Vegetable lambs confuse me.
Apparently there was a Greek author called Theophrastus who first described them, or rather described small tress that grew wool in India and Arabia. They had no fruit but a pod containing wool about the size of a spring apple. Guess what that could be describing.
Though the word he used for "apple" was "mal-on" which could mean apple, fruit, or sheep. Many people translated it as "sheep" and legends of the lamb's tastiness came later.
I'm really confused. This doesn't seem like there are any known stories about it before the mistranslation. There don't seem to be sightings. Maybe it's an "all fiction exists somewhere" thing. Or an antique escaped thoughtform? I think a thoughtform would have more punch though, be more threatening or sexy.
Vegetable Lamb - Thougths and considerations
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I think that ancient Greek author was probably talking about cotton flowerscairngorn wrote: ↑Mon Apr 26, 2021 5:24 pm Vegetable lambs confuse me.
Apparently there was a Greek author called Theophrastus who first described them, or rather described small tress that grew wool in India and Arabia. They had no fruit but a pod containing wool about the size of a spring apple. Guess what that could be describing.
Though the word he used for "apple" was "mal-on" which could mean apple, fruit, or sheep. Many people translated it as "sheep" and legends of the lamb's tastiness came later.