A Short Story about Quisqualis Fruit![]() Legend has it that Shi Jun Zi (quisqualis fruit) was named after an ancient Chinese medical doctor with a surname Guo and first name Shi Jun. This quisqualis fruit was renowned for destroying parasites and removing stagnant food in a persons digestive system. [Zi is often appended at the end of an objects name to indicate that it is an object, or to round up the pronunciation.] The legend was recorded in an ancient Chinese pharmaceutical reference book entitled, Kai Bao Materia Medica (Treasures of Herbs). Shi Jun Zi (or Quisqualis Fruit) is also known as Liu Qiu Zi in Chinese. It is a deciduous vine-like shrub that blossoms in the summer with perfuming fragrance and red petals. The dried ripe fruit of Quisqualis resembles coconut. It is sweet in flavor, warm in nature and is used as an herbal medicine to expel intestinal parasites and to remove stagnant food from the digestive system.
An section in the well-known Chinese novel Flowers in A Mirror, describes Tang Aus travels to foreign countries and meeting a female scholar named Lan Yin (Voice of the Orchid), who suffers from stomach bloating. Tang Au makes a diagnosis: This bloating is a sign of stagnant food, resulting from untreated infantile parasitic contamination. As the number of parasites increases, your stomach becomes swollen. Tang Au recommends her taking quisqualis fruit to destroy the parasites and remove the stagnant food. He says, I will tell you a secret family prescription. Take parched quisqualis fruits with stone-like Omphalia five to six times in succession and all parasites will be expelled. Lan Yin followed the prescription and was quickly cured. Because Jun Zi [in Shi Jun Zi] in Chinese means gentleman, and gentleman and beauty are often used together to create contrasts in poems or couplets, Shi Jun Zi often appears in couplets, such as the following one. [Note: Gentleman Blossom means Shi Jun Zi blossom] Beauty herb; blue in spring, green in summer, and golden in autumn. The upper part of the couplet describes the changing colours of Shi Jun Zi blossoms in one day whereas the second line describes the changing colours of the beauty herb in different seasons. This simple couplet vividly describes the unique characteristics of changing colours of these two herbs. References: Chinese version available at http://www.zhengjian.org/zj/articles/2003/3/21/20901.html Published: Monday 12th May 2003 http://www.clearharmony.net/articles/200305/12311.html |
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