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1 There has been considerable doubt what plant it was that produced the cassia of the ancients. Fée, after diligently enquiring into the subject, inclines to think that it was the Laurus cassia of Linnæus, the same tree that produces the cassia of the present day.
2 There is little doubt that all this is fabulous.
3 Or, "smelling like balsam."
4 "Looking like laurel."
5 "Equal to cinnamon." Fée thinks that it is a variety of the Laurus cassia.
6 He probably alludes to the Daphne Cnidium of Linnæus, which, as Fée remarks, is altogether different from the Laurus cassia, or genuine cassia.
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- Cross-references in general dictionaries to this page
(6):
- LSJ, ψευδόναρδος
- Lewis & Short, ămōmum
- Lewis & Short, languĭdus
- Lewis & Short, pseudŏnardus
- Lewis & Short, sicco
- Lewis & Short, vergo