Home Guide to Herbs - davies


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7
The Complete Home GuideinttorHoderubcs,tNioantural Healing, and Nutrition  
7
apprenticeship. These people and others have been my inspiration and  
guides, both in my life and in my practice, which I first established in  
1
982.  
On a historical note, Ezra Suggett, a herbal apothecary in Beccles,  
Suffolk, was my great-great-grandfather. He inspired me through the  
wonderful tales of his work that were told to me as a child by my  
grandmother. His dispensary and clinic was similar to many of its kind in  
the mid nineteenth century. His materia medica would have included at  
least 40 percent herbs imported from America, such as slippery elm,  
goldenseal, and sarsaparilla, with the other 60 percent coming from  
Europe, mostly from Britain, and a few from Asia. Many would have been  
collected locally (by knowledgeable gatherers), and many remedies would  
have included these local plantsfor instance, sea holly root from the  
beaches, or fennel, burdock, and plantain from the hedges and meadows.  
His clientele would have visited his dispensary and bought herbs after a  
quick chat or lengthier consultation, or alternatively he would have made  
a house call on his horse, carrying a saddlebag large enough to hold his  
traveling medicine bag and poisons box (which I still have). One story  
passed down was that upon being called out in the middle of the night, he  
rode twelve miles to a cottage deep in the fens to assist. He found a  
worried mother and a screaming baby. He simply undressed the baby and  
removed the diaper pin, which was pricking the baby’s tummy! He then  
rode twelve miles home again.  
The large building that once housed his thriving business is now a  
bank, but his love and use of herbs live on. It is believed that when the  
apothecaries came under fire from the medical profession, Suggett joined  
the National Institute of Medical Herbalists, which was founded to  
safeguard their profession. To this date it is one of the largest and oldest  
herbal associations in Britain.  
Ill Health, the Greatest Teacher  
My teacher, Dr. Christopher, was in and out of a wheelchair for most of  
his early life. His illnesses included serious spleen and liver disease and a  
crumbling spine resulting from chronic arthritis and rheumatism, all of  
which became progressively worse. When he was thirty-five years old it  
was predicted that he would not reach his fortieth birthday, and it was  
probably this close brush with death that became a turning point in his  
life. He rediscovered herbs, along with food and water treatments, and  
finally examined his long-buried negative feelings about being abandoned  
by his original parents. Most of all he rebelled against the fate assigned to  
him, married, had many children, and went on to live to the age of eighty-  
two. He established flourishing clinics and taught herbalism, while  


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