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184
PEARL.
per annum, the value of which is nearly £100,000. Although large quantities of these shells are consumed in inlaying fancy wood-work, papiermache and in making knife-haudles and other small ornamental objects, by far the greater por­tion is required for making buttons, chiefly in Birmingham.—British Xorth Borneo Herald.
To the Editor of the " British North Borneo Herali."
Sir,—Without wishing any criticism to be implied on the Early Notices of North Borneo and Sulu from Chinese Sources which were printed in your issue of the 1st instant, I should like to remark that I was especially struck by the weight of the pearl mentioned in the following passage :—" Id the year 1421 (a.d. is supposed to be understood) the mother of the Eastern Kiug (King of Sulu) sent to Court a brother of her late husband, called Faduka Suli; he presented as tribute a large pearl weighing more than seven taels." Now seven Chinese taels are equal 4,137 2/6 grains Troy, which if valued at the present valuation of pearls, presuming the pearl in question to have been of the first quality, would give the grand sum of £41,374. In the estim­ation of the Chinese it may have possessed a still higher value, seeing the fabulous prices they sometimes put on pearls. That which Julius Osesar presented to the mother of Marcus Brutus was valued at £13,417 10s; and the one which Cleopatra, in her desire to expend in one feast a larger sum than Mark Anthony had done in his most sumptuous feasts, swallowed with a draught of vinegar; cost about £60,729 35s 4d. The pearl obtained by Philip II of Spain in 15S7 from the island of Margarita off the Columbian Coast which weighed 250 carats or 800 grains was valued at 8150,000.
To those celebrated pearls just noted must now be added (if credence is to be placed in the Early Notices of Borneo and Sulu from Chinese Sources) the above remarkable one presented by a Queen of Sulu to the Hoag-Te of the Kingdom.— Yours, &e.                                                                                                 Ohin-Chu.
PEARLS AND PEARLING LIFE.
Pearls and Pearling Life. By Edwin VV. Streeter, f. r. a. s. e (London: George Bell and Sons, 1886.) The book before us, according to the preface, and as far as we aro aware, is the only work in the English language which is entirely devoted to the history of pearls. The introductory chapter is immediately followed by one which gives a brief historical account of pearls in connection with India, China, Persia, Palestine, Egypt, Ancient Greece and Italy, and Europe in the middle ages. This is succeeded by a resume of the ancient ideas respecting the origin and supposed medicinal qualities of pearls, and by a few words on "breeding" pearls. The next chapter treats of the different kinds of pearl-forming mollusks, both marine and fiuviatile. The writer then gives an account of the true mother-of-pearl shell, describing its geographical distrib­ution, the different varieties, its structure, the parasites found within the shells, and their external enemies, their method of getting rid of extraneous substances (stones, small shells, &c.) accidentally introduced within the valves of the shell, and the uses to which the mother-of-pearl is put. The sixth chapter, although headed "The Origin and Formation of Pearls," also refers to the different kinds, such as bouton pearls, baroque pearls, and coq de ferle, the mode of life of the oyster, the positions in which pearls are found, &c. It also treats of the qualities which regulate the value of pearls. The next chapter gives a short account of the Sooloo Archipelago, the natives as pearl divers, and their method of dredging. Then follows a good description of the fisheries of North-West Australia and Torres Strait, and this is succeeded by an interest­ing chapter entitled " Pearling Life at the Present Day," which is practically descriptive of pearling expeditions made by Mr. Streeter's vessel, the Ski lJas Sair, from Singapore to the North-West Australian coast and the Sooloo Arclii-palago. Chapter XL is devoted to a condensed account of the pearl-fisheries of Ceylon and Southern India, and this is followed by a resume of what is known respecting the fisheries in the Persian Gulf, (He Red Sea, on the west coast