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MYRTLE . The pbpros of the Greeks, the myrtus of the See also: Romans, and the myrtle, Myrtus communis (see fig.), of botanists, as now found growing See also: wild in many parts of the Mediterranean region, doubtless all belong to one and the same See also: species
.
It is a low-growing, See also: evergreen See also: shrub, with opposite leaves, varying in
Myrtle (Myrtus communis)
.
I
.
Vertical section of flower, 3
.
See also: Berry, enlarged
.
enlarged
.
4
.
Seed with contained embryo,
2
.
See also: Plan of flower in See also: horizontal e, much enlarged
.
See also: plane
.
dimensions, but always small, See also: simple, dark-See also: green, thick in texture, and studded with numerous receptacles for oil
.
When the leaf is held up to theSee also: light it appears as if perforated with pin-
' See also: Liber quotulianus contra-rotulatoris garderobae Edw
.
I
.
(See also: London, 1787), pp, xxxii. and 27.holes owing to the translucency of these oil-cysts
.
The fragrance of the plant depends upon the presence of this oil
.
Another peculiarity of the myrtle is the existence of a prominent vein See also: running round the leaf within the margin
.
The See also: flowers are See also: borne on See also: short stalks in the axils of the leaves
.
The flower-stalk is dilated at its upper end into a globose or ovoid receptacle enclosing the 2- to 4-partitioned ovary
.
From its margin proceed the five sepals, and within them the five rounded, spoon-shaped, spreading, See also: white petals
.
The stamens spring from the receptacle within the petals and are very numerous, each consisting of a slender white filament and a small yellow two-lobed anther
.
The
See also: style surmounting the ovary is slender, terminating in a small button-like stigma
.
The fruit is a purplish berry, consisting of the receptacle and the ovary blended into one succulent investment enclosing very numerous minute seeds
.
The embryo-plant within the seed is usually curved
.
In cultivation many varieties are known, dependent on variations in theSee also: size and shape of the leaves, the presence of so-called See also: double flowers, &c
.
The typical species is quite See also: hardy in the See also: south of See also: England
.
The Chilean species, M
.
Ugni, a shrub with ovate, dark green leaves and white flowers succeeded by globular red or black glossy truit with a pleasant smell and taste, is a greenhouse shrub, hardy in south-west Britain
.
The See also: common myrtle is the See also: sole representative in See also: Europe of a large genus which has its headquarters in extra-tropical South See also: America, whilst other members are found in See also: Australia and New Zealand
.
The genus Myrtus also gives its name to a very large natural See also: order, Myrtaceae, the general floral structure of which is like that of the myrtle above described, but there are See also: great differences in the nature of the fruit or seed-vessel according as it is dry or capsular, dehiscent, indehiscent or pulpy; minor differences exist according to the way in which the stamens are arranged
.
The aromatic oil to which the myrtle owes its fragrance, and its use in See also: medicine and the arts, is a very general attribute of the order, as may be inferred from the fact that the order includes, amongst other genera, See also: Eucalyptus (q.v.), Pimenta and Eugenia (See also: cloves)
.
Myrtol, a constituent of myrtle oil, has been given in doses of 5—15 minims on See also: sugar or in capsules for pulmonary See also: tuberculosis, fetid See also: bronchitis, bronchiectasis, and similar conditions
.
It appears to lessen expectoration in such cases
.
The leaves of Myrtus chekan are aromatic and expectorant, and have been used in chronic bronchitis
.
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