138 BOTANICON SINICUM. 
title of the same work often reads p> FF H SE RH (the literary 
name of the author was 7 Fs), 
Thus again the work =F #j 72 4 (P. list 89; my list No. 1015), 
writings of Wang Mei k‘i, is identical with the mw 4. 
quoted P. XIV. (sub mo li hua). The same author is also styled 
E+ Hi. 
The Pen ts‘ao list of medical works gives the titles of a host of 
collections of medical prescriptions ( Fj), and alchemical receipts 
of various periods. The origin of many of these I have not been 
able to ascertain. But I think that no important Chinese treatise 
quoted in the Pen ts‘ao has been omitted in my list, where the 
reader who in future may investigate the History of Chinese 
Medicine (a field of inquiry still untrodden by European scholars), 
will also find a considerable amount of information on the subject. 
1. X% HE (& Aiye ch‘uan. A treatise on the Artemisia leaf (used 
as moxa), by Li Yen men (see No. 258). Ming dyn.—P. med. 16. 
2. An hui tung chi. See p. 89. 
3. BB jes 2 An nan chilio. An account of Annam, by # All 
Li Tse, a native of that country. Close of the 13th cent.— 
Wylie 33. 
4. 7% HE Ch‘a king. A treatise on the Tea plant, by iz 
Inu Yii. Middle of the 8th eent.—P. 26.—Wylie 119.—Reprinted 
in the Ch. deseript. part XXI. 36, 
5. 4 PR Ch‘a lu. An account of the Tea plant, by Zs‘ai Siang 
(see No. 428),—S, K. K. XII. 21. ; 
6. 3% Ht Ch‘a pu. A treatise on Tea, by = ae $f, Bao Wen s. 
Sung dyn.—P.28.—W. H. CCXVIII. 8, where the author is styled 
HE BC $B Yen Wen si, a native of Shu (the present Sz’ ch‘uan). 
7. A work with the same title, by RA Jc 9} Ku Yiian king of 
the Ming dyn. is mentioned in the H. K. III. 60. 
8. 3 B Ch‘a tui. A work on Tea, by 2¢ = AR Ts‘ai Tsung 
yen. Sung dyn.—P. 28-—W. H. COXVIII. 10. 
9. 25 WE Fj Ch‘a tung pu. Selection of extracts from ancient 
authors regarding Tea, by pit #8 Ch‘en Ki, First half of the 
17th cent.—Wylie 119, | : cs 
