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Plantain, Common
Botanical: plantago major
(LINN.)
Family: N.O. Plantaginaceae
---Synonyms---Broad-leaved Plantain. Ripple
Grass. Waybread. Slan-lus. Waybroad. Snakeweed. Cuckoo's Bread. Englishman's
Foot. White Man's Foot.
(Anglo-Saxon) Weybroed.
---Parts Used---Root, leaves, flower-spikes.
The Common Broad-leaved Plantain
is a very familiar perennial 'weed,' and may be found anywhere by roadsides
and in meadow-land.
---Description---It
grows from a very short rhizome, which bears below a great number of
long, straight, yellowish roots, and above, a large, radial rosette
of leaves and a few Iong, slender, densely-flowered spikes. The leaves
are ovate, blunt, abruptly contracted at the base into a long, broad,
channelled footstalk (petiole). The blade is 4 to 10 inches long and
about two-thirds as broad, usually smooth, thickish, five to eleven
ribbed, the ribs having a strongly fibrous structure, the margin entire,
or coarsely and unevenly toothed. The flower-spikes, erect, on long
stalks, are as long as the leaves, 1/4 to 1/3 inch thick and usually
blunt. The flowers are somewhat purplish-green, the calyx fourparted,
the small corolla bell-shaped and four-lobed, the stamens four, with
purple anthers. The fruit is a two-celled capsule, not enclosed in the
perianth, and containing four to sixteen seeds.
The Plantain belongs to the natural
order Plantaginaceae, which contains more than 200 species, twenty-five
or thirty of which have been reported as in domestic use.
The drug is without odour: the leaves
are saline, bitterish and acrid to the taste; the root is saline and
sweetish.
The glucoside Aucubin, first isolated
in Aucuba japonica, has been reported as occurring in many species.
---Medicinal
Action and Properties---Refrigerant,
diuretic, deobstruent and somewhat astringent. Has been used in inflammation
of the skin, malignant ulcers, intermittent fever, etc., and as a vulnerary,
and externally as a stimulant application to sores. Applied to a bleeding
surface, the leaves are of some value in arresting haemorrhage, but
they are useless in internal haemorrhage, although they were formerly
used for bleeding of the lungs and stomach, consumption and dysentery.
The fresh leaves are applied whole or bruised in the form of a poultice.
Rubbed on parts of the body stung by insects, nettles, etc., or as an
application to burns and scalds, the leaves will afford relief and will
stay the bleeding of minor wounds.
Fluid extract: dose, 1/2 to 1 drachm.
In the Highlands the Plantain is still
called 'Slan-lus,' or plant of healing, from a firm belief in its healing
virtues. Pliny goes so far as to state, 'on high authority,' that if
'it be put into a pot where many pieces of flesh are boiling, it will
sodden them together.' He also says that it will cure the madness of
dogs. Erasmus, in his Colloquia, tells a story of a toad, who,
being bitten by a spider, was straightway freed from any poisonous effects
he may have dreaded by the prompt eating of a Plantain leaf.
Another old Herbal says: 'If a woodhound
(mad dog) rend a man, take this wort, rub it fine and lay it on; then
will the spot soon be whole. ' And in the United States the plant is
called 'Snake Weed,' from a belief in its efficacy in cases of bites
from venomous creatures; it is related that a dog was one day stung
by a rattlesnake and a preparation of the juice of the Plantain and
salt was applied as promptly as possible to the wound. The animal was
in great agony, but quickly recovered and shook off all trace of its
misadventure. Dr. Robinson (New Family Herbal) tells us that
an Indian received a great reward from the Assembly of South Carolina
for his discovery that the Plantain was 'the chief remedy for the cure
of the rattlesnake.'
The Broad-leaved Plantain seems to have
followed the migrations of our colonists to every part of the world,
and in both America and New Zealand it has been called by the aborigines
the 'Englishman's Foot' (or the White Man's Foot), for wherever the
English have taken possession of the soil the Plantain springs up. Longfellow
refers to this in 'Hiawatha.'
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Our Saxon ancestors esteemed it
highly and in the old Lacnunga the Weybroed is mentioned
as one of nine sacred herbs. In this most ancient source of Anglo-Saxon
medicine, we find this 'salve for flying venom':
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'Take a handful of hammer wort
and a handful of may the (chamomile)
and a handful of waybroad and roots of water dock, seek those
which will float, and one eggshell full of clean honey, then take
clean butter, let him who will help to work up the salve, melt it
thrice: let one sing a mass over the worts, before they are put
together and the salve is wrought up.
Some of the recipes for ointments in
which Plantain is an ingredient have lingered to the present day. Lady
Northcote, in The Book of Herbs (1903), mentions an ointment
made by an old woman in Exeter that up to her death about twenty years
ago was in much request. It was made from Southernwood, Plantain leaves,
Black Currant leaves, Elder buds, Angelica and Parsley, chopped, pounded
and simmered with clarified butter and was considered most useful for
burns or raw surfaces. A most excellent ointment can also be made from
Pilewort (Celandine), Elder buds, Houseleek and the Broad Plantain leaf.
Decoctions of Plantain entered into
almost every old remedy, and it was boiled with Docks, Comfrey and a
variety of flowers.
A decoction of Plantain was considered
good in disorders of the kidneys, and the root, powdered, in complaints
of the bowels. The expressed juice was recommended for spitting of blood
and piles. Boyle recommends an electuary made of fresh Comfrey roots,
juice of Plantain and sugar as very efficacious in spitting of blood.
Plantain juice mixed with lemon juice was judged an excellent diuretic.
The powdered dried leaves, taken in drink, were thought to destroy worms.
To prepare a plain infusion, still recommended
in herbal medicine for diarrhoea and piles, pour 1 pint of boiling water
on 1 OZ. of the herb, stand in a warm place for 20 minutes, afterwards
strain and let cool. Take a wineglassful to half a teacupful three or
four times a day.
The small mucilaginous seeds have been
employed as a substitute for linseed. For 'thrush' they are recommended
as most useful, 1 OZ. of seeds to be boiled in 1 1/2 pint of water down
to a pint, the liquid then made into a syrup with sugar and honey and
given to the child in tablespoonful doses, three or four times daily.
The seeds are relished by most small
birds and quantities of the ripe spikes are gathered near London for
the supply of cage birds.
Abercrombie, writing in 1822 (Every
Man his own Gardener), giving a list of forty-four Salad herbs,
includes Plantain.
Dr. Withering (Arrangement of Plants)
states that sheep, goats and swine eat it, but that cows and horses
refuse it.
It is a great disfigurement to lawns,
rapidly multiplying if allowed to spread, each plant quite destroying
the grass that originally occupied the spot usurped by its dense rosette
of leaves.
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Salmon's Herbal (1710)
gives the following manifold uses for Plantage major:
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'The liquid juice clarified and
drunk for several days helps distillation of rheum upon the throat,
glands, lungs, etc. Doses, 3 to 8 spoonsful. An especial remedy
against ulceration of the lungs and a vehement cough arising from
same. It is said to be good against epilepsy, dropsy, jaundice and
opens obstructions of the liver, spleen and reins. It cools inflammations
of the eyes and takes away the pin and web (so called) in them.
Dropt into the ears, it eases their pains and restores hearing much
decayed. Doses, 3 to 6 spoonsful more or less, either alone or with
some fit vehicle morning and night. The powdered root mixed with
equal parts of powder of Pellitory of Spain and put into a hollow
tooth is said to ease the pain thereof. Powdered seeds stop vomiting,
epilepsy, lethargy, convulsions, dropsy, jaundice, strangury, obstruction
of the liver, etc. The liniment made with the juice and oil of Roses
eases headache caused by heat, and is good for lunatics. It gives
great ease (being applyed) in all hot gouts, whether in hands or
feet, especially in the beginning, to cool the heat and repress
the humors. The distilled water with a little alum and honey dissolved
in it is of good use for washing, cleansing and healing a sore ulcerated
mouth or throat.'
'Salmon also tells us that a good cosmetic
is made with essence of Plantain, houseleeks and lemon juice.
Culpepper tells us that the Plantain
is 'in the command of Venus and cures the head by antipathy to Mars,
neither is there hardly a martial disease but it cures.' He also states
that 'the water is used for all manner of spreading scabs, tetters,
ringworm, shingles, etc.'
From the days of Chaucer onwards we
find reference in literature to the healing powers of Plantain. Gower
(1390) says: 'And of Plantaine he hath his herb sovereine,' and Chaucer
mentions it in the Prologue of the Chanounes Yeman. Shakespeare,
both in Love's Labour's Lost, iii, i, and in Romeo and Juliet,
I, ii, speaks of the 'plain Plantain' and 'Plantain leaf' as excellent
for a broken shin, and again in Two Noble Kinsmen, I, ii: 'These
poore slight sores neede not a Plantin.' His reference to it in Troilus
and Cressida, III. ii: 'As true as steel, as Plantage to the moon,'
is an allusion that is now no longer clear to us. Again, Shenstone in
the Schoolmistress: 'And plantain rubb'd that heals the reaper's
wound.'
SOURCES

Lady Aquarius 1962's Cauldron
10/8/2002
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