
Note: this is an ancient form of the table, as you can see from the not-so-clear brushstrokes. The added "ye" kana wasn't actually ever used in Japanese, rather the kana was scraped before the syllable system was used. It is an ancient sôsho form of 江, which at that time was pronounced [je], but is now simply [e]. The [je] sound merged with the [e] sound ages ago in Japan, as you can see from some old Japanese city names (like Ebisu, once called Yebisu, as you can tell by the "Yebisu" beer company, which kept it's name; even though they use the katakana [we] for [je], oddly). For more information see: 二つの「え」の話. Happy studying!
(It appears i have forgoten the syllabic "n" symbol, sorry. But you can find that symbol anyway, the point of this table is the consonant/vowel combination)