Friday 3 August 2012

Enoch Soames

Enoch Soames is a short story by the British writer Max Beerbohm. It appeared in the collection Seven Men (1919) and was originally published in the May 1916 edition of The Century Magazine. It is well known for its clever and humorous use of the ideas of time travel and pacts with the Devil. The story is also memorable for its complex combination of fact and fiction; though the hero Soames is a fictional character, the story is narrated by Beerbohm himself, and contains a written portrait of the real-life artist William Rothenstein, as well as countless references to contemporary events and places.

Monday 9 January 2012

Asarum

Description
Medicinal Parts
The primary medicinal part is the root of the plant. However, the leaves have been used to a lesser extent.

Flower and Fruit
The end of the stem forms a short-pedicled, slightly hanging flower. The perigone forms a campanulate tube with a 3- to 4-lobed margin. It is brownish on the outside, dark purple on the inside. There are 2 groups of 6 stamens on the ovaries, which are fused with the tube and are flattened above. The style is thick, short and solid; the stigma is 6-rayed. The fruit is a many-seeded, indehiscent capsule divided into many chambers by false membranes. Each capsule contains numerous boat-shaped seeds with a spongy appendage.

Leaves, Stem, and Root
Asarum europaeum is a shaggy-haired perennial growing 4 to 10 cm high. It has a thin, creeping rhizome that is branched and usually has 3 to 4 scalelike, brownish-green stipules. It has an ascending short-scaled stem, with the terminal flower at the tip. There are 2 to 4 long-petioled, almost opposite, broad, reniform leaves. They are entire-margined, coriaceous, dark-green glossy above, pale and matte beneath, deeply reticulate and evergreen.

Characteristics
The rhizome has a pepperlike smell; the leaves and flowers have an unpleasant camphor smell. Asarum europaeum is a protected species.

Habitat
The plant is indigenous to the northern parts of southern Europe, central and east-central Europe as far as the Crimea and eastward into western Siberia as well as an enclave in the Atai. Asarum is cultivated in the U.S.

Production
Asarum root is the root of Asarum europaeum, which is gathered in August and air-dried in the shade. Asarum is primarily collected in the wild, but is cultivated in the U.S.

Not to be Confused With
Can be confused with other valerian types and with Arnica montana, Genum urbanum, Valeriana officinalis and Viola ordorata. Powder that is not made from Asarum europaeum can be identified by the presence of fibers, stone cells, oxalate filament agglomerations, and the absence of starch.

Other Names
Asarabacca, Coltsfoot, False Coltsfoot, Fole's Foot, Hazelwort, Public House Plant, Snakeroot, Wild Ginger, Wild Nard