Tags
digitalis purpurea, foxglove, medicinal plants, Pembrokeshire coastal path, plants associated with fairies, poisonous wildflowers
June is the month when elegant Foxgloves are at their best in many parts of Wales. I took most of the photographs in this post in Pembrokeshire where they adorn woodlands, roadsides and cliffs of the mainland and some of the offshore islands. Beautiful to behold, poisonous in the wrong hands yet life-saving when used for good, they have a long-held and fascinating place in our natural history.
Foxglove–Digitalis purpurea – Welsh – Ffion or Maneg Ellyllyn — The Good People’s Glove
The graceful Foxglove is a downy biennial herb that thrives in acidic soils in a wide range of habitats. In their first year large downy basal leaves are produced, followed in their second year by impressive flower spikes from 3-6 feet (1-2m) tall. The plants die once they have seeded, but if the flowers are picked before they go to seed, the basal leaves will last another year and they will attempt to seed again.
Three basic colours self-seed – pink, purple & white. They can come true to the parent plant where colour forms are isolated, but they cross-pollinate freely & many stands of foxgloves include all three shades.
In Wales the Foxglove is a characteristic plant of early summer, thriving on acidic soil in the shady conditions of open woods, woodland clearings and hedge banks. But it also tolerates the open and exposed habitats of moorland and heath margins, sea-cliffs and rocky mountain slopes.
It may also appear where ground has been disturbed, such as in newly cleared woodland, or where the old vegetation has been burnt.
ORIGIN OF THE NAME
There have been many suggestions for the derivation of the name “foxglove”. It is an ancient name and exists in a list of plants as old as the time of Edward III (King of England from 1327-1377). The prefix ‘fox‘ has most likely been commuted over time from “folks”, who to our fourteenth century ancestors were the fairies, but so-called as to speak of them explicitly was believed to get their attention & cause them to do mischief. ‘Glove‘ may have come from the Anglo-Saxon gliew, which was the name for a musical instrument consisting of many small bells. So, put the two together and you could make it ‘Fairy Bells’. However it came about, Foxglove is the English common name we all know and love it by.
There appear to be two Welsh names for the Foxglove, one is Ffion, from which the popular Welsh female name is taken and the other Maneg Ellyllyn which translate as “The Good People’s Glove.” Similar then to Folk’s Glove and its association with fairies.
In Gaelic they were Lus Mor, the Great Herb, for being the most magical of all herbs.
Plants that are widespread & medicinally potent invariably acquire a large number of folk-names, & the foxglove’s many names are a case study in our ancestor’s imaginations.
A whole host of alternative common names reflect the association with fairies Fairy Caps, Fairy Gloves, Fairy Thimbles, Fairy Herb, Fairybells, Fairy-fingers, Goblin Gloves, Fairy Petticoats, Fairyweed.
Another name, Dead Man’s Bells served to warn of the plant’s poisonous disposition.
The names Flopdock, Floppydock, Flop-a-Dock, Flapdock, Popdock, Flop-poppy, Flop-top, Cowflop, Gooseflops, Rabbit’s Flowers or Bunny Rabbits all allude to the foxglove’s large soft downy leaves.
Mythology and legends
One story has it that fairies would hide themselves inside the flowers. Mischievous children, wanting to hear fairy thunder, would hold one of the flower bell then strike the other end on their hand. The poor fairy, rightly upset and probably rather cross, would make a snapping sound, a clap of fairy thunder, while she escaped from her retreat.
Another Welsh legend explains why foxgloves bend and sway so gracefully. It has nothing to do with the wind, but that as the flower is sacred to the fairies, it has the power of recognising them, and indeed all spiritual beings who pass by, and that it bows in deference to them as they waft along.
IN ENGLISH LITERATURE
At least two great poets, Wordsworth and Tennyson were moved to immortalise the foxglove in words; the former clearly aware of the deadly qualities of the plant. In The Borderers, a tragedy, a woman describes a dream she had:
“My poor Babe
Was crying, as I thought, crying for bread
When I had none to give him; whereupon,
I put a slip of foxglove in his hand,
Which pleased him so, that he was hushed at once:
When, into one of those same spotted bells
A bee came darting, which the Child with joy
Imprisoned there, & held it to his ear,
And suddenly grew black, as he would die.”
Sounds more like a nightmare to me!
Tennyson names the flower in the poem ‘In Memoriam’ –
” …. Bring orchis, bring the foxglove spire…”
and also in ‘The Two Voices’ –
” ….The foxglove cluster dappled bells …”
MODERN MEDICINAL USES

Foxglove-digitalis purpurea. A plant that is beautiful on the outside but toxic at its heart. All parts of the plant are poisonous.
Foxglove is the source of digitalis, derived from several cardiac glycosides produced by the plant, and widely used as a heart medication. It is used to increase cardiac contractility and as an antiarrhythmic agent to control the heart rate, particularly in individuals affected by irregular (and often fast) atrial fibrillation and especially if they have been diagnosed with congestive heart failure. Which basically translates to it regulates the heartbeat.
The use of Digitalis purpurea extract containing cardiac glycosides for the treatment of heart conditions was first described in English language medical literature by William Withering, in 1785, which is considered the beginning of modern therapeutics.
With careful usage and expert pharmaceutical guidance, doctors have subsequently used digitalis and saved thousands of lives, but it is at the same time a dangerously toxic plant. Used wrongly it can cause heart palpitations, delirium, hallucinations, vomiting, & possibly death.
TRADITIONAL, FOLK & HERBAL MEDICINE
Modern-day herbalists have largely abandoned the use of digitalis because of its narrow therapeutic index and the difficulty of determining the amount of active drug in herbal preparations. Once the usefulness of digitalis in regulating the human pulse was understood, it was employed for a variety of purposes, including the treatment of epilepsy and other seizure disorders, which are now considered to be inappropriate treatments.
The Doctrine of Signatures
Foxglove flowers were supposed to look like an animal’s open mouth. Within the doctrine of signatures this meant it must have some medicinal value in treatment of injuries of the mouth & throat. The speckles in the mouth of the flower were, according to the Doctrine symbolic of inflammation of the throat. Another array of folk-names reflect foxglove’s association with the mouth: Throatwort, Rabbit’s Mouth, Bunny Mouths, Tiger’s Mouth, Duck’s Mouth, Gap-Mouth, & Dragon’s Mouth.
Another, less charming name of Scabbit Dock came about as in Culpepper’s day Foxglove was used in an ointment or shampoo for treating impetigo or “scabby head”.
Midwifery
An association with midwifery probably gave rise to the names Granny’s Gloves or Granny’s Bonnets, & Witch’s or Witches’ Gloves. Witches & grannies, or at least midwives & other herbal practitioners, had many uses for this plant. Dr William Withering, the aforementioned man credited with discovering digitalis as a heart remedy circa 1775, apparently learned of its potency from an unnamed midwife.
Pingback: Foxgloves: Beauty and Danger! – Norfolk Tales, Myths & More!
Associating foxgloves very much with Wales and the west of England I remember being lost for words when seeing them for the first time in Southern Spain growing alongside pink rhododendrons! I think the unpredictability of their appearance is part of their magic, less likely to be taken for granted! Being biennial perhaps you’ll get another good showing next year!
LikeLike
Very interesting and informative. Last year we had brilliant displays of wild foxglove. It was a very wet May. Less this year as has been much drier. An amazing plant as it stands so high and has such powerful medicine!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Lucky you! Not so common up here in this part of NorthWales where we’re on limestone.
LikeLike
Heaps of them this year! And quite a few in our garden. 🙂 🙂
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you, a great favourite of mine too. A beautiful treat in early summer on the western side of our British coast.
LikeLike
One of my favourite wild flowers. Lovely photos!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Pingback: Beautiful blooms and some rare treats (1) | everyday nature trails
Thank you, foxgloves are much-suited to Wales and its climate. Are they common in your part of Spain? Nearest to where we lived was one spot in the mountains down near Tarifa where they flower alongside rhododendrons – earlier in the season than here of course, and a most unexpected sight!
LikeLike
The photos and info make for a fascinating read. We have some foxgloves in the spring but too hot now. You have the wonderful green.
LikeLike
We’ve had a fantastic showing of Foxgloves this year. Sadly they’re dying off now. 😦
LikeLike
It has definitely been a wonderful year for them and it’s sad to see them go, although the stems studded with seed pods still look good.
LikeLike
Very informative…thanks for posting.
Coincidentally, Foxglove is one of the only flowers we can cultivate here which the deer don’t devour.
LikeLike
Thank you for your comments. It has been mentioned that slugs do not eat foxgloves either, so the plant must be toxic to fauna too and they know to avoid it.
LikeLike
Thank you Finn,
The foxglove is one of those plants that is beautiful and charismatic and has had significance for different reasons for centuries so there is so much fascinating stuff attached to it.
LikeLike
Wonderful post! I love learning about our native flowers and foxgloves are one of my favourites.
LikeLike
Fascinating details, thank you. I’m a big fan of self-seeded foxgloves. They are just about the only ‘spike’ style flower our resident slugs don’t demolish.
LikeLike
Thank you, I’m glad you enjoyed the post – I was afraid it was a bit long, but I could have kept going, there is just so much to a foxglove! It’s very interesting that slugs don’t eat them isn’t it? The plant is probably poisonous to them as well as us, so a protective trait that has ensured their successful survival. Perhaps if we protected our delphiniums and lupins with some kind of foxglove-leaf mush they’d leave them alone too.
LikeLike
Oh to have delphiniums and lupins! If you could discover a true slug solution, you’d be a rich woman.
LikeLike
Gorgeous post. I like to see the bottoms of fat bumble bees protruding out of the gloves.
LikeLike
Thank you, I love the sight of the bumblebees reversing out too!
LikeLike