Tradition / Region: Chinese mythology
Alternate Names: Dragon Beard Grass, Jinyun Grass, Dragon Fodder
Category: Plant
The Myth
On Donghai Island, in the waters of the Longju River, there was said to grow a remarkable and powerful grass known as Longqi. The place was already famous in legend as the pasture where King Mu of Zhou once raised his eight extraordinary horses, and it was believed that this grass was the source of their unmatched strength.
Longqi grew among stones and shallow water along the riverbanks and roadsides. Its shoots rose straight from the ground without branches, slender and upright. In summer, small spikes formed at the tips, blooming into flowers that later produced tiny red fruits.
To ordinary eyes it was only a plant, yet its power was known to animals and people alike. Horses that grazed on Longqi became swift beyond measure, able to run thousands of miles in a single day. Because of this, people said that the grass carried the breath of dragons, and an old saying spread: a dragon plant can turn a horse into a dragon foal.
The grass was also valued for its medicinal qualities. It was said to be slightly cold in nature and not poisonous. When used as a remedy, it could drive out harmful forces from the heart, ease troubled urination, cure swelling and sores, and relieve rheumatism. Those who consumed it regularly were believed to grow stronger, their bodies becoming lighter, their sight and hearing sharper, and their lives longer.
Because it could be harvested, tied into bundles, and fed to horses, people also called it Dragon Fodder. Travelers and scholars wrote that wherever water met stone, the grass might be found, quietly growing while carrying the hidden strength of dragons within it.
Thus Longqi was remembered as a humble plant with extraordinary gifts — a grass that could grant speed, health, and long life to those who knew its secret.
Gallery
Sources
Wikipedia contributors. (n.d.). 龙剑. In Wikipedia. Retrieved March 1, 2026, from https://zh.wikipedia.org/wiki/龙剑
Interpretive Lenses
Religious Readings
- Christian Ascetic Deep Dive
Philosophical Readings
- Nietzschean Deep Dive
Psychological Readings
- Jungian Deep Dive
Esoteric Deep Dive
- Hermetic Deep Dive
Political / Social Readings
- Marxist Deep Dive