Chap. 54.] PEARLS. 431 



world ; Perimnla," also, a promontory of India. But those 

 are most highly valued which are found in the vioinity of 

 Arabia," in the Persian Gulf, which forms a part of the Eed 

 Sea. 



The origin" and production of the shell-fish is not very dif- 

 ferent from that of the shell of the oyster. When the genial 

 season of the year" exercises its influence on the animal, ilk is 

 said that, yawning, as it were, it opens its shell, and bq receives 

 a kind of dew, by means of which it becomes impregnated ; 

 and that at length it gives birth, after many struggles, to the 

 burden of its shell, in the shape of pearls, which vary accord- 

 ing to the quaMty of the dew. If this has been in a perfectly 

 pure state when it flowed into the shell, then the pearl pro- 

 duced is white and brilliant, but if it was turbid, then the 

 pearl is of a clouded colour also ; if the sky should happen to 

 have been lowering when it was generated, the pearl wiU be 

 of a paUid colour ; from all which it is quite evident that the 

 quality of the pearl depends much more upon a cahn state of 

 the heavens than of the sea, and hence it ia that it contracts a 

 cloudy hue, or a limpid appearance, according to the degree of 

 serenity of the sky in the morning. 



If, again, the fish is satiated in a reasonable time, then the 

 pearl produced increases rapidly in size. If it should happen 

 to lighten at the time, the animal shuts its shell, and the pearl 

 is diminished in size in proportion to the fast that the animal 

 has to endure : but if, in addition to this, it should thun- 



'8 See B. vi. o. 23. ^lian, Hist. Anim. B. xv. c. 8, says to the same 

 effect, but calls it " Perimuda, a city of India." 



" .^lian, Hist. Anim. B. x. c. 13. It has been already remarked, in the 

 sixth Book, that the ancients looked upon the Persian Gulf as forming 

 part of the ErythraBan or Bed Sea. 



'8 The pearl itself, Curier says, is nothing else but an extravasation, so 

 to say, of the juices, whose duty it is to line the interior of the shell, to 

 thicken and so amplify it ; and consequently, it is produced by a malsidy. 

 It is possible, he says, for them to be found in all shell-fish ; but they have 

 no beauty in them, unless the interior of the shell, the nacre, or, as we call 

 it, the mother of pearl, is lustrous and beautiful itself. Hence it is, that 

 the finest of them come from the east, and are furnished by the kind of 

 bivalve, called by Linnaeus, " Mytilus margaridferus," which has the most 

 beautiful mother of pearl in the interior that is known. The parts of the 

 Indian sea which are mentioned by Pliny, are those in which the pearl 

 oyster is stiE found iu the greatest abundance. 



•' All this theory, as Cuvier says, is totally imaginary. 



