Cassia[1] is a shrub also, which grows not far from the plains
where cinnamon is produced, but in the mountainous localities; the branches of it are, however, considerably thicker than
those of cinnamon. It is covered with a thin skin rather than
a bark, and, contrary to what is the case with cinnamon, it
is looked upon as the most valuable when the bark falls off
and crumbles into small pieces. The shrub is three cubits in
height, and the colours which it assumes are threefold: when
it first shoots from the ground, for the length of a foot, it is
white; after it has attained that height, it is red for half a
foot, and beyond that it is black. This last is the part that
is held in the highest esteem, and next to it the portion that
comes next, the white part being the least valued of all. They
cut the ends of the branches to the length of two fingers, and
(20.) To these varieties the dealers have added another, which they call daphnoides,[4] and give it the surname of isocinnamon;[5] the price at which it sells is three hundred denarii per pound. It is adulterated with storax, and, in consequence of the resemblance of the bark, with very small sprigs of laurel. Cassia is also planted in our[6] part of the world, and, indeed, at the extreme verge of the Empire, on the banks of the river Rhenus, where it flourishes when planted in the vicinity of hives of bees. It has not, however, that scorched colour which is produced by the excessive heat of the sun; nor has it, for the same reason, a similar smell to that which comes from the south.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.