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Still more wonderful is the mode in which they collect the cinnamon.
Where the wood grows, and what country produces it, they cannot tell
- only some, following probability, relate that it comes from the
country in which Bacchus was brought up. Great birds, they say,
bring the sticks which we Greeks, taking the word from the
Phoenicians, call cinnamon, and carry them up into the air to make
their nests. These are fastened with a sort of mud to a sheer face of
rock, where no foot of man is able to climb. So the Arabians, to
get the cinnamon, use the following artifice. They cut all the oxen
and asses and beasts of burthen that die in their land into large
pieces, which they carry with them into those regions, and Place near
the nests: then they withdraw to a distance, and the old birds,
swooping down, seize the pieces of meat and fly with them up to their
nests; which, not being able to support the weight, break off and
fall to the ground. Hereupon the Arabians return and collect the
cinnamon, which is afterwards carried from Arabia into other countries.
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