Part 54 (1/2)
Vegetarians who eat Tomatoes constantly and freely claim that cancer is a disease almost unknown among their ranks; but an Italian doctor writing from Rome gives it as the experience of himself and his medical brethren that cancer is as common in Italy and Sicily among vegetarians as with mixed eaters. Most of our American cousins, who are the enterprising fathers of this medicinal fruit, persuade themselves that they are never in perfect health except during the Tomato season. And with us the ruddy Solanum has obtained a wide popularity not simply at table as a tasty cooling sallet, or an appetising stew, but essentially as a supposed antibilious purifier of the blood. When uncooked it contains a notable quant.i.ty of Solanin, and it would be dangerous to let animals drink water in which the plant had been boiled. The Staff of the Cancer Hospital at Brompton have emphatically declared ”they see no ground whatever for supposing that the eating of Tomatoes predisposes to cancer.”
Nevertheless some country people in the remote American States attribute cancer to an excessively free use of the wild uncultivated tomato as food.
[571] The first mention of this fruit by the London Horticultural Society occurred in 1818.
Chemically in addition to the acids already named the Tomato contains a volatile oil, a brown resinous extractive matter very fragrant, a vegeto-mineral matter, muco-saccharin, some salts, and in all probability an alkaloid. The whole plant smells unpleasantly, and its juices when subjected to heat by the action of fire emit a vapour so powerful as to provoke vertigo and vomiting.
The specific principles furnished by the Tomato will, when concentrated, produce, if taken medicinally, effects very similar to those brought about by taking mercurial salts, viz., an ulcerative-state of the mouth, with a profuse flow of saliva, and with excessive stimulation of the liver: peevishness also on the following day, with a depressing backache in men, suggesting paralysis, and with a profuse fluor albus in women. When given in moderation as food, or as physic, the fruit will remedy this chain of symptoms.
By reason of its efficacy in promoting an increased flow of bile if judiciously taken, the Tomato bears the name in America of Vegetable Mercury, and it has almost superseded calomel there as a biliary medicinal provocative. Dr. Bennett declares the Tomato to be the most useful and the least harmful of all known medicines for correcting derangements of the liver. He prepares a chemical extract of the fruit and plant which will, he feels a.s.sured, depose calomel for the future.
Across the Atlantic an officinal tincture is made from the Tomato for curative purposes by treating the apples, and the bruised fresh plant with alcohol, and letting this stand for eight days before it is filtered and strained.
A teaspoonful of the tincture is a sufficient dose with one or two tablespoonfuls of cold water, three times in the day.
[572] The fluid extract made from the plant is curative of any ulcerative soreness within the mouth, such as nurses' sore mouth, or canker. It should be given internally, and applied locally to the sore parts.
Spaniards and Italians eat Tomatoes with pepper and oil. We take them as a salad, or stewed with b.u.t.ter, after slicing and stuffing them with bread crumb, and a spice of garlic.
The green Tomato makes a good pickle, and in its unripe state is esteemed an excellent sauce with rich roast pork, or goose. The fruit when cooked no longer exercises active medicinal effects, as its volatile principles have now become dispelled through heat.
By the late Mr. s.h.i.+rley Hibberd, who was a good naturalist, it was a.s.serted with seeming veracity that the cannibal inhabitants of the Fiji Islands hold in high repute a native Tomato which is named by them the _Solanum anthropophagorutm_, and which they eat, _par excellence_, with ”Cold Missionary.” Nearer home a worthy dame has been known with pious aspirations to enquire at the stationer's for ”Foxe's book of To-Martyrs.”
”Chops and Tomato sauce” were ordered from Mrs. Bardell, in Pickwick's famous letter. ”Gentlemen!” says Serjeant Buzfuz, in his address to the jury, ”What does this mean?” But he missed a point in not going on to add--”I need not tell you, gentlemen, the popular name for the Tomato is _love apple_! Is it not manifest, therefore, what the base deceiver intended?”
”A cuc.u.mber in early spring Might please a sated Caesar, Rapture asparagus can bring, And dearer still green peas are: Oh! far and wide, where mushrooms hide, I'll search, as wide and far too For watercress; but all their pride Must stoop to thee,--Tomato!”
[573] TORMENTIL.
The Tormentil (_Potentilla Tormentilla_) belongs to the tribe of wild Roses, and is a common plant on our heaths, banks, and dry pastures. It is closely allied to the _Potentilla_, but bears only four petals on its flowers, which are of bright yellow. The woody roots are medicinally useful because of their astringent properties.
Sometimes the stem is trailing, making this the _Tormentilla Reptans_, but more commonly it ascends. The name comes from _tormina_, which signifies such griping of the intestines as the herb will serve to relieve, as likewise the twinges of toothache. The root is employed both for tanning leather, and for dyeing it by the thickened red juice. Furthermore through its astringency this root is admirable for arresting bleedings. Vesalius considered it to be as useful against syphilis as Guiac.u.m, and Sarsaparilla. A decoction of Tormentil makes a capital gargle, and will heal ulcers of the mouth if used as a wash. If a piece of lint soaked therein be kept applied to warts, they will wither and disappear. Chemically the herb contains ”_Tormentilla Red_,” identical with that of the Horse Chestnut, also tannic, and kinoric acids. The decoction should be made with four drams to half-a-pint of water boiled together for ten minutes, adding half a dram of Cinnamon stick at the end of boiling; one or two tablespoonfuls will be the dose, or of the powdered root (dried) the dose will be from five to thirty grains.
”_In fluxu sanguinis, fluore albo, et mictu involuntario Tormentilla valet_.” Dr. Thornton (1810) tells of a labouring botanist who learnt the powers of this root, and by its decoction, sweetened with honey, cured intractable agues, severe diarrhoeas, and s...o...b..tic ulcers (which had been turned out of hospitals as inveterate), [578] also many fluxes. Lord William Russell heard about this, and allowed the poor man a piece of his park in which to cultivate the herb, ”_Non est vegetabile quod in fluxionibus alvi efficacius est_.” The root is so rich in tannin that it may be used instead of oak bark.
TURNIP.
The Turnip (_Bra.s.sica Rapa_) belongs to the Cruciferous Cabbage tribe, being often found growing in waste places, though not truly wild. In this state it is worth nothing to man or beast; but, by cultivation, it becomes a most valuable food for cattle in the winter, and a good vegetable for our domestic uses. It exercises some aperient action, and the liquid in which turnips are boiled will increase the flow of urine. It is called also ”bagie,” and was the ”gongyle” of the Greeks, so named from the roundness of the root.
When mashed, and mixed with bread and milk, the Turnip makes an excellent cleansing and stimulating poultice for indolent abscesses or sores.
The Scotch eat small, yellow-rooted Turnips as we do radishes.
”Tastes and Turnips proverbially differ.” At Plymouth, and some other places, when a girl rejects a suitor, she is said to ”give him turnips,” probably with reference to his sickly pallor of disappointment.
The seventeenth of June--as the day of St. Botolph, the old turnip man,--is distinguished by various uses of a Turnip, because in the Saga, which figuratively represents the seasons, the seeds were sown on that day.
It is told that the King of Bithynia in some expedition against the Scythians during the winter, and when at a great distance from the sea, had a violent [575] longing for a small fish known as _aphy_--a pilchard, or anchovy. His cook cut a Turnip to a perfect imitation of its shape, which, when fried in oil, well salted, and powdered with the seeds of a dozen black poppies, so deceived the king that he praised the root at table as an excellent fish.