December 11, 2023, by Chloe
The Ballad of the Cherry Tree
This is a guest post by Trish Kerrison, who volunteered at Manuscripts and Special Collections between April and September 2023, cataloguing medicinal herbs and their uses in remedies from material held in our collections.
In Mrs Willoughby’s Housekeeping Book of 1737 (MS 87/4), to which Mother Bird is a frequent contributor, there is a receipt for Plague Water – it lists fifty-two ingredients, the last of which, cherries, are noted as being optional.
We heard it first at Evensong,
the dreaded plague was back among
city-dwelling folk, we must seek
out ancient remedies to keep
in readiness, must say a prayer
to God to guide our footsteps where
grow the blossoms, fruits and leaves,
the roots and grasses, herbs and seeds.
Lord bless m’Lady’s remedy
A woodcutter’s daughter, I must
gather in the woodland harvest;
Sweet Angelica from the shade
of woodland fringes, much favoured
by Old Mother Bird in physicks
for settling of stomach sickness.
Wood Sorrel, in abundance, green
with leaves to wash a liver clean
and the flowers of the Elder tree
most necessary for the ease
of lungs clogged by foul congestion
in the long cold winter seasons
Lord bless m’Lady’s remedy
Further along the woodland path,
where earth is damp and richly dark,
the finest Pennyroyal grows,
that makes the blood so well to flow,
and Celandine, bright yellow blooms
watery pains and ills to soothe
And deeper in the wood’s dark heart,
where only fairies dare to pass,
Polypody of th’ oaks display
many-fingered leaves as if they
were fabric on a draper’s stall
not cures for sickness, bile and gall
Lord bless m’Lady’s remedy
In softer shade, Archangel grows
fair comfort for old joints and bones
and Lily of the Valley’s frail
white blooms to mend a heart that ails
in the night when sickness spreads
and man hovers ‘twixt life and death.
Enough! My basket overflows
with remedies that nature grows,
women now are a gathering,
carrying their spoils like off’rings
to long forgotten gods of earth,
the village green, their holy church.
Lord bless m’Lady’s remedy
In twos and threes, the women wait
to hear what next m’Lady says
Old Mother Bird inspects each piece,
m’Lady checks ‘gainst her receit
til satisfied with ev’ry grain
fifty-one gifts from God, Amen.
Old Mother Bird mithers and frets,
has no-one stored some cherries, red,
since the harvest, seven-month gone?
Then pray you the plague will not come
‘ere cherries hang down full and ripe
for this herbage will save no lives.
Lord bless m’Lady’s remedy
M’Lady, she is unconcerned,
listens not to Old Mother Bird
thinks cherries only add some sweet
‘gainst the bitter of this physick,
but Old Mother Bird lost her sons
to plague, when cherries there were none.
By their grave a cherry tree stands
late planted by her grieving hand
it blossoms pretty in the spring,
but ‘tis too short, the joy it brings
for its cherries grow shrivelled, hard
and bitter like her broken heart
Lord bless m’Lady’s remedy
The receit is known, proved to cure,
says m’Lady, talk you no more
of this, we have no time to waste
make haste to the kitchen, make haste.
We crush our leaves and mix and grind
the nuts and bark, and roots and rinds
Boil and simmer many a day,
sieve and strain, sieve and strain
‘til liquid runs as clear as glass.
Carefully bottled, stoppered fast
‘tis stored ready for what may come,
God bless us, and the work we’ve done.
Lord bless m’Lady’s remedy
What if ‘tis so that cherries, red,
are the diff’rence ‘twixt life and death?
In the graveyard, Old Mother Bird
casts down the tree with angry words,
bows branches low, down to the graves
of all the lives that were not saved
cursed its saplings to bloom in spring
but only bitter cherries bring.
The plague did not return this way,
Thanks be to God, whose name we praise,
Old Mother Bird now Rests in Peace
but still, the Cherry Tree doth Weep.
As part of this project, over 3400 records have been created which cover approximately 200 years from the early 1600s to the late 1700s. The research can be accessed in our Reading Room – to find out more, or to book an appointment today, please contact us at mss-library@nottingham.ac.uk.
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