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Burdock (Arctium lappa)
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Burdock
Botanical: Arctium lappa (LINN.) Family: N.O. Compositae
---Synonyms---Lappa. Fox's Clote. Thorny Burr. Beggar's
Buttons. Cockle Buttons. Love Leaves. Philanthropium. Personata. Happy
Major. Clot-Bur. ---Parts Used---Root, herb and seeds (fruits).
---Habitat---It grows freely throughout England (though rarely
in Scotland) on waste ground and about old buildings, by roadsides and in
fairly damp places.
The Burdock, the only British member of its genus, belongs to the
Thistle group of the great order, Compositae.
---Description---A stout handsome plant, with
large, wavy leaves and round heads of purple flowers. It is enclosed in a
globular involucre of long stiff scales with hooked tips, the scales being
also often interwoven with a white, cottony substance.
The whole plant is a dull, pale green, the stem about 3 to 4 feet and
branched, rising from a biennial root. The lower leaves are very large, on
long, solid foot-stalks, furrowed above, frequently more than a foot long
heart-shaped and of a grey colour on their under surfaces from the mass of
fine down with which they are covered. The upper leaves are much smaller,
more egg-shaped in form and not so densely clothed beneath with the grey
down.
The plant varies considerably in appearance, and by some botanists
various subspecies, or even separate species, have been described, the
variations being according to the size of the flower-heads and of the
whole plant, the abundance of the whitish cottonlike substance that is
sometimes found on the involucres, or the absence of it, the length of the
flower-stalks, etc.
The flower-heads are found expanded during the latter part of the
summer and well into the autumn: all the florets are tubular, the stamens
dark purple and the styles whitish. The plant owes its dissemination
greatly to the little hooked prickles of its involucre, which adhere to
everything with which they come in contact, and by attaching themselves to
coats of animals are often carried to a distance.
'They are Burs, I can tell you, they'll stick where they are thrown,'
- Shakespeare makes Pandarus say in Troilus and Cressida, and
in King Lear we have another direct reference to this plant:
- 'Crown'd with rank Fumiter and Furrow-weeds,
- With Burdocks, Hemlocks, Nettles, Cuckoo-flowers.'
- Also in As You Like It:
- ROSALIND. How full of briers is this working-day world!
- CELIA. They are but burs, cousin, thrown upon thee in holiday
foolery. If we walk not in the trodden paths, our very petticoats will
catch them.
The name of the genus, Arctium, is derived
from the Greek arktos, a bear, in allusion to the roughness of the
burs, lappa, the specific name, being derived from a word meaning
'to seize.'
Another source derives the word lappa from the Celtic
llap, a hand, on account of its prehensile properties.
The plant gets its name of 'Dock' from its large leaves; the 'Bur' is
supposed to be a contraction of the French bourre, from the Latin
burra, a lock of wool, such is often found entangled with it when
sheep have passed by the growing plants.
An old English name for the Burdock was 'Herrif,' 'Aireve,' or 'Airup,'
from the Anglo-Saxon hoeg, a hedge, and reafe, a robber - or
from the Anglo-Saxon verb reafian, to seize. Culpepper gives as
popular names in his time: Personata, Happy Major and Clot-Bur.
Though growing in its wild state hardly any animal except the ass will
browse on this plant, the stalks, cut before the flower is open and
stripped of their rind, form a delicate vegetable when boiled, similar in
flavour to Asparagus, and also make a pleasant salad, eaten raw with oil
and vinegar. Formerly they were sometimes candied with sugar, as Angelica
is now. They are slightly laxative, but perfectly wholesome.
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---Cultivation---As the Burdock grows freely in
waste places and hedgerows, it can be collected in the wild state, and is
seldom worth cultivating.
It will grow in almost any soil, but the roots are formed best in a
light well-drained soil. The seeds germinate readily and may be sown
directly in the field, either in autumn or early spring, in drills 18
inches to 3 feet apart, sowing 1 inch deep in autumn, but less in spring.
The young plants when well up are thinned out to 6 inches apart in the
row.
Yields at the rate of 1,500 to 2,000 lb. of dry roots per acre have
been obtained from plantations of Burdock.
---Parts Used Medicinally---The dried root from
plants of the first year's growth forms the official drug, but the leaves
and fruits (commonly, though erroneously, called seeds) are also used.
The roots are dug in July, and should be lifted with a beet-lifter or a
deep-running plough. As a rule they are 12 inches or more in length and
about 1 inch thick, sometimes, however, they extend 2 to 3 feet, making it
necessary to dig by hand. They are fleshy, wrinkled, crowned with a tuft
of whitish, soft, hairy leaf-stalks, grey-brown externally, whitish
internally, with a somewhat thick bark, about a quarter of the diameter of
the root, and soft wood tissues, with a radiate structure.
Burdock root has a sweetish and mucilaginous taste.
Burdock leaves, which are less used than the root, are collected in
July. For drying, follow the drying of Coltsfoot leaves. They have a
somewhat bitter taste.
The seeds (or fruits) are collected when ripe. They are brownish-grey,
wrinkled, about 1/4 inch long and 1/16 inch in diameter. They are shaken
out of the head and dried by spreading them out on paper in the sun.
---Constituents---Inulin, mucilage, sugar, a
bitter, crystalline glucoside - Lappin-a little resin, fixed and volatile
oils, and some tannic acid.
The roots contain starch, and the ashes of the plant, burnt when green,
yield carbonate of potash abundantly, and also some nitre.
[Top]
---Medicinal Action and Uses---Alterative,
diuretic and diaphoretic. One of the best blood purifiers. In all skin
diseases, it is a certain remedy and has effected a cure in many cases of
eczema, either taken alone or combined with other remedies, such as Yellow
Dock and Sarsaparilla.
The root is principally employed, but the leaves and seeds are
equally valuable. Both root and seeds may be taken as a decoction of 1 OZ.
to 1 1/2 pint of water, boiled down to a pint, in doses of a wineglassful,
three or four times a day.
The anti-scorbutic properties of the root make the decoction very
useful for boils, scurvy and rheumatic affections, and by many it is
considered superior to Sarsaparilla, on account of its mucilaginous,
demulcent nature; it has in addition been recommended for external use as
a wash for ulcers and scaly skin disorders.
An infusion of the leaves is useful to impart strength and tone
to the stomach, for some forms of long-standing indigestion.
When applied externally as a poultice, the leaves are highly resolvent
for tumours and gouty swellings, and relieve bruises and inflamed surfaces
generally. The bruised leaves have been applied by the peasantry in many
countries as cataplasms to the feet and as a remedy for hysterical
disorders.
From the seeds, both a medicinal tincture and a fluid extract
are prepared, of benefit in chronic skin diseases. Americans use the seeds
only, considering them more efficacious and prompt in their action than
the other parts of the plant. They are relaxant and demulcent, with a
limited amount of tonic property. Their influence upon the skin is due
largely to their being of such an oily nature: they affect both the
sebaceous and sudoriferous glands, and probably owing to their oily nature
restore that smoothness to the skin which is a sign of normal healthy
action.
The infusion or decoction of the seeds is employed in dropsical
complaints, more especially in cases where there is co-existing
derangement of the nervous system, and is considered by many to be a
specific for all affections of the kidneys, for which it may with
advantage be taken several times a day, before meals.
---Preparations---Fluid extract, root, 1/2 to 2
drachms. Solid extract, 5 to 15 grains. Fluid extract, seed, 10 to 30
drops.
Culpepper gives the following uses for the Burdock:
- 'The Burdock leaves are cooling and moderately drying, wherby good
for old ulcers and sores.... The leaves applied to the places troubled
with the shrinking in the sinews or arteries give much ease: a juice of
the leaves or rather the roots themselves given to drink with old wine,
doth wonderfully help the biting of any serpents- the root beaten with a
little salt and laid on the place suddenly easeth the pain thereof, and
helpeth those that are bit by a mad dog:... the seed being drunk in wine
40 days together doth wonderfully help the sciatica: the leaves bruised
with the white of an egg and applied to any place burnt with fire,
taketh out the fire, gives sudden ease and heals it up afterwards....
The root may be preserved with sugar for consumption, stone and the lax.
The seed is much commended to break the stone, and is often used with
other seeds and things for that purpose.'
- It was regarded as a valuable remedy for stone in the Middle Ages,
and called Bardona. As a rule, the recipes for stone contained some
seeds or 'fruits' of a 'stony' character, as gromel seed, ivy berries,
and nearly always saxifrage, i.e. 'stone-breaker.' Even date-stones had
to be pounded and taken; the idea being that what is naturally 'stony'
would cure it; that 'like cures like' (Henslow).
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