[688] Ibid. x. (1851) 128.

[689] Stanisl. Julien et P. Champion, Industries anc. et modernes de l’Empire chinois, 1869. 95.

[690] We have once met with galls imported from Shanghai which differed from ordinary Chinese galls in not being horned, but all of an elongated ovoid form, often pointed at the upper end, and having moreover a strong cheesy smell. They may be derived from Distylium racemosum S. et Z., though they do not perfectly accord with the depressed pear-shaped forms figured by Siebold and Zuccarini (Flora Japonica, tab. 94).

[691] See also Schenk, in Buchner’s Repertorium für Pharm. v. (1850) 26-27, or short abstract of that paper in the Jahresbericht of Wiggers, 1850. 48.

[692] See also Stenhouse, Proceedings of the Royal Society, xi. (1862) 402.

[693] Returns of Trade at the Treaty Ports of China, for 1872. 154; for 1874.

[694] Matsugata, Le Japon à l’Exposition universelle (Paris, 1878) 116. 146.

[695] Herbarius, Patavie 1485.

[696] Cockayne Leechdoms, &c., iii. (1866) 316.

[697] De arte distillandi, first edition 1500, Argentorati, cap. xv.