Home1778 Edition

EUPHORBIA

Volume 4 · 395 words · 1778 Edition

spurge; a genus of the trigynia order, belonging to the dodecandra clas of plants. There are 62 species, six of which are natives of Great Britain. They are mostly shrubby and herbaceous succulents, frequently armed with thorns, having stalks from 10 or 12 inches to as many feet in height, with quadripetalous flowers of a whitish or yellow colour. They are easily propagated by cuttings; but the foreign kinds must be always kept in pots in a stove. If kept dry, they may be preserved for several months out of the ground, and then planted; when they will as readily take root as though they had been fresh. The juice of all the species is so acid, that it corrodes and ulcerates the body wherever it is applied; so that physicians have seldom ventured to prescribe it internally. Warts, or corns, anointed with the juice, presently disappear. A drop of it put into the hollow of an aching tooth, gives relief, like other corrosives, by destroying the nerve. Some people rub it behind the ears, that it may blister. One of the foreign species, named fula, is such a violent corrosive, that, if applied to any part of the body, it produces a violent inflammation, which is soon succeeded by a swelling that degenerates into a gangrene, and proves mortal. Ipecacuanha is the root of another species. A third hath obtained the name of sterculia, or dirtwood, from its smell, which is said exactly to resemble human excretions.

in the materia medica; a gum resin, brought us always in loose, smooth, and glossy gold-coloured drops or granules. It is the produce of the euphorbia antiquorum verum, which grows to 10 or 12 feet high. Its principal use is externally in liniments, and plasters applied to the feet, which are intended to stimulate, but not absolutely to raise blisters; for it is observed by Avienne, that, when taken internally in large doses, it has been found to ulcerate the intestines, and bring on death itself after the most terrible symptoms.

EUPHORION of Chalcis, a poet and historian, born in the 126th Olympiad. Suetonius says that Tiberius composed verses in imitation of Euphorion, Rianius, and Parthenius; with whom he was charmed to such a degree, that he ordered their writings and their pictures to be kept in all the public libraries, among the ancient and celebrated authors.