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#1
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I've come across this phrase recently, referring to a hedgerow plant.
But I can't find any reference to it, either in my wild flower books or on Google. Old man's beard, yes, but not oatmeal. Has anyone come across it, and what's the usual (or even latin) name for it. -- Chris E-mail: christopher[dot]hogg[at]virgin[dot]net |
#2
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The message
from Chris Hogg contains these words: I've come across this phrase recently, referring to a hedgerow plant. But I can't find any reference to it, either in my wild flower books or on Google. Old man's beard, yes, but not oatmeal. Has anyone come across it, and what's the usual (or even latin) name for it. -- Chris E-mail: christopher[dot]hogg[at]virgin[dot]net Can't find 'Old man's oatmeal' but there's a reference to cow parsley as 'Bad man's oatmeal' on the website: http://66.102.9.104/search?q=cache:o...c t=clnk&cd=3 Don't know whether this could be related. Janet G |
#3
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![]() In article , Janet Baraclough writes: | The message | from Chris Hogg contains these words: | | I've come across this phrase recently, referring to a hedgerow plant. | But I can't find any reference to it, either in my wild flower books | or on Google. Old man's beard, yes, but not oatmeal. Has anyone come | across it, | | No. Yes. Chris Hogg has. Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
#4
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On Fri, 30 Jun 2006 19:57:52 +0100, Janet Galpin
wrote: The message from Chris Hogg contains these words: I've come across this phrase recently, referring to a hedgerow plant. But I can't find any reference to it, either in my wild flower books or on Google. Old man's beard, yes, but not oatmeal. Has anyone come across it, and what's the usual (or even latin) name for it. -- Chris E-mail: christopher[dot]hogg[at]virgin[dot]net Can't find 'Old man's oatmeal' but there's a reference to cow parsley as 'Bad man's oatmeal' on the website: http://66.102.9.104/search?q=cache:o...c t=clnk&cd=3 Don't know whether this could be related. Janet G Thanks Janet. A lot more help than some I could mention :-) -- Chris E-mail: christopher[dot]hogg[at]virgin[dot]net |
#6
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![]() "Chris Hogg" wrote I've come across this phrase recently, referring to a hedgerow plant. But I can't find any reference to it, either in my wild flower books or on Google. Old man's beard, yes, but not oatmeal. Has anyone come across it, and what's the usual (or even latin) name for it. Chris Found this at http://64.233.183.104/search?q=cache...l&ct=clnk&cd=2 It mentions Old mans Oatmeal but does not give another name for it : Magickal Names of Herbs, Flowers, Trees and Roots © 1987 by Scott Cunningham When the old recipes began to be recorded many early herbalists, Witches, magicians and occultists wished to keep secret the most powerful of the old magics. So they used magical names and symbolism and even added fanciful ingredients to the formulae. Even today scholars look over old manuscripts, shake their heads, and wonder why old occultists used such horrifying ingredients as the "ear of a Jew," "bloody fingers," "dove's feet," "bat's wings" and so on. The often quoted illustration from Shakespeare's Macbeth serves as a useful example of this practice. Every ingredient he lists as being in the Witches' pot (fillet of a fenny snake/in the cauldron boil and bake:/eye of newt, and toe of frog,/Wool of bat, and tongue of dog,/ adder's fork, and blind-worm's sting/Lizards leg, and howlet's wing,/etc.) refers to a plant and not to the gruesome substance popularly thought. The list of such names is quite long and varied, but a few examples can be given here. "Bloody fingers" refers to foxglove. "Tongue of dog" is simply hound's tongue, a common herb. "Blood" is the sap from an elder tree. "Eyes" mean any one of a group of plants resembling the eye, such as the aster, daisy, camomile, or perhaps even eyebright. Crow's foot, dog's tooth, horse-tongue, Jew's ear--are all magical and dialectical names for herbs and plants. Then, too, many plants were given "folk" names which reveal their uses in magic or the superstitions surrounding them. This is especially common in the British Isles, where one plant can be known by as many as two dozen distinct names. Finally, there are a whole bookful of plants with appelations such as "Our Ladies Fingers" or "Old Man's Oatmeal." These are plants originally dedicated to the Pagan goddesses and gods of the common folk and after the introduction of Christianity were assigned new roles as representative of the Virgin Mary and the Devil respectively. Following is a list of some magical names of herbs, along with their more common ones. Knowing these names may not give you additional power, but reading them is like taking a walk through a Witches' garden, and to the keen eye the old names reveal magical uses and a good deal of folklore. Folk Name: Common Name Folk Name: Common Name Candlemas Maiden: Snowdrop May Lily: Lily of the valley Candlewick Plant: Mullein Mistress of the Night: Tuberose Crown for a King: Wormwood Password: Primrose Dew of the Sea: Rosemary Queen of the Meadow: Meadowsweet Dragonwort: Bistort Ram's Head: American Valerian Dwale: Deadly Nightshade Seven Year's Love: Yarrow Earth Smoke: Fumitory Sleep Wort: Lettuce Elfwort: Elecampane Sorcer's Violet: Periwinkle Enchanter'S Plant: Vervain Star Flower: Borage Eye of the Star: Horehound Star of the Earth: Avens Five Finger Grass: Cinquefoil Starweed: Chickweed Golden Star: Avens Starwort: Aster Honey Lotus: Melilot Thousand Seal: Yarrow Joy of the Mountain: Marjoram Thunder Plant: Houseleek Little Dragon: Tarragon Unicorn Horn: True Unicorn Root Love-In-Idleness: Pansy Wax Dolls: Fumitory Love Parsley: Lovage Witches Aspirin: While Willow Bark Loveroot: Orris Witches Bells: Foxglove Lad's Love: Southernwood Witch Herb: Mugwort Master of the Woods: Woodruf Witchwood: Rowan Masterwort: Angelica Witches Briar: Brier Hip DISCLAIMER! The information contained herein is not intended to replace the services of trained health professionals. You are advised to consult with your health care professional with regard to matters relating to your health, and in particular regarding matters that may require diagnosis or medical attention. There seem to be lots of references to "Bad mans oatmeal" (Hemlock) which might be a derivitive of the name ? http://www.hort.purdue.edu/newcrop/h...onhemlock.html HTH jenny |
#7
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![]() JennyC wrote: "Chris Hogg" wrote I've come across this phrase recently, referring to a hedgerow plant. But I can't find any reference to it, either in my wild flower books or on Google. Old man's beard, yes, but not oatmeal. Has anyone come across it, and what's the usual (or even latin) name for it. Chris [...] There seem to be lots of references to "Bad mans oatmeal" (Hemlock) which might be a derivitive of the name ? http://www.hort.purdue.edu/newcrop/h...onhemlock.html Hmm. I still prefer to think of myself as middle-aged, but I don't like the sound of that at all. Is it a reference to a discreet way of getting rid of Dad? "Ash beans and long oats" used to be slang for a thrashing, and "give [someone] his oatmeal" was slang for "punish": could be clues. -- Mike. |
#8
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On 1/7/06 23:30, in article
, "Mike Lyle" wrote: snip "give [someone] his oatmeal" was slang for "punish": could be clues. Hence 'Porridge', perhaps? ;-) -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.co.uk South Devon (email address on website) |
#9
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![]() Sacha wrote: On 1/7/06 23:30, in article , "Mike Lyle" wrote: snip "give [someone] his oatmeal" was slang for "punish": could be clues. Hence 'Porridge', perhaps? ;-) I suppose so. Irritatingly," porridge" isn't in Partridge's Historical Slang (of "stir", which is of Romany origin, he says "much nonsense has been written about this word", which I suppose must be a swipe at those who connect "stir" and "porridge"!) -- Mike. |
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