TOXIC BOTANICALS LIBRARY


Toxic plants have been studied, cultivated, and deliberately kept for centuries — by physicians, poisoners, midwives, cunning folk, and anyone who understood that the line between medicine and poison was a matter of dose rather than intent. Many of the most dangerous plants in this archive are also the most pharmacologically significant, their alkaloids still present in modern medicine under different names. Their history belongs not only to the dangerous but to everyone who learned to work carefully with difficult things.

Baneberry: The Plant That Grows Its Own Eyes
Dryad Undine Dryad Undine

Baneberry: The Plant That Grows Its Own Eyes

Find it in a shaded forest in late summer and it looks like something is staring back — porcelain-white berries, each one marked with a single dark eye, clustered on stems the color of a bruise. The name doesn't soften the warning at all.

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“The dose makes the poison. The knowledge makes the difference.”

— After Paracelsus

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