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Materia Medica Viva Volume 10 – page 2302

The Mental Picture
Euphrasia patients feel emotionally bad when lying down at night. After lying down they start sighing, they develop a weeping mood, feel confused in mind and anxious; and sometimes develop a fear that they may go blind. The nocturnal time of mental aggravation is usually the opposite to the time of physical aggravation, which is during the day.
There is general depression; Euphrasia patients are buried and lost in thought, unable to communicate with their surroundings. They have aversion to company, to communication and to speech. Euphrasia patients are often introverted and quiet, they do not say much, they do not communicate much with the outside world; and frequently they are not inclined to take much in from the outside world either. ‘Indolent, hypochondriac, the external objects were no incentive for him, had no life for him’, is a symp- tom from the Materia Medica Pura.
So Euphrasia can be thought of in states of mental depression coup- led with eye complaints and disturbances of speech. Another prover exhibited ‘fretful mood’ and ‘great irritability’ instead of apathy; sometimes an ill-humoured silence will prevail.
Finally Euphrasia also has disturbances of speech that have their roots in the brain. The patients have to re-start several times in order to pronounce a word; it is like stammering, but it not only refers to single words, but also to whole parts of sentences. They seem to be discontented with the expression they have used, and so they interrupt themselves and try to say the same thing again, using other words. Thus, sometimes all the functions that are necessary for speaking seem to be disturbed; cheeks and lips, larynx, nerves and brain seem to work only reluctantly. A weakness of memory is also mentioned by Hering. It is not surprising that in the mental sphere of Euphrasia, a disinclination to speak is prominent.