Opium is an anesthetic made from dry resins of immature capsules of Papaver Somniferum. The main constituent of opium is morphine, which has an analgesic action similar to a compound called endorphin produced in the body. Some people use it as a remedy to relieve depression and body pain. The opiate first creates a sense of joy and excitement that is part of the psychological drive some people use to use medicine.
The confession of the British consumer (1822) of Thomas de Quincey is one of the first and most famous literary poisoning literature reports written from the point of view of drug users, which details this. Fun and danger of medicine. In this book, neither the Ottoman Empire, which is an addict who is writing about him, nor the Chinese, the British opium user said: "I doubt whether Turkish people are present, whether they are in paradise of consumers, half or not, I'm looking forward to it." De Quincey wrote an article about British romantic poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834). That "Kubula Khan" is also widely regarded as an opium experience poem. Callorage suffered from jaundice and rheumatic fever and began using opium in 1791 After serious attack of 1801, he became addicted and needed 80-100 drops of lavender every day.
In the early 19th century, Umbrian consumers of Thomas de Quincy, a romantic poet such as Sir Byron, John Keats, Percy Shelley, Samuel Taylor Coleridge confessed the spread of opium. Until the end of the nineteenth century, Britain and Western Europe suffered a trend since people used opium to treat mild illness such as stomach pain and headache. When Bayer 's German pharmacist tried to manufacture a weak opiate that gradually beaten poisoning, they misdirectly invented more addictive heroin (based on German heroism, heroes or a great country). However, initially people did not understand their addictive and debilitating effects, so prescribing heroin for daily medical purposes such as coughing and cold, and prescribing a way to reduce morphine poisoning.