From Robert Hooke's Micrographia, 1665 |
My
friend has fleas. Of course I mean that her puppy has fleas, because that’s
what you catch at puppy-school, but they seem to be generously dispersed and
multiplying about the house and it looks like a bit of a nightmare to me,
endless washing and vacuuming, shaking of bedding, testing of proprietary
brands of flea-zapper, not to mention all the jokes… By now it is the tail end
of fleas that she is suffering from; the worst is over now that cold weather’s
on its way and the halcyon days of prime flea-time are numbered…
G M Crespi, 'Searcher for Fleas', 1720s |
Fleas
in the past were a habitual problem for any householder. The Goodman of Paris,
in 1393 when advising his new wife on the chief ways to keep a husband content
(I should quickly say that my friend’s spouse took a day off work to assist with
flea-warfare) suggested, ‘I beseech you thus to bewitch your husband … have
a care in winter he have a good fire and smokeless and let him rest well and be
well covered between your breasts. And in summer take heed that there be no
fleas in your chamber, nor in your bed, the which you may do in six ways. If
the room be strewn with alder leaves, the fleas will be caught thereon. If you
have at night one or two trenchers [of bread] slimed with glue or
turpentine and set about the room, with a lighted candle in the midst of each
trencher, they will come and be stuck thereto…’
Hyssop (copyright Valerie Hill) |
Strewing
herbs, from the Middle Ages until the 18th century, played a large
and efficacious role in control of fleas and other vermin, mixed in with the
rushes, reeds or straw that would have covered every earth or flagstone floor
as a thick layer, in rich or poor households alike. Periodically the floors
were swept clean of these rushes and herbs, which were then burned, ridding the
household of many of the fleas and larvae that would have collected there. I
don’t need to remind anyone in the North of England about rush bearing, which
was a formal celebration of this ritual.
Thomas
Tusser (1524-1580) listing twenty-one strewing herbs altogether in his
instructional poem Five Hundreth Pointes of Good Husbandry; includes costmary, cowslips,
daisies, germander and winter savory.
‘While
wormwood hath seed, get a handful or twain,
To
save against March, to make flea to refrain:
Where
chamber is sweeped, and wormwood is strown,
No
flea, for his life, dare abide to be known.’
Fleabane (copyright Valerie Hill) |
I
imagine your strewing herb of choice would have been largely dictated by what
you could get locally, or the type of environment you lived in. Those on sandy,
well-drained soils might grow hyssop (Hyssopus officinalis); if you were in a marshy or
clayish area then fleabane (Pulicaria dysenterica) would be handier to go out
and pick by the wayside, or watermint (Mentha aquatica).
The
Niewe Herball of 1578 says ‘Of Fleawurt, or Flebane … some hold, that if
this hearbe whiles it is yet greene, be strowed in the house, that Fleas will
not come not ingender where it is layd.’
Mint,
with its volatile oils and sharply cooling aromatic pungency was also excellent
against mice, which detest the smell and will not touch food that has either
fresh or dried mint laid around it. Pennyroyal or pudding grass (Mentha
pulegium) was
brought to market by poor women to sell for a variety of uses, including
specifically against fleas, and its effectiveness is clear, being used like
this since antiquity. This is the Pulegium of the Romans, named by Pliny (pulex being Latin for flea). John
Pechey in 1694 says of pennyroyal; ‘The fresh Herb wrap’t in a Cloth, and
laid in a Bed, drives away Fleas; but it must be renewed once a week.’
Lady's bedstraw (copyright Valerie Hill) |
The scent
of other herbs lasts much longer than a week; foliage of the bedstraw family,
such as Lady’s bedstraw (Galium verum, also known as fleaweed), and woodruff (Asperula
oderata)
contain asperuloside which produces coumarin; the leaves when freshly gathered
have little scent at all, but when dried give out a sweet smell of newly-mown
hay that can last for years.
Sweet woodruff (copyright Valerie Hill) |
Fleas do not, apparently, like coumarin at all,
which is also in the pretty melilot (Melilotus altissima) another strewing herb. Mrs
Grieve tells us that, in June, on St Barnabas day, bunches of box, woodruff,
lavender and roses were traditionally put inside churches; fleas were clearly a
problem in the house of God too. There are so many other kinds of potent,
aromatic herbs used for strewing that I haven’t time to go into here, but a
fleeting mention is due for meadowsweet (Filipendula ulmaria), well-known for being the
favourite strewing herb of Queen Elizabeth the first.
Georges de la Tour, 'Woman Catching Fleas', 1630s |
It
would seem though, from these genre paintings, that sometimes direct action was
the only way, and the only way to really kill a flea by hand is to crack it
(sorry) between the nails. During an infestation this would have been rather
laborious. With animals occupying human living quarters, cats and dogs running
in and out, (rabbits hanging before skinning could have come into the kitchen
crawling with fleas), and so on, I wonder whether every poor household
struggled with fleas all of the time, especially in the warmer months.
Gerard ter Borch, 'Boy Ridding his Dog of Fleas', c1665 |
Even
the toughest flea needs certain conditions to flourish; adequate warmth and
humidity, plus delicious warm-blooded morsels (us, puppies) to feast on. Lucky,
then, for my beleaguered friend up the hill, that the dark nights are drawing
in now, and regular frosts should see off any laggardly critters. The bad news
is that flea larvae can successfully over-winter in the house, to wake up in
the warmth and vigour of the spring (another reason to burn your strewing herbs
before the year is out).
But I’ll leave you with one last image that shows how
very intricate and time-consuming one’s flea-revenge could be…
Great post! I now want to spend the whole day herbals.
ReplyDeleteI agree! Except I will now spend the whole day itching!
ReplyDeleteAmazing paintings.
Squirming here! Reminds me of a hot, hot August when we returned from some days away to greet the looked-after cats . . .
ReplyDeleteOh dear, if only I'd known more about strewing back then. What was worse, invited brother & wife arrived hours too early, so the mirage of the jumping carpet was met all eyes. (nb. Have not had an infestation since!)Shudder, shudder.
Wonderful and useful flea facts and pictures, Jane!
Brilliant! When I was a young vet, we were counselled, upon finding the inevitable signs of fleas on a dog or cat whose owner thought they were above flea treatments and whose benighted animal was crawling, to say,
ReplyDelete'Madam, I think Tiddles may have picked up a flea...'
Works every time. I"m a huge believer in herbal treatments, but I use Program and Johnson's4Fleas (Nitenpyram) on all the animals in Scott Cottage...
Fascinating - and incredibly useful! Thank you.
ReplyDeleteWhat a fun post!
ReplyDeleteI wanted to have fleas in latest P.K. Pinketon Mystery after reading Mark Twain's hilarious account of a dog who "was addicted to fleas" but then my Nevada friends told me that FLEAS ARE UNKNOWN IN THE HIGH DESERT! So I narrowly avoided making a blooper. I guess historical fiction is the one time when you regret being denied flea-hijinks...
Great post, Jane! Weren't trenchers handy things? And I shall go and pick some woodruff directly.
ReplyDeleteI am sowing ladies' bedstraw next year in my pocket-handkerchief go meadow, so good to hear it deters fleas because they do hang out in the garden. I flea-spray the house annually and la dog gets Frontline, but then she goes out.. However, the problem has decreased with age. At least dog- fleas and cat-fleas don't live ON humans, only take the odd snack.
ReplyDeleteAdore the flea-circus pics!
Who would have thought there were so many pictures of people flea-picking?
ReplyDeleteThanks very much, and for sharing your flea-reminisences and flea-politics. Sorry about the itching, at least I didn't mention bubonic plague...
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