The British Homoeopathic Review, Volume 491905 - Medicine |
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Page 21
... never be admitted as other than a colloquialism and as a partial statement of the whole truth . For , just as it is certain that the bacterium is an essential complement to sus- ceptibility , so is it certain that without susceptibility ...
... never be admitted as other than a colloquialism and as a partial statement of the whole truth . For , just as it is certain that the bacterium is an essential complement to sus- ceptibility , so is it certain that without susceptibility ...
Page 24
... never far distant . Arnica has long been under suspicion of causing true erythema and true erysipelas . Seeing how thoroughly the latter disease has been traced to the action of micro - organisms , the deduction that the drug behaves by ...
... never far distant . Arnica has long been under suspicion of causing true erythema and true erysipelas . Seeing how thoroughly the latter disease has been traced to the action of micro - organisms , the deduction that the drug behaves by ...
Page 25
... never been detected in an effusion so caused , but I am equally unable to find any instance in which it has been sought there . If rigors , coincident rise of temperature , pulse and respiration rate , dulness of a portion of the lungs ...
... never been detected in an effusion so caused , but I am equally unable to find any instance in which it has been sought there . If rigors , coincident rise of temperature , pulse and respiration rate , dulness of a portion of the lungs ...
Page 28
... never yet known , and all under the gentle , safe and speedy reign of the law of similars ? These are questions which only systematic work , such as seems impossible to isolated workers , answer . 99 can We are all of us in some degree ...
... never yet known , and all under the gentle , safe and speedy reign of the law of similars ? These are questions which only systematic work , such as seems impossible to isolated workers , answer . 99 can We are all of us in some degree ...
Page 58
... to be regretted that he never was able to go- through a full course of study and take a qualification . 66 But his gifts and knowledge very soon made him 58 Monthly Homœopathic Review , an . 2 , 1905 . OBITUARY . OBITUARY. ...
... to be regretted that he never was able to go- through a full course of study and take a qualification . 66 But his gifts and knowledge very soon made him 58 Monthly Homœopathic Review , an . 2 , 1905 . OBITUARY . OBITUARY. ...
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Common terms and phrases
abdomen aconite action acute allopathic annual appeared Applause Association asthma attack attendance believe belladonna blood British Homœopathic Burford Byres Moir cantharidin cause chronic Clifton clinical colleagues Committee condition Congress course cure diphtheria disease Dispensary doctor doses drug Dudley Wright Dyce Brown effect experience fact feel fever funds gall-bladder give given Goldsbrough GOULD hæmorrhage Hahnemann Ham House HOMEOPATHIC REVIEW Homœo homoeopathic hysterectomy increased Institute interest intestinal Journal kidney knowledge Ladies law of similars lectures lobar pneumonia London Homœopathic Hospital Materia Medica medicine meeting menorrhagia Messrs method Miss months Moorgate Street mucous mucous membrane Neatby nephritis occurred operation organs Out-patients pain paper pathic patient peritonitis physician pneumonia practice present President proved recovery remedy rheumatism skin success suffering surgical symptoms temperature thanks therapeutic Thursdays tissues treatment tumour uric acid urine uterus
Popular passages
Page 594 - There's not a chain That hellish foes, confederate for his harm, Can wind around him, but he casts it off With as much ease as Samson his green withes. He looks abroad into the varied field Of nature, and though poor perhaps, compared With those whose mansions glitter in his sight, Calls the delightful scenery all his own. His are the mountains, and the valleys his, And the resplendent rivers. His to...
Page 603 - ... the more striking, singular, uncommon, and peculiar (characteristic) signs and symptoms of the case of disease are chiefly and most solely to be kept in view; for it is more particularly these that very similar ones in the list of symptoms of the selected medicine must correspond to, in order to constitute it the most suitable for effecting the cure.
Page 275 - It is a curious fact that while most of the States of the Union have laws for the regulation of medical practice, there does not exist an authoritative legal definition of medicine. Perhaps, as satisfying a definition of it as does exist, is to be found in the Standard Dictionary, in the phrase which defined it as "The healing art ; the science of the preservation of health ; and of treating disease for the purpose of cure.
Page 626 - Wherewithal shall a young man cleanse his way ? by taking heed thereto according to thy word.
Page 62 - It is an uncontrolled truth," says Swift, "that no man ever made an ill figure who understood his own talents, nor a good one who mistook them.
Page 387 - After dinner, I walked to Ham, to see the house and garden of the Duke of Lauderdale, which is indeed inferior to few of the best villas in Italy itself ; the house furnished like a great Prince's ; the parterres, flower-gardens, orangeries, groves, avenues, courts, statues, perspectives, fountains, aviaries, and all this at the banks of the sweetest river in the world, must needs be admirable.
Page 723 - The symptoms attributed to an oxalic acid diathesis, with the exception of those due to local irritation in the genito-urinary tract, do not appear to be due to the presence in the system of soluble oxalates, but are more likely to depend on other products of fermentation and putrefaction.
Page 121 - Feb. 1. 1906. which had bothered me not a little for several years. The gentleman had been subject to attacks of neuralgia for fifteen or twenty years, affecting the right side of head, and which had been the cause of the almost complete destruction of sight in that eye. The attacks were caused by fatigue, cold, or derangement of the stomach. The pain...
Page 456 - Anteriorly, the right is covered by the right lobe of the liver, the descending portion of the duodenum, and the ascending colon...
Page 629 - As a mode of defense autobiography is a failure; it too often confirms the old saying, that a man who is his own lawyer has a fool for a client.