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VI THE PEARL FISHERIES OF THE PERSIAN GULF
Dear as the wet diver to the eyes Of his pale wife, who waits and weeps on shore, By sands of Bahrein in the Persian Gulf ; Plunging all day in the blue waves ; at night, Having made up his toll of precious pearls, Rejoins her in their hut upon the shore.
Sir Edwin Arnold.
T HE pearl fisheries of the Persian Gulf are the most famous and valuable in the world, and have been prosecuted for more than two thousand years. A translation by that eminent Assyriologist, Jules Oppert, of a cuneiform inscription on a broken obelisk, erected presumably by a king of Nineveh, seems to in­dicate a very early origin for these fisheries.1 Professor Oppert's translation is :
In the sea of the changeable winds (i.e., the Persian Gulf),
his merchants fished for pearls ;
In the sea where the North Star culminates,
they fished for yellow amber.
The earliest writing of Europeans on the East refer to these fish­eries. An account of them was given by the Greek writer Megas-thenes, who accompanied Seleucus Nicator, the Macedonian general, in his Asiatic conquests, about 307 b.c. Shortly afterward they were noted by the Greek historian, Isidorus of Charace, in his account of the Parthian Empire. Extracts from Nearchus preserved by Arrian also mention them. Ptolemy speaks of the pearl fisheries which ex­isted from time immemorial at Tylos, the Roman name for the present Island of Bahrein. These resources were well known in the days of Pliny. In his "Historia Naturalis," Book IX, ch. 35, he says: "But the most perfect and exquisite [pearls] of all others be they that are gotten about Arabia, within the Persian Gulf." 2 Pliny states also
1 Oppert, " L 'Ambre jaune chez les Assyriens."          2 Holland's edition of 1601, p. 254.
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