In the same gulf, there is the island of Tylos,[1] covered with
a forest[2] on the side which looks towards the East, where it
is washed also by the sea at high tides. Each of the trees
is in size as large as the fig; the blossoms are of an indescribable sweetness, and the fruit is similar in shape to a lupine,
but so rough and prickly, that it is never touched by any animal. On a more elevated plateau of the same island, we find
trees that bear wool, but of a different nature from those of the
Seres;[3] as in these trees the leaves produce nothing at all,
and, indeed, might very readily be taken for those of the vine,
(11.) This tree is known by the name of gossypinus:[5] the smaller island of Tylos, which is ten miles distant from the larger one, produces it in even greater abundance.
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