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The Romance of Plant Life - Interesting Descriptions of the Strange and Curious in the Plant World (1907) (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R1,316
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The Romance of Plant Life - Interesting Descriptions of the Strange and Curious in the Plant World (1907) (Hardcover)
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for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book:
CHAPTER II ON SAVAGES, DOCTORS, AND PLANTS Savages knew
Botany?First lady doctors and botanical excursions- True drugs and
horrible ornaments?Hydrophobia cure?Cloves? Mustard?Ivy?Roses and
Teeth?How to keep hair on?How to know if a patient will
recover?Curious properties of a mushroom? The Scythian
lamb?Quinine: history and use?Safflower?Romance of ipecacuanha?Wars
of the spice trade?Cinnamon, logwood, and indigo?Romance of
pepper?Babylonian and Egyptian botanists? Chinese
discoveries?Theophrastus?Medieval times?The first illustrated book
? Numbers of plants known?Discoveries of painters and poets. IF we
look back to the time when all men and women were mere savages,
living like the Esquimaux or the Australians of to-day, then it is
certain that every person was much interested in plants. Nothing
was so interesting as daily food, because no one was ever certain
of even one good meal in the day. So that in those early times
there was a very sound, well-grounded knowledge of roots, bulbs,
and fruits. They knew all that were good to eat, all that could
possibly be eaten in time of famine and starvation, and also every
poisonous and unwholesome plant. Some savage genius must have
discovered that certain plants were "good medicinen; that certain
tree-barks helped to check fever, and that others were worth trying
when people had successfully devoured more than they FIRST LADY
DOCTORS could comfortably digest. The life of a savage meant
tremendous meals, followed by days of starvation; even now, when
young children are fed on rice in India, a thread is tied round
their waist, and, when this bursts, they are not allowed to eat any
more. Very probably some of these early physicians were lady
doctors usually of a certain age. Men were too busy with their
hunting and wa...
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