful; it disturbs
+the curative process, excites an excess of reaction in
+the organism, exhausts it, and develops artificial
+derangements, which often mislead the judgment,
+and induce an uncalled-for and improper application
+of remedial means. Such repetitions are
+unnecessary; any one who is acquainted with the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
+action of Natrum mur., will at once perceive that
+the psora-destroying effect of this agent had not
+been neutralized by Apis. Recovery becomes more
+and more completely established, and sometimes
+terminates in the breaking out of a wide-spread,
+bright-looking eruption, resembling recent dry itch,
+and attended with the peculiar itching which always
+exists in this disease. The complete peeling off of
+the epidermis shows the true cause of the disease.
+In a few cases, an itch-eruption of this kind proved
+contagious, and communicated itself to other persons
+in the family.</p>
+
+<p>A similar course of treatment was pursued, if
+some other anti-psoric had to be resorted to, according
+as one or the other of the three miasms seemed
+to require.</p>
+
+<p><i>The thoroughness of this treatment of intermittent
+fevers is proved by the fact, that no relapses ever took
+place, or that no secondary diseases were ever developed.</i></p>
+
+<p>If these sequel&aelig; were the consequences of an
+abuse of Cinchona, and this China-cachexia was the
+source of subsequent paroxysms of fever, I have,
+even in such cases, when nothing else would help,
+seen Apis cure both the fever and the China-cachexia,
+in most cases which came under my treatment.
+In the most inveterate cases, which had perhaps
+been mismanaged in various ways, and where
+the reactive power of the organism seemed entirely
+prostrated, I found it necessary to resort to the employment
+of a most penetrating agent, more particularly
+the 5000th potency of Natrum muriaticum,
+which I have so far found the only sufficiently<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>
+powerful curative influence under the circumstances.
+The rules of administering this potency are the
+same as those for the exhibition of the 30th.</p>
+
+<p>Not only does Apis afford help in the affections
+which habitually and most generally occur among
+us; it is likewise in curative rapport with the</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Typhoid-gastric conditions which develope
+themselves during the course of an erysipelatous
+or exanthematous cutaneous affection,
+more particularly scarlatina, rubeola,
+measles and urticaria.</span></p>
+
+<p>The use of Apis in erysipelas is indicated by:
+"Nos. 168, 169: great anxiety in the head, with
+swelling of the face; inflammatory swelling and
+twitching so violent, that an apoplectic attack is
+dreaded. 175 to 178: sensation as if the head were
+too large; swelling of the head; sensitiveness to
+contact on the vertex, forehead; burning, stinging
+about the head. 292: erysipelatous inflammation
+of the eyelids. 295: after the most violent pains
+of the right eye, a bluish, red, whitish swelling of
+both eyes, which were closed in consequence. 297:
+swelling under the eyes during erysipelas, as when
+stung by a bee. 316: red swelling of both ears,
+with a stinging and burning pain in the swelling,
+with redness of the face every evening. 356: erysipelas
+spreading across the face, and proceeding
+from the eyes. 359: tension in the face, awakening
+her about one o'clock, the nose was swollen, so were
+the right eye and cheek, stinging pain when touching
+the part; under the right eye, and proceeding
+from the nose, red streaks spread across the cheek,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
+until four o'clock; next day, after midnight, sudden
+swelling of the upper lip, with heat and burning redness,
+continuing until morning; on the third night,
+sudden crawling over the right cheek, with stinging
+near the nose, after which the cheek and upper lip
+swelled. 363: face red and hot, with burning and
+stinging pain, it swells so that he is no longer
+recognized. 388: pimple in the vermilion border
+of the lower lip, which he scratches, after which an
+erysipelatous swelling arises, spreading rapidly over
+the chin and the lower jaw, and invading the anterior
+neck and the glands, so that he is unable to
+move the jaws, as during trismus, or as if the ligaments
+of the jaws were inflamed; with constant
+disposition to sleep, the sleep being interrupted by
+frightful dreams. 706 to 707: swelling of the right
+half of the labia, with inflammation and violent
+pain, rapid, hard pulse, diarrh&#339;a consisting of yellow,
+greenish mucus, in the case of a girl of three
+years old; deeply-penetrating distress, commencing
+in the clitoris and spreading to the vagina; the
+labia minora are swollen, they feel dry and hard,
+they are covered with a crust; at the commencement
+urination is painful. 948: burning of the
+toes, and erysipelatous redness with heat at a circumscribed
+spot on the foot, the remainder of the
+foot being cold. 1167, 1168: acute pain and erysipelatous
+swelling, hard and white in the centre;
+bright red, elevated, hard swelling of the place
+where he was stung, and round about a chilly feeling.
+1170-1173: red place where he was stung,
+with swelling and red streaks along the fingers and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
+arm; red streaks along the lymphatic vessels, proceeding
+from the sting along the middle finger and
+arm; inflammatory swelling, spreading all around.
+1181: throbbing in the swelling. 1182: wide-spread
+cellular inflammation, terminating in resolution.
+1224, 1225: swelling and erysipelatous redness;
+erysipelatous redness of the toes and feet."</p>
+
+<p>If we add to these remarks, that Apis corresponds
+to gastric and typhoid conditions, as was shown before,
+with remarkable similarity of symptoms, we
+find, without doubt, that all known erysipelatous
+forms of inflammation are covered by the pathogenetic
+effects of Apis. Hence we may with propriety
+give Apis in these affections. Practical
+experience has abundantly confirmed these conclusions.
+For the last four years, I have cured readily,
+safely and easily all forms of erysipelas which have
+come under my notice&mdash;&#339;dematous, smooth, vesicular,
+light or dark colored, seated or wandering,
+phlegmonous, recent or habitually recurring, of a
+light or inveterate character, repelled, among individuals
+of every disposition and age. I have never
+seen all kinds of pain yield more readily; I have
+never seen the accompanying fever abate more
+speedily; I have never arrested the further spread
+of erysipelas, nor effected a resolution of the inflammation
+of the cellular tissue, more certainly; nor,
+if the termination in suppuration was no longer
+avoidable, have I ever succeeded in effecting the
+formation of laudable pus, the spontaneous discharge
+of the pus, the radical healing of the sore
+without any scar&mdash;<i>how important is all this in erysipelatous<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>
+inflammation of the mamm&aelig;</i>&mdash;with more
+certainty and thoroughness, than by means of Apis!
+No remedy possesses equal powers in protecting
+internal organs from the dangerous inroad of this
+disease.</p>
+
+<p>I effected all this without any other medicinal aid,
+or without resorting to an operation. Keeping
+quiet and dry, and in a uniform temperature, is all
+that is required, in order to secure the full curative
+action of Apis. In this disease it is used in the same
+manner as we have indicated before. If the liver
+should be very much involved in this disease, we
+effect a cure still more rapidly, by alternating Aconite
+with Apis, in case inflammation is present;
+Carduus mari&aelig;, in case of simple inflammatory irritation,
+and Hepatin, if disorganizations have already
+set in. In phlegmonous and suppurative habitual
+erysipelas, a cure is generally facilitated, if a dose
+of Sulphur 30 is interpolated, in the manner which
+we have explained before, in order to neutralize the
+psoric taint which is here generally present.</p>
+
+<p>According to this experience, in conjunction with
+the symptoms 706, 707, I believe that Apis will
+prove a successful prophylactic and curative agent
+in a disease of children, which terminates fatally in
+almost every case. I mean erysipelas of new-born
+infants, which commences at the genital organs,
+thence spreads over the skin, and terminates in the
+induration and destruction of this organ. Until
+now, I have not had an opportunity of verifying
+the truth of this theoretical conclusion by actual<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
+experiments. Hence I content myself with offering
+this suggestion for further practical trials.</p>
+
+<p>The American Provings likewise show that Apis
+may be of great use in scarlatina.</p>
+
+<p>"No. 349: redness of the face, as in scarlatina.
+408 to 413: tongue very painful, the burning and
+raw feeling increases; vesicles spring up along the
+margin of the tongue, the pains are accompanied by
+stitches; at the tip of the tongue, toward the left
+side, a row of small vesicles spring up, some six or
+eight, which are very painful and sore; dryness of
+the tongue, red and fiery appearance of the inside
+of the cheeks, with painful sensitiveness. 311:
+pains in the interior of the right ear. 413 to 417:
+burning at the upper portion of the left ear; stitches
+under the left ear, tension under and behind the ears;
+red swelling of both ears, with a stinging and burning
+pain in the swelling. 462 to 463: difficulty of
+swallowing, staging pains when swallowing. 466:
+burning in the fauces down to the stomach. 470:
+difficulty of swallowing in consequence of redness
+and swelling of the tonsils. 473: ulcers in the
+throat during scarlet fever. 1236: scarlatina does
+not come out, in the place of which the throat becomes
+ulcerated. 1237: retrocession of scarlatina,
+violent fever, excessive heat, congestion of the head,
+reddened eyes, violent delirium. 832: redness and
+swelling in front of the neck, swelling of the glands.
+833: swelling of the cervical glands on the injured
+side. 836: tension on the right side of the nape of
+the neck, below and back of the ear. 897, 898:
+itching and burning of the dorsum of the hand and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
+of the knuckles and first phalanges; cracking of the
+skin here and there; itching and chapping of the
+hand and lower lip."</p>
+
+<p>If we add to these symptoms the above enumerated
+cerebral symptoms, the typhoid alteration of
+the internal mucous membrane of the whole alimentary
+canal and of the respiratory organs, the
+disorganizing and paralyzing action upon the blood
+and nerves, the inclination to dropsical effusion, the
+affection of the cervical glands with tendency to
+suppuration, the appearance of otorrh&#339;a,&mdash;we have
+a group of symptoms which resemble very accurately
+the prevailing type of epidemic scarlatina. I
+know, from abundant experience, that the hom&#339;opathic
+law has been brilliantly confirmed in this
+disease. Thanks to the curative powers of Apis,
+scarlatina has ceased to be a scourge to childhood.
+The dangers to which children were usually exposed
+in scarlatina, have dwindled down to one, which
+fortunately is a comparatively rare phenomenon. It
+is only where the scarlet-fever poison acts at the
+outset with so much intensity, that the brain becomes
+paralyzed at once, and the disease must necessarily
+terminate fatally, that no remedy has as yet
+been discovered. In all other cases, unless some
+strange mishap should interfere, the physician, who
+is familiar with Apis, need not fear any untoward
+results in his treatment of scarlatina.</p>
+
+<p>In all lighter cases, where the disease sets in less
+tumultuously, and runs a mild course, it is proper,
+as soon as the disease has fairly broken out, to give
+a globule of Apis 30, and to watch the effects of this<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>
+dose without interference. The immediate consequence
+of this proceeding, is to bring the eruption
+out in a few hours, all over the skin, with abatement
+of the fever and general perspiration, after which
+the eruption runs its course in a few days, with a
+progressive feeling of convalescence, the epidermis
+peels off from the third to the fifth day, and, at the
+latest, to the seventh day, with cessation of the fever,
+so that the process of desquamation is generally terminated
+within the next seven days, after <i>which the
+patient may be fairly said to be convalescent, and the
+patient may be said to be absolutely freed from all danger
+of consecutive diseases</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The same result is obtained by nature in cases of
+mild scarlatina, without the interference of art. But
+the experience which I have had an opportunity of
+making during my long official employment as
+district-physician, has convinced me that Nature
+accomplishes her end far more easily, more speedily
+and satisfactorily, if assisted by art in accordance
+with the law of hom&#339;opathy. The sequel&aelig; especially
+are rendered less dangerous by this means.</p>
+
+<p>But if the disease sets in with a considerable
+degree of intensity at the very outset, and the fever
+continues without abatement, it is advisable to keep
+up a medicinal impression by repeating the dose.
+To this end we dissolve a globule of Apis 30, in
+seven dessert-spoonfuls of water, by shaking the
+solution vigorously in a corked vial, and giving a
+dessert-spoonful every three, six, or twelve hours
+as the case may require. In all ordinary cases a
+single solution of this kind sufficed to subdue the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>
+fever and to secure a favorable termination of the
+disease.</p>
+
+<p>The struggle between disease and medicine assumes
+a far different form, if the morbific poison
+has penetrated the organism more deeply; if a process
+of disorganization has already developed itself
+in the intestinal mucous membrane, and if the
+alteration of the sanguineous fluid, which is an
+inherent accompaniment of such a disorganizing
+process, has depressed the nervous activity to such
+a degree that typhus, or paralysis of the brain or
+lungs seems unavoidable, as may be inferred from
+the bright-red tongue, which is thickly studded
+with eruptive vesicles, and speedily becomes excoriated,
+fissured and covered with aphth&aelig;; by a
+copious discharge of thick, white, bloody and fetid
+mucus from the nose; by the swelling and induration
+of the parotid glands, increasing difficulty of
+deglutition; sensitiveness of the abdomen to pressure;
+badly-colored, slimy, bloody diarrh&#339;a; scanty
+emissions of turbid, red, painful urine; accelerated
+and labored breathing; loss of consciousness; delirium;
+sopor; convulsions; trembling of the limbs;
+appearance as if the patient were lying in his bed
+in a state of fainting; the skin is at times burning,
+hot and dry; at others it feels like parchment,
+cooler; at others again, hot and cool together in
+spots; the fever increases with changing pulse, and
+is more constant; in short, all the symptoms,
+although developing themselves less rapidly, show
+that a fatal termination becomes more and more
+probable. In such a case it is above all things<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
+necessary to saturate the organism with Apis. If
+there is much fever, this result is best accomplished
+by means of alternate doses of Aconite and Apis, a
+few drops of the third potency, shaken together
+with twelve tablespoonfuls of water, each drug by
+itself, the dose to be repeated every hour; and if
+the temperature is rather depressed, by giving Apis
+without the Aconite, a tablespoonful every hour or
+two hours. In favorable cases the fever becomes
+more remittent within one to three days; a moderate
+and pleasant perspiration breaks out all over the
+skin; the sleep becomes calm and natural, and the
+typhoid symptoms abate. If this change takes
+place, it is proper to exhibit Apis in a more dynamic
+form, in order to assimilate it more harmoniously
+to the newly awakened reactive power
+of the organism. To this end we dissolve a few
+globules of Apis 30 in seven dessert-spoonfuls of
+water, giving a dessert-spoonful morning and evening,
+and we continue this treatment, until the
+symptoms of typhoid angina have gradually abated,
+the tongue has been healed, the normal desire for
+food has returned, and the digestive functions go
+on regularly; after which the natural reaction of
+the organism, assisted by careful diet, will be found
+sufficient to complete the cure. If no improvement
+sets in after Apis has been used for three days, we
+may rest assured that a psoric miasm is in the way
+of a cure, which requires to be combated with some
+anti-psoric remedy. I have generally found Kali
+carbonicum efficient, of which I gave one globule
+thirty on the fourth day of the treatment, permitting<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
+it to act uninterruptedly from one to three
+days, according as the disease was more or less
+acute, after which I again exhibited Apis in the
+manner previously indicated. In this way I succeeded
+in developing the curative powers of Apis, so
+that in a few days a gradual improvement, however
+slight, became perceptible to the careful observer.
+As soon as the improvement is well marked, all
+repetition of the medicine should cease, and the
+natural reaction of the organism should be permitted
+to complete the cure. Any one who is
+acquainted with the action of the Kali, must know
+that it continues without being interrupted by Apis.
+An invaluable blessing of Nature!</p>
+
+<p>This proceeding is crowned with the desired
+results; the convalescence is shorter and easier,
+and there is less danger of serious sequel&aelig;, which,
+according to all experience, are so common in complicated
+cases of scarlatina, otorrh&#339;a and suppuration
+of the parotid glands are generally avoided
+under this treatment without any other aid, or, if
+it is impossible to avert such changes, they generally
+come to a speedy and safe end. This treatment
+likewise keeps off dropsy and its dangers.</p>
+
+<p>In cases where the secretion of <i>black urine</i> shows
+that the liver is deeply involved in the disease,
+Apis is powerless. These are the only exceptions
+to the curative power of this drug. Here we are
+told by our law of cure, that the sphere of Lachesis
+commences. We give one or two globules of Lachesis
+30 in seven dessert-spoonfuls of water, a dessert-spoonful<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>
+every twelve hours, and in acute cases
+every three hours; and the good effects of the
+medicine must seem miraculous to one who is not
+accustomed to this mode of treating diseases.
+Already in a few hours the patient becomes tranquil,
+showing that the process of disorganization
+has been arrested; the improvement continues from
+hour to hour; the sleep becomes more tranquil;
+the cutaneous secretions, and those of the bowels
+and kidneys, become more active; after the lapse
+of one, or at most two days, the urine begins to
+look clearer and lighter-colored, and in about
+three days a return of the natural color of the
+urine shows that the functions of the liver are
+restored to their normal standard; the patient is
+able to do without any further medical treatment,
+and the natural reaction of the vital forces will be
+found sufficient to effect a cure.</p>
+
+<p>If I have not mentioned the affections of the
+kidneys, which may be present in this disease, it is
+because I have become satisfied by years of experience,
+that they constitute secondary affections in
+scarlatina, and that we should commit a great error
+if we would draw conclusions regarding this point
+from post-mortem phenomena.</p>
+
+<p>Nobody who has observed the resemblance, at
+any rate, during the present epidemic, between</p>
+
+<h3>RUBEOLA</h3>
+
+<p class="noin">and scarlet-fever, will deny that the remarks which<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
+we have offered concerning this latter disease, likewise
+apply to rubeola. In</p>
+
+<h3>MEASLES,</h3>
+
+<p class="noin">likewise, Apis will prove a curative agent.</p>
+
+<p>In the American Provings, Apis is indicated in
+this disease by the following symptoms: "No. 1103,
+heat all over; the face is red as in scarlatina; eruption
+like measles; cough and difficult respiration
+as in croup; muttering delirium; 1211, superficial
+eruptions over the whole body, resembling measles,
+with great heat and a reddish-blue circumscribed
+flush on the cheeks; 1218, measle-shaped eruption."</p>
+
+<p>If we add to these symptoms the peculiarity
+inherent in Apis, to cause catarrhal irritations of the
+eyes, such as occur during measles, we have a right
+to infer that Apis will prove a valuable remedial
+agent in measles.</p>
+
+<p>Although common mild measles do not require
+any medicinal treatment, and generally get well
+without any prejudice to the general health; nevertheless,
+cases occur where intense ophthalmia, a violent
+and racking cough, and the phenomena which
+appertain to it; an intense irritation of the internal
+mucous membrane; diarrh&#339;a; dangerous prostration
+of strength; marked stupefaction and various
+nervous phenomena render the interference of art
+desirable. In all such cases, I have seen good
+effects from the use of Apis, which differed not
+only from the regular course of the disease, but
+likewise from the effects which have been witnessed<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
+under the operation of other medicines. In ordinary
+cases, and without treatment, it takes three,
+five, seven and eleven days, before the eyes get
+well again; but under the use of Apis, the eyes
+improve so decidedly in from one to three days,
+that the eyes do not require any further treatment;
+and that even troublesome sequel&aelig;, such as photophobia;
+styes which come and go; troublesome
+lachrymation; continual redness; swelling and
+blennorrh&#339;a of the lids; fistul&aelig; lachrymalis, etc.,
+need not be apprehended.</p>
+
+<p>If Apis has had a chance to exercise its curative
+action in a case of measles, we hear nothing of the
+troublesome, and often so wearing and racking
+cough, which so often prevails in measles, and the
+continuance of which is accompanied by an increased
+irritation and swelling of the respiratory
+mucous membrane and an increasing alteration of
+its secretion, which recurs in paroxysms, assumes a
+suspicious sound, shows a tendency to croup and
+to the development of tuberculosis, and finally
+degenerates in whooping-cough, so that epidemic
+measles and whooping-cough often go hand in
+hand. After Apis, the cough speedily begins to
+become looser and milder, to loose its dubious character,
+and to gradually disappear without leaving
+a trace behind. If these results should be confirmed
+by further experience, we would have attained additional
+means of preventing the supervention of
+whooping-cough in measles; a triumph of art and
+science which should elicit our warmest gratitude.</p>
+
+<p>Any one who knows, how malignant measles,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>
+unassisted by art, are accompanied by deep-seated
+irritation of the mucous membrane of the stomach
+and bowels; how they lead to diarrh&#339;a; to sopor;
+how they threaten life by long-lasting and troublesome
+putrid and typhoid fevers; and how, if they
+do not terminate fatally, they result in slow convalescence,
+and sometimes in chronic maladies for
+life, will admit, on seeing the diarrh&#339;a cease; on
+beholding the quiet sleep which patients enjoy; the
+pleasant and general perspiration; the return of
+appetite; the increase of strength, and the complete
+disappearance of all putrid and typhoid symptoms,
+that Apis has indeed triumphed over the disease.</p>
+
+<p>The following simple proceeding will secure such
+results: As soon as the fever has commenced, we
+prepare the above-mentioned solution of Aconite, of
+which we give a small spoonful every hour. If,
+after using the Aconite, the eruption breaks out
+and the fever abates, no further medication is necessary.
+If fever and eruption should require further
+aid, Apis is to be given, one or two globules of
+thirtieth potency in seven dessert-spoonfuls of water,
+well shaken, a dessert-spoonful morning and evening;
+or, if the disease is very acute, every three
+hours, which treatment is to be continued until an
+improvement sets in, after which the natural reaction
+of the organism will terminate the cure.</p>
+
+<p>Sequel&aelig; seldom take place after this kind of
+treatment; this is undoubtedly an additional recommendation
+for the use of Apis. Until this day
+I have never seen a secondary disease resulting
+from measles. Nevertheless, such sequel&aelig; will<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
+undoubtedly occur, for it is characteristic of the
+measle-miasm, to rouse latent psoric, sycosic, syphilitic
+and vaccinine taints, which afterwards
+require a specific anti-psoric treatment. Nevertheless,
+sequel&aelig; will certainly occur less frequently
+after the use of Apis, for which we ought to be
+thankful. In</p>
+
+<h3>URTICARIA AND PEMPHIGUS</h3>
+
+<p class="noin">Apis will likewise afford speedy and certain help.</p>
+
+<p>Many symptoms in the American Provings confirm
+this statement. More particularly 1198 to
+1210, and 1232 to 35: "very soon thick nettle-rash
+over the whole body, itching a good deal, passing
+off after sleeping soundly; violent inflammation
+and pressure over the whole body; friction brought
+out small white spots resembling musquito-bites;
+suddenly an indescribable stinging sensation over
+the whole body, with white and red spots in the
+palms of the hands, on the arms and feet; her
+Whole body was covered with itching and burning
+swollen streaks, after which the other troubles disappeared;
+swelling of the face and body; the parts
+are covered with a sort of blotches somewhat paler
+than the ordinary color of the skin; eruption over
+the whole body resembling nettle-rash, with itching
+and burning; nettle-rash in many cases; spots on
+the nape of the neck and forehead, resembling nettle-rash
+under the skin; consequences of repelled
+urticaria; whitish, violently itching swellings of the
+skin, on the head and nape of the neck, like nettle-rash;<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
+after the rash disappeared, the whole of the
+right side was paralyzed, with violent delirium even
+unto rage; after taking Apis the eruption appeared
+in abundance, and the delirium abated."</p>
+
+<p>These provings have been abundantly confirmed
+by my own experience. The use of Apis in these
+eruptions has been followed in my hands by the
+most satisfactory results; and I feel justified in
+recommending Apis as a most efficient remedy in
+these diseases, which are still wrapt in a good deal
+of obscurity. An additional source of satisfaction
+to have obtained more means of relieving human
+suffering. The experienced Neuman writes, in his
+Special Therapeutics, 2d Edit., Vol. I., Section 2,
+p. 681, about urticaria: "Howsoever unimportant
+a single eruption of urticaria may be, it becomes
+disagreeable and troublesome by its constant repetition,
+which is not dangerous, but exceedingly disturbing.
+It would be desirable to be acquainted
+with a safe method of curing this eruption, but so
+far, it has been sought for in vain." The same
+physician, speaking of pemphigus, writes in the
+same place, that its etiology, prognosis and treatment,
+are still very dubious; that it leads to extensive
+chronic sufferings, and often terminates fatally;
+and that no specific remedy is known for this disease.
+The more frequent opportunities we have of observing
+both these diseases in different individuals, the
+more frequently we observe them in conjunction
+with serious chronic maladies characterized by some
+specific chronic miasm, or in conjunction with the
+most penetrating and disturbing emotions, such as<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
+fright and its consequences; the more frequently
+we observe the sudden appearance and disappearance
+of such pustules, alternating with corresponding
+improvements or exacerbations in the internal organism,
+where we have to look on utterly powerless,
+as it were, the more uneasy do we feel at the
+mysterious nature of this malady, which, during
+the period of organic vigor, seems to be a sort of
+trifling derangement, somewhat like urticaria, but
+which, as the vital energies become prostrated by
+age, becomes more and more searching and tormenting,
+breaks forth again and again, exhausting
+the vital juices and leading irresistibly to a fatal
+termination; a result which is particularly apt to
+take place during old age, although I have likewise
+observed it, but rarely, among new-born infants.</p>
+
+<p>These developments lead us to suspect that urticaria
+and pemphigus are identical in essence; this
+fact is richly substantiated by the hom&#339;opathic law
+which furnishes identical means of cure for either
+of these affections. In either case, if the vital forces
+are prostrated, and the sensitiveness of the organic
+reaction is considerable, one pellet of Apis 30, and,
+if there is considerable resistance to overcome, two
+pellets shaken with six dessert-spoonfuls of water, a
+spoonful night and morning, is all that should be
+done, after which, all further treatment should be
+discontinued as long as the improvement continues
+or the skin remains clear from all eruptions. If
+the improvement cease or the eruption should
+reappear, we have in the first place to examine
+whether the improvement will not speedily resume<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>
+its course, or whether the eruption does not show
+itself more feebly than before, or if the cure is not
+evidenced by some other favorable change. In the
+former case the medicine should be permitted to act
+still further; in the latter case, another dose of Apis
+30 should be given, after which the result has to be
+carefully watched. In all benign cases, more particularly
+if no other means of treatment had been resorted
+to before, this management will suffice. If this
+should not be the case, if the eruption should appear
+again, we may rest assured that a psoric miasm lurks
+in the organism, and that an anti-psoric treatment has
+to be resorted to. The best anti-psoric under these
+circumstances, is Sulphur 30, one pellet, provided
+this drug has not yet been abused; or Causticum
+30, one pellet, if such an abuse has taken place.
+Syphilis may likewise complicate the disease, in
+which case Mercurius 30, one pellet, may be given;
+or, if Mercury had been previously taken in excessive
+doses, Mercurius 6000, one globule.</p>
+
+<p>After one or the other of these remedies, the
+symptoms should be carefully observed without
+doing anything else, with a view of instituting
+whatever treatment may afterwards be necessary,
+we wind up the treatment with another dose of
+Apis 30, one pellet, after which, the organic power
+is permitted to complete the cure. The result is,
+that the most difficult and complicated cases yield
+perfectly to such treatment, which is based upon
+the strictest scientific principles.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3>FURUNCLES AND CARBUNCLES</h3>
+
+<p class="noin">are likewise cured by Apis in the speediest and
+easiest manner.</p>
+
+<p>We find the following symptomatic indications in
+the American Provings: "682, painful pimple, suppurating
+in the middle, with red areola; painful
+like a boil, in the hairy region on the left side
+above the os pubis, continuing painful for several
+days; 1196, furuncles with stinging pains; 844,
+845, violent, stinging, burning pain at a small spot
+on the left side, in the lower region of the nape of
+the neck; also on the back part of the head; swelling
+at the nape of the neck, so that the head is
+pressed forward towards the chest; 1222, dark
+bluish-red painful swellings, with general malaise;
+1167, acute pain and erysipelatous swelling, very
+hard and pale in the centre."</p>
+
+<p>Apis has been a popular remedy for boils from
+time immemorial; the people have been in the
+habit of covering boils with honey, more particularly
+honey in which a bee had perished.</p>
+
+<p>Apis, hom&#339;opathically prepared, is better adapted
+to such an end than honey. A few drops of Apis 3,
+shaken with twelve tablespoonfuls of water, a tablespoonful
+of this solution every three hours, generally
+relieves the pain in a short period, promotes
+suppuration, effects the discharge of the decayed
+cellular tissue, and a speedy cure of the furuncle.</p>
+
+<p>If furuncles incline to become carbunculous, the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
+ichorous matter is speedily changed to good pus,
+and all danger is averted.</p>
+
+<p>In a case of carbuncle the gangrenous disorganization
+of the skin and cellular tissue becomes very
+soon confined to a small spot; the dead parts are separated
+from the living tissues; the fever is hushed;
+the disorganizations which it threatens are averted;
+a healthy suppuration is established throughout
+the gangrenous part, detaching and removing
+all decayed matter, and replacing the loss of substance
+by new granulations until the sore becomes
+cicatrized in such a hardly perceptible manner,
+that any one who is acquainted with the ravages
+of this disease, and is in the habit of seeing deep
+and disfiguring cicatrizes, even in the most successful
+cases, is disposed to deny the fact that such an
+intensely disorganizing process has been going on
+in this instance. No other remedial means are
+required, much less a surgical operation.</p>
+
+<p>Inasmuch as carbuncle is generally preceded for
+a longer period by a deep-seated feeling of illness
+in the organism, showing that the psoric miasm
+pervades the tissues, it behooves us, in order to
+secure all the better a favorable result, to give a
+dose of highly-potentized Sulphur at the very outset
+of the disease. After having used the first portion
+of Apis, a globule of Sulphur 30 or 6000 may
+be interposed, the former in all cases where no
+Sulphur had been used, and the latter in cases
+Sulphur had been used in large doses. We permit
+such a dose to act for twenty-four hours, after which<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>
+Apis is resumed, and continued according to the
+above stated rule.</p>
+
+<p>Sulphur should likewise be given in all cases
+where the furuncles reappear at different periods.
+Such a reappearance of the eruption, after it had
+once been cured by Apis, shows that a psoric taint
+pervades the organism which it is absolutely necessary
+to meet with specific counter-acting remedies.</p>
+
+<p>The more frequently we meet such difficult complications,
+and see with our own eyes their successful
+treatment, the more we learn to appreciate the fact,
+<i>that Apis cures to a certainty the most dangerous
+affections of this kind, and that the anti-psoric remedy
+corrects at the same time the primary degeneration of
+the tissues, without either interfering with the operations
+of the other drug, on the contrary, by assisting each
+other</i>. In</p>
+
+<h3>PANARITIA</h3>
+
+<p class="noin">Apis proves the same invaluable remedy.</p>
+
+<p>Genuine panaritia only spring up in psoric
+ground, and in regard to extent and intensity of
+development, depend altogether upon the existing
+psoric taint. Hence it is indispensable to extinguish
+this taint by appropriate remedies. This is
+most effectually accomplished by at once giving
+Sulphur, the most powerful of our anti-psorics.
+Sulphur seems to attack the evil at its very foundation,
+and we feel perfectly satisfied with its action,
+except that we would like to hasten the course of
+the disease still more, in order to abbreviate the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
+tortures inherent in this malady. This result is
+most certainly accomplished by means of Apis.</p>
+
+<p>If panaritia are the result of excessive doses of
+Sulphur, Apis meets our case perfectly. In hundreds
+of cases panaritia spring up and will continue
+to spring up from such a source, as long as the
+world continues to live in darkness, and to reject
+the rays of truth which the genius of Hahnemann
+has sent forth among the benighted understandings
+of his fellow beings. Notwithstanding Hahnemann's
+teachings concerning the medicinal power
+of Sulphur, which the world has now been in possession
+of for years, and which the most thoughtful
+minds have accepted as a truth, the true friend of
+man has still to weep over the quantities of Sulphur
+which all apothecaries sell to any one at his option;
+h&aelig;morrhoidal patients continue to swallow Sulphur
+from day to day; almost every body, from the child
+up to the old man, who is affected with catarrh,
+swallows the so-termed pulmonary powders which
+contain Sulphur, and of which relief is expected;
+whole legions repair every year to the Sulphur
+Springs; young and old use sulphur-baths at home;
+all over the world, the itch, which is a very common
+disease, is removed by means of a sulphur
+ointment, &amp;c. One of the evil consequences of this
+ignorance, which particularly oppresses the laboring
+class, is the artificial development of panaritia; the
+more frequently these occur, the more necessary it
+is to employ speedy and safe means for their extermination.
+In such a case we can no longer depend
+upon Sulphur, of which we cannot possibly know<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>
+how far it has already poisoned the organism, and
+to what extent it may still be able to rouse a reaction;
+in which case, even those who know, may be
+led to make dangerous mistakes. In all such cases
+Apis is of the best use to us; it is even sufficient to
+arrest the disorganizing process, and to bring about
+a satisfactorily progressing cure.</p>
+
+<p>The curative indications contained in the "American
+Provings," have been confirmed by my own
+experience. We read in Nos. 903-911, "the phalangeal
+bones are painful; burning jerking, like a
+stitching, contracting sensation, in the right numb,
+from without inwards; drawing pains reaching the
+extremities of the fingers; distinct feeling of numbness
+in the fingers, especially in the tips, around
+the roots of the nails, with sensation as if the nails
+were loose, and as if they could be shaken off;
+burning in the tips of fingers, as from fire; fine
+burning stinging in the tips of the fingers; burning
+around a hang-nail, on the outside of the fourth
+finger of the right hand, with pain internally, without
+redness and without aggravation from pressure,
+with continual burning in the tip; swelling of the
+fingers, which remained painful for several days;
+915, blister at the tip of the right index, discharging
+a bloody ichor when opened, and afterwards a
+milky pus, with violent burning, throbbing, and
+gnawing pains, continuing to spread for two days."</p>
+
+<p>From all this we deduce the highly important
+practical rule: In a case of whitlow, first ascertain
+whether and how far Sulphur has been abused by
+the patient. Unfortunately the non-abuse of Sulphur<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
+is an exception to the rule, whereas the abuse
+of Sulphur is quite common even in our age.
+Would that in this respect the ancient darkness
+might yield to the new light.</p>
+
+<p>In case Sulphur had been abused by the patient,
+we mix a few drops of Apis 3 in twelve tablespoonfuls
+of water, giving a tablespoonful every hour, or
+every two or three hours, according as the pains are
+more or less violent. This treatment has to be
+continued until the pains cease. They cease either
+because the inflammation has been dispersed, and
+the morbid process is terminated, or else a healthy
+suppuration has been set up, so that the swelling
+will discharge of itself, and a cure will be effected
+as speedily as the nature of the panaritium will
+admit. In either case the medicine need not be
+repeated, and the organic reaction will be sufficient
+to complete a cure without the interference of surgery.
+A simple bread and milk poultice may be
+used as soothing palliative, especially if the external
+skin is of a firm, hard texture. Resolution may be
+depended upon in every case, where Apis has been
+resorted to in time. A healthy suppuration will
+always set in after the exhibition of Apis, provided
+Sulphur or a psoric taint do not gain the ascendancy.
+If the Sulphur miasm gains the ascendancy,
+there will be no marked improvement during the
+first days of the treatment. In such a case we have
+at once to resort to a very high potency of Sulphur.
+A single globule of Sulphur 6000 would frequently
+ameliorate the worst aspect of the case as by a
+miracle, after which a few more doses of Apis 3, a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
+drop morning and evening, would so improve the
+symptoms, as to render all further medication unnecessary.</p>
+
+<p>If the psoric miasm should be the cause of the
+retarded improvement, as may easily be determined
+by the predisposing circumstances of the case, and
+if no Sulphur should have been administered previously,
+it is expedient to discontinue the use of
+Apis, and to at once exhibit a globule of Sulphur
+30, which may be allowed to act for twenty-four
+hours, after which Apis is to be resumed in the
+same manner, until a cessation of the pain manifests
+the cure of the disease.</p>
+
+<p>These explanations likewise point out the true
+course to be pursued, in case we should at the outset
+find that a whitlow owes its existence to the
+psoric miasm.</p>
+
+<p>Ever since hom&#339;opathy has enabled us to treat
+this dreaded affection with positive and specific
+remedies in a most satisfactory manner, the horrible
+pains which characterize this trouble, and the mutilations
+to which it so frequently leads, only exist in
+quarters where egotism, the love of lucre and the
+absence of all conscientiousness prevents physicians
+from inquiring into the merits of our superior mode
+of treatment. Is not this unpardonably wicked?</p>
+
+<h3>SPONTANEOUS LIMPING</h3>
+
+<p class="noin">is another affection which we cure with Apis.</p>
+
+<p>This disease which causes so much distress in
+life, is likewise, in its essential nature, an outbirth<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>
+of psora, and, as regards its local character and its
+effects upon the constitution of the patient, it seems
+to be characterized by the same inflammatory and
+suppurative process as whitlow, and be endowed
+with a similar tendency to organic destruction. In
+the American Provings, symptom 917, "Painful
+soreness in the left hip-joint, immediately after
+taking a dose of Apis 2, afterwards debility, unsteadiness,
+trembling in this joint," is the only
+symptom that seems to indicate the curative power
+of Apis in this distressing malady. What experienced
+physician has not often seen the hip show
+such symptoms of disease, particularly after violent
+frights and anguish? Who has not seen blows on
+the back and nates, by way of punishment, attended
+with such consequences? Who has not seen coxarthrocace
+develope itself during the course of a
+severe cerebral disease, scarlatina or typhus, where
+the patient, on suddenly awakening to consciousness
+from a state of stupor, is made sensitive of the
+presence of this insidious disease, perhaps already
+fully developed? Since I have used Apis, I have
+never had to deplore such saddening results.</p>
+
+<p>According to my observation, we may regard
+Apis as a specific remedy for spontaneous limping;
+every new trial confirms me in this statement.
+Apis may be depended upon as a capital remedy in
+every stage of this disease, as long as the psoric
+miasm is kept in the background; but as soon as
+the psoric taint is fully developed, a suitable anti-psoric
+has to be given in alternation with Apis.
+My experience has led me to prefer Kali carbonicum<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
+to all other anti-psoric remedies in this disease.
+But inasmuch as the keenest observer may
+overlook the right moment when the psoric poison
+begins to operate, it is well to forestall the enemy
+at the very commencement, which may be done
+with the more propriety, the more certainly we
+know that these two remedies, Apis and the anti-psoric,
+not only not counteract, but mutually support
+each other from the beginning to the end of
+the treatment. After many experiments, I have
+hit upon the following course as the most proper:</p>
+
+<p>If the limping, as is often the case in the severest
+forms of the disease, sets in gradually, almost imperceptibly
+and without much pain, I give at once
+a globule of Kali carbonicum 30. As a general
+rule, this one dose is sufficient to arrest the further
+development of the disease, and to award all danger
+so completely, that one, who is unacquainted with
+the nature of the malady, feels disposed to assert
+that it never existed. But if the pains continue,
+and are accompanied with fever, I resort to Apis 3,
+after Kali had been allowed to act for a day or two,
+mixing a drop in twelve tablespoonfuls of water,
+and giving a dose every hour, or every two or three
+hours, according as the pains come on more or less
+frequently. This treatment is continued until the
+patient is quieted, after which the two remedies are
+permitted to act without any further repetition of
+the medicine.</p>
+
+<p>If the inflammation of the joint sets in suddenly
+and with a violent fever, as is often the case after
+violent commotions, castigations, etc., we prepare a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
+solution of Aconite in the same manner as the Apis,
+and give these two medicines in alternate tablespoonful
+doses every hour. After these two solutions
+are finished, and the first assault of the disease
+has been controlled, we give a globule of Kali 30,
+and permit it to act for twenty-four hours. After
+this period we again give Apis every hour, two or
+three hours, as above, until the pains cease, after
+which Kali is allowed to act until the disease is
+entirely cured.</p>
+
+<p>If suppuration and caries of the joint have already
+set in, no matter whether the pus has found an outlet
+in the region of the joint itself, or burrows down
+the thigh to find an outlet somewhere else, Kali is
+no longer sufficient, Silicea has to be exhibited; it
+is more hom&#339;opathic to caries than other anti-psorics.
+We give a globule of Silicea 30, and allow it
+to act for two or three days, after which a drop of
+Apis 3, is repeated morning and night, until the
+pains&mdash;which may require a more frequent exhibition
+of the drug&mdash;cease, and a healthy pus is secreted.
+After this change is accomplished, Silicea
+is sufficient to complete the healing of the osseous
+disorganization, and should be left undisturbed to
+the end of the treatment.</p>
+
+<p>I have found this simple proceeding so perfectly
+efficient in this dreadful malady that the fever was
+speedily controlled, and rendered harmless, the inflammation
+was scattered without leaving a trace
+behind, the secretion ichor was transformed into
+that of healthy pus, and the disorganization of the
+joint was prevented; the limb, even after it had<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
+become elongated, again assumed its normal shape,
+the carious masses were expelled, the various channels
+of suppuration were stopped, and the danger of
+a fatal consumptive fever was averted. If our aid
+is not sought until <i>the head of the femur is destroyed,
+and the bone has completely slipt out of its socket</i>, it is
+impossible to prevent shortening and stiffness of the
+limb. Another splendid triumph over a dreadful
+source of danger and disease!</p>
+
+<h3>WHITE SWELLING OF THE KNEE</h3>
+
+<p class="noin">is very similar to this affection of the hip-joint.
+Here too we observe the same insidious inflammatory
+beginning, the same irresistible tendency to
+ichorous suppuration and disorganization of the
+constituent parts of the joint, the same tendency to
+destroy the organism by gradual exhausting fever.
+We have unmistakeable proofs of the presence of a
+poisonous process pervading the whole organism.
+He who has had frequent opportunities of observing
+this disease, knows perfectly in what mysterious
+obscurity it is still enveloped, and how specifically
+different this affection of the knee sometimes appears
+to us from the hip disease. The hom&#339;opathic
+law teaches us more positively than any thing else
+could do, that every case of disease should be
+viewed as something specifically distinct from other
+cases, and should be treated with medicines that
+are specifically adapted to it. An experience of
+many years has taught me that iodine is the best<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
+remedy to meet the symptoms which generally characterize
+white swelling of the knee. Even at the
+present day Iodine is one of those remedies that
+require a good deal of elucidation. Hence we
+should not, carried away by analogy, conclude from
+those things which are not clear, concerning other
+things which are no more so. Nevertheless the observations
+which have been made so far, have led
+to some highly important, more or less positive
+conclusions, and have shown us with a certain degree
+of satisfaction and certainty, that iodine is an
+inestimable gift of God, by means of which we are
+enabled to free mankind from one of the most
+frightful complications, the psoric, sycosic and
+mercurial miasms. I have been induced by various
+signs to believe that, in white swelling of the knee
+such a complication exists.</p>
+
+<p>Considering the paucity of our observations
+bearing upon this important point, it seems impracticable
+to make any positive statements with reference
+to the assistance that we might possibly derive
+from the use of Apis in this disease. My own
+opportunities for observation having been very few,
+I recommend the use of Apis in white swelling of
+the knee, to my professional brethren. The following
+symptoms in "Hering's American Provings,"
+seem to indicate it; No.'s 828, 829 and 931, "violent
+pain in the left knee, externally, above and
+below the knee, particularly above, somewhat in
+front; painful &#339;dematous swelling of the knee;
+burning stinging about the knee." In white swelling
+of the knee, where no all&#339;opathic treatment<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>
+has yet been pursued, I recommend Iodine 30, one
+globule, in six dessert-spoonfuls of water, a dessert-spoonful
+morning and evening, until the whole is
+finished; after this wait three days, and then give
+Apis 3, as before mentioned, a tablespoonful every
+hour or three hours, or a drop morning and evening,
+according as the pain or danger is more or less
+pressing. Apis is more especially useful in removing
+pain, in changing the secretion of ichor to that
+of healthy pus, and in arresting the consumptive
+fever. After these results have been accomplished,
+we permit the previously given Iodine to achieve
+the cure. If Iodine had been abused under all&#339;opathic
+treatment, before the hom&#339;opathic treatment
+commenced, we give Iodine 5000, one globule, in
+order to subdue the Iodine diathesis, and thus remove
+the most powerful obstacle to a cure. Any
+one who knows more about this point, will please
+mention it.</p>
+
+<p>Although Apis acts well in white swelling of the
+knee, which is comparatively a rare disease, yet it
+is far more useful in</p>
+
+<h3>DYSENTERY.</h3>
+
+<p>It is undoubtedly true that Hahnemann has revealed
+to us the means of surpassing in this disease
+the all&#339;opathic wisdom of a thousand years, by a far
+more successful, safe and expeditious treatment.
+Nevertheless, much remains to be desired in this
+dreaded disease. Who does not know that medicinal<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>
+aggravations are particularly to be dreaded
+in this malady? Who has not often felt embarrassed
+to select the right remedy among three or
+four that seemed indicated by the symptoms, and
+where it was nevertheless important, in view of the
+threatening danger, to select at once the right remedy?
+Who has not been struck by the strange irregularity
+that in a disease which generally sets in as
+an epidemic, different remedies are often indicated
+by different groups of symptoms? Who has not become
+convinced after a careful observation of the
+course of the disease, that nothing is more deceptive
+than the pretended curative virtues of corrosive
+sublimate in dysentery, and that it is a matter of
+duty to be mindful, in this very particular, of the
+warning words of the master who, having himself
+been deceived at one time by the delusive palliation
+of mercury, addresses to us the remarkable warning
+that "mercury, so far from responding to all non-venereal
+maladies, on the contrary is one of the
+most deceitful palliatives the temporary action of
+which is not only soon followed by a return of the
+original symptoms of disease, but even by a return
+of these symptoms in an aggravated form." (See
+Hahnemann's Chronic Diseases, Vol. II.)</p>
+
+<p>This delusive palliation is more particularly one
+of the effects of corrosive sublimate in Dysentery;
+and is exceedingly dangerous in this disease. Hence
+we warn practitioners against this danger.</p>
+
+<p>We feel so much the more grateful to the principle
+Similia Similibus, which, even though it did
+not protect its discoverer from faulty applications,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
+yet finally led us to the discovery of the right
+remedy for dysentery.</p>
+
+<p>No.'s 590 and 599 in the American Provings,
+read as follows: "Violent tenesmus; nausea, vomiting
+and diarrh&#339;a, first lumpy and not fetid, afterwards
+watery and fetid, lastly papescent, mixed
+with blood and mucus, and attended with tenesmus;
+afterwards dysenteric stools, with tenesmus and
+sensation as if the bowels were crushed;" combining
+these symptoms with the general character of
+Apis, particularly the circumstance that not only
+the ordinary precursors and first symptoms of
+dysentery, but also its terminations and its sequel&aelig;,
+and its most important complications find their
+approved remedy in Apis; all this shows us that
+Apis is a natural remedy for dysentery. This truth
+is abundantly confirmed by experience. All my
+previously obtained results in practice, testify to the
+correctness of this statement.</p>
+
+<p>At the very commencement of the disease, a
+globule of Apis 3 is sufficient to cut short the disease
+so that the patient feels easy, and sleeps quietly.
+During this slumber, fever, pain and tenesmus disappear,
+and the patient wakes with a feeling of
+health. If this should not take place in three hours,
+owing to the more advanced state of the disease,
+another dose of Apis is required, after which the
+patient soon feels well.</p>
+
+<p>If the dysenteric disease has had a chance to
+localize itself, and to assume a higher degree of intensity,
+it becomes necessary to excite the organic
+reaction all the more frequently. Under these circumstances<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
+we repeat the medicine every hour, or
+every two or three hours, one globule at a time,
+until all further medication has become unnecessary.</p>
+
+<p>It is well known that epidemic diarrh&#339;a, viz., a
+diarrh&#339;a resulting from peculiar alterations of the
+normal condition of the atmosphere, earth, water,
+indispensable food, or from other still unknown
+elementary influences inevitably acting upon every
+body, commences in the form of a simple, apparently
+unimportant diarrh&#339;a; that it gradually increases
+in intensity as the processes of nutrition and sanguification
+become more deeply disturbed, and that
+it finally terminates in life-destroying cholera.
+All these different stages of diarrh&#339;a, whether with
+or without vomiting, watery or papescent, of one
+color or another, with or without pain, with or
+without fever, have yielded readily, safely and thoroughly
+to Apis in my hands. I must except, however,
+cholera of the epidemic form, where I have
+not yet been able to try Apis for want of opportunity.
+As far as my personal observations go, I am
+disposed to affirm that the best mode of effecting a
+good result, is to give Apis 3 and Aconite 3, in
+alternation, one drop of each preparation well
+shaken in a bottle containing twelve tablespoonfuls
+of water, and giving a tablespoonful every hour or
+three hours, if the danger is great, and in milder
+cases a full drop alternately morning and evening.
+This treatment is continued until an improvement
+sets in, after which the organic reaction is permitted
+to develope itself, which will terminate in a few<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>
+hours or days, according as the disease is more or
+less violent, and assistance was sought more or less
+early, in the perfect recovery of the patient.</p>
+
+<p>This end is not always attained with equal certainty
+and rapidity, if Apis is not given in alternation
+with Aconite. In such a case, Apis alone often
+develops a powerful reaction, which is avoided by
+the alternate use of Aconite. Wherever the case is
+urgent, and it is important to shorten the durations
+of the organic reaction, the two remedies should be
+given in alternation. In most cases I have seen a
+few alternate doses give rise to a pleasant perspiration,
+speedily followed by quiet sleep and recovery
+on waking. May we not expect the same result at
+the commencement of Asiatic cholera, and thus
+arrest the further development of the disease?</p>
+
+<p>Apis is no less effectual against <i>chronic diarrh&#339;a</i>,
+more particularly if resulting, not from any deep-seated
+disorganizations, but from some permanent
+inflammatory irritation of the intestinal mucous
+membrane, and which causes and fosters so much
+distress, by rendering all normal digestion impossible
+and finally bringing on its inseparable companion,
+the last degree of hypochondria. This
+misery is so much more lamentable, as it is, so to
+say, forced upon mankind from the cradle to the
+grave by the still prevailing and almost ineradicable
+delusion of <i>cathartic medication</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Scarcely has the little being seen the light of the
+world, when the process of purgation begins. Nurse,
+aunt, grandmamma, everybody, hasten to hush the
+cries which the rough contact of the outer world<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>
+extorts from the little being, by forcing down its
+throat a little laxative mixture, and the family-physician,
+who goes by fashion, approves of all
+this. It is his habit, in after-life, to combat every
+little costiveness, every digestive derangement,
+every incipient disease, by means of his cathartic
+mixture, and his skill is considered proportionate
+to the quantity of stuff which the bowels expel
+under the operation of his drugs. Laxative pills,
+rhubarb, glauber-salts, bitter-waters, aloes, gin, etc.,
+etc., are in every body's hands, and become an
+increasing necessity for millions. An ancient prejudice
+decrees that, to permit a single day to pass
+by without stool, would be to expose one's life to
+the greatest danger. Every year we see thousands
+rush to warm and cold springs that have the reputation
+of being possessed with dissolvent and cathartic
+properties. Those who cannot afford to go to
+the springs, use artificial mineral water in order to
+accomplish similar purposes. Very seldom a disease
+is met with, that is permitted to run its course
+without dissolvent or cathartic means. It is still a
+profitable business to sell patent purgatives, such as
+cider in which a little magnesia has been dissolved.</p>
+
+<p>Everybody feels how offensive these things are to
+nature; how they attack the stomach and bowels;
+how they derange digestion and nutrition; how
+slowly patients recover from the effects of such
+drugs; how chronic abdominal affections, after
+having been eased for a while by such drugs, soon
+return again with redoubled vigor; how the dose
+has to be increased in order to obtain the same<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>
+result; how the intervals of relief becomes shorter
+and shorter, and how, in the end, the stomach is
+totally ruined, and the abnormal irritation and
+paralysis of this viscus, with the diarrh&#339;a and
+constipation, corresponding to these conditions,
+gradually lead to the complete derangement of
+the reproductive process.</p>
+
+<p>In spite of all this, long habit has secured to
+these pernicious customs a sort of prescriptive
+right. The distress consequent upon them, increases
+in proportion as the reactive powers of the
+organism decrease, which is more particularly the
+case in the present generation. The suppression of
+these abuses has never been more necessary than
+in our age. Indeed, the old proverb is again verified:
+"Where need is greatest, there help is
+nearest."</p>
+
+<p>The world is not only indebted to Hahnemann
+for a knowledge, but also for a natural corrective
+of this serious abuse. His provings on healthy
+persons show this beyond a doubt. Few men, if
+their attention has once been directed to this abuse,
+will feel disposed to deny its extent. Nor has a
+favorable change in this respect been looked for in
+vain, since hom&#339;opathy has now, for half a century
+at least, shown the uselessness of all regular
+methods of purgation, and the superiority of the
+means with which this new system accomplishes
+most effectually all that those pernicious methods
+promised to do. It should be considered a duty
+by every physician, to be acquainted with the new
+means of cure. The continued use of purgatives<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
+should be considered a crime against health. They
+will soon cease to exist as regular means of treatment,
+and their pernicious consequences will no
+longer have to be relieved by remedial means.
+But until their use is abolished, we shall have to
+counteract them by adequate means of cure, more
+particularly the abnormal irritation and the paralytic
+debility, which are the most common consequences
+of the abuse of cathartics.</p>
+
+<p>It is a most fortunate thing that we have in Apis
+one of the most reliable means of removing the
+evil effects of cathartic medicines. A single globule
+of Apis 30 is sufficient to this end. It is best
+to use it as follows: dissolve the globule in five
+tablespoonfuls of water by shaking the mixture
+well in a well closed vial, and let the patient take
+a tablespoonful of this solution. If this dose acts
+well, no repetition is necessary for the present. If
+this dose should not be sufficient, we prepare a new
+potence by throwing away three tablespoonfuls of
+the former solution and substituting four tablespoonfuls
+of fresh water, shaking the mixture well.
+We give a spoonful of this second solution, twenty-four
+hours after the first had been given, and, if
+necessary, a third spoonful prepared in the same
+way, and even a fourth and fifth, after which we
+await the result, without thinking either of improvement
+or exacerbation.</p>
+
+<p>Generally, a feeling of ease is experienced shortly
+after taking Apis. The painful sensitiveness of the
+pit of the stomach and of the abdomen, together
+with the troublesome, disagreeable and oppressive<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>
+distention and weight, soon disappear; the tongue
+gradually loses its swollen and cracked appearance,
+its dirty redness, its slimy coating, its sore spots,
+tardy indentations along its edges, the burnt feeling
+at its tip, which is dotted with very fine vesicles,
+that cause a good deal of soreness; the pappy, sour,
+bitter, metallic, foul taste disappears; the appetite
+is again normal; both the previous aversion to
+food and the excessive craving disappear; the absence
+of thirst, which is so common in this condition,
+again gives place to a natural desire for drink,
+the bluish-red color and swelling of the palate and
+throat, and the incessant urging to hawk, decrease
+visibly: the distress after eating; the sour stomach
+with or without nausea or heartburn; the excessive
+rising of air; the regurgitation of the ingesta; the
+eructations which taste of the food that had been
+eaten long before; the yawning; the irresistible
+drowsiness when sitting; the general loss of
+strength; the vacuity of mind, the aversion to
+talking and to company, decrease more and more
+every day; the whole abdomen feels easier and
+softer: the excessive and irresistible urging to urinate,
+especially after rising from a chair or from
+bed, and accompanied by a distressing nervousness,
+abates; the diarrh&#339;ic and abnormally colored
+evacuations, together with the frequent and irresistible
+urging, increased after eating, early in the
+morning and after sour and flatulent food, and
+accompanied by various sore pains in the rectum,
+diminish more and more, and give place to normal
+evacuations, first for days, next for weeks, although<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
+they continue to alternate more or less with constipation,
+or painful, insufficient, hard stool, until they
+terminate sooner or later, according as the disease
+is more or less deep-seated, and had lasted more or
+less long, in permanent restoration of the normal
+secretions and excretions of the digestive organs.
+At the same time the many distresses which the
+abnormal condition of the bowels and stomach had
+occasioned in the head and heart, disappear; the
+poor patient who had been a prey to so many sufferings,
+feels like one born again.</p>
+
+<p>This is the general result, unless psoric, sycosic,
+syphilitic or vaccinine complications should be present.
+Unfortunately the abuse of cathartics excites
+these miasms if they exist in the organism, and at
+the same time prostrates the reactive powers of the
+organism, and enables its enemies to rise against it.
+The distress becomes more and more complicated;
+disorganizations, alterations of the fluids, disturbances
+of the assimilative sphere, nervous derangements
+from simple illusions of the sentient sphere,
+and occasional trembling and twitching, to spasmodic
+and convulsive movements, and final extinction
+of nervous power, marasmus of the spinal
+marrow or a ramollissement of the brain; these are
+the consequences of such miasmatic complications.</p>
+
+<p>In such a case Apis alone is not sufficient. We have
+to employ such antidotes as <i>Sulphur</i>, our most powerful
+anti-psoric which, unless it had been abused
+previously, never leaves us in the lurch in the presence
+of psora; <i>iodine</i> which, under similar circumstances,
+becomes indispensable wherever psora and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
+sycosis are combined; <i>bichromate of potash</i> or <i>fluoric
+acid</i>, if psora, syphilis and mercurial poisoning are
+united; and lastly, <i>tartar emetic</i>, or again <i>fluoric
+acid</i>, if the vaccine poison alone, or in combination
+with the other poisons, occupies the foreground.</p>
+
+<p>This is not the place to treat of these special forms
+of human distress, and to individualize their treatment;
+I shall endeavor to do this on a more suitable
+occasion. I shall have to limit myself here to
+a superficial sketch of the treatment, adding merely
+that a single dose of the specific antidote will act
+best if given highly potentized, and that the improvement
+should afterwards be allowed to progress
+as long as a trace of it remains visible. But as soon
+as the improvement stops and an exacerbation sets
+in, which is not speedily followed by another improvement,
+or which seems to require our aid, we
+use Apis 3, one drop every day, until the improvement
+is again perceived, after which we wait until
+another exacerbation demands our interference.
+One dose of Apis is often insufficient; if not, from
+three to five doses will be found sufficient to mitigate
+the pains, and to advance the cure which Apis
+will complete in conjunction with the high potency
+that should not be repeated, and which is not interfered
+with by the Apis. What more precious boon
+for the physician and patient in these serious moments?
+It is only a physician who has instituted
+provings upon himself, that is capable of comprehending
+this harmonious blending of the two therapeutic
+agents. He sees the well known effects of a
+well known cause go and come at alternate periods.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
+What man of common sense would be willing to
+repudiate such evidence?</p>
+
+<p>But even in a case where Sulphur and Iodine
+had been given to excess, and a sort of Sulphur and
+Iodine diathesis had been established in consequence,
+Apis is still the best remedy to meet this
+complicated derangement.</p>
+
+<p>Although we may believe that the time is at hand
+when this kind of ignorance shall no longer be
+tolerated, it unfortunately is still a prevailing sin
+of the profession. Even if we should be unable to
+effect a perfect cure, yet we may afford essential
+relief to such patients; we may often arrest their
+sufferings for a longer or shorter period, and shorten
+the paroxysms until they become almost imperceptible.
+Apis is particularly instrumental in
+effecting this end. Diseases of the</p>
+
+<h3>RESPIRATORY ORGANS</h3>
+
+<p class="noin">are likewise successfully combated by Apis. The
+American Provings contain the following symptomatic
+indications:</p>
+
+<p>1. No.'s 731, 733, 736, 742, 743, 749, 760:
+"Hoarseness and difficulty of breathing, roughness
+and sensitiveness in the larynx, each time after he
+smells of the poison; talking is painful, sensation
+as if the larynx were tired by talking; drawing
+pains in the larynx; cough when starting during
+sleep; rough cough during evening; heat; difficult
+breathing, every drop of liquid almost suffocates
+him; labored inspirations as during croup."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>2. 737-740: "Violent paroxysms of cough, occasioned
+by a titillating irritation in the lower part of
+the larynx near the throat-pit, with increase of
+headache when coughing, on the left side, superiorly;
+in half an hour, some phlegm is detached,
+after which the coughing ceases; on the first day,
+when waked from his sleep before midnight, he
+had a violent cough, especially after lying down
+and sleeping, with titillation at a very small spot,
+deep down on the posterior wall of the thorax,
+which wakes him; he feels better as soon as the
+least little portion of mucous is detached; cough particularly
+during warmth, during rest, and rousing
+him from his first slumber for several evenings."</p>
+
+<p>3. 1081, 746, 790: "Chilly every afternoon at
+three or four o'clock; she shudders, especially
+during warmth; chill across the back, the hands
+feel as if dead; in about an hour she felt hot and
+feverish, with rough cough, hot cheeks and hands,
+without thirst; this passes off gradually, she feels
+heavy and prostrate; cough and labored breathing
+as during croup, after violent feverish heat, with dry
+skin and full pulse; disturbed sleep, with muttering,
+timid and incoherent talk, whitish-yellow coating
+of the tongue, and painless, yellow-greenish, slimy
+diarrh&#339;a, in four days the breathing become labored,
+a violent abdominal respiration, red face, increasingly
+livid, pulse hard, cough, with barking resonance&mdash;pains
+in the chest, with labored breathing."</p>
+
+<p>4. 754, 770, 772, 803: "Hurried, labored breathing,
+with heat and headache; chest oppressed; difficult
+labored breathing; sense of suffocation even<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
+when leaning against a thing; general debility;
+worse during cold weather, accompanied by asthmatic
+pains; cough; sense of suffocation; pains in
+the chest; coldness and deadness of the extremities,
+which looked bluish; sense of soreness; lameness;
+sense of bruising in the chest, as after recent contusions
+by a blow; jamming, etc."</p>
+
+<p>These observations do not indeed show with
+characteristic certainty the diseases to which Apis
+might correspond. But if they are contrasted with
+the total character of Apis; if we consider that
+Apis develops a catarrhal irritation throughout the
+whole intestinal mucous membrane, affecting most
+deeply the nervous system and the normal constitution
+of the fluids, we have sufficient ground to
+experiment with Apis in those respiratory diseases
+which seem to be inherent in the prevailing genius
+of disease, and which are characterized by the very
+conditions which I have described. Who is not
+struck by the fact, that the same individual morbid
+process is reflected by different forms of disease,
+<i>croup</i>, <i>whooping-cough</i>, <i>influenza</i>, <i>acute and chronic
+bronchial catarrh</i>? The more essential the resemblance
+between these forms of disease and the
+medicinal power, the more certainly may we expect
+a cure. The medicinal power which seems to
+be most adequate to this end, is undoubtedly Apis.
+My observations in this respect are not sufficiently
+numerous to enable me to offer positive directions
+concerning the best mode of using the medicine in
+these diseases, or concerning the extent of the
+curative process or the complications that may<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>
+exist. All I can do is to recommend Apis for
+further experiments in this range, and to remind
+my brethren of the insufficiency of other drugs,
+which has been a source of trouble to us in the
+past ten years. Every body who has watched the
+course of these diseases during this period, must
+have seen the difference existing between the present
+and the past character of the symptoms. It
+must, therefore, be a source of satisfaction to all of
+us, to have found in Apis an agent that is capable
+of filling up the gap.</p>
+
+<p>My observations regarding the curative virtues
+of Apis in urinary, uterine and ovarian difficulties,
+and in rheumatism and gout, are not very extended.
+In the American Provings, symptoms 634 to 669,
+seem to point to urinary difficulties, and 685 to 695,
+to ovarian troubles; symptoms 697 to 727 to uterine
+derangements; and 837, 842, 867, 873, 874, 918,
+919, 940, 942, 964, 969, to rheumatism and gout.</p>
+
+<p>What little experience I have had in the employment
+of Apis in these diseases, is, however, sufficient
+to induce me to recommend the use of it for further
+and more enlarged knowledge.</p>
+
+<p>I have had abundant opportunities of verifying
+the warning expressed in No. 721, "pregnant women
+should use the drug very cautiously." I am not
+acquainted with any drug which seems possessed
+of such reliable virtues regarding the prevention of
+miscarriage, more particularly during the first half
+of pregnancy, as Apis. I have often become an
+involuntary spectator of the power of Apis to effect
+miscarriage; for I had given it to honest women<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
+who did not know that they were pregnant, and
+where the fact of pregnancy was revealed to them
+by the subsequent miscarriage, which took place
+after one or two doses of Apis had been taken.
+Ever since I have made it a rule not to give Apis
+to females in whom the existence of pregnancy can
+be suspected in the remotest degree until the matter
+is reduced to a certainty, and the conduct of the
+physician can be determined upon in accordance
+with existing facts.</p>
+
+<p>I am unable to say how far this power inherent
+in Apis, of producing miscarriage, may be serviceable
+to females who are prone to miscarriage.</p>
+
+<p>I beg the privilege of adding a more general
+warning to this particular one. The more generally
+useful a thing is, the more liable is it to abuse.
+The most important and useful discoveries of
+hom&#339;opathy are abused in this manner by our
+age given to all sorts of excesses.</p>
+
+<p>Not only are the records of hom&#339;opathy ransacked
+by speculative minds, who use her advantages
+for personal gain without giving due credit to the
+source whence the good things are obtained. This
+species of egotism may perhaps be excused in consideration
+of the use which this kind of plagiarism
+affords, even if whole volumes should be filled with
+it. But if the stolen property is paraded before the
+world as something belonging to one's self by right
+divine; if official influence is abused for the purpose
+of dressing up that which rightfully belongs to our
+science, as some original discovery, thus caricaturing
+and disfiguring the beauty of the genuine blessing;<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>
+then good is changed to evil, and the evil is the
+greater, the more comprehensive the truth that is
+so shamefully abused. It is absurd and may entail
+sad consequences upon the world, if the rational use
+of Apis is to be converted to the irrational proceedings
+of the so-called specific method, which is often
+practised by men who, knowing better, purposely
+conceal the truth from the world. For years past,
+I have been called upon again and again, by patients
+who had been in the hands of these men, and who
+had been drenched with medicine, and had had all
+sorts of disastrous complications engendered in their
+poor bodies, to afford them some relief from these
+tortures inflicted by physicians who do not hesitate
+to assail the health of their patients by massive
+doses of drugs, of which they often know nothing
+but the name.</p>
+
+<p>With these facts before me, nobody can find it
+strange that I should feel some misgivings in laying
+before the world a drug endowed with such extensive virtues.
+Apis is one of those drugs, the abuse
+of which may prove as destructive as the use of it
+is a source of saving good. It is no anti-psoric, nor
+is it capable of antidoting the three miasms, or of
+inflicting medicinal diseases for life. Nevertheless,
+it is a deeply and speedily-acting drug, for it affects
+the whole internal mucous membrane, the nervous
+system, and the process of sanguification, thus disturbing
+the health for a long time. Its primary
+aggravating action, its deeply penetrating interference
+with the existing morbid process, which
+may lead to errors in diagnosis, and its power to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>
+exhaust the reactive energies of the organism prematurely,
+render it a very dangerous agent. These
+circumstances go to show that such an agent, in the
+hands of the partizans of the Specific School, may
+be as dangerously and injuriously abused as other
+important drugs have been. I cannot sufficiently
+warn my readers against such distressing abuses.
+Only he is protected from the danger of imitating
+such shameful absurdities, who listens to the words
+of our master:</p>
+
+<div class="bk1" style="width: 17em;"><p>"Imitate this, but imitate this correctly!"</p></div>
+
+<div class="trn"><b>Transcriber's Note:</b>
+Minor typographical errors have been corrected without note.
+Inconsistent hyphenation has been standardised, whilst variant
+and archaic spellings remain as printed.</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Apis Mellifica, by C. W. Wolf
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+</pre>
+
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