School: St John of God Convent, Rathdowney (roll number 16203)
- Location:
- Ráth Domhnaigh, Co. Laoise
- Teacher: The Sisters
![The Schools’ Collection, Volume 0828, Page 118](https://doras.gaois.ie/cbes/CBES_0828%2FCBES_0828_118.jpg?width=1600&quality=85)
Archival Reference
The Schools’ Collection, Volume 0828, Page 118
Image and data © National Folklore Collection, UCD.
See copyright details.
DownloadOpen data
Available under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
- XML School: St John of God Convent, Rathdowney
- XML Page 118
- XML “Cures in Olden Times - Constipation”
- XML “Cures in Olden Times - Consumption”
- XML “Cures in Olden Times - Bunions”
Note: We will soon deprecate our XML Application Programming Interface and a new, comprehensive JSON API will be made available. Keep an eye on our website for further details.
On this page
- A bowl of senna leaves was always near the fire. If children became ill water was put on the leaves and the dose was prepared. It was made like tea, milk and sugar were added.
- 1l One good cure for consumption is Spanish onions stewed in milk. Dandelion leaves either boiled or eaten raw were also taken. Another cure for consumption was to tale six or eight snails,put them in a box with a little oatmeal, by crawling over it they will rid themselves of slime. Have half a pint of barley water that you have previously strained, boiling very fast, drop the snails into it. Simmer for one hour and put in a cup. Add a teaspoonful to each glass of liquid the patient drinks.
2; Cough or Asthma, Ivy leaves boiled with sugar sufficent to make a syrup. Scalded buttermilk with butter and oatmeal added. - Transcription guide »You are not logged in, but you are welcome to contribute a transcription anonymously. In this case, your IP address will be stored in the interest of quality control.By clicking the save button you agree that your contribution will be available under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License and that a link to dúchas.ie is sufficient as attribution.