BUFO RANA
The Toad. (The common variety, proved by Mure).
N.O. Bufonidae, Batrachidae.
Solution in rectified spirit of the poison expressed from the cutaneous glands.
In spite of modern scepticism regarding the poisonous properties of the toad, Shakspere, who seems to have known everything, was absolutely correct in speaking of the toad as having ‘sweltered venom ‘. The poison is excreted by glands in the skin of the back. ‘Quintessence of toads’ figured largely in the therapy of Salmon’s Doron Medicon (1583), where it is commended as a ‘Specifick in the Dropsy’. Homeopathic experiments and poisoning have shown that this reputation is founded on fact. But the chief laurels of Bufo have been won in the treatment of epilepsy. Bojanus has cured many cases; and no medicine has served me better in the treatment of this disease. Few people who have witnessed a char¬acteristic epileptic seizure can have failed to notice the curiously toad – like aspect assumed by the subject. The epileptic seizure and the status- epilepticus give the clearest correspondence to the Bufo range of action. Again in this remedy, epilepsy is often found among the effects of excessive masturbation in the young, and Bufo provokes the tendency to the practice, and even causes impotence. The Indian women of Brazil are aware of this last property, and administer the venom to their husbands in food or drink when they wish to free themselves from their marital attentions.
THE ESSENTIAL FEATURES
The main features of Bufo are the following:
1. The poison of this toad has a remarkable action on the nervous system, sexual organs and skin. A suppressed skin eruption