Step 1 : Introduction to the question "1. The acorus plant, which thrives near small bodies of water, was used in ancient Greece as a treatment for which ocular condition?"
...1. Inflammation of the eye 2. Earache 3. The upside down pupil condition 4. Triple vision The little acorus is known by quite a few other names as well. These include sweet flag, calamus, sweet cinnamon, myrtle grass, flag root and beewort. In the ancient worlds of the Orient and Egypt, it was used for thousands of years for its sedative, diuretic, laxative and carminative properties - and as an aphrodisiac. Naughty! The uses to which it could be put gradually spread to the rest of the known world in days of yore, where, in addition to those already listed, it was found that the dried and powered root, if pushed up the nostrils, could counteract the effects of catarrh. In medieval Britain it was strewn on the floors of medieval buildings because of its sweet perfume - and as a material to thatch the roofs of cottages. How unfortunate would it be if its effects as a laxative kicked in at the same time as its aphrodisiacal properties? Decisions, decisions.
Step 2 : Answer to the question "1. The acorus plant, which thrives near small bodies of water, was used in ancient Greece as a treatment for which ocular condition?"
Inflammation of the eye:
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