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Hemlock   /hˈɛmlˌɑk/   Listen
Hemlock

noun
1.
Poisonous drug derived from an Eurasian plant of the genus Conium.
2.
Large branching biennial herb native to Eurasia and Africa and adventive in North America having large fernlike leaves and white flowers; usually found in damp habitats; all parts extremely poisonous.  Synonyms: California fern, Conium maculatum, Nebraska fern, poison hemlock, poison parsley, winter fern.
3.
Soft coarse splintery wood of a hemlock tree especially the western hemlock.
4.
An evergreen tree.  Synonym: hemlock tree.



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"Hemlock" Quotes from Famous Books



... and white, every year, than would pay the poor-rates and state-taxes. They make excellent huntin'-coats, and would make beautiful razor-straps, bindin' for books, and such like things; it would make a noble export. Tannin' in hemlock bark cures the horrid nigger flavour. But then, we hante arrived at that state of philosophy; and when it is confined to one class of the human family, it would be dangerous. The skin of a crippled slave might be worth more than the critter was himself; and I make no doubt, we should ...
— The Attache - or, Sam Slick in England, Complete • Thomas Chandler Haliburton

... what verdict they brought. He had no fear of death, and would not trouble himself to say a word to preserve his life. The divine voice, he declared, would not permit him. He was sentenced to drink the poison of hemlock, and was imprisoned for thirty days, during which he conversed in his old calm ...
— Historic Tales, vol 10 (of 15) - The Romance of Reality • Charles Morris

... just stretched to grasp its goal,—"Put ye in the sickle." And when there are but a few in the midst of a nation, to save it, or to teach, or to cherish; and all its life is bound up in those few golden ears,—"Put ye in the sickle, pale reapers, and pour hemlock for ...
— Selections From the Works of John Ruskin • John Ruskin

... he had contracted with old Zack Lurvey to cut three hundred thousand feet of hemlock logs and draw them to the bank of a small river where in the spring they could be floated down to Lurvey's Mills. For hauling the logs he had two yokes of oxen, the yoke of large eight-year-olds that I have already described, and another yoke of small, white-faced cattle. During the ...
— A Busy Year at the Old Squire's • Charles Asbury Stephens

... unwash-outable stain. She set herself to the exciting task of repetition and variation. She tried the velvet shell of young butternuts upon threads of her white wool, and found a spring green, and if she spread over it a thinnest wash of hemlock bark, they were olive, and if she dipped them in mitigated indigo, lo! they were of the green of sea hollows. The butternut in all stages of its growth, from the smallest and greenest to the rusty black of the ...
— The Development of Embroidery in America • Candace Wheeler


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