252 BOTANICON SINICUM. 
or Jaq ln hao. Under the latter name the plant is noticed 
in P., XV, 22. The other names are given as synonyms. | 
The figure in Ch., XIV, 24, under 6 hao is rude. It cam 
be decided what kind of plant is meant. 
Lu kr says :—The 6 hao or lo hao grows in low, swampy 
places. Its leaves resemble those of the ¥§ # sie hao, but 
are smaller. The stem of the plant can be eaten raw or 
cooked. ¢ 
The 9 % inthe So moku'[V, 12] is Seseli Libanotis. 
Koch, an umbelliferous plant, but in the Phon zo [XLVH, 5 
it is Cardamine sylvatica, Link., according to Francaet ; but 
the drawing rather seems to refer to Sisymbrium sophioides. 
fii # in the Phon zo [XIV, 6] is Pedicularis sceptru 
carolinum, I, 
V. supra, 44. E., 62, family > p- 11, “in hao, with synony 
4a, th B: Fap., 2089, Begyhrinte Sophia, La ft hp 2075 
Seseli Libanotis, Koch, Ff} i). te 
435.— 9H Siao. Lewes calls this the ox tail’s southernwood 
Shi king, 120, 365 :—Gathering the ox tail southernwoo 
224:—Cold come the waters down from that spring: and 
overflow the bushy southernwood (siao). 274 :—How high 
and long i is the southernwood. 471:—We take southernw 
(siao) and offer it with the fat. ; 
Mao explains the siao of the Shi king by #§ hao, Artemis 
Li ki (1, 448] Artemisia (siao) along with millet and ri 
burned with the fat of the victim in sacrifices. IT, 22 
On sacrifices. The fat of the inwards was burned, and th 
_was mixed with the blaze of dried southernwood (: ; 
This served as a tribute to the spirit. 
Chou li, I, 84:—Le préposé au territoire hors banliewe 
— fournit quand il y a des sacrifices les plantes odoriférantes 
: (stao) et les herbes pour envelopper [mao, v. infra, 9 
The: commentary explains siao by hiang hao (fra. 
Artemisi a). 
