MUmClD^. WHELK. 129 



gives the purple dye (therefore it would apply better to 

 the dog-whelk, Buccinum lapillus, or Purpura lapillus, 

 which yields a purple dye) ; thus, embroidered with 

 purple is weolc-basn-hewen ; scarlet dye is weolc-read. 

 In leS^ Purpura lapillus, the dog-whelk, was employed 

 for dyeing linen in Ireland ; and Neumann says that the 

 purple-fish was also found ou the coasts of Ireland, and 

 that some persons made considerable profit by marking 

 linen with its juices. 



The shell, which is very hard, is broken by a smart 

 blow, taking care not to crush the body of the fish 

 within. After picking off the broken pieces, there ap- 

 pears a white vein or reservoir, lying transversely in a 

 little furrow near the head. This being carefully taken 

 out, and characters drawn with it, or its viscid juice 

 squeezed upon linen or silk, the part immediately ac- 

 quires, on being exposed to the sun, a pale yellowish- 

 green, which quickly deepens into an emerald green, 

 then changes to a blue, and at last to a fine purplish- 

 red. If the cloth be now washed with scalding water 

 and soap, and laid again in the sun, the colour changes 

 to a beautiful crimson, which suffers no further altera- 

 tion from sun or air, soap, alum, alkaline leys, or any 

 of the substances used for assaying the permanency of 

 colours. 



The juice of the purple-fish receives no colour itself, 

 and communicates none to silk or linen, without expo- 

 sure to the sun. It seems to be the light, and not the 

 heat, of the sun, that calls forth the tincture ; for when 

 the cloth is covered with thin opake bodies, which trans- 

 mit heat without light, no colour is produced, while 

 transparent ones give no impediment to its produc- 

 tion. The juice, itself, in close glass vessels, becomes 



K 



