1. ABELMOSCHUS MOSCHATUS. This
plant is a native of Bengal. Its seeds
were formerly
mixed with hair powder, and are still used to
perfume pomatum.
The Arabs mix them with their coffee berries.
In
the West Indies
the bruised seeds, steeped in rum, are used, both
externally and
internally, as a cure for snake bites.
2. ABRUS PRECATORIUS. Wild liquorice.
This twining, leguminous plant
is a native of
the East, but is now found in the West Indies and
other tropical
regions. It is chiefly remarkable for its small
oval seeds, which
are of a brilliant scarlet color, with a black
scar at the place
where they are attached to the pods. These seeds
are much used
for necklaces and other ornamental purposes, and are
employed in India
as a standard of weight, under the name of Rati.
The weight of
the famous Kohinoor diamond is known to have been
ascertained in
this way. The roots afford liquorice, which is
extracted in the
same manner as that from the true Spanish
liquorice plant,
the Glycyrrhiza glabra. Recently the claim
was
made that the
weather could be foretold by certain movements of
the leaves of
this plant, but experimental tests have proved its
fallacy.
3. Abutilon INDICUM. This plant
furnishes fiber fit for the
manufacture of
ropes. Its leaves contain a large quantity of
mucilage.
4. Abutilon VENOSUM. This malvaceous
plant is common in collections,
as are others
of the genus. They are mostly fiber-producing
species.
The flowers of A. esculentum are used as a vegetable
in
Brazil.
5. Acacia BRASILIENSIS. This
plant furnishes the Brazil wood, which
yields a red or
crimson dye, and is used for dyeing silks. The
best quality is
that received from Pernambuco.
6. Acacia catechu. The drug
known as catechu is principally prepared
from this tree,
the wood of which is boiled down, and the
decoction subsequently
evaporated so as to form an extract much
used as an astringent.
The acacias are very numerous, and yield
many useful products.
Gum arabic is produced by several species,
as A. vera,
A. arabica, A. adansonii, A. verek,
and
others. It
is obtained by spontaneous exudation from the trunk
and
branches, or by
incisions made in the bark, from whence it flows
in a liquid state,
but soon hardens by exposure to the air. The
largest quantity
of the gum comes from Barbary. Gum senegal is
produced by A.
vera. By some it is thought that the timber
of
A. arabica
is identical with the Shittim tree, or wood of the
Bible. From
the flowers of A. farnesiana a choice and delicious
perfume is obtained,
the chief ingredient in many valued “balm of
a thousand flowers.”
The pods of A. concinna are used in India
as a soap for
washing; the leaves are used for culinary purposes,
and have a peculiarly
agreeable acid taste. The seeds of some
species are used,
when cooked, as articles of food. From the seeds
of A. niopo
the Guahibo Indians prepare a snuff, by roasting the
seeds and pounding
them in a wooden platter. Its effects are to
produce a kind
of intoxication and invigorate the spirits. The
bark of several
species is extensively used for tanning, and the
timber, being
tough and elastic, is valuable for the manufacture
of machinery and
other purposes where great strength and
durability are
requisite.
7. ACACIA DEALBATA. The
silver wattle tree of Australia. The bark is
used for tanning
purposes. It is hardy South.
8. ACACIA HOMOLOPHYLLA. This
tree furnishes the scented myall wood, a
very hard and
heavy wood, of an agreeable odor, resembling that of
violets.
Fancy boxes for the toilet are manufactured of it.
9. ACACIA MELANOXYLON. The wood
of this tree is called mayall wood in
New South Wales.
It is also called violet wood, on account of the
strong odor it
has of that favorite flower; hence it is in great
repute for making
small dressing cases, etc.
10. ACACIA MOLLISSIMA. The black
wattle tree of Australia, which
furnishes a good
tanning principle. These trees were first called
wattles from being
used by the early settlers for forming a
network or wattling
of the supple twigs as a substitute for laths
in plastering
houses.
11. ACROCOMIA SCLEROCARPA. This
palm grows all over South America. It
is known as the
great macaw-tree. A sweetish-tasted oil, called
Mucaja oil, is
extracted from the fruit and is used for making
toilet soaps.
12. ADANSONIA DIGITATA. The
baobab tree, a native of Africa. It has
been called the
tree of a thousand years, and Humboldt speaks of
it as “the
oldest organic monument of our planet.”
Adanson, who
traveled in Senegal
in 1794, made a calculation to show that one
of these trees,
30 feet in diameter, must be 5,150 years old.
The
bark of the baobab
furnishes a fiber which is made into ropes and
also manufactured
into cloth. The fiber is so strong as to give
rise to a common
saying in Bengal, “as secure as an elephant bound
with baobab rope.”
The pulp of the fruit is slightly acid, and the
juice expressed
from it is valued as a specific in putrid and
pestilential fevers.
The ashes of the fruit and bark, boiled in
rancid palm oil,
make a fine soap.
13. ADENANTHERA PAVONINA. A
tree that furnishes red sandal wood. A dye
is obtained simply
by rubbing the wood against a wet stone, which
is used by the
Brahmíns for marking their foreheads after
religious bathing.
The seeds are used by Indian jewelers as
weights, each
seed weighing uniformly four grains. They are
known
as Circassian
beans. Pounded and mixed with borax, they form
an
adhesive substance.
They are sometimes used as food. The plant
belongs to the
Leguminosae.
14. ADHATODA VASICA. This plant
is extolled for its charcoal in the
manufacture of
powder. The flowers, leaves, roots, and especially
the fruit, are
considered antispasmodic, and are administered in
India in asthma
and intermittent fevers.
15. AEGLE MARMELOS. This plant
belongs to the orange family, and its
fruit is known
in India as Bhel fruit. It is like an orange;
the
thick rind of
the unripe fruit possesses astringent properties,
and, when ripe,
has an exquisite flavor and perfume. The fruit
and
other parts of
the plant are used for medicinal purposes, and a
yellow dye is
prepared from the skin of the fruits.
16. AGAVE AMERICANA. This plant
is commonly known as American aloe,
but it is not
a member of that family, as it claims kindred with
the Amaryllis
tribe of plants. It grows naturally in a wide
range of climate,
from the plains of South America to elevations
of 10,000 feet.
It furnishes a variety of products. The plants
form impenetrable
fences; the leaves furnish fibers of various
qualities, from
the fine thread known as pita-thread, which is
used for twine,
to the coarse fibers used for ropes and cables.
Humboldt describes
a bridge of upward of 130 feet span over the
Chimbo in Quito,
of which the main ropes (4 inches in diameter)
were made of this
fiber. It is also used for making paper.
The
juice, when the
watery part is evaporated, forms a good soap (as
detergent as castile),
and will mix and form a lather with salt
water as well
as with fresh. The sap from the heart leaves is
formed into pulque.
This sap is sour, but has sufficient sugar and
mucilage for fermentation.
This vinous beverage has a filthy odor,
but those who
can overcome the aversion to this fetid smell
indulge largely
in the liquor. A very intoxicating brandy is made
from it.
Razor strops are made from the leaves; they are also
used
for cleaning and
scouring pewter.
17. AGAVE RIGIDA. The sisal
hemp, introduced into Florida many years
ago, for the sake
of its fiber, but its cultivation has not been
prosecuted to
a commercial success. Like many other of the best
vegetable fibers
found in leaves, it contains a gummy substance,
which prevents
the easy separation of the fiber from the pulp.
18. ALEURITES TRILOBA. The
candleberry tree, much cultivated in
tropical countries
for the sake of its nuts. The nuts or kernels,
when dried and
stuck on a reed, are used by the Polynesians as a
substitute for
candles and as an article of food; they are said to
taste like walnuts.
When pressed, they yield largely of pure
palatable oil,
as a drying oil for paint, and known as artists’
oil. The
cake, after the oil has been expressed, is a favorite
food for cattle.
The root of the tree affords a brown dye, which
is used to dye
cloths.
19. ALGAROBIA GLANDULOSA. The
mezquite tree, of Texas, occasionally
reaching a height
of 25 to 30 feet. It yields a very hard, durable
wood, and affords
a large quantity of gum resembling gum arabic,
and answering
every purpose of that gum.
20. ALLAMANDA CATHARTICA. This
plant belongs to the family of
Apocynaceae,
which contains many poisonous species. It is often
cultivated for
the beauty of its flowers; the leaves are
considered a valuable
cathartic, in moderate doses, especially in
the cure of painter’s
colic; in large doses they are violently
emetic. It
is a native of South America.
21. ALOE SOCOTRINA. Bitter aloe,
a plant of the lily family, which
furnishes the
finest aloes. The bitter, resinous juice is stored
up in greenish
vessels, lying beneath the skin of the leaf, so
that when the
leaves are cut transversely, the juice exudes, and
is gradually evaporated
to a firm consistence. The inferior kinds
of aloes are prepared
by pressing the leaves, when the resinous
juice becomes
mixed with the mucilaginous fluid from the central
part of the leaves,
and thus it is proportionately deteriorated.
Sometimes the
leaves are cut and boiled, and the decoction
evaporated to
a proper consistence. This drug is imported in
chests, in skins
of animals, and sometimes in large
calabash-gourds,
and although the taste is peculiarly bitter and
disagreeable,
the perfume of the finer sorts is aromatic, and by
no means offensive.
It is common in tropical countries.
22. ALSOPHILA AUSTRALIS. This
beautiful tree-fern attains a height of
stem of 25 to
30 feet, with fronds spreading out into a crest 26
feet in diameter.
These plants are among the most beautiful of all
vegetable productions,
and in their gigantic forms indicate, in a
meager degree,
the extraordinary beauty of the vegetation on the
globe previous
to the formation of the coal measures.
23. ALSTONIA SCHOLARIS. The
Pali-mara, or devil tree, of Bombay. The
plant attains
a height of 80 or 90 feet; the bark is powerfully
bitter, and is
used in India in medicine. It is of the family
of
Apocynaceae.
24. AMOMUM MELEGUETA. Malaguetta
pepper, or grains of paradise;
belonging to the
ginger family, Zingiberaceae. The seeds
of this
and other species
are imported from Guinea; they have a very warm
and camphor-like
taste, and are used to give a fictitious strength
to adulterated
liquors, but are not considered particularly
injurious to health.
The seeds are aromatic and stimulating, and
form, with other
seeds of similar plants, what are known as
cardamoms.
25. AMYRIS BALSAMIFERA. This
plant yields the wood called Lignum
Rhodium.
It also furnishes a gum resin analogous to Elemi, and
supposed to yield
Indian Bdellium.
26. ANACARDIUM OCCIDENTALE. The
cashew nut tree, cultivated in the
West Indies and
other tropical countries. The stem furnishes a
milky juice, which
becomes hard and black when dry, and is used as
a varnish.
It also secretes a gum, like gum arabic. The nut
or
fruit contains
a black, acrid, caustic oil, injurious to the lips
and tongue of
those who attempt to crack the nut with their teeth;
it becomes innocuous
and wholesome when roasted, but this process
must be carefully
conducted, the acridity of the fumes producing
severe inflammation
of the face if approached too near.
27. ANANASSA SATIVA. The well-known
pineapple, the fruit of which was
described three
hundred years ago, by Jean de Lery, a Huguenot
priest, as being
of such excellence that the gods might luxuriate
upon it, and that
it should only be gathered by the hand of a
Venus. It
is supposed to be a native of Brazil, and to have been
carried from thence
to the West, and afterwards to the East
Indies. It
first became known to Europeans in Peru. It is
universally acknowledged
to be one of the most delicious fruits in
the world.
Like all other fruits that have been a long time under
cultivation, there
are numerous varieties that vary greatly, both
in quality and
appearance. The leaves yield a fine fiber, which
is
used in the manufacture
of piña cloth; this cloth is very
delicate, soft,
and transparent, and is made into shawls, scarfs,
handkerchiefs,
and dresses.
28. ANDIRA INERMIS. This
is a native of Senegambia. Its bark is
anthelmintic,
but requires care in its administration, being
powerfully narcotic.
It has a sweetish taste, but a disagreeable
smell, and is
generally given in the form of a decoction, which is
made by boiling
an ounce of the dried bark in a quart of water
until it assumes
the color of Madeira wine. Three or four grains
of the powdered
bark acts as a powerful purgative. The bark is
known as bastard
cabbage bark, or worm bark. It is almost obsolete
in medicine.
29. ANDROPOGON MURICATUS. The
Khus-Khus, or Vetiver grass of India.
The fibrous roots
yield a most peculiar but pleasing perfume. In
India the leaves
are manufactured into awnings, blinds, and
sunshades; but
principally for screens, used in hot weather for
doors and windows,
which, when wetted, diffuse a peculiar and
refreshing perfume,
while cooling the air.
30. ANDROPOGON SCH[OE]NANTHUS. The
sweet-scented lemon grass, a native
of Malabar.
An essential oil is distilled from the leaves, which
is used in perfumery.
It is a favorite herb with the Asiatics,
both for medicinal
and culinary purposes. Tea from the dried
leaves is a favorite
beverage of some persons.
31. ANONA CHERIMOLIA. The Cherimoyer
of Peru, where it is extensively
cultivated for
its fruits, which are highly esteemed by the
inhabitants, but
not so highly valued by those accustomed to the
fruits of temperate
climates. The fruit, when ripe, is of a pale
greenish-yellow
color, tinged with purple, weighing from 3 to 4
pounds; the skin
thin; the flesh sweet, and about the consistence
of a custard;
hence often called custard apple.
32. ANONA MURICATA. The sour-sop,
a native of the West Indies, which
produces a fruit
of considerable size, often weighing over 2
pounds. The
pulp is white and has an acrid flavor, which is not
disagreeable.
33. ANONA RETICULATA. The common
custard apple of the West Indies. It
has a yellowish
pulp and is not so highly esteemed as an article
of food as some
others of the species. It bears the name of
Condissa in Brazil.
The Anonas are grown to some extent throughout
southern Florida.
34. ANONA SQUAMOSA. The
sweet-sop, a native of the Malay Islands,
where it is grown
for its fruits. These are ovate in shape, with
a
thick rind, which
incloses a luscious pulp. The seeds contain an
acrid principle,
and, being reduced to powder, form an ingredient
for the destruction
of insects.
35. ANTIARIS INNOXIA. The
upas tree. Most exaggerated statements
respecting this
plant have passed into history. Its poisonous
influence was
said to be so great as not only to destroy all
animal life but
even plants could not live within 10 miles of it.
The plant has
no such virulent properties as the above, but, as it
inhabits low valleys
in Java where carbonic acid gas escapes from
the crevices in
volcanic rocks which frequently proves fatal to
animals, the tree
was blamed wrongly. It is, however, possessed
of
poisonous juice,
which, when dry and mixed with other ingredients,
forms a venomous
poison for arrows, and severe effects have been
felt by those
who have climbed upon the branches for the purpose
of gathering the
flowers.
36. ANTIARIS SACCIDORA. The
sack tree; so called from the fibrous bark
being used as
sacks. For this purpose young trees of about a
foot
in diameter are
selected and cut into junks of the same length as
the sack required.
The outer bark is then removed and the inner
bark loosened
by pounding, so that it can be separated by turning
it inside out.
Sometimes a small piece of the wood is left to form
the bottom of
the sack. The fruit exudes a milky, viscid juice,
which hardens
into the consistency of beeswax, but becomes black
and shining.
37. ANTIDESMA BUNIAS. An
East India plant which produces small,
intensely black
fruit about the size of a currant, used in making
preserves.
The bark furnishes a good fiber, which is utilized
in
the manufacture
of ropes. A decoction of the leaves is a reputed
cure for snake
bites. The whole plant is very bitter.
38. ARALIA PAPYRIFERA. The
Chinese rice paper plant. The stems are
filled with pith
of very fine texture and white as snow, from
which is derived
the article known as rice paper, much used in
preparing artificial
flowers.
39. ARAUCARIA BIDWILLII. The
Bunya-Bunya of Australia, which forms a
large tree, reaching
from 150 to 200 feet in height. The cones are
very large, and
contain one hundred to one hundred and fifty
seeds, which are
highly prized by the aborigines as food. They
are
best when roasted
in the shell, cracked between two stones and
eaten while hot.
In flavor they resemble roasted chestnuts. During
the season of
the ripening of these seeds the natives grow sleek
and fat.
That part of the country where these trees most abound
is
called the Bunya-Bunya
country.
40. ARAUCARIA BRASILIENSIS. The
Brazilian Araucaria, which grows at
great elevations.
The seeds of this tree are commonly sold in the
markets of Rio
Janeiro as an article of food. The resinous matter
which exudes from
the trunk is employed in the manufacture of
candles.
41. ARAUCARIA CUNNINGHAMII. The
Morton Bay pine. This Australian tree
forms a very straight
trunk, and yields a timber of much
commercial importance
in Sidney and other ports. It is chiefly
used for house
building and some of the heavier articles of
furniture.
42. ARAUCARIA EXCELSA. This
very elegant evergreen is a native of
Norfolk Island.
Few plants can compare with it in beauty and
regularity of
growth. The wood is of no particular value, although
used for building
purposes in Norfolk Island.
43. ARDISIA CRENATA. A native
of China. The bark has tonic and
astringent properties,
and is used in fevers and for external
application in
the cure of ulcers, etc.
44. ARECA CATECHU. This palm
is cultivated in all the warmer parts of
Asia for its seed.
This is known under the name of betel nut, and
is about the size
of a nutmeg. The chewing of these nuts is a
common practice
of hundreds of thousands of people. The nut is
cut
into small pieces,
mixed with a small quantity of lime, and rolled
up in leaves of
the betel pepper. The pellet is chewed, and is
hot
and acrid, but
possesses aromatic and astringent properties.
It
tinges the
saliva red and stains the teeth. The practice
is
considered beneficial
rather than otherwise, just as chewing
tobacco-leaves,
drinking alcohol, and eating chicken-salad are
considered healthful
practices in some portions of the globe. A
kind of catechu
is obtained by boiling down the seeds to the
consistence of
an extract, but the chief supply of this drug is
Acacia catechu.
45. ARGANIA Sidéroxylon. This
is the argan tree of Morocco. It is
remarkable for
its low-spreading mode of growth. Trees have been
measured only
16 feet in height, while the circumference of the
branches was 220
feet. The fruit is much eaten and relished by
cattle. The
wood is hard and so heavy as to sink in water.
A
valuable oil is
extracted from the seeds.
46. ARISTOLOCHIA GRANDIFLORA. The
pelican flower. This plant belongs
to a family famed
for the curious construction of their flowers,
as well as for
their medical qualities. In tropical America
various species
receive the name of “Guaco,” which is a
term given
to plants that
are used in the cure of snake bites. Even some
of
our native species,
such as A. serpentaria, is known as
snake-root, and
is said to be esteemed for curing the bite of the
rattlesnake.
It is stated that the Egyptian jugglers use some of
these plants to
stupefy the snakes before they handle them. A.
bracteata
and A. indica are used for similar purposes
in India.
It is said that
the juice of the root of A. anguicida, if
introduced into
the mouth of a serpent, so stupefies it that it
may be handled
with impunity. The Indians, after having
“guaconized”
themselves, that is, having taken Guaco, handle the
most venomous
snakes without injury.
47. ARTANTHE ELONGATA. A plant
of the pepper family, which furnishes
one of the articles
known by the Peruvians as Matico, and which is
used by them for
the same purposes as cubebs; but its chief value
is as a styptic,
an effect probably produced by its rough under
surface, acting
mechanically like lint. It has been employed
internally to
check hemorrhages, but with doubtful effect. Its
aromatic bitter
stimulant properties are like those of cubebs, and
depend on a volatile
oil, a dark-green resin, and a peculiar
bitter principle
called maticin.
48. ARTOCARPUS INCISA. This
is the breadfruit tree of the South Sea
Islands, where
its introduction gave occasion for the historical
incidents arising
from the mutiny of the “Bounty.” The
round
fruits contain
a white pulp, of the consistence of new bread.
It
is roasted before
being eaten, but has little flavor. The tree
furnishes a viscid
juice containing caoutchouc, which is used as
glue for calking
canoes. In the South Sea Islands the breadfruit
constitutes the
principal article of diet; it is prepared by
baking in an oven
heated by hot stones.
49. ARTOCARPUS INTEGRIFOLIA. The
jack of the Indian Archipelago,
cultivated for
its fruit, which is a favorite article among the
natives, as also
are the roasted seeds. The wood is much used,
and
resembles mahogany.
Bird-lime is made from the juice.
50. ASTROCARYUM VULGARE. Every
part of this South American palm is
covered with sharp
spines. It is cultivated to some extent by the
Indians of Brazil
for the sake of its young leaves, which furnish
a strong fiber
for making bowstrings, fishing nets, etc.
The finer
threads are knitted
into hammocks, which are of great strength. It
is known as Tucum
thread. The pulp of the fruit furnishes an oil.
In Guiana it is
called the Aoura palm.
51. ATTALEA COHUNE. This palm
furnishes Cahoun nuts, from which is
extracted cohune
oil, used as a burning oil, for which purpose it
is superior to
cocoanut oil. Piassaba fiber is furnished by this
and A. funifera,
the seeds of which are known as Coquilla nuts;
these nuts are
3 or 4 inches long, oval, of a rich brown color,
and very hard;
they are much used by turners for making the
handles of doors,
umbrellas, etc. The fiber derived from the
decaying of the
cellular matter at the base of the leaf-stalks is
much used in Brazil
for making ropes. It is largely used in
England and other
places for making coarse brooms, chiefly used in
cleaning streets.
52. AVERRHOA BILIMBI. This is
called the blimbing, and is cultivated
to some extent
in the East Indies. The fruit is oblong,
obtuse-angled,
somewhat resembling a short, thick cucumber, with a
thin, smooth,
green rind, filled with a pleasant, acid juice.
53. AVERRHOA CARAMBOLA. The
caramba of Ceylon and Bengal. The fruit of
this tree is about
the size of a large orange, and, when ripe, is
of a rich yellow
color, with a very decided and agreeable
fragrance.
The pulp contains a large portion of acid, and is
generally used
as a pickle or preserve. In Java it is used both
in
the ripe and unripe
state in pies; a sirup is also made of the
juice, and a conserve
of the flowers. These preparations are
highly valued
as remedies in fevers and bilious disorders.
54. BACTRIS MAJOR. The Marajah
palm, of Brazil, which grows upon the
banks of the Amazon
River. It has a succulent, rather acid fruit,
from which a vinous
beverage is prepared. B. minor has a stem
about 14 feet
high and about an inch in diameter. These stems
are
used for walking
canes, and are sometimes called Tobago canes.
55. BALSAMOCARPON BREVIFOLIUM. This
shrub is the algarrobo of the
Chilians.
It belongs to the pea family. Its pods are short
and
thick, and when
unripe contain about 80 per cent of tannic acid;
the ripe pods
become transformed into a cracked resinous
substance, when
their tanning value is much impaired; this
resinous matter
is astringent, and is used for dyeing black and
for making ink.
56. BALSAMODENDRON MYRRHA. A
native of Arabia Felix, producing a gum
resin, sometimes
called Opobalsamum, which was considered by the
ancients as a
panacea for almost all the ills that flesh is heir
to. B. mukul
yields a resin of this name, and is considered
identical with
the Bdellium of Dioscorides and of the Scriptures.
The resin has
cordial and stimulating properties, and is burnt as
an incense.
In ancient times it was used as an embalming
ingredient.
57. BAMBUSA ARUNDINACEA. The
bamboo cane, a gigantic grass, cultivated
in many tropical
and semitropical countries. The Chinese use it
in
one way or other
for nearly everything they require. Almost every
article of furniture
in their houses, including mats, screens,
chairs, tables,
bedsteads, and bedding, is made of bamboo. The
masts, sails,
and rigging of their ships consist chiefly of
bamboo. A
fiber has been obtained from the stem suitable for
mixing with wool,
cotton, and silk; it is said to be very soft
and to take dyes
easily. They have treatises and volumes on its
culture, showing
the best soil and the seasons for planting and
transplanting
this useful production.
58. BAUHINIA VAHLII. The Maloo-climber
of India, where the gigantic
shrubby stems
often attain a height of 300 feet, running over the
tops of the tallest
trees, and twisting so tightly around their
stems as to kill
them. The exceedingly tough fibrous bark of this
plant is used
in India for making ropes and in the construction of
suspension bridges.
The seeds form an article of food; they are
eaten raw, and
resemble cashew nuts in flavor.
59. BEAUCARNEA RECURVIFOLIA. This
Mexican plant is remarkable for the
large bulbiform
swelling at the base of the stem. It is a plant
of
much elegance
and beauty, resembling a drooping fountain.
60. BERGERA KOENIGII. The curry-leaf
tree of India. The fragrant,
aromatic leaves
are used to flavor curries. The leaves, root,
and
bark are used
medicinally. The wood is hard and durable, and
from
the seeds a clear,
transparent oil, called Simbolee oil, is
extracted.
61. BERRYA AMMONILLA. This furnishes
the Trincomalee wood of the
Philippine Islands
and Ceylon, and is largely used for making oil
casks and for
building boats, for which it is well adapted, being
light and strong.
62. BERTHOLLETIA EXCELSA. This
furnishes the well known Brazil nuts,
or cream nuts
of commerce. The tree is a native of South America
and attains a
height of 100 to 150 feet. The fruit is nearly
round
and contains from
eighteen to twenty-four seeds, which are so
beautifully packed
in the shell that when once removed it is found
impossible to
replace them. A bland oil is pressed from the
seeds,
which is used
by artists, and at Para the fibrous bark of the tree
is used for calking
ships, as a substitute for oakum.
63. BIGNONIA ECHINATA. A native
of Mexico, where it is sometimes
called Mariposa
butterfly. The branches are said to be used in
the
adulteration of
sarsaparilla. B. chica, a native of Venezuela,
furnishes a red
pigment, obtained by macerating the leaves in
water, which is
used by the natives for painting their bodies.
The
long flexible
stems of B. kerere furnish the natives of French
Guiana with a
substitute for ropes. B. alliacea is termed
the
Garlic shrub,
because of the powerful odor of garlic emitted from
its leaves and
branches when bruised. These plants all have showy
flowers, and the
genus is represented with us by such beautiful
flowers as are
produced by B. radicans and B. capreolata.
64. BIXA ORELLANA. Arnotta plant.
This plant is a native of South
America, but has
been introduced and cultivated both in the West
and East Indies.
It bears bunches of pink-colored flowers, which
are followed by
oblong bristled pods. The seeds are thinly coated
with red, waxy
pulp, which is separated by stirring them in water
until it is detached,
when it is strained off and evaporated to
the consistence
of putty, when it is made up into rolls; in this
condition it is
known as flag or roll arnotta, but when thoroughly
dried it is made
into cakes and sold as cake arnotta. It is much
used by the South
American Caribs and other tribes of Indians for
painting their
bodies, paint being almost their only article of
clothing.
As a commercial article it is mainly used as a coloring
for cheese, butter,
and inferior chocolates, to all of which it
gives the required
tinge without imparting any unpleasant flavor
or unwholesome
quality. It is also used in imparting rich orange
and gold-colored
tints to various kinds of varnishes.
65. BLIGHIA SAPIDA. The akee
fruit of Guinea. The fruit is about 3
inches long by
2 inches wide; the seeds are surrounded by a spongy
substance, which
is eaten. It has a subacid, agreeable taste.
A
small quantity
of semisolid fatty oil is obtained from the seeds
by pressure.
66. B[OE]HMERIA NIVEA. A
plant of the nettle family, which yields the
fiber known as
Chinese grass. The beautiful fabric called
grasscloth, which
rivals the best French cambric in softness and
fineness of texture,
is manufactured from the fiber of this plant.
The fiber is also
variously known in commerce as rheea, ramie, and
in China as Tchow-ma.
It is a plant of the easiest culture, and
has been introduced
into the Southern States, where it grows
freely. When
once machinery is perfected so as to enable its being
cheaply prepared
for the manufacturer, a great demand will arise
for this fiber.
67. BOLDOA FRAGRANS. A Chilian
plant which yields small edible fruits;
these, as well
as all parts of the plant, are very aromatic.
The
bark is used for
tanning, and the wood is highly esteemed for
making charcoal.
An alkaloid called boldine, extracted from the
plant, has reputed
medicinal value, and a drug called Boldu is
similarly produced.
68. BORASSUS FLABELLIFORMIS. The
Palmyra palm. The parts of this tree
are applied to
such a multitude of purposes that a poem in the
Tamil language,
although enumerating eight hundred uses, does not
exhaust the catalogue.
In old trees the wood becomes hard and is
very durable.
The leaves are from 8 to 10 feet long, and are used
for thatching
houses, making various mattings, bags, etc.
They
also supply the
Hindoo with paper, upon which he writes with a
stylus. A
most important product called toddy or palm wine is
obtained from
the flower spikes, which yield a great quantity of
juice for four
or five months. Palm-toddy is intoxicating, and
when distilled
yields strong arrack. Very good vinegar is also
obtained from
it, and large quantities of jaggery or palm sugar
are manufactured
from the toddy. The fruits are large and have
a
thick coating
of fibrous pulp, which is cooked and eaten or made
into jelly.
The young palm plants are cultivated for the market,
as cabbages are
with us, and eaten, either when fresh or after
being dried in
the sun.
69. BOSWELLIA THURIFERA. This
Coromandel tree furnishes the resin
known as olibanum,
which is supposed to have been the frankincense
of the ancients.
It is sometimes used in medicine as an astringent
and stimulant,
and is employed, because of its grateful perfume,
as an incense
in churches.
70. BROMELIA KARATAS. The Corawa
fiber, or silk-grass of Guiana, is
obtained from
this plant, which is very strong, and much used for
bowstrings, fishing
lines, nets, and ropes.
71. BROMELIA PINGUIN. This
is very common as a hedge or fence plant in
the West Indies.
The leaves, when beaten with a blunt mallet and
macerated in water,
produce fibers from which beautiful fabrics
are manufactured.
The fruit yields a cooling juice much used in
fevers.
72. BROSIMUM ALICASTRUM. The
bread-nut tree of Jamaica. The nuts or
seeds produced
by this tree are said to form an agreeable and
nutritious article
of food. When cooked they taste like hazelnuts.
The young branches
and shoots are greedily eaten by horses and
cattle, and the
wood resembles mahogany, and is used for making
furniture.
73. BROSIMUM GALACTODENDRON. The
cow tree of South America, which
yields a milk
of as good quality as that from the cow. It forms
large forests
on the mountains near the town of Cariaco and
elsewhere along
the seacoast of Venezuela, reaching to a
considerable height.
In South America the cow tree is called Palo
de Vaca, or Árbol
de Leche. Its milk, which is obtained
by making
incisions in the
trunk, so closely resembles the milk of the cow,
both in appearance
and quality, that it is commonly used as an
article of food
by the inhabitants of the places where the tree is
abundant.
Unlike many other vegetable milks, it is perfectly
wholesome, and
very nourishing, possessing an agreeable taste, and
a pleasant balsamic
odor, its only unpleasant quality being a
slight amount
of stickiness. The chemical analysis of this milk
has shown it to
possess a composition closely resembling some
animal substances;
and, like animal milk, it quickly forms a
cheesy scum, and
after a few days’ exposure to the atmosphere,
turns sour and
putrefies. It contains upwards of 30 per cent
of a
resinous substance
called galactine.
74. BRYA EBENUS. Jamaica
or West India ebony tree. This is not the
plant that yields
the true ebony-wood of commerce. Jamaica ebony
is of a greenish-brown
color, very hard, and so heavy that it
sinks in water.
It takes a good polish, and is used by turners for
the manufacture
of numerous kinds of small wares.
75. BYRSONIMA SPICATA. A Brazilian
plant, furnishing an astringent
bark used for
tanning, and also containing a red coloring matter
employed in dyeing.
The berries are used in medicine, and a
decoction of the
roots is used for ulcers.
76. CAESALPINIA BONDUC. A tropical
plant, bearing the seeds known as
nicker nuts, or
bonduc nuts. These are often strung together for
necklaces.
The kernels have a very bitter taste, and the oil
obtained from
them is used medicinally.
77. CAESALPINIA PULCHERRIMA. This
beautiful flowering leguminous plant
is a native of
the East Indies, but is cultivated in all the
tropics.
In Jamaica it is called the “Barbados flower.”
The wood
is sought after
for charcoal, and a decoction of the leaves and
flowers is used
in fevers.
78. CAESALPINIA SAPPAN. The
brownish-red wood of this Indian tree
furnishes the
Sappan wood of commerce, from which dyers obtain a
red color, principally
used for dyeing cotton goods. Its root also
affords an orange-yellow
dye.
79. CALAMUS ROTANG. This
is one of the palms that furnish the canes or
rattans used for
chair bottoms, sides of pony-carriages, and
similar purposes.
It is a climbing palm and grows to an immense
length; specimens
300 feet long have been exhibited, climbing over
and amongst the
branches of trees, supporting themselves by means
of the hooked
spines attached to the leaf stalks. C. rudentum
and C. viminalis
furnish flexible canes. In their native
countries they
are used for a variety of manufacturing purposes,
also for ropes
and cables used by junks and other coasting
vessels.
In the Himalayas they are used in the formation of
suspension bridges
across rivers and deep ravines. C. scipionum
furnishes the
well-known Malacca canes used for walking sticks.
They are naturally
of a rich brown color. The clouded and mottled
appearance which
some of these present is said to be imparted to
them by smoking
and steaming.
80. CALLISTEMON SALIGNUS. A
medium-sized tree from Australia; one of
the many so-called
tea trees of that country. The wood, which is
very hard, is
known as stone wood and has been used for wood
engraving.
Layers of the bark readily peel off; hence it also
receives the name
of paper-bark plant.
81. CALLITRIS QUADRIVALVIS. This
coniferous plant is a native of
Barbary.
It yields a hard, durable, and fragrant timber, and
is
much employed
in the erection of mosques, etc., by the Africans
of
the North.
The resin that exudes from the tree is used in varnish
under the name
of gum-sandarach. In powder it forms a principal
ingredient of
the article known as pounce.
82. CALOPHYLLUM CALABA. This
is called calaba tree in the West Indies,
and an oil, fit
for burning, is expressed from the seeds. In the
West Indies these
seeds are called Santa Maria nuts.
83. CALOTROPIS GIGANTEA. The
inner bark of this plant yields a
valuable fiber,
capable of bearing a greater strain than hemp.
All
parts of it abound
in a very acrid milky juice, which hardens into
a substance resembling
gutta-percha; but in its fresh state it is
a valuable remedy
in cutaneous diseases. The bark of the root also
possesses similar
medical qualities; and its tincture yields
mudarine,
a substance that has the property of gelatinizing when
heated, and returning
to the fluid state when cool. Paper has been
made from the
silky down of the seeds.
84. CAMELLIA JAPONICA. A well-known
green-house plant, cultivated for
its large double
flowers. The seeds furnish an oil of an agreeable
odor, which is
used for many domestic purposes.
85. CAMPHORA OFFICINARUM. This
tree belongs to the Lauraceae. Camphor
is prepared from
the wood by boiling chopped branches in water,
when, after some
time, the camphor becomes deposited and is
purified by sublimation.
It is mainly produced in the island of
Formosa.
The wood of the tree is highly prized for manufacturing
entomological
cabinets. As the plant grows well over a large
area
in the more Southern
States, it is expected that the preparation
of its products
will become a profitable industry.
86. CANELLA ALBA. This is a
native of the West Indies, and furnishes a
pale olive-colored
bark with an aromatic odor, and is used as a
tonic. It
is used by the natives as a spice. It furnishes
the true
canella bark of
commerce, also known as white-wood bark.
87. CAPPARIS SPINOSA. The
caper plant, a native of the South of Europe
and of the Mediterranean
regions. The commercial product consists
of the flower-buds,
and sometimes the unripe fruits, pickled in
vinegar.
The wood and bark possess acrid qualities which will
act
as a blister when
applied to the skin.
88. CARAPA GUIANENSIS. A meliaceous
plant, native of tropical America,
where it grows
to a height of 60 to 80 feet. The bark of this
tree
possesses febrifugal
properties and is also used for tanning. By
pressure, the
seeds yield a liquid oil called carap-oil or
crab-oil, suitable
for burning in lamps.
89. CARICA PAPAYA. This
is the South American papaw tree, but is
cultivated in
most tropical countries. It is also known as the
melon-apple.
The fruit is of a dingy orange-color, of an oblong
form, about 8
to 10 inches long, by 3 or 4 inches broad. It
is
said that the
juice of the tree, or an infusion of the leaves and
fruit, has the
property of rendering tough fiber quite tender.
Animals fed upon
the fruit and leaves will have very tender and
juicy flesh.
90. CARLUDOVICA PALMATA. A
pandanaceous plant from Panama and
southward.
Panama hats are made from the leaves of this plant.
The
leaves are cut
when young, and the stiff parallel veins removed,
after which they
are slit into shreds, but not separated at the
stalk end, and
immersed in boiling water for a short time, then
bleached in the
sun.
91. CARYOCAR NUCIFERUM. On the
river banks of Guiana this grows to a
large-sized tree.
It yields the butter-nuts, or souari-nuts of
commerce.
These are of a flattened kidney shape, with a hard
woody
shell of a reddish-brown
color, and covered with wart-like
protubérances.
The nuts are pleasant to eat, and yield, by
expression, an
oil called Piquia oil, which possesses the flavor
of the fruit.
92. CARYOPHYLLUS AROMATICUS. This
myrtaceous plant produces the
well-known spice
called cloves. It forms a beautiful evergreen,
rising from 20
to 30 feet in height. The cloves of commerce are
the unexpanded
flower-buds; they are collected by beating the tree
with rods, when
the buds, from the jointed character of their
stalks, readily
fall, and are received on sheets spread on
purpose; they
are then dried in the sun. All parts of the plant
are aromatic,
from the presence of a volatile oil. The oil is
sometimes used
in toothache and as a carminative in medicine.
93. CARYOTA URENS. This
fine palm is a native of Ceylon, and is also
found in other
parts of India, where it supplies the native
population with
various important articles. Large quantities of
toddy, or palm-wine,
are prepared from the juice, which, when
boiled, yields
very good palm sugar or jaggery, and also excellent
sugar candy.
Sago is also prepared from the central or pithy part
of the trunk,
and forms a large portion of the food of the
natives.
The fiber from the leaf stalk is of great strength;
it is
known as Kittool
fiber, and is used for making ropes, brushes,
brooms, etc.
A woolly kind of scurf, scraped off the leaf stalks,
is used for calking
boats, and the stem furnishes a small quantity
of wood.
94. CASIMIROA EDULIS. A
Mexican plant, belonging to the orange family,
with a fruit about
the size of an ordinary orange, which has an
agreeable taste,
but is not considered to be wholesome. The seeds
are poisonous;
the bark is bitter, and is sometimes used
medicinally.
95. CASSIA ACUTIFOLIA. The cassias
belong to the leguminous family.
The leaflets of
this and some other species produce the well-known
drug called senna.
That known as Alexandria senna is produced by
the above.
East Indian senna is produced by C. elongata.
Aleppo
senna is obtained
from C. obovata. The native species, C.
marylandica,
possesses similar properties. The seeds of C.
absus, a native
of Egypt, are bitter, aromatic, and mucilaginous,
and are used as
a remedy for ophthalmia. C. fistula is called
the Pudding-Pipe
tree, and furnishes the cassia pods of commerce.
The seeds of C.
occidentalis, when roasted, are used as a
substitute for
coffee in the Mauritius and in the interior of
Africa.
96. CASTILLOA ELASTICA. This
is a Mexican tree, which yields a milky
juice, forming
caoutchouc, but is not collected for commerce
except in a limited
way.
97. CASUARINA QUADRIVALVIS. This
Tasmanian tree produces a very hard
wood of a reddish
color, often called Beef wood. It is marked with
dark stripes,
and is much used in some places for picture frames
and cabinetwork.
This belongs to a curious family of trees having
no leaves, but
looking like a gigantic specimen of Horse-tail
grass, a weed
to be seen in wet places.
98. CATHA EDULIS. This
plant is a native of Arabia, where it attains
the height of
7 to 10 feet. Its leaves are used by the Arabs
in
preparing a beverage
like tea or coffee. The twigs, with leaves
attached, in bundles
of fifty, and in pieces from 12 to 15 inches
in length, form
a very considerable article of commerce, its use
in Arabia corresponding
to that of the Paraguay tea in South
America and the
Chinese tea in Europe. The effects produced by
a
decoction of the
leaves of Cafta, as they are termed, are
described as similar
to those produced by strong green tea, only
more pleasing
and agreeable. The Arab soldiers chew the leaves
when on sentry
duty to keep them from feeling drowsy. Its use
is
of great antiquity,
preceding that of coffee. Its stimulating
effects induced
some Arabs to class it with intoxicating
substances, the
use of which is forbidden by the Koran, but a
synod of learned
Mussulmans decreed that, as it did not impair the
health or impede
the observance of religious duties, but only
increased hilarity
and good humor, it was lawful to use it.
99. CECROPIA PELTATA. The
South American trumpet tree, so called
because its hollow
branches are used for musical instruments. The
Waupe Indians
form a kind of drum by removing the pith or center
of the branches.
The inner bark of the young branches yields a
very tough fiber,
which is made into ropes. The milky juice of the
stem hardens into
caoutchouc.
100. CEDRELA ODORATA. This
forms a large tree in the West India
Islands, and is
hollowed out for canoes; the wood is of a brown
color and has
a fragrant odor, and is sometimes imported under the
name of Jamaica
cedar.
101. CEPHAELIS IPECACUANHA. This
Brazilian plant produces the true
ipecacuanha, and
belongs to the Cinchonaceae. The root is
the
part used in medicine,
it is knotty, contorted, and annulated, and
of a grayish-brown
color, and its emetic properties are due to a
chemical principle
called emetin.
102. CERATONIA SILIQUA. The
carob bean. This leguminous plant is a
native of the
countries bordering on the Mediterranean. The
seed
pods contain a
quantity of mucilaginous and saccharine matter, and
are used as food
for cattle. Besides the name of carob beans,
these pods are
known as locust pods, or St. John’s bread, from
a
supposition that
they formed the food of St. John in the
wilderness.
It is now generally admitted that the locusts of St.
John were the
insects so called, and which are still used as an
article of food
in some of the Eastern countries. There is more
reason for the
belief that the husks mentioned in the parable of
the prodigal son
were these pods. The seeds were at one time used
by singers, who
imagined that they softened and cleared the voice.
103. CERBERA THEVETIA. The name
is intended to imply that the plant is
as dangerous as
Cerberus. The plant has a milky, poisonous juice.
The bark is purgative;
the unripe fruit is used by the natives of
Travancore to
destroy dogs, as its action causes their teeth to
loosen and fall
out.
104. CEREUS GIGANTEA. The
suwarrow of the Mexicans, a native of the
hot, arid, and
almost desert regions of New Mexico, found growing
in rocky places,
in valleys, and on mountain sides, often
springing out
of mere crevices in hard rocks, and imparting a
singular aspect
to the scenery of the country, its tall stems
often reaching
40 feet in height, with upright branches looking
like telegraph
posts for signaling from point to point of the
rocky mountains.
The fruits are about 2 or 3 inches long, of a
green color and
oval form; when ripe they burst into three or four
pieces, which
curve back so as to resemble a flower. Inside
they
contain numerous
little black seeds, imbedded in a crimson-colored
pulp, which the
Indians make into a preserve. They also eat the
ripe fruit as
an article of food.
105. CEREUS MACDONALDIAE. A
night-blooming cereus, and one of the most
beautiful.
The flowers when fully expanded are over a foot in
diameter, having
numerous radiating red and bright orange sepals
and delicately
white petals. It is a native of the Honduras.
106. CEROXYLON ANDICOLA. The
wax palm of New Grenada, first described
by Humboldt and
Bonpland, who found it on elevated mountains,
extending as high
as the lower limit of perpetual snow. Its tall
trunk is covered
with a thin coating of a whitish waxy substance,
giving it a marbled
appearance. The waxy substance forms an
article of commerce,
and is obtained by scraping the trunk. It
consists of two
parts of resin and one wax, and, when mixed with
one third of tallow,
it makes very good candles. The stem is used
for building purposes,
and the leaves for thatching roofs.
107. CHAMAEDOREA ELEGANS. This
belongs to a genus of palms native of
South America.
The plant is of tall, slender growth; the stems are
used for walking
canes, and the young, unexpanded flower spikes
are used as a
vegetable.
108. CHAMAEROPS FORTUNEI. This
palm is a native of the north of China,
and is nearly
hardy here. In China, the coarse brown fibers
obtained from
the leaves are used for making hats and also
garments called
So-e, worn in wet weather.
109. CHAMAEROPS HUMILIS. This
is the only European species of palm, and
does not extend
farther north than Nice. The leaves are commonly
used in the south
of Europe for making hats, brooms, baskets, etc.
From the leaf
fiber a material resembling horse hair is prepared,
and the Arabs
mix it with camel’s hair for their tent covers.
110. CHAVICA BETEL. This plant
is found all over the East Indies,
where its leaf
is largely used by Indian natives as a masticatory.
Its consumption
is immense, and has been said to equal that of
tobacco by Western
peoples. It is prepared for chewing by
inclosing in the
leaves a slice of the areca nut, and a small
portion of lime.
It is thought to act as a stimulant to the
digestive organs,
but causes giddiness and other unpleasant
symptoms to those
not accustomed to its use.
111. CHIOCOCCA RACEMOSA. This
plant is found in many warm countries,
such as in southern
Florida. It is called cahinca in Brazil, where
a preparation
of the bark of the root is employed as a remedy for
snake bites.
Almost every locality where snakes exist has its
local remedies
for poisonous bites, but they rarely prove to be
efficient when
truthfully and fairly tested.
112. CHLORANTHUS OFFICINALIS. The
roots of this plant are an aromatic
stimulant, much
used as medicine in the Island of Java; also, when
mixed with anise,
it has proved valuable in malignant smallpox.
113. CHLOROXYLON SWIETENIA. The
satinwood tree of tropical countries.
It is principally
used for making the backs of clothes and hair
brushes, and for
articles of turnery-ware; the finest mottled
pieces are cut
into veneers and used for cabinet-making.
114. CHRYSOBALANUS ICACO. The
cocoa plum of the West Indies. The
fruits are about
the size of a plum, and are of various colors,
white, yellow,
red, or purple. The pulp is sweet, a little
austere, but not
disagreeable. The fruits are preserved and
exported from
Cuba and other West India Islands. The kernels
yield
a fixed oil, and
an emulsion made with them is used medicinally.
115. CHRYSOPHYLLUM CAINITO. The
fruit of this plant is known in the
West Indies as
the star apple, the interior of which, when cut
across, shows
ten cells, and as many seeds disposed regularly
round the center,
giving a star-like appearance, as stars are
generally represented
in the most reliable almanacs. It receives
its botanic name
from the golden silky color on the under side of
the leaves.
116. CICCA DISTICHA. This
Indian plant is cultivated in many parts
under the name
of Otaheite gooseberry. The fruits resemble those
of a green gooseberry.
They have an acid flavor; are used for
preserving or
pickling, and eaten either in a raw state or cooked
in various ways.
117. CINCHONA CALISAYA. The
yellow bark of Bolivia. This is one of the
so-called Peruvian
Bark trees. The discovery of the medicinal
value of this
bark is a matter of fable and conjecture. The
name
cinchona is derived
from that of the wife of a viceroy of Peru,
who is said to
have taken the drug from South America to Europe in
1639. Afterwards
the Jesuits used it; hence it is sometimes called
Jesuit’s
bark. It was brought most particularly into notice
when
Louis XIV of France
purchased of Sir R. Talbor, an Englishman, his
heretofore secret
remedy for intermittent fever, and made it
public.
There are various barks in commerce
classified under the head of Peruvian barks.
Their great value depends upon the presence of certain
alkaloid substances called quinine, cinchonine, and
quinidine, which exist in the bark in combination
with tannic and other acids. Quinine is
the most useful of these alkaloids, and this
is found in greatest quantities in Calisaya bark.
The gray bark of Huanuco is derived from Cinchona
micrantha, which is characterized by its
yield of cinchonine, and the Loxa or Loja barks
are furnished in part by Cinchona officinalis,
and are especially rich in quinidine. There
is some uncertainty about the trees that produce
the various kinds of bark. These trees grow in
the forests of Bolivia and Peru, at various elevations
on the mountains, but chiefly in sheltered mountain
valleys, and all of them at a considerable distance
below the frost or snow line. They are
destroyed by the slightest frost. Plants of various
species have been distributed from time to time,
in localities which seemed most favorable to
their growth, but all reports from these distributions
have, so far, been discouraging.
118. CINNAMOMUM CASSIA. This
furnishes cassia bark, which is much
like cinnamon,
but thicker, coarser, stronger, less delicate in
flavor, and cheaper;
hence it is often used to adulterate
cinnamon.
The unexpanded flower buds are sold as cassia
buds,
possessing properties
similar to those of the bark. It is grown
in southern China,
Java, and tropical countries generally.
119. CINNAMOMUM ZEYLANICUM. A
tree belonging to Lauraceae, which
furnishes the
best cinnamon. It is prepared by stripping the
bark
from the branches,
when it rolls up into quills, the smaller of
which are introduced
into the larger, and then dried in the sun.
Cinnamon is much
used as a condiment for its pleasant flavor, and
its astringent
properties are of medicinal value. It is cultivated
largely in Ceylon.
The cinnamon tree is too tender to become of
commercial importance
in the United States. Isolated plants may be
found in southern
Florida, at least it is so stated, but the area
suited to its
growth must be very limited.
120. CISSAMPELOS PAREIRA. The
velvet plant of tropical countries. The
root furnishes
the Pareira brava of druggists, which is used
in
medicine.
121. CITRUS AURANTIUM. The orange,
generally supposed to be a native
of the north of
India. It was introduced into Arabia during the
ninth century.
It was unknown in Europe in the eleventh century.
Oranges were cultivated
at Seville towards the end of the twelfth
century, and at
Palermo in the thirteenth. In the fourteenth
century they were
plentiful in several parts of Italy. There are
many varieties
of the orange in cultivation. The blood red, or
Malta, is much
esteemed; the fruit is round, reddish-yellow
outside and the
pulp irregularly mottled with crimson. The
Mandarin or Tangerine
orange has a thin rind which separates
easily from the
pulp, and is very sweet and rich. The St.
Michael’s
orange is one of the most productive and delicious
varieties, with
a thin rind and very sweet pulp. The Seville or
bitter orange
is used for the manufacture of bitter tincture and
candied orange-peel.
The Bergamot orange has peculiarly fragrant
flowers and fruit,
from each of which an essence of a delicious
quality is extracted.
122. CITRUS DECUMANA. The
shaddock, which has the largest fruit of the
family. It
is a native of China and Japan, where it is known as
sweet ball.
The pulp is acid or subacid, and in some varieties
nearly sweet.
From the thickness of the skin the fruit will keep
a
considerable time
without injury.
123. CITRUS JAPONICA. This is
the Kum-quat of the Chinese. It forms a
small tree, or
rather a large bush, and bears fruit about the size
of a large cherry.
There are two forms, one bearing round fruits,
the other long,
oval fruits. This fruit has a sweet rind and an
agreeably acid
pulp, and is usually eaten whole without being
peeled. It
forms an excellent preserve, with sugar, and is largely
used in this form.
124. CITRUS LIMETTA. The lime,
which is used for the same purposes as
the lemon, and
by some preferred, the juice being considered more
wholesome and
the acid more agreeable. There are several
varieties, some
of them being sweet and quite insipid.
125. CITRUS LIMONUM. The lemon;
this plant is found growing naturally
in that part of
India which is beyond the Ganges. It was unknown
to the ancient
Greeks and Romans. It is supposed to have been
brought to Italy
by the Crusaders. Arabian writers of the twelfth
century notice
the lemon as being cultivated in Egypt and other
places. The
varieties of the lemon are very numerous and valued
for their agreeable
acid juice and essential oil. They keep for a
considerable time,
especially if steeped for a short period in
salt water.
126. CITRUS MEDICA. The
citron, found wild in the forests of northern
India. The
Jews cultivated the citron at the time they were under
subjection to
the Romans, and used the fruit in the Feast of the
Tabernacles.
There is no proof of their having known the fruit in
the time of Moses,
but it is supposed that they found it at
Babylon, and brought
it into Palestine. The citron is cultivated
in China and Cochin-China.
It is easily naturalized and the seeds
are rapidly spread.
In its wild state it grows erect; the branches
are spiny, the
flowers purple on the outside and white on the
inside. The
fruit furnishes the essential oil of citron and the
essential oil
of cedra. There are several varieties; the fingered
citron is a curious
fruit, and the Madras citron is very long and
narrow; the skin
is covered with protubérances.
127. CLUSIA ROSEA. A tropical
plant which yields abundantly of a
tenacious resin
from its stem, which is used for the same purpose
as pitch.
It is first of a green color, but when exposed to the
air it assumes
a brown or reddish tint. The Caribs use it for
painting the bottoms
of their boats.
128. COCCOLOBA UVIFERA. Known
in the West Indies as the seaside grape,
from the peculiarity
of the perianth, which becomes pulpy and of a
violet color and
surrounds the ripe fruit. The pulpy perianth has
an agreeable acid
flavor. An astringent extract is prepared from
the plant which
is used in medicine.
129. COCOS NUCIFERA. The cocoanut
palm. This palm is cultivated
throughout the
tropics so extensively that its native country is
not known.
One reason of its extensive dissemination is that it
grows so close
to the sea that the ripe fruits are washed away by
the waves and
afterwards cast upon far-distant shores, where they
soon vegetate.
It is in this way that the coral islands of the
Indian Ocean have
become covered with these palms. Every part of
this tree is put
to some useful purpose. The outside rind or husk
of the fruit yields
the fiber from which the well-known cocoa
matting is manufactured.
Cordage, clothes, brushes, brooms, and
hats are made
from this fiber, and, when curled and dyed, it is
used for stuffing
mattresses and cushions. An oil is produced by
pressing the white
kernel of the nut which is used for cooking
when fresh, and
by pressure affords stearin, which is made into
candles, the liquid
being used for lamps. The kernel is of great
importance as
an article of food, and the milk affords an
agreeable beverage.
While young it yields a delicious substance
resembling blanc-mange.
The leaves are used for thatching, for
making mats, baskets,
hats, etc.; combs are made from the hard
footstalk; the
heart of the tree is used as we use cabbages.
The
brown fibrous
net work from the base of the leaves is used as
sieves, and also
made into garments. The wood is used for building
and for furniture.
The flowers are used medicinally as an
astringent and
the roots as a febrifuge.
130. COCOS PLUMOSUS. A
Brazilian species, highly ornamental in its
long, arching
leaves, and producing quantities of orange-colored
nuts, in size
about as large as a chestnut, inclosed in an edible
pulp.
131. COFFEA ARABICA. The coffee
plant, which belongs to the
Cinchonaceae
and is a native of Abyssinia, but is now cultivated
in many tropical
regions. It can not be successfully cultivated
in
a climate where
the temperature, at any season of the year, falls
below 55 degrees,
although it will exist where the temperature all
but falls short
of freezing, but a low fall of temperature greatly
retards the
ripening of the fruit. Ripe fruits are often gathered
from plants in
the extreme south of Florida. The beans or seeds
are roasted before
use, and by this process they gain nearly one
half in bulk and
lose about a fifth in weight. Heat also changes
their essential
qualities, causing the development of the volatile
oil and peculiar
acid to which the aroma and flavor are due. The
berries contain
theine; so also do the leaves, and in some
countries the
latter are preferred.
132. COFFEA LIBERICA. The Liberian
coffee, cultivated in Africa, of
which country
it is a native. This plant is of larger and stronger
growth than the
Arabian coffee plant and the fruit is larger.
This
species is of
recent introduction to commerce, and although it was
reported as being
more prolific than the ordinary coffee plant,
the statement
has not been borne out in Brazil and Mexico, where
it has been tested.
It is also more tender than the older known
species.
133. COLA ACUMINATA. An
African tree, which has been introduced into
the West Indies
and Brazil for the sake of its seeds, which are
known as Cola,
or Kola, or Goora nuts, and extensively used as a
sort of condiment
by the natives of Africa. A small piece of one
of these seeds
is chewed before each meal to promote digestion.
It
possesses properties
similar to the leaves of coca and contains
theine. These
nuts have from time immemorial occupied a prominent
place in the dietetic
economy of native tribes in Africa, and the
demand for them
has established a large commercial industry in the
regions where
they are obtained.
134. COLOCASIA ESCULENTA. This
plant has been recommended for
profitable culture
in this country for its edible root-stock. It
is cultivated
in the Sandwich Islands under the name of Tara.
The
young leaves are
cooked and eaten in the same manner as spinach or
greens in Egypt.
They are acrid, but lose their acridity when
boiled, the water
being changed. The roots are filled with starch,
and have long
been used as food in various semitropical countries.
135. CONDAMINEA MACROPHYLLA. This
plant belongs to the cinchona
family, and contains
tonic properties. The Peruvian bark gatherers
adulterate the
true cinchona bark with this, but it may be
detected by its
white inner surface, its less powerful bitter
taste, and a viscidity
not possessed by the cinchonas.
136. CONVOLVULUS SCAMMONIA. This
plant furnishes the scammony of the
druggists.
137. COOKIA PUNCTATA. A small-growing
tree from China, which produces
a fruit known
as the Wampee. This fruit is a globular berry,
with
five or fewer
compartments filled with juice. It is much esteemed
in China.
138. COPAIFERA OFFICINALIS. This
tree yields balsam of copaiba, used
in medicine.
The balsam is collected by making incisions in the
stem, when the
liquor is said to pour out copiously; as it exudes
it is thin and
colorless, but immediately thickens and changes to
a clear yellow.
Like many other balsams, it is nearly allied to
the turpentines;
it has a moderately agreeable smell, and a
bitter, biting
taste of considerable duration. Distilled with
water it yields
a limpid essential oil.
139. COPERNICA CERIFERA. The
Carnuba, or wax palm of Brazil. It grows
about 40 feet
high, and has a trunk 6 or 8 inches thick, composed
of very hard wood,
which is commonly employed in Brazil for
building and other
purposes. The upper part of the young stem is
soft, and yields
a kind of sago, and the bitter fruits are eaten
by the Indians.
The young leaves are coated with wax, called
Carnaub wax, which
is detached by shaking them, and then melted
and run into cakes;
it is harder than beeswax, and has been used
for making candles.
The leaves are used for thatch, and, when
young, are eaten
by cattle.
140. COPROSMA ROBUSTA. A
cinchonaceous shrub. The leaves of this plant
were formerly
used in some of the religious ceremonies of the New
Zealanders.
141. CORDIA MYXA. This produces
succulent, mucilaginous, and emollient
fruits, which
are eaten. These qualities, combined with a slight
astringency, have
led to their use as pectorals, known as
Sebesténs.
The wood of this tree is said to have furnished the
material used
by the Egyptians in the construction of their mummy
cases; it is also
considered to be one of the best woods for
kindling fire
by friction.
142. CORDYLINE AUSTRALIS. The
Australian Ti, or cabbage tree, a
palm-like plant
of 15 to 20 feet in height. The whole plant is
fibrous, and it
has been suggested as good for a paper-making
material.
The juice of the roots and stem contains a small amount
of sugar, and
has been employed for procuring alcohol.
143. CORYPHA UMBRACULIFERA. The
Talipot palm, a native of Ceylon,
producing gigantic
fan-like leaves. These leaves have prickly
stalks 6 or 7
feet long, and when fully expanded form a nearly
complete circle
of 13 feet in diameter. Large fans made of these
leaves are carried
before people of rank among the Cinghalese;
they are also
commonly used as umbrellas, and tents are made by
neatly joining
them together; they are also used as a substitute
for paper, being
written upon with a stylus. Some of the sacred
books of the Cinghalese
are composed of strips of them. The hard
seeds are used
by turners.
144. COUROUPITA GUIANENSIS. The
fruit of this tree is called, from its
appearance, the
cannon-ball fruit; its shell is used as a drinking
vessel, and when
fresh the pulp is of an agreeable flavor.
145. CRATAEVA GYNANDRA. This
West Indian tree yields a small fruit
which has a strong
smell of garlic, hence it is called the garlic
pear. The
bark is bitter and used as a tonic.
146. CRESCENTIA CUJETE. The
calabash tree of the West Indies, where it
is valued for
the sake of its fruits, which resemble pumpkins in
appearance and
occasionally reach a diameter of 18 inches.
Divested of their
pulp, which is not edible, they serve various
useful domestic
purposes, for carrying water, and even as kettles
for cooking.
They are strong and light.
147. CROTON BALSAMIFERUM. This
West Indian shrub is sometimes called
seaside balsam
or sage. A thick, yellowish, aromatic juice exudes
from the extremities
of the broken branches, or wherever the stem
has been wounded.
In Martinique a liquor called Eau de Mantes
is
distilled from
this balsamic juice with spirits of wine. The
young
leaves and branches
are used in warm baths, on account of their
agreeable fragrance
and reputed medicinal virtues.
148. CROTON ELEUTHERIA. This
plant furnishes cascarilla bark, used as
an aromatic bitter
tonic, having no astringency. It has a fragrant
smell when burnt,
on which account it has been mixed with smoking
tobacco.
149. CROTON TIGLIUM. A plant
of the family Euphorbiaceae, from the
Indian Archipelago,
which produces the seeds from whence croton
oil is extracted.
It is a very powerful medicine, and even in
pressing the seeds
for the purpose of extracting the oil, the
workmen are subject
to irritation of the eyes and other
casualties.
150. CUBEBA OFFICINALIS. A native
of Java, which furnishes the cubeb
fruits of commerce.
These fruits are like black pepper, but
stalked, and have
an acrid, hot, aromatic taste; frequently used
medicinally.
151. CURCAS PURGANS. A tropical
plant cultivated in many warm
countries for
the sake of its seeds, known as physic nuts. The
juice of the plant,
which is milky, acrid, and glutinous, produces
an indelible brown
stain on linen. The oil from the seeds is used
for burning in
lamps; and in paints. In China it is boiled with
oxide of iron
and used as a varnish. It is also used medicinally.
152. CURCUMA LONGA. A plant
belonging to the Zingiberaceae, the roots
of which furnish
turmeric. This powder is used in India as a mild
aromatic, and
for other medicinal purposes. It also enters into
the composition
of curry-powder, and a sort of arrowroot is made
from the young
tubers.
153. CURCUMA ZEDOARIA. This
plant furnishes zedoary tubers, much used
in India as aromatic
tonics.
154. CYATHEA MEDULLARIS. This
beautiful tree fern is a native of
Australia, where
it attains a height of 25 to 30 feet, having
fronds from 10
to 15 feet in length. It contains a pulpy substance
in the center
of the stem, of a starchy, mucilaginous nature,
which is a common
article of food with the natives. The trees have
to be destroyed
in order to obtain it.
155. CYBISTAX ANTISYPHILITICA. A
plant of the order of Bignoniaceae,
called Atunyangua
in the Andes of Peru, where the inhabitants dye
their cotton clothes
by boiling them along with the leaves of this
plant; the dye
is a permanent blue. The bark of the young shoots
is much employed
in medicine.
156. CYCAS REVOLUTA. The
sago palm of gardens. The stem of the plants
abounds in starch,
which is highly esteemed in Japan. A gum exudes
from the trunk
of the old plant, which is employed medicinally by
the natives of
India.
157. CYCAS CIRCINALIS. A
native of Malabar, where a kind of sago is
prepared from
the seeds, which are dried and powdered; medicinal
properties are
also attributed to the seeds.
158. DACRYDIUM FRANKLINII. Called
Huon pine, because of its being
found near the
Huon River, in Tasmania. It belongs to the yew
family. It
furnishes valuable timber, very durable, and is used
for ship and house
building; some of the wood is very beautifully
marked, and is
used in furniture making and cabinetwork.
159. DALBERGIA SISSOO. A tree
of northern India, the timber of which
is known as Sissum
wood. This wood is strong, tenacious, and
compact, much
used for railway ties and for gun-carriages.
160. DAMARA AUSTRALIS. A singular
plant of the Coniferae family,
called the Kauri
pine. It forms a tree 150 to 200 feet in height,
and produces a
hard, brittle resin-like copal, which is used in
varnish.
161. DASYLIRION ACROTRICHUM. A
plant of the pineapple family, from
Mexico. The
leaves contain a fine fiber, which may be ultimately
more extensively
utilized than it is at present.
162. DESMODIUM GYRANS. An interesting
plant of the pea family, called
the moving plant,
on account of the rotatory motion of the
leaflets.
These move in all conceivable ways, either steadily
or
by jerks.
Sometimes only one leaf or two on the plant will be
affected; at other
times a nearly simultaneous movement may be
seen in all the
leaves. These movements are most energetic when
the thermometer
marks about 80 deg.. This motion is not due
to any
external or mechanical
irritation.
163. DIALIUM ACUTIFOLIUM. The
velvet tamarind, so called, from the
circumstance that
its seed-pods are covered with a beautiful black
velvet down.
The seeds are surrounded by a farinaceous pulp of an
agreeable acid
taste.
164. DIALIUM INDUM. The
tamarind plum, which has a delicious pulp of
slightly acid
flavor.
165. DICKSONIA ANTARCTICA. The
large fern tree of Australia. This
plant attains
the height of 30 or more feet, and its fronds or
leaves spread
horizontally some 20 to 25 feet. It is found in
snowy regions,
and would be perfectly hardy south. It is one
of
the finest objects
of the vegetable kingdom when of sufficient
size to show its
true beauties.
166. DIEFFENBACHIA SEGUINA. This
has acquired the name of dumb cane,
in consequence
of its fleshy, cane-like stems, rendering
speechless any
person who may happen to bite them, their acrid
poison causing
the tongue to swell to an immense size. An ointment
for applying to
dropsical swellings is prepared by boiling the
juice in lard.
Notwithstanding its acridity, a wholesome starch is
prepared from
the stem.
167. DILLENIA SPECIOSA. An
East Indian tree, bearing a fruit which is
used in curries
and for making jellies. Its slightly acid juice,
sweetened with
sugar, forms a cooling beverage. The wood is very
tough, and is
used for making gun-stocks.
168. DION EDULE. A Mexican
plant, bearing large seeds containing a
quantity of starch,
which is separated and used as arrowroot.
169. DIOSPYROS EBENUM. An East
Indian tree which in part yields the
black ebony wood
of commerce, much used in fancy cabinetwork and
turnery, door
knobs, pianoforte keys, etc.
170. DIOSPYROS KAKI. The Chinese
date plum or persimmon. The fruits
vary in size from
that of a medium-sized apple to that of a large
pear; they also
vary much in their flavor and consistency, some
being firm, and
others having a soft custard-like pulp, very sweet
and luscious.
The Chinese dry them in the sun and make them into
sweetmeats; they
are sometimes imported, and in appearance
resemble large-sized
preserved figs. These plants are being quite
largely cultivated
in some of the southern States, and the fruit
is entering commerce.
171. DIPTERIX ODORATA. This
leguminous plant yields the fragrant seed
known as Tonka
bean, used in scenting snuff and for other purposes
of perfumery.
The odor resembles that of new-mown hay, and is due
to the presence
of coumarine. The tree is a native of Cayenne
and grows 60 to
80 feet high.
172. DORSTENIA CONTRAYERVA. A
plant from tropical America, the roots
of which are used
in medicine under the name of Contrayerva root.
173. DRACAENA DRACO. The Dragon’s
Blood tree of Teneriffe. This
liliaceous plant
attains a great age and enormous size. The resin
obtained from
this tree has been found in the sepulchral caves of
the Cuanches,
and hence it is supposed to have been used by them
in embalming the
dead. Trees of this species, at present in
vigorous health,
are supposed to be as old as the pyramids of
Egypt.
174. DRACAENOPSIS AUSTRALIS. Ti
or cabbage tree of New Zealand. The
whole of this
plant is fibrous and has been used for paper making.
The juice of the
roots and stem contains a small amount of sugar
and has been used
for producing alcohol.
175. DRIMYS WINTERI. This plant
belongs to the magnolia family and
furnishes the
aromatic tonic known as Winter’s bark. It
is a
native of Chili
and the Strait of Magalhaens.
176. DRYOBALANOPS AROMATICA. A
native of the Island of Sumatra. It
furnishes a liquid
called camphor oil and a crystalline solid
known as Sumatra
or Bornéo camphor. Camphor oil is obtained from
incisions in the
tree, and has a fragrant, aromatic odor. It has
been used for
scenting soap. The solid camphor is found in cracks
of the wood, and
is obtained by cutting down the tree, dividing it
into blocks and
small pieces, from the interstices of which the
camphor is extracted.
It differs from the ordinary camphor in
being more brittle
and not condensing on the sides of the bottle
in which it is
kept. It is much esteemed by the Chinese, who
attribute many
virtues to it. It has been long known and is
mentioned by Marco
Polo in the thirteenth century.
177. DUBOISIA HOPWOODII. The
leaves of this Australian plant are
chewed by the
natives of Central Australia, just as the Peruvians
and Chilians masticate
the leaves of the Erythroxylon coca, to
invigorate themselves
during their long foot journeys through the
country.
They are known as Pitury leaves.
178. DURIO ZIBETHINUS. A common
tree in the Malayan Islands, where its
fruit forms a
great part of the food of the natives. It is said
to
have a most delicious
flavor combined with a most offensive odor,
but when once
the repugnance of the peculiar odor is overcome it
becomes a general
favorite. The unripe fruit is cooked and eaten,
and the seeds
roasted and used like chestnuts.
179. ELAEIS GUINEENSIS. The
African oil palm is a native of
southwestern Africa,
but has been introduced into other regions.
It grows to a
height of 20 to 30 feet and bears dense heads of
fruit. The
oil is obtained by boiling the fruits in water and
skimming off the
oil as it rises to the surface. It is used in
the
manufacture of
candles. In Africa it is eaten as butter by the
natives.
180. ELAEIS MELANOCOCCA. A
palm from tropical America which produces
large quantities
of oil.
181. ELAEOCARPUS HINAU. A New
Zealand tree, of the linden family. The
bark affords an
excellent permanent dye, varying from light brown
to deep black.
The fruits are surrounded by an edible pulp, and
they are frequently
pickled like olives.
182. ELETTARIA CARDAMOMUM. This
plant furnishes the fruits known as
the Small or Malabar
cardamoms of commerce. The seeds are used
medicinally for
their cordial aromatic properties, which depend
upon the presence
of a volatile oil. In India the fruits are
chewed by the
natives with their betel.
183. EMBLICA OFFICINALIS. A
plant belonging to Euphorbiaceae, a
native of India.
In Bornéo the bark and young shoots are used to
dye cotton black,
for which purpose they are boiled in alum. The
fruits are made
into sweetmeats, with sugar, or eaten raw, but
they are exceedingly
acid; when ripe and dry, they are used in
medicine, under
the name of Myrobalani emblici. The natives
of
Travancore have
a notion that the plant imparts a pleasant flavor
to water, and
therefore place branches of the tree in their wells,
especially when
the water is charged with an accumulation of
impure vegetable
matter.
184. ENCKEA UNGUICULATA. A plant
of the family Piperaceae, having an
aromatic fruit
like a berry, with a thick rind. The roots are
used
medicinally in
Brazil.
185. ENTADA SCANDENS. This leguminous
plant has remarkable pods, which
often measure
6 or 8 feet in length. The seeds are about 2 inches
across, and half
an inch thick, and have a hard, woody, and
beautifully polished
shell, of a dark-brown or purplish color.
These seeds are
frequently converted into snuff-boxes and other
articles, and
in the Indian bazars they are used as weights.
186. ERIODENDRON ANFRACTUOSUM. The
silk-cotton, or God tree of the
West Indies.
The fruit is a capsule, filled with a beautiful silky
fiber, which is
very elastic, but can not be woven, and is only
used for stuffing
cushions.
187. ERYTHRINA CAFFRA. The Kaffir
tree of South Africa. The wood is
soft and so light
as to be used for floating fishing nets. The
scarlet seeds
are employed for making necklaces. The Erythrinas,
of which there
are many species, are mostly remarkable for the
brilliant scarlet
of their flowers, and are known as Coral trees.
188. ERYTHRINA UMBROSA. This
is a favorite tree for growing in masses,
for the purpose
of sheltering cocoanut plantations, and inducing a
proper degree
of moisture in their neighborhood.
189. ERYTHROXYLON COCA. The
leaves of this plant, under the name of
coca, are much
used by the inhabitants of South America as a
masticatory.
It forms an article of commerce among the Indians,
who carefully
dry the leaves and use them daily. Their use,
in
moderation, acts
as a stimulant to the nervous system and enables
those who chew
them to perform long journeys without any other
food. The
use of coca in Peru is a very ancient custom, said
to
have originated
with the Incas. It is common throughout the
greater part of
Peru, Quito, New Granada; and on the banks of the
Rio Negro it is
known as Spadic. A principle, called cocaine,
has been extracted
from the leaves, which is used in medicine.
190. EUCALYPTUS AMYGDALINA. The
peppermint tree, a native of Tasmania.
It produces a
thin, transparent oil possessed of a pungent odor
resembling oil
of lemons, and tasting like camphor, which has
great solvent
properties. The genus Eucalyptus is extensive
and
valuable.
The greater number form large trees, known in Australia
as gum trees.
191. EUCALYPTUS GIGANTEA. This
stringy bark gum furnishes a strong,
durable timber,
used for shipbuilding and other purposes. E.
robusta contains
large cavities in its stem, between the annual
concentric circles
of wood, filled with a red gum. Many of the
species yield
gums and astringent principles and also a species of
manna. The
timber of these trees has been pronounced to be
unsurpassed for
strength and durability by any other timber known.
The leaves of
these trees are placed vertically to the sun, a
provision suited
to a dry and sultry climate.
192. EUCALYPTUS GLOBULUS. The
blue gum, a rapid-growing tree,
attaining to a
large size. Recently it has attracted attention
and
gained some repute
in medicine as an antiperiodic. The leaves have
also been applied
to wounds with some success. It produces a
strong camphor-smelling
oil, which has a mint-like taste, not at
all disagreeable.
193. EUGENIA ACRIS. The
wild clove or bayberry tree of the West
Indies. In
Jamaica it is sometimes called the black cinnamon.
The
refreshing perfume
known as bay rum is prepared by distilling the
leaves of this
tree with rum. It is stated that the leaves of
the
allspice are also
used in this preparation.
194. EUGENIA JAMBOSA. A tropical
plant, belonging to the myrtle
family, which
produces a pleasant rose-flavored fruit, known as
the Roseapple,
or Jamrosade.
195. EUGENIA PIMENTO. The fruits
of this West Indian tree are known in
commerce as allspice;
the berries have a peculiarly grateful odor
and flavor, resembling
a combination of cloves, nutmeg, and
cinnamon; hence
the name of allspice. The leaves when bruised
emit
a fine aromatic
odor, and a delicate odoriferous oil is distilled
from them, which
is said to be used as oil of cloves. The berries,
bruised and distilled
with water, yield the pimento oil of
commerce.
196. EUGENIA UGNI. This small-foliaged
myrtaceous plant is a native of
Chili. It
bears a glossy black fruit, which has an agreeable
flavor and perfume,
and is highly esteemed in its native country.
The plant is hardy
in the Southern States.
197. EUPHORBIA CANARIENSIS. This
plant grows in abundance in the
Canary Islands
and Teneriffe, in dry, rocky districts, where
little else can
grow, and where it attains a height of 10 feet,
with the branches
spreading 15 or 20 feet. It is one of the kinds
that furnish the
drug known as Euphorbium. The milky juice
exudes from incisions
made in the branches, and is so acrid that
it excoriates
the hand when applied to it. As it hardens it
falls
down in small
lumps, and those who collect it are obliged to tie
cloths over their
mouths and nostrils to exclude the small, dusty
particles, as
they produce incessant sneezing. As a medicine
its
action is violent,
and it is now rarely employed. There are a vast
number of species
of Euphorbia, varying exceedingly in their
general appearance,
but all of them having a milky juice which
contains active
properties. Many of them can scarcely be
distinguished
from cactuses so far as relates to external
appearances, but
the milky exudation following a puncture
determines their
true character. E. grandidens is a
tall-growing,
branching species, and attains a height of 30 feet.
The natives of
India use the juice of E. antiquorum, when
diluted, as a
purgative. The juice of E. heptagona and
other
African species
is employed to poison arrows; the juice of E.
cotinifolia
is used for the same purpose in Brazil. The roots
of
E. gerardiana
and E. pithyusa are emetic, while E.
thymifolia
and E. hypericifolia possess astringent and
aromatic
properties.
The poisonous principle which pervades these plants
is
more or less dissipated
by heat. The juice of E. cattimandoo
furnishes caoutchouc
of a very good quality, which, however,
becomes brittle,
although soaking in hot water renders it again
pliable. E.
phosphorea derives the name from the fact of its
sap
emitting a phosphorescent
light, on warm nights, in the Brazilian
forests.
198. EUTERPE EDULIS. The
assai palm of Para. It grows in swampy lands,
and produces a
small fruit thinly coated with clotted flesh of
which the inhabitants
of Para manufacture a beverage called assai.
The ripe fruits
are soaked in warm water and kneaded until the
fleshy pulp is
detached. This, when strained, is of a thick,
creamy consistence,
and, when thickened with cassava farina and
sweetened with
sugar, forms a nutritious diet, and is the daily
food of a large
number of the people.
199. EUTERPE MONTANA. The center
portion of the upper part of the stem
of this West Indian
palm, including the leaf bud, is eaten either
when cooked as
a vegetable or pickled, but the tree must be
destroyed in order
to obtain it.
200. EXC[OE]CARIA SEBIFERA. This
Euphorbiaceous plant is the tallow
tree of China.
The fruits, are about half an inch in diameter, and
each contains
three seeds, thickly coated with a fatty substance
which yields the
tallow. This is obtained by first steaming the
seeds, then bruising
them to loosen the fat without breaking the
seeds, which are
removed by sifting. The fat is then made into
flat circular
cakes and pressed, when the pure tallow exudes in a
liquid state and
soon hardens into a white, brittle mass. Candles
made from this
get soft in hot weather, which is prevented by
coating them with
insect wax. A liquid oil is obtained from the
seeds by pressing.
The tree yields a hard wood, used by the
Chinese for printing
blocks, and its leaves are used in dyeing
black.
201. EXOGONIUM PURGA. This
plant furnishes the true jalap-tubers of
commerce.
They owe their well-known purgative properties to their
resinous ingredients.
Various species of Ipom[oe]a furnish a
spurious kind
of this drug, which is often put in the market as
the genuine article.
202. EXOSTEMMA CARIBAEUM. This
West Indian plant has become naturalized
in southern Florida.
It belongs to the cinchona family and is
known as Jamaica
bark. It is also known as Quinquina Caraïbe.
The
bark is reputed
to be a good febrifuge, and also to be employed as
an emetic.
It is supposed to contain some peculiar principle,
as
the fracture displays
an abundance of small crystals. The
capsules, before
they are ripe, are very bitter, and their juice
causes a burning
itching on the lips.
203. FERONIA ELEPHANTUM. The
wood apple or elephant apple tree of
India, belonging
to the family Aurantiaceae. It forms a
large
tree in Ceylon,
and yields a hard, heavy wood, of great strength.
It yields a gum,
which is mixed with other gums and sold under the
name of East Indian
gum arabic. The fruit is about the size of an
orange, and contains
a pulpy flesh, which is edible, and a jelly
is made from it,
which is used in cases of dysentery. The leaves
have an odor like
that of anise, and the native India doctors
employ them as
a stomachic and carminative.
204. FEVILLEA CORDIFOLIA. The
sequa or cacoon antidote of Jamaica. It
belongs to the
cucumber family, and climbs to a great height up
the trunks of
trees. The seeds are employed as a remedy in a
variety of diseases,
and are considered an antidote against the
effects of poison;
they also contain a quantity of semisolid fatty
oil, which is
liberated by pressing and boiling them in water.
205. FICUS ELASTICA. This
plant is known as the india-rubber tree. It
is a native of
the East Indies, and is the chief source of
caoutchouc
from that quarter of the globe, although other species
of Ficus yield
this gum, as well as several plants of other
genera. It
is a plant of rapid growth, and from the larger
branches roots
descend to the earth as in the case of the banyan
tree.
206. FICUS INDICA. The
famous banyan tree of history. Specimens of
this Indian fig
are mentioned as being of immense size. One in
Bengal spreads
over a diameter of 370 feet. Another covered an
area of 1,700
square yards. It is one of the sacred trees of
the
Hindoos.
It was known to the ancients. Strabo describes
it, and it
is mentioned by
Pliny. Milton also alludes to it as follows:
Branching
so broad along, that in the ground
The
bending twigs take root; and daughters grow
About
the mother tree; a pillared shade,
High
overarched, with echoing walks between.
There
oft the Indian herdsman, shunning heat,
Shelters
in cool; and tends his pasturing herds
At
loop-holes cut through thickest shade.
207. FICUS RELIGIOSA. The
pippul tree of the Hindoos, which they hold
in such veneration
that, if a person cuts or lops off any of the
branches, he is
looked upon with as great abhorrence as if he had
broken the leg
of one of their equally sacred cows. The seeds
are
employed by Indian
doctors in medicine.
208. FLACOURTIA SEPIARIA. A
bushy shrub, used in India for hedges. Its
fruit has a pleasant,
subacid flavor when perfectly ripe, but the
unripe fruit is
extremely astringent. The Indian doctors use a
liniment made
of the bark in cases of gout, and an infusion of it
as a cure for
snake bites.
209. FOURCROYA CUBENSE. This
plant is closely related to the agave,
and, like many
of that genus, furnishes a fine fiber, which is
known in St. Domingo
as Cabuya fiber. These plants are very
magnificent when
in flower, throwing up stems 20 to 30 feet in
height, covered
with many hundreds of yucca-like blossoms.
210. FRANCISCEA UNIFLORA. A
Brazilian plant called Mercurio vegetal;
also known as
Manaca. The roots, and to some extent the leaves,
are used in medicine;
the inner bark and all the herbaceous parts
are nauseously
bitter; it is regarded as a purgative, emetic, and
alexipharmic;
in overdoses it is an acrid poison.
211. FUSANUS ACUMINATUS. A
small tree of the Cape of Good Hope and
Australia.
It bears a globular fruit of the size of a small peach,
and is known in
Australia as the native peach. It has an edible
nut, called the
Quandang nut, which is said to be as sweet and
palatable as the
almond.
212. GALIPEA OFFICINALIS. This
South American tree furnishes Angostura
bark, which has
important medical properties, some physicians in
South America
preferring it to cinchona in the treatment of
fevers. Its
use has been greatly retarded by bark of the deadly
nux-vomica
tree having been inadvertently sold for it. As
this
bark is sometimes
used in bitters, a mistake, as above, might
prove as fatal
as cholera.
213. GARCINIA MANGOSTANA. This
tree produces the tropical fruit called
mangosteen, a
beautiful fruit, having a thick, succulent rind,
which contains
an astringent juice, and exudes a gum similar to
gamboge.
The esculent interior contains a juicy pulp, of the
whiteness and
solubility of snow, and of a refreshing, delicate,
delicious flavor.
The bark of the tree is used as a basis for
black dye, and
it has also some medicinal value.
214. GARCINIA MORELLA. It is
supposed that Siam gamboge is obtained
from this tree,
also that known as Ceylon gamboge. The juice is
collected by incising
the stems, or by breaking young twigs of the
tree and securing
the yellow gum resinous exudations in hollow
bamboos, where
it is allowed to harden. It is employed by artists
in water colors
and as a varnish for lacquer work.
215. GARCINIA PICTORIA. A fatty
matter known as gamboge butter is
procured from
the seeds of this tree in Mysore. They are pounded
in a stone mortar,
then boiled till the butter or oil rises to the
surface.
It is used as a lamp oil, and sometimes in food.
216. GARDENIA FLORIDA and GARDENIA RADICANS. Cape
Jasmines, so called
from a supposition
that they were natives of the Cape of Good
Hope. The
genus belongs to the cinchona family. G. lucida
furnishes a fragrant
resin somewhat similar to myrrh. The fruit of
G. campanulata
is used as a cathartic, and also to wash out
stains in silks.
G. gummifera yields a resin something like
Elemi.
217. GASTROLOBIUM BILOBUM. A
leguminous plant, having poisonous
properties.
In western Australia, where it is a native, farmers
often lose their
cattle through their eating the foliage. Cats
and
dogs that eat
the flesh of these poisoned cattle are also
poisoned. G.
obtusum and G. spinosum possess similar
properties.
218. GENIPA AMERICANA. This
belongs to the cinchona family, and
produces the fruit
called genipap or marmalade box. It is about
the size of an
orange, and has an agreeable flavor. The juice
of
the fruit yields
a bluish-black dye, called Canito or Lana-dye.
This color is
very permanent, and is much used by Indians in South
America.
219. GEONOMA SCHOTTIANA. A pretty
Brazilian palm; the leaves are used
for thatching
huts, and other parts of the plant are utilized.
220. GOUANIA DOMINGENSIS. A
plant of the buckthorn family, known in
Jamaica as Chaw-Stick,
on account of its thin branches being
chewed as an agreeable
stomachic. Tooth brushes are made by
cutting pieces
of the stem to convenient lengths and fraying out
the ends.
A tooth powder is prepared by pulverizing the dried
stems. It
is said to possess febrifugal properties, and owing
to
its pleasant bitter
taste it is used for flavoring cooling
beverages.
221. GREVILLEA ROBUSTA. The
silk oak tree of Australia; a tree that
attains a large
size, and is remarkable for the graceful beauty of
its foliage.
222. GREWIA ASIATICA. This
Indian tree represents a genus of plants of
considerable economic
value. This particular species yields a
profusion of small
red fruits which are used for flavoring drinks,
having a pleasant
acid flavor. The fibrous inner bark is employed
by the natives
for making fishing nets, ropes, twine, and for
other similar
purposes.
223. GRIAS CAULIFLORA. The anchovy
pear of Jamaica. The fruit is
pickled and eaten
like the mango, having a similar taste.
224. GUAIACUM OFFICINALE. The
wood of this tree is called Lignum Vitae.
A resin, called
gum guaiacum, exudes from the stem, and is
otherwise obtained
from the wood by artificial means. It is of a
greenish-brown
color, with a balsamic fragrance, and is
remarkable for
the changes of color it undergoes when brought into
contact with various
substances. Gluten gives it a blue tint:
nitric acid and
chlorin change it successively to green, blue, and
brown. The
resin is used medicinally as also are the bark and
wood.
225. GUAZUMA TOMENTOSA. This
plant is nearly allied to the
chocolate-nut
tree, and yields fruits that abound in mucilage, as
also does the
bark of the young shoots. The mucilage is given
out
in water, and
has been used as a substitute for gelatin or albumen
in clarifying
cane juice in the manufacture of sugar. The timber
is light, and
is employed for the staves of sugar hogsheads; it is
known in Jamaica
as bastard cedar. A strong fiber is obtained from
the young shoots.
226. GUILIELMA SPECIOSA. The
peach palm of Venezuela. The fruits are
borne in large
drooping bunches, and their fleshy outer portion
contains starchy
matter, which forms a portion of the food of the
natives.
They are cooked and eaten with salt, and are said to
resemble a potato
in flavor. A beverage is prepared by fermenting
them in water,
and the meal obtained from them is made into bread.
The wood of the
old trees is black, and so hard as to turn the
edge of an ax.
227. HAEMATOXYLON CAMPECHIANUM. The
logwood tree. This dyestuff is
largely used by
calico printers and other dyeing manufacturers.
It
is also used as
an ingredient in some writing inks. The heart
wood
is the part used
for dyeing. This is cut into chips which yield
their color to
water and alcohol. The colors are various according
to treatment,
giving violet, yellow, purple, and blue, but the
consumption of
logwood is for black colors, which are obtained by
alum and iron
bases.
228. HARDENBERGIA MONOPHYLLA. An
Australian climbing plant of the
leguminous family.
The long, carrot-shaped, woody root was called,
by the early settlers
in that country, sarsaparilla, and is still
used in infusion
as a substitute for that root.
229. HARTIGHSEA SPECTABILIS. A
New Zealand tree, called Wahahe by the
natives, who employ
the leaves as a substitute for hops, and also
prepare from them
a spirituous infusion as a stomachic medicine.
230. HELICONIA BIHAI. A plant
of the order Musaceae, from South
America.
The young shoots are eaten by the natives, and the
fruits
are also collected
and used as food. It also furnishes a useful
fiber.
231. Hévéa BRASILIENSIS. A
tree of tropical America growing in damp
forests, especially
in the Amazon valley, which, together with
other trees called
siphonia furnish the Para rubber, or American
caoutchouc.
The sap is collected from incisions made in the tree
during the dry
season, and is poured over clay molds and dried by
gentle heat, successive
pourings being made till a sufficiently
thick layer is
produced.
232. HIBISCUS ROSA SINENSIS. The
flowers of this malvaceous plant
contain a quantity
of astringent juice, and, when bruised, rapidly
turn black or
deep purple; they are used by the Chinese ladies for
dyeing their hair
and eyebrows, and in Java for blacking shoes.
233. HIBISCUS SABDARIFFA. This
species is known in the West Indies as
red sorrel, on
account of the calyxes and capsules having an acid
taste. They
are made into cooling drinks, by sweetening and
fermentation.
The bark contains a strong useful fiber which makes
good ropes if
not too much twisted. It is also known as the
Roselle plant.
234. HIBISCUS TILIACEUS. A plant
common to many tropical countries.
Its wood is extremely
light when dry, and is employed by the
Polynesians for
getting fire by friction, which is said to be a
very tedious and
tiresome operation, and difficult to accomplish.
Good fiber is
also obtained from the bark.
235. HIPPOMANE MANCINELLA. This
is the poisonous manchineel tree of
South America
and other tropical regions. The virulent nature
of
the juice of this
tree has given it a reputation equal to that
forced upon the
upas tree of Java. The juice is certainly very
acrid, and even
its smoke, when burning, causes temporary
blindness.
The fruit is equally dangerous, and from its beautiful
appearance is
sometimes partaken of by those who are unaware of
its deleterious
properties, but its burning effects on the lips
soon causes them
to desist. Indians are said to poison their
arrows with the
juice of this tree.
236. HURA CREPITANS. This tropical
plant is known as the sand-box
tree. Its
deep-furrowed, rounded, hard-shelled fruit is about
the
size of an orange,
and when ripe and dry, it bursts open with a
sharp noise like
the report of a pistol; hence, it is also called
the monkey’s
dinner bell. An emetic oil is extracted from the
seeds, and a venomous,
milky juice is abundant in all parts of the
plant.
237. HYMENAEA COURBARIL. The
locust tree of the West Indies; also
called algarroba
in tropical regions. This is one of the very
largest growing
trees known, and living trees in Brazil are
supposed to have
been growing at the commencement of the Christian
era. The
timber is very hard, and is much used for building
purposes.
A valuable resin, resembling the anime of Africa,
exudes
from the trunk,
and large lumps of it are found about the roots of
old trees.
238. HYPHAENE THEBAICA. The
doum, or doom palm, or gingerbread of
Egypt; it grows
also in Nubia, Abyssinia, and Arabia. The fibrous,
mealy husks of
the seeds are eaten, and taste almost like
gingerbread.
In the Thebias this palm forms extensive forests, the
roots spreading
over the lurid ruins of one of the largest and
most splendid
cities of the ancient world.
239. ICICA HEPTAPHYLLA. The
incense tree of Guiana, a tall-growing
tree, furnishing
wood of great durability. It is called cedar wood
on account of
its fragrant odor. The balsam from the trunk is
highly odoriferous,
and used in perfumery, and is known as balsam
of acouchi; it
is used in medicine. The balsam and branches are
burned as incense
in churches.
240. ILEX PARAGUAYENSIS. This
is the tea plant of South America, where
it occupies the
same important position in the domestic economy of
the country as
the Chinese tea does in this. The mate
is
prepared by drying
and roasting the leaves, which are then reduced
to a powder and
made into packages. When used, a small portion
of
the powder is
placed in a vessel, sugar is added, and boiling
water poured over
the whole. It has an agreeable, slightly
aromatic odor,
rather bitter to the taste, but very refreshing and
invigorating to
the human frame after severe fatigue. It acts
in
some degree as
an aperient and diuretic, and in overdoses produces
intoxication.
It contains the same active principle, theine as tea
and coffee, but
not their volatile and empyreumatic oils.
241. ILLICIUM ANISATUM. This
magnoliaceous plant is a native of China,
and its fruit
furnishes the star anise of commerce. In China,
Japan, and India
it is used as a condiment in the preparation of
food, and is chewed
to promote digestion, and the native
physicians prescribe
it as a carminative. It is the flavoring
ingredient of
the preparation Anisette de Bordeaux. Its
flavor
and odor are due
to a volatile oil, which is extracted by
distillation,
and sold as oil of anise, which is really a
different article.
242. ILLICIUM FLORIDANUM. A
native of the Southern States. The leaves
are said to be
poisonous; hence, the plant is sometimes called
poison bag.
The bark has been used as a substitute for cascarilla.
243. ILLICIUM RELIGIOSUM. A
Japanese species, which reaches the size
of a small tree,
and is held sacred by the Japanese, who form
wreaths of it
with which to decorate the tombs of their deceased
friends, and they
also burn the fragrant bark as incense. Their
watchmen use the
powdered bark for burning in graduated tubes, in
order to mark
the time, as it consumes slowly and uniformly.
The
leaves are said
to possess poisonous properties.
244. INDIGOFERA TINCTORIA. The
indigo plant, a native of Asia, but
cultivated and
naturalized in many countries. The use of indigo
as
a dye is of great
antiquity. Both Dioscorides and Pliny mention
it, and it is
supposed to have been employed by the ancient
Egyptians.
The indigo of commerce is prepared by throwing the
fresh cut plants
into water, where they are steeped for twelve
hours, when the
water is run off into a vessel and agitated in
order to promote
the formation of the blue coloring matter, which
does not exist
ready formed in the tissues of the plant, but is
the result of
the oxidation of other substances contained in them.
The coloring matter
then settles at the bottom; it is then boiled
to a certain consistency
and afterwards spread out on cloth
frames, where
it is further drained of water and pressed into
cubes or cakes
for market.
245. IPOM[OE]A PURGA. A
species of jalap is obtained from this
convolvulaceous
plant; this is a resinous matter contained in the
juices.
246. IRIARTELLA SETIGERA. A
South American palm growing in the
underwood of the
forests on the Amazon and Rio Negro. The Indians
use its slender
stems for making their blow pipes or gravatanas,
through which
they blow small poisoned arrows with accuracy to a
considerable distance.
247. JAMBOSA MALACCENSIS. This
Indian plant belongs to the myrtle
family. It
produces a good-sized edible fruit known as the Malay
apple.
248. JASMINUM SAMBAC TRIFOLIATUM. A
native of South America. The
flowers are very
fragrant, and an essential oil, much used in
perfumery under
the name of jasmine oil, is obtained from this and
other species.
249. JATROPHA CLAUCA. An East
Indian plant the seeds of which when
crushed furnish
an oil which is used in medicine.
250. JATROPHA CURCAS. The physic
nut tree of tropical America. This
plant contains
a milky, acrid, glutinous juice, which forms a
permanent stain
when dropped on linen, and which might form a good
marking ink.
Burning oil is expressed from the seeds in the
Philippine Islands;
the oil, boiled with oxide of iron, is used in
China as a varnish.
It is used in medicine in various ways, the
leaves for fomentations,
the juice in treating ulcers, and the
seeds as purgatives.
251. JUBAEA SPECTABILIS. The
coquito palm of Chili. The seed or nut is
called cokernut,
and has a pleasant, nutty taste. These are used
by the Chilian
confectioners in the preparation of sweetmeats, and
by the boys as
marbles, being in shape and size like them. The
leaves are used
for thatching, and the trunks or stems are
hollowed out and
converted into water pipes. A sirup called Miel
de Palma or palm
honey, is prepared by boiling the sap of this
tree to the consistency
of treacle, and is much esteemed for
domestic use as
sugar. The sap is obtained by cutting off the
crown of leaves
when it immediately begins to flow and continues
for several months
provided a thin slice is shaved off the top
every morning.
Full-grown trees will thus yield 90 gallons.
252. KAEMPFERIA GALANGA. This
plant belongs to the family of gingers.
The root stocks
have an aromatic fragrance and are used
medicinally in
India as well as in the preparation of perfumery.
The flowers appear
before the leaves upon very short stems.
253. KIGELIA PINNATA. This
plant is interesting from the circumstance
of its being held
sacred in Nubia, where the inhabitants celebrate
their religious
festivals under it by moonlight, and poles made of
its wood are erected
as symbols of special veneration before the
houses of their
great chiefs. The fruits, which are very large,
when cut in half
and slightly roasted, are employed as an outward
application to
relieve pains.
254. KRAMERIA TRIANDRA. This
is one of the species that yield the
rhatany roots
of commerce. In Peru an extract is made from this
species, which
is a mild, easily assimilated, astringent medicine.
It acts as a tonic,
and is used in intermittent and putrid fevers.
It is also styptic,
and when applied in plasters is used in curing
ulcers. The
color of the infusion of the roots is blood-red, on
which account
it is used to adulterate, or rather it forms an
ingredient in
the fabrication of port wine.
255. KYDIA CALYCINA. An Indian
plant of the family Byttneriaceae. The
bark is employed
in infusion as a sudorific and in cutaneous
diseases, and
its fibrous tissue is manufactured into cordage.
256. LAGETTA LINTEARIA. The
lace-bark tree of Jamaica. The inner bark
consists of numerous
concentric layers of fibers, which interlace
in all directions,
and thus present a great resemblance to lace.
Articles of apparel
are made of it. Caps, ruffles, and even
complete suits
of lace are made with it. It bears washing with
common soap, and
when bleached in the sun acquires a degree of
whiteness equal
to the best artificial lace. Ropes made of it
are
very durable and
strong.
257. LANSIUM DOMESTICUM. A
low-growing tree of the East Indies, which
is cultivated
to some extent for its fruit, which is known in Java
and Malacca as
lanseh fruit, and is much esteemed for its delicate
aroma; the pulp
is of somewhat firm consistence and contains a
cooling, refreshing
juice.
258. LAPAGERIA ROSEA. A
twining plant from Chili. The flowers are very
beautiful, and
are succeeded by berries, which are said to be
sweet and eatable.
The root has qualities closely resembling
sarsaparilla and
used for the same purpose.
259. LATANIA RUBRA. A
very beautiful palm from the Mauritius. The
fruit contains
a small quantity of pulp, which is eaten by the
natives, but is
not considered very palatable by travelers.
260. LAWSONIA INERMIS. This
is the celebrated henna of the East. The
use of the powdered
leaves as a cosmetic is very general in Asia
and northern Africa,
the practice having descended from very
remote ages, as
is proved by the Egyptian mummies, the parts dyed
being usually
the finger and toe nails, the tips of the fingers,
the palms of the
hands, and soles of the feet, receiving a reddish
color, considered
by Oriental belles as highly ornamental. Henna
is prepared by
reducing the leaves to powder, and when used is
made into a pasty
mass with water and spread on the part to be
dyed, being allowed
to remain for twelve hours. The plant is known
in the West Indies
as Jamaica Mignonette.
261. LECYTHIS OLLARIA. This
tree produces the hard urn-shaped fruits
known in Brazil
as monkey cups. The seeds are eatable and sold
as
Sapucaia nuts.
The fruit vessels are very peculiar, being 6 inches
in diameter and
having closely fitting lids, which separate when
the seeds are
mature. The bark is composed of a great number
of
layers, not thicker
than writing paper, which the Indians separate
and employ as
cigar wrappers.
262. LEPTOSPERMUM LANIGERUM. A
plant known throughout Australia as
Captain Cook’s
tea tree, from the circumstance that, on the first
landing of this
navigator in that country, he employed a decoction
of the leaves
of this plant as a corrective to the effects of
scurvy among his
crew, and this proved an efficient medicine.
Thickets of this
plant, along the swampy margin of streams, are
known as Tea-tree
scrubs. It is also known among the natives as
the Manuka plant.
The wood is hard and heavy, and was formerly
used for making
sharp-pointed spears. It belongs to the myrtle
family of plants.
263. LICUALA ACUTIFIDA. This
palm is a native of the island of
Pulo-Penango,
and yields canes known by the curious name of Penang
Lawyers.
It is a low-growing plant, its stems averaging an inch
in
diameter.
The stems are converted into walking canes by scraping
their rough exteriors
and straightening them by means of fire
heat.
264. LIMONIA ACIDISSIMA. An
East India shrub which produces round
fruits about the
size of damson plums, of a yellowish color, with
reddish or purplish
tints. They are extremely acid, and the pulp
is employed in
Java as a substitute for soap.
265. LIVISTONA AUSTRALIS. This
is one of the few palms found in
Australia.
The unexpanded leaves, prepared by being scalded and
dried in the shade,
are used for making hats, while the still
younger and more
tender leaves are eaten like cabbage.
266. Lúcuma MAMMOSUM. This
sapotaceous plant is cultivated for its
fruit, which is
called marmalade, on account of its containing a
thick agreeably
flavored pulp, bearing some resemblance in
appearance and
taste to quince marmalade. A native of South
America.
267. MABA GEMINATA. The ebony
wood of Queensland. The heart wood is
black, and the
outside wood of a bright red color. It is
close-grained,
hard, heavy, elastic and tough, and takes a high
polish.
268. MACADAMIA TERNIFOLIA. An
Australian tree which produces an edible
nut called the
Queensland nut. This fruit is about the size of
a
walnut, and within
a thick pericarp, a smooth brown-colored nut,
inclosing a kernel
of a rich and agreeable flavor, resembling in
some degree that
of a filbert.
269. MACHAERIUM FIRMUM. A
South American tree which furnishes a portion
of the rosewood
of commerce. Various species of the genus, under
the common Brazilian
name of Jaccaranda, are said to yield this
wood, but there
is some uncertainty about the origin of the
various commercial
rosewoods.
270. MACLURA TINCTORIA. The
fustic tree. Large quantities of the
bright yellow
wood of this tree are exported from South America
for the use of
dyers, who obtain from it shades of yellow, brown,
olive, and green.
A concentrated decoction of the wood deposits,
on cooling, a
yellow crystalline matter called Morine. This
tree
is sometimes called
old fustic, in order to distinguish it from
another commercial
dye called young fustic, which is obtained in
Europe from a
species of Rhus.
271. MACROPIPER METHYSTICUM. A
plant of the pepper family, which
furnishes the
root called Ava by the Polynesians. It has narcotic
properties, and
is employed medicinally, but is chiefly remarkable
for the value
attached to it as a narcotic and stimulant beverage,
of which the natives
partake before they commence any important
business or religious
rites. It is used by chewing the root and
extracting the
juice, and has a calming rather than an
intoxicating effect.
It is a filthy preparation, and only partaken
of by the lower
classes of Feejeeans.
272. MACROZAMIA DENISONII. An
Australian cycad, the seeds of which
contain a large
amount of farina, or starchy matter, which
formerly supplied
a considerable amount of food for the natives of
that country.
The fresh seeds are very acrid, but when steeped in
water and roasted
they become palatable and nutritious.
273. MALPIGHIA GLABRA. A
low-growing tree of the West Indies, which
produces an edible
fruit called the Barbadoes cherry.
274. MAMMEA AMERICANA. The fruit
of this tree, under the name of
mammee apple,
is very much esteemed in tropical countries. It
often attains
a size of 6 or 8 inches in diameter and is of a
yellow color.
The outer rind and the pulp which immediately
surrounds the
seeds are very bitter, but the intermediate is sweet
and aromatic.
The seeds are used as anthelmintics, an aromatic
liquor is distilled
from the flowers, and the acrid, resinous gum
distilled from
the bark is used to destroy insects.
275. MANETTIA CORDIFOLIA. This
climbing-plant is a native of South
America, and belongs
to the family of Cinchonaceae. The rind
of
the root has emetic
properties, and is used in Brazil for dropsy
and other diseases.
It is also exported under the name of
Ipecacuan, chiefly
from Buenos Ayres.
276. MANGIFERA INDICA. The
mango, in some of its varieties esteemed as
the most delicious
of tropical fruits, while many varieties
produce fruit
whose texture resembles cotton and tastes of
turpentine.
The unripe fruit is pickled. The pulp contains
gallic
and citric acid.
The seeds possess anthelmintic properties. A soft
gum resin exudes
from the wounded bark, which is used medicinally.
277. MANICARIA SACCIFERA. Bussu
palm of South America. Its large
leaves are used
for thatching roofs, for which purpose they are
well fitted and
very durable. The fibrous spathe furnishes a
material of much
value to the natives. This fibrous matter when
taken off entire
is at once converted into capital bags, in which
the Indian keeps
the red paint for his toilet, or the silk cotton
for his arrows,
or he stretches out the larger ones to make
himself a cap
of nature’s own weaving, without seam or joint.
278. MANIHOT UTILISSIMA. This
euphorbiaceous plant yields cassava or
mandiocca meal.
It is extensively cultivated in tropical climates
and supplies a
great amount of food. The root is the part used,
and in its natural
condition is a most virulent poison, but by
grating the roots
to a pulp the poison is expelled by pressure,
and altogether
dissipated by cooking. The expressed juice, when
allowed to settle,
deposits the starch known as tapioca.
279. MARANTA ARUNDINACEA. The
arrowroot plant, cultivated for its
starch. The
tubers being reduced to pulp with water, the fecula
subsides, and
is washed and dried for commerce. It is a very
pure
kind of starch,
and very nutritious. The term arrowroot is said
to
be derived from
the fact that the natives of the West Indies use
the roots of the
plant as an application to wounds made by poison
arrows.
280. MAURITIA FLEXUOSA. The
Moriche, or Ita palm, very abundant on the
banks of the Amazon,
Rio Negro, and Orinoco Rivers. In the delta
of the latter
it occupies swampy tracts of ground, which are at
times completely
inundated, and present the appearance of forests
rising out of
the water. These swamps are frequented by a tribe
of
Indians called
Guaranes, who subsist almost entirely upon the
produce of this
palm, and during the period of the inundations
suspend their
dwellings from the tops of its tall stems. The
outer
skin of the young
leaves is made into string and cord for the
manufacture of
hammocks. The fermented sap yields palm wine,
and
another beverage
is prepared from the young fruits, while the soft
inner bark of
the stem yields a farinaceous substance like sago.
281. MAXIMILIANA REGIA. An
Amazonian palm called Inaja. The spathes
are so hard that,
when filled with water, they will stand the
fire, and are
sometimes used by the Indians as cooking utensils.
The Indians who
prepare the kind of rubber called bottle rubber,
make use of the
hard stones of the fruit as fuel for smoking and
drying the successive
layers of milky juice as it is applied to
the mold upon
which the bottles are formed. The outer husk,
also,
yields a kind
of saline flour used for seasoning their food.
282. MELALEUCA MINOR. A native
of Australia and the islands of the
Indian Ocean.
The leaves, being fermented, are distilled, and
yield an oil known
as cajuput or cajeput oil, which is green, and
has a strong aromatic
odor. It is valuable as an antispasmodic
and stimulant,
and at one time had a great reputation as a cure
for cholera.
In China the leaves are used as a tonic in the form
of decoction.
283. MELICOCCA BIJUGA. This
sapindaceous tree is plentiful in tropical
America and the
West Indies, and is known as the Genip tree. It
produces numerous
green egg-shaped fruits, an inch in length,
possessing an
agreeable vinous and somewhat aromatic flavor,
called honey berries
or bullace plums. The wood of the tree is
hard and heavy.
284. MELOCACTUS COMMUNIS. Commonly
called the Turk’s Cap cactus, from
the flowering
portion on the top of the plant being of a
cylindrical form
and red color, like a fez cap. Notwithstanding
that they grow
in the most dry sterile places, they contain a
considerable quantity
of moisture, which is well known to mules,
who resort to
them when very thirsty, first removing the prickles
with their feet.
285. MESEMBRYANTHEMUM CRYSTALLINUM. The
ice plant, so called in
consequence of
every part of the plant being covered with small
watery pustules,
which glisten in the sun like fragments of ice.
Large quantities
of this plant are collected in the Canaries and
burned, the ashes
being sent to Spain for the use of glass makers.
M. edule
is called the Hottentot’s fig, its fruit being
about
the size of a
small fig, and having a pleasant, acid taste when
ripe. M. tortuosum
possesses narcotic properties, and is chewed
by the Hottentots
to induce intoxication. The fruits possess
hygrometric properties,
the dried, shriveled, capsules swelling
out and opening
so as to allow of the escape of the seeds when
moistened by rain,
which at the same time fits the soil for their
germination.
286. MIKANIA GUACO. A composite
plant which has gained some notoriety
as the supposed
Cundurango, the cancer-curing bark. It has long
been supposed
to supply a powerful antidote for the bite of
venomous serpents.
287. MIMUSOPS BALATA. The Bully
tree. This sapotaceous plant attains a
great size in
Guiana and affords a dense, close-grained, valuable
timber. Its
small fruits, about the size of coffee berries, are
delicious when
ripe. The flowers also yield a perfume when
distilled in water,
and oil is expressed from the seeds.
288. MIMUSOPS ELENGI. A native
of Ceylon, where its hard, heavy,
durable timber
is used for building purposes. The seed also
affords a great
amount of oil.
289. MONODORA GRANDIFLORA. An
African plant belonging to the Anonaceae.
It produces large
fruit, which contains a large quantity of seeds
about the size
of the Scarlet-Runner bean. They are aromatic
and
impart to the
fruit the odor and flavor of nutmeg; hence they are
also known as
calabash nutmegs.
290. MONSTERA DELICIOSA. This
is a native of southern Mexico and
yields a delicious
fruit with luscious pineapple flavor. The outer
skin of the fruit,
if eaten, causes a stinging sensation in the
mouth. This
is easily removed when the fruit is ripe. The
leaves
are singularly
perforated with holes at irregular intervals, from
natural causes
not sufficiently explained. In Trinidad the plant
is called the
Ceriman.
291. MORINGA PTERYGOSPERMA. A
native of the East Indies, where it
bears the name
of horse-radish tree. The seeds are called ben
nuts
and supply a fluid
oil, highly prized by watchmakers, called oil
of ben.
The root is pungent and stimulant and tastes like
horse-radish.
292. MORONOBEA COCCINEA. The
hog gum tree, which attains the height of
100 feet.
A fluid juice exudes from incisions in the trunk and
hardens into a
yellow resin. It is said the hogs in Jamaica when
wounded rub the
injured part against the tree so as to cover it
with the gum,
which possesses vulnerary properties; hence its
name. The
resin has been employed as a substitute for copaiba
balsam, and plasters
are made of it.
293. MUCUNA PRURIENS. A tall
climbing plant of the West Indies and
other warm climates.
It is called the cowage, or cow-itch, on
account of the
seed pods being covered with short brittle hairs,
the points of
which are finely serrated, causing an unbearable
itching when applied
to the skin, which is relieved by rubbing the
part with oil.
It is employed as a vermifuge. In East Africa
it is
called Kitedzi.
The sea beans found on the coast of Florida are
the seeds of Mucuna
altissima. In Cuba these are called bulls’
eyes.
294. MURRAYA EXOTICA. A Chinese
plant of the orange family. The fruit
is succulent,
and the white flowers are very fragrant. They
are
used in perfumery.
295. MUSA CAVENDISHII. This
is a valuable dwarf species of the banana
from southern
China. It bears a large truss of fine fruit, and
is
cultivated to
some extent in Florida, where it endures more cold
than the West
India species and fruits more abundantly.
296. MUSA ENSETE. This Abyssinian
species forms large foliage of
striking beauty.
The food is dry and uneatable; but the base of
the flower stalk
is eaten by the natives.
297. MUSA SAPIENTUM. The banana
plant. This has been cultivated and
used as food in
tropical countries from very remote times, and
furnishes enormous
quantities of nutritious food, and serves as a
staple support
to a large number of the human race. The expressed
juice is in some
countries made into a fermented liquor and the
young shoots eaten
as a vegetable.
298. MUSA TEXTILIS. This
furnishes the fiber known as manilla hemp,
and is cultivated
in the Philippine Islands for this product. The
finer kinds of
the fiber are woven into beautiful shawls and the
coarser manufactured
into cordage for ships. The fiber is obtained
from the leaf-stalks.
299. MUSSAENDA FRONDOSA. This
cinchonaceous plant is a native of
Ceylon. The
bark and leaves are esteemed as tonic and fébrifuges
in the Mauritius,
where they are known as wild cinchona. The
leaves and flowers
are also used as expectorants, and the juice of
the fruit and
leaves is used as an eyewash.
300. MYRISTICA MOSCHATA. The
nutmeg tree. The seed of this plant is
the nutmeg of
commerce, and mace is the seed cover of the same.
When the nuts
are gathered they are dried and the outer shell of
the seed removed.
The mace is also dried in the sun and assumes a
golden yellow
color. The most esteemed nutmegs come from Penang.
At one time the
nutmeg culture was monopolized by the Dutch, who
were in the habit
of burning them when the crop was too abundant,
in order to keep
up high prices.
301. MYROSPERMUM PERUIFERUM. This
plant yields the drug known as
balsam of Peru,
which is procured by making incisions in the bark,
into which cotton
rags are thrust; a fire is then made round the
tree to liquefy
the balsam. The balsam is collected by boiling
the
saturated rags
in water. It is a thick, treacly looking liquid,
with fragrant
aromatic smell and taste, and is not used so much in
medicine as it
formerly was.
302. MYROSPERMUM TOLUIFERUM. A
South American tree, also called
Myroxylon,
which yields the resinous drug called balsam of Tolu.
This substance
is fragrant, having a warm, sweetish taste, and
burns with an
agreeable odor. It is used in perfumery and in
the
manufacture of
pastilles, also for flavoring confectionery, as in
Tolu lozenges.
303. MYRTUS COMMUNIS The
common myrtle. This plant is supposed to be a
native of western
Asia, but now grows abundantly in Italy, Spain,
and the south
of France. Among the ancients the myrtle was held
sacred to Venus
and was a plant of considerable importance,
wreaths of it
being worn by the victors of the Olympic games and
other honored
personages. Various parts of the plant were used
in
medicine, in cookery,
and by the Tuscans in the preparation of
myrtle wine, called
myrtidanum. It is still used in perfumery,
and a highly perfumed
distillation is made from the flowers. The
fruits are very
aromatic and sweet, and are eaten fresh or dried
and used as a
condiment.
304. NANDINA DOMESTICA. A
shrub belonging to the family of berberries.
It is a native
of China and Japan, where it is extensively
cultivated for
its fruits. It is there known as Nandin.
305. NAUCLEA GAMBIR. A native
of the Malayan Islands, which yields the
Gambir, or Terra
Japonica of commerce. This is prepared by boiling
the leaves in
water until the decoction thickens, when it is
poured into molds,
where it remains until it acquires the
consistency of
clay; it is then cut into cubes and thoroughly
dried. It
is used as a masticatory in combination with the areca
nut and betel
leaf, and also for tanning purposes.
306. NECTANDRA LEUCANTHA. The
greenheart, or bibiru tree of British
Guiana, furnishing
bibiru bark, which is used medicinally as a
tonic and febrifuge,
its properties being due to the presence of
an uncrystallizable
alkaloid, also found in the seeds. The seeds
are also remarkable
for containing upwards of 50 per cent of
starch, which
is made into a kind of bread by the natives. The
timber of this
tree is extensively employed in shipbuilding, its
great strength
and durability rendering it peculiarly well suited
for this purpose.
307. Népenthès DISTILLATORIA. This
pitcher plant is a native of
Ceylon. The
pitchers are partly filled with water before they
open; hence it
was supposed to be produced by some distilling
process.
In Ceylon the old, tough, flexible stems are used as
willows.
308. NEPHELIUM LITCHI. This
sapindaceous tree produces one of the
valued indigenous
fruits of China. There are several varieties;
the fruit is round,
about an inch and a half in diameter, with a
reddish-colored,
thin, brittle shell. When fresh they are filled
with a sweet,
white, transparent, jelly-like pulp. The Chinese
are
very fond of these
fruits and consume large quantities of them,
both in the fresh
state and when dried and preserved.
309. NERIUM OLEANDER. This is
a well-known plant, often seen in
cultivation, and
seemingly a favorite with many. It belongs to
a
poisonous family
and is a dangerous poison. A decoction of its
leaves forms a
wash, employed in the south of Europe to destroy
vermin; and its
powdered wood and bark constitute the basis of an
efficacious rat-poison.
Children have died from eating the
flowers.
A party of soldiers in Spain, having meat to roast
in
camp, procured
spits and skewers of the tree, which there attains
a large size.
The wood having been stripped of its bark, and
brought in contact
with the meat, was productive of fatal
consequences,
for seven men died out of the twelve who partook of
the meat and the
other five were for some time dangerously ill.
310. NOTELAEA LIGUSTRINA. The
Tasmanian iron wood tree. It is of medium
growth and furnishes
wood that is extremely hard and dense, and
used for making
sheaves for ships’ blocks, and for other articles
that require to
be of great strength. The plant belongs to the
olive family.
311. OCHROMA LAGOPUS. A tree
that grows about 40 feet high, along the
seashores in the
West Indies and Central America, and known as the
cork wood.
The wood is soft, spongy, and exceedingly light, and
is
used as a substitute
for cork, both in stopping bottles and as
floats for fishing
nets. It is also known as Balsa.
312. [OE]NOCARPUS BATAVA. A South
American palm, which yields a
colorless, sweet-tasted
oil, used in Para for adulterating olive
oil, being nearly
as good for this purpose as peanut oil, so
largely used in
Europe. A palatable but slightly aperient beverage
is prepared by
triturating the fruits in water, and adding sugar
and mandiocca
flour.
313. OLEA EUROPAEA. The European
olive, which is popularly supposed to
furnish all
the olive oil of commerce. It is a plant of slow
growth and of
as slow decay. It is considered probable that
trees
at present existing
in the Vale of Gethsemane are those which
existed at the
commencement of the Christian era. The oil is
derived from the
flesh of the fruit, and is pressed out of the
bruised pulp;
inferior kinds are from second and third pressings.
The best salad
oil is from Leghorn, and is sent in flasks
surrounded by
rush-work. Gallipoli oil is transported in casks,
and Lucca in jars.
The pickling olives are the unripe fruits
deprived of a
portion of their bitterness by soaking in water in
which lime and
wood ashes are sometimes added, and then bottled in
salt and water
with aromatics.
314. OPHIOCARYON PARADOXUM. The
snake nut tree of Guiana, so called on
account of the
curious form of the embryo of the seed, which is
spirally twisted,
so as to closely resemble a coiled-up
blacksnake.
The fruits are as large as those of the black walnut,
and although they
are not known to possess any medical properties,
their singular
snake-like form has induced the Indians to employ
them as an antidote
to the poison of venomous snakes. The plant
belongs to the
order of Sapindaceae.
315. OPHIORRHIZA MUNGOS. A plant
belonging to the cinchona family, the
roots of which
are reputed to cure snake bites. They are intensely
bitter, and from
this circumstance they are called earth-galls by
the Malays.
316. OPHIOXYLON SERPENTINUM. A
native of the East Indies, where the
roots are used
in medicine as a febrifuge and alexipharmic.
317. OPUNTIA COCHINELLIFERA. A
native of Mexico, where it is largely
cultivated in
what are called the Nopal plantations for the
breeding of the
cochineal insect. This plant and others are also
grown for a similar
purpose in the Canary Islands and Madeira.
Some of these
plantations contain fifty thousand plants. Cochineal
forms the finest
carmine scarlet dye, and at least there are 2,000
tons of it produced
yearly, in value worth $2,000 per ton.
318. OPUNTIA TUNA. This plant
is a native of Mexico and South America
generally.
It reaches a height of 15 to 20 feet and bears
reddish-colored
flowers, followed by pear-shaped fleshy fruits 2
or 3 inches long,
and of a rich carmine color when ripe. It is
cultivated for
rearing the cochineal insect. The fruits are sweet
and juicy; sugar
has been made from them. The juice is used as
a
water-color and
for coloring confectionery.
319. OREODAPHNE CALIFORNICA. The
mountain laurel, or spice bush, of
California.
When bruised it emits a strong, spicy odor, and the
Spanish Americans
use the leaves as a condiment.
320. OREODOXA OLERACEA. The
West Indian cabbage palm, which sometimes
attains the height
of 170 feet, with a straight cylindrical trunk.
The semicylindrical
portions of the leaf-stalk are formed into
cradles for children,
or made into splints for fractures. Their
inside skin, peeled
off while green, and dried, looks like vellum,
and can be written
upon. The heart of young leaves, or cabbage, is
boiled as a vegetable
or pickled, and the pith affords sago. Oil
is obtained from
the fruit.
321. ORMOSIA DASYCARPA. This
is the West Indian bead tree, or necklace
tree, the seeds
of which are roundish, beautifully polished, and
of a bright scarlet
color, with a black spot at one end resembling
beads, for which
they are substitutes, being made into necklaces,
bracelets, or
mounted in silver for studs and buttons. It is
a
leguminous plant.
322. OSMANTHUS FRAGRANS. This
plant has long been cultivated as Olea
fragrans.
The flowers have a fine fragrance, and are used by
the
Chinese to perfume
tea. It appears that they consider the leaves
also valuable,
for they are frequently found in what is expected
to be genuine
tea.
323. PACHIRA ALBA. A South American
tree the inner bark of which
furnishes a strong
useful fiber, employed in the manufacture of
ropes and various
kinds of cordage. The petals of the flowers are
covered with a
soft silky down which is used for stuffing cushions
and pillows.
324. PANDANUS UTILIS. The
screw pine of the Mauritius, where it is
largely cultivated
for its leaves, which are manufactured into
bags or sacks
for the exportation of sugar. They are also used
for
making other domestic
vessels and for tying purposes.
325. PAPPEA CAPENSIS. A small
tree of the soapberry or sapindaceous
family, a native
of the Cape of Good Hope, where the fruit is
known as the wild
plum, from the pulp of which a vinous beverage
and excellent
vinegar are prepared, and an eatable, though
slightly purgative,
oil is extracted from the seeds. The oil is
also strongly
recommended for baldness and scalp affections.
326. PAPYRUS ANTIQUORUM. The
paper-reed of Asia, which yielded the
substances used
as paper by the ancient Egyptians. The underground
root-stocks spread
horizontally under the muddy soil, continuing
to throw up stems
as they creep along. The paper was made from
thin slices, cut
vertically from the apex to the base of the stem,
between its surface
and center. The slices were placed side by
side, according
to the size required, and then, after being wetted
and beaten with
a wooden instrument until smooth, were pressed and
dried in the sun.
327. PARITIUM ELATUM. The mountain
mahoe, a malvaceous plant, that
furnishes the
beautiful lace-like bark called Cuba bast, imported
by nurserymen
for tying their plants. It was at one time only
seen
as employed in
tying together bundles of genuine Havana cigars.
It
forms a tree 40
feet or more in height, and yields a greenish-blue
timber, highly
prized by cabinet-makers.
328. PARKIA AFRICANA. The
African locust tree, producing seeds which
the natives of
Soudan roast, and then bruise and allow to ferment
in water until
they become putrid, when they are carefully washed,
pounded into powder,
and made into cakes, which are said to be
excellent, though
having a very unpleasant smell. The pulp
surrounding the
seeds is made into a sweet farinaceous
preparation.
329. PARKINSONIA ACULEATA. This
leguminous plant is called Jerusalem
Thorn. Although
a native of Southern Texas and Mexico, it is found
in many tropical
countries, and is frequently used for making
hedges. Indians
in Mexico employ it as a febrifuge and sudorific
and also as a
remedy for epilepsy.
330. PARMENTIERA CEREIFERA. In
the Isthmus of Panama this plant is
termed the Candle
tree, because its fruits, often 4 feet long,
look like yellow
candles suspended from the branches. They have
a
peculiar, apple-like
smell, and cattle that partake of the leaves
or fruit have
the smell communicated to the beef if killed
immediately.
331. PASSIFLORA QUADRANGULARIS. The
fruit of this plant is the
Granadilla of
the tropics. The pulp has an agreeable though
rather
mawkish taste.
The root is said to possess narcotic properties,
and is used in
the Mauritius as an emetic.
332. PAULLINIA SORBILIS. The
seeds of this climbing sapindaceous plant
furnish the famous
guaranà of the Amazon and its principal
tributaries.
The ripe seeds, when thoroughly dried, are pounded
into a fine powder,
which made into dough with water, is formed
into cylindrical
rolls, from 5 to 8 inches long, becoming very
hard when dry.
It is used as a beverage, which is prepared by
grating about
half a teaspoonful of one of the cakes into about a
teacup of water.
It is much used by Brazilian miners, and is
considered a preventive
of all manner of diseases. It is also used
by travelers,
who supply themselves with it previous to
undertaking lengthy
or fatiguing journeys. Its active principle is
identical with
theine, of which it contains a larger quantity than
exists in any
other known plant, being more than double that
contained in the
best black tea.
333. PAVETTA BORBONICA. This
belongs to the quinine family. The roots
are bitter, and
are employed as a purgative; the leaves are also
used medicinally.
334. PEDILANTHUS TITHYMALOIDES. This
euphorbiaceous plant has an
acrid, milky,
bitter juice; the root is emetic, and the dried
branches are used
medicinally.
335. PERESKIA ACULEATA. The
Barbadoes gooseberry, which belongs to the
family Cactaceae.
It grows about 15 feet in height, and produces
yellow-colored,
eatable, and pleasant-tasted fruit, which is used
in the West Indies
for making preserves.
336. PERSEA GRATISSIMA. The
avocado or alligator pear, a common tree
in the West Indies.
The fruits are pear-shaped, covered with a
brownish-green
or purple skin. They are highly esteemed where
grown, but strangers
do not relish them. They contain a large
quantity of firm
pulp, possessing a buttery or marrow-like taste,
and are frequently
called vegetable marrow. They are usually eaten
with spice, lime-juice,
pepper, and salt. An abundance of oil, for
burning and for
soap-making, may be obtained from the pulp. The
seeds yield a
deep, indelible black juice, which is used for
marking linen.
337. PH[OE]NIX DACTYLIFERA. The
date palm, very extensively grown for
its fruit, which
affords the principal food for a large portion of
the inhabitants
of Africa, Asia, and southern Europe, and likewise
of the various
domestic animals dogs, horses, and camels
being
alike partial
to it. The tree attains to a great age, and bears
annually for two
hundred years. The huts of the poorer classes
are
constructed of
the leaves: the fiber surrounding the bases of
their stalks is
used for making ropes and coarse cloth; the stalks
are used for the
manufacture of baskets, brooms, crates, walking
sticks, etc.,
and the wood for building substantial houses; the
heart of young
leaves is eaten as a vegetable; the sap affords an
intoxicating beverage.
It may be further mentioned that the date
was, probably,
the palm which supplied the “branches of palm
trees” mentioned
by St. John (xii, 13) as having been carried by
the people who
went to meet Christ on his triumphal entry into
Jerusalem, and
from which Palm Sunday takes its name.
338. PHORMIUM TENAX. This
plant is called New Zealand flax, on account
of the leaves
containing a large quantity of strong, useful fiber,
which is used
by the natives of that country for making strings,
ropes, and articles
of clothing. The plant could be grown in this
climate, and would
no doubt be largely cultivated if some
efficient mode
of separating the fiber could be discovered.
339. PHOTINIA JAPONICA. The
Japanese Medlar, or Chinese Lo-quat. It
bears a small
oval fruit of an orange color when ripe, having a
pleasant subacid
flavor. It stands ordinary winters in this
climate, and forms
a fine evergreen, medium-sized tree.
340. PHYSOSTIGMA VENENOSUM. A
strong leguminous plant, the seeds of
which are highly
poisonous, and are employed by the natives of Old
Calabar as an
ordeal. Persons suspected of witchcraft or other
crimes are compelled
to eat them until they vomit or die, the
former being regarded
as proof of innocence, and the latter of
guilt. Recently
the seeds have been found to act powerfully in
diseases of the
eye.
341. Phytéléphas MACROCARPA. The
vegetable ivory plant, a native of
the northern parts
of South America. The fruit consists of a
collection of
six or seven drupes; each contains from six to
nine
seeds, the vegetable
ivory of commerce. The seeds at first contain
a clear, insipid
liquid; afterwards it becomes milky and sweet,
and changes by
degrees until it becomes hard as ivory. Animals
eat
the fruit in its
young green state; a sweet oily pulp incloses the
seeds, and is
collected and sold in the markets under the name of
Pipa de Jagua.
Vegetable ivory may be distinguished from animal
ivory by means
of sulphuric acid, which gives a bright red color
with the vegetable
ivory, but none with the animal ivory.
342. PICRASMA EXCELSA. This
yields the bitter wood known as Jamaica
Quassia.
The tree is common in Jamaica, where it attains the
height of 50 feet.
The wood is of a whitish or yellow color, and
has an intensely
bitter taste. Although it is used as a medicine
in cases of weak
digestion, it acts as a narcotic poison on some
animals, and the
tincture is used as fly poison. Cups made of this
wood, when filled
with water and allowed to remain for some time,
will impart tonic
properties to the water.
343. PINCKNEYA PUBENS. This
cinchonaceous plant is a native of the
Southern States
and has a reputation as an antiperiodic. It is
stated that incomplete
examinations have detected cinchonine in
the bark.
It has been used successfully as a substitute for
quinine.
A thorough examination of this plant seems desirable
so
that its exact
medical value may be ascertained.
344. PIPER BETEL. This plant
belongs to the Piperaceae. Immense
quantities of
the leaves of this plant are chewed by the Malays.
It tinges
the saliva a bright red and acts as a powerful stimulant
to the digestive
organs and salivary glands; when swallowed it
causes giddiness
and other unpleasant symptoms in persons
unaccustomed to
its use.
345. PIPER NIGRUM. This
twining shrub yields the pepper of commerce.
It is cultivated
in the East and West Indies, Java, etc., the
Malabar being
held in the highest esteem. The fruit when ripe
is
of a red color,
but it is gathered before being fully ripe and
dried in the sun,
when it becomes black and shriveled. White
pepper is the
same fruit with the skin removed. When analyzed,
pepper is found
to contain a hot acrid resin and a volatile oil,
as well as a crystalline
substance called piperin, which has
been recommended
as a substitute for quinine.
346. PISTACIA LENTISCUS. The
mastic tree, a native of southern Europe,
northern Africa,
and western Asia. Mastic is the resin of the tree
and is obtained
by making transverse incisions in the bark, from
which it exudes
in drops and hardens into small semitransparent
tears. It
is consumed in large quantities by the Turks for chewing
to strengthen
the gums and sweeten the breath. It is also used
for
varnishing.
347. PISTACIA TEREBINTHUS. The
Cyprus turpentine tree. The turpentine
flows from incisions
made in the trunk and soon becomes thick and
tenacious, and
ultimately hardens. Galls gathered from this tree
are used for tanning
purposes, one of the varieties of morocco
leather being
tanned with them.
348. PISTACIA VERA. The pistacia
tree, which yields the eatable
pistachio nuts.
It is a native of western Asia. The nuts are
greatly eaten
by the Turks and Greeks, as well as in the south of
Europe, either
simply dried like almonds or made into articles of
confectionery.
349. PITHECOLOBIUM SAMAN. This
leguminous plant yields eatable pods,
which are fed
to cattle in Brazil. Some Mexican species produce
pods that are
boiled and eaten, and certain portions contain
saponaceous properties.
The pods are sometimes called Manila
tamarinds.
The leaves of this tree fold closely up at night, so
that they do not
prevent the radiation of heat from the surface of
the ground, and
dew is therefore deposited underneath its
branches.
The grass on the surface of the ground underneath this
tree being thus
wet with dew, while that under other trees is
found to be dry,
has given it the name of rain tree, under the
supposition that
the leaves dropped water during the night.
350. PITTOSPORUM UNDULATUM. A
plant from New Zealand, which reaches a
considerable size,
and furnishes a wood similar to boxwood. The
flowers are very
fragrant.
351. PLAGIANTHUS BETULINUS. The
inner bark of the young branches of
this plant yields
a very fine fiber, sometimes called New Zealand
cotton, though
more like flax than cotton; it is the Akaroa of the
New Zealanders.
In Tasmania it bears the name of Currajong. Good
cordage and twine
for fishing nets are made from this fiber. A
superior paper
pulp is prepared from the wood; it is also employed
in making handles
to baskets, rims for sieves, and hoops for
barrels.
352. PLATONIA INSIGNIS. A
Brazilian tree which bears a fruit known in
that country as
Pacoury-uva. The pulp of this fruit is semiacid,
very delicious,
and is employed in making preserves. The seeds
embedded in this
pulp have the flavor of almonds.
353. PLUMBAGO SCANDENS. The
root of this plant is called Herbe du
Diable in
San Domingo; it is acrid in the highest degree, and
is a
most energetic
blistering agent when fresh.
354. PLUMERIA ALBA. A South
American plant. The flowers are used in
perfumery, and
furnish the scent known as Frangipane or
Frangipani.
In Jamaica the plant is known as red jasmine.
355. POGOSTEMON PATCHOULY. This
plant affords the celebrated patchouli
perfume.
The peculiar odor of patchouli is disagreeable to some,
but is very popular
with many persons. The odoriferous part of the
plant is the leaves
and young tops, which yield a volatile oil by
distillation,
from which an essence is prepared; satchels of
patchouli are
made of coarsely powdered leaves. Genuine Indian
shawls and Indian
ink were formerly distinguished by their odor of
this perfume,
but the test does not now hold good. Ill effects,
such as loss of
sleep, nervous attacks, etc., have been ascribed
to its extensive
use.
356. PONGAMIA GLABRA. Some
years ago this tree was recommended as
suitable for avenue-planting
in the south of France. In India an
oil called poonga
is expressed from the seeds, which is much used
for mixing with
lamp oil. It is of a deep yellow color, and is
fluid at temperatures
above 60 deg. F., but below that it becomes
solid.
357. PORTLANDIA GRANDIFLORA. This
plant belongs to the cinchonaceous
family, and is
said to possess properties similar to those of the
true cinchona.
The bark is exceedingly bitter.
358. PSIDIUM CATTLEYANUM. This
is the purple guava from China. The
fruits are filled
with juicy, pale flesh, of a very agreeable
acid-sweet flavor.
359. PSIDIUM PYRIFERUM. The
West Indian guava, a well-known fruit in
the tropics, but
only known here in the shape of guava jelly. The
wood of the tree
has a fine, close grain, and has been
experimented with
as a substitute for boxwood for engraving
purposes, but
it is too soft to stand the pressure of printing.
360. PSYCHOTRIA LEUCANTHA. A
plant belonging to the cinchona family.
Emetic properties
are assigned to the roots, which are also used
in dyeing.
Native of Peru.
361. PTEROCARPUS MARSUPIUM. This
tree affords gum-kino, which is
obtained by making
incisions in the bark, from which the juice
exudes and hardens
into a brittle mass, easily broken into small
angular, shining
fragments of a bright ruby color. It is highly
astringent.
The wood is hard and valuable for manufacturing
purposes.
362. PUNICA GRANATUM. The
pomegranate, a native of northern Africa and
western Asia.
The fruit is valued in warm countries on account of
its delicious
cooling and refreshing pulp. Numerous varieties
are
grown, some being
sweet and vinous, and others acid or of a
bitter, stringent
taste; the color also varies from light to dark
red. The
bark of the root abounds in a peculiar principle called
punicin.
This bark appears to have been known to the ancients,
and used by them
as a vermifuge, and is still used in Hindostan as
a specific against
tapeworm. The rind of the fruit of the bitter
varieties contains
a large amount of tannin, and is used for
tanning morocco
leather. The flowers yield a red dye.
363. QUASSIA AMARA. The wood
of this plant furnishes Surinam quassia.
It is destitute
of smell, but has an intensely bitter taste, and
is used as a tonic.
The root has also reputed medicinal value, as
also have the
flowers.
364. QUILLAJA SAPONARIA. The
Quillai or Cully of the Chilians. Its
bark is called
soap-bark, and is rough and dark-colored
externally, but
internally consists of numerous regular whitish or
yellowish layers,
and contains a large quantity of carbonate of
lime and other
mineral matters. It is also rich in saponine,
and
is used for washing
clothes; 2 ounces of the bark is sufficient to
wash a dress.
It also removes all spots or stains, and imparts a
fine luster to
wool; when powdered and rubbed between the hands in
water, it makes
a foam like soap. It is to be found in commerce.
365. RANDIA ACULEATA. A
small tree native of the West Indies, also
found in southern
Florida. In the West Indies the fruit is used
for producing
a blue dye, and medicinal properties are assigned to
the bark.
366. RAPHIA TAEDIGERA. The Jupati
palm. The leaf-stalks of this plant
are used by the
natives of the Amazon for a variety of purposes,
such as constructing
inside walls, making boxes and baskets, etc.
R. vinifera,
the Bamboo palm, is similarly used by the Africans,
who also make
a very pliable cloth of the undeveloped leaves.
Palm
wine is one of
the products of the genus.
367. RAVENALA MADAGASCARIENSIS. This
plant is called the Traveler’s
tree, probably
on account of the water which is stored up in the
large cup-like
sheaths of the leaf-stalks, and which is sought for
by travelers to
allay their thirst. The broad leaves are used
in
Madagascar as
thatch to cover their houses. The seeds are edible,
and the blue,
pulpy aril surrounding them yields an essential oil.
368. RHAPIS FLABELLIFORMIS. The
ground rattan palm. This is supposed
to yield the walking-canes
known as rattan, which is doubted. It
is a native of
southern China, and is also found in Japan, where
it is known by
the name of Kwanwortsik.
369. RHIZOPHORA MANGLE. This
plant is known as the mangrove, possibly
because no man
can live in the swampy groves that are covered with
it in tropical
countries. The seeds germinate, or form roots
before they quit
the parent tree, and drop into the mud as young
trees. The
old plants send out aerial roots into the water, upon
which the mollusca
adhere, and as the tide recedes they are seen
clinging to the
shoots, verifying the statements of old travelers
that they had
seen oysters growing on trees. All parts of this
tree contain tannin.
The bark yields dyes, and in the West Indies
the leaves are
used for poulticing wounds. The fruit is edible;
a
coarse, brittle
salt is extracted from the roots, and in the
Philippines the
bark is used as a febrifuge.
370. ROTTLERA TINCTORIA. This
plant belongs to the order
Euphorbiaceae,
and reaches the size of a small tree in the Indian
Archipelago and
southern Australia. From the surface of the
trilobed capsules
of this plant, which are about the size of peas,
a red, mealy powder
is obtained, well known in India as kamala,
and which is used
by Hindoo silk-dyers, who obtain from it a deep,
bright, durable
orange or flame color of great beauty. This is
obtained by boiling
the powder in a solution of carbonate of soda.
When the capsules
are ripe the red powder is brushed off and
collected for
sale, no other preparation being necessary to
preserve it.
It is also used medicinally as an anthelmintic and
has been successfully
used in cases of tapeworm. A solution
removes freckles
and pustules and eruptions on the skin.
371. RUELLIA INDIGOTICA. This
small bush is extensively cultivated in
China for the
preparation of a blue coloring-matter of the nature
of indigo.
The pigment is prepared from the entire plant by a
process similar
to that employed in procuring the common indigo.
It is sold in
China in a pasty state. The water in which the
plant
is steeped is
mixed with lime and rapidly agitated, when the
coloring deposits
at the bottom of the vessel.
372. SABAL ADANSONII. This dwarf
palm is a native of the Southern
States. The
leaves are made into fans, and the soft interior of
the stem is edible.
373. SABAL UMBRACULIFERA. This
is a West Indian palm; the leaves are
used for various
purposes, such as making mats, huts, etc.
374. SACCHARUM OFFICINARUM. The
sugar cane. Where the sugar cane was
first cultivated
is unknown, but it is supposed to have been in
the East Indies,
for the Venetians imported it from thence by the
Red Sea prior
to the year 1148. It is supposed to have been
introduced into
the islands of Sicily, Crete, Rhodes, and Cyprus
by the Saracens,
as abundance of sugar was made in these islands
previous to the
discovery of the West Indies in 1492 by the
Spaniards, and
the East Indies and Brazil by the Portuguese in
1497 and 1560.
It was cultivated afterwards in Spain, in Valentia,
Granada, and Murcia
by the Moors. In the fifteenth century it was
introduced into
the Canary Islands by the Spaniards and to Madeira
by the Portuguese,
and thence to the West India Islands and to
Brazil. The
Dutch began to make sugar in the island of St. Thomas
in the year 1610
and in Jamaica in 1644. Its culture has since
become general
in warm climates and its use universal.
375. SAGUERUS SACCHARIFER. The
arenga palm, which is of great value to
the Malays.
The black horsehair like fiber surrounding its
leaf-stalks is
made into cordage; a large amount of toddy or palm
wine is obtained
by cutting off the flower spikes, which, when
inspissated, affords
sugar, and when fermented a capital vinegar.
Considerable quantities
of inferior sago and several other
products of minor
importance are derived from this palm.
376. SAGUS RUMPHII. This palm
produces the sago of commerce, which is
prepared from
the soft inner portion of the trunk. It is obtained
by cutting the
trunk into small pieces, which are split and the
soft substance
scooped out and pounded in water till the starchy
substance separates
and settles. This is sago meal; but before
being exported
it is made into what is termed pearl sago. This
is
a Chinese process,
principally carried on at Singapore. The meal
is washed, strained,
and spread out to dry; it is then broken up,
pounded, and sifted
until it is of a regular size. Small
quantities being
then placed in bags, these are shaken about until
it becomes granulated
or pearled.
377. SALVADORA PERSICA. This
is supposed to be the plant that produced
the mustard seed
spoken of in the Scriptures.
378. SANDORICUM INDICUM. A tropical
tree, sometimes called the Indian
sandal tree, which
produces a fruit like an apple, of agreeable
acid flavor.
The root of the tree has some medicinal value.
379. SANSEVIERA GUINEENSIS. Called
the African bowstring hemp, from
the fibers of
the leaves being used for bowstrings.
380. SANTALUM ALBUM. This tree
yields the true sandalwood of India.
This fragrant
wood is in two colors, procured from the same tree;
the yellow-colored
wood is from the heart and the white-colored
from the exterior,
the latter not so fragrant. The Chinese
manufacture it
into musical instruments, small cabinets, boxes,
and similar articles,
which are insect proof. From shavings of the
wood an essential
oil is distilled, which is used in perfumery.
381. SAPINDUS SAPONARIA. The
soapberry tree. The fruit of this plant
is about the size
of a large gooseberry, the outer covering or
shell of which
contains a saponaceous principle in sufficient
abundance to produce
a lather with water and is used as a
substitute for
soap. The seeds are hard, black, and round, and
are
used for making
rosaries and necklaces, and at one time were
covered for buttons.
Oil is also extracted from the seeds and is
known as soap
oil.
382. SAPIUM INDICUM. A widely
distributed Asiatic tree which yields an
acrid, milky juice,
which, as also the leaves of the plant,
furnishes a kind
of dye. The fruit in its green state is acid,
and
is eaten as a
condiment in Bornéo.
383. SAPOTA ACHRAS. The
fruit of this plant is known in the West
Indies as the
sapodilla plum. It is highly esteemed by the
inhabitants; the
bark of the tree is astringent and febrifugal;
the seeds are
aperient and diuretic.
384. SAPOTA MULLERI. The bully
or balata tree of British Guiana, which
furnishes a gum
somewhat intermediate between India rubber and
gutta-percha,
being nearly as elastic as the first without the
brittleness and
friability of the latter, and requiring a high
temperature to
melt or soften it.
385. SCHINUS MOLLE. The root
of this plant is used medicinally and the
resin that exudes
from the tree is employed to astringe the gums.
The leaves are
so filled with resinous fluid that when they are
immersed in water
it is expelled with such violence as to have the
appearance of
spontaneous motion in consequence of the recoil.
The
fruits are of
the size of pepper corns and are warm to the taste.
The pulp surrounding
the seeds is made into a kind of beverage by
the Mexican Indians.
The plant is sometimes called Mexican
pepper.
386. SCHOTIA SPECIOSA. A
small tree of South Africa called Boerboom at
the Cape of Good
Hope. The seeds or beans are cooked and eaten
as
food. The
bark is used for tanning purposes and as an astringent
in medicine.
387. SEAFORTHIA ELEGANS. This
palm is a native of the northern part of
Australia, where
it is utilized by the natives. The seeds have
a
granular fibrous
rind, and are spotted and marked like a nutmeg.
388. SELAGINELLA LEPIDOPHYLLA. This
species of club moss is found in
southern California,
and has remarkable hygrometric qualities. Its
natural growth
is in circular roseate form, and fully expanded
when the air is
moist, but rolling up like a ball when it becomes
dry. It remains
green and acts in this peculiar manner for a long
time after being
gathered. Of late years numbers have been
distributed throughout
the country under the names of “Rose of
Jericho”
and “Resurrection Plant.” This is,
however, quite
distinct from
the true Rose of Jericho, Anastatica
hierochuntica,
a native of the Mediterranean region, from Syria
to Algeria.
This plant, when growing and in flower, has branches
spread rigidly,
but when the seed ripens the leaves wither, and
the whole plant
becomes dry, each little branch curling inward
until the plant
appears like a small ball; it soon becomes
loosened from
the soil, and is carried by the winds over the dry
plains, and is
often blown into the sea, where it at once expands.
It retains this
property of expanding when moistened for at least
ten years.
389. SEMECARPUS ANACARDIUM. The
marking nut tree of India. The thick,
fleshy receptacle
bearing the fruit is of a yellow color when
ripe, and is roasted
and eaten. The unripe fruit is employed in
making a kind
of ink. The hard shell of the fruit is permeated
by
a corrosive juice,
which is used on external bruises and for
destroying warts.
The juice, when mixed with quick-lime, is used
to mark cotton
or linen with an indelible mark. When dry it forms
a dark varnish,
and among other purposes it is employed, mixed
with pitch and
tar, in the calking of ships. The seeds, called
Malacca beans,
or marsh nuts, are eaten, and are said to stimulate
the mental powers,
and especially the memory; and finally they
furnish an oil
used in painting.
390. SERISSA F[OE]TIDA. A cinchonaceous
shrub, having strong
astringent properties.
The roots are employed in cases of
diarrhea, also
in ophthalmia and certain forms of ulcers. It
is a
native of Japan
and China.
391. SHOREA ROBUSTA. This
tree produces the Saul wood of India, which
has a very high
reputation, and is extensively employed for all
engineering purposes
where great strength and toughness are
requisite.
It is stronger and much heavier than teak. An
oil is
obtained from
the seeds, and a resin similar to Dammar resin is
likewise obtained
from the tree.
392. SIDA PULCHELLA. A
plant of the mallow family; the bark contains
fibrous tissues
available for the manufacture of cordage. The
root
of S. acuta
is esteemed by the Hindoos as a medicine, and
particularly as
a remedy for snake bites. The light wood of these
species is used
to make rocket sticks.
393. SIMABA CEDRON. A native
of New Grenada, where it attains the size
of a small tree,
and bears a large fruit containing one seed; this
seed, which looks
like a blanched almond, is known in commerce as
the cedron.
As a remedy for snake bites it has been known from
time immemorial
in New Grenada. It is mentioned in the books of
the seventeenth
century. Recently it has obtained a reputation
as
a febrifuge, but
its value as an antidote to the bites of snakes
and scorpions
is universally believed, and the inhabitants carry
a
seed with them
in all their journeyings; if they happen to be
bitten by any
venomous reptile they scrape about two grains of the
seed in brandy
or water and apply it to the wound, at the same
time taking a
like dose internally. This neutralizes the most
dangerous poisons.
394. SIMARUBA OFFICINALIS. This
tree yields the drug known as Simaruba
bark, which is,
strictly speaking, the rind of the root. It is
a
bitter tonic.
It is known in the West Indies as the mountain
damson.
395. SIPHONIA ELASTICA. The
South American rubber plant, from which a
great portion
of the caoutchouc of commerce is obtained.
There are
several species
of siphonia which, equally with the above, furnish
the India rubber
exported from Para. The caoutchouc exists
in the
tree in the form
of a thin, white milk, which exudes from
incisions made
in the trunk, and is poured over molds, which were
formerly shaped
like jars, bottles, or shoes, hence often called
bottle rubber.
As it dries, the coatings of milky juice are
repeated until
the required thickness is obtained, and the clay
mold removed.
It belongs to the extensive family Euphorbiaceae.
396. SMILAX MEDICA. This
plant yields Mexican sarsaparilla, so
called to distinguish
it from the many other kinds of this drug.
The plant is a
climber, similar to the smilax of our woods.
397. SPONDIAS MOMBIN. This yields
an eatable fruit called hog plum in
the West Indies.
The taste is said to be peculiar, and not very
agreeable to strangers.
It is chiefly used to fatten swine. The
fruit is laxative,
the leaves astringent, and the seeds possess
poisonous qualities.
The flower buds are used as a sweetmeat with
sugar.
398. STRELITZIA REGINAE. A
plant of the Musa or banana family. The
flowers are very
beautiful for the genus. It is a native of the
Cape of Good Hope.
The seeds are gathered and eaten by the
Kaffirs.
399. STRYCHNOS NUX-VOMICA. This
is a native of the Coromandel coast
and Cochin-China.
It bears an orange-like fruit, containing seeds
that have an intensely
bitter taste, owing to the presence of two
most energetic
poisons, strychnine and brucine.
The pulp
surrounding the
seeds is said to be harmless, and greedily eaten
by birds.
The wood of the plant is hard and bitter, and possesses
similar properties
to the seeds, but in a less degree. It is used
in India in intermittent
fevers and in cases of snake bites. S.
tiente is
a Java shrub, the juice of which is used in poisoning
arrows. S.
toxifera yields a frightful poison called Ourari
or
Wourari, employed
by the natives of Guiana. This is considered to
be the most potent
sedative in nature. Several species of
Strychnos
are considered infallible remedies for snake bites;
hence are known
as snakewood. S. pseudo-quina, a native of
Brazil, yields
Colpache bark, which is much used in that country
in cases of fever,
and is considered equal to quinine in value. It
does not contain
strychnine, and its fruits are edible. S.
potatorum
furnishes seeds known in India as clearing-nuts, on
account of their
use in clearing muddy water. St. Ignatius beans
are supposed to
be yielded by a species of Strychnos, from the
quantity of strychnine
contained in the seeds.
400. SWIETENIA MAHAGONI. This
South American plant furnishes the
timber known in
commerce as mahogany. The bark is considered a
febrifuge, and
the seeds prepared with oil were used by the
ancient Aztecs
as a cosmetic. The timber is well known, and much
used in the manufacture
of furniture.
401. TACCA PINNATIFIDA. This
is sometimes called South Sea arrowroot.
The tubers contain
a great amount of starch, which is obtained by
rasping them and
macerating four or five days in water, when the
fecula separates
in the same manner as sago. It is largely used
as
an article of
diet throughout the tropics, and is a favorite
ingredient for
puddings and cakes.
402. TAMARINDUS INDICA. The
tamarind tree. There are two varieties of
this species.
The East Indian variety has long pods, with six to
twelve seeds.
The variety cultivated in the West Indies has
shorter pods,
containing one to four seeds. Tamarinds owe their
grateful acidity
to the presence of citric, tartaric, and other
vegetable acids.
The pulp mixed with salt is used for a liniment
by the Créoles
of the Mauritius. Every part of the plant has
had
medicinal virtues
ascribed to it. Fish pickled with tamarinds are
considered a great
delicacy. It is said that the acid moisture
exhaled by the
leaves injures the cloth of tents that remain under
them for any length
of time. It is also considered unsafe to sleep
under the trees.
403. TANGHINIA VENENIFERA. This
plant is a native of Madagascar, and
of the family
Apocynaceae. Formerly, when the custom
of trial by
ordeal was more
prevalent than now, the seeds of this plant were
in great repute,
and unlimited confidence was placed in the
poisonous seeds
as a detector of guilt. The seeds were pounded,
and a small piece
swallowed by each person to be tried; those in
whom it caused
vomiting were allowed to escape, but when it was
retained in the
stomach, it would quickly prove fatal, and their
guilt was thus
held to be proven.
404. TASMANNIA AROMATICA. The
bark of this plant possesses aromatic
qualities, closely
resembling Winter’s bark. The small black
fruits are used
as a substitute for pepper.
405. TECTONA GRANDIS. The
teak tree. Teak wood has been extensively
employed for shipbuilding
in the construction of merchant vessels
and ships of war;
its great strength and durability, the facility
with which it
can be worked, and its freedom from injury by fungi,
rendering it peculiarly
suitable for these purposes. It is a
native of the
East India Islands, and belongs to the order
Verbenaceae.
406. TERMINALIA CATAPPA. The
astringent fruits of this tropical plant
are employed for
tanning and dyeing, and are sometimes met with in
commerce under
the name of myrobalans, and used by calico printers
for the production
of a permanent black. The seeds are like
almonds in shape
and whiteness, but, although palatable, have a
peculiar flavor.
407. TETRANTHERA LAURIFOLIA. This
plant is widely dispersed over
tropical Asia
and the islands of the Eastern Archipelago. Its
leaves and young
branches abound in a viscid juice, and in
Cochin-China the
natives bruise and macerate them until this
becomes glutinous,
when it is used for mixing with plaster, to
thicken and render
it more adhesive and durable. Its fruits yield
a solid fat, used
for making candles, although it has a most
disagreeable odor.
408. THEA VIRIDIS. This
is the China tea plant, whose native country
is undetermined.
All kinds and grades of the teas of commerce are
made from this
species, although probably it has some varieties.
Black and green
teas are the result of different modes of
preparation; very
much of the green, however, is artificially
colored to suit
the foreign trade. The finest teas do not reach
this country;
they will not bear a sea voyage, and are used only
by the wealthy
classes in China and Russia. The active principles
of the leaves
are theine and a volatile oil, to which latter the
flavor and odor
are due. So far as climate is concerned for the
existence of the
tea plant in the United States, it will stand in
the open air without
injury from Virginia southwards. A zero frost
will not kill
it. But with regard to its production as a
profitable crop,
the rainfall in no portion of the States is
sufficient to
warrant any attempt to cultivate the plant for
commercial purposes.
But this does not prevent its culture as a
domestic article,
and many hundreds of families thus prepare all
the tea they require,
from plants it may be from the pleasure
ground or lawn,
where the plant forms one of the best ornaments.
409. THEOBROMA CACAO. This plant
produces the well-known cacao, or
chocolate, and
is very extensively cultivated in South America and
the West India
Islands. The fruit, which is about 8 to 10 inches
in length by 3
to 5 in breadth, contains between fifty and a
hundred seeds,
and from these the cacao is prepared. As an article
of food it contains
a large amount of nutritive matter, about 50
per cent being
fat. It contains a peculiar principle, which is
called theobromine.
410. THEOPHRASTA JUSSIAEI. A
native of St. Domingo, where it is
sometimes called
Le petit Coca. The fruit is succulent, and bread
is made from the
seeds.
411. THESPESIA POPULNEA. A tropical
tree, belonging to the mallow
family. The
inner bark of the young branches yields a tough fiber,
fit for cordage,
and used in Demerara for making coffee bags, and
the finer pieces
of it for cigar envelopes. The wood is considered
almost indestructible
under water, and its hardness and durability
render it valuable
for various purposes. The flower buds and
unripe fruits
yield a viscid yellow juice, useful as a dye, and a
thick, deep, red-colored
oil is expressed from the seeds.
412. THEVETIA NERIIFOLIA. This
shrubby plant is common in the West
Indies and in
many parts of Central America. Its bark abounds
in a
poisonous milky
juice, and is said to possess powerful properties.
A clear, bright,
yellow-colored oil, called Exile oil, is
obtained, by expression,
from the seeds.
413. THRINAX ARGENTEA. This
beautiful palm is called the Silver Thatch
palm of Jamaica,
and is said to yield the leaves so extensively
used in the manufacture
of hats, baskets, and other articles. It
is also a native
of Panama, where it is called the broom palm, its
leaves being there
made into brooms.
414. TILLANDSIA ZEBRINA. A South
American plant of the pineapple
family; the bottle-like
cavity at the base of the leaves will
sometimes contain
a pint or more of water, and has frequently
furnished a grateful
drink to thirsty travelers.
415. TINOSPORA CORDIFOLIA. A
climbing plant, so tenacious of life that
when the stem
is cut across or broken, a rootlet is speedily sent
down from above,
which continues to grow until it reaches the
ground. A
bitter principle, calumbine, pervades the plant.
An
extract called
galuncha is prepared from it, considered to be a
specific for the
bites of poisonous insects and for ulcers. The
young shoots are
used as emetics.
416. TRIPHASIA TRIFOLIATA. A
Chinese shrub, with fruit about the size
of hazelnuts,
red-skinned, and of an agreeable sweet taste; when
green, they have
a strong flavor of turpentine, and the pulp is
very sticky.
They are also preserved whole in sirup, and are
sometimes called
limeberries.
417. TRISTANIA NERIIFOLIA. A
myrtaceous plant from Australia, called
the turpentine
tree, owing to its furnishing a fluid resembling
that product.
418. URCEOLA ELASTICA. A
plant belonging to the Apocynaceae, a native
of the islands
of Bornéo and Sumatra, where its milky juice,
collected by making
incisions in its soft, thick, rugged bark, or
by cutting the
trunk into junks, forms one of the kinds of
caoutchouc
called juitawan, but it is inferior to the South
American, chiefly
owing to want of care in its preparation, the
milky juice being
simply coagulated by mixing with salt water,
instead of being
gradually inspissated in layers on a mold. The
fruit contains
a pulp which is much eaten by the natives.
419. URENA LOBATA. A malvaceous
plant, possessing mucilaginous
properties, for
which it is used medicinally. The bark affords
an
abundance of fiber,
resembling jute rather than flax or hemp.
420. UVARIA ODORATISSIMA. An
Indian plant which is supposed to yield
the essential
oil called Ylang-Ylang, or Alan-gilan. This oil
is
obtained by distillation
from the flowers, and is highly esteemed
by perfumers,
having an exquisite odor partaking of the jasmine
and lilac.
421. VANGUERIA EDULIS. A
cinchonaceous plant, the fruits of which are
eaten in Madagascar
under the name of Voa-vanga. The leaves are
used in medicine.
422. VANILLA PLANIFOLIA. The
vanilla plant, which belongs to the
orchid family.
The fruit is used by confectioners and others for
flavoring creams,
liquors, and chocolates. There are several
species, but this
gives the finest fruit. It is a climbing orchid,
and is allowed
to climb on trees when cultivated for its fruit.
In
Mexico, from whence
is procured a large portion of the fruit, it
is cultivated
in certain favorable localities near the Gulf coast,
where the climate
is warm. Much of the value of the bean depends
upon the process
of its preparation for the market. In Mexico,
where much care
is given to this process, the pods are gathered
before they are
fully ripe and placed in a heap, under protection
from the weather,
until they begin to shrivel, when they are
submitted to a
sweating process by wrapping them in blankets
inclosed in tight
boxes; afterwards they are exposed to the sun.
They are then
tied into bundles or small bales, which are first
wrapped in woolen
blankets, then in a coating of banana leaves
first sprinkled
with water, then placed in an oven heated up to
about 140 deg.
F. Here they remain for twenty-four to forty-eight
hours, according
to the size of the pods, the largest requiring
the longest time.
After this heating they are exposed to the sun
daily for fifty
or sixty days, until they are thoroughly dried and
ready for the
market.
423. VATERIA INDICA. This
plant yields a useful gum resin, called
Indian copal,
piney varnish, white dammar, or gum anine. The
resin
is procured by
cutting a notch in the tree, so that the juice may
flow out and become
hardened. It is used as a varnish for
pictures, carriages,
etc. On the Malabar coast it is manufactured
into candles,
which burn with a clear light and an agreeable
fragrance.
The Portuguese employ this resin instead of incense.
Ornaments are
fashioned from it under the name of amber. It
is
also employed
in medicine.
424. WEINMANNIA RACEMOSA. A
New Zealand tree called Towhia by the
natives of that
country. Its bark is used for tanning purposes,
and as a red and
brown dye, which give fast colors upon cotton
fabrics.
425. WRIGHTIA TINCTORIA. The
leaves of this plant furnish an inferior
kind of indigo.
The wood is beautifully white, close-grained, and
ivory-like, and
is much used for making Indian toys.
426. XANTHORRH[OE]A ARBOREA. The
grass gum tree of Australia, also
called black boy.
This is a liliaceous plant, which produces a
long flower-stalk,
bearing at the top an immense cylindrical
flower-spike,
and when the short black stem is denuded of leaves,
the plants look
very like black men holding spears. The leaves
afford good fodder
for cattle, and the tender white center is used
as a vegetable.
A fragrant resin, called acaroid resin, is
obtained from
it.
427. XIMENIA AMERICANA. A small
tree, found in many warm regions;
among others in
southern Florida. In Brazil it is called the
Native Plum on
account of its small yellow fruits, which have a
subacid and somewhat
astringent aromatic taste. The wood is
odoriferous and
is used in the West Indies as a substitute for
sandalwood.
428. YUCCA AL[OE]FOLIA. The
yucca leaves afford a good fiber, and some
southern species
are known as bear’s grass. The root
stems also
furnish a starchy
matter, which has been rendered useful in the
manufacture of
starch.
429. ZAMIA FURFURACEA. This
plant belongs to the order Cycadaceae,
and is grown to
some extent for the starchy matter contained in
the stem, which
is collected and used as arrowroot; but it is not
the true arrowroot,
that being produced by a species of Maranta.
430. ZAMIA INTEGRIFOLIA. The
coontie plant of Florida. The large
succulent roots
afford a quantity of arrowroot, said to be equal
to the best of
that from Bermuda. The fruit has a coating of
an
orange-colored
pulp, which is said to form a rich edible food.
It
was from the roots
of this plant that the Seminoles of Florida
obtained their
white meal.
431. ZINGIBER OFFICINALE. This
plant is cultivated in most warm
countries for
the sake of its rhizomes, which furnish the spice
called ginger.
It is prepared by digging up the roots when a year
old, scraping
them, and drying them in the sun. Ginger, when
broken across,
shows a number of little fibers embedded in floury
tissue. Its
hot pungent taste is due to a volatile oil. It
also
contains starch
and yellow coloring matter. Ginger is used for
various medicinal
purposes, and in many ways as a condiment, and
in the preparation
of cordials and so-called teas.