DROSERA ROTUNDIFOLIA



265. (Heat and sweat on the chest, thighs and houghs, with thirst, all day and night.)

Night-sweat.

Sweats. (Observation.) [BONFIGLI, in Vicat, l. c.]

Anxiety with feeling of heat quickly running all over the body, but especially all over the face, as though he were about to receive bad news (aft. 3.1/2 h.), and again (aft. 27 h.) rigor all over the body, without heat and without thirst. [Lr.]

270. Restlessness; when reading hecould not stick long to one subject – he must always go to something else (aft. 36 h.). [Gn.]

All day long, uneasiness of disposition and anxiety, full of mistrust, as if he had to do with none but false people (aft. 38 h.). [Lr.]

Extremely uneasy, sad disposition, all day – he imagined he was being deceived by spiteful, envious people. [Lr.]

Silent and reserved; with anxiety – he always feared he was about to learn something disagreeable. [Lr.]

Anxiety, as if his enemies would not leave him quiet, envied and persecuted him. [Lr.]

275. He is sad and dejected about the ills of life, which people cause one another and himself, respecting which he is anxious and concerned; at the same time want of appetite (aft. 5 h.).[Gn.]

He is dejected about the malice of others on all hands, and at the same time disheartened and concerned about the future (aft. 4 d.). [Gn.]

Anxiety, especially in the evening (about 7 or 8 o’clock), as if he were impelled to jump into the water in order to take his own life by drowning- he was not impelled to any other mode of death. [Lr.]

Anxiety in solitude – he wished to have someone always near him, could not bear to be without companions, and was quieter when he had someone to sleak to; but when they again left him in solitude, he was all the more anxious, until he fell asleep; on awaking the anxiety returned (for six successive evenings). [Lr.]

The anxiety appeared to rise up from the subcostal region.[Lr.]

280. Very peevish; a trifle puts him out of humour.

He takes insults very resentfully, not without vexation.

Unhappy, obtuse of sense and disinclined for manual and intellectual work (aft. 33 h.). [Gn.]

An unimportant circumstance excited him so much, that he was beside himself with rage (aft. 4.1/2 h.). [Gn.]

Obstinate prosecution od resolutions he had formed.

285. He feels an inner tranquillity and cheerfulness. (Reaction of the vital power, secondary action, curatvie action.) (aft. 12 h.). [Gn.]

Tranquillity of disposition. (Reaction of the vital power, secondary action, curatvie action.)[Lr.]

Happy, steadfast disposition; he dreaded no evil, because he was conscious of having acted honourably. (Reaction of the vital power, secondary action, curatvie action.)[Lr.]

Samuel Hahnemann
Samuel Hahnemann (1755-1843) was the founder of Homoeopathy. He is called the Father of Experimental Pharmacology because he was the first physician to prepare medicines in a specialized way; proving them on healthy human beings, to determine how the medicines acted to cure diseases.

Hahnemann's three major publications chart the development of homeopathy. In the Organon of Medicine, we see the fundamentals laid out. Materia Medica Pura records the exact symptoms of the remedy provings. In his book, The Chronic Diseases, Their Peculiar Nature and Their Homoeopathic Cure, he showed us how natural diseases become chronic in nature when suppressed by improper treatment.