> HERBACEOUS
•
Autumn
crocus
•
Buttercup
•
Calabar
bean
•
C.
monkshood
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Daffodil
•
Foxglove
•
Hemlock
•
Henbane
•
Jimsonweed
•
Lily
of the valley
•
Mandrake
•
Mexican
cactus
•
Oleander
•
Peony
•
Pheasant’s
eye
•
Poppy
•
Potato
•
Tobacco
> FRUTESCENT
•
Belladonna
•
Cannabis
•
Coca
> LIGNEOUS
•
Castor
oil plant
•
Poison
ivy
•
Quinine
tree
•
Strophanthus
•
Strychnos
•
Yew
> MISCELLANEOUS
•
Additional
plants

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According to ancient
Greek mythology, once there was a handsome slender lad called Narcissus.
Many beautiful nymphs were in love with him but he was haughty and rejected
their love. One day, he saw his face in the clear water of a mountain brook
and fell so deeply in love with his own reflection that he couldn’t leave
that place any more. He died there and a beautiful flower–“the flower of
death”–grew from the place where his head had dropped. Consequently, it
was named after the self-enamored Narcissus.
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The daffodil
is distributed mostly in the Mediterranean but has been cultivated as a
decorative plant for ages all over the world.
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Narcissus
pseudonarcissus major
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The number of the
varieties has already reached 12,000. Most people are familiar only with
the aesthetic value of the daffodil and are completely unaware of the fact
that these wonderful blossoms– yellow or white with a red brim–and the
bulbs contain the poisonous alkaloids narcitine and narcicysteine. They
have no application in modern medicine.
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