would go insane in agony. I gave him an ordinary minute dose without effect. Then I gave him two five drop doses of the tincture at short intervals. This produced complete relief. This I followed by one drop doses every half hour for a few hours.
I told him to take the following regularly. Ten drops of the tincture in half glass of water, two teaspoonfuls four times daily. He was told if the pain became severe to take five drops of the tincture as before. This he was obliged to do only a few times. He also was completely cured.
The value of Gelsemium in neuralgia and migraine became strongly impressed on my mind, and I had many verifications of its power.
Case of psychoneurosis
The second patient, a young man of thirty-seven, came to my office October 20th, 1931. He was suffering from persistent dull headache in the left parieto-occipital region extending down neck. This had lasted one and a half years. No treatment helped. He had just spent thirty-two days in one of the great New York hospitals. X-rays were taken and all other diagnostic tests were made. Psychoneurosis was the diagnosis. The diagnosis was good, but the treatment failed to be of the slightest benefit. Heat was applied daily for nineteen days. Aspirin, massage and other forms of treatment failed.
On his first visit I prescribed Gelsemium tincture, ten drops in half glass of water, two teaspoonfuls four times daily. In one week he had improved. I then substituted twenty drops instead of the ten. In another week he was practically well, only experiencing a slight soreness in the occipital region, but no violent attacks. He returned to work without discomfort and continued to improve in every way.
The Homeopathic World, 1932, September No. 801