| ACONITES | Poisonous plants in the buttercup family such as monkshood or wolfsbane (8) |
| LARKSPURS | Plants in the buttercup family |
| FOXGLOVES | Growing near dens of vixens and their male counterparts and loved by fairies according to folklore, one of the most poisonous plants in our flora, Digitalis (9) |
| HENBANE | Poisonous plant in the nightshade family |
| SUMAC | A poisonous plant in one direction, a French author in the other |
| STAVESACRE | Poisonous plant in a way welcome - almost blessed |
| ACONITE | Plant such as monkshood or wolfsbane whose dried poisonous root is used as a narcotic (7) |
| CLEMATIS | Climbing, flowering plant in the buttercup family also known as traveller's joy (8) |
| ACONITUM | Genus of the monkshood, queen of poisons or wolfsbane (8) |
| LEOPARDS | - bane; herbaceous perennial also known as monkshood, queen of all poisons and devil's helmet, Aconitum; or, a plant in the genus Doronicum (8) |
| ANEMONES | Flowers in the buttercup family |
| DOGBANES | Poisonous plants of the Apocynum genus (8) |
| PEONY | Plant in the buttercup family With large. showy globular flowers, the Balearic variety was once widespread in Mallorca but is now more limited to the mountainous north-west of the Island (5) |
| ANEMONE | Genus of plants of the buttercup family such as the Wood ? (7) |
| RATSBANE | Name for many poisonous plants (8) |
| BANEBERRY | Plant of the buttercup family such as the Eurasian ___, also called herb Christopher (9) |
| HEMLOCKS | Poisonous plants |
| DELPHINIUM | Popular garden plant in the buttercup family (10) |
| GOLDTHREAD | Purl- or zari-like silk yarn wound with gilded wire for embroidery or weaving; or, a wild flower in the buttercup family with slender yellow roots resembling said strand (4,6) |
| CELANDINE | Lesser -; yellow bloom with heartshaped leaves in the buttercup family which is one of the first woodland flowers of the year (9) |