| Intensive study of detail seems to narrow the mental
horizon, cripple the faculty of
association and weaken the power of co-ordi-nating related phenomena.
So it comes about that we speak of voluntary and involuntary action
just as if every
one knew precisely where the one ends and the other begins; not
realising that this
center of control is a shifting one, a sort of flexible governor
which constantly adjusts
the surge and resurge of vital power.
Sickness is first felt as a disturbance of this governing center,
which if not too
violent and no terminal interference arises, soon subsides into
its accustomed play
again. These purely dynamic forces can be held in leash only by
a more or less
synchronously acting power, while irremovable terminal obstruction
surely makes for
death, by just that much.
It is here that we enter the arena of the age old struggle between
the realistic and the
idealistic or dynamic schools of thought. For us it is between surgery
and therapy;
everything depending upon our breadth of mind and point of view.
The realist leans
toward material and mechanical means, while the philosophically
inclined works out his
problems from the dynamic standpoint; all of which tells why the
law of similia does
not appeal equally to every one and why quite a few Homeopaths don't
fit well into
Homoeopathy.
For many centuries past the acts of medicine have, perhaps, not
always been
edifying. Like Omar it has mostly come out of the same door through
which it went in,
and over whose portal is graven the fateful word, Materialism. Once
within its noisome
precincts the student is intoxicated more and more at every step
until the supersensible
side of nature becomes to him but a vague, indefinite thing, unworthy
of serious
consideration. That the material is but the visible side of the
less palpable, but more
permanent , does not come up for consideration and ultimately it
becomes to him a dark
enigma.
Although continually struggling along material lines medicine
is always arriving on
the borderland of the immaterial and infinitesimal, with its law
of similia. Incredulity
and unbelief, ultimately based upon purely materialistic conceptions,
have however thus
far been sufficient to keep it from venturing into the domain of
the seemingly
intangible. Yet we need not be disturbed, for general science and
philosophy is slowly
but surely forcing the issue, in spite of the side-stepping opportunities
which the
victories of sanitary science afford.
Homoeopathy, springing from and preserving the vitalism of the
ancients, is nolens
volens, the leaven of modern medicine. Its victories have, more
than once, saved
medicine from utter rout and shameful defeat. While pathologists
have placidly hunted
microbes amidst the myriads of dying, Homoeopaths have calmly cured
the sick with
infinitesimals.
Of "the powers within" ordinary medicine has no just
conception,. hence no
philosophy and no means and methods. If it knew as much of curing
as it does of
anatomy, diagnosis, etc. we might indeed speak proudly of the "science
of medicine";
but as the matter now stands, aside from recoveries due to the recuperative
powers of
nature and homoeopathic cures, so-called cures are in reality a
sorry joke, with often a
tragic ending.
In this day we hear much about the near approach of science to
the discovery of
methods by which greater energy may be liberated and thus the whole
material world
revolutionised and benefited. Discovery is actually moving rapidly
in this direction; but
its consummation may after all not prove an unmixed blessing. Meanwhile
we as
Homoeopaths hold in our hands the golden wand with which we may
transform and
conduct almost unlimited stores of native energy into healing channels.
This being the
case, why is it that every homoeopathic physician is not also a
homoeopathic healer,
whose work will far outclass that of the ordinary physician? Perhaps
it is a large
question, but failing to grapple with it will not bring the correct
answer.
If we look back over our history and mark well the mental equipment
of those who
have left their impress upon our development, we cannot fail to
observe that it has been
the mind of larger grasp that has prevailed. The mind capable of
laying aside
preconceived ideas, willing to take facts as they come and for what
they are worth and
capable of drawing correct deductions therefrom.
True Homoeopathy is not the thing that comes out of the mouth
of its false
prophets, that has grown by establishing hospitals or by fattening
on privilege and
position. No! These things are self-destructive in their very nature.
Homoeopathy lives
and exists in the inner conviction of its votaries that nature cures
likes by likes; hence it
follows that it is our duty to acquaint ourselves with every means
by which we may
develop and facilitate curative reaction.
Such a study may at times seem to take us far afield, but if we
always keep with us
the lamp of pure philosophy and wisdom, and always act from the
point of pure
disinterestedness, the way and means will gradually become clear
and the truth will
prosper gloriously.
Under the guidance of a few devoted souls this Association was
born at a time when
the pathologic materialistic idea had already revolutionised old
school medicine and
was fast permeating the whole homoeopathic organism also. Sensing
the danger, they
banded together for the preservation of a purer and better Homoeopathy;
and now, after
a lapse of forty years and having passed through many critical vicissitudes
the Society
is what you see it today. Do not think that it has done but little
more than preserve the
traditions of glories that are past and gone. Its moral influence
has always extended far
beyond the limits of its membership, so that in these days, when
Homoeopathy in
general is undergoing a most severe moulting process, this organisation
stands as the
rallying point around which all of its adherents may foregather
and feel the joys
incident to a common interest.
Its archives hold many treasures of which it may well be proud.
Not only are there
records of cures of unsurpassed brilliancy but there are provings
not otherwise
available, philosophical dissertations of great acumen and debates
which throw light
upon many a moot point in practice. Dull is the man who can read
them and fail to feel
the inspiration for nobler and better work in the relief of suffering
and weak humanity.
If I stand before you and tell of the wondrous results of the
application of similia, it
may look brilliant, but unless it stirs up in you a desire to know
how you may also do
the like, my effort smacks of vaingloriousness and the fruit thereof
is dead.
If I would cure I must perforce arouse a similar reaction. If
I wish to excite you to
emulate the fathers in Homoeopathy I must appeal to your humanity,
that you may
awake and strive to find the straight and narrow path presided over
by the genius of
self-sacrifice in which they walked in the light of similia.
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