MAGNES



Dull, numb pain. [ANDRY et THOURET, l. c., p. 100.]

300. (Nocturnal pains). [ANDRY et THOURET, l. c., p. 130.]

Drawing and shooting pain mingled with itching. [ANDRY et THOURET, l. c., p. 219.]

Drawing pain. [ANDRY et THOURET, l. c., p. 220.]

Shuddering drawing through the whole body. [UNZER, l. c., p. 14.]

A tug through the whole body almost like a shudder. [UNZER, l. c., p. 12.]

305. Joints painful to the touch. [UNZER, l. c., p. 110.]

Pain of the part to which the magnet is applied, as from the near approach of red0hot colas. [UNZER, l. c., p. 10.]

Pain of the part to which the magnet is applied, as from the near approach of red-hot coals. [UNZER, l. c., p. 10.]

A formication as if all the humours accumulated at the part where the magnet lay. [ANDRY et THOURET, l. c., p. 130.]

On the chest (at the part where the magnet was applied) small pimples. [ANDRY et THOURET, l. c., p. 149.]

(At the place where the magnet was applied) a very itchy eruption. [ANDRY et THOURET, l. c., p. 159.]

310. Under the applied magnet the skin is painful and excoriated, and round about are itch-like pimples filled with pus. [ANDRY et THOURET, l. c., p. 176.]

Red eruption, red spots (at the part where the magnet was applied?). [ANDRY et THOURET, l. c., p. 196.]

Red eruption, like vesicles, in the palms of the hands. [UNZER, l. c., p. 33.]

At the part where the magnet is applied a burning itching, which compels him to scratch till the blood comes; the skin is red, and round about there are small papules, which soon go off. [ANDRY et THOURET, l. c., pp. 214, 215.]

Round about the part where the magnet is applied eruption of large pimples. [ANDRY et THOURET, l. c., p. 220.]

315. At the part where the magnet is applied there occur deep little ulcers, the size of lentils. [ANDRY et THOURET, l. c., p. 219.]

Widely extended eruption of pimples and even of pocks, with drawing and shooting pain, – also red spots round about. [ANDRY et THOURET, l. c., pp. 241 – 243.]

Discharge of a reddish fluid from the wound. [ANDRY et THOURET, l. c., p. 128.]

The spot where the magnet was applied goes to sleep, becomes numb and insensible. [ANDRY et THOURET, l. c., p. 232.]

320. A shock, so that the upper part of the body as far as the hips is forcibly bent upwards and forwards, with a cry. [UNZER, l. c., p. 23.]

When lying, the upper part of the body is spasmodically raised up (with a cry) as from a shock, so that the body is thrown forwards with the nose on the bed, and just as forcibly thrown backwards. [UNZER, l. c., p. 29.]

The upper part of the body spasmodically raised up and driven forwards, and thrown back upon one side. [UNZER, l. c., p. 33.]

(Frequent starting and raising up as from shocks) violent shocks, which were followed by general trembling of the body, burning in the chest, through both arms, and sweat all over. [UNZER, l. c., p. 18.]

All the convulsions from the magnet did not alter the pulse. [UNZER, l. c., p. 1.]

325. Shock like a start through the body, followed by sweat on both hands. [UNZER, l. c., p. 18.]

On rising from the (midday) siesta stiffness of the body when moving.

In the morning after rising great exhaustion with anxiety (aft. 44 h.).

Frightened, starting up with a cry, followed by sweat all over the body. [UNZER, l. c., p. 17.]

Paralysis for ten days with loss of sensation, but with normal warmth and moisture of the limb. [ANDRY et THOURET, l. c., pp. 214, 215.]

330. Shocks deprive him of consciousness. [UNZER, l. c., p. 25.]

The spasmodic raising up (and shocks) of the body forwards on to the bed are followed by long-continued unconsciousness, thereafter (p.39) a blowing with the mouth, as if he felt great heat, whereupon consciousness and liveliness return. [UNZER, l. c., p. 32.]

Unconsciousness with staring turned-up eyes, open mouth, almost imperceptible respiration, and with a movement in the chest resembling palpitation of the heart, with unaltered ordinary pulse. [UNZER, l. c., p. 101.]

During the unconsciousness moving of each finger in succession; after the recurrence of consciousness profuse sweat. [UNZER, l. c., p. 96.]

Exhaustion in all the limbs with a syncope of short duration recurring several times. [ANDRY et THOURET, l. c., p. 155.]

335. (Attacks of syncope, during which she retained consciousness. [ANDRY et THOURET, l. c., p. 160.]

Long continued syncopes, during which she retained consciousness. [ANDRY et THOURET, l. c., p. 196.]

Syncope, wherein she feels the sufferings, but on account of inability to speak or move cannot complain. [UNZER, l. c., p. 48.]

Syncopes. [ANDRY et THOURET, l. c., p. 232.]

He becomes exhausted immediately, without sleepiness, and wishes to partake of something of a cordial and strengthening character, but he knows not what (immediately).

340. In the very early hours a waking slumber if several hours duration, but after sunrise stupefied sopor ot profound sleep, full of tiresome passionate (e.g. vexations) dreams, which ends with a headache as if the whole brain were sore, this goes off after rising.

Sleep with dreams full of distress and anxiety, like night-mare (aft. 30 h.).

Very vivid, lively dreams, as if an adventure occurred to him when awake.

Dreams full of feasting, boasting and talking big.

Dreamful sleep with open mouth.

345. Waking up about 3 a.m. – after some hours’ of dreamful slumber, then, without thirst, sensation of heat in the limbs, which he first wishes to have uncovered, afterwards carefully covered up.

He snores during sleep in the morning. (After touching the middle of the magnet.)

He wakes up from 3 a.m., but in the morning at sunrise his eyelids close and he lies in a state of stupefied slumber, full of tiresome dreams.

In the morning he lies asleep on his back, one open hand lies under his occiput, the other over his stomach, with the knees spread out, with snoring during inspiration, with half open mouth and low talking in sleep; he dreams of amorous subjects and seminal emission (though none occurs); after waking, headache in the occiput, as after occiput, as after a pollution, tightness of the chest and bruised pain of all the joints, which goes off after rising and moving the body, whilst a large quantity of catarrhal mucus is thrown up.

Lascivious dream, even during the midday sleep, with discharge of prostatic fluid; after waking the genitals are very much inclined to emit semen (aft. 2 h.).

350. At night, towards morning, waking sopor (during which he hears every noise and has some power of thinking), which after sunrise changes into a stupefied supor, in which he neither hears nor feels anything, except violent pains, as from a long journey, and as if bruised in all the joints, which compel him always to change the place of his limbs, with loud rumbling in the abdomen, occasionally interrupted by discharge of flatus, and a disagreeable feeling of bodily heat; during which he generally lies on his back, with open mouth. After waking and opening the eyes the pains in the limbs soon diminish; but instead thereof, there occurs a headache of a similar character, which after rising changes into a headache such as occurs at the commencement of a stuffed coryza, but which soon goes off after sneezing and flow of mucus from one nostril.

He wakes up about 1 a.m.

In the morning, in sleep, sweat without heat, or bland copious exhalation of the whole body which does not weaken him (and goes off after waking.)

He talks in his sleep.

Insensibility and (fatal) sopor. [ANDRY et THOURET, l. c., p. 115.]

355. Moaning in sleep as from an anxious dream. [UNZER, l. c., p. 25.]

In his sleep he snores during inspiration but during expiration he breathes through his nose.

Tossing about in bed during sleep.

He throws himself about in bed at night and thinks he is uncomfortable in every place.

360. In the morning, after waking up completely, flatulence accumulates in the hypogastrium with loud rumbling; flatus is discharged, there occurs great sneezing, copious flow of mucus from the nose, and yawning, all which, however, soon go off.

In the morning, on awaking from sleep, the mouth is covered with thick, almost dry mucus, and the eyelids are dry; both go off after sneezing and discharge of nasal mucus.

A mixture of cold and burning shivering all over the body, which was extremely sensitive. [NUZER, l. c., p. 28.]

In the evening, before lying down, an attack of the symptoms of a catarrhal fever; the shafts of the bones of the limbs are painful as if bruised in their middle, at the same time obtuse, obnubilating headache; he is hoarse, and viscid mucus lies on his chest (in the trachea) (aft. 4 h.).

After midnight fever; without shivering, disagreeable feeling of heat in the whole body, especially in the palms and soles, with dryness in the throat and sweat on the face, the nape, and, indeed, all over the body.

365. Fever for more than three days. [ANDRY et THOURET, l. c., p. 186.]

Fever for fourteen days. [ANDRY et THOURET, l. c., p. 176.]

On the affected part sensation of heat and formication. [ANDRY et THOURET, l. c., pp. 214, 215.]

Dry heat in the morning in bed.

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.