Perhaps in coming in sight of the Strait, the ship of Don
Juan was so much in advance as barely to see the hulls of the rest; and
lay to till the rest came up. - E.]
Before leaving the Gulf of Arabia or of Mecca, it may be proper to
consider the reason why the ancients called this Gulf the Red Sea, and
to give my own opinion founded on what I actually saw, whether it differ
in colour from the great ocean. In the sixth book of his Natural
History, Pliny quotes several opinions as the origin of the name
Erythros given to this sea by the ancients[334]. The first is, that it
took its name from Erythra, a king who once reigned on its borders,
whence came Erythros which signifies red in the Greek. Another
opinion was that the reflexion of the sun-beams gave a red colour to
this sea. Some hold that the red colour proceeds from the sand and
ground along the sea coast, and others that the water was red itself. Of
these opinions every writer chose that he liked best. The Portuguese who
formerly navigated this sea affirmed that it was spotted or streaked
with red, arising as they alleged from the following circumstances. They
say that the coast of Arabia is naturally very red, and as there are
many great storms in this country, which raise great clouds of dust
towards the skies, which are driven by the wind into the sea, and the
dust being red tinges the water of that colour, whence it got the name
of the Red Sea.
[Footnote 334: By Dr. Hyde, in his notes on Peritsol, and Dr.
Cumberland, in his remarks on Sanchoniatho, and by other writers,
Erythros or Red is supposed to be a translation of Edom, the name
of Esau; whence it is conjectured that this sea, as well as the
country of Idumea, took their denominations from Edom. But this does
not seem probable for two reasons: First, because the Jews do not call
it the Red Sea but Tam Suf, or the Sea of Weeds; and, second,
the ancients included all the ocean between the coasts of Arabia and
India under the name of the Erythrean or Red Sea, of which the
Persian and the Arabian Gulfs were reckoned branches. - Ast. I. 129.
c.]
From leaving Socotora, till I had coasted the whole of this sea all
the way to Suez, I continually and carefully observed this sea; and
the colour and appearance of its shores, the result of which I shall now
state. First then, it is altogether false that the colour of this sea is
red, as it does not differ in any respect from the colour of other seas.
As to the dust driven by the winds from the land to the sea staining the
water; we saw many storms raise great clouds of dust and drive them to
the sea, but the colour of its water was never changed by these.
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