Online Encyclopedia

NIGHTSHADE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V19, Page 686 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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NIGHTSHADE  , a

general
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term for the genus of
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plants known to botanists as Solanum . The
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species to which the name of nightshade is commonly given in England is Solanum Dulcamara which is also called bittersweet or woody nightshade (see fig . I) . It is a
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common plant in
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damp hedgebanks and thickets, scrambling over underwood and hedges . It has slender slightly woody stems, with alternate lanceolate leaves more or less heart-shaped and auriculate at the
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base . The flowers are arranged in drooping clusters and resemble those of the potato in shape, although 'Poets and novelists are
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apt to command at will the
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song of this
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bird, irrespective of season . If the appearance of truth is to be regarded, it is dangerous to introduce a nightingale as singing in England before the 15th of
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April or after the 15th of
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June . The " early nightingale " of newspaper paragraphs is generally a thrush . much smaller . The flower clusters spring from the stems at the side of, or opposite to, the insertion of a leaf . The corolla is rotate, of a
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lilac-blue colour with a green spot at the base of each segment, or sometimes white, and bears the yellow sessile anthers
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united at their margins so as to form a cone in the centre of the flower . The flowers are succeeded by ovate
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scarlet berries, a in. long, which in large doses appear to be poisonous or, to say the least, dangerous to children, cases of poisoning by them having occurred .

Solanum Dulcamara is subject to the same parasitic fungus (Phyla-p h t h or a infest-ens) as the 2 potato, and cut across, enlarged; 4,

seed, much enlarged. communicating the spores to the potato if not removed from the hedges of the fields where potatoes are grown . The plant derives its names of " bittersweet " and Dulcamara from the fact that its taste is at first bitter and then sweet . It is a native of
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Europe, North Africa and temper-
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ate
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Asia, and has been introduced into North
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America . The dried young branches are known in
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pharmacy under the name dulcamara . Dulcamara contains a bitter principle yielding by decomposition a
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sugar dextrose and the
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alkaloid solanine . It also contains another
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glucoside dulcamarin, which when boiled with dilute acid splits up into sugar and dulcamaretin . Solanine appears to exert a depressant
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action on the vagus nerve and 2, corolla, with stamens, cut open and flattened, Solanum Duleag nat.
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size; 3,
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cross section of ovary, much differs from S. white enlarged. mares in having white flowers in small umbels and globose black berries . It is a common weed in gardens and waste places, growing about 12 or 18 in. high, and has ovate, entire or sinuate or toothed leaves . Two varieties of the plant, one with red and the other with yellow berries, are sometimes met with, but are comparatively rare . The berries have been known to produce poisonous effects when eaten by children, and owe their properties to the presence of solanine . In
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Reunion and
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Mauritius the leaves are eaten like spinach . Deadly nightshade, dwale or belladonna (Atropa belladonna) is a tall bushy herb of the same natural order (fig .

2) . It grows to a height of 4 or 5 ft., having leaves of a dull green colour, with a black shining

berry fruit about the size of a
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cherry, and a large tapering root . The plant is a native of central and south Europe, extending into Asia, and is found locally in England, chiefly on
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chalk and
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limestone, from Westmorland and south-wards . The entire plant is highly poisonous, and accidents not infrequently occur through children and unwary persons eating the attractive-looking fruit . Its leaves and roots are largely used in
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medicine, on which account the plant is cultivated, chiefly in south Germany,
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Switzerland and France (see BELLADONNA) . The name nightshade is applied to plants of different genera in other countries .
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American nightshade is Piiytolacca decandra (poke-weed, q.v.) . The three-leaved nightshade is an American species of Trillium . The
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Malabar nightshade is Basella, which is widely used as a pot-herb in India . Enchanter's nightshade is Circaea lutetiana, a small, glandular, softly-hairy plant, common in damp woods, with slender, erect or ascending stems, paired ovate leaves with long stalks, and small white flowers in terminal racemes, succeeded by a small fruit covered with hooked bristles; it is a member of the natural order
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Onagraceae, and is not known to possess any poisonous
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property; the name seems to have been given to it in the first place in ,mistake for a species of Mandragora (see MANDRAKE) .

End of Article: NIGHTSHADE
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FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE (1820–191o)
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COUNT COSTANTINO NIGRA (1828-1907)

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