There are three things which almost every person gives himself credit for under- DR. BEDDOES. VOL. IV. FOURTH EDITION. LONDON: PRINTED BY C. WHITTINGHAM, DEAN-STREET, FETTER-LANE, FOR T. COX, ST. THOMAS's-STREET, BOROUGH, AND H. D. SYMONDS, PATERNOSTER-ROW; 1799. LAW III. A too great Excitement of the Nerves, or moving Fibres, exhausts the Powers of the Mind, and enfeebles the Body. Homeop - Fee Clark 8.26.25 12115 INTRODUCTION. SECTION I. OF EXHAUSTION. THE state of exhaustion in the nerves, as in the irritable fibre, may be either, 1. TEMPORARY, or 2. IRREPARABLE. In the state of temporary exhauftion, the mind is tired, and, like the body, recovers its due tone only by rest: But in the state of permanent exhauftion this recovery is flow, and, generally, irreparable. |