Such is the conclusion of my clinical observations made at Hôpital St. Jacques in August, 1895.
What I said last year I can only repeat with renewed confidence in this; and I hope that the years which follow will not cause me to alter my opinion.
FOOTNOTES:
[C] L' Union Homéopathique, vol. v, No. 3.
[D] Homœopathic World, vol. xxvi, No. 304.
[E] "On Tuberculin," an extract from the Journal Belge d' homéopathie, 1895.
[F] Pathogenese, sua importancia.
[G] Dr. J. Compton Burnett, in his book, "New Cure for Consumption," p. 129, makes this remark: "The best way to get some really good Bacillinum is to take a portion of the lung of an individual who has died of genuine bacillary tuberculosis pulmonum, choosing a good-sized portion from the parietes of the cavity and its circumjacent tissue, as herein will be found everything pertaining to the tuberculous process—bacilla, débris, ptomaines and tubercles in all its stages (such was practically the origin of the matrix of my Bacillinum) and preparing by trituration in spirit. In this way nothing is lost."
[H] I have tabulated shortly their various characteristics.