A 575526 CURABILITY OF TUMOURS J. C. BURNETT H61699 B9% CURABILITY OF TUMOURS J. Compton Burnett, M.D. ARTES LIBRARY 1837 SCIENTIA VERITAS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Hાખ E PLURIBUS UNION SQUAERIS PENINSULAM AMOENAME CIRCUMSPICE' CURABILITY OF TUMOURS. CURABILITY OF TUMOURS BY MEDICINES. as. J. РТО BY COMPTON BURNETT, M.D. "What I call a cure is an alteration of the disposition and the effect of that disposition, and not the destruction of the cancerous parts."-John Hunter. Science moves but slowly, slowly creeping on from point to point.”—Tennyson. Lassen wir uns durch eristische Einwürfe nicht irre machen am Fortschritte unserer grossen Kunst und Wis- senschaft unermüdlich zu arbeiten !"-on Grauvogl LONDON: THE HOMEOPATHIC PUBLISHING COMPANY, 12, WARWICK LANE, E.C. 1893. EDWARD THOMAS, PRINTER, CAXTON BUILDINGS, PEPPER STREET, CHEster. To the Memory OF THE Father of Scientific bomœopathy IN GREAT BRITAIN, JOHN J. DRYSDALE, M.D., THIS LITTLE VOLUME IS Dedicated IN AFFECTION, ADMIRATION AND GRATITUDE BY The Author. PREFACE. SOME time since I published a small work entitled "Tumours of the Breast: their Treatment and Cure by Medicines"; and in its Preface stated that it really constituted a part of a larger work on the subject of the medicability of Tumours in general, which I had in hand; the present volume is what I referred to. Do I include Cancer in the term Tumour ? Yes; and a number of my cured cases were declared to be such by the highest authorities in England; and I hope later on to have the privilege of treating of that dire malady in a separate work by itself, and apart from Tumours in general-but my clinical material viii Preface. for that task is at present inadequate for the proof of what I, at present, must be content to think over to myself in my quiet moments. As Duparcque says: - "Le cancer est incurable parcequ'on ne le guérit pas ordinairement; on ne peut le guérir puisqu'il est incurable, donc quand on le guérit, c'est qu'il n'existait pas." The lines of demarcation between malig- nant and benign Tumours are, clinically, not easily drawn early on, and the exact knowledge obtained when the parts are under the micro- scope comes too late to be of any clinical use. If we are ever to succeed in veritably curing grave disease by medicines, we must proceed from the simple to the complex ; from the benign to the malignant; and it is Preface. ix reasonable to begin with the least difficult, and start at the thing in its very earliest stages, for there comes an incurable stage in almost every ailment of a progressive nature. the It is extremely important to carefully differentiate between an incurable disease and incurable stage of a perfectly curable complaint. People will say, of course it is; but is it not a fact that new therapeutic measures are commonly tried in the last hope- less stages of disease, and even then often clumsily and unwillingly? For instance: is it not an almost daily experience of homoeopathic practitioners to find themselves called in at the last incurable stages of maladies in which every conceivable method of cure must in the nature of things necessarily fail? x Preface. This must be always borne in mind in regard to the amenability of tumours, whether benign or cancerous. Nevertheless physicians must be firm, and not allow themselves to be sneered or jeered away from their duty, but always try to cure everything; I do not mean pretend, but try. Many a clinical battle have I fought and won, although the winning had been previously proved to be impossible. 66 Inasmuch as it is not commonly believed that tumours can be cured by medicines, a very important part of my task in this volume should be to prove that it can be done. There are some who will say, we need no proof from you that it is possible to cure Tumours medicinally; that has been proved over and over again." This remark has been hurled at me time and again, but these selfsame men consistently advise their patients suffering Preface. xi from tumour to have the same removed by operation. Within the ordinary limits of a practical treatise like this, it is not feasible to motive every prescription, and hence the part entitled "Remarks on Therapeutic Principles" is inserted as a necessary part of my subject, and in order to show, in general thesis, the why and wherefore of many of the prescrip- tions which are, in fact, often not so empirical as they might otherwise appear to be. For, in regard to the choice of the various remedies I have made use of, I felt bound to explain the principles that have guided me, so far as time and space would allow; and this will also obviate a good deal of needless repetition. In my judgment they may all be included in the word homoeopathy, but there are some who dispute this, and say that treatment to be really xii Preface. homœopathic must be purely and solely accord- ing to the totality of the symptoms. Well, I am bound to confess that I am not infrequently unable to cure tumours by choosing the remedies according to the totality of the symptoms as set forth in the provings of the remedies. If others can, let them come forward with their clinical evidence; and, if their results are better than mine, I will sit at their feet; if, however, mine are better than theirs, let them sit at mine; but facta, non verba. Is it The practical question with me is this: it not time to widen our definition of homœopathy in regard to the choice of the remedy, and, while leaving the choice of the remedy according to the totality of the symp- toms in full force and dignity, draw into it all the aids that may lead to the right choice of the remedies; more particularly the natural history of the morbid processes themselves. Preface. xiii In other words, I maintain that choosing the remedies according to the totality of the symptoms is only one way of finding the right remedy; and, moreover, sometimes totally in- adequate. You may find the right remedy once in a way according to the old doctrine of signatures; and, even though so found, it acts homeopathically; the way of choosing is poor and crude, but it is a way. You may find the right remedy by organ- testing after the manner of Paracelsus, and the remedy acts homeopathically although found that way. You may find the right remedy purely hy- pothetically, after the manner of Von Grauvogl and Schüssler, the mode of action remains the same, i.e., homœopathic. You may use dynamized salt-Natrum muriaticum—to cure marine cachexia, sea-side xiv Preface. neuralgia, sea-side headache, and the like, and still the action of the remedy is homeopathic You prove, or assume as pure theory, the double and opposite actions of large and small doses of the same remedy, and treat chronic arsenicism with Arsenicum, and it is still home- opathy. You may theorize clinically as I do in "New Cure of Consumption," and reach no mean degree of success-further than ever before reached, and I maintain that it is homœopathy all the time. The fact is we need any and every way of finding the right remedy; the simple simile, the simple symptomatic simillimum, and the far- thest reach of all—the pathologic simillimum ; and I maintain that we are still well within the lines of the homœopathy that is expansive, progressive, science-fostered, science-fostering, and world-conquering. J. COMPTON BURNETT. 86, WIMPOLE Street, CAVENDISH SQUARE, LONDON, Easter, 1893. Curability of Tumours. by Medicines. PRELIMINARY REMARKS ON THERAPEUTIC PRINCIPLES. WHEN drugs affect certain parts of the economy specifically, the general fact is the one elaborated by the great and greatly vilified Paracel- sus, and it constituted the backbone of his practice. Remedies owning this quality were his Appropriata. That is, they are appropriated by the organs they re- spectively and specifically influence, much as we may suppose the kidneys seize upon the particles in the blood to form what is then known as urine. Grounded on this basis, the medical 2 Curability of Tumours. practice of Paracelsus was not only in advance of the common medical practice of his own now distant day, but actually much in advance of the orthodox medical practice of the time that now is. If any one questions this statement let him compare the Paracelsic practice of physic in regard to, say gallstones, with that recommended in the best of the old school practice (I except the eclectics, who are really and essentially organopaths, and often sound prac- titioners). Rademacher, in the early part of this century, re-discovered this Medicina Paracelsica and having practised it with much success for many years he taught its precepts and practice with such power that a School of Medicine arose, his disciples bearing the honored name of Rademacherians. With these came into general use the words organ- Curability of Tumours. 3 remedy, organ-disease; the general fact being called organopathy. Hahnemann founded his homo- opathy, Rademacher founded his organ- opathy (the re-discovered Medicina Paracelsica really), practically con- temporaneously with one another, and both may be said to have been in full development in the forties of this nineteenth century. The specificity of seat of the Medicina Hahnemannica (i.e., homo- opathy) and the principle of the remedia appropriata of the Medicina Paracelsica (sometimes termed Rademacherianism), practically coincide. Hahnemannic medicine in its pris- tine purity is based on pure pharma- codynamics; it is in fact therapeutically applied pharmacodynamics; its first and deepest ground-work being the principle that given drugs affect given 4 Curability of Tumours. organs (parts) by self-elective prefer- ence. Therefore up to this point Paracelsic medicine and Hahnemannic medicine coincide. But Paracelsic medicine (organ- opathy) grows primarily out of the knowledge of drug-action obtained by giving drugs to the sick, and as first. indications the older Hohenheimians accepted the doctrine of signatures of things external and internal. On the other hand Hahnemannic medicine (homoeopathy) grows out of the knowledge of drug-action obtained by giving drugs to the healthy (the drug-proving) the first indications being, nevertheless, for the older remedies, the same as in Paracelsic medicine. This I assert, and I am prepared to prove the assertion. After a certain time the prac- titioners of organopathy adopted the Curability of Tumours. 5 : Hahnemannic drug-provings, and by this adoption became by the very fact large-dose homoeopaths. For when the Rademacherian organopath adopted drug-provings he was on precisely the same lines as the homœopaths who gave small material doses: the theoretical admission of the law of likes only separating them. At this stage the organopaths were homoeopathescent as are the Ringerites now. And the more the Rademacher- ians occupied themselves with drug- provings the more homoeopathescent. they became, and this went on until their separative distinctiveness waned and went they almost unconsciously tacked themselves on to the rear column of homœopathy. The reason why homoeopathy swal- lowed up organopathy lies in the fact that homoeopathy is organopathy and something else besides, viz. : the differentiating law of similars. 6 Curability of Tumours. Had the Medicina Hahnemannica not been based upon a law demonstrable by pure scientific experiment, it would have been long since extinct except as an historic expression. But the law sticks fast, and there is no removing it-be you symptomatiker or specifiker, allopath or eclectic. That opium in due dose constipates has been proved it is admitted. That opium in refracted dose opens the bowels has been proved: it is admitted. That the kind of constipation which opium produces is similar to the kind of constipation which it does away with has been proved: it is admitted. What is here stated of opium can be tested; it has been tested and proved unto very weariness-with the competent, therefore, it is admitted. Taking now the organopaths and the large-dose specificity-of-seat homo- Curability of Tumours. 7 opaths as united in principle and in fact, we come to the second point in our task. THE KIND OF ACTION. If we admit that certain remedies do really affect definite organs and parts specifically, we come at once to the question How? What is the quality of such action? We meet here with the most profound difficulties. All things considered, the symptoms producible by a drug give to a certain large extent the answer. Thus, in pneumonia and phthisis blood comes from the lungs, and we know from experience that the pulmonary lesions found in consumption and inflammation of the lungs fully explain why it is that 8 Curability of Tumours. blood is extravasated, and a consider- ation of the lung functions shews why it is cast out by expectoration. Now, if we examine into the effects of phosphorus on the lungs, we find that it also produces pulmonary lesions like those found in certain cases of phthisis and pneumonia. * The organopath might say: Yes, pneumonia is a disease of the lungs, of course, or at any rate the disease is expressed in the lungs but I cannot tell what lung remedy to choose, unless I proceed to the clinical test of ex- periment. But the homoeopath says: Oh! no; not at all we can foretell with scien- tific precision and accuracy, what remedy should be given in your lung disease. How? By By comparing the * For my present purpose, and to avoid a long side issue, I leave the Remedia universalia out of account. Curability of Tumours. 9 symptoms of the disease and of drugs, and the drug that symptomatically corresponds nearest to the manifes tations of the disease, that drug is the presumptive remedy for the case. And the morbid anatomy of phos- phorism likewise resembles the morbid anatomy of the disease. Hence they are subjectively and objectively similar. And this is well borne out in practice, whereof literature is full of examples. I have used phosphorus in pneu- monia and phthisis scores and scores of times with strikingly curative results, so have thousands more. Those who deny this power of phosphorus-I, of course, mean free phosphorus—must bring me more than mere words before. I can admit their denial as having any value. We are therefore arrived at a point. where we admit that a remedy must ΙΟ Curability of Tumours. not only affect the same part as the disease by special elective affinity, but the symptoms of drug and the symp- toms of disease must be like one another. This is the KIND OF ACTION. The symptomatic degrees of kind of action are varied and extensive, but we are here concerned only with the demonstration of the elementary facts of Ist-The Seat of Action. 2ndly-The Kind of Action. We now come to THE RANGE OF ACTION. If a normal individual gets chilled and a pneumonia follows as a conse- quence, the disease that we have to Curability of Tumours. II deal with has a no longer existing cause the chill, which is over and past. What remains is effect, and has located itself in the lungs; the distres- sed breathing, the cough, the bloody sputum, &c. These are now the disease from alpha to omega. Phosphorus administered as a rem- edy will cure this chill-pneumonia, and there is an end of it; patient gets quite well, little the worse for it. If a foreign body-say a little nail- gets into the lung substance, and there sets up a pneumonia with distress of breathing, cough, bloody expectoration, &c.; here we have a still existing cause the nail. Phosphorus administered as a rem- edy will at first, perhaps, seem to cure this nail-pneumonia, just as it did the chill-pneumonia, but then the affair jibs, retrogradés, exacerbates. < 12 Curability of Tumours. The phosphorus is homœopathic to the pneumonia per se but not to the nail. The nail is here typical of any material still persisting cause. such as weak heart, valvular disease, microbes, &c. Supposing the pneumonia to be caused by still active and multiply- ing microbes, the phosphorus would play the same part here as in nail-pneumonia; it could not get rid of the nail; it cannot get rid of the microbes. From this it follows that an accur- ately correct scientific homoeopathic prescription is only possible in the hands of sound diagnosticians; it is not enough to work out the homo- opathic equation symptomatically; it must be motived, or the homeopathicity is empirical only. That is to say the range of action may be from end to end of the affection, or it may be homo- Curability of Tumours. 13 opathic to, and reach as far as, for instance, the nail in nail-pneumonia, or the microbes in microbic pneumonia. To the (1) seat of action; and the (2) kind of action; we have now added the (3) range of action of the remedy. It is a sad reflection upon the scientific spirit of the age that the theory and practice of scientific homo- opathy are not taught by the most able and most accomplished pharmacolo- gists and pathologists honours and money could obtain. Homœopathy is not taught at all. Why? Just because it is not understood by the common medical unionists, and what they do not know is not know- ledge. A few of them at times seem to catch hold of its skirts here and there, but as even this constitutes them black-legs one hears no more about it. This the curse of medical priest-craft. 14 Curability of Tumours. We will go on now to what I shall call the STOP-SPOT OF THE ACTION. The stop-spot of the action of a remedy is that spot in the morbid process beyond which it cannot go. Thus in the treatment of nail pneu- monia by phosphorus, the action of the phosphorus is spent or stopped at the spot where the nail is; the nail is its stop-spot. In microbic pneumonia the stop-spot is where the microbes are operative. We have therefore in the range of drug-action to consider whether it is co-extensive with the range of the disease-action, and so reaching to the end, having been coincident from start to goal, or whether it only goes a part of the way. If it only goes a part of the way I call the place where it Curability of Tumours. 15 the spot ceases, the stop-spot, or where the action is stopped or be- comes spent. A consideration of this is highly important, because finding out the stop- spot in the range of action of any given remedy will enable us to winnow the wheat of real cures, from the chaff of pseudo-cures. The contention that the disease is all expressed in the symptoms is one to which I cannot assent, because it is not true it may be, or it may not be. It is not enough to cover the totality of the symptoms; for when this has been done we are only half way, we have then to ask these questions: What is the real nature, the natural history, the pathology of the malady under consider- ation? What caused it? Is the cause still there or has it gone? Is the drug chosen capable of producing a real disease like the one before us? In 16 Curability of Tumours. fact is it really homoeopathic to the morbid process-coincident-adequate -reaching from beginning to end? If not, we are on the wrong scent if we are to really cure and not merely palliate. I once attended a young girl over a series of years, for repeated attacks of congestion of the brain: She flushed up hot and red; her pupils were wide open; she was restless; she tossed about and talked nonsense. This is a fair picture of poisoning by belladonna, and hence Bell. was given each time, and each time it cured. Finally, in one of the attacks, the belladonna failed to act, and patient died. The end showed that the various attacks had been from tubercules, and then we clearly saw why it was that the patient died; and why it was that belladonna had cured the symptoms and yet left the disease proper behind, and whereof patient eventually died. Curability of Tumours. 17 In this case the drug belladonna was the remedy of the attacks up to the tubercules, but no further: the place where they were operative was the stop-spot of belladonna, up to this stop-spot it was homoeopathic, but no further; and why? Just because there existed no homoeopathicity be- yond the stop-spot; from the start to the stop-spot the homoeopathicity was striking, and its remedial action full and complete, but between the stop- spot and the goal it did not act, because there was no homœopathicity. Belladonna as we know is not capable of producing a morbid process analo- gous to tuberculosis. Of the absolute truth of this I have many have many times. satisfied myself. We thus find that a drug, to really cure a disease, must affect the same or similar part as the disease; it must affect it in a similar manner, and more- C 18 Curability of Tumours. over the range of drug-action must be co-extensive with the disease-action. In the treatment of tuberculosis, notably of the brain coverings, I have sometimes succeeded with Glonoin 3* and Iodium 3* in alternation. I have used these two remedies in this form of consumption for many years with relatively satisfactory results, and have thus many a time brought unshapely hydrocephalic heads to something like shapeliness. But the tubercular virus itself is by far more uniformly efficacious as a rule; it is more prompt and deeper-going. I have at times been almost awestruck at its marvellous action. In the simple diseases of organs and parts, we can get on beautifully well, and cure our patients with joy and satisfaction, with the aid of the homœopathic specificity of seat. or Curability of Tumours. 19 organopathy; the quality of the action here is simple, and simple homœo- pathicity is enough. come to A step further and we complicated and differentiated maladies and sufferings; here we want, and must have, differentiated and scientific hom- œopathy in its fullest development, and in its entire range of dose. With these conceptions of place of action and kind of action of remedies, carried out in practice with faithfulness and per- severance, physicians can can do great things. But almost all the remedies heretofore used in practical clinical life are of necessity limited in their ranges, and thus it comes to pass that the ranges of action of a good many diseases extend a long way beyond the stop-spots of the actions of our remedies. Now, therefore, if we are to find remedies for such diseases we must, I opine, go in quest of them; we want 20 Curability of Tumours. remedies whose ranges of action shall be equal to and co-extensive with the ranges of action of the diseases. Thus tuberculosis affects the brain- coverings-so does belladonna; here we have specificity of seat, or organopathy- but this does not suffice; the acute. tuberculosis flushes the face, causes delirium, dilatation of the pupils, &c.; belladonna also flushes the face, causes delirium, dilatation of the pupils, &c., and therefore we may say that bella- donna and tuberculosis are therapeu- tically convertible, which is true up to a certain point, viz., the stop-point of the tuberculosis action and the stop-point of the belladonna-action do not co- incide. I am going to walk twenty miles to my goal along a given route, my strong friend is going the same route, and thus I shall have a companion, but Amicus only goes twelve miles, and this Curability of Tumours. 21 therefore leaves me eight miles to go alone, and as the danger lies in the last few miles only, the companionship of Amicus in the twelve miles he travels my way is no good to me, as I shall be robbed and killed after he quits me. This is the exact relative position of tuberculosis of the meninges, or hydro- cephalus, and belladonna; belladonna is the friend who only goes the first twelve miles of the twenty-mile journey. We want a twenty-mile remedy, twelve is not enough; for with a twelve- mile remedy we perish. Far be it from me to undervalue the importance of the symptoms, or to speak lightly of the totality thereof as a sure means of finding the remedy in a given case, but be it equally far from me to regard symptoms and covering the totality thereof as other than a means. to the finding of the remedy; for cover- ing the totality of the symptoms may ¡ 22 Curability of Tumours. be, and often is, nothing but scientific palliation. If the range of action of the remedy be not coincident with the disease itself a real cure does not result, no matter how many symptoms you may silence. I cannot subscribe to the generally accepted view that when you have covered all the symptoms of a case you will necessarily work a real cure; you may do so, or you may only palliate the case; certainly this kind of palliation is scientific and, pro tanto, beneficial, but palliation it is and pallia- tion it remains, e.g., Gallstones are not. gone when you have laboriously cov- ered the symptoms and thoroughly cured them. And so on. To cure a disease by remedies, the remedies must stand in some relation- ship to the disease-process itself, no matter whether the symptoms reveal Curability of Tumours. 23 the process or not. If the symptoms spell out the morbid process, the symptoms suffice. To me the physician who never gets beyond the symptoms is like a reader who, in order to read, is always obliged to spell his words. In the graver forms of disease the only bodies that I am acquainted with which have a range of action coincident. with the disease-processes themselves. are of zoic zoic nature and frequently those which are causal or constitu- ent of these same processes. See Ameke, the literature of the nosodes, and my "New Cure of Consumption. 11 *And also my "Natrum Muriaticum as Test of the Doctrine of Drug Dynamization," in which it is clearly demonstrated by clinical facts that the small dose of Nat. Mur. fully antidotes the effects of the larger quantities of the crude salt already taken and still being taken. 24 Curability of Tumours. The disease-processes are in quality zoic; the remedies, to have a range of action equal to the disease-processes, must be likewise zoic (like in quality). That zoic remedies constitute the field of promise, for the further development of progressive scientific homoeopathy, I am beginning clearly to see, though only through the gate ajar, but I live in hope of more light. Here let me just say that where zoic remedies are named in this work, they were chosen on a tentatively workable hypothesis of my own, and that although they are often so chosen purely hypothetically, they are no more and no less than homœopathic remedies, pointing to a great advance in homoeopathy. Some Hahnemannian reviewers of certain of my writings have said hard things about me, possibly with the good intention of stifling a new heresy I have nothing to do with any man's subjective opinions; the future of Curability of Tumours. 25 medicine belongs to homoeopathic pathologists, and to really cure the great diseases (with a pathologico- anatomical basis) we MUST HAVE rem- edies homœopathic to such morbid anatomy, at any rate in its earlier stages. No drug is capable of curing a morbid state homoeopathically, unless it is capable of producing one like it. I am quite quite prepared to grant, indeed I quite believe, that every morbid state or process MIGHT BE cured from the symptoms alone as a guide, PROVIDED Such states and processes had been actually produced pathogenetically in healthy human beings, and the symptoms produced had been duly noted during the days, weeks, months. and years (and perhaps lives and generations of lives), wherein such processes are being evolved. But that 26 Curability of Tumours. is not, and in the nature of things to a very large extent, never can be. To speak of the "all-sufficiency of symptoms" is to mislead some, to disgust others; and in general it effec- tively dams the stream of homœopathic progress However, in this little treatise, it is not a question of opinions, but of facts; we shall all agree that Tumours are solid facts. མཱརཱམཧཱཏུནྟཱན, མ། ། ཨརོ་གསོ, པཨ་ར་བ་ The Cure of Tumours by Medicines. CHAPTER I. ALL knowledge is, knowledge is, I take it, a revelation from the Great Source of wisdom, and that this knowledge. may not be too great for our small minds, it comes to us gradually, according to our several stages of development. Knowledge is therefore for the individual progressive, and the enigma of to-day, may be palpably clear to-morrow. Science is knowledge technically expressed, and as Tennyson says, "moves but slowly, slowly creeping on from point to point." The practical 28 Curability of Tumours. application of the sciences to the behoof of curing diseases by remedies is usually considered an art. But science and art must go together, and it is not always easy to draw a line demarcating one from the other. I understand by "medicable" and medicability" not quite the same as “curable ” and “curability.' " Medicable, for me, is that which may be treated by medicaments (remedies, medicines) with a fair prospect of being ameliorated or cured thereby, and medicability is the substantive formed therefrom. I have never seen these words used in English, but adopt and adapt them from médicable and médic- abilité, which I have observed here and there in French works. Tumours have been occasionally cured by medicines, records whereof may be found in literature, more Curability of Tumours. 29 especially in that of the homœopathic school; therefore it is possible to do it. But though such be the case, the indications for the use of remedies for the withering of tumours are so meagre that few believe in, and still fewer undertake, their medicinal cure. Trying to cure what is commonly held to be incurable is a laudable ambition, and by no means the same. thing as pretending to cure, though unhappily for medical progress "trying" is commonly confounded with "pre- tending." If you try and fail, you are laughed at ; if you try and succeed, you are hated; I have experienced both, and so speak feelingly. I have myself diligently tried to work out the problem of the cure of tumours by medicines, and issued a preliminary gmentary essay on the 30 Curability of Tumours. subject, under the title of "Tumours of the Breast, and their Treatment and Cure by Medicines"* which contains the narration of the cure or amelior- ation by medicines of a number of cases of tumours of the breast. In these pages I shall assume a knowledge of the contents of "Tu- mours of the Breast," and hence shall not quote from it, but I will just say that I claim therein to have proved positively, though on a limited scale, that tumours can be cured by medi- cines; the curability of tumours by remedies being thus demonstrated scientifically and practically. I will now advance a step further with my subject, and treat of tumours wherever situate as medicable. And the quality of being medicable-of being curatively amenable to drug treatment, I shall term, as already said, medicablity. * London, James Epps 9., 1888. Curability of Tumours. ЗІ Of course whoever steps out of the ranks and propounds a thesis not commonly maintained, the same must be prepared to fight; I shirk not the battle. The Dichter says:— 66 Das ist der Fluch der bösen That, dass sie fortzeugend Böses muss gebaehren," but happily the converse is also true, for it is the blessedness of a good deed that it produces its like. Perhaps I could hardly do better, by way of opening the battle, than reproduce here what I published in the Homœopathic World, Vol. xxiv., No. 280, March, 1889, under the heading :- CASE OF TUMOUR OF THE BREAST CURED BY MEDICINES. For something like a dozen years I have treated tumours of various parts of the body with medicines, and at odd 32 Curability of Tumours. moments during the past two years I have been writing out my, more or less. successful, cases, beginning with the most gropingly tedious ones: partly for my own instruction, partly to show how I came to believe in the curability of tumours by medicines, and finally as the ground-work of a contemplated publication on the subject. In the spring of last year a lady informed me that Jessie S had S- been to a London Hospital with a tumour of the breast, and that the medical authorities had declared an operation to be imperative. As I knew the girl's appearance, I said I was quite sure an operation was not necessary. Indeed, I felt very grieved that such views should be held on the question of tumours and their amenability to drug treatment, i.e., in a well-nourished young person of twenty years of age. Curability of Tumours. 33 I forthwith set to work and issued the small volume entitled, "Tumours of the Breast: their Treatment and Cure by Medicines," and in its preface. related the just-mentioned circum- stances. I had the less hesitancy in bringing out the work, as-so far as I am aware -there is no British or foreign mono- graph on the medicinal treatment of tumours of the breast extant. Of the practitioners of general medicine, I do not suppose I per cent. believe it possible to cure a tumour with medicines. Of the British physicians. and surgeons practising homoeopathy, I should say that the vast majority of them hold the same views as their allopathic colleagues. Those who do believe the thing possible have for the most part a sort of academical notion that it can be done here and there, but they have half a notion also that D 34 Curability of Tumours. possibly errors in diagnosis may account. for not a few of the supposed cures. Still they would not deny, and would hardly affirm, that tumours are what the French call médicables. On the other hand, cases of tumour have been reported as cured by homo- opathic remedies all down our literature, and a certain number of British ho- mœopathic practitioners have for long been in the regular habit of treating the cases of tumour that come under their notice with homoeopathically chosen remedies. The whole of British homoeopathic literature might, perhaps, show three or four such cases a year. I mean published cases; because we know nothing of the yet unborn. unborn. In view, therefore, of the fact that we had practically no work on the medicinal treatment of tumours, I thought it my duty to come forward and state my own Curability of Tumours. 35 views and experience, believing that it is of primary importance to suffering humanity to demonstrate to the medical profession that it is possible to cure tumours with medicines, since it must be manifest that no sensible man will set about learning how to do a thing which he believes to be impossible-the present editors of The Monthly Homeo- pathic Review always excepted: they are evidently of opinion that people wish to be instructed in the therapeutics of the impossible. it ; Now that my "Tumours of the Breast" is on their tables they find (see their last month's review [?] of it) that-First, Nobody doubted secondly, that the work is well done; thirdly, that it is badly done; fourthly, that they hope many will read it; fifthly, it is not worth reading; and, lastly, they hope no one will write another like it! 36 Curability of Tumours. Now, I should like to ask these editorial reviewers three questions:- First, Why did they not quote my preface? Secondly, why do they not say that almost all they urge against the book is urged in the book against itself? Thirdly, Where is there any other work on the same lines with a twentieth part of even its bill of fare? I was an editor once myself, and am familiar with the cheap glory obtainable by reviewing a book out of itself. Now let me give a little piece of advice to my reviewers in case they should favour me with a copy of a work on "Tumours of the Breast: their Treatment & Cure by Medicines"- Do not, in building your therapeutic house, begin with the roof, which is the proceeding your review recommends to others. The case I will now tell about is the identical one that I have referred to, Curability of Tumours. 37 E and which sent my aforesaid work to the press as a declared fragment, and which my said reviewers have discover- ed is what it is, and what it professes. to be, a fragment. Miss Jessie S-, at. 20, having had her left breast condemned at a well-known London Hospital, excited my sympathy, and I had her brought to me, offering to treat her for nothing as she is but a poor orphan. She came on May 24th, 1888, and informed me that two years previously a lump came in her left breast, which lump persists in growing, and pains. In the left mamma there was a tumour in its outer lower fourth, about the size. of a baby's fist. I have pointed out in book on “Tumours of the Breast,' my that, in my experience, mammary tumours are most commonly of ovarian origin. It was so here. The left ovary was hyperesthesic and the menses had >> 38 Curability of Tumours. always been too frequent, at the time in question, every fortnight. Patient was a large salt eater. The mammæ were rather unduly large. She had been recommended by the physicians and surgeons at the hospital to have very nourishing diet, and to take as much milk as possible!! In three months the menses were normal: the tumour was gone, and thus far has not returned. Thuja 30, Acid. Nit. 30, and Sabina 30, were used in infrequent dose, and each given during one month by itself alone and in the order named. P.S.-The "Hahnemannian Month- ly" and the "Review" both observe that I was very fortunate in having patients who persevered with my treat- ment so long. That may be; but as the earliest and most tedious cases paid me, for the most part, no fees at all, I have not felt the "fortune" further Curability of Tumours. 39 than that it justifies my motto "Keep on pegging away." I ought to have added to the forego- ing narrative that I forbad salt and milk, other than in very moderate quantities, and recommended a partial exclusion of meat from the patient's dietary, as also the ovary-irritating condiment known as pepper. Pepper, salt, and milk are bad in cases of mammary tumours from ovarian or uterine irritation, and many of these tumours are of such origin. In the very next number of the same journal I was pleased to see the following from the pen of Dr. Harmar Smith, then of Guildford :- CASE OF TUMOUR OF THE BREAST CURED BY MEDICINE. THE perusal of Dr. Burnett's interesting case under the above title, in the current number of The Homeopathic World, has reminded me of a 40 Curability of Tumours. somewhat similar case, which occurred in my own practice many years ago. I made notes of the case at the time, but cannot now lay my hands upon them, so write from memory. The tumour was seated in the mammary gland (my patient had had a family). She was pale and delicate, and often ill. She was approaching the climacteric epoch, and the catamenia were abnormally frequent. The tumour was about the size of a Tangier orange, and very hard, so that Mrs. S. feared it was malignant (she knew too much for her own comfort), and was much depressed in consequence, and I could only partially reassure her, as I was not sure that it might not be as she supposed, and that it was not carcinoma in an early stage. I, however, "pegged away" as Dr. B. says, with my medicines, and had the satisfaction of seeing the tumour gradually melt away, lessen- ing both in size and hardness, and in about three months (the period occupied by Dr. Burnett's case) it was quite gone. I believe there was no local treatment, or if any, only a poultice or fomentation. One thing I very distinctly remember, viz., that I believed the cure was due solely to the medicines. These were Phytolacca and Hydrastis, in low dilutions. Curability of Tumours. 4I After this I thought I had secured my patient pour toujours, but alas! I had to prove afresh the truth of Scott's lines-at least as to patients: Oh, woman! in our hours of ease, Uncertain, coy, and hard to please.” Having to go from home shortly afterwards, to accompany a patient whose mind was off its balance, on an Italian tour, I found on my return home that the physician who had attended Mrs. S. for me in my absence, had taken my place as her ordinary medical attendant. An examination of the index of the first twenty-seven annual volumes of The British Journal of Homœopathy confirms Dr. Burnett's statement, as to the paucity of cases published in British homeopathic literature of tumours treated on the similia similibus curantur principle. In all these years there are only about a dozen of such papers published in what was so long facile princeps in British (I might have said in world-wide) homeopathic periodical literature. Amongst this number of papers the fullest by far is one by the late Dr. Viettinghoff, in the seventeenth volume. He gives full details of thirteen cases, all of which, with one exception, he believed to be cancerous, and several he 42 Curability of Tumours. reports as cured. Dr. Viettinghoff, however, made use of such a multitude of medicines, that it is impossible to say which were operative. There are some cases also of amelioration or cure of tumours of the breast, reported by Dr. Hughes in his " Pharmacodynamics," under the headings of Hydrastis and Phytolacca, the medicines prescribed in my own case. I think this fairly typifies the posi- tion of most homoeopathic practitioners in regard to the medicability of tumours; like Dr. Harmar Smith they cured a case or two or two "many years ago," and there the matter rested—nothing more came of it; and ever since, I dare swear, they have sent pretty well all their tumour cases to the surgeons. Doubtless ingratitude does blight many rising therapeutic efforts, and unrequited labour will not thrive. Had Dr. Harmar Smith cut off the peccant breast, his patient would have Curability of Tumours. 43 been ten times more grateful, because more impressed; and because she would have comprehended the operation, whereas she did not, could not, com- prehend the gentle medicinal cure. I once cured a gentleman's wife of a dangerous tumour of the breast; she is alive, and quite well both of it, and of herself, now-[cured, therefore, according to John Hunter's definition]. When he first brought her to me he ridiculed my opinion that the tumour was medicable, because in direct con- tradiction to Sir J.- ; when I had finished the cure, however, he rated me soundly because I had been nearly three years doing it, whereas, said he, "You told me it would be only two.' (I had said I thought it might be perhaps two years.) I lost my temper with the good squire, which I regret, for on reflection it is manifest that he did not understand, could not understand, "" 44 Curability of Tumours. how the opinion of a homoeopath could possibly be as good as, or better than that of Sir James; he had not sufficient knowledge to judge, and also not en- lightenment enough to be able to know that he did not know. Whereas he knew right well that both the world of science and (what is much more) society would endorse the opinion of Sir James, and do its best to stifle mine, and that with honest intent. But good intentions are not neces- sarily of any service; when the blind lead the blind and both fall into the ditch together, the good intentions of of the blind leader avail nothing. When medicines had quite cured the tumour of his wife's breast, the only thing that struck him was not its wonderfulness, or the imperceptible gentleness of action of the remedies made use of, or its scientific beauty, but the slowness of the cure! In his Curability of Tumours. 45 mind cutting off and curing are con- vertible terms. I have noticed that the longer it takes to cure a tumour by medicines. the less people esteem it; and, indeed, that from their standpoint is natural enough, for the simple and sufficient reason that they have not enough knowledge to form a correct judgment. Still the gentleman referred to had been to Oxford, and thus runs his creed :- "My name is Blow-it, And whatever is KNOWLEDGE, I know it. I'm master of New College; And what I don't know isn't KNOWLEDGE. CHAPTER II. The Difficulties. WHY is it that, as we have just seen, odd cases of tumour have been cured by remedies here and there for many years, notably by homoeopathic practitioners, and yet the systematic medication for tumours is still non-existent ? I take it that the difficulties of the task, the com- plexities of the clinical problems to be solved, the incapacity of mankind to value and understand the work done, all tend to prevent it. And even more still, the venomous hatred of those who can not. But I will imitate the little birds by taking my little notions one stick at a time petit à petit, l'oiseau fait • Curability of Tumours. 47 son nid, which is a process of proved practicability, and I will in like manner endeavour to construct а method of curing tumours with medi- cines; as it is not absolutely scientific, I cannot present it as a complete and polished whole, with a smoothly eupho- nious Hellenic name, but what it lacks in science it fully makes up in sense, and so let it be known as my stick- by-stick method. 9/ After all there is nothing positively of saving grace in Hellenic names, as witness the name Surgeon, which is indisputably Hellenic, being from Xip the hand and pyor work, and hence Χειρουργός is a handworker and Χειρουργία is surgery, or handiwork; and yet notwithstanding this very respectable family history, surgery offers no cure for tumours sufficiently pleasing to my mind for me to be desirous of its aid were I afflicted with a tumour in any part of my body. Surgeons may think 48 Curability of Tumours. the cutting-out and cutting-off pro- cesses "curing;" I think them a last sad refuge of helplessness. One of the great difficulties in the medicinal treat- ment of tumours lies in the kinds of studies that have been prosecuted in relation to tumours, their ætiology being but scantily considered, while therapeutics is simply scouted. Essentially all we know of tumours is, more or less, what they are made of, as shewn by that very valuable instrument the microscope. It is very curious to take a look at the various works (their authors like them to be called scientific) on the subject of Tumours, and how when one has read a goodly number, the only thing that has been really treated of, is practi- cally their morphology and structure, and then . . . "cut them off." Hunter, however, knew very well that when he cut out a tumour he Curability of Tumours. 49 had only got rid of the product of the disease, not the disease itself. But then Hunter was a thinker; and, instead of being made a baronet, was hounded to death by pettifoggers. Composed wholly or mostly of, or growing from fibrous tissue, the tumour is called a fibroma; of bone, osteoma ; of cartilage, enchondroma; of fat, lip- oma-respectively steatoma; of muscle, myoma; of nerve, neuroma; of embry- onic fleshy stuff, sarcoma; of glia, glioma; encapsuled, and like a bladder, cystoma; and so on almost endlessly. Of course, for purposes of classifi- cation, as a mere matter of natural history, this positive scientific method is absolutely sound and useful, and biologically even interesting, but for the practical physician (not to mention the patient!) it is at present of but small value. E 50 Curability of Tumours. It does not help the surgeons (though I hope to make it help me a little). And the proof of this lies in the fact that the longer this line of research is continued in, the more diseases we get, and the more doctors mankind needs. The more "'omas" we have the more surgeons we want! To turn human suffering to account for for biological research is not my ideal of medicine. My ideal of medicine is rather that which tends to its own elimination, i.e., the more it advances, the nearer it comes to its own destruction, and hence, preventive medicine should have the highest rank. Fortunately it is just in preventive medicine, in its crudest form, at any rate, that nearly all medical men work, wherefore they deserve well of mankind. But to return from this wandering at large to my tumours, I would say, that though in my judgment lipoma, Curability of Tumours. 51 &c., as fibroma, myoma, sarcoma, sarcoma, designations of tumours are thera- peutically so little helpful, still they do, nevertheless, constitute a compara- tively fixed basis of classification, and that is something. And even here it is not entirely valueless; the fact is, all real knowledge helps. One reason why tumour-curing by medicines has barely entered upon its baby-life, lies in the wholesale and crude way in which the subject has been therapeutically approached; people have sought a solvent for tu- mour generally, but tumours are vital growths, and must be vitally approached and regarded. What comes vitally, must go vitally, and therefore gently, painlessly, and comparatively slowly. This slowness is very detrimental to its adoption: I will exemplify-I had cured a lady of a tiny tumour in her nose; she was pleased and 52 Curability of Tumours. grateful, and subsequently brought to me her niece, on whom the doctors. were about to operate for a small ovarian tumour; I cured this tumour also, but it occupied two years or thereabouts, and then aunt and niece both persuaded a friend, a lady resi- ding at Shepherd's Bush, to come to me. How long did I think it would take to cure her ovarian tumour? At least two years. I prefer the operation said she, that will only take six weeks. But it took less-she died under or shortly after the operation. Of such examples I could give so many that I must conclude that the operational statistics I read in the medical journals are made up very hastily. The same aunt and niece persuaded a lady from Chatham to come to me for a tumour of the breast; the lady's husband declined my treatment, as I Curability of Tumours. 53 i thought it would take two years at the very least. She was successfully operated on, and thoroughly cured thereby of her mammary tumour; nine months later, she was was again thoroughly cured of another tumour, by a perfectly successful operation ; a few months thereafter, she was again successfully operated on for another tumour, and just as she was getting well-she died. 1 } CHAPTER III. Homœopathy-What good is it in Tumour-curing? "the THERE are many thousands of more or less learned medicoes-in fact, the vast majority of the profession, who "don't believe in homoeopathy at all, you know.” I have heard it called by many names; some of which are "nonsense made difficult." (That's what I used to call it !!) "Therapeu- tic nihilism," (von Schroff); negation of science in therapeutics; "the deathbed of diagnostics;" "old women's plaything;' "d d- quack- ery;" "a trade-mark for the unsuccess- ful; ""an advertising medium; "the invention of a German quack who sold pnoeum at a high price, which 'pnœum' was borax." "" Curability of Tumours. 55 was Perhaps the wittiest I ever heard "Homœopathy! my dear madam-yes, I know what homoeo- pathy is; it is nothing!" and lately I was reading a smart pamphlet in which the author thus burst forth into eloquence :- "The medical world was at this time governed by Theory, Empiricism, Authority, and Speculation. The majority of practition- ers blindly followed the authority of the past, and bled and dosed by the book, or adopted some strange theory. For example: Doctor Letsom, a practitioner of standing in London, read a paper to the Medical Society of that city in 1783, recommending lizards for the cure of cancer and other diseases. Well may the following lines be attributed to him. He is made to say:- " When patients come to I, I physics, bleeds and sweats'em. And if they choose to die What's that to I, I lets 'em.' A good illustration of the speculative tendency may be found in the theory formed by Hahnemann, at the close of the last century. He ignored all previous medical. knowledge; denied the existence of any cur- 56 Curability of Tumours. ative power in the system; that any know- ledge of anatomy, physiology, pathological anatomy, diagnosis, or the investigation of the nature of disease, was necessary to the physician, and claimed that symptoms alone should be treated, and that the more the medicine was diluted the greater its power over disease. So if calling bad names would kill, we should not have to expect much help help from from homœopathy in tumour-curing, or in anything else, for it would be dead. "What do you think of these apples, Sir?" "Don't know; let me eat a few and I'll tell you." So let us take a bite or two at the homoeopathic apple and see what it is like. Homœopathy says that those natural bodies called drugs that will cause morbid symptoms, will cure morbid symptoms thereunto similar; and to find out what drugs can do thera- Curability of Tumours. 57 peutically, we must try them them on healthy people to find out. But where are the healthy people to be had, who will eat drugs long enough and in quantities large enough to grow tumours in their bodily parts?— clearly they are not forthcoming. This has rendered homoeopathy almost helpless in medicinal tumour- curing, but all the same the chapter of accidents proves theoretically its absolute soundness, as does also pure symptomatic treatment without without any regard to morbid anatomy at all. It has been proved that the homœopathic treatment of symptoms does some- times result in the cure of the tumour causing such symptoms; thus colo- cynth given for its pains has several times cured, not only such pains, but also the entire state, tumour and all. But here the difficulty of finding a remedy which shall be homœopathic 58 Curability of Tumours. not to the symptoms due to the presence of the tumours, but to their causation that is to say, to those symptoms which constitute the disease- picture, and which lead up to, and end in the formation of tumours-this difficulty is, in the present state of our knowledge, well-nigh insurmountable ; hence I have learned to hang my hat on any peg I could find. And as the chapter of accidents helps us a little, let us start with it. CHAPTER IV. The Chapter of Accidents. Bony Tumours. IT has often been maintained by the well-meaning in the homo- opathic ranks that animals cannot be used as provers for our remedies. This is no doubt true as regards pure symptomatology, but I am of quite the contrary opinion as regards pathological states: disturbances of nutrition, tissue-change and tumours. Let me prove this by adducing a case of exostosis cured purely homo- opathically, yet without any regard to symptoms, the choice of the remedy being based upon the morbid anatomy alone. This proves that morbid anato- my may be taken as a prescribing бо Curability of Tumours. basis in medicinal tumour-curing on homœopathic lines. This point is very important, because many deny it, and maintain that the totality of the symptoms alone must serve as the basis for a truly homoeopathic prescription. This case also proves that animals may be utilised as provers: on the basis of morbid anatomy, of course. CASE OF EXOSTOSIS OF Right OS CALCIS CURED BY HECLA LAVA.* Dr. Garth Wilkinson went once to Iceland for a holiday, and observed that the Animals which fed in the pastures where the finer ashes of Mount Hecla fall, suffered from immense maxillary and other exostoses. Being an adherent of the scientific system of medi- cine founded for us by Samuel Hahnemann, he brought some Hecla lava home with him, * From "Fifty Reasons for being a Homœopath," by the writer, Curability of Tumours. 61 and it has been already successfully used to cure affections similar to those which it is capable of causing. On July 3, 1880, a young lady, æt. 15, came under my observation with an exostosis on her right os calcis, somewhat smaller and a little flatter than half a walnut shell. It was at times painful. Patient was in other respects in good health and well nourished, but her teeth were not very sound. She goes blue in winter, and suffers also very badly from chilblains both on hands and feet, worse on hands. R. Trit 2 Hecla Montis lave 3 iv. S. Six grains three times a day. 17th. The exostosis is decidedly smaller; it never pains now. Pergat. September 25. The exostosis has entirely disappeared; the two heels being compared, no difference between them now can be discovered. Hecla lava has been shown to consist of silica, alumina, calcium, and magnesia, with some ferric ferric oxide. We are therefore not astonished that it can cause and cure exos- toses. 62 Curability of Tumours. Brother allopath, this is science in therapeutics; what have you to take its place? Give absorbents and paint the part with iodine? What guarantee can you give me that your absorbents will not absorb a bit of the pancreas or some small glands in lieu of the exostosis? I said we are not astonished that Hecla lava can both cause and cure exostoses for both silica and lime do the same. Now here we have a bony tumour- let us say osteoma-cured by a natural body that produces bony tumours in animals. I have cured several bony tumours of the jaws with the same remedy, and that very promptly: they were all of recent origin. I treated one lady for a bony tumour of the skull with Hecla lava (after the failure of Aurum), but it Curability of Tumours. 63 made it so painful that patient refused further treatment; I have an idea that if she had persevered her osteoma would have disappeared, and this, I think, is borne out by the Dublin phy- sician's horse-case, which shall come in here. In the "Monthly Homœopathic Review" for January, 1882, may be read the following eminently instructive gritty paper:- THE TREATMENT OF SPLINTS IN HORSES. BY W. B. B. SCRIVEN, M.D. EVERY bona fide example of the genuine action of the law of similars is valuable and worth recording. This is more especially the case when the subject is an unimaginative pachyderm who is ignorant of the object of the treatment of which he or she may be the victim. I may here observe that the lower animals have in several instances been instrumental in con- vincing some of the most powerful intellects of the truth and superiority of our system of cure. Archbishop Whately was converted in this wise. 64 Curability of Tumours. My late friend, Dr. Charles Luther, had attend- ed with success, one of the Misses Whately. Her father, then a candid unbeliever, could not refuse his assent to the fact that the health of his daughter had been quite re-established under Dr. Luther's treatment, after a long period of delicacy and active medication secun- dum artem. His Grace still sceptical as to the efficacy of infinitesimals, remarked that Dr. Luther's success might, in a great measure, be due to the action of "mind on matter," but said, that if he (Dr. Luther) would cure his favourite dog, a brown Irish water-spaniel, who was almost depilated by mange, and been under the care of the most distinguished vets in London and Dublin, he would believe. Luther accepted the challenge: the dog recovered his hair and his health in six or eight weeks; the great logician became a firm homeopath, and continued so till death. We have now to do with a larger, if not nobler animal. About three years ago I bought a well bred mare, five years old, with a very prominent splint, the size of a walnut, on the inside of the near fore leg, about three inches below the knee. From its position and its having become thoroughly ossified, it did not cause lameness or constitute unsoundness," but was a blemish which I hoped to remove. Curability of Tumours. 65 Dr. Garth Wilkinson has drawn attention to the action of the lava of Mount Hecla on the- cattle and ponies which graze on the slopes of the mountain, giving rise in them to various bony deformities. It occurred to me that if the lava could pro- duce exostosis it ought to cure splint. I got our friend, Mr. Gould, to prepare an ointment of one drachm of 1st trit. of lava to an ounce of lard. This was rubbed on the splint night and morning, and five grains of the 3rd dec. trit. was put on the mare's tongue twice a day. In three weeks the splint began to soften, and in three or four more had quite disappeared. The next case was that of a valuable high- stepping harness mare, twelve years old, who, when young, had thrown out a large splint, which, after hard work, used to inflame, and lame her, but latterly had given us little trouble. As an experiment, I ordered the same treatment to be resorted to with her, and in a few days the splint became so tender that we desisted, and when the aggravation passed off, the splint had become smaller, and now causes no inconveni- ence. Last summer, a military friend told me he had a very valuable hunter which had become lame from ossification of the cartilages of both F 66 Curability of Tumours. 66 fore feet. I mentioned my success with the lava, and advised him to try it. He afterwards went abroad, and when in London en route for Cannes, wrote to me as follows from the Army and Navy Club, Pall Mall: My horse was affected in both fore feet with a considerable enlargement and hardness of the cartilages from ossification. I applied your remedy both in- ternally and externally for three weeks, before. I perceived any improvement, but after that time the benefit was very marked, both in removing the enlargement, and also taking away the hardness at the heels and restoring their springy feel. Whether the cure will be perfect, time alone will tell, but so far nothing can be more satisfactory. I am still going on with the treatment. Again thanking you much for your kindness, &c., &c.' I called some days ago at the stables of my friend, and saw the horse, who has now no trace of hardness, and goes perfectly sound. Dublin, 23rd Nov., 1881. Scoffers at homoeopathy not infre- quently score a point with the preju- diced, ignorant, and weakminded by Curability of Tumours. 67 maintaining that it is faith that works homœopathic cures. Well, I wonder if this Dublin physician's horse-patients had the faith that heals? or the arch- bishop's dog? I lay great stress upon these cures of osteomata by Hecla lava because they conclusively demonstrate that the law of similars is a workable instrument in the medicinal treatment of tumours; also it shows that the accepted ana- tomical classification of tumours is some help to us. And, moreover, what a vista of therapeutic possibilities this opens up to us! When we know what natural bodies can produce myomata, neuromata, fibromata, lipo- mata, &c., we shall to some extent have their remedies straight away. But we shall need a careful dis- crimination, for I have noticed that 68 Curability of Tumours. the so called ivory tumours do not yield. to Hecla lava, and hence I infer that the bony tumours which yield to it must be of a spongy texture, and that those caused by it are built in the same way. CHAPTER V. Enchondromata. Von Grauvogl's Deductive Homeopathy. Nutrition Remedies. TUMOURS, so far as animal chemis- try knows thus far, contain nothing of a specific nature; neither does the morphology of tumours offer any therapeutic ground-work, unless it were based upon the signatura rerum natur- alium, which is not now in vogue. It may not be generally known that the late Dr. von Grauvogl always claimed the mental parentage and right of priority of the Nutrition Remedies which Dr. Schüssler, of Oldenburg, has brought into such prominence, and von Grauvogl never ceased to throw the accusation of 70 Curability of Tumours. plagiarism at Schüssler and the latter has never ceased to protest against such accusation. GRAUVOGL'S THEORY OF THE NATURE OF ENCHONDROMA. Our author first gives a case of rheumatism cured with benzoic acid as an example of a function-remedy. By the way, if my readers are not acquainted with v. Grauvogl's status in the world of medical thinkers, let them read-if they can-his Lehrbuch der Homœopathie, Nürnberg, 1866. It is from this work (and what a work!) that I quote whenever I refer Grauvogi. to He fitly chooses, for the purpose of its exemplification, a disease that the physiological school unanimously declare to to be absolutely incurable viz: Enchondroma, or cartilage-tumour. Curability of Tumours. 71 It was the first he ever cured, and the subject was a pale boy of fourteen years of age, who having taken off a useless bandage, showed Grauvogl his right hand; the metacarpal bones of his ring and middle-fingers, as well as those of the index and thumb, and the bones of the middle-finger itself, were swelled up, forming hard oval bulging masses with even surfaces; all the joints being implicated and unrecognizable, and hence, for half a year past, immovable. These parts were in different places denuded of skin by ulcerous surfaces through which the bones were recognizable from the grating produced by a sound. The lad, a labourer, had a good deal of pain in the diseased parts, was very sleepy by day, languid and very depressed. Surgery could, of course, do nothing but destroy the hand by exarticulating it. 72 Curability of Tumours. This pathological process of carti- laginous metamorphosis of the bone is called Enchondroma, the new formation of which which it consists is morphologically and chemically actly the same as cartilage. ex- The only constituent of bone which is lacking in cartilage is silicea. In the bones of adults there are 0,003 of silicea to 25,628 grammes by weight of bone. In fact, cartilage is bone minus silex. Here arose a happy thought in Grauvogl's mind: What if this if this pathic cartilage formation could be brought back to normality by supplying the silicea as a nutrition-remedy? No sooner thought than done he gave Silicea 6, five drops every two hours; in a week some improvement, in another fortnight the joints could be moved, in a further fortnight all the concomitants Curability of Tumours. 73 had disappeared: appetite had come back, the drowsiness was gone, the lad was cheerful, joyful and happy at his recovery. In eight weeks he was well, and sixteen years later he was still continuing so. Grauvogl's idea-in which I fully concur—is not that the Silicea 6 itself supplied the lacking silex, but acted dynamically, enabling the or- ganism to appropriate the silex it needed from the food in the boy's stomach. Silex was not presumably wanting in the food, but the organism was unable to take it up and utilize it. For Grauvogl's elaborate raisonne- ments my readers will please refer to his Lehrbuch. Whether this be the pit whence Schüssler dug his Bio- chemical Therapeutics does not concern me here; certainly Grauvogl's idea was in the field long before Schüssler's. 74 Curability of Tumours. Some may, perhaps, carp at this use of the deductive method; let Grauvogl answer them :- "Daher behaupte ich, dass aller Fortschritt, der von von einem Homö- opathen ausgegangen ist, zur Sache der Homöopathie so gut gehört und ihr Eigenthum so gut geworden ist, wie jede andere ihrer Lehren. Nur der Geist der Inhumanität könnte dagegen eifern !" CHAPTER VI. Enchondroma (continued). Hay-baths. IN discussing sycosis, von Grauvogl reckons enchondroma as arising from it. (p. 214.) It is curious how untutored man finds out remedial measures for helping himself in dis- ease. Grauvogl first became acquain- ted with Hay-baths by noticing, I presume in Bavaria, that the country people used them for old sores with decaying bone, and he calls attention to their their utility in certain cases of caries and enchondroma of the bones. Assuming the truth of what the country-folks told him, Grauvogl con- cluded that it must be the silicea in the hay that did the good. He there- fore made a chemical examination of 1 76 Curability of Tumours. hay to find out whether silicea could be indeed found dissolved in such hay-baths. He took three quents of finely- chopped hay with twelve ounces of water, free of silicic acid, and boiled it down to one-half its first bulk, the filtered fluid therefrom obtained he made into an extract and-but I need not give the details: it is enough to say that the finally resulting ash contains silicea, i.e., the ash not of the hay itself, but of the of the filtered hay-tea. Hay-baths therefore contain dissolved silicea. And SO we see that the ignorant countryman who uses hay-baths for his bad places is really taking. silicea. V. Grauvogl's pale boy with the enchondroma was а laborer who worked for a potter and his business was to carry clay backwards and forwards and he would thus, of course, Curability of Tumours. 77 † 1 be constantly handling silicea-con- taining-earth of one sort and another. In the meantime it will not be lost time if we bear in mind this fact. Also in connection with the, by Grauvogl, demonstrated presence of dissolved silicea in hay tea, and as we know there is silicea in the hay as one of its constituents we may profitably remember that, possibly, silicea may have acted pathogenetically both in the potter's boy and in the cases of splint. Horse-kenners tell me that splint in the horse is from hard roads which cause a "striking up" to the cartilage- covered bone-ends, and they believe they prove this by saying that horses out at grass do not suffer from splint. Personally I wonder whether the excess of silicea in the hay may not rather be the cause of the splint. 78 Curability of Tumours. In any case we may accept the statement of v. Grauvogl that silicea is a nutrition-remedy of bone, and we know it can cure enchondroma, and inasmuch as this is a variety of tumour what I am here stating is apposite. But mere appositeness is not enough; what I am trying to lead up to simply and intelligibly is just this that deduction is helpful in homœopathy and therefore in tumour- curing. V. Grauvogl seems to have had mixed motives in giving silicea for the cure of the enchondroma, viz.: I.-Homœopathic tradition. 2.-The homoeo-pharmic symptomatology of silicea. 3.-His pathological specu- lation that enchondroma, being an outgrowth from bone and being chemically bone minus silicea, should Curability of Tumours. 79 be curable by supplying silicea in dynamic dose. To go no further, I have myself demonstrated that Nat. that Nat. muriat. in dynamic dose is powerfully antidotal of the effects of the same substance in repeated material quantities, and I think it conceivable that silicea may be a potent causator of carti- laginous and osseous tumour-form- ations. We shall see. Let me close this sixth Chapter by giving a practical scrap (see my "Fifty Reasons for Being a Homœopath," p. 140.) ENCHONDROMA INDICIS CURED BY CALCAREA FLUORICA ALone. A maiden lady of sixty came to consult me on the thirteenth of October, 1883, telling me she had a 80 Curability of Tumours. shiny swelling on her left index finger, which had been there for about eighteen. months. The lump was hard and pain- ful, and of about the size of a small split walnut, but rather flatter. Patient was very nervous and depressed. R Trit. 3x Calcarea fluorica. Six grains four times a day, dry on the tongue. October 27th.-Very great improve- ment. R Rep. November 3rd.-The cartilaginous nature is now clearly to be felt. Ꭱ R Rep. 10th. The swelling continues to get softer. R Rep. (dry on the tongue.) 17th. Still progressing; softer and smaller; on its middle-finger side it has taken on inflammatory action, as if it were going to gather, being hot, red, and more swelled. R Rep. } Curability of Tumours. 81 24th. The tumour is softer and smaller, and patient is beginning to bend her finger, which had previously become quite impossible. R Rep. December 1st.-Still improving. R Rep. 15th.-Finger is much more normal in colour, and still progressing. Patient went on with the same remedy until a short way into the new year. I saw her the last time on December 29th, when she was nearly well. If I remember rightly Grauvogl was the first to use and to recommend the fluoride of lime for enchondroma. The interest of this case lies not so much in the importance of the tumour (it was only the size of half a walnut, or thereabouts), but rather in the fact that only one remedy was used, and no other, and no chnage was made either G 82 Curability of Tumours. in diet or place of abode. The lady had a hard lump on her finger for 18 months; she took a course of Calc. fl., to the choice of which homœopathy led me, and the lump went away. If anyone should prefer to call this tumour an osteoma or osteoma or an osteo-en- chondroma, I am content, for I am quite of Rindfleisch's opinion when he says: "Ich möchte behaupten, dass genau dieselbe Geschwulst nur genau an demselben Punkte des Körpers wiedergefunden werden kann." Dr. Schüssler denies that silicea is a bone-remedy while von Grauvogl heads the list with it, and in another place Dr. Schüssler himself recommends sil- icea in bone diseases; and without silicea there is no bone. Be that as it may, I think with Schüssler that Calcium fluoride is a bone remedy and can cure bony and enchondromatous formations. For exostosis, osteoma, he recommends Curability of Tumours. 83 [ calc. phos., most of which the homo- opaths taught and practised long before he was born. The fact is, silicea, calcarea, and fluorine are homoeopathic to different kinds of hard tumours, which the progress of science will certainly prove. However, I would not appear to be ungrateful to friend Schüssler for I have learned much from his writings, beginning at the time when he was-- what I think he still cannot help being-Schüsslerism notwithstanding- a homœopath! His work confirms my long since formed opinion that heresy and schism are the grandest means of human progress, and, when the prayer against these comes in, I commonly remain silent! CHAPTER VII. Traumatism in the Causation and Cure of Tumours. Specificity of Seat: Organopathy. and On the subject of traumatism in this regard, I must refer to my "Tumours of the Breast" (pp. 40-50). But I have now a case to relate of a large tumour, presumably of traumatic origin, in the cure of which two factors were helpful, viz: traumatism specificity of seat, or organopathy. Had I thought that my patient would recover I should have given one remedy at a time at any rate, but I did not think he would, but let me tell my story. . . Curability of Tumours. 85 ABDOMINAL TUMOUR CURED BY Two REMEDIES BELLIS PERENNIS AND CEANOTHUS AMERICANUS. On November 17th, 1887, I was requested to see a gentleman resident in London who was said to have a very large tumour in the abdomen, and no efforts to cure it had been spared, but they were quite unavailing. As six medical men-including the consulting surgeon and the consulting physician at Guy's Hospital-had seen him and done their best to no purpose, I did not much care to go as a seventh medical man, merely to say ditto to the dictum of the other six. There seemed no chance of a cure, and an operation. had been declared to be impossible, evidently because of the position and size of the tumour, and its probable. adhesions to adjacent parts and organs. 86 Curability of Tumours. The tumour presumably had its origin in a fall, then eight years ago, on the left side, which fractured the ribs; that is to say, the side had never been comfortable since and for many months this large mass had been growing larger and larger, at first incommoding loco- motion and finally rendering it impossi- ble. Patient was not only bedridden, but was not even able to turn over in bed, partly from weakness and partly because of the And patient being a bulking mass. long way past sixty years of age did not make the prospect any brighter. However, two days later, I did go to see the patient, and found a slender- built man crouched up on his back and a little to the right. As he could not turn over himself his wife and I had to aid him for the purposes of a proper physical examination, which disclosed a huge mass in his left side almost from the nipple to the pelvic rim. There Curability of Tumours. 87 were brown patches on the skin of the abdomen, and inside of the left Pou- part's ligament were a number of lumps. to be felt like little potatoes, presumably indurated and hypertrophied lymphatic glands. Add to this a quite cachectic look and rather severe adynamia, and the picture of hopeless malignant disease is complete. I made close enquiry as to the opinions of my six doctorial prede- cessors in regard to the seat of origin of the tumour, and found that their two family advisers (the same firm) had always held it be connected with the left kidney. And when they failed to do it any good they called in a physician of repute who thought it could be cured, but when his efforts had also failed a good surgeon was called and he thought it quite incurable. Then came a consulting physician and surgeon respectively from Guy's, and the final outcome of all the deliberations was 88 Curability of Tumours. 1 that it was cancer, or at any rate a tumour connected with with the spleen which was or had become malignant in its nature, and that the result must necessarily be fatal; a mere matter of time, in fact. The most careful exami- nation did not enable me to say whether it was connected with spleen or kidney or with both the tumour practically occupied the left half of the abdomen, and, not considering its history, was apparently connected with the spleen. Was there any chance of cure? There had been quite enough diag- nosing from the stand-point of mere diagnostics, but I found the medicinal treatment had been confined to general tonic and quasi-absorbent measures, probably quinine, iron, mercury, and certainly iodine. Curability of Tumours. 89 I think any practical physician or surgeon will concede that a more hopeless case to cure by medicines is hardly to be found. case To begin with, How are we to choose medicines for such a allopathically, homoeopathically, or anyhow? My own plan in difficult cases that seem so hopeless is to lay firmly hold of some point that may serve as a reasonable therapeutic starting point whence to carry out a cure. As a start there is here the trau- matic element in the case, that is favorite and a positive, and my own well-tried anti-traumatic is Bellis pe- rennis; then the proving of this drug, communicated by myself, shews decided affinity for the left hypochon- drium, and finally Bellis has already in my hands cured a few tumours. 90 Curability of Tumours. This plan, in the face of desperate odds, to lay hold of any help-promising remedy, is at least a stay for further reflection. Bellis perennis as an anti- traumatic and also Ceanothus Ameri- canus as a splenic presented themselves. to my mind, but which? Candidly confessed I thought the good man doomed, but determind to try and save him, and not knowing which of my two remedies was the more likely to do something quickly, (for the case urgent-patient's friends had already taken a last look at him as they thought,) I gave the two in alternation, and much did I subsequently regret this double shot, for the use of two medicines at one time teaches next to nothing: However Bellis and Ceano- thus I were given in five drop doses every four hours in alternation; this was on Nov. 12th, 1887, I find, and not the 17th, which was the date of my second visit. x P Curability of Tumours. 91 F The result of this medication was that after a while patient could turn over in bed, then he could get in and out of bed by himself, and in 17 days from beginning the medicine, viz: on Nov. 29th, patient came to my West- end rooms in a cab with his wife. The effects of the medicines were great diminution in the swelling (patient had lost much flesh and was still losing flesh) the passage of vast quantities of urine-"it literally pours. from me." The skin of the palms of his hands is black but the lines. strikingly white in contrast. And the tumour itself was not only much smaller, but more defined. But patient's weakness was terrible; evi- dently his coming to me was partly bravour and more an effort of will than real physical power, I therefore stopped the two remedies and gave Nux. V. 1* and Calc. Hypophos. 3* as an indicated all-round pick-me-up. 92 Curability of Tumours. Dec. 6th. He is much stronger; can walk up stairs, but his tumour is The not quite so well. hands, &c., is peeling off. 15, containing mucus and in great quantities. skin of his Ur. sp. gr. phosphates Repeat first prescription. 16th. He is still getting thinner but he is stronger, tongue very much coated; has to strain much at stool; eats well; he has walked here from the end of the street. Has a cold on the chest and cough, and this shakes him and hurts his side very much. R Bryonia alb. 1x and Phos. 3x in alt. 27th. The cough is worse on going to bed and seems to be a spleen-cough. R Scilla marit. P Five drops in water three times a day. He did not need any subsequent treatment and he came to say goodbye on Jan. 24th, 1888. He had lost the Curability of Tumours. 93 tumour and the enlargement and indu- ration of the lymphatic in the left side, and he was rapidly gaining flesh and strength. All things considered, it was clearly a tumour of the spleen, and I am disposed to think the lymphatics were irritated to enlargement either by the iodic and other irritant topics that had been applied, or else by the pressure of the tumour. Still, the entire case remains a little. puzzling, and others being in possession of its main features can judge as well as myself. At least it teaches-nil desperandum! The cure was complete and per- manent, which I know, as patient turns up in my rooms every few months for 94 Curability of Tumours. his own and my satisfaction. Such a case is an oasis in the desert of a physician's hard life. Should anyone say: But where is your homœopathy in this case? My reply is: Proved again up to the hilt! For, just as v. Grauvogl's case of en- chondroma was conceived by him on a pathological theory, and was yet cured homœopathically, so was this case of traumatic swelling of the ab- domen cured purely homoeopathically, although not on the totality of the symptoms subjective and objective. Now in regard to Bellis, if anyone doubt this, let him or her read the homœopathic provings of this same daisy, and it will be seen that it pro- duces swelling precisely of this conges- tive exsudative kind-pathologically very like it, in fact; and if any further Curability of Tumours. 95 doubt still obtains, let them make a tea of the daisy-roots, leaves, flowers and all-and drink a wine-glassful three times a day, and then they will not merely believe, but KNOW. There is nothing like the direct experiment on one's own corpus vile; I have done it myself, and so need no professor of pharmacology to tell me. But this chapter is getting unduly long, so I will go on to the next, which shall be extracted from the work al- ready referred to, viz., "Fifty Reasons." { CHAPTER VIII. More than One Remedy often Needful. AS we have already seen, it is not very often that we can cure a tumour with one medicine, and here- anent I must explain, and for this purpose I cannot possibly do better than quote from Fifty Reasons," p. 123- 66 You take exception to the number of remedies used in my last case, and want to know "which cured the case?” Will you get a long ladder and put it up against the side of your house, and mount it so as to get into your Curability of Tumours. 97 house by the top window; and when you have safely performed the feat, write and tell me which rung of that ladder enabled you to do it. I sympathise with your objection, because it was once my own great stumbling block in accepting accepting the results of homoeopathic treatment; it may perhaps be adequately explained somewhere in the vast literature of the homoeopathic fraternity, but I have never come across such an ex- planation, and hence have had to work it out for myself. I will put it to you thus-In difficult, chronic, complicated cases of disease you require not a reme- dy but a ladder (series) of remedies, not one of which can of itself effect the cure, but each of which works cure-wards, their cumulative action eventuating in a cure THAT is how I cure cataract, and many other chronic diseases that are currently held to be incurable by most men of all shades of therapeutic H 98 Curability of Tumours. opinion. I regard this power of util- ising a long series of remedies for the cure of difficult chronic cases as only second in importance to the law of cure itself. I originally learned the thing in conversation with Dr. Drysdale, of Liverpool, though not formulated by him, and I doubt if Dr. Drysdale ever did formulate it. In my own mind I call it the ladder of remedies plan. It is what I often heard Dr. Drysdale call "a course of medicines." I often compare the cure of a diffi- cult case of disease to a game of chess in which you have king, queen, bishops, knights, rooks, and pawns, the various powers of which you must learn before you can play chess. TUMOUR IN THE THROAT. A married lady of fifty-four came on the eighth of August, 1883, to con- sult me about a lump in her throat. Curability of Tumours. 99 In the left side of the top of the neck there was a hard body about the size of a hen's egg, but flatter. The tumour had been there for a very long time, and with it she had had much throat irritation. It was situated to the left and behind the larynx, but whether actually connected with the œsophagus or larynx I could never quite satisfy myself. It moved up and down with the act of deglutition. Trit. 3x Sul. iod., 3 iv., gr. vj ter die. August 22nd.-No change. R Psor. 30. October 5th. The throat-i.e. the fulness, uneasiness, pain and distress. in the throat-is very much better, and the tumour has sensibly diminished in size. R Thuja occid. 30. Novem, ist.-The tumour is about half gone. R Psor. 30. Uor M 100 Curability of Tumours. 29th. The tumour about two-thirds gone; general health good. R Thuja 30. Dec. 21st.-There is some tickling in the throat. The tumour is larger again, and the patient feels choky. R Psor. 30. January 14th, 1884. The tumour has again sensibly diminished in size. R Psor. C. Feb. 8th.-Tumour still swollen. R Merc. viv. 5. March 3.-"I feel the lump very much less, about half its original size, said the lady. She has much rheuma- tism in ankles and knees. R Silicea 6 trit., in frequently repeated doses. 31st.-Has been visiting a friend suffering from consumption, and since then as spit a little blood-streaked Curability of Tumours. ΙΟΙ phlegm; has a good deal of tickling in the throat. R Psor. 30. April 16th.-No coloured expectora- tion for a week, and then very trifling; the tickling in the throat is better, but the throat feels very rough. The tu- mour is rather smaller. B Sul. iod. 3x six grains three times a day. 30th. No coloured expectoration for the past week; the tickling in the throat is very much better, but talking brings it on. The tumour has lately not altered sensibly in size, but it is more self-contained and one can now de- monstrate that it is not connected with the larynx, being in the areolar tissue, behind and to its left. Has a good deal of rheumatism. R Tc. Cundurango 1, 3 iv. in water three times a day. Five drops 102 Curability of Tumours. May 21st. Thinks it is not so well; the tickling sensation in the throat is worse. Feels the spring. The throat is worse in the morning and when tired. R Thuja 30. June 16th.-Throat rather better; has only had the coloured expectoration once, but the voice is hoarse, and she feels her throat weak. Has rheumatism in ankles and knees worse after motion. The tumour is a trifle smaller. R Urea 6. June 11th.-More blood-coloured ex- pectoration. Has had all the symptoms of a cold aching all over with tingling; and feeling giddy and ill; aphonia; much tenderness in the neck; rheuma- tism better; urine thick (unusual); vio- lent tickling in the throat with scraping and dryness; the tumour is nearly gone. The throat symptoms are worse Curability of Tumours. 103 night and morning, and when she is tired. R Tc. Phytolacca decandra 1., 3 iv., gtt. V., n. m. August 6th.-Better in every way; the tumour is barely to be found. R Rep. Sept. 3rd.-Feels practically well. I can find the small remains of the tumour only with great difficulty. R Rep. (at night only.) Nov. 13th. Still a little uneasiness in the throat. R Trit. 3. Sul, iod. 28th. Nearly well. R Rep. Dec. 31st.-The tumour can not be found, but she still complains of a husky voice. R Trit. 4. Kali brom. I04 Curability of Tumours. I did not see the patient again for some months, as the tumour had quite disappeared, and she herself felt quite well, but she came to me again on April 10th, 1885, complaining of tickling and irritation at the old spot. R Psor. C. May 11th. She feels easier in the throat, but the tumour is returning. R Trit 3x. Sul. iod. Nov. 25th. The lump is still in- creasing. R Psor. C. This lady came again on February 15th, 1886, and for the last time on the 30th April, 1886, when I discharged her cured. I see her son occasionally on his own account, and thus know that she continues quite well, and has a very healthy general appearance. Curability of Tumours. 105 February 23rd, 1892.-I happened to see this lady to-day and am glad to say she continues quite well. It is no use to urge against the medicinal cure of tumours that so many remedies are often needful: if one remedy will not cure, we must use as many as will such is our art . often complex and no fewer; difficult and too CHAPTER IX. Etiological Doctrine of Homœopathy. Sycosis. I WILL take this case also from the same source, and will then confine myself to hitherto unpublished cases. WARTY TUMOUR IN MOUTH. An officer in the army brought his twelve-year-old daughter to me on the thirteenth of November, 1886, telling me that she had something growing in her mouth. A similar growth had come a year ago, when his family surgeon excised it; in six months from the time of the operation it had grown again, making it difficult for the child Curability of Tumours. 107 to eat her food, as it caught the tongue and teeth, and then bled. This time the doctor ligatured it off thoroughly, leaving a hole, and informed the father that this time he hoped its roots were got rid of. Now it has grown again at the side of the said hole. On examining the mouth I find in its left side, just to the left of the frænulum linguæ, a warty fleshy ex- crescence, of the shape of a cock's comb, about a quarter of an inch broad at its base, and nearly a quarter of an inch high. Patient has normal teeth : the tongue is coated, and she is very pale. I ordered Thuja occidentalis 30 internally, in infrequent dose, and a mouth wash of Thuja , two drops in a dessert spoonful of water night and morning; to keep it bathing the growth as long as possible, and then expecto- rate. As this brought the growth down to the size of a pea, treatment was discon- 108 Curability of Tumours. tinued, but she then bit it on three successive occasions, whereupon it again took to growing, and in January, 1887, when I saw it, it was about as big as a horse bean. This time I ordered Sabina, just as I had previ- ously ordered Thuja. Under the Sabina patient took on a healthy look, but a small piece of the growth still persisted, when I ordered Cupressus Lawsoniana in like manner as the Thuja and Sabina had been used. That was in March, 1887, and I did not see her again. But I met her father in October on another matter, when I enquired about the case, and he replied, "Oh, she is quite well; the lump has been gone a long time, but the hole is still there. So if you ever get a little cock's comb growth in your mouth, take my advice and have it treated homoeopath- ically, for it is, as you see, much better than either excision or ligature, and Curability of Tumours. 109 you will thereafter have no "hole " to mark the locus in quo. Any one who is acquainted with the literature of sycosis will not expect me to enter upon so vast a subject here; those who are not are recom- mended to study it in the writings of Hahnemann, Bönninghausen, Wolf, H. Goullon, and Grauvogl. As how- ever, I am, so far as I am aware, the first and still the only practitioner to use Cupressus Lawsoniania, I may be permitted just to state that I base my use of it upon a fragmentary proving made by myself with the berries and leaves, and from which I conclude that it acts very like Thuja; I could not go on with my proving because of the terrible pains it caused in the stomach. I shall refer to it again. Finally, it might be asked: Why did you not stick to the Thuja rather than follow it up with Sabina, and then IIO Curability of Tumours. with Cupressus? Because I have found from practical experience that ringing the changes on like-acting remedies conduces more quickly to a cure than going on with the same. CHAPTER X. John Hunter's Conception of a Cure the only TRUE ONE. on Cancer IN The Morton Lecture on and Cancerous Diseases for 1889, Sir Spencer Wells, Bart., F.R.C.S. quotes thus from John Hunter (p. 30):— Let me read to you what our great master, John Hunter, said just a hundred years ago (Palmer's edition of his works, vol. i., page 625) as to cures for cancer:- "No cure has yet been found; for what I call a cure is an alteration of the disposition and the effect of that disposition, and not the destruction of the cancerous parts. But as we have no such medicine, we are often obliged to remove cancerous parts, which extirpation, however, will often cure as well as we could do by changing the disposition and action. Arsenic seems to have some power of this kind, II2 Curability of Tumours. and its effects might be increased, by being used internally and externally; but its use is very dangerous, and I am afraid insufficent for the disease. This is a remedy which enters. into the empirical nostrums which are in vogue for curing cancer; and among which Plunkett's holds the highest rank. But this is no new discovery, for Senertus, who lived the Lord knows how long ago, mentions a Roderiguez and Flusius, who obtained considerable fame and fortune by such a composition. I was desired to meet Mr. Plunkett, to decide on the propriety of using his medicine in a particular case. I have no objection to meet anybody. It was the young one: the old one is dead, and might have died himself of a cancer for aught I know I asked him what he intended to do with his medicine He said, 'To cure the patient.' 'Let me know what you mean by that. Do you mean to alter the diseased state of the parts, or do you mean by your medicine to remove the parts diseased?' 'I mean to destroy them,' he replied. Well, then, that is nothing more than I or any other surgeon can do with less pain to the patient." Sir Spencer says further on :- It is curious to compare this claim with John Hunter's remarks on the use of arsenic to Curability of Tumours. 113 "destroy the cancerous disposition," with Mr. Hutchinson's recent observations on "Arsenic- Cancer," and with Dr. Creighton's views on arsenic among other alterative or "habit- breaking" drugs, metals, or metalloid substances having elective affinities for particular tissues; and his theory of cancer as an acquired habit of the tissues, "a habit that might be broken if we only knew how." The inhalation of oxygen and the use of oxygenated water as a beverage have been supported upon somewhat similar grounds, and did no harm beyond disappointing the patient. But as a fashion its day was short. The use of methodical compression, which often did good, has led to the more modern massage, which has already done much harm. I thus quote, from Sir Spencer Wells, John Hunter's definition of a cure which I accept, and by it I am prepared to be judged. Sir Spencer also says (p. 28) Can we encourage the forlorn hope of the patient that growth may still be stopped? that some benign alteration may take place in its structure—something "like the spontaneous involution" of Virchow-some retrograde fatty change in the cells or elementary components I 114 Curability of Tumours. of the tumour, while extension or growth of new cancer cells is stopped? If this could be attained before other parts of the body were infected it would amount to curing cancer. From time to time such cases of cure are reported, but few, if any, stand the test of accurate investigation. Virchow, however, cautions us against too great scepticism in such therapeutical investigations, and says that the hopeless condition of the patient justifies the trial of remedies of whose mode of action we have no clear idea. But we must proceed from the simple to the complex, from the benign to the malignant. CYST OF RIGHT UPPER Eyelid Cured BY PLATANUS OCCIDENTALIS. A married lady just under 30 got a swelling in her right upper eyelid in the spring of 1887 and called in the Curability of Tumours. 115 'homoeopathic' adviser of the family, taking herself, in the meantime, Pulsa- tilla with transitory benefit. This gentleman informed the lady that medi- cines could not cure it, and he advised its removal by operation, which was declined. This family-like many others we wot of—are divided in their medical views and proclivities, some being allopathically and some homo- opathically inclined. When their usual 'allopathic adviser "happened to call to see papa" his advice was also sought as to the possibility of curing the tumour with medicines, and he said "No! It is quite impossible to cure it with medicines; it is only a little cyst and must be cut out.” The lady had formerly been a patient of mine for enlargement of the left ovary which medicines had cured. Hence she returned to me to see if medicines would cure the little lump 116 Curability of Tumours. on the eyelid about the size of a pea- wherein she was not disappointed. Platanus occidentalis was the remedy that cured it. ( Gtt. v. nocte maneque.) I did not mean to give empiric cases of this kind, and I mention this one merely as a further protest against the self-sufficiency of medical ignor- ance- our grand medical art not even able to cure a little cyst as big as a pea! But this case, though cured empirically, will serve serve to introduce another new remedy-the Platanus occi- dentalis that thrives so beautifully in our London streets. I have found it a remedy of some value in psoriasis and in cystic formations arising from oc- clusions of the mouths of the outlets of ducts and glands. Whether it has ever before been used in medicine I do Curability of Tumours. 117 ! not know: I was led to use it purely ex-hypothesi, and may have more to say about it another time. Here it is mentioned parenthetically and by the way. Certainly it acts upon epithelial structures, and notably on the outlets of the little glands of the skin. As only one remedy was used, the case is proof-affording that at least a little cyst can be removed gently, medicinally cured in fact, in the sense of John Hunter. How do I know that the cure is a Hunterian one? Five years have elapsed since the little cystoma was cured and there has been no return, and patient continues otherwise in good health. CHAPTER XI. Ovarian Tumour Cured by Bovista and Aurum Muriaticum Natronatum. A CLERGYMAN'S wife, thirty-one years of age, mother of seven children, came to me on May 13th, 1886, for treatment for a tumour within the abdomen. The lady's husband had accompanied their family doctor with her to an eminent gynaecological specialist, who had pronounced the tumour a cyst, and both family doctors and the gynaecologist had strongly urged an immediate operation. Of the children born, the most of them were cross births and one was The baby was two years still-born. The baby old. No genesiac fraud. Curability of Tumours. 119 Patient suffers badly from leucor- rhæ for years; she menstruates now every ten days or so; dysmenorrhœa; dreadful dysuria; frequent and most difficult micturition; palpitation of the heart on the least exertion; peculiar tingling sensation down the left side and hand; spleen very notably en- larged; patient often goes faint; fear- fully constipated; twice vaccinated; she is always cold; feet and hands go dead white; all her pains are worse at night. On examination I find a tumour of the left ovary of the size of my fist. Patient was treated with great care. and perseverance till September 29th, 1887, when she was discharged cured. She had a number of remedies, amongst which I will name Aconitum, Bryonia, Sulphur, Nux Vomica, Bovista, and several nosodes. But the remedies that were were evidently, obviously, and promptly curative were Bovista 31 and Aurum mur. nat. 3x. 120 Curability of Tumours. When I last saw the lady in September no trace of the tumour could be found. April 25th, 1888.-On this day I again very carefully examined the lady, but could find no trace of any tumour whatsoever. I should add that as a necessary part of the treatment all marital rights. and privileges were temporarily pro- hibited; this is important. Beginning of 1889.-I again ex- amined the lady but could find no tumour. January 30th, 1890.—Saw the lady's husband and learned that she continues well. February, 1892.-Patient brought her daughters to see me. tinues quite well. She con- CHAPTER XII. Abdominal Tumour. A MARRIED lady of 40, mother of five children, came to me on August 9th, 1886, for an abdominal tumour situated deep in behind the bowels on a level with the navel. She had been under many able men who had made various diagnostic guesses which, how- ever, did not lessen the tumour, which was the size of a small baby's head: my own diagnosis was retroperitoneal fi- broid, which I judged it to be from its position and hardness, and possibly connected with the pancreas or cir- cumpancreatic areolar tissue. The most distressing symptom of the case was the severe vomiting-at times so bad that she had to keep I22 Curability of Tumours. ! Patient her couch for weeks together. had not had much to complain of in her 40 years' career beyond severe confinements and occipital neuralgia. She had not suckled her children. Had been, she said, six times vacci- nated, the last three times unsuccess- fully. She suffered very much from whites and dysmenorrhoea. R & Thuja. September 3rd.-Menses much less painful; whites better; has only had one night of vomiting; she is very fond of salt and takes a great deal of it. Hecla Montis lava 3 trit. in eight-grain doses. October 8th.-Whites much better, as also the last menstruation; much neuralgia at the back of eyes, most towards evening. No vomiting, tumour decidedly smaller. Psor. 30 in infrequent doses. Curability of Tumours. 123 November 22nd.-Whites continue better, also the menses; neuralgia nearly gone; much dyspepsia. Tumour about the same. Thuja occ. 30 in infrequent dose. December 6th.—Cannot go on with the powders on account of the dyspepsia; all food gives pain within five minutes, only comfortable when the stomach is quite empty; no neuralgia; whites not quite well; percussion shews the tu- mour to be very much smaller, but she has a good deal of backache. R Tc. Cundurango 1. Five drops in water three times a day. January 17th, 1887.-Did her a vast amount of good, notably for her indi- gestion; whites still continue, backache better, and has felt wonderfully strong and well, though she vomited a good deal last Wednesday. Menses normal; tumour, perhaps, a trifle smaller. 124 Curability of Tumours. Patient had some nosodes, Silicea 6, Thuja 30 and then again Cundurango 1, and was discharged quite cured in November 21st, 1887; no vestige of tumour left. I saw patient's sister on April 17th, 1888, and learned that the cure was permanent. Nearly a year later I met the lady at an evening party and during the music in the drawing room she told me—what her looks certainly con- firmed that she continued quite well. January, 1890.-Continues well. CHAPTER XIII. Tumour in Uterine Region. AN unmarried woman, thirty-seven years of age, came to me on August 3rd, 1885, complaining of a swelling in the lower part of her abdomen, and which had been there for some years. It appeared to me to be seated in the broad ligament of the left side near to the uterus. It was hard and about the size of a baby's head. She complained of dreadful pains in the uterus and its region. Seven months before she had a fall from a chair, from which time on the pain had been very severe. For the past two years sensation of pins and needles in the hands and arms on awaking in the night and towards morning. 126 Curability of Tumours. Patient is a faithful old servant of the parents of the mistress of the woman whose case is narrated in "Tumours of the Breast," and she comes to me in consequence thereof. Her master had lately died, and she had lifted him a great deal during his last illness. R Med. C. Six in twenty-four, one at bedtime. Sep. 1st. Feels much better; the sensation of formication much less; the tumour is clearly a mural fibroid. Less pain in the uterus. R Med. CC. Ib. Oct. 1st. The formication has en- tirely gone and she declares herself wonderfully better. R Tc. Bellidis per. 1. Five drops in water night and morning. Curability of Tumours. 127 Nov. 5th. The tumour is a trifle smaller; gets a pain in it after she has been in bed a few minutes. R Syph. CC. Six in twenty-four, one dry on the tongue at bedtime. Dec. 3rd. The pain is gone, but has the pins and needles on awaking again. The tumour is smaller. R Med. CC. January 12th, 1886.-Pins and needles gone; hands are still numb; no pain; the uterus feels now through the abdominal parietes like one about three months' gravid. There is not, and never has been, any leucorrhoea. n. m. R Trit. 6, Lapis alb. (Grauvogl's) gr. vj. February 16th.-Better all round; menses normal; tumour undoubtedly smaller. Rep. 128 Curability of Tumours. she says. March 16th.-Getting on very well The uterus can be ballooned about just under the umbilicus, and is still tumid. April 15th.-Better; no numbness; no pain; very much smaller; now there is some leucorrhoea. Rep. May 20th.-Better; no leucorrhoea; no pain; no no formication; she feels well, no tumour can be found, and the womb is no longer to be felt or found (as heretofore) through the abdominal parietes. Rep., but only one six-grain powder at bedtime. July 6th." I am getting on very well, thank God."-The tumour has left no trace of itself. Everything normal. Rep. Curability of Tumours. 129 Sep. 6th.-Well; and long there- after her mistress informed me that patient continued quite well; and, oddly enough, also grateful. I shall here interpolate the obser- vation that the nosodes are remedies of which I shall hope to treat on a future occasion. I am here treating of the amenability of tumours to remedies, and in the great field of medicine it is much better to take one thing at a time. Any well read homoeopathic practitioner will see probable indi- cations for them in Lux, Gross, Hering, Swan, Berridge, Skinner, and others, notably in the pages of the "Homo- opathic Physician" and of the "North American Journal of Homœopathy." Whether they are chosen on the iso- pathic principle of Lux, according to the law of similars, or otherwise, I will not here discuss. K CHAPTER XIV. Tumour of Left Ovary. A Complex Case. A MARRIED lady placed herself under my care on May 26th, 1882, for a tumour of the parts for whose cure she had been advised an operation. She was in a state of great nerve ex- haustion, very largely, I think, from observing the course of the case of a friend of hers, who had been operated on for a similar affection and who had undergone great suffering. Patient was at this date thirty-five years of age; had had two children; was much emaciated, and had a very dusky skin. Her sufferings were extreme, being much intensified by the assiduous. marital claims made upon her. Curability of Tumours. 131 Patient's face was much disfigured with very numerous pimples — large angry inflamed follicles, some as large as peas; she had thus suffered, she said, for six years. A month before her last baby was born, twelve years before, she was oc- cupied "pottering about" in her green- house, and had uterine hæmorrhage. Uterus very much enlarged: so much so that it appears as a hard ridge above the pubes, and three or four times a week patient has much yellow mattery discharge from the vagina. Burning pain in the rectum and in the tumour, extending at times all over the left side of the abdomen; worse at night. The burning pain and bearing down on micturating, she describes as dreadful; and the womb is the seat of a burning so intense that she says is as if she were on fire. Menses regular but pain- She has been vaccinated ful at first. 132 Curability of Tumours. three times; has used very many vaginal injections. Cannot stand erect. Liver is painful, and she suffers much from dyspepsia. R Thuja occidentalis 30. June 18th.-Less leucorrhoea; she can now stand up straight; the skin of the left side of the abdomen is much darker than that of the right. R Viscum album 30. July 3rd. Very great amelioration of the facial acne, but the pain in the ovarian tumour is dreadful, and hot and burning; worse at night; she complains of constant thirst. R Arsenicum album 30. 19th.-Is always thirsty; the pain in the tumour is very bad, "burning worse at night." Ꭱ Aurum metallicum 4 trit. August 31st. There was some im- provement (in the pain) at first, but she Curability of Tumours. 133 has gone back, except that the skin of the face continues better, the uterus is rather smaller, and the tumour is more defined. R Mer. cor. C. September 29th.-Pain in side de- cidedly better, but she caught a cold and had a bad cough, the severe dragging from which brought the pain back, though in a less degree. She can now stand up straight and walk about with comparative comfort. Face much improved. The cough is very distressing. R Dulcamara Ix. November 9th.-Still some cough that she thinks comes up from the stomach. The tumour is smaller. The cough shakes her a good deal. R Lycopod. 4 trit. 24th. The side-pain is worse, in fact, unbearable. 134 Curability of Tumours. Que faire ? Fall back on hypo- dermic injections, and so get at any rate some temporary relief from pain? No! I know that road leads to the bad. Magis venenum magis remedium must be true, or there is no science in thera- peutics worth the having, and again aux grands maux les grands remèdes. Finally the dusky coloration, the noc- turnal exacerbation, the temporary yielding to Merc. R Syph. CC. December 20th.-The face is vastly improved; pain in the side better; is getting much fatter, particularly in arms and breasts, and she now weighs 8st. 11lbs. Less discharge. R Trit. 6 Kali Chlor. January 24th, 1883.-Pain in the side worse; worse by night; tumour smaller, less discharge, which is now pale yellow. Repeat last prescription but one. Curability of Tumours. 135 March 1st. After taking the last mentioned remedy the pain was better, and then I gave Kali chlor. again, as the tumour had previously diminished under its use. The burning pain has again returned; she feels sick and is thirsty. R Syph. CC. May 9th. The discharge is much diminished; the tumour, though smaller than formerly, is still very evident and very painful, particularly at night. R Bovista 3x trit. June. No change. R Trit. 4 Lapis alb. July 23rd. The pain in the tumour is dreadful. R Syph. CC. August 24th.-There is still a good deal of pain, worse at night, but the discharge is less. Ꭱ Tinct. Ceanothus Americanus. Five drops in water three times a day. 136 Curability of Tumours. October 20th.-Better altogether; less discharge; not nearly so distended. R Merc. Met. 4; And one of my reasons for giving this was because I had observed in several cases, that patients taking it in moderate triturations (2-6) have put on a good deal of flesh. November 21st.-Patient has fat- tened considerably on this prescription, and now weighs nine stone one pound. To continue the same remedy, but in fifth trituration. January 16th, 1884. R Tarentula Cubensis 30. February 4th.-Seems to have set up violent inflammatory symptoms in the tumour. R Liquor. Sodae Chlor. Two drops in water twice a day. Curability of Tumours. 137 February 25th.-The pain at night is dreadful; the discharge is much worse, but the tumour is much smaller. R Variolinum 30. March 28th.-The leucorrhoea is very bad and contains some blood; face is much better. R Liquor. Sod. Chlor. in 2-drop doses. May 12th.-Face quite clear; she is very much better, and the tumour has gone down a good deal. R Merc. Met. 6 trit. June 11th. The skin of face is now normal; but there is still a good deal of burning in the swelling, which, how- ever, is again much smaller. R Thuja 30. August 11th. Considering herself quite well, she stayed away last month, and comes now because there are a few more pimples and some pain. R Liquor. Sod. Chlor. 138 Curability of Tumours. January 11th, 1885.-Being so much better, has become irregular in atten- dance, but since last August she has had Variolinum from me with much advantage. The tumour has quite dis- appeared, and she now comes for a cough. R Tc. Causticum 6. February 9th.-Cough gone; now the side pains again, and feels raw; on very close examination, one still finds a rest of the old tumour at its lowest part near the groin. R Syph. CC. March 6th.—Wheezy; cough worse in the evening. R Psor. C. June 12th. The cough went away, and patient has also stayed away till The left ovary still troubles her, and the pain is very bad again, and is now. Curability of Tumours. 139 now worse after sleep. When she urin- ates she passes stringy whites. B Med. 30. July 17th.-Has hay-fever (never had it before, she avers); much sneez- ing; gets an hour of sneezing on rising, and washing brings it on. She is very much better in the hypogastric region, the after-sleep pain particularly. R Rep. (C.) October 19th.-The symptoms of hay-fever still persist. R Psor. C. November 14th.-Comes for a loud noisy cough, beginning at 4 a.m., with severe sneezing fit. R Osmium 6. February 12th, 1886.-Cough soon went away after beginning with the Osmium. 140 Curability of Tumours. Patient has called upon me a few times since this day, for colds and pains in the side, but these yielded to treatment of precisely the same nature as already described, and she has had no return of the tumour, and the womb has long since returned to its normal size. Middle of 1890.-Saw patient, and learned that she continued well. August, 1892.-Patient continues. well and I can find no trace of tumour. She came at this date to me for "flushes" and at my request allowed me to examine for the long-treated and finally-cured tumour. Thus it will be seen that my ob- servation of this case extends over ten years and three months. Of course a case of tumour that takes four years to cure and needs a number of remedies to effect that cure, Curability of Tumours. 141 is, particularly to the uninitiated, of no great interest unless the subject is thought out somewhat, but if this be done, it becomes more and more in- teresting to the student, and the more interesting the more he knows of drugs, drug-action, the phases and causations. of disease and of doctrinal pharmacolo- gy. A difficult game of chess can only be understood by one who knows chess well, and only a man well grounded in the science can appreciate a finely played game; to the man who cannot play chess, the grandest game ever played means . . . nothing. To the majority of medical men the just narrated case will mean no more than just this: "Oh, he had a case of tumour; the patient stuck to him; he gave her a lot of different medicines, and after a long time the tumour had disappeared." For all that, the truly competent will see that the game was 142 Curability of Tumours. not only won but at the same time was well-played-and the cure is a Hunter- ian one, for patient remains well. I dwell thus on these points not vain- gloriously, but to make it quite clear to those who will sit in judgment on my tumour-curing with medicines, that unless they understand the subject, their opinion of my work is worthless, though they may be doctors of medi- cines, masters in surgery, licentiates. in midwifery and editors of journals: if they cannot play the game they are no judges; if they can they will be delighted in studying the points of a good game well won. The analogy between the cure of a complex case like this, by divers and diverse remedies, and the playing a difficult complicated game of chess is not so very far-fetched, and enables the mind to grasp the mode of procedure. Curability of Tumours. 143 I always feel that unless we can use a series of remedies in very difficult complex cases, such cases will remain for ever uncured, or as people usually say, incurable. And the complaint raised against "using so many medi- cines in a case is really on a par with a complaint against a difficult game of skill such as chess that it "takes so many moves to win." " No doubt some of my cases might have been got well much more quickly, but it must be remembered that I was then treading an almost unknown way; the same case now would, I imagine, not take me half the time; but in this I may be wrong. CHAPTER XV. Uterine Fibroid; Chronic Oophoritis. AN unmarried lady, forty-five years of age, came under my observation on February 11th, 1882, suffering, as a gynaecologist and several other doctors had told her, from a fibrous tumour of the womb. Her general appearance was that of a lady at about the sixth month of pregnancy. She had been dissuaded from an operation by two medical men of good repute. Father and brother had died of consumption. Her irides are blue with dark rings round their circumferences. There is a tumour in the right wall of the womb, the size of which I cannot readily determine, but it must be as big as my Curability of Tumours. 145 fist. The left ovary very painful and enlarged a good deal; is tender at menstrual period and most painful then. No leucorrhoea. Patient has a gouty tongue. Has been three times vaccinated and had small-pox twice. Two years ago had eczema which she cured (?) with Turkish baths. R Tc. Thuja occid. 30. March 7th. Slight discharge from vagina-which is most unusual. shew of eczema on her hands. R Psor. 30. Slight April 1st.-Last menses excessive; painful motions. R Merc. viv. C. 25th. Her knees are very bad- painful and swelled-worse at rest, better moving about. Has small puru- lent spots about the pubes. R Tc. Rhus tox. 3. L 146 Curability of Tumours. May 1st. Knees are much better- much pain in the back. R Viscum album 30. June 10th.-Not so well-menor- rhagia and leucorrhoea; haemorrhoids and constipation. R Nux V. 30 and Sul. 30. July 11th. The tumour (from ex- ternal palpation) seems rather smaller; patient can walk with more ease. R Sedum acre 30. 22nd.— Has a cold and gets Bry. 1º and Phos. 6. August 8th. The vagina has be- come very irritable, requiring frequent ablutions and lubrications. The left ovary is not so tender as formerly. R Sempervivum tectorum 30 Septem. 5th.-Is better decidedly; much sore throat; has always been subject to quinsies and sore throats. Very constipated. R Merc. viv. C. Curability of Tumours. 147 Sept. 30th.-Has had globus hys- tericus; a good deal of pain in the rectum. R Persicaria urens 30. Nov. 2nd. Has "worked wonders" i.e. the bowels act better; the tumour is smaller; has some irritation of the skin, and she looks much healthier. R Rep. Decem. 14th.-Bowels act freely; much pain in vagina, worse at night. R Syph. CC. January 9th, 1883.-It seems that night really means early morning. R Merc. viv. February 1st.-Thinks she is worse; the pains cause her to swell out. R Bovista 4x. 13th.-Feels better; it has done her good. R Rep. March 6th-Bovista 6. 148 Curability of Tumours. March 22nd.-Psor. 30. April 5th.-Has done her a great deal of good-the swelling is decreasing. R Thuja 30. 19th.-Better. R Trit. 4. Lapis alb. May 15th.-Better. R Silicea (6 trituration). June 7th.-Trit. 4 Plat. 14th.-Stannum (cough). 19th.-Comes and begs to have the prescription of May 15th: it did her so much good. R Silicea 6. July 10th.-Much better. R Rep. August 7th.-R Syph. CC. 21st. Much cutaneous irritation. R Tc. Lappa major. Curability of Tumours. 149 Then follow Hepar, Silicea, Ceano- thus, Ferrum, Helonias, Tarentula Cub., Sul. and Thuja, &c.; when on May 1st, 1884, I prescribed Chelid. maj. ; and on the 20th of the same month the tumour had so diminished in size that I could find it only with great difficulty. But it required more than another year's treatment before the tumour was quite gone, and during this time the changes were rung on the already mentioned remedies and some others, of which two seemed particularly of advantage, viz.: Urea (6-12) and Hecla, both of which have more than once. done me good service in stubborn cases. of tumours, the former particularly in gouty persons. The cure holds good, for I saw the lady quite lately and enquired. This case was rather instructive to me, more particularly from a patho- aetiological stand-point, inasmuch as 150 Curability of Tumours. eczema had preceded the tumour-form- ation, and when the eczema had been got rid of by external means the uterine fibroid began to grow; moreover, after the tumour had quite gone, eczema broke out again. Quite a number of cases of tumour have their starting point in silenced cutaneous discharges; this is no vague theoretical statement, but a fact in nature which I have oft verified and which is clinically verifiable any day. Many cases of chronic skin-diseases. are no more and no less than chronic diffuse cancerosis. This is one reason why cancer is more common now than formerly, while skin diseases are less common. The ordinary dermatologist works, unwit- tingly, great evil; and when driving Curability of Tumours. 151 along the Thames Embankment one day, and gazing at Cleopatra's Needle, I said to myself-How much mischief did good old Sir Erasmus Wilson work in getting together the money that went to fetch and erect that? na A persisting skin-disease in a really healthy taintless person is a sight I have myself never seen, just as I am not acquainted with any other causeless effect. CHAPTER XVI. Ovarian Tumour. ON November 14th, 1884, a childless married lady of thirty years of age came to me for a swelling in the left side of the abdomen that had been slowly growing about a year. Patient suffered most severely at the menstrual period, and, for many years, from most severe and distressing leucorrhoea. She also suffers somewhat from hae- morrhoids. In the recumbent position, with relaxed muscles, one feels in in the left iliac region a hard tender circum- scribed mass of the size of an orange. It came gradually, subsequently to a fall she had about a year before. Curability of Tumours. 153 There are furfuraceous patches on the pubes and skin of the neck. R Tc. Bellidis p. 3x. Five drops in water three times a day. Dec. 4th.-Did much good, at first particularly; the decidedly better; piles bleed; profuse menorrhagia; leucorrhoea sanguineous and severe. Tumour not perceptibly smaller. R Tc. Thuja 30. Jan. 6th, 1885.-Very much better in her general feelings; only very little pain in left ovarian region; whites better; last period less excessive; the tumour is about the same size but very much. less tender. R Rep. Feb. 5th.-Leucorrhoea worse; tu- mour much smaller; last period much less painful. Complains of a good deal of pain in the left eye and left temple. R Tc. Bellidis p. 1. ziv. Five drops in water three times a day. 154 Curability of Tumours. March 3rd.-Leucorrhoea better; tumour about half its original size; but still tender, and when she hurries it drops. Last period less painful. R Psor. C. 24th. Some of her relatives have been paralysed; she gets nightmare; hands go dead; leucorrhoea worse; much dragging down. R Syph CC. May 2nd. Says she feels well, so much good has she felt from the powders; tumour nearly gone, whites, also. Is costive. R Med. 30. June 9th.-Tumour rather larger; whites nearly well. R Syph. CC. 20th. also. Tumour much better; whites R Trit. 6 Silicea. Curability of Tumours. 155 July 4th.-Leucorrhoea again bad; piles bleeding. 16th. The leucorrhoea is less bad; the left ovarian region is again very tender; pains in the eyes in the morn- ing on awaking. R Med. C. August 22nd.-Pains in the eyes gone; left side much less tender. R Med. CC. Sept. 3rd. No trace of the tumour can be found either by palpation or per- cussion. All she now complains about is that she so easily catches cold. She now dances and runs and bends herself at will without feeling the side at all. R Pso. C. Oct. 27th. Well. Discharged. On two subsequent occasions patient came with a little tenderness at the old 156 Curability of Tumours: spot, but the tumour did not return, and the tenderness quickly yielded to the same remedies as before. Long subsequently this lady ac- companied her aunt to see me, when I was unable to find any tumour, and patient stated that she was in excellent health, which her looks fully corrobo- rated. She is now gone with her husband on a tour round the world. The mere notes of the cases in the last few chapters are so voluminous that I feared to render them absolutely unreadable, and hence I skipped all pharmacological raisonnements, so I will refer my reader to the Remarks on Therapeutic Principles at the beginning of this work. December, 1888.-Patient is well and hearty. No trace of tumour. February, 1892. 1892. I hear from a relative that patient is enceinte, and hence I think this long-after-history, Curability of Tumours. 157 ending in a satisfactory enceinture, shews the cure to have been a truly Hunterian one. As to the remedies used, I must say that the bulk of the prescriptions were untried, a few here and there purely empirical, some on purely homoeopathic symptomatology, some on tradition, and the nosodes on the same line of thought as will be found set forth, to some extent, in my "Five Years' Experience in the New Cure of Consumption by Its Own Virus," and later on in these pages if time and space permit. If not, the therapeutic principles I believe in I have already sufficiently explained. By the way, the great objectors to the use of Bacillinum and the like for the most part declare that the higher dilutions contain none of the drug; but as I use these zoic medicines only in high dilutions they are objecting to nothing, and this on their own shewing! Either the higher dilutions. 158 Curability of Tumours. contain of the essence of the drug, or they do not; if they do not the names they go by must be a matter of total indifference. If higher dilutions contain none of the original drug it must follow that Pulsatilla CC., Bacillinum CC., and Syphilinum CC., and Broomhandle CC. are one and the same thing, viz.: a wee quantity of sugar of milk. In what university did these sapient objectors learn their logic? CHAPTER XVII. Tumour cured purely Symptomatically. I PROPOSE, in this chapter, to shew that a tumour may be cured purely on symptoms; indeed this has been done time and again, and I will take a case not of my own (mine are too complex) but of Gilchrist; I take it bodily from Tumours: Their Etiology and his Curability.' CASE OF OVARIAN TUMOUR CURED WITH COLOCYNTH; BY DR. GILCHRIST, Lecturer on Surgery in the Homeopathic Medical College of the University of Michigan. A young woman twenty-five years of age had been suffering for five years as follows: Extreme weakness and lassitude; cannot walk much on account of the weakness and trembling 160 Curability of Tumours. of the legs, especially in the open air, when, however, the other symptoms are better; worse, in every respect, from heat and in warm weather; walks bent over, with the hand applied to the right side; sallow complexion, and an expression of suffering in the face; occasionally has a sharp pain, like a stab, in the right pelvic region, obliging her to bend double, causing her to scream and toss about in agony; difficulty in breathing during the catamenia; is confined to the bed during the whole period; always several days recovering from these attacks. During the menstrual interval has yellow, thick, offensive leucorrhoea; bowels originally slightly constipated; now, after some some years' use of cathartics, immovably so; a well-defined tumour in the right iliac fossa, about the size of a cocoanut, elastic feel, but hard and immovable, and the seat of an occasional severe cutting pain. During the attacks of colic, I should have said, there was bilious vomiting; uterus prolapsed, inclined to the left side, and, owing to the pressure of the tumour directly upon it, could not be moved by any safe or usual exertion of force; has been under allopathic treatment for four years; has been twice tapped, with temporary subsidence of the tumour; has had no treatment for over a year. During an interval of five months, gave her Coloc. in vary- Curability of Tumours. 161 ļ ing potencies-never lower than the 200th- resulting in a complete cure. wards she remained well. One year after- Dr. Dunham likewise cured, by the use of Coloc. a similar case. Personally, I have an idea that colo- cynth is an ovary-medicine in the Rademacherian sense. But both Gil- christ and Dunham cured their cases simply by considering the totality of the symptoms, and as these distinguished men cannot do the impossible, it must follow that tumours can be cured symptomatically. Dunham, the gentle scholar, the humble-minded Christian physician, is now in heaven, smiling down encouragement upon us who labour on; may his earthward smiles strengthen us in our heavenward strivings. There are a good many single cases of cure of tumours by medicines strewn about in the very large homœopathic M 162 Curability of Tumours. literature of America: however, they for the most part are very isolated and solitary; taken singly they are curious, interesting, and not infrequently some- what of the nature of flukes; collec- tively they are instructive. None of these cures seems to have caused the curing physician to go on steadily and perseveringly at medicinal tumour- curing in almost every case--perhaps in every one-nothing more came of it: in the end the surgeon alone remained in the field. Well, it's very difficult; and symp- toms alone do not commonly suffice, and I fancy this is the rock on which they stranded, and still do strand. I wish to say nothing that is unkind to the absolutely-nothing-but-symptoms men, but their self-sufficiency when they fondle the symptoms as the in-all and be-all of medicine, is only paral- leled by their vulgar imputions of base. motives to those who decline to admit Curability of Tumours. 163 that symptoms are other than a means to the end. A grand means, but still only a means: never the goal. "New When I brought out my Cure of Consumption" I did it because Koch forced my hand, which I had held back for years; my wife often urging me to publish my experience with Bacillinum two or three years before Koch's Cure was heard of, but I hesi- tated, because I felt the world was not ripe for it, and a man with a very large. family has no right to court ruin-so I held back. When I did come forward, because of the Koch fever, to vindicate the rights of the homoeopathic school to priority (myself included) I was accused by certain journalistic symptom-hunters of yapping for Kochian loaves and fishes ! ! ! When I shewed the review to my wife she exclaimed, "What a cruel shame!" But this is only by the way, and only brought in as a parenthesis. 164 Curability of Tumours. Que voulez-vous? think of the In- quisition in the name of the gentle Jesus of Nazareth. Our sufferings are but microscopic specks by the side of mountains. And Paracelsus they actually battered to pieces with cudgels, and then made fun of him because having written on longævity, he died (!) early! At the same time it is very impor- tant to not under-value symptoms as we cannot get on without them; and the more's the pity. I say this advisedly, because symptomatic equations are very time-devouring, and working at them too much is apt to become stultifying, and, I have at times thought, narrows the medical mind-turning it slowly into something very like a machine. When homœopathy casts. off its swaddling clothes, the subjective symptoms will be to Higher Homo- opathy what spelling is to reading. CHAPTER XVIII. Case of Very Large Fibroid Tumour of the Womb. THIS case is interesting. An unmarried lady, fifty-one years of age, was sent to me on April 10th, 1883, by the Countess of X. For the past eight years patient had been suffer- ing from a uterine tumour with oc- casional bleedings, and which had been diagnosed by eminent gynaecologists as uterine fibroid. In external appearance patient appeared to be in the family way at about the eight month or the beginning of the ninth, when the onus lies well just below the meso-gastrium. The tumour was as hard as a board. Patient also had a fatty tumour under 166 Curability of Tumours. her left clavicle, size of an orange. She was very anaemic and washed-out look- ing, and had latterly been taking the quack remedies of Count Mattei, with no advantage. of consumption. Patient's mother died The most prominent subjective. symptom was her "blown-out" feeling. Objectively she was anaemic and her gait waddling. I seized hold of the only available point—the 'blownoutness,' and prescribed Bovista 3 six grains dry on the tongue night and morning. May 3rd, 1883.—She has apparently menstruated, and does not feel anything like so much blown-out in the abdomen. Her feet, which had been much swelled for some time past, were considerably easier; she felt better. Repeated the Bovista. Curability of Tumours. 167 June 16th. On the whole not any further diminution, and there is some hæmorrhage. R Trit. 4 Lapis alb. September 6th.-Better; smaller in the body; can now eat vegetables; no vaginal discharge. Repeated the Lapis alb. October 18th.-Well in herself but size of the tumour is not less. Com- plains of flushes and fulness in the head. R Psoricum 30. November 17th.-Worse; larger; very uncomfortable in the body; her eyes are swollen; urine scanty, the feet are swelling. R Tc. Platina mur. 3. Five drops in water night and morning. January 1st, 1884. Has lost the palpitation; the fibroid is smaller in 168 Curability of Tumours. size; but the lipoma is larger and she has no appetite. R Psoricum 100. February 2nd.-Pains in the chest gone; fearful metrorrhagia. R Variolinum 30. March 1st.-Looks cachectic; the lipoma is much larger. R Calcium fluoricum 6, and also the third decimal of the Pyrophosphate of Iron. 15th. No better; feet swell; has much rheumatism. Is always worse in the spring. The unfortunate lady's size is truly frightful. R Tc. Aur. mur. nat. 3x, three drops in water three times a day. April 8th.-There is much discharge per vaginam, but it is more watery and she can walk better, and the feet are less swelled. Heart beats uncomfort- ably, and there is a well-pronounced Curability of Tumours. 169 murmur best heard at the base, and no doubt of haemic nature. She has a cough, and there is much distressing aching in the lower part of the abdomen. R Repeated the Aurum. 29th.-Gouty inflammation of the right foot and ankle; the vaginal discharge has ceased; is smaller cer- tainly. R Repeat. May 27th.-Foot and ankle well except that the anklebones still ache; the tumour is much smaller, so that patient is relatively comfortable. The old brown discoloration of the skin of the forehead is nearly gone; she is rather restless at night; the fatty tumour remains about the same. R Repeat. June 29th.- Slight vaginal discharge as if a monthly period, but it continued 170 Curability of Tumours. for three weeks; the size of tumour about the same; the lipoma a trifle larger. B Psoricum 30. July 12th.-No bleeding; less un- comfortable; soles of feet tender and painful. R Tc. Urea 6. 5iv. Five drops in water night and morning. January 5th, 1885.-Tumour a good deal smaller and patient's health is greatly improved. Psor. 100. April 21st. Did her much good; no bleeding for long; the tumour is diminishing. R Urea 6. as before. June 18th.-No bleeding at all; is much smaller; she is quite losing her cachectic look; the lipoma is no smaller; has had another attack of gouty inflammation in the feet. R Trit. 5. Lapis alb. Curability of Tumours. 171 July 16th.-Has gone much larger and is not so well in herself; some leucorrhoea; cannot rest at night; goes to sleep for two or three hours and wakes up, remains awake and restless. and cannot get off again. R Urea 6. September 1st.-Still large. Psor. 100. 18th. Much inflammation in eyelids. Tumour distinctly larger. R Medorrh. 100. March 25th, 25th, 1886. Did her so much good that she has had no medicine since, and she now comes to ask if she need take any more. The tumour has gone down so much that patient has become shapely like any other lady; still gets occasional periods, and as nearly as I can judge the tumour is about two thirds gone, but the fatty tumour remains pretty much as it was. R Medorrh. 30. 172 Curability of Tumours. April 22nd.-Tumour again much diminished in size; no bleeding or other discharge; there is still some rheumatism and left-sided conjunctivitis. R Urea 12. June 17th.-Eye well; rheumatism well; no discharge, not much of the tumour left. R Trit. 3x Hecla lava. This ends the treatment, which, it will be observed, began in April, 1883, and terminated, in June, 1886, in complete cure of the tumour and res- toration of patient to good health. It will be observed that there are considerable gaps in the clinical narra- tion, and these were due to the fact that the patient is addicted to travelling about a good deal, and so would often absent herself for months. Curability of Tumours. 173 FIVE YEARS AFTERWARDS. July, 1891.—I am pleased to be able to add that though I have not seen this lady since June, 1886, she sent me word in July, 1891, that she had had no return of her tumour of the womb, and continued in capital health; the occasion of this message was her send- ing a friend of hers to me to be also treated for a tumour; but for this happy circumstance I should have continued in complete ignorance of the sequel to the termination of the cure. Of the lady's ungraciousness in not even informing me before I will say nothing, suffice for me that the huge fibroid tumour was radically and per- manently cured by medicines, and that fully five years of subsequent good health testify thereto. Hence I think we may fairly reckon this a truly Hunterian cure. CHAPTER XIX. Tumour of the Right Breast. AN unmarried lady of thirty-nine came under my observation, brought by her mother, on May 2nd, 1889. Spinal deformity all her life, and wearing instruments since she was twelve; the lateral curvature being very consider- able. Her father died of phthisis; of her Geschwister two brothers and two sisters died of phthisis, and one brother died of typhoid. I have often noticed a proneness to typhoid in those disposed to phthisis. Rheumatism, neuralgia, measles and whooping cough, comprise the list of her own previous ailments. Her tongue is pippy in its anterior half; in the outer upper aspect of her right Curability of Tumours. 175 breast between it and the axilla, there is a tumour of about the size of my (pretty big) fist. Patient complains of being subject to frightful headaches of the right side coming on at midnight and going off at daybreak, very severe dysmenorrhoea all her menstrual life till the last six months, when it has been a good deal less severe. She thinks herself that the tumour started from the pressure of the fingers of the person who fit on her mechanical arrangements to support her spine. A very eminent London surgeon who has advised her these fifteen years is of opinion that the tumour is fibrous, and he accordingly advises excision; the local Kensington surgeon agreed, but wished for the further opinion of Dr.—who said the tumour was not fibrous, but strumous, and required to be lanced. The opinions being thus divergent, the advice of another eminent surgeon was taken, and he thought it was spinal, 176 Curability of Tumours. but declined to give a very positive opinion. At this point her mother brings her to me. Patient I should say, is a huge salt eater. Many blotches in her skin. To To my mind the constitutional crasis of the lady was tuberculous, and hence I ordered Bacillinum C. in rather infrequent repetition. May 28th. Pus — has evidently formed in the outermost part of the previously hard tumour, whereover the skin is red; the lingual papillæ (pips) are much less red; headaches are worse (at night-towards morning); there are fewer cutaneous blotches. She tells me she is liable to severe pain in ball of the left foot, worse on approach of damp weather; last period more than usually painful. She retches a good deal. The local surgeon is very angry at patient being under the care of a homoeopath, and begs to be allowed to watch the case as a friend, Curability of Tumours. 177 to which request patient accedes. The good man's conceit does not desert him, and he sends me word that "he awaits the result with calmness,” what- ever that might mean. R Tc. Silicea 6. Five drops in water three times a day. July 13th. Patient feels much better; headaches better; no pips; no retching; tumour smaller, not so active, and no longer looks so red, but the tissue in its inside has evidently softened, and the contents will clearly have to be voided. I repeat the first prescription. June 27th. The tumour has burst and has discharged enormously. The bad nights, want of rest, and the noc- turnal headaches led me to give Syph. CC. I should have said that patient's friends declare she looks ten years N 178 Curability of Tumours. younger, indeed she has a freshness of teint and a healthfulness of face that no one remembers to have ever observed in her before. The local surgeon has given up calling as a friend." July 25th.-The tumour is practi- cally gone and patient is well of herself, but I again order Silicea to rid her of the hardened tissue around where the abscess broke. Patient made a complete recovery, the tumour totally disappeared, and for the first time in her life she feels in capital health. This cure made a a very deep impression in patient's social circle. Of what nature was the swelling Clearly strumous, and not an organ- ized neoplasm. CHAPTER XX. The Physician must be a General. The Curing Art Warfare. I THINK I must somewhere have read that the great Napoleon's definition of war-La Guerre-runs thus . . . C'est C'est l'art d'être le plus fort sur un point donné; and such is the art of curing disease. THICKENING OF CARDIA. Lady mother of nine children, came under my observation on March 26th, 1886, for a tumour at the top of the stomach and much vomiting. She was at the time fifty-three years of age, and in a very sad state indeed- hopeless, so every one thought. 180 Curability of Tumours. dozen aux That would also have been my view, had my weapons of cure been of the traditional sort. And here I will pause a moment to say that I do not advocate the use of zoic remedies in simple ailments, just as a general would not fire a big cannon to knock over half a brick-bats. As I often say grands maux les grands remèdes. Such pop-guns as Nux Vomica or Pulsatilla or Subnitrate of Bismuth will not cure tumours of the stomach, and hence if they are to be cured we must bring out bigger guns, and the zoic remedies are the very biggest guns of all beyond compare. Some ailings are like sparrows: very small arms will suffice to kill them say hydropathy, or homœopa- thic simples, but tumours generally resist small arms. As Lady 's mother died of an internal tumour, naturally her ladyship Curability of Tumours. 181 regarded her own state with all the greater apprehension. There was pain at the pit of the stomach, constant, gnawing; painful on pressure. Very weak; great thirst; no saliva; she passes a great quantity of pale urine, and must rise four or five times every night to micturate; much heat and irritation in urinary passage. Head aches at top and back. Violent vomiting. At midnight is always roused by feverishness for the past four years. In the epigastrium is a hard tender mass, corresponding in position to the cardia. She is very chilly. Twice vaccinated. Recounting her health history, she tells me she has had dysentery, ague, piles, anaemia, smallpox, puerperal fever, boils, styes, whites, and was once salivated. R Medorrh 30. One dose every seven days. 182 Curability of Tumours. April 14th. The pain at the pit of the stomach is gone; thirst now mostly an hour-and-half after breakfast; more saliva; passes less water; no head- aches; no vomiting; still has the "ghost fever"; less chilly; less tender- ness at epigastrium, and the mass is seemingly a little smaller. She begs for an aperient, as there is total inertia of bowels. R Plumbum 12, and Opium 12, in alternation. May 7th. Is suddenly plunged into acute grief by the death of her husband of angina pectoris. R Tc. Ignatia am. 3x, five drops in water three times a day. And thereafter we had recourse to the previously mentioned prescriptions, and then followed some of the remedies I have ventured to term term pop-guns Curability of Tumours. 183 (quoad the tumours), and patient was discharged cured-or rather she dis- charged herself. The case passed out of my mind for several years. FIVE YEARS LATER. At the end of 1891 and again in the spring of 1892, her ladyship came to bring a grandchild of hers, and hence I know that she has never looked back. She has now a much healthier look than she had six years ago; and, considering what she has gone through, her condition-being in her sixtieth year-must be termed eminently sat- isfactory. Any trouble from your stomach now, my lady?" "Oh! no thank you, none at all." CHAPTER XXI. Organopathy grounded on Homœopathy. Homeopathic Aggravations proved by IN my Koch. "Diseases of the Spleen and their Remedies clinically Illustra- ted," I shew that organopathy is specificity of seat merely the funda- mental basis of specific therapeutics; its father is Paracelsus, its modern resuscitator is Rademacher, its most eminent disciples Bernhardi, Loeffler, Kissel, Rapp, Guttceit, while Grauvogl very properly draws it into the service of homoeopathy. V. Homœopathy and organopathy, and zoic medicines, all help in the following case of :- Curability of Tumours. 185 ATHEROMA OF SCALP-WEN-SEBACEOUS CYST. On June 30th, 1888, a lady of sixty or thereabouts came to consult me for a large wen at the back of her scalp a couple of inches or so behind the left. ear. Had had it for many years but smaller; it is now enlarging. Patient is subject to intermittent erysipelas and much giddiness and swimming in the head. R Bellis per. P July 10th.—No better; giddiness is much worse with certain movements of the head; there is a sensation in the left hypochondrium as if it swelled. up, and then follows giddiness; also, 186 Curability of Tumours. for years whenever she puts her hands into cold water she gets a thrill under the left ribs. So it is probably spleen-v. Grauvogl's hydrogenoid con- stitution she feels draughts which make her chilly; there is some epi- gastric throbbing. Patient tells me she once had suppressed measles and suppressed smallpox, and also typhoid. B Spiritus Glandium Quercus ? 17th. Complains of a tender fulness in the left hypochondrium; the left cheek flushes. R Rep. 19th. No better. Ceanothus Am. 1. August 4th.-Swimming in head and the side much the same; she feels weaker; no pains in the shoulder; side however, less swollen. R Variol. 30 in very infrequent doses in powder-form. Curability of Tumours. 187 15th." Since I have been taking the last medicine I have gradually become much better; the dizziness and swimming in the head, and swelling in the side, have been much less.” R Variol C in very infrequent dose. 25th. Nearly well; she is very positive that the powders have done her so much good; the last (C) even more than the former (30). She has lost her pallor, has quite a fresh colour, and is really quite a different woman. The wen is easier. R Bellis per. ? October 20th.-Had to give up the Bellis p. and had some more Variol. powders, when no further progress being appreciable I gave Morbillin. 30 in very infrequent dose (December) when patient passed a round worm and (January) I ordered her Rubia 188 Curability of Tumours. P tinctoria simply as a spleen medicine, whereupon the atheroma broke and discharged a good deal at times, and off and on till the end of March, when it healed and there was an end of it. I might add that Cuprum, Terebinth, Thuja, and Sulphur were used in the interim, and, on April 6th, I could scarcely find where the tumour had been. The containing membrane was one day pulled away by the lady's friend while dressing the suppurating wen. A good many poultices were used by the lady while it was discharg- ing, but not before. It might very naturally be urged by surgery-loving friends: What is the advantage of all this medicating for a bit of a wen? Why not just slit it up and pull out the whole thing and have done with it? Well, in the first place, good and thoughtful practitioners have main- Curability of Tumours. 189 tained that operations for wens are as times followed by Bright's Disease, and as Bright's Disease at any rate cannot be operated upon, it is just as well to let the wens alone, since they are a lesser evil than Morbus Brightii. Furthermore, the lady was not well, and it was by treating her ill-health that I succeeded in getting rid of the wen. I might add that the Quercus will cause giddiness, and it is, moreover, a mild, yet powerful spleen medicine. The remedy in the case was evi- dently the Variolinum, and I have no doubt that it cured homoeopathically. I have known the lady for seventeen years, off and on, as a patient, but had never seen her with a good colour till after the Var. She continues very well to date. 190 Curability of Tumours. At the beginning of the narration of the foregoing case, I said that homoeo- pathy, organopathy and zoic medicines. all helped in its cure; I do not mean that these are distinct from one another, but I mention them thus separately by name because many homœopaths do not admit admit organ- opathy as an integral part of homo- opathy, while many others pooh-pooh or turn up their superior noses at the use of zoic medicines such as Bacillinum, Morbillinum, Variolinum. Whereas I maintain that organopathy is basic elementary homoeopathy lead- ing up to symptomatic differentiation, and the zoic medicines begin where the ordinary symptomatic differentiation leaves off. In regard to tumour-curing I find that organopathy is very helpful indeed, and with it I often succeed alone without the serious expenditure of time called for in truly differential symptomatic treatment. It saves the Curability of Tumours. I9I physician's time and preserves his mental strength. Its weak point is the relatively uncertain power of organ- medicines over the disposition, it gets rid of the product more effectively than it does with the diathesis. This same weak point, however, exists likewise in purely homœopathic symptom-cover- ing; in neither case is the neoplastic diathesis materially influenced unless the degree of homeopathicity in the drug chosen be very considerable: for looking deeply into the thing makes us aware that it is not the mode of choosing a remedy that is of greatest import, but the degree of likeness. existing between drug-pathogenesy and the natural history of the malady in its anatomical and physiological es- sence. This is where the zoic medi- cation begins it hits the diathetic quality as well as the product. Here only higher dilutions at longer intervals 192 Curability of Tumours. are any good, or fuel is added to the flames; whereas in organopathy small material doses act well and suffice, and the doses are repeatedly given with advantage-the greater the degree. of homoeopathicity the higher the dilution and the longer the interval between the doses. This I have before pointed out in my "Fifty Reasons for Being a Homœopath," and although it has apparently attracted no notice. from critical pens; still herein lies the real solution of the "question of the dose." Let any clear-headed unprejudiced physician think this matter over and then put the idea to the clinical test and he will find it is true in nature and capable of exact scientific clinical demonstration. It is this idea also that gives a real explanation of homœopathic "aggravations" that are very real to those who often spot the Curability of Tumours. 193 simillimum, but mere moonshine to those who do not. Said Dr. Robert Cooper to me one day, in regard to chronic deafness more particularly t Well, I find I cure best if I get an aggravation, so that if I do not get any aggravation I conclude I have not got the right remedy for the case; they may laugh at it as much as they like, but that's what I find." We do not often get aggravations in organopathic practice, because the degree of drug-likeness to the disease. is small; but they do occur at times when there happens to be a great degree of homoeopathicity existing between drug-action and morbid state; and in reading the literature of the organopaths one is struck with the curious fact that the more experienced О 194 Curability of Tumours. they became in applying organ-remedies to organ-diseases the smaller became their doses: thus Rademacher slowly came down from twenty-five or thirty drops of the ordinary strong tincture to 15, to 12, to 10; aye, even to “one drop well diluted in water!" If anyone wants an absolutely conclusive ready-made proof that the degree of homoeopathicity regulates the dose, let him compare the results obtained with Tuberculinum in Kochian practice and those obtained by myself and others, with practically the same. drug, but given in high dilution in very infrequent doses. Moreover, Koch himself proves the high degree of homoeopathicity of his Tuberculinum by getting an aggravation where there is tubercular disease only, but his aggravation is very apt to be lethal, but homoeopathic all the Curabuty of Tumours. 195 same in its nature; and it is lethal because the dose is too great. Dr. Kröner, of Potsdam, in the Zeitschrift des Berliner Vereines homöopathischer Aerzte, Vol. xi. part ii* p. 191 in his review of Die Koch' sche Tuberculose Behandlung auf Grund von Beobachtungen in der evangelischen Diakonissenanstalt Stuttgart von Obermedizinalrath Sick; Stuttgart, 1892-thus remarks:- zu "In some cases I am struck with the fact that after a severe aggravation, calling for the stopping of all further injections, there occurs sooner or later, not only a return to the status quo ante, but decided improvement was observable. And in connection with this, who does not think of examples of such in homoeopathic practice?" * April 5th, 1892. 196 Curability of Tumours. It is but fitting that State Medicine in the German fatherland should thus give a scientific demonstration of the truth of Hahnemann's "aggravation!" The German Hahnemann is indeed avenged in his own home-land! CHAPTER XXII. Tumour in Left Hypochon- drium. A CITY gentleman, fifty-eight years of age, came to consult me in the month of April, 1888, for a tumour in the left side of his abdomen, reaching from just below the apex beat of the heart to the left as far as the spinal column; from above downwards as far as a transverse line drawn through the navel and to the right to about an inch beyond the mesian perpendicular. His doctors had given him up, particularly because he had lost flesh and strength; and his aspect shewed that they were right. 198 Curability of Tumours. To his knowledge he had had the tumour for two years, but he believes it may have been there much longer, and it is slowly growing. The swelling is very painful, and the pain extends to and is also felt in the epigastrium. A deep scar over his left eyebrow dates. back 50 years, when he was kicked in that region by his father's horse. He vomits a good deal. The essential points, therefore, were: the swelling, the pain, the vomiting, the loss of flesh, and the weakness. As the patient was a very chilly mortal, and worse in wet weather, I concluded that the tumid mass was either a very large spleen or a tumour growing out of it. But which? That could not be determined on the hither side of the post-mortem table, and then it would be too late. The exact nature Curability of Tumours. 199 of internal tumours is very frequently simply unknown and unknowable; even puncturing will not always dis- close it, and this is often dangerous, and in any case objectionable. Besides the before-mentioned kick over his left eye, I elicited that he had never been vaccinated, having had variola fully 40 years ago. Now the effect of acute diseases on the economy are known to last a very long time; how long does not appear to be determinable. I therefore thought that perhaps that might have morbidly impressed the organism, and so be the causal start, improbable as it may appear. Wherefore I ordered (see my "Nat- rum Muriaticum" and "New Cure of Consumption" for doctrinal reasons), Variol. 30, six globules every eighth day. This was on the 9th April, and 200 Curability of Tumours. on the 12th May, he reported himself very much better, and the tumour had slightly decreased. In another six weeks-June 22- patient had lost all the pain; the vomiting had ceased, and he had gained flesh and strength. But the tumour was larger [ Aggravation?] Now thinking that the pyrexia ac- companying the variola may have acted causally in the matter (hypothetical again) I gave him Pyrogenium 5. ↑, July 18th. He thinks the lump is smaller; has gained flesh, and looks quite healthy. I ordered Bellis per. 9, both because of the old blow over left eye, and because Bellis has an affinity for the left hypochondrium, and also because it has already cured tumours. in my hands. He took thereof six drops night and morning till he had used four drachms. Curability of Tumours. 201 August 24th. In the perpendicular, as also in the transverse, the tumour has diminished by fully an inch both ways. In himself he is now quite well. It being clearly splenic:— R Ceanothus Am. 1. Five drops in water night and morning. — October 10th. The swelling is much smaller. He then had Spirit glandium quercus, and finally Variol. C., and in the beginning of 1889 was quite well and ceased attending. Not long since, I saw this gentle- man again, and learned that he con- tinues well. It will be useful to dwell for a few moments upon this case, principally because it shews--what I often notice- that the primary start may indicate the remedy, and this seems to remove 202 Curability of Tumours. the obstacle, or bar to drug action, just as Hahnemann noticed and taught in regard to his ætiologic homœopathy: the Coethen phase of homoeopathy. To bring the treatment down to John Hunter's conception of a real cure of tumour must be our constant aim, and the idea that is worked out in my "Natrum Muriaticum," viz:- a hair of the dog that bit you—seems, strangely, to be helpful. This idea really lies very deep and bears thinking about and underlies the labours of the isopaths, of Pasteur, Koch, Swan, Ameke. And the line of demarcation appears to me to be what I have given expression to in my "New Cure of Consumption," viz: "where homoeopathicity merges into identity." In other words the double and oppos- ite actions of large and small doses, as I think "Natrum Muriaticum as Curability of Tumours. 203 Test of the Doctrine of Drug Dynam- isation" fully proves in regard to Sodium Chloride at any rate. Working out that thesis turned my mind in the direction of "the remedy in the disease" where it certainly is some- times, and, perhaps, under conditions. Do homoeopathic physicians in general really believe what they so oft have quoted: Magis venenum magis remedium ? Do they understand what it all involves? Perhaps a few of them do. Revenons à nos moutons. Mr. On June 19th, 1889. This day called upon me to say he had sadly run down in health owing to domestic affliction and much night watching, and he had begun to find 204 Curability of Tumours. A out that he had a left side again, in fact the old lump was again slightly to the fore. R Tc. Urtica urens ?. Five drops in water night and morning. July 24th. The tumour has gone down; he says: "I can feel it not so large." He feels very well in himself. To continue with the Urtica, which was done till December 18th, 1889, when the most careful examination failed to reveal the smallest remains of the lump. And how do you feel, said I to him? "First-rate.' By the the way, Urtica urens is a splendid splenic, whose clinical history I propose to relate another time. Patient, I believe, continues well to date. Curability of Tumours. 205 Was this a genuine neoplasm, a tumour in the strict sense ? Well, the leading allopathic sur- geons of London said so, and if their diagnostic powers are vain what is their raison d'être? They cannot cure any- thing. By the way not so long ago they were very great at blood-corpuscle counting in splenic tumefaction; strange to say that also did not cure anybody, and the blood-cell counting is going. out of fashion; in fact is almost as much out of date as the crinoline. CHAPTER XXIII. Abdominal Tumour. THE subject of this chapter is an abdominal tumour of special interest, not only on account of its fully successful treatment, but be- cause the case was throughout watched and periodically examined by an allo- pathic surgeon of repute, who himself advised his patient to make the neces- sary long sea voyage from a distant hot country to London, to seek further skilled advice in regard to her abdomi- nal tumour. The surgeon, of course, did not even dream of its cure by remedies, and in sending her home this was not in Curability of Tumours. 207 his mind. But years before I had cured а child of the patient of lymphatic tumours, and SO once arrived in London the lady sought my opinion: I found in the upper part of the abdomen a tumour that was of con- siderable size, having its seat of origin, so far as I could tell, at the left end of the pancreas, but extending across to the right a good way towards the liver. In size it may be said to be about that of a big man's fist, and seemingly a fibroid. For a year past. there has been much dyspepsia. The pancreas I considered much enlarged, and the spleen was also increased in size. Of eight children five had died in infancy; there was a large brown patch on the forehead almost co-extensive with it; she had formerly had sore throats; her hair has fallen out and is still in process of falling out, and her 208 Curability of Tumours. nights were bad. Patient was a large salt-eater; had been three times vaccinated, and had had typhoid and ague, as also hypogastric neuralgia; costive. August 4th, 1886— Sepia 5, five drops in water three times a day. 18th. Urine rather slimy; hair falls out rather less. Complains very much of sleepless nights. R Syph. CC. in very infrequent dose. September 15th.-The remedy did her constipation much good; the hair ceased falling out; the forehead less brown. The tumour certainly smaller. R The same remedy enough to last two months. November 15. The first ten days I took the powders I had a good deal of pain and diarrhoea followed by con- Curability of Tumours. 209 stipation and bad piles with much smarting rawness. The tumour is without doubt a good deal smaller and much softer. R Rep. January 31st, 1887. -"I stopped taking the powders and have only just finished them; and I have had to have the doctor here for piles and fissure: he examined my tumour about five or six weeks ago, and said it was half its previous size, and since then I think it is smaller still and I have a difficulty in finding it-it seems much further away from the surface." R Iris Versicolor 30. March 12th.-"I am glad to be able to report further good progress; I have had my doctor here to see how the tumour was getting on; he says it is much smaller than when he saw it two or three months ago, and is now Р 210 Curability of Tumours. not larger than a very small hen's egg; I am feeling well in myself and suffer very much less from constipation, and have taken no Cascara.” R Syph. CC. May 10th." The last time the doctor was here he could not feel any lump, but I am two months gone in the family way. The brown marks on the forehead have gone. I have had dysenteric diarrhoea and am weak." R Arsenicum 3 trit. Six grains twice a day. July 1st.- Ꭱ Aurum mur. nat. 3x. Six drops twice a day. August 12th. — Has returned to England, and comes to me worn out with dysentery. Simaruba cured it. R Calc. Hypophos. 3x, gr. viij. three times a day. Curability of Tumours. 211 Sept. 7th. Quite recovered her strength. Returns to her distant home across the sea. R Aur. mur. nat. 3x. As before. Nov. 7th.-Feels quite well. Has finished the medicine. R Syph. CC. Feb. 20th, 1888. "I have sent for my doctor to examine my tumour, and he says it is sausage-shaped, but much smaller and flatter. My baby is very fine and healthy, and I am well." R Tc. Iris Versicolor 3x. And then followed Aurum again as before; when the doctor again examined patient for the tumour, and declared it to have quite disappeared. The cure holds good. 2.12 Curability of Tumours. I am very especially pleased to record this case, as its course was carefully watched by an watched by an unbiassed highly qualified general practitioner (a British graduate), who took no part in the treatment, remaining just an onlooking expert, and who has not consulted at all with me, does not know me personally, and has never even communicated with me, nor has he the faintest idea of what remedies have been used.. 1 He is an allopath, and, seemingly, is content so to be and so to remain. How this can possibly be I do not pretend to comprehend. I have often observed this sort of quasi-interest in homœopathic work go hand in hand with practical and life-long indifference. I suppose the quasi-interest is no really scientific concern at all, but rather curiosity and a kindly sort of Curability of Tumours. 213 feeling for their clients' fads. The Spanish generals behaved in pretty much the same sort of superior way to one Arthur Wellesley in the Peninsular campaign. But history has squared the accounts pretty fairly. The following letter from the lady shall end this chapter, to wit:— DEAR DR. Burnett, JANUARY 12th, 1889. It is six months since I received the last medicine you ordered me. Shortly after its arrival I had an attack of fever which lasted a long time-over two months; it was simple fever without any complications, but I became very weak with it and was some time getting up my strength again. It is only quite lately I finished your medicine, and two days ago I had Dr. to see me. He searched long and carefully for the tumour and I am delighted to say could not find any trace of it; he says the left lobe of my liver is still slightly enlarged, as it has been for a long time. In spite of this 214 Curability of Tumours. enlargement of liver, I have no unpleasant symptoms with it, and feel in perfect health and strength, and am up to dancing and playing tennis, which latter I always do regularly and always feel the better for it. I feel very grateful for all you have done for me. My baby also is well, strong and rosy. May I consider myself out of your hands now? I suppose the only thing for my liver is a change out of the country, but that I doubt if I shall get this year as times are so bad. With kind regards and good wishes to you for the New Year, I remain, Yours sincerely, YEARS LATER. In the Summer of 1892, I saw this lady, and thus know from personal examination that the cure holds good. CHAPTER XXIV. Tumour of the Tongue, presumably Cancerous. SOME five years since a lady, sixty odd years of age, came under my observation for a tumour of the tongue for which she had already once under- gone a successful operation, i.e. the then existing tumour was a fresh one that had come at the old spot, viz.: the left side of the tongue, and was about the size of a walnut. On the recommen- dation of several eminent physicians, allopathic and homeopathic, the oper- ation had been performed by a well- known London surgeon. But, as first stated, the tumour recurred. Three homœopathic physicians strongly urged the imperative necessity of of a new operation. 216 Curability of Tumours. The case was complicated with a fatty heart, atheroma of the arteries, numerous symptoms of paresis, pro- found adynamia, sorrow and worry without end, and hence very numerous remedies have been called to the rescue, and right well they have responded, for the tumour has long since gone and the lady is still bravely to the fore. By reason of the extraordinary complexity of this case it would serve no useful purpose to narrate the case in detail, but I might name Condurango, Var., Barium, Iodium, Ferrum aceti- cum, Variodinum, Oleum succini non- rect., Ceanothus, Rubia tinct., Lyco- podium and Aurum, as remedies that did sound service. At the date of which I am writing these notes-June, 1889, the lady is in fair health and the tongue is well, and it is with the tumour of the tongue that we are here concerned. Curability of Tumours. 217 January 14th, 1890.—I the lady a few days ago and the tumour continues well. heard from so can say Of course the tongue is not exactly a normal tongue inasmuch as a piece of it was cut away, so it always remains some- what odd-looking and puckered laterally by the scar tissue. A number of the homoeopathic prac- titioners of Great Britain have seen this case and they will readily recognize it by this description of the hard tried lady, who is the widow of an Anglican clergyman on the East Coast. February, 1892.-At this date I saw this lady and found the tongue. still healthy. This lapse of time justi- fies my calling this a really Hunterian cure. CHAPTER XXV. Postaural Lymphoma— Vaccinosis and Psora. ON the first of April, 1886, a little girl of nine years of age was brought to me for advice in regard to her general health, and specially for a small glandular tumour behind the left ear. Delicate as a baby, then got strong; subsequently went thin and deaf-now two years ago-was taken to an aurist who removed portions of the tonsils and thereafter totally excised them. Deafness was better, but patient herself became very ill, was sent to the seaside and recovered. Now she has bad broken chilblains. "and everything with her gets mattery." Curability of Tumours. 219 There is a little lump-presumably glandular—behind the left ear of the size of a large hazel nut. Acne of skin. Anorexia. Once vaccinated. Thuja 30, infrequently. May 11th.-Lump behind ear smaller; flesh very unhealing, but not quite so mattery. Psor. 30, infrequently. September 30th.—Well; no lump, and she is bonny. That the indurated gland behind the ear was of a piece with the tonsillar disease will hardly be disputed, and that the excision of the tonsils was an eminently silly proceeding, must be equally manifest. Still, of course, vaccinosis is non- sense and psora nothing but moonshine. But, banter apart, will any medical man, of any pathy, tell me a shorter 220 Curability of Tumours. and better way to cure tumour, great or small, than I am here trying to set forth? real-a I claim that this is a Hunterian-cure, for the disease is cured in its effect and, I truly believe, in its disposition. Whether a small glandular enlargement may quite right- fully be called a tumour I will leave an open question. As this chapter is very short I will add one more case of :- SEBACEOUS TUMOUR OF SCALP. A married lady, mother of three children, came under my observation at the end of the year 1887, for a number of ailments. She was verging on fifty years of age and had double cataract. Curability of Tumours. 221 When I say that she came for a number of ailments that is not quite. what I mean: I ought rather to say that, though suffering from a number of ailments she came to me for double cataract and seemed almost afraid lest I might, as it were incidentally, or accidently, cure something else. There was a good-sized wen in the lady's scalp that finally yielded to my treat- ment. She had She had taken a great many remedies from me; her constitution slowly improved; she became much stronger; her hair which had been very thin, grew again, and in the Autumn of 1889, while taking Acidum uricum 5, the wen disappeared; having burst and discharged. These wens are very curious things, and to me biologically decidedly puzzling. For instance, why does kidney-disease follow their forcible removal? Why are their owners so prone to pains, 222 Curability of Tumours. and paresis? At present I am study- ing a number of them with much interest; and although I not infrequently cure them, still I cannot say I under- stand them. Sebaceous cysts from occluded outlets of the sebaceous follicles are only the dry bones of the thing. 1 1 CHAPTER XXVI. Mammary Tumour. A WIDOW lady of twenty-six years of age, whose only two children had died, called to ask a gentleman of my acquaintance what he would recommend her to do in a difficult matter, viz: the removal or non-re- moval of her left breast by operation as Mr. Dr. —, and Dr. 2 " as well as the surgical staff of Hospital in London had decided was imperative owing to a a tumour that had been growing in it for some time. The gentleman in question is very enlightened, intelligent, and noted for his kindheartedness, hence the be- wildered are in the habit of seeking his advice and, at times, following it. 224 Curability of Tumours. TUMOUR OF LEFT BREAST. On April 16th, 1888, Mrs. X., a young widow, twenty-six years of age, mother of two children, both of whom have, however, died, came telling me she had been under treatment at St. Thomas's Hospital and elsewhere, for a tumour of the breast. the Menses regular, but painful; the tumour is more painful at the monthly time. She had a knock on the left breast 15 months ago. Mr. hospital surgeon, and the surgeons at St. Thomas's, and also the surgeons at the country town whence she hails, all recommended operation. "Do those gentlemen all recom- mend an operation?" "Yes sir, all of them." Curability of Tumours. 225 In the outer aspect of the left breast I found a very painful swelling, the corresponding part of the right breast being also tender to the touch, but not the seat of any tumour. Patient was of opinion that the tumour in the left breast was a trifle smaller than it had been, but much more painful. Anorexia, anaemia. Has been twice vaccinated; had bad measles, a weak chest, pneumonia, bronchitis, low fever and much grief. The first two very obvious points in this case were the grief- fancy a young woman of delicate health, who had lost her two babes and her husband, and who had been recommended by half-a-dozen surgeons of repute to have one of her breasts ablated-then there was, probably, some blow; in fact she dated the whole thing to a blow. Therefore I gave her Ignatia Amara I (dear old Hahnemann, thou Q 226 Curability of Tumours. hadst not lived in vain if thou hadst left us nought, but this one thrice- blessed therapeutic legacy!) and Bellis perennis 9. May 16th.-Patient is brighter and better in herself; the tumour is very painful and more defined. R Thuja occid. 30. June 13th.-Better in health; very bilious and many headaches. R Psor. 30. July 16th. At first the lump swelled a good deal and then went down again. Patient is very yellow and bilious; the tumour very tender. R Hydrastis Can. p. August 27th.-She does not think there is any real improvement. R Fer. Picric. 3x, 3iv, three drops in water night and morning. Curability of Tumours. 227 October 15th.-Nearly well, but she suffers fearfully from neuralgia of the jaw. R Bacill. 30. November. Very bad bilious attack and the tumour has increased in size somewhat. R Hydrastis Can. p. January 14th, 1889.-The tumour is nearly gone she says, and I have difficulty in finding its remnant. is very pale and bilious. R Rubia tinctoria P. She March 11th. The little bit of the tumour that remains is now evidenced by pains than by bulk. March 11th, Morbill. 30. more April 8th.—Pain is nearly gone, but she will have it that the tumour has grown again a little. R Rep. (C.) 228 Curability of Tumours. 〃 June 5th. The tumour is quite gone; patient is still pale and there is still a little pleurodynia. R Sabina 30. This ended the matter, patient continues well and has no tumour Saint Thomas's prognosis notwith- standing. - CHAPTER XXVII. Small Vascular Growth inside the Left Lower Eyelid near the Internal Canthus. AN unmarried lady of some seven- and-twenty summers consulted me on July 25th, 1888, for a small vascular tumour inside the left lower eyelid near the inner canthus, and separated from the caruncula by about the eighth of an inch. What really troubled her was the lachrymation or rather the stillicidium. She had been aware of this growth some six months, and has been under proper" treatment for the same, and the treating surgeon has very improperly 230 Curability of Tumours. cauterised it, so of course the surface of the tumour is somewhat cicatricial. R Tc. Cupress. Law. 3, ɔ̃iv. Five drops in water night and morning. but not much. August 22nd.—It is rather smaller, She herself has always been well, but thus far has never had a healthy look. The Cypress drops have, however, brought a healthy hue to her face- "and I never had a healthy colour in my face before in my life! "" She now tells me that she had a similar vascular tumour on the right lower eyelid, but on its outside, but it disappeared herefrom at the time it appeared on the corresponding internal spot of the left side. And yet the Patient is curiously affected by the moon, and that in this wise-at full moon her brain seems excited and worried, and surgeon cauterized it! Curability of Tumours. 231 she cannot sleep, but if she sleep, dreams; this has been the case for the past twenty years. Her teeth are greenish and her gums unhealthy. R Argent met. 5. Five drops in water night and morning. October 8th. The eye has ceased watering and the wee growth is less red. R Selenium 5, ziv. Five drops in water night and morning. And under its use the tumour waned and went, but the cicatricial surface due to the surgeon's cauterising of course remains. October 18th, 1889.-" The last medicine cured it." January 24th, 1890.-The eye continues well. CHAPTER XXVIII. Ovarian Tumours: Bearing on Marriage. Of their Modes of Cure. THE treatment of tumours in young women has a very vital bearing on the future life, happiness and family- life of the subjects. This now follow- ing case well exemplifies the point. In the year 1882 I was requested to meet Dr. M. in consultation in regard to the state of health of Miss X. then just thirty years of age. I found the left half of the hypo- gastrium occupied by a large tumour roughly about the size of a big man's fist. It had been much larger and had been reduced to the just-stated Curability of Tumours. 233 size by curative manipulations in which is very expert, but below Dr. M- its man's-fist size the tumour would not go by the curative movements. Questioned as to the time she had had it patient said many years; it had been subject of treatment during the past four years, and now it was my task to recommend an operation, or to undertake the case to see if remedies could cure it. Although the tumour was not so very large, it appeared very unsightly by reason of the lithe build of the patient, and this unsightliness. caused her near relatives to greatly favour an operation, and when I stated that I thought medicines would cure it I fear no one believed me except the patient herself and Dr. M ———— It is astonishing with what light- heartedness the belongings of а patient-particularly a number of the 234 Curability of Tumours. women-discuss such operations on women other than themselves! In the end my view was accepted. The patient had bad yellow leucorrhoea ; the menses were very painful and there- with a good deal of vomiting. My treatment was regularly begun on November 6th, 1882, and my first prescription was Thuja occidentalis 30, not only because of the leucorrhoea, but for the vaccinosis, viz.: she had been in all three times vaccinated: the second time was nine years pre- viously, when she was ill for nine weeks. with it, and in the winter before (1881) she had fourteen boils. There was also much flatulence, and her constipation she described as "fearful;" subject also to bilious attacks every ten days or so, and the whites of her eyes were dirty-yellow to a degree but rarely seen except in the aged. The Thuja seemed to cause a great deal Curability of Tumours. 235 of pain in the tumour: she had one dose every day for a month. Psorin. 30 followed the Thuja, and hereupon I find this note in my case- book :- Dec 13th, 1882.—At first the pain went better and she felt better: now in every way worse than ever; also severe pain in the top of the head; conjunctivae very yellow. Thuja C. January 1st, 1883. Her head is very bad; insomnia; starts a good deal on going off to sleep. Nat. Sul. 4, six grains in water every three hours. February 28th.-The Natrum sul. has seemingly greatly upset her, so much so that she is afraid to go on with it. The The initiated will see that the prescription was Grauvoglian. Patient is very bilious. R Syph. CC. 236 Curability of Tumours. 1 { March 21st. No obvious improve- ment. R Medorrh. 30. No change worth naming in the tumour, but the constipation became so bad that it became for the time the substantive complaint. For this Podophyllin 2x and Euonymin 3x was used, the latter with much satis- faction and general improvement, and under it the conjunctivae cleaned a good deal and the tumour slightly diminished in size. As she was so cold, and had pains in the left side she received from me Ceanothus americanus I, and so the treatment went on till August, 1885, when she was discharged quite cured; the remedies used after the Ceanothus were, in order named, with intervals of from one to six weeks between the remedies, Merc. met. 3, Variol. C, Bellis per. 1, Medorrh. C., and Chion- anthus . Curability of Tumours. 237 I several times saw and examined patient and can state that she con- tinued quite well; the whites of her eyes are long since clean. She has since happily married, and apropos hereof I may say that she very greatly improved in good looks under the treatment. Nor is this strange, for so long as the ovary was the seat of a tumour so long was it quite impossible for her to be other than plain healthy ovaries are absolutely essential to good looks. How hideous those whose ovaries have been opera- ted upon frequently become. November, 1889. She continues 1889.—She quite well, so she tells me in a chatty letter. CHAPTER XXIX. The Treatment of Mammary Tumour, also in its bearing upon Marriage. THE bearing of the treatment of ovarian tumours upon marriage and motherhood is obvious, since there can be no offspring without ovary— where the ovaries are removed there is simply the spayed condition of common animal life. A human being without ovaries is not a woman at all. Where a lady's breast is removed for a tumour-can that lady be said to be still marriageable? Hardly. And whether or no how fearfully shocking the mutilation, even to the lady herself. Curability of Tumours. 239 TUMOUR OF LEFT BREAST. A married lady, forty-two years of age, mother of seven children, was brought to me me by her husband in the month of November, 1886, for a swelling in one of her breasts, which had been hurt. I found in the lowest third of her left breast a hardish tumour, of the size of a hen's egg, which was at times painful. Her menses were always too profuse, so that for many years she had never been able to get over the anaemia due to one period before another was there. Had leucorrhoea badly for many years. On the skin, in various regions, a number of wart-like excre- scences. She had had measles, scar- latina and mumps, each twice, she informed me. Had also had variola, and besides this, she had been vaccin- ated four times, the last three times. 240 Curability of Tumours. without success. This fact, together with some of the other already nar- rated morbid phenomena, viz.: the leucorrhoea, the wart-like excrescences, caused me to regard the case as one of vaccinosis, respectively sycosis. Thuja 30 and Mag. sul. 3x enabled me to discharge her quite cured in four months. Long afterwards she accompanied a near relation to consult me in his regard, when I took the opportunity of examining the breast, but could find no tumour. The reason why the tumour yielded so promptly, lay evidently in the fact that it was merely a hardened mass of normal tissue, and this hardening from infiltration only, I had intended follow- ing with Bellis, but the lump having disappeared no further treatment was needed. Curability of Tumours. 241 That the Thuja was here the curative agent, I infer from the fact that I first prescribed it with palpable effect; Mag. sulph. was the second prescription, and when it was finished patient herself asked for the first-given remedy, i.e., the Thuja, because it had SQ much alleviated her menstrual inconveniences. Patient did not know what reme- dies were given, so the value of her testimony is manifest. I regarded the tumour as mammary infiltration from ovarian started by trauma. irritation R CHAPTER XXX. Confounding Effect with Cause. THE surgical removal of tumours seems to me to be unsatisfactory in every important particular. It only professes to deal with the product and can never be, even theo- retically, a Hunterian cure: disposition is not even aimed at! The treatment by the the actual cautery gets rid of the superficial effect-the product-the cause is not even considered at all. Let me exemplify : Curability of Tumours. 243 TUMOUR OF LEFT HIP. A strong powerfully-built maiden lady, about fifty years of age, came under my observation on April 25th, 1889, telling me that she was very anxious about a tumour of her left hip. An examination disclosed an in- flamed hardened nearly circular patch of about the size of a florin depressed in the centre and scaly near its rim She had spent the winter at the seaside in charge of an invalid, and having for some six months or SO noticed a red mulberry-like growth at the above-mentioned spot, she sought to set her mind at rest by shewing said growth to the doctor when he came one day to see her ward. "You had better let me burn that away, or 244 Curability of Tumours. it might give you trouble some day" said he, and at a number of his sub- sequent visits he took a turn at the burning-away proceeding. The result was that he not only succeeded in burning away the growth, but went on "burning" till he had created a concavity about four times the size of the original growth and about as much below the cutaneous surface as the mulberry growth had been above it. to When the lady went home Surrey with her charge the doctor urged her to return to him for a continuance of the cauterisation as soon as she could. Happily better counsels prevailed, and after several weeks of fruitless waiting to see if it would heal up, the patient came to me as the holder of a more gentle faith than burning. Curability of Tumours. 245 In five months nothing remained but the hole to mark the locus in quo. The remedies used were Hydrastis Canad. and Morbillin. 30, each by itself month about. The use of the former was empirical tradition, of the latter the fact that she had had the measles badly as a child and had suffered much from "lungs." While taking the Morbillin, in infrequent dose, in powder-form, the place scaled off several times, and thus the thickening was got rid of. Afterwards I enquired of her: Which did you more good, the powders or the drops ? "Oh the powders; I have felt so much better ever since I had the powders." When I reflect upon this case I say to myself thus:- The small tumid mass on the buttock was produced from the within. 246 Curability of Tumours. of the patient, being thus produced from the interior of patient's organism, it is qualitatively and potentially only to be killed from within, i.e., in its vital self; you can no more cure the thing by burning away the excrescence than you can cure the gout by cutting off a gouty toe. The growth is a vital product; the growing is a vital process proceeding centrifugally and towards a fixed point on the cutaneous periphery. CHAPTER XXXI. Cure of Tumour of Left Breast. A LADY of forty-four, married, but without children, and who had formerly been under my care for neuralgia and recurrent iritis, presented herself to me at the end of the year 1888, with a very hard tumour of the left breast about the size of her fist. The menopause was evidently there as there had been no period since. October. Of course the tumour caused great anxiety, but when I informed the lady that remedies would cure it, she simply accepted my statement and the sequel confirmed it. The tumour had been as it were quiescent for nine years; that is to say 248 Curability of Tumours. nine years previously patient had the ague (malarial fever) at San Sebastian, and it was this fever that was said to have caused a lump to come in the breast and which the doctors at the time thought would gather and dis- charge, but it did not and remained pretty much the same, till the period stopped in October, when it began all at once to grow, and that pretty fast. Thinking the matter over it seemed manifest that if a lump would stay for nine years, there must be an internal cause-disposition-ever operative, for if it had not been continuous in its operativeness, the lump must have long since disappeared causeless lump cannot be. a Patient had long ago had congestion of the lungs and, moreover, her mother died of phthisis. I regarded the general state as from the mother's phthisis, and therefore Curability of Tumours. 249 gave Tuberculinum C. in very infre- quent dose for several months and this greatly reduced the tumour in size, but it became more defined notwithstanding the decrease in size, and this rather struck me. The converse is commonly the case. I then went back to the time of its origin and found that patient had had much quinine at that period, i.e. nine years previously. Now knowing that effects of quinine are long-lasting and at times antidoted by Natrum mur. I gave this latter in eight-grain doses of the sixth centesimal trituration three times a day. March 19th, 1889.-Tumour well defined; size of a child's fist and hard. Tongue very pippy. Repeat the Tubercul. C. 250 Curability of Tumours. April 1st. Tumour certainly small- er; the pips are numerous but not so florid. R Fragaria vesca (a very good mamma- medicine in the Rademacherian sense, though not one of his medicines), ten drops in water night and morning. April 23rd.-Tumour about half Patient much praises this medi- gone. cine. Repeat the Tubercul. C. May 21st.-The lump is smaller. R Fragaria vesca. o f June 25th.-Lump about the same. R Silicea 6. Eight drops night and morning. August 6th.-"The lump in my breast is smaller but it is still there." R Silicea 12. Curability of Tumours. 251 August 28th.-"The lump in my breast is smaller; my skin is very spotty." Rep. November 20th.—Tumour not quite gone. R Tc. Pulsatilla nig. p. Four drops in water three times a day. December 12th.-Tc. Hydrastis Canadensis . January 17th, 1890.-Tumour quite gone. February 6th. No trace of tumour. 18th.-Discharged cured. My conception of the actions of the remedies in this case may be thus stated. In the first place the Tuber- culinum cured the maternal taint of 252 Curability of Tumours. tuberculosis; the Natrum mur. anti- doted the long-lasting effects of the quinine; the Fragaria vesca acted upon the mammary organ as a gentle stimulant and woke its life up a little; the Silicea, Pulsatilla and Hydrastis are homœopathic remedies that may be termed standard polychrests. Let my theories go for just as much as they are worth, but not less than . . . The tumour was cured and patient remains well. December, 1892.-Bringing a niece to me for a skin eruption, patient said: "You have never quite cured my spots.' What about the tumour ? “Oh! that's alright.' " CHAPTER XXXII. Generalizations in Some Cases of a Certain Practical Value- Tumour of the Testis. THERE are certain generalizations that have arisen in the evolutionary expansion of homoeopathy that must be rightly and duly appraised if we are to do the greatest possible amount of good in practical drug therapeutics. Thus the general statement that Natrum muriaticum * antidotes the effects of quinine deserves a certain amount of attention, though of course. it is not every case of cinchonism that dynamized chloride of sodium * See " Natrum Muriaticum as Test of the Doctrine of Drug Dynamization." 254 Curability of Tumours. will cure. In this sense I understand the value of the statement that Gold follows Mercurius SO well in the syphilitically broken down. * SMALL TUMOUR OF RIGHT TESTIS. In the early part of the year 1885, a gentleman came under my obser- vation for a tiny tumour at the bottom of the right testis and about which he had consulted five medical men, of whom three are eminent surgeons of general renown. Opinions were di- vided as to whether it was of a specific nature or not. As patient had had it over a year and as he he had been very actively treated for it with the usual specifics; and, moreover, as the metal has an * See Hughes's "Pharmacodynamics.” Curability of Tumours. 255 admitted affinity for the testis, I gave Aurum metallicum fourth trituration, and thereof six grains night and morn- ing. This reduced the little lump about one fourth. Hydrastis Canadensis, fifteen drops a day, in three doses, also did a little and lessened it still further. There subsequently followed Syph. CC., Psor. 30, and Bellis perennis 1, and in the middle of the summer the tiny tumour had quite gone. It was only about the size of a small nut, but was very hard, irritating, and at times painful. I saw the patient in 1887 and ascertained that the tumour had not returned. October 9th, 1889.-The tumour has not returned and patient has continued in splendid health "Not needed a doctor for years." 256 Curability of Tumours. TUMOUR IN THE SHAFT OF THE PENIS. A gentleman, age 52, came under my observation on May 12, 1885, for a tumour of the penis of recent origin― practically recently recognized-and to which his attention had been forced by the fact that when in a state of orgasmic plethora it "looked round the The thing was I thought a kind of bone-like deposit, as the feeling of it give that impression. It was corner." about two or three lines thick and of the size of a sixpenny piece. Patient had " gone the pace," and had been blessé par Vénus in every way known to M. Ricord of course, lang syne. He had a number of remedies, and was completely well of the tumour when I examined him on December 9th, 1886, and in the erect position of the member, the direction was straight Curability of Tumours. 257 or very nearly so. Oddly enough, his wife had been formerly cured by me of a tumour of a distinctly ugly character. He had from me, in the order named, Chelidonium majus p, Med. 30; Urea 6, Chionanthus Virgin. p, Med. C.; Syph. CC.; Stigmata maidis Fl. Ext.; Acid nit. 3x; Stillingia sylvat. ; Urea 6; Psor. C.; Acid. oxalic. 3x, and Acid. mur. 6. The greatest ameliorations followed Syph. and Urea, the former seeming to cure the disposition, while the latter very evidently cleared away the product of that disposition. FIVE YEARS LATER. In April, 1892, I saw him incident- ally, when he brought a member of his family to me, and on my enquiry how this old trouble had behaved he said, "Oh! I have been first-rate ever since, it has never returned." S I CHAPTER XXXIII. Swellings of the Breast and Thyroid. AT the end of the year 1885, a lady of sixty odd years of age came under my observation for a tumour in her neck. Examination showed it to be, seemingly, hypertrophy of the right side of the thyroid gland, which latterly had begun to encroach upon the left one. She had a good deal of salivation worse towards morning. She says she has usually her ailings in her left side. In addition to the tumour in the neck, there was also a circumscribed swelling in the outer half of the right breast, which caused her great alarm. She feels very chilly, and has many sensations as of pins and needles. She is also very twitchy. R Med. C. in infrequent dose. Curability of Tumours. 259 December 30th, 1885.-The thyroid tumour, much to my amazement, is distinctly smaller. Treatment was continued at ir- regular intervals, and patient was discharged cured on February 27th, 1889, and continues well of the two tumours, and in the enjoyment of capital health. A good many remedies were of course used, such as Bellis perennis, Hydrastis canadensis p, Baptisia tinctoria 1, Tubercul. C., which did her more good, perhaps, than any remedy she ever took. In my judgment the two nosodes were essentially the curative agents in this case, and the intercurrent remedies, though needfully helpful, were still not other than empirically indicated on lines already amply dwelt upon. CHAPTER XXXIV. were NO doubt it would be better and more instructive if my cases systematically grouped and classified in some way or another, but I do not seem to know enough to be at present capable of doing this. What I present in this volume is really so new to practical medicine, that I can hardly hope to get beyond the stage of preliminary fragments: some material towards the upbuilding of practical phymatology from the clinical side. have before to-day quoted the saying of a great French physician, that the pretension of being perfect, and of only furnishing something that is entirely finished, too often results in absolute. sterility. I know a very able physician in the north, who years and years ago I Curability of Tumours. 261 was in the habit of sketching out to me the way he intended to handle this and that subject, by and bye when he could do it perfectly. "I detest the crude things that are published." Phthisis was the subject of which he knows a good deal, and about which he was going to write all these years since, going to work in a hypothetically perfect way, having at least some approximation to finality, and the style was to be literary, polished, and worthy of the subject and of homoeopathy. It has not come to pass: it never will, because perfection is unattainable except in effort, and finality is ultra- mundane. The man who bakes a few bricks might as well say he will make no bricks till the house is built and roofed in. But the bricks are needed for the building of the house. 262 Curability of Tumours. SMALL TUMOUR OF LEFT BREAST. LYMPHOMATOUS TUMOURS OF NECK. on A young lady of 17 years of age was brought by her mother to me February 25th, 1890, for a small tumour in the left breast that had already been reduced in size by homœopathic treat- ment, and also, and principally, for large strumous glands all round her neck under the jaw, giving the young lady an almost hideous aspect, she being very full in the face. She had never been ill till she had the measles at the age of two; the next summer pertussis, thereafter scarlatina, then the glands of the neck became very large, after this she had varicella and typhoid, all very badly; convulsions with nearly all of them. One sees a scar of ancient date in the neck. Curability of Tumours. 263 After Scarlatin. C. the tumour in breast a very small affair-could no longer be found. The glands under the jaw were not altered much, if any. Under Bacill. C., the glands began to lessen in size materially, but a visit to the seaside made them worse again. July 20th. Thuja occid. 30. October 31st.-The contour of the lower jaw can now be readily dis- tinguished, whereas when I first saw the patient, her face and neck ran into one another, the flesh of both being on the same level. "But" said the young lady's mother, "It was not the last powders that did that, but the ones before." R Bacill. C. December 11th, 1890.-The swell- ing of the glands has about three- fourths gone. Then followed two or 264 Curability of Tumours. three other remedies, and finally the Bacillinum again. Patient paid me her last visit just a year ago. The young lady has come out and been to a number of balls, and is highly delighted. Her mother sent me a photograph of the young lady taken after the cure, and though the neck looks to me still a little full, others do not notice it, nor do the ladies themselves. This case must be taken side by side with the subject of tuberculosis generally;* and in regard to tubercular or strumous glands, it must be remem- bered that strumous glands may be tubercular, and nothing else, or they may be tubercular and . *See my "New Cure of Consumption." Curability of Tumours. 265 And that is why schablonenmaessige Behandlung an indiscriminatingly routine treatment with the zoic specific must often fail inasmuch as remedies- at any rate highly dynamized remedies can never cure anything other than that to which they are homœopathic. I am here and there struck with the fact that, for instance, Bacill. will not act till Thuja has been given and then it will act beautifully the vaccinosis evidently barring the way, much as Hahnemann teaches in regard to psora and the use of Sulphur intercurrently. CHAPTER XXXV. After Operation for Cancer. [NASMUCH as I am fairly held responsible for my own diagnoses, I suppose those commonly considered my opponents will be content to abide by theirs. The following case was declared to be cancer by very competent surgeons, who testified to their faith therein by cutting off the lady's left breast. But cutting off an apple does not cure an apple tree of growing apples. CANCER OF THE BREAST. A married lady, 35 years of age, was brought by her husband to me on Curability of Tumours. 267 December 17th, 1888. She had four children, baby being four years old. She had been operated on for cancer of the left breast, some months. previously the whole breast—a very large one-being totally ablated, and now a tumour has come again in the right breast, and the old scar has become very painful. Patient was totally wrecked in her nerves, could not sleep and swayed to and fro' in awful dread and fear, exclaiming oh! and ah! being willing and anxious to go anywhere and do anything. Her hurrying up and down hither and thither I could compare only to the way a hyæna hurries up and down in its cage, and it is almost pathog- nomonic of the very worst type of cancer, and therefore a symptom I 268 Curability of Tumours. much dislike. An aunt of hers has cancer she tells me, but otherwise. her family history is good. She has been twice vaccinated and has had scarlatina and " nerves." She has a good deal of acne here and there, some of the little inflam- matory nodules getting large and very angry. The cure took just two years, and I could declare her quite cured at the end of the year 1890. At my special request she resumed ordinary married life again with her husband, she promising me that should she ever have another child she would suckle it with the one remaining breast. There followed cessation of the period in February, 1891, she was safely de- livered of a very sweet healthy little boy in September, and she has very successfully suckled the little mannie Curability of Tumours. 269 with her one breast; and there is now nothing very unusual about this lady, except that she looks very thriving, and possesses only one breast. And the treatment? Patient received from me in the order named-Urtica urens 4, Psor. 30, Hydrastis Can. 4, Bellis perennis p, Bacill. c., Thuja 30; Acid. hippuric 5, Helonias , Ignatia am. 1, Rhus tox. 3x, Bacillin CC., Cypripedin. 3x, and one or two others, and I must leave the case now, which I can do all the more willingly as the competent can see the reasons for them; for the incom- petent I am not writing. Very notable Surgeons, fellows of the Royal Society, and others are at times condescendingly hopeful that we look forward to the day when "a remedy for cancer will be discovered." What- 270 Curability of Tumours. ever knowledge such people possess, or do not possess, there are two things of which they know nothing real, viz., cancer, and the modes of action of remedies in cancer and cancerous diseases. People may be so eminent that they reach to the topmost heaven, but a con- catenation of morbid complexities, each one of which is a vital process, never can in the very nature of things be cured by "one" anything. You might as well try to grow potatoes in a field consisting of one chemical element instead of ordinary humus; or live in the hope of some day being able to win a long and very difficult game of chess by making "one" move all by itself. This running after a remedy for any disease of a complex nature is simple Curability of Tumours. 27I ignorance of fundamental principles, and bars the road of progress Cancer is a chain of links, and each kind has links of different nature and each link is a biological process. And you are going to alter all that with "A" remedy? It is absolutely un- thinkable, and has no parallel in pharmaco-biological phenomena. CHAPTER XXXVI. Small Tumour of Penis. AN unmarried gentleman, member of a learned profession, 46 years of age, came under my professional care on Nov. 14, 1882, for a hard lump on the middle of the shaft of the penis that had been there some months and that was probably of a specific nature. The treatment lasted 13 months, when there was no trace of it left. Patient had Aur. met. 4 trituration, and 3, Aur. mur. 3, Thuja 30, Platinum 5 trit., Kali chlor. 4x, Chelid. maj. 8, Liquor soda chlor., three drops in water night and morning; Syp. 200, Hepar 3x, and Sepia 3x. : Curability of Tumours. 273 THREE YEARS LATER. In 1886 I saw this gentleman, and ascertained from inspection and palpa- tion that there had been no return of the tumour. The nature of the tumour appeared to me to have been cartilaginous. CASE OF OSTEOMA PENIS. A married gentleman, verging on fifty years of age, came under my observation on November 23, 1888, for certain eye and heart symptoms, acne, and principally for a bony tumour in the shaft of the virile member. He had Thuja 30, Strophanthus I, Cean- othus Am. 1, and Bellis perennis 4, and then Vaccinin C. and thus a year or so T 274 Curability of Tumours. passed without patient having mustered courage enough to tell me of his bony tumour; in fact he did not tell me till the month of September, 1890. In the shaft, a little below the dorsal surface, I found a plate of bone an inch and a half long, and about three-quarters of an inch broad. Its edge felt sharp, and of course the organ was held out at an angle to the body, and slightly to the left. Patient informed me that he had not been fully aware of its presence till three months previously, and then because of its inconvenience on par- ticular occasions, and on account of his clothes. The organ was not the seat of any actual pain, but it ached intensely and persistently; bending himself somewhat forward patient would often distort his face slightly and say, "It aches." Curability of Tumours. 275 There is absolutely no history or soupçon of any thing specific; and patient is a teetotaler and a non- smoker, and otherwise a man of irre- proachable history and life. I therefore took, as therapeutic basis, the one elementary and un- doubted fact that there was a bony tumour, and prescribed Heclae Lava 30, five drops in water night and morning. This was on September 17, 1890. And, lest I forget it, I will just add that patient lived then (and lives now) on the chalk whence his drinking water is habitually obtained, latterly he boils it beforehand. but October 29th, 1890.-The osseous plate is distinctly smaller and thinner, but copulation continues to be very painful. R Rep. 276 Curability of Tumours. December 3rd.-The bone is rather smaller; copulation not quite so pain- ful or awkward, but the organ aches very much. R Aurum metallicum, 4th trituration, in eight grain doses at bedtime. And in support of this prescription, there was also long- standing diplopia of the auric kind. January 5th, 1891.-The osteoma penis is about three-fourths gone, but patient complains a good deal of indigestion. Rep. January 30th.-The eye is better, but there is no further improvement in the bony mass. R Hecla lava 12, ten drops in water at bedtime. March 6th. The eye is not quite so well, but the bony tumour has further diminished in size. R Aurum met., 4 trit.; eight grains at bedtime. Curability of Tumours. 277 April 29th. The bony tumour is now reduced to a gristly cord, all its boniness having gone; at first it was a longitudinal oblong plate, with a bony feel and sharp edges; now it feels like a tiny rope, but laterally not quite so defined as a rope would be. R Sodium silico-fluoride 6; ten drops in water at bedtime. June 19th.-Although the plate of bone has gone, the ridge of hard cord still exists from end to end, but not quite so cord-like. R Aur. met., 3 trit.; eight grains dry on the tongue at bedtime. August 7th.-Patient feels well, but there is still the gristly rope-like remains of the old bony plate. R Silicate of Sodium; five drops in water night and morning. Nov. 6th.—It is gone. Arnica 1. 278 Curability of Tumours. January 29th, 1892.-There is no return of the tumour, but we can just feel a little gristly node in the shaft, and when erect the organ turns aside somewhat. R Aurum met. 12. April 11th, 1892.-Quite well of the part, except that when erect the axis deviates somewhat, so he says. No doubt the tumour overstretched or destroyed some of the fibres, so that although all the tumour has disappear- ed, the tissue of its seat has lost some of its contractility; in other words. the tissue within puckers slightly. December, 1892.-Cure holds good. CHAPTER XXXVII. Keloid of Face. A FOREIGN gentleman, 32 years of age, unmarried, came under observation on January 22nd, my 1886. His flat-backed nose made me think of syphilis. His right ear and the skin in front of it were the seat of a new formation of scar-tissue, in extent about that of a child's palm, but with irregular contour: it was red in part, and portions were shiny and contracted with certain bridles of tissue produced by the contraction, the portion on the concha itself was not so distinctly cicatricial. It was very evidently on the increase. There were little spots from which a circumscribed inflammatory process seemed to start and finally these 280 Curability of Tumours. ended in scar. I am not very sure that it could be called true Keloid, but it was a new formation of scar- tissue, and I do not know what else to term it. Besides this he had eczema marginatum on the inner surface of the left thigh. But patient did not really come for this primarily, but rather for an inveterate gonorrhoea of six months standing that had defied treatment by old school and new, low dilutions and high potencies. The scarring process in the face arrested my attention as being very unsightly and of more interest than a common urethrorrhoea. In view of his nez camus I began the treatment with Syp. CC. Slight improvement in both keloid and gonorrhoea. Medorrh. 30 also im- proved both processes a little, but Curability of Tumours. 281 neither had done anything worth while. It turned out that he had had his first gonorrhoea ten years previously, which had been silenced by injections without much trouble. At the end of March I ordered Thuja occid. 30 which increased the flow from the urethra very much, but vastly improved the keloid. I then tried Med. C and thereafter Kali chl. 6 but with no advantage. The discharge was much more free in the evening and the keloidal dermatitis was very sore when he was lying down. Then for several months patient treated himself with Sulphur and Mercurius 31, but no further improvement followed. He had given up my treatment because the last remedy which I gave him in July, viz., Vaccininum 30, had made his gonorrhoea flux more profuse and more yellow, and caused great activity in the keloid. 282 Curability of Tumours. I went over his case afresh and noted that his lips were constantly peeling, and he was in the habit of biting off the loose bits of skin. Here I gave Malandrium CC., this was on December 8, 1886. In eight days he returned stating that this remedy had given a new start to his gleet and turned it into a gonorrhoea of the first water, and in examining the parts there was every appearance of a gonorrhoea with profuse yellow discharge. I told him to continue with his Malandrium CC. January 5th, 1887.-Has had a gathering in his prepuce which dis- charged for 10 days; the urethral discharge has much diminished. The Keloid greatly improved. Sepia 6 then finished the gleet, but the Keloid, though slowly improving, for a long time under the different remedies still lingered on. Curability of Tumours. 283 Cupressus In March he had Sabina 30 for about a month, and thereafter Lawsoniana 30 for a number of weeks, which finished the cure, and when he showed himself to me in the Summer of 1887, I could certainly tell where the keloidal process had been, but its activity was quite extinct, the scar had lost all redness and the remains gave me the impression. that he might at one time have had a small burn at the part. Long afterwards his brother con- sulted me and told me that the cure. had proved permanent. 284 Curability of Tumours. Two TUмours. A gentleman, twenty-four years of age, unmarried, and following a literary occupation, came under my observation on October 31, 1881, com- plaining of two tumours. One was very hard, and he had noticed it about two months; it was about the size of a walnut, and seated on the ribs behind on a level with the top of the liver; anteriorly to this a fatty tumour of the size of a halfpenny bun; has had this lipoma all his life, and it is now distinctly growing. R Psoricum 30; one pilule at bedtime. November 28th.-Both tumours are smaller, the lipoma being also softer. R Rep. January 9th, 1882.-The hard tu- mour is gone; the lipoma softer. R Rep. Curability of Tumours. 285 February 10th.-The fatty tumour is still softening. R Rep. March 6th. The lipoma is still getting softer, and in its upper half is also flatter. R Rep. April 3rd.-R Rep. June 12th.—The lipoma is smaller, flatter and softer. R Nil. July 3rd. Still diminishing. R Nil. August 2nd.-At a standstill. R Psoricum 30; one pilule at bedtime. September 4th.—Smaller. R Nil. 286 Curability of Tumours. September 25th.-Still smaller. R Nil. October 23rd.-Smaller still, and notably flatter. December 15th.—The tumour very very slowly is becoming smaller and softer. R Nil. · February 5th, 1883.-Standstill. R Psoricum 30; one pilule dry on the tongue at bedtime. July 13th. Still diminishing. R Rep. May 5th, 1884.-There is now only a vestige of the lipoma left, and patient discharged himself. This case is remarkable as having been treated by one remedy only during the whole time, and one dilution of that one remedy, viz., the 30th; and always the same dose, viz., one pilule. Curability of Tumours. 287 The remedy was here and there omitted, and when the progress seemed to stop it was again renewed. On the ribs at the back of the liver is a favorite site of these bun-shaped lip- omata. P.S.-About three years before I saw him, this gentleman suffered from a pustular eruption of his hands, for which Dr. A. C. Pope prescribed Silicea 30; but as he only prescribed. once, I suspect someone's ointment followed. But I have no positive information on this point. CHAPTER XXXVIII. Lipoma Cruris. A MARRIED lady, childless, came under my care on August 1, 1888, for a fatty tumour of the right thigh, near the vulva. Or rather she came under my care really for severe piles, "to avoid an operation," she having heard that I did not think highly of operations. The piles having been cured, her husband enquired whether the fatty tumour could be likewise got rid of by medicines. I replied that I would try, saying that I would at any rate do her no harm. Patient had often miscarried, and had had a polypus removed from the edge of the os uteri in former years by operation. She remained long under Curability of Tumours. 289 my treatment, and finally gave it up from weariness; and she did this the more readily as, though the lipoma is not gone, it is very greatly reduced in size. When I took her in hand the tumour, coming exactly between the thickest part of the thighs, rendered ordinary walking very difficult. This it no longer does, walking being now comfortable. Has been four times vaccinated. Is liable to cystitis, which she has had three times. She has also had rheumatic fever and severe sciatica. Cupressus Lawsoniana, Thuja occid. and Sabina are the remedies that did the good Of all tumours, ivory osteomata and lipomata, and certain cystomata, I find the most difficult to touch. The fatty tumours seem very indo- lent, and though I generally get them down about one-half or two-thirds, I IT 290 Curability of Tumours. do not succeed beyond that. Fatty tumours appear to arise from friction, as in this case from the rubbing of the fleshy thighs against one another— as witness the lipoma professionale of certain Russian women, Of course the friction is only the exciting cause, there is the neoplastic disposition behind. They are more common in women than in men, and I know several cases where the exciting cause is evidently due to the friction of the corsets. I have sometimes thought that the disposition is of a sycotic nature, but I have still an open mind on the subject, and await "more light." SMALL LIPOMATOUS CYST CURED BY THUJA. A young lady of ten years of age was brought to me by her mother on Curability of Tumours. 291 March 22, 1889, to be treated for a tumour in the wall of the left side of the abdomen, which had been probed and poulticed by two homœopathic practitioners. The lump would not go notwithstanding the homeopathic poulticing and the homoeopathic probing, and then the the help of a consultant from St. B's Hospital was obtained, but the tumour would not yield. After a month under Thuja occiden- talis 30, the tumour was well on the wane, and without any other treatment slowly withered and disappeared alto- gether. Two YEARS LATER. There has been no return of the tumour. CHAPTER XXXIX. Case of Ovarian Tumour. SEPTEMBER 29th, 1886.-On this date a gentleman brought his wife. to me for my opinion in regard to a pretty large tumour situate in the region of the right ovary, and which the local doctors had decided, with their per- mission, to excise. The Patient is forty-five years of age; childless; many years married. tumour had been coming for seven years, it felt very tense, but whether it was a cyst or fibrous, or what, opinions. were divided. In size it is about as big as a baby's head and globular in shape. The lump had only really obtruded itself much upon her notice for the past four months. Leucorrhoea for many years, which diminishes as the tumour gets larger. Curability of Tumours. 293 Much sinking at the stomach, dyspepsia (long treated as nervous,) severe stomachic pains; no pains in the tumour proper; costive; very nervous; once vaccinated; she is very weak, and tired; skin tawny and in parts very brown "I have always had good, but delicate health; I am bilious. but never had any disease, but I once had 'inflammation in the side.' She is the only child of a father who died at twenty-five years of age of phthisis, and her mother died at sixty-five, of bronchitis. The treatment lasted over five years, in fact nearly six, as I began to treat her in the month of September, 1886, and did not discharge her as absolutely well till September, 1891, when I very carefully examined the lady and could not find any remains of the tumour whatever. 294 Curability of Tumours. There were three reasons that conduced to rendering the duration of the cure very long, and they were these. First of all the patient was diseased all over, her original crasis was bad, and hence it was not merely a question of curing a tumour as a morbid product and the constitutional disposition thereto, but quite apart from the tumour the patient was ill throughout anteriorly to the neoplastic development, and in this case at any rate it is fair to assume that though the operation had been safely and successfully performed, still that would not have touched the previously-existing diseasedness of the lady's tissues. In the second place the cure was interrupted and much retarded by a bad carriage accident that happened during its course. And finally the patient lived a very long way off and I only saw her about five times during Curability of Tumours. 295 the whole time; and I might add that the treatment was often interrupted by domestic circumstances, so that though six years elapsed, I find I prescribed altogether about thirty different times, mostly by letter on on patient's own reports. me in the order She had from me in the named-Sulph. 30, Syph. CC., Med C., Sepia 6, Bryonia 3x, Bellis peren. I, Cundurango 1, Aurum mur. nat. 3x, Platin. mur. 3x, Nux 1x, Syph. CC., Bacill. C., Hepar 3x, Iodoformum 3x, Nux vom. Ix, Bryonia 4, Salufer. 5, Viscum album 3x, Fucus vesiculosus p, Hepar 30, Trifolium prat. p, and Aur. brom. 3. Looking back on the case I am of opinion that it is one of inflammatory cystoma, having its first start in the inflammation in the side. 296 Curability of Tumours. Patient is now in excellent health, and wrote me a graceful and grateful letter not many days ago quite of her own accord, merely that I might know that my labour of years had not been thrown away. RIGHT OVARIAN TUMOUR. A childless married lady, twenty- seven years of age, came to consult me on March 17th, 1885, for a lump in the right side of the abdomen and severe leucorrhoea. She had been married three years. She complained of feeling tired on awaking in the morning, with a nasty bitter taste in her mouth; severe frontal headaches; had backache low down; feels sick now and again; face spotty; chin pimply on the left side. Curability of Tumours. 297 The size of the "lump in the right side " I find I did not note, but it was readily felt and pointed out by the patient herself. Womb thickened, heavy and lying very low down. She had been once vaccinated and had had measles, scarlatina and varicella. The origin of the tumour is referred by the patient to falling against, or off a stile. About this time I had been reading of the good results. obtained, by a New York gynecologist, in uterine and ovarian tumours and indurations, from medicated sponges. placed within the vagina and left there, and which were used in this case, the medication being with Mercurius cor. 6. “acted very severely, These sponges sponges "acted causing copious discharge of a most offensive kind.” R Psor. 30. 298 Curability of Tumours. April 14th." The appearance of the sponges is now entirely different; now the discharge is yellow and there is no blood, but very offensive; difficulty in passing water" in the early morning. R Med. 30, and continue the sponges. May 30th." For eight or nine days the pain in the back continued to be very troublesome, some mornings I could scarcely breathe without caus- ing a very sharp pain; this passed off after I had been up an hour; frequent headaches, feeling of sickness whenever I sat up or walked about." Here I discontinued the use of the sponges as I found not only in this, but in other cases, that their use. was fraught with so much discomfort and suffering to the patient, and after all was only local messing and could, in the nature of things, only affect the product Curability of Tumours. 299 of the disposition, and not the disposi- tion itself. Moreover, although the same piece of sponge was only used once, the discharge was rendered very foul and most unpleasant to the lady herself. The fact is, the vagina is self- cleansing, and the less it is mechanically interfered with the better. All these modern difficulty-producing disinfecting injections are irrational, nasty and hurt- ful, except where there are lesions of continuity of extraneous origin, i.e., not a part of the disease-process itself. R Med. C. July 23rd. The tumour is more than half gone; the chin is covered with hard indolent pimples: whites nearly well; is now much freer from pain at the menstrual period than she has ever been in her life. Very much better all round. R Bellis p. 1. UorM 300 Curability of Tumours. 1 August 23rd.-Back very bad, she has retrograded. R Med. C. This did her so much good that I did not hear of her for six months, when I found only a small rest of the tumour, but the uterus itself was still enlarged. Here followed Helonin 3x in eight- grain doses a day, for a month; then Aletris farniosa o, fifteen drops a day, as an organ remedy, until patient had taken a fluid ounce, and finally, two months of Aurum muriaticum nat. 3x. This brought us to the fall of 1886. March 18th, 1890.—“I am quite well and walk eight miles a day." Curability of Tumours. 301 OVARIAN TUMOUR. A lady of thirty years of age, mother of one child, was brought by her husband to me on January 14, 1891, to know whether it was absolutely necessary that she be operated on for the lump in her right side; said lump was in the position of the right ovary, and about the size of a large orange, and not very well defined. Its exact nature I could not determine, the examination not being facilitated by very sufficient adipose layers. The tumour ached a great deal, and there was leucorrhoea. There being a, certainly rather vague, history of trauma, I ordered Bellis per. p. Ten drops in water night and morning. February 11th.-Sodium Bromide 3x. Eight grains night and morning. 302 Curability of Tumours. March 11th.-Last period seven days too soon; thereafter leucorrhoea. The tumour aches. R Apis 6. Ten drops in water night and morning. April 27th.-The tumour is smaller; an irritable tongue. B Colocynth 12. Ten drops at bedtime. May 25th.-Very much better; sides of tongue frothy. R Sodium bromide 3x trit. Eight grains at bedtime. June 22nd. - Well ; longer to be found. tumour no Discharged cured. In cases of this sort which yield in a few months to remedies, their very Curability of Tumours. 303 amenability to the remedies destroys the diagnosis, hence it can only be with the aid of very large experience that we shall be able to construct a therapy of tumours with something like positive differential indications. All being well I shall, by and by, attempt a few differentiations, but at present I do not feel I have quite sufficient data to go upon. CHAPTER XL. Abdominal Tumour. A LADY, fifty-six years of age, mother of a very large family, came under my care for a tumour in the epigastrium, on March 26th, 1886. Her mother had died of internal tumour. She was in a most miserable plight pains at the pit of the stomach, constant gnawing; tumid mass very tender; cachectic appearance; very weak; great thirst; passes a great quantity of pale water, rising as often as five times during the night for the purpose; headaches at the top and back; violent vomiting-distressing eructations; costive and chilly. Patient had had so many illnesses during her life that I had small hopes of her cure. Curability of Tumours. 305 I never could quite satisfy myself what the tumour really was, and its rapid cure gave me no proper oppor- tunities of studying the thing diag- nostically. My first prescription- Med. 30, hit the nail right on the head and forthwith initiated a cure which was complete in a few months. The other remedies were Ignatia am. 3x, Plumbum 12, Opium 12. And now, more than eight years later, patient continues in good health; the tumour has never returned. CASE OF OVARIAN TUMOUR. March 11th, 1885.-On this date a married lady, forty-two years of age, mother of six children, came to me for an abdominal tumour, situated in the X 306 Curability of Tumours. region of the left ovary, with pretty severe concomitant vaginal hæmorrhage and slight leucorrhoea. She had been twice vaccinated, and also had had variola. The tumour was long from side to side, i.e., it lay transversely seemingly from the uterus to some six inches to the left, to, where the left- hand end of an ovarian tumour would very likely be. The bleeding was at any time and in any position. The tumour had been there, and the bleeding, for about ten months, and were supposed to have had their origin in a fright. Previous to the fright the menses had been always regular, but scanty. Much pain in the tumour. R Thuja occidentalis 30. This cured the bleeding, and the period became normal. But the pain in the tumid mass. was worse; the abdomen much more distended; and Curability of Tumours. 307 patient complained very much that when once awake in the very early morning she could not get off again. R Bellis perennis 1. April 15th. No hæmorrhage; period normal, except that it is very painful in the left side. Patient feels very ill, faint, and fidgety, and has dreadful back-ache R Variol 30. After this patient felt somewhat better, but the tumour was no smaller. September 3rd.-Psor. 30. October 3rd. She is very much better, but bad leucorrhoea has set in, and it now transpires that patient formerly suffered very much from leucorrhoea, which had yielded to suppressive treatment, and after Variol. C. there was vaginal hæmorrhage 308 Curability of Tumours. which lasted twenty-five days, the period having previously missed. There are many flat warts on the body; much pain in the left side. November 10th-Med. C. February 2nd, 1886.-This remedy produced a very a very violent aggravation lasting several weeks, when health returned, the side was practically well, and the tumour was gone. After this a little swelling of the spleen and liver had to be righted, as also some indigestion, and this Myrica Cerifera 3x and Ceanothus Am. I speedily effected, when patient happily passed her change of life. Curability of Tumours. 309 SIX YEARS LATER. April 19th, 1892.—I this day care- fully examined the patient-as I have done several times during the six years that have elapsed since the tumour was cured-but find no trace of any tumour, and patient is in good health. and condition; I claim, therefore, that the cure is a Hunterian one, as not only is the tumour got rid of-the product of the disposition-but the disposition itself is likewise cured. CASE OF OVARIAN TUMOUR. An unmarried lady, 48 years of age, whose mother and grandmother died of cancer, as also did one of her mother's sisters, and one of her own sisters has been cured by me of two 310 Curability of Tumours. small tumours, came to me on Decem- ber 20, 1884, for a tumour of the left ovary, almost exactly like the one I have just described; I therefore need not describe it. This lady's most urgent symptoms were leucorrhoea and severe bleeding from the vagina, lasting for weeks at a time. Her period has always been profuse, but formerly lasted only five days, but now it will continue for weeks; at this date it has continued for three weeks. She has been three times vaccinated, and has suffered severely from left-sided neural- gia; the treatment lasted uninter- ruptedly till August 7th, 1886, but the notes are so voluminous that I forbear to transcribe them, so I will just pick out the the salient therapeutic features only. Thuja occid. 30 very materially lessened the leucorrhoea; she had it at intervals for several months. Curability of Tumours. 311 Phosphorus C. completely controlled the hæmorrhage for some time, but did not cure it; it recurred. The real cure of the tumour was effected by Med. 30, Sepia 3x, Med. C, and Psor. C; the Kal. Chlor helped. The only other interesting point was the fact that Sanguisuga off. 3x trituration (a capital and genuinely homœopathic styptic) given after the Phosphorus had ceased to act, stopped the hæmorrhage for good and all; it never returned, and that is over six years ago. Phosphorus C. was, how- ever, twice given afterwards for little shows," after which the change of life was established, and patient continues in excellent health to this day, with the sole exception of some nerve twitchings. of long standing, and which I have never succeeded in touching. As five years and a half testify to the cure, I think it fulfils John Hunter's conditions. 312 Curability of Tumours. NOTE ON SANGUISUGA. I have used Sanguisuga off-the good old leech of glorious memory— for a number of years in some cases of hæmorrhage, and at times with striking effect; at times it has failed me. I was first led to use it from perusing a short notice (the reference to which I have unfortunately mislaid) of some physiological experiments performed with it on the continent, from which it appeared the leech decomposes the blood in some way and causes hæmorrhage, and hence I conclude that it is homoeopathic to hæmorrhage whereof the cause lies in the blood itself rather than in the tissues through which the blood passes. And this would seem to explain why the bleeding from leech bites is often out of all proportion to the actual lesion in the continuity produced by the mechanical bite. Curability of Tumours. 313 I once saw a case of very nearly fatal bleeding from a few leech-bites in the inflamed neck of a young man, and yet the lesions were quite insignificant. Whether the leech has ever been used as an internal remedy by anyone but myself I am not aware. HARD MAMMARY TUMOUR. An unmarried lady, resident in London, thirty-eight years of age, came to consult me on January 13th, 1890, for a hard tumour on the left side of her chest, that had been growing for the past three years, and is now about the size of an orange. In the left breast there is a hard tumour, moveable, lying between the mammilla and the manubrium sterni ; the left nipple is scabby; left arm 314 Curability of Tumours. aches and feels weak; left breast itself aches. Patient's parents were cousins; father died at 46 of typhoid; mother still living and well, although she had had an ovarian tumour taken away by operation when 21 years of age; patient's only brother is alive. Three years ago patient knocked her left breast against a post, and she thinks her hard stays have had some- thing to do with it; she is of full figure. She had been twice vaccinated on the left arm, and her mother says that the first time "her arm was so bad she thought it would come off." She has had varicella. Her The tumour gets larger in wet weather, and before the menses. left ear gathers off and on for years. R Vaccinin C. Curability of Tumours. 315 February 14th.-Better; less tired and less weariness; the left ear gathers less; tumour rather smaller, but it is very hard, and nodulated; nipple less incrusted; the left arm is now comfort- able; she asks for the same powders again. Patient is dusky and tawny, ergo, Bacill. C. March 17th.-Lump is smaller; she looks better: "it was the first powders that took away the weariness. R Vaccin. C. " (The nipple is less incrusted.) April 23rd. The nipple is cleaner. R Bellis per. ; ten drops in water night and morning. June 4th. Says she is not so well; her complexion is much clearer. B Thuja occid. 30. 316 Curability of Tumours. July 9th-Better; the tumour is not so defined and not so hard, and the nodules are less distinct. There is now no incrustation of the nipples. R Sabina 30. October 15th.—The lump is very much better, and is now barely more than hardened milk-ducts. The left nipple is scabby again. The left ear gathers more; the breast is no longer influenced by wet. R Cupressus Lawson. 30. Ꭱ January 7th, 1891.-The tumour has not quite gone. R 1x Bursa Pastoris Ix; five drops in water night and morning. December 20th, 1891.-Discharged cured of the tumour, and in excellent health. Curability of Tumours. 317 CONGENITAL VASCULAR TUMOUR. Mrs. K. brought her one-year-old baby-girl to me on July 28, 1881. I found on the girlie's back, just to right of the spinal column and below the angle of the scapula, a red vascular tumour of the size of half a walnut, but flatter and more spread out; it was there at birth, but had been growing a good deal lately. At birth it was not quite so large as a sixpenny-piece, and it was flat; now it is almost three-quarters of an inch above the niveau. On the outside of the right thigh there had been a similar growth but much smaller, but that has gone all but a few little blood- vessels; the wee patient is in good health, ails nothing, and is fat; has nine teeth, and is beginning to walk. 318 Curability of Tumours. The family doctor very strongly urged its removal by operation because it had taken to grow so much, but being of opinion that the vascular tumour must have an internal cause of some kind, and as I can, personally, not see how a knife could possibly modify that, I advised its careful medicinal treatment, to the end that a truly Hunterian cure might be effected. Having nothing to guide me I went on hypotheses, and gave in succession Thuja 30, Ferri. Phos. 6 trit, Hamamelis ; Phos. 1,000, whereupon it shrank somewhat. Thereupon came Psor. 30, Sul. 30, Chenopodium 3x, Lycopodium CC., Merc. Met. C. and CC., Syph. CC., and here I see the note "vastly improved," and after Merc. "decidedly smaller." Thuja 30 and C., Aur. Met. 12, Fragaria Vesca 12, 1x, and Syph. CC., finished the treatment and the cure. Curability of Tumours. 319 It is over ten years since this little lady was brought to me, and the tumour was years before it finally withered and went. I saw patient's mother not many days since, and was informed, on enquiry, that the tumour had never shown any sign of returning since the year 1884 or 1885; and the young lady's back is quite normal in all respects. I have cured several such vascular tumours on the same lines, but this was the largest of all and the most difficult to cure; the smaller ones need therefore not be further referred to. INDEX. PAGE. 304 85, 121, 206 59 38 7 ΙΟ 14 26 : : ... : I ... 132 277 185 276, 278 168 118, 168 157, 176 16 : : : 85 89 85 Abdominal Tumour ... Abdominal Tumour cured... ... Accidents, Chapter of Acid Nitric in Tumour of Breast... Action, the kind of ... Range of Stop-spot of the Allsufficiency of Symptoms Appropriata Arsenicum in Ovarian Tumour Arnica in Osteoma Penis Atheroma of Scalp ... Aurum Met. in Osteoma ... ... Aurum Met. in Ovarian Tumour ... Mur. Bacillinum... >> Belladonna in Congestion of Brain Bellis Per. in Abdominal Tumour affinity of for left side an Anti-traumatic in Ovarian Tumours in Uterine Tumours Blown-out Feeling, Bovista in Bony Tumours of Skull : : : : : : : ... 153 147, 166 166 : : 59 62 Y 322 Index. : PAGE. 166 118, 135 147, 166 16 176 266 : : : ... 30, 31, 17+ ... 258 79 168 82 Bovista in " Blown-out" feeling in Ovarian Tumour in Uterine Tumour Brain, Congestion of Breast, Bacillinum in Tumour of Cancer of ... Silicea in Tumour of Tumours of and Thyroid, Swellings of Calc Fluor. in Enchondromata in Uterine Tumour Calc. Phos. in Osteoma Cancer, after operations for of Breast Cancerous Tumour of Tongue Cardia, Thickening of Causticum in Ovarian Tumour Ceanothus as a Splenic in Abdominal Tumour in Ovarian Tumour in Uterine Tumour Chapter of Accidents : : : : Chelidonium in Uterine Tumour... Chill-Pneumonia, Phosphorus in... Chronic Oophoritis... Colocynth Cure of Ovarian Tumour an Ovary Medicine Complex Cure, a Congenital Vascular Tumour ... 266 266 215 179 : : : : : : : : : : ... : : : 5:0 138 90 85 135 149 58 149 I I 144 159 161 : : : 130 317 Index. 323 PAGE. 16 23, 157 123 I02 289 283 108 27 179 Congestion of Brain, Belladonna in Consumption, new cure of... Cundurango in Tumour of Abdomen Throat Cupressus in Lipoma of Thigh in Keloid... : : : : Cupressus Lawson. in Warty Tumours of Mouth Cure of Tumours Curing Art Warfare "Curing," Surgical... Cyst, Lipomatous Cystitis Cystoma : Dietary in Tumour of Breast Difficulties of Treatment, The Dunham, Dr., Case of Eczema Marginatumn of Thigh : : ... : : ... Effects of Phosphorus on the Lungs Enchondroma ... : : : : Indicis of hand ... : 48 290 289 49 39 46 161 280 8 ... 49, 69 ... 79 : 71 : 72 ... : 106 : 59 60 : : : 229 279 284 Silicea in Etiological Doctrine of Homœopathy Exostosis Cured of Os calcis : Eyelid, Vascular growth inside ... Face, Keloid of Fatty Tumour ... ... : ... 324 Index. Ferri Pyrophos. in Uterine Tumour Fibroid of Uterus, Large... Fibroma, Composition of ….. Fragaria Vesca, a Mammary Medicine Remedies in PAGE. 168 164 49 250 ... 179 181 : 253 : : : : : 159 186, 201 : : : 49 18 70 229 74 275, 276 122 Gastric Tumour Generalisation Gilchrist, Dr., Case of Glandium Quercus Glioma ... Glonoin in Tuberc. Meningitis : : Grauvogl's Theory of Enchondromata Growth inside Eyelid Hay Baths in Enchondromata Hecla Lava in Osteoma Penis Abdominal Tumour Composition of Cure of Exostosis with in Uterine Tumour Helonias in Uterine Tumour Homœopathy in Tumour Curing Horses, Treatment of Splint in ... Hunterian Cure Hunter's conception of Cure Hydrastis in Tumour of Breast... Hypochondrium, Tumour in left Iodine in Tubercular Meningitis Isopathic Principle of Lux Kali Chlor. in Keloid of Face 61 60 149 149 54 : : : : : : ... 63 309 III 40 197 18 129 281 ... Index. 325 Keloid of Face ... : PAGE. Kali Bromide in Throat Affections Chlor. in Ovarian Tumour Kind of Action, The : Koch's Tuberculinum and Homœopathy Lipoma of Thigh Lipomatous Cyst cured Ladder of Remedies Plan Thuja in Lapis Alb. in Ovarian Tumour ... Uterine Tumour ... Lappa Major. Lecture on Cancer, Morton Left Ovary, Tumour of Like-acting Remedies Lipoma ... ... Lungs, Effect of Phosphorus on Lux, Isopathic Principle of Lycopodium in Ovarian Tumour Lymphoma, Post-aural Lymphomatous Tumour of Neck Mammary Tumour, hard Medorrhinum in Keloid : : : : : : : : : Malandrium in "" Mercurius in 279 103 134 7 194 284 288 291 291 98 135 127, 167 : : : : : : 148 III 130 ΙΙΟ 49 8 129 133 218 262 313 280, 281 : : : : : 282 281 238 232 28 Mammary Tumours and Marriage Marriage, bearing of Ovarian Tumours on Medicability, meaning of ... ... 326 Index. Medîcable, meaning of Medicina Hahnemannica. Paracelsica ... Medorrhinum in Ovarian Tumours in Uterine jlerc. Cor. in Ovarian Tumour Merc. Vivus in Tumour of Throat ... PAGE. 28 3 2 139, 154, 155 126, 171 133 100 in Uterine Tumour ... Neuroma ... New Cure of Consumption Nosodes ... ... Nutrition Remedies Nux Vom. in Uterine Tumour Osteoma of Penis Ovarian Tumour, case of ... Right-side Oophoritis, Chronic... Operation for Cancer, after Organopathy... Osmium Osteoma 145, 146, 147 49 ... 23 ... : 129 69 ... 146 273 ...292, 301, 305, 309 ... ... Calc. Phos. in Ovarian Origin of Tumours Ovarian Tumour and Marriage Ovarian Tumours, Arsen. Alb. in….. Aurum Met. in Bellis in Bovista in ... : : : : ... ... : : : : 296 144 266 85, 184 ... 139 49 83 37 130 232 132 132 153 135 Index. 327 Ovarian Tumours, Causticuin in Ceanothus in Cured by Colocynth ... : : : PAGE. 138 135 159 : : 134 135 .. 136-7 133 139, 154, 155 133 ... 138, 139, 154, 155 ... 154 Kali Chlor in Lapis Alb. in Liq. Soda Chlor in Lycopodium in Medorrhinum in Merc. Cor. in Psoricum in Silicea in Syphil. in Tarentula Cub. in Thuja in Variolinum in Viscum Alb. in Penis, Osteoma of Polypus, Uterine ... : : Penis, Tumour of ... ... ... 134, 135, 138 136 132, 137, 153 137 : : : : : : Persicaria in Uterine Tumour Phosphorus, Effects on Lungs in Phthisis ... in Pneumonia Physician, a General Phytolacca in Tumour of Breast... of Throat... Platanus in Abdominal Tumour in Cyst of Eyelid... in Cystic Formations ... 132 273 289 256, 271 : 147 7 8, II 179 40 103 122 ... 114 ... 116 328 Index. * Platanus in Psoriasis Platina in Uterine Tumour Platina Mur. "" Psora and Vaccinosis Psorinum in Abdominal Tumour... in Ovarian Tumour in Throat Tumour : : : : : PAGE. II6 148 167 218 122 138, 139, 154, 155 99 in Uterine Tumour 145, 148, 167, 168, 170 Rademacherianism ... ... Rademacher's Medicina Paracelsica Range of Action, The Remedies, Like-acting ... ... ... 3 2 10 ΙΙΟ Rhus Tox. in Uterine Tumours : : ... ... Sabina in Tumour of Breast Sarcoma in Warty Tumonr of Mouth Scalp, Atheroma of... Scilla Marit. in Spleen Cough Sebaceous Cyst Tumour of Scalp Sedum Acre in Uterine Tumour Sempervivum in Uterine Tumour Silicea in Tumour of Breast in Ovarian Tumour in Tumour of Throat in Uterine Tumour Skull, Bony Tumour of Soda Chlor. in Ovarian Tumour Solvent for Tumours : ... ... : : ... : : : : ... ... 145 38 108 149 185 92 185 : : : : 220 146 146 177 154 100 148, 149 62 ... 136, 137 5I Index. 329 Specificity of Seat Spleen. Diseases of ... Splints in Horses, Treatment of Steatoma ... Stop-spot of Action ... ... ... : Sulph. Iod. in Tumour of Throat... Surgical "Curing " Symptoms, all-sufficiency of Sycosis Symptomatic Cure of Tumours Syphilinum in Ovarian Tumours : in Tumour of Breast... in Uterine Tumour ... Swellings of Breast and Thyroid ... Sabina in Keloid in Lipoma of Thigh Sanguisuga in Ovarian Tumour Note on ... : : ... ... : ... : PAGE. 85 184 63 49 14 ΙΟΙ 48 26 : 107 159 134, 135, 138, 154 ... 177 127, 147, 148 258 ... 283 289 311 312 273 277 281 Silicate of Sodium in Osteoma of Penis... Sodium Silico-fluoride in Sulphur in Keloid Thigh, Lipoma of Thuja in Lipoma of Thigh in Lipomatous Cyst in Keloid ... Tumour, Abdominal... Fatty of Rib Tumours, two : : : ... ... : : : ... ... 288 289 291 281 304 284 : : :. 2 284 284 330 Index. Tarentula in Ovarian Tumour in Uterine Tumour Testis, Tumour of .. ... ... ... ... : PAGE. 136 149 254 46 79 179 98 122, 123 132, 137, 153 38 The Difficulties Theory of Enchondromata, Grauvogl's... Thickening of Cardia Throat, Tumour in ... Thuja in Abdominal Tumour in Ovarian Tumour in Tumour of Breast of Throat in Uterine Tumour : : : in Warty Tuinour of Mouth Tongue, Cancerous Tumour of Traumatism as cause of Tumours ... Treatment of Splints in Horses Tubercular Meningitis, Glonoine in Tumours, Abdominal Iodine in... : ... : Bony Cure of Cured Symptomatically by Colocynth Curing, Homœopathy in in Left Hypochondrium in Mouth, Warty 99 145 ... 107 215 85 63 ... 18 18 85, 206 : 59 27 a 159 159 54 ... ... 197 ... 106 125 in Uterine Region of Breast 31, 174, 223, 239, 247, 262 Acid Nitric in 38 Index. 331 1 Tumour of Breast, Sabina in Thuja in Tumours of Breast, Author's Work on of Left Hip of Penis of Scalp, Sebaceous of Throat ... : : PAGE. 38 : 38 39 243 ... 256, 272 ... 220 98 Ovarian Origin of... Solvent for... Urea in Tumour of Throat Uterine Tumours... Urtica Urens, a Spleen Remedy Uterine Fibroid Tumours ... ... : : ... ... : ... Aur, Mur. in Bovista in ... Calc. Fluor. in Ceanothus in Chelidonium in ... : Ferri Pyrophos. in ….. Hecla Lava in Helonias in Lapis Alb. in Lappa Major in Merc. Vivus in Nux Vom. in... Persicaria Nr. in ... : : Platina in ... : 152 37 5I ... 102 149, 170 204 144 125 168 ... 147, 166 168 149 I 19 168 ... 149 149 148, 167 148 146, 147 146 147 148, 167 332 Index. PAGE. Uterine, Tumours, Psorinum in 145, 148, 167, 168, 170 Rhus Tox. in Sedum Acre in Silicea in Sempervivum Tect. in Syphilinum in Tarentula in Thuja in Urea in Variolinum in ... Viscum Alb. in 145 146 146 148, 149 ... 147, 148 ... 149 ... 145, 148 ... 149 137, 146, 168 146 Urethrorrhoea 280 ... Uterine Polypus Vaginal Medication ... Vascular Tumour, Congenital Vaccinosis and Psora ... 289 : : 297 317 218 ... Variolinum in Uterine Tumours 137, 146, 168 Vascular Growth inside Eyelid 229 Viscum Alb. in Ovarian Tumours in Uterine Tumours Warty Tumour in Mouth ... Wen-Sebaceous Cyst 132 : : 146 106 ... Thuja in ... ... 107 ... : : : 185 Zoic Remedies ... 24 UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN 3 9015 02011 8454 Filmed by Preservation 1991