Poison
substance that causes disturbances to organisms
(Redirected from Poisons)
- For the rock band, see Poison (band).
Poisons are substances that can cause disturbances to organisms, usually by chemical reaction or other activity on the molecular scale, when a sufficient quantity is absorbed by an organism. In medicine (particularly veterinary) and in zoology, a poison is often distinguished from a toxin and a venom. Toxins are poisons produced via some biological function in nature, and venoms are usually defined as biological toxins that are injected by a bite or sting to cause their effect, while other poisons are generally defined as substances which are absorbed through epithelial linings such as the skin or gut.
QuotesEdit
- Belladonna, n.: In Italian a beautiful lady; in English a deadly poison. A striking example of the essential identity of the two tongues.
- Ambrose Bierce The Devil's Dictionary
- What's one man's poison, signior,
Is another's meat or drink.- Beaumont and Fletcher, Love's Cure (c. 1612–13; revised c. 1625; published 1647), Act III, scene 2. Same in Lucretius, IV. 627.
- I wanna taste you but your lips are venomous poison
You're poison running through my veins
You're poison I don't wanna break these chains
- If you persevere in your rancor, you do nothing but keep feeding yourself on poison.
- Fausto Cercignani in: Brian Morris, Simply Transcribed. Quotations from Writings by Fausto Cercignani, 2014, quote 57.
- Son, I don't have money even to buy poison.Please help –
- Dadasaheb Phalke in a letter to his son Bhalchandra in late 1930s, quoted in "Dadasaheb Phalke's family wants Bharat Ratna for him". Hindustan Times. 27 April 2013. Retrieved on 26 December 2013.
- Worry is the stomach's worst poison.
- All things are poison and nothing is without poison; only the dose makes a thing not a poison.
- Paracelsus "Die dritte Defension wegen des Schreibens der neuen Rezepte," Septem Defensiones 1538. Werke Bd. 2, Darmstadt 1965, p. 510 (full text)
- Let me have
A dram of poison, such soon-speeding gear
As will disperse itself through all the veins
That the life-weary taker may fall dead
And that the trunk may be discharg'd of breath
As violently as hasty powder fir'd
Doth hurry from the fatal cannon's womb.- William Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet (1597), Act V, scene 1, line 59.
Hoyt's New Cyclopedia Of Practical QuotationsEdit
- Quotes reported in Hoyt's New Cyclopedia Of Practical Quotations (1922), p. 609-10.
- Vipera Cappadocem nocitura mormordit; at illa Gustato peril sanguine Cappadocis.
- A deadly echidna once bit a Cappadocian; she herself died, having tasted the Poison-flinging blood.
- Demodocus, translation of his Greek Epigram.
- Un gros serpent mordit Aurèle.
Que croyez-vous qu'il arriva?
Qu' Aurèle en mourut? Bagatelle!
Ce fut le serpent qui creva.- In a manuscript commonplace book, written probably at end of 18th Cen. See Notes and Queries. March 30, 1907, p. 246.
- Hier auprès de Charenton
Un serpent morait Jean Fréron,
Que croyez-vous qu'il arriva?
Ce fut le serpent qui creva.- Imitation from the Greek. Found also in Œuvres Complèts de Voltaire, III, p. 1002. (1817). Printed as Voltaire's; attributed to Piron; claimed for Fréron.
- The man recover'd of the bite,
The dog it was that died.- Oliver Goldsmith, Elegy on the Death of a Mad Dog. Same idea in Manasses—Fragmenta. Ed. Boissonade. I. 323. (1819).
- While Fell was reposing himself in the hay,
A reptile concealed bit his leg as he lay;
But, all venom himself, of the wound he made light,
And got well, while the scorpion died of the bite.- Gotthold Ephraim Lessing, Paraphrase of Demodocus.
- All men carry about them that which is poyson to serpents: for if it be true that is reported, they will no better abide the touching with man's spittle than scalding water cast upon them: but if it happen to light within their chawes or mouth, especially if it come from a man that is fasting, it is present death.
- Pliny the Elder, Natural History, Book VII, Chapter II. Holland's translation.
- In gährend Drachengift hast du
Die Milch der frommen Denkart mir verwandelt.- To rankling poison hast thou turned in me the milk of human kindness.
- Friedrich Schiller, Wilhelm Tell, IV. 3. 3.
- Venenum in auro bibitur.
- Poison is drunk out of gold.
- Seneca the Younger, Thyestes, Act III. 453.
- Talk no more of the lucky escape of the head
From a flint so unhappily thrown;
I think very different from thousands; indeed
'Twas a lucky escape for the stone.- John Wolcot (Peter Pindar), On a Stone thrown at George III.
External linksEdit
- Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry
- American Association of Poison Control Centers
- American College of Medical Toxicology
- Find Your Local Poison Control Centre Here (Worldwide)
- Poison Prevention and Education Website
- Cochrane Injuries Group, Systematic reviews on the prevention, treatment and rehabilitation of traumatic injury (including poisoning)
- Pick Your Poison—12 Toxic Tales by Cathy Newman