MEDICINAL PLANTS in Folk Tradition

(National Geographic (Little) Kids) #1

subsp.ericetorum,the common one there of wet, heathy ground and bogs.
The majority of those recording the use as a love-charm, however, have
attributed it just to ‘orchids’ generically.


Notes


  Pondweeds, Grasses, Lilies and Orchids 335


  1. Friend 1882

  2. Ó Súilleabháin, 314

  3. Moore MS
    4.Phytologist,1 (1843), 583

  4. Williams MS (Welsh Folk Museum
    tape no. 6571B)

  5. McNeill

  6. Anne E. Williams, in litt.

  7. IFC S 483: 329, 369

  8. Pratt 1850–7; Johnson 1862

  9. Chamberlain 1882

  10. Collyns

  11. Tongue

  12. IFC S 897: 235

  13. Cameron

  14. IFC S 226: 22

  15. Maloney

  16. Wilde, 28

  17. Parman

  18. Barbour

  19. IFC S 812: 440

  20. IFC S 655: 150, 267

  21. IFC S 737: 107

  22. Logan, 76

  23. Baker, 57

  24. McClafferty

  25. Ó hEithir

  26. IFC S 251: 173

  27. IFC S 654: 89

  28. IFC S 512: 523; 572: 70

  29. IFC S 476: 91

  30. de Crespigny & Hutchinson, 106

  31. IFC S 484: 42
    33.Scottish Naturalist,1 (1871), 54

  32. Robinson 1876, 202

  33. IFC S 932: 32
    36.Folk-lore Record,4 (1881), 96–125

  34. IFC S 931: 26

  35. Cameron

  36. Hart 1898

  37. IFC S 636: 133

  38. Hatfield, 41

  39. Purdon

  40. Maloney

  41. IFC S 850: 113

  42. IFC S 654: 242; 655: 175

  43. Martin, 93

  44. Ó Súilleabháin, 314

  45. Stewart, 110

  46. Tait
    50.PLNN,no. 36 (1994), 172

  47. Newman & Wilson

  48. Taylor MS (Hatfield, 42)

  49. IFC S 550: 283

  50. IFC S 907: 267

  51. Harris

  52. Maloney

  53. Palmer 1994, 122
    58.PLNN,no. 9 (1989), 40

  54. Gerard, 758

  55. Pratt 1850–7

  56. Gibbs, 57

  57. Porter 1974, 46
    63.PLNN,no. 46 (1996), 223

  58. Read, 305

  59. Harland

  60. A. Allen, 185

  61. Wright, 247

  62. Purdon

  63. A. Allen, 185

  64. Maloney

  65. IFC S 931: 304

  66. Henderson & Dickson, 33

  67. Wright, 238

  68. IFC S 170: 47, 205, 257

  69. Taylor MS (Hatfield, 30)

Free download pdf