John Gerard's 'Of the Historie of Plants', better known as 'Gerard's Herball' and first published in 1597, is one of the most delightful of Elizabethan herbals. Its glorious prose, the folk-lore steeping its pages, and all its quaint conceits about the "Vertues" of herbs, are known by reputation the world over. This is partly because no book on flowers or trees can be written without quotations from his glowing pages, but mainly because the work has won an unchallenged place of honour as the most delightful, fragrant, and refreshing of all old-time herbals, as it is by far the most amusing.
When reading Gerard we are wandering in the peace of an Elizabethan
garden, with a companion who has a story for every flower and is full of wise
philosophies. He inspires us with his own simple faith in the healing virtues
of herbs: we must agree that 'sweet Marjoram is good for those who are given
to over-much sighing', that 'the smell of Basil is good for the heart, takes away sorrowfulness and makes a man merry and glad', and that Borage 'brings
alwaies courage'.
Gerard was born in Nantwich in 1545. The original edition is a huge book,
with more than 1600 pages, so for this edition, working from the enlarged and
amended edition of 1636 by Thomas Johnson, Marcus Woodward has extracted
the essential essence of the book, preserving all that is most precious. No word
has been altered, though all that is tedious or gross has been omitted.
The book contains descriptions of nearly 200 plants, with details of their
habitats, alternative names, and culinary and medical uses, and is illustrated
with 114 woodcuts.
Unlike other modern reprints of the 1927edition, this edition is reproduced full size in a sturdy laminated boards binding.