Water-lilies, Buttercups and Poppies 81
- for instance, Cameron
- McNeill
- IFC S 636: 191
- IFC S 524: 11
- Beith
- IFC S 483: 329, 369
- McNeill
- for references, see under
Potamogeton - Maloney
- Withering 1787–92, 321
- Sargent
- IFC S 710: 49
- IFC S 250: 35
- Parkinson, 216
15.Wiltshire Family History Society
Journal,46 (1992), 6 - Pratt 1857, 33
- Henderson & Dickson, 45
- Wood-Martin, 200
- Gregory, 12
- IFC S 968: 225; 959: 77; Logan, 51;
Maloney - Friend 1883–4, ii, 368
- Tongue
- A. Allen, 178
- Vickery MSS
- Carmichael, ii, 280
26.PLNN,no. 26 (1992), 118 - Vickery 1995
- Johnston 1853, 27
- Carmichael, ii, 280
- Polwhele 1816, ii, 607; Davey, 10, 23
- Bardswell
- IFC S 672: 260
- IFC S 589: 15, 62
- IFC S 484: 41–2
- Farrelly MS
- Logan, 12
- Ó hEithir
- Barbour
- IFC S 60: 302
- Vickery MSS
- IFC S 903: 448
- Kermode MS
- Pennant 1776, ii, 43
- Johnston 1853, 28 footnote
- Martin, 225
- McNeill
- Macpherson MS
- Vickery MSS
- Beith
- McNeill
- CECTL MSS
- Freethy, 80
- Pratt 1850–7
- Hatfield, 43
- Parkinson, 501
- Hart 1898
- IFC S 1075: 139
- Henslow
- MacFarlane
- Beith
- Henderson & Dickson, 80, 93
- McNeill
- Davey, 17
- Lafont, 6, 70
- Woodruffe-Peacock
quite different application comes from far-off Orkney, where the juice was
given to children to rid them of intestinal worms.^116
Ireland has had at least one different use for the plant, too: in Cavan it was
burnt and the smoke inhaled as a cure for stomach trouble.^117 Both the scien-
tific and vernacular names are derived from fumus,the Latin word for smoke,
so that is presumably an ancient practice, possibly even well pre-Classical.
Notes