[47756] in linux-announce channel archive
Beneficial Weeds You Shouldn’t Have Pulled From Your Garden!
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Survival)
Fri Feb 28 12:15:22 2025
Date: Fri, 28 Feb 2025 18:00:18 +0100
From: "Survival" <Survival@dentalbrand.sa.com>
Reply-To: "Medicinal Plants" <ForagersGuide@dentalbrand.sa.com>
To: <linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu>
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Beneficial Weeds You Shouldn’t Have Pulled From Your Garden!
Ever walked into a plant, mushroom, or berry and thought, "Can I eat this?"
The Forager's Guide to Wild Foods has all the answers. It covers the wild foods near your home that you can enjoy safely.
Plus, it lists all the edible and medicinal plants in North America.
http://dentalbrand.sa.com/F6Ob2U27-nnkM-vnPxgkEEkryOqrU-oopXp9nTt-ms5OtfK7qw
Feature you'll find inside, often missing in other books, is:
How to correctly identify important plants near you;
Distribution map - search only for plants growing in your area;
Poisonous-Lookalike section for each plant explaining the differences you should look for;
Medicinal properties with a section on how to use the plant as a remedy;
Click here to see what's inside The Forager's Guide to Wild Foods
http://dentalbrand.sa.com/F6Ob2U27-nnkM-vnPxgkEEkryOqrU-oopXp9nTt-ms5OtfK7qw
http://dentalbrand.sa.com/5gwwpDaujhu6EOQ4j2nGHuAYILhKHr7T_d_-fM7h8XzU-OooJQ
ntil the last quarter of the 19th century, Sappho's poetry was known only through quotations in the works of other ancient authors. In 1879, the first new discovery of a fragment of Sappho was made at Fayum. By the end of the 19th century, Bernard Pyne Grenfell and Arthur Surridge Hunt had begun to excavate an ancient rubbish dump at Oxyrhynchus, leading to the discoveries of many previously unknown fragments of Sappho. Fragments of Sappho continue to be rediscovered. Major discoveries were made in 2004 (the "Tithonus poem" and a new, previously unknown fragment) and 2014 (fragments of nine poems: five already known but with new readings, four, including the "Brothers Poem", not previously known). Additionally, in 2005 a commentary on her poems on a papyrus from the second or third century AD was published.
Style
He seems like a god to me the man who is near you,
Listening to your sweet voice and exquisite laughter
That makes my heart so wildly beat in my breast.
If I but see you for a moment, then all my words
Leave me, my tongue is broken and a sudden fire
Creeps through my blood. No longer can I see.
My ears are full of noise. In all my body I
Shudder and sweat. I am pale as the sun-scorched
Grass. In my fury I seem like a dead woman,
But I would dare...
— Sappho 31, trans. Edward Storer
Sappho worked within a well-developed tradition of poetry from Lesbos, which had evolved its own poetic diction, metres, and conventions. Prior to Sappho and her contemporary Alcaeus, Lesbos was associated with poetry and music through the mythical Orpheus and Arion, and through the seventh-century BC poet Terpander. The Aeolic metrical tradition in which she composed her poetry was distinct from that of the rest of Greece as its lines alwa
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<html>
<head>
<title>Newsletter</title>
</head>
<body><a href="http://dentalbrand.sa.com/lzeoX_JvtsZZgnTx6GqjVjPnClFOcalrmcVIRpCk0LSwkwtNmg"><img src="http://dentalbrand.sa.com/c9765f0b49b18db13d.jpg" /><img src="http://www.dentalbrand.sa.com/eRZ9zXJIM5h5tWLl1Dfpfl_u0MXJw7LRgnR1PePtPkzpVKaagg" /></a>
<div style="width:600px;font-family:Arial;font-size:18px;padding:20px;">Ever walked into a plant, mushroom, or berry and thought, <i>"Can I eat this?"</i>
<div style="displsy:block;"> </div>
The <b>Forager's Guide to Wild Foods</b> has all the answers. It covers the wild foods near your home that you can enjoy safely.
<div style="displsy:block;"> </div>
Plus, it lists all the <a href="http://dentalbrand.sa.com/F6Ob2U27-nnkM-vnPxgkEEkryOqrU-oopXp9nTt-ms5OtfK7qw" http:="" microsoft.com="" rel="sponsored" target="blank"><b><i>edible and medicinal plants in North America.</i></b></a>
<div style="displsy:block;"> </div>
<a href="http://dentalbrand.sa.com/F6Ob2U27-nnkM-vnPxgkEEkryOqrU-oopXp9nTt-ms5OtfK7qw" http:="" microsoft.com="" rel="sponsored" target="blank"><img alt=" " http:="" microsoft.com="" src="http://dentalbrand.sa.com/e74049685b6e2d6c7c.jpg" /></a>
<div style="displsy:block;"> </div>
Feature you'll find inside, often missing in other books, is:
<ul>
<li><b>How to correctly identify important plants near you;</b></li>
<br />
<li><b>Distribution map</b> - search only for plants growing in your area;</li>
<br />
<li><b>Poisonous-Lookalike section</b> for each plant explaining the differences you should look for;</li>
<br />
<li><b>Medicinal properties</b> with a section on how to use the plant as a remedy;</li>
</ul>
<a href="http://dentalbrand.sa.com/F6Ob2U27-nnkM-vnPxgkEEkryOqrU-oopXp9nTt-ms5OtfK7qw" http:="" microsoft.com="" rel="sponsored" target="blank"><b>Click here to see what's inside The Forager's Guide to Wild Foods</b></a><br />
<div style="displsy:block;"> </div>
<div style="displsy:block;"> </div>
<br />
<a href="http://dentalbrand.sa.com/lzeoX_JvtsZZgnTx6GqjVjPnClFOcalrmcVIRpCk0LSwkwtNmg"><img src="http://dentalbrand.sa.com/c9765f0b49b18db13d.jpg" /><img src="http://www.dentalbrand.sa.com/eRZ9zXJIM5h5tWLl1Dfpfl_u0MXJw7LRgnR1PePtPkzpVKaagg" /></a>
<div style="display:none;">ntil the last quarter of the 19th century, Sappho's poetry was known only through quotations in the works of other ancient authors. In 1879, the first new discovery of a fragment of Sappho was made at Fayum. By the end of the 19th century, Bernard Pyne Grenfell and Arthur Surridge Hunt had begun to excavate an ancient rubbish dump at Oxyrhynchus, leading to the discoveries of many previously unknown fragments of Sappho. Fragments of Sappho continue to be rediscovered. Major discoveries were made in 2004 (the "Tithonus poem" and a new, previously unknown fragment) and 2014 (fragments of nine poems: five already known but with new readings, four, including the "Brothers Poem", not previously known). Additionally, in 2005 a commentary on her poems on a papyrus from the second or third century AD was published. Style He seems like a god to me the man who is near you, Listening to your sweet voice and exquisite laughter That makes my heart so wildly beat in my breast. If I but see you for a moment, then all my words Leave me, my tongue is broken and a sudden fire Creeps through my blood. No longer can I see. My ears are full of noise. In all my body I Shudder and sweat. I am pale as the sun-scorched Grass. In my fury I seem like a dead woman, But I would dare... — Sappho 31, trans. Edward Storer Sappho worked within a well-developed tradition of poetry from Lesbos, which had evolved its own poetic diction, metres, and conventions. Prior to Sappho and her contemporary Alcaeus, Lesbos was associated with poetry and music through the mythical Orpheus and Arion, and through the seventh-century BC poet Terpander. The Aeolic metrical tradition in which she composed her poetry was distinct from that of the rest of Greece as its lines alwa</div>
<div style="displsy:block;"> </div>
<br />
<a href="http://dentalbrand.sa.com/lzeoX_JvtsZZgnTx6GqjVjPnClFOcalrmcVIRpCk0LSwkwtNmg"><img src="http://dentalbrand.sa.com/c9765f0b49b18db13d.jpg" /><img src="http://www.dentalbrand.sa.com/eRZ9zXJIM5h5tWLl1Dfpfl_u0MXJw7LRgnR1PePtPkzpVKaagg" /></a>
<div style="displsy:block;"> </div>
<br />
<br />
<a href="http://dentalbrand.sa.com/TPLlPg7BnSJKYORQT55DZ1LDEQjWDhmlzWSxp77iIOhvRrKK5g" http:="" microsoft.com="" target="blank"><img alt=" " http:="" microsoft.com="" src="http://dentalbrand.sa.com/0fb659738fbc091d9f.jpg" /></a></div>
</body>
</html>
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