Difference between revisions of "Sprig of wolfsbane"

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{{wikipedia|Aconitum}}
 
{{wikipedia|Aconitum}}
Eating a '''sprig of wolfsbane''' will cure [[lycanthropy]].{{refsrc|eat.c|1679}}
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Eating a '''sprig of wolfsbane''' will cure [[lycanthropy]].{{refsrc|src/eat.c|2191|version=NetHack 3.6.6}}
  
 
Wolfsbane is a [[vegan]] food, and is also suitable food for herbivorous pets.
 
Wolfsbane is a [[vegan]] food, and is also suitable food for herbivorous pets.
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Wielding wolfsbane has no effect on lycanthropes or wolves (as opposed to [[Clove of garlic|garlic]] or other [[The Banes|banes]]). You can't use wolfsbane to poison weapons, and it will not poison you if you eat it.
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Eating a cursed sprig of wolfsbane might interrupt your meal, so that half of the sprig remains uneaten. If you finish the meal it will nevertheless grant you relief from lycanthropy.
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== Generation ==
  
 
[[Priest]]s begin the game with 1 or 2 sprigs of wolfsbane.
 
[[Priest]]s begin the game with 1 or 2 sprigs of wolfsbane.
  
Wielding wolfsbane has no effect on lycantropes or wolves (as opposed to [[Clove of garlic|garlic]] or other [[The Banes|banes]]). You can't use wolfsbane to poison weapons and it will not poison you if you eat it.  
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== Origin ==
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[[NetHack is not real life]]; in real life, wolfsbane is extremely poisonous and should not be eaten. The name comes from the belief that it was unusually lethal to wolves.<ref>http://botanical.com/botanical/mgmh/a/aconi007.html</ref>
  
This is in fact a major case of [[NetHack is not real life]], because wolfsbane in real life is very poisonous (so '''don't eat it in real life'''), and the name comes from the fact that it was used to poison wolves. Wolves were often killed by Christians for two reasons: first, wolves sometimes prey on livestock and were considered a pest, and second, wolves were considered sacred by Germanics (for example Wotan is accompanied by the wolves Geri and Freki), and the monotheist Christians desecrated their values, by killing wolves (or chopping down old oaks which were used to worship Tyr).
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==Encyclopedia entry==
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{{encyclopedia|1.  Any of various, usually poisonous perennial herbs of the genus Aconitum, having tuberous roots, palmately lobed leaves, blue or white flowers with large hoodlike upper sepals, and an aggregate of follicles.  2.  The dried leaves and roots of some of these plants, which yield a poisonous alkaloid that was formerly used medicinally. In both senses also called monkshood.|[ The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition. ]
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== References ==
 
== References ==
 
 
<references />
 
<references />
  
  
 
[[Category:Comestibles]]
 
[[Category:Comestibles]]
{{nethack-360}}
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{{nethack-366}}

Latest revision as of 19:11, 6 December 2022

% Sprig of wolfsbane.png
Name sprig of wolfsbane
Base price 7 zm
Nutrition 40
Turns to eat 1
Weight 1
Conduct vegan

Eating a sprig of wolfsbane will cure lycanthropy.[1]

Wolfsbane is a vegan food, and is also suitable food for herbivorous pets.

Wielding wolfsbane has no effect on lycanthropes or wolves (as opposed to garlic or other banes). You can't use wolfsbane to poison weapons, and it will not poison you if you eat it.

Eating a cursed sprig of wolfsbane might interrupt your meal, so that half of the sprig remains uneaten. If you finish the meal it will nevertheless grant you relief from lycanthropy.

Generation

Priests begin the game with 1 or 2 sprigs of wolfsbane.

Origin

NetHack is not real life; in real life, wolfsbane is extremely poisonous and should not be eaten. The name comes from the belief that it was unusually lethal to wolves.[2]

Encyclopedia entry

1. Any of various, usually poisonous perennial herbs of the genus Aconitum, having tuberous roots, palmately lobed leaves, blue or white flowers with large hoodlike upper sepals, and an aggregate of follicles. 2. The dried leaves and roots of some of these plants, which yield a poisonous alkaloid that was formerly used medicinally. In both senses also called monkshood.

[ The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition. ]

References