Arborivital Medicine. Being an Inquiry into the Curative Powers of Some of Our Common Field and Garden Plants, Judged of by Dise
Read Arborivital Medicine. Being an Inquiry into the Curative Powers of Some of Our Common Field and Garden Plants, Judged of by Dise by Diseases online for free. First published in 1895, this public domain book is available to read on How to eGuides.com in its entirety. Start reading instantly with no registration or sign-up.
Want a paperback you can flip through?
Get the Kindle or paperback edition.
Support How to eGuides.com by getting a print, hardcover, or Kindle edition.
Read this public domain book online for free. The complete text can be viewed instantly using the embedded reader above.
Description
Arborivital Medicine. Being an Inquiry into the Curative Powers of Some of Our Common Field and Garden Plants, Judged of by Diseases of the Ear. The Hahnemannian Monthly, July 1895. Pyrus Malus. – The common crab-apple tree.
Author: Robert Thomas Cooper
Year: 1895
"My preparation of the pyrus malus was not at all to my liking, having been made in the Autumn from the succulent branch of the crab-apple tree when it had finished fruiting; whereas a preparation more theoretically correct would be one taken earlier in the season from the flower and flower buds with the branchlets and tender leaves. In preparing the tincture I may mention it was made from the living tree, the branch being plunged into proof spirits of wine and exposed for an hour, the 12 φ A., to a fairly bright autumn sun; heliosthened, as I term it." - Robert Thomas Cooper Arborivital Medicine. Being an Inquiry into the Curative Powers of some of our Common Field and Garden Plants, Judged of by the Diseases of the Ear. Pyrus Malus. - The common crab-apple tree. This article originally appeared in The Hahnemannian Monthly , July 1895, pages 468-473. Published by The Homoeopathic Medical Society of the State of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia. This transcription is made available to the Internet Archive through the kind support of Stefanie Mann. If anyone would support publishing the writings of Dr. Robert Thomas Cooper, contact Barry Shaw at shawyouare@gmail.com