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Thyme, Wild
Botanical: Thymus serpyllum (LINN.)
Family: N.O. Labiatae
Description
Cultivation
Constituents
Medicinal Action and Uses
Synonyms---other of Thyme. Serpyllum.
Part Used---Herb.
The Wild Thyme is indigenous to the greater part of the
dry land of Europe,
though is a great deal less abundant than the Common
Thyme
so widely cultivated.
It is foundup to a certain height on the Alps, on high
plateaux, and in valleys,
along ditches and roads, on rocks, in barren and dry soil,
and also in damp clay
soil destitute of chalk. It is seen in old stony, abandoned
fields, dried-up
lawns and on clearings. In England it is found chiefly on
heaths and in
mountainous situations, and is also often cultivated as a
border in gardens or
on rockeries and sunny banks. It was a great favourite of
Francis Bacon, who in
giving us his plan for the perfect garden, directs that
alleys should be planted
with fragrant flowers: 'burnet, wild thyme and watermints,
which perfume the air
most delightfully being trodden upon and crushed,' so that
you may 'have
pleasure when you walk or tread.'
The herb wherever it grows wild denotes a pure
atmosphere, and was thought to
enliven the spirits by the fragrance which it diffuses into
the air around. The
Romans gave Thyme as a sovereign remedy to melancholy
persons.
Wild Thyme is a perennial, more thickset than the
Garden
Thyme, though
subject to many varieties, according to the surroundings in
which it grows. In
its most natural state, when found on dry exposed downs, it
is small and
procumbent, often forming dense cushions; when growing
among furze or other
plants which afford it shelter, it runs up a slender stalk
to a foot or more in
height, which gives it a totally different appearance. The
specific name, serpyllum,
is derived from a Greek word meaning to creep, and has
been
given it from its
usually procumbent and trailing habit.
Description---The root is
woody
and fibrous, the
stems numerous, hard, branched, procumbent, rising from 4
inches to 1 foot high,
ordinarily reddish-brown in colour. The bright green oval
leaves 1/8 inch broad,
tapering below into very short foot-stalks, are smooth and
beset with numerous
small glands. They are fringed with hairs towards the base
and have the veins
prominent on the under surfaces. Their margins are entire
and not recurved as in
Garden Thyme. As with all other members of the important
order Labiatae, to
which the Thymes belong, the leaves are set in pairs on the
stem. The plant
flowers from the end of May or early June to the beginning
of autumn, the
flowers, which are very similar to those of the Garden
Thyme, being purplish and
in whorls at the top of the stems.
Bees are especially fond of the Thyme blossoms, from
which they extract much
honey. Spenser speaks of the 'bees-alluring time,' and
everyone is familiar with
Shakespeare's the 'bank whereon the wild thyme blows,' the
abode of the queen of
the Fairies. It was looked upon as one of the fairies'
flowers, tufts of Thyme
forming one of their favourite playgrounds.
In some parts it was a custom for girls to wear sprigs
of Thyme, with mint
and lavender, to bring them sweethearts!
Thyme has also been associated with death. It is one of
the fragrant flowers
planted on graves (in Wales, particularly), and the Order
of Oddfellows still
carry sprigs of Thyme at funerals and throw them into the
grave of a dead
brother. An old tradition says that Thyme was one of the
herbs that formed the
fragrant bed of the Virgin Mary.
Wild Thyme is the badge of the Drummond clan.
Cultivation---Wild Thyme
will
grow on any soil, but
prefers light, sandy or gravel ground exposed to the sun.
Propagate by seeds, cuttings, or division of roots. Care
must be taken to
weed. Manure with farmyard manure in autumn or winter and
nitrates in spring.
Cut when in full flower, in July and August, and dry in
the same manner as
Common Thyme.
It is much picked in France, chiefly in the fields of
the Aisne, for the
extraction of its essential oil.
Constituents---When
distilled,
100 kilos (about 225
lb.) of dried material yield 150 grams of essence (about 5
or 6 OZ.). It is a
yellow liquid, with a weaker scent than that of oil of
Thyme extracted from T.
vulgaris, and is called oil of Serpolet. It contains 30
to 70 per cent of
phenols: Thymol, Carvacrol, etc. It is made into an
artificial oil, together
with the oil of Common Thyme. In perfumery, oil of Serpolet
is chiefly used for
soap.
The flowering tops, macerated for 24 hours or so in salt
and water, are made
into a perfumed water.
Medicinal Action and Uses---
In
medicine, Wild Thyme
or Serpolet has the same properties as Common Thyme, but
to
an inferior degree.
It is aromatic, antiseptic, stimulant, antispasmodic,
diuretic and emmenagogue.
The infusion is used for chest maladies and for weak
digestion, being a good
remedy for flatulence, and favourable results have been
obtained in convulsive
coughs, especially in whooping cough, catarrh and sore
throat. The infusion,
prepared with 1 OZ. of the dried herb to a pint of boiling
water, is usually
sweetened with sugar or honey and made demulcent by
linseed
or acacia. It is
given in doses of 1 or more tablespoonfuls several times
daily.
The infusion is also useful in cases of drunkenness, and
Culpepper recommends
it as a certain remedy taken on going to bed for 'that
troublesome complaint the
nightmare,' and says: 'if you make a vinegar of the herb as
vinegar of roses is
made and annoint the head with it, it presently stops the
pains thereof. It is
very good to be given either in phrenzy or lethargy.'
Wild Thyme Tea, either drunk by itself or mixed with
other plants such as
rosemary, etc., is an excellent remedy for headache and
other nervous
affections.
Formerly several preparations of this plant were kept in
shops, and a
distilled spirit and water, which were both very
fragrant.
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