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#000507

A Modern Herbal, Volume II (I-Z)

Mrs. M. Grieve; edited by Mrs. C. F. Leyel

A Modern Herbal, Volume II (I-Z) — Front Cover
Front Covermain image

The second of two volumes of Maud Grieve's classic *A Modern Herbal*, this book continues the alphabetical encyclopedia from I to Z, covering hundreds more herbs, grasses, fungi, shrubs and trees. As in the first volume, each entry gathers a plant's botanical description, cultivation, chemistry and its medicinal, culinary, cosmetic and economic uses, richly interwoven with history and folklore. First published in 1931 and edited by Hilda Leyel, the work was celebrated as the most comprehensive English herbal since Culpeper and has stayed in print through the Dover reprint. It remains equal parts practical reference and cultural treasury of plant lore, of enduring appeal to gardeners, cooks and herbal enthusiasts.

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The author

"Mrs. M. Grieve" was Sophia Emma Magdalene Grieve (1858–1941), known as Maud, a Fellow of the Royal Horticultural Society who founded a medicinal herb school and farm at Chalfont St. Peter in Buckinghamshire. During and after the First World War — when imported drugs grew scarce — she wrote hundreds of pamphlets on individual plants. The editor Hilda Leyel gathered and expanded these, adding American herbs, into the single work published as A Modern Herbal.

The book

First published in 1931, A Modern Herbal is an alphabetical encyclopedia of some eight hundred to a thousand plants, cataloguing their medicinal, culinary, cosmetic and economic uses along with cultivation notes and a deep seam of folklore. It was hailed as the most comprehensive English herbal since Culpeper, and the Dover reprint has kept it in print for generations. This is Volume II (I–Z).

How it has aged

Its value now is historical and botanical rather than medical: it is a magnificent record of early-twentieth-century herb lore, prized by gardeners, historians and herbalists for its detail and charm. But its remedies reflect 1931 knowledge, and some plants it discusses are toxic or interact with modern drugs. Read it for pleasure and reference, not as a prescription.

For more context

The full text is freely available online at botanical.com; pair it with a current, evidence-based guide before using any plant medicinally.

Sources

Type
Book
Author / Maker
Mrs. M. Grieve; edited by Mrs. C. F. Leyel
Publisher
Dover Publications
Place of publication
New York
Year
1931
Edition
Dover reprint
ISBN
None
Shelf
Reference
Location
Colorado