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One hundred years and more have now come and gone since the author
of
these posthumous manuscripts first saw the light of day, on the
family
estate of "See" of his noble forbears in Germany. A blood
relation of
the reigning House, he was descended from a long line of distinguished
ancestors. He was the eldest son of the late Count Ludwid and Countess
Augusta zur Lippe and was destined by them for the profession of
law.
He, therefore, finished his academical preparations and was graduated
from the Uiversity of Berlin. While prosecuting legal studies there,
however, taste and opportunity attracted him to the more congenial
pursuits of medicine, and at the close of a year, he devoted himself
thereto.
Emigrating to the United States in 1839 he presented himself to
the sole
school of the homeopathic practice in this country - the old
Allentown Academy of the Homoeopathic Healing Art. After
assiduous application he was granted his diploma from Dr. Constantine
Hering, as President of the institution, on July 27, 1841. Removing
to
Pottsville, Dr. von Lippe practiced with success and growing ability
until called to a larger field, at Carlisle. Here the prevalent
epidemics of the Cumberland Valley gave him a new distinction, by
means
of which he was, six years later, induced to settle in Philadelphia.
Here he speedily attained a marked distinction in the most fashionable
practice of his day. Aside, however, from his strictly professional
labors, Dr. von Lippe had been a regular contributor to homoeopathic
literature and an active correspondent with his confreres in foreign
parts, and more especially with Wilson in London and Rocco Rubini
in
Naples. The correspondence, now turned yellow with the lapse of
years,
is both interesting and instructive and quite fully attests the
warm
friendship of many admirers. Rubini's original pamphlet in Italian,
introducing the cactus grandiflorus, is particularly valuable.
Dr. von Lippe filled the chair of materia medica in the Homoeopathic
College of Pennsylvania from 1863 to 1868 and with distinguished
success. He also translated valuable Italian, German, and French
Homoeopathic essays and treatises, that are now standard. He augmented
and improved the homeopathic meteria medica, and by his clinical
reports
has shown how this may be rendered practically available and utilized
in
the application of homoeopathic knowledge and principles. Adopting
homoeopathy after careful examination, when qualified to institute
and
conduct it; believing it to be progressive rather than stagnant,
and
having devoted the best years of a prosperous life to establishing
its
claims in this country, he absolutely rejected all claims and
solicitations that would have recalled him to Germany.
Just now when the thought of the entire medical profession the
world
over is veering away from polypharmacy and courting the single agent,
when men like von Behring and Wright and Roux are tempering the
actual
etiological factor in degree for the acquisition of a beneficent
immunity, when the size of dose as exemplified by preparations of
tuberculin are reduced to one millionth of a milligram, when the
physicians of all schools unite in admitting the need of testing
the
action of drugs on humans themselves and when in a state of health,
it
may surely be of interest to read and pursue the works of this great
German nobleman who was in point of fact the indomitable Ajax of
the
homoeopathic practice of his day. Standing at the very door of
the
citadel of truth he kept the sacred fires of healing science alit
by the
broad-axe of truth itself.
Like the sire of Hahnemann himself he lived the motto of that man's
belief "To act and to be, not merely to seem."
William B. Griggs.
Philadelphia.
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