the dark, and of someone being behind him. There may also be a state of anxious delirium.
The Bromium fever can bring about delusions. Things appear to jump off the ground before her; she thinks people are looking over her shoulder and that she would see someone on turning; she feels as if spectres would appear in the evening. Many of the delusions are similar to Belladonna: the patient sees dead persons, images, phantoms; thinks that she is on a journey; has visions in the evening; thinks another person is in the room.
These patients’ mood is capricious. On waking, they may be cheerful, happy and lively, or quarrelsome and fretful with irritability. Generally they are displeased and dissatisfied. A desire for mental labour may be preceded by an aversion to her own profession. The patient is morose in the afternoon after siesta, or very low spirited with pain in the left iliac region. Concentration is difficult, with confusion of mind while writing, also at night on lying down. She is disinclined to read and has difficulty in fixing thoughts; there is a loss of ideas and forgetfulness. In general the patient is subject to intellectual weakness and melancholia. Hysterical or manic behaviour may include crying, howling, barking and lamentation with a hoarse voice. The patient is subject to hysterical attacks with fits.
The Bromium Child
Bromium is mostly prescribed for acute disorders and for children. It is especially suitable for children with thin, white, delicate skins, with very light hair and eyebrows, who are in general puny and sickly looking, and also for scrofulous children with enlarged glands. Dark haired children may also be affected. The children desire to be carried, particularly during croup, and nosebleed accompanies many conditions. Bromium mostly affects the