MAGNETIS POLUS AUSTRALIS



General shivering (immediately).

Sensation as if cool water were poured over the head on to the chest (immediately). [Hsch.]

Chillinesss in the room, all day, especially after a sleep in the evening (aft. 24 h.).

Chilliness of the legs up to the knee, with heat rising up towards the head and rush of blood to the head.

340. Rigor with feeling of coldness, for two hours, without thirst and without being actually cold; then great warmth (also when walking in the open air), with thirst and sweat on the forehead and chest, especially in the scrobiculus cordis (immediately).

Chill, in the afternoon, especially on the upper arms (aft. 3 h.).

Cold feeling on the knees (immediately).

(On drinking a shivering in the calves.)

345. General shivering (immediately). (Repetition of 337.)

Chilliness, with dryness in the mouth and thirst (immediately), then headache; beating on one side, followed by out-pressing in the middle of the forehead and great chilliness in the open air (aft. ½ h.).

Cold feeling in the left scapula (immediately).

Cold feeling in both arms and in the left side.

During the chill much itching on the back.

350. During the chill flapping noise in the ears.

(In the chill he must go to bed.)

In the evening cold feeling (without shivering) all over, without thirst (except at the commencement of the chill), and without being actually cold; at the same time very cross, everything was disagreeable to him, even eating: followed (aft. 2 h.) by heat and sweat all over, without thirst.

Internal coldness in the affected part.

The left hand seems to him much colder, but is warm enough, indeed, warmer than usual (immediately).

355. During the chill proper warmth of the skin, with dryness in the mouth and great thirst; after some hours profuse sweat all over, without feeling of heat, on the contrary he had shivering over the sweating parts under the bed clothes, as if they were affected with goose-skin.

Some hours after the cold feeling an inward dry warmth, when walking (aft. 7 h.).

On the thighs rather a coldness and feeling of coldness, with heat of the sexual parts.

During the chill or feeling of coldness he was quite warm, yet he was constrained to lie down and cover himself well up; he had great dryness in the mouth; he then broke out in profuse sweat all over, without hot feeling, on the contrary he had always shivering over the sweating parts, as if goose-skin ran them; at the same time flapping noise in the ears.

(Awakes in the morning with violent headache, some heat, alternating with chill; he could not leave the bed)(aft. 36 h.).

360. Internal warmth, without thirst.

After a meal heat of the face.

Sensation of warmth, which gradually passed over into heat (in a woman in the zoomagnetic sleep, from touching with the south-pole). [HEINIKE, l. c., p. 4.]

Warm sensation at the point of contact.

Hot hands after midnight in bed.

365. Warmth all over especially in the back (aft. 6 h.).

Uncomfortable, unusual heat, with surly disposition (the 1st 36 h.).

At various times heat rushing over one part of the body to another, e.g. from the thigh down over the tibia. [Hsch.]

When lying in the evening in bed, ebullition in the blood, as if it hopped in the blood-vessels.

For two successive mornings perspiration in sleep.

370. In the night general sweat.

Thirst for two days, without heat.

Great dread of open air; even when it is not cold it penetrates through the marrow of the bones, with feverish, lachrymose humour (aft. 12 h.).

From a slight cause, violent anger; he becomes hasty and trembling, and breaks out into violent language. [Stf.]

Wild, hasty, harsh violent in word and deed (which he is not himself aware of); he asserts himself with vehemence and despises others, with distorted features. [Stf.]

375. After walking in the open air quarrelsome, surly (aft. 20 h.).

After a sleep, towards evening. Extremely cross and surly (aft. 20 h.).

After a sleep, towards evening. Extremely cross and surly (aft. 24 h.).

Surly, cross, peevish (aft. 3 d.). [Stf.]

He is silent; it vexes him to speak (aft. 2 d.). [Stf.]

Society is disagreeable to him, he wants to be alone. [Stf.]

380. He dislikes cheerful faces (aft. 3 d.). [Stf.]

He is much given to start when any one touches him.

Cheerless, dejected, as if he were alone, to had received some bad news, for three hours (immediately).

Weeping (immediately).

Irresolution (the first hours).

385. Great sadness, discontented with himself.

Dislike to work and peevishness.

Great quickness if fancy.

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.