查看原文
其他

【84】Old Medicines Preserved in US Apothecary Museum

littleflute 漂泊者乐园 2021-10-05



漂泊者乐园微信公众号在线英语学习资料

 美国之音特别英语节目:慢速英语听力 



*【84】 

ARTS & CULTURE

Old Medicines Preserved in US Apothecary Museum

November 25, 2018


In earlier times, healers and health workers used strangely-named plants for medicinal purposes. Plants with names such as dragon’s blood, mandrake root and devil’s snare could be bought at a drugstore called an apothecary.

Today, one of the best preserved apothecaries in the United States has been turned into a museum in Alexandria, Virginia. The museum provides interesting examples of medicines used before the development of modern drugs.

The Stabler-Leadbeater Apothecary served customers for more than 140 years, from 1792 to 1933. When the business failed, the store and its contents were bought. It was redesigned to look as it had in the 18th century. In 1939, it reopened as a museum.

Lauren Gleason supervises the museum.

“A lot of the medicines that people would have been purchasing here were probably for minor ailmentsrashes, skin conditions, the flu, a headache.”

The apothecary has many thousands of objects. Some seem strange now, like the bloodletting tools. They were used to take blood from patients in hopes of removing their sickness as well. The treatment was often harmful, however, and ended in the late 19th century.

Many famous people visited the apothecary while it was still a business, including America’s first president. George Washington and his wife Martha lived nearby in the early 1800s at their home of Mount Vernon.

But the apothecary had more than medicine.

"Lots of other chemicals like paints, dyes and perfumes, would have been made and sold here.”

And, she said, customers could also buy baby bottles, writing instruments, and even clothes-making machines at the store.

One bottle at the store holds a poison that was once used to ease pain. The drug called aconite comes from the wolfsbane plant. In earlier times, wolfsbane was thought to help control violence by imaginary creatures known as werewolves. In folklore, a werewolf is a human that changes into a wolf during full moons. Jim Williams works at the apothecary.

"So if you're having werewolf trouble, it will get you through to the next full moon."

Williams added that wolfsbane would also be used to treat pain in human joints.

Visitor Christine Zapata from California said she was especially interested in the former store’s different plants.

"Using all these different herbs and plant-based medicines that are coming back now, for me that's most interesting for me since I work in the cannabis industry."

One box at the apothecary used to contain bottles of Coca-Cola. The drinks were first sold in the late 1800s as medicine believed to cure conditions like tiredness and headaches. However, Coca-Cola at that time contained the drug cocaine and could be addictive.

Some treatments fell into disuse after it became known they were poisonous. But we continue to depend on many medicines found in the apothecary to heal injuries and cure disease.

I’m Jonathan Evans.


Deborah Block reported this story for VOA News. Jonathan Evans adapted it for Learning English. Caty Weaver was the editor.

_________________________________________________________________

Words in This Story


addictive – adj. causing a strong and harmful need to regularly have or do something

ailments – n. sicknesses or illnesses

rashes – n. groups of red spots on the skin caused by an illness or a reaction to something

dyes – n. substances used for changing the color of something (such as hair or cloth) usually permanently

folklore – n. ideas or stories that are not true but that many people have heard or read

preserved – adj. kept in good condition over a long period of time



提示: 回复  d6 可收听查看所有《文化艺术 ARTS & CULTURE 》文章。

您好!既然漂到这里,就顺便把本文转到朋友圈吧!


 


: . Video Mini Program Like ,轻点两下取消赞 Wow ,轻点两下取消在看

您可能也对以下帖子感兴趣

文章有问题?点此查看未经处理的缓存