[The Coming Race by Edward Bulwer Lytton]@TWC D-Link book
The Coming Race

CHAPTER XXIII
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Its fleece is not thick, but very long and fine; it varies in colour, but is never white, more generally of a slate-like or lavender hue.

For clothing it is usually worn dyed to suit the taste of the wearer.

These animals were exceedingly tame, and were treated with extraordinary care and affection by the children (chiefly female) who tended them.
We then went through vast storehouses filled with grains and fruits.
I may here observe that the main staple of food among these people consists--firstly, of a kind of corn much larger in ear than our wheat, and which by culture is perpetually being brought into new varieties of flavour; and, secondly, of a fruit of about the size of a small orange, which, when gathered, is hard and bitter.

It is stowed away for many months in their warehouses, and then becomes succulent and tender.

Its juice, which is of dark-red colour, enters into most of their sauces.
They have many kinds of fruit of the nature of the olive, from which delicious oils are extracted.


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