Nor is it by any means agreed what is the appearance of
the incense-tree. We have sent several expeditions against
Arabia, and the Roman arms have penetrated into the greater
part of that country; indeed, Caius Cæsar,[1] the son of Augustus, even earned considerable renown there; and yet this tree
has been described by no Latin writer, at least that I know
of. The descriptions given of it by the Greek writers vary
very considerably: some of them say that it has exactly the
leaf of the pear-tree, only somewhat smaller, and of a grass-green colour. Others, again, say, that it has a rather reddish
leaf, like that of the mastich, and others, that it is a kind of
terebinth,[2] and that King Antigonus, to whom a branch of it
was brought, was of that opinion. King Juba, in the work
which he wrote and dedicated to Caius Cæsar, the son of
Augustus, who was inflamed by the wide-spread renown of
Arabia, states, that the tree has a spiral stem, and that the
branches bear a considerable resemblance to those of the Pontic
maple, while it secretes a sort of juice very similar to that of
1.
2.