问题 问答题

八宝珍珠散功效与作用

答案

参考答案:阴虚喉疳,咽嗌干燥,局部淡红,微肿刺痛,日久肿痛加重,声音嘶哑.其色紫暗不鲜,破烂臭腐者。

解析:八宝珍珠散
【来源】《医宗金鉴》卷六十六。
【组成】儿茶川连末川贝母(去心,研)青黛各4.5克红褐(烧灰存性)官粉黄柏末鱼脑石(微煅)琥珀末各3克人中白(煅)6克硼砂2.4克冰片1.8克京牛黄珍珠(豆腐内煮半小时取出,研末)各1.5克麝香0.9克
【用法】上药各研细末,共兑一处,再研匀。每用少许,吹人喉内烂肉处。
【主治】阴虚喉疳,咽嗌干燥,局部淡红,微肿刺痛,日久肿痛加重,声音嘶哑.其色紫暗不鲜,破烂臭腐者。

单项选择题
单项选择题

One reason many politicians behave badly these days is that we spend less time thinking about what it means to behave well. This was less of a problem in past centuries when leaders, teachers and clergy held detailed debates over what it meant to have good character.

In the 18th century, for example, Edmund Burke composed a long, famous passage defining the standards of political excellence. In the 19th century, Anthony Trollope wrote a series of popular novels fussing over what it means to behave well in political life. Trollope’s view was different than ours. Many Americans today assume that people are born with a good Inner Self but get corrupted by politics. American voters are always looking for the Innocent Outsider who can come in and bring sweeping change.

Trollope admired Prudent Insiders, not Innocent Outsiders. His most admirable characters have been educated by long experience. They have grown mature by exercising responsibility. They have been ennobled by custom and civilization. In his books, powerless outsiders often behave self-indulgently and irresponsibly. Those who are in government have to grapple with the world as it really is.

Trollope’s ideal politicians—who have names like Plantagenet Palliser, Joshua Monk and the Duke of St. Bungay put service before independence. Their party and their country have asked them to accept certain duties and face certain problems, and they just get on with it. They are more weighty, but also more boring.

Trollope’s ideal politicians share certain traits. They are reserved, prudent and scrupulous. They immerse themselves in dull practical questions like, say, converting the currency system. They are not sweeping thinkers, but they make sensitive discriminations about the people and the circumstances around them. They learn to operate within the constraints imposed by their idiom, and they don’t whine or complain about those constraints. They develop delicate understandings of what is required in a given place in time.

Trollope’s ideal leaders are not glamorous celebrities of the sort we have come to long for since J. F. Kennedy. They are more like seamen or carpenters. They are judged by their professional craftsmanship. They are thin-skinned about any moral transgression they might commit and rigorously honest when judging themselves. They try to make things better but are acutely aware that everything they do might make things worse. Trollope’s leaders don’t embrace change quickly but have to be dragged into embracing it after much interrogation, and the change they prefer is incremental.

Trollope praises one of his prime ministers, Plantagenet Palliser, for "that exquisite combination of conservatism and progress which is his country’s present strength and her best security for the future. " Trollope’s readers would have come away from his books with a certain model for how practical people should behave, which they could either copy or argue with. I’m not sure his exemplars could thrive amid the TV politics of today, which calls for grand promises and bold colors. But there are prudent, reserved people in government even now.

Trollope’s ideal politicians have all the following traits except()

A. an admirable sense of responsibility

B. a commitment to routine government work

C. a sensitive discrimination against impatient people

D. a lesser sense of independence