Mullen Considered by some as a weed, the monks of the Middle Ages grew mullen for a number of ailments, especially those
associated with coughs and congestion. One of its common names was "bullocks lungwort," taken from a common home
cure used to treat cattle with coughs and pneumonia. Sap from the crushed leaves of the plant is said to alleviate the pain
of insect bites. [Thomas Stuart McFarland, a farmer near Belgrade, Newton County, in southeast
Texas, reported that he had sweet fennel in his garden as of April 16, 1840.]
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