Homoeopathy : its nature and relative value / by Archibald Reith ; with an appendix by D. Dyce Brown.
- Date:
- 1868
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Homoeopathy : its nature and relative value / by Archibald Reith ; with an appendix by D. Dyce Brown. Source: Wellcome Collection.
Provider: This material has been provided by the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh. The original may be consulted at the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh.
96/96 (page 96)
![NOTE TO APPENDIX. Trousseau's Medication Substitutive.^' To the opponents of Honuvopathy who are led .by the opinions of emi- nent authorities, the fact that such an authority as Trousseau should advocate a system so siniiliir to Homoeopathy as his medication substi- tutive is rather awkward. They try to get out of the corner by main- taining that inasmuch as the substitutive treatment gives a dose wliich will at iirst make the patient worse, while Homoeopathy, in choosing the same medicine, only gives it in a dose less than will produce this aggrava- tion, that therefore the principles are entirely different—the difference being merely that of name, of dose, and of the consequent comfort of the patient. Unfortunately for this way of avoiding the difficulty, it can be shown that it was a knowledge and belief in the doctrines of Hahnemann that gave birth to the medication substitutive. It is known in France that this theory did not originate with Trousseau, but with the celebrated Bretonneau, whose pupil Trousseau was, and from whom Trousseau quotes so frequently. The rest of the story is better told in the words of the following quotation from a French work. (Not being able to procure the work, 1 am obliged to make the quotation second-hand.) Was Bretonneau acquainted with the labours of Hahnemann when he invented his substitution ? I reply he was ; and I bring in proof of my assertion the evidence of a venerable i^ld man (Dr. Guerin, of ChatiUon-sur-Indre, now eighty-seven or eighty-eight, and in full ])ossession of his faculties) who was the fellow-pupil and friend of Bretonneau. That distinguished physician, who has sometimes done me the honour of calling me in to a consultation, is a Homoeopath of twenty-five or thirty years' standing. Wishing to know the cause of his conversion, I latterly ]iut some ques- tions to him on the subject, and here is his reply—'It was my friend, Bretonneau, who put me in the way. Having heard of Hahnemann's wonderful cures in Germany, where his new method was much talked of, he resolved to acquaint himself with his works, which struck him forci- bly and he imparted his impressions to me. ' There is some good,' said he, ' in that system ; it is worth studying.' The confidence with which Bretonneau inspired me set me a thinking in my turn. I studied the system ; I understood it; and then, after adequate preparation, I com- menced the practice, which I have continued to this day, with success which I had never attained in the old school.' 'But,' said I to M. Guerin, ' how comes it that Bretonneau did not adopt, on his own ac- count, the advice which he felt bound to give to his friends ?' ' What are you thinking of?' said the good old Doctor, 'position ties a man down ; and the position which Bretonneau had gained among the princes of the medical science could hardly allow him to break openly with ante- cedents full of brilliant promises for the future, and to emancipate him- self with eclat from those deadly prejudices of his school which have turnetl, and continue every day to turn, so many fine intellects from the only way which, in my opinion, can ever give our poor art an ascending direction. I rejoined, ' Bretonneau was at perfect liberty to accept or reject Hahnemann's doctrine, but could he honestly rob him of his pro- perty in order to pervert his system for the benefit of his personal ambi- tion'' 'Have patience,' replied my interlocutor, ' honesty is the best policv Wait till the hour of reparative justice shall sooner or later de- clare for the lawful possessor.'-(Ciiauvet, Le discours de M. Ducloc, Lettre tH'auteur, Tours, 1867.) O. COKNWALL AND BONS, PK1KTEK3, ABEKDElM.](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b21911101_0098.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)