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Veratrum

hellebore

VERATRUM. The Greek physicians were acquainted with a poisonous herb which they called white hellebore, and which has been supposed to represent the Veratrum album of modern bot anists. In modern times the name has been applied to a genus of herbaceous plants belonging to the family Liliaceae. Veratrum is a tall-growing herb, having a fibrous root-stock, an erect stem, with numerous broad, plicated leaves placed alternately, and terminal, much-branched clusters of greenish or purplish polygamous flow ers. Each perfect flower consists of six regular petals, as many sta mens, whose anthers open outwardly, and a three-celled superior ovary which ripens into a three-celled, many-seeded capsule. The

genus comprises io species, natives of the temperate regions of the northern hemisphere, generally growing in pastures or woods. V. album and the North American species V. viride are commonly grown in gardens as ornamental perennials, but their poisonous qualities should be kept in mind, particularly as they bear a con siderable resemblance in foliage to the harmless Gentians lutea. Both contain the potent alkaloid veratrine. (See also HELLEBORE.)