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Ch. 8: Pearl Fisheries of the British Isles

Ch. 8: Pearl Fisheries of the British Isles Page of 650 Ch. 8: Pearl Fisheries of the British Isles Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
EUROPEAN PEARL FISHERIES                   169
homes. These pearls have attracted attention up to the present time ; and while they do not compare with those of the seas, either in quality or in aggregate value, yet they are prized on account of their intrinsic \vorth as well as because they are a product of the fatherland. In the densely populated valleys, the rivers are so polluted by refuse and sewage that the mollusks have been greatly depleted ; but in the streams of clear, cool water, draining the mountain regions of France, Ger­many, Austria, and also in the rivers of Norway, Sweden, Russia, etc., the fisheries are not unimportant.
The most celebrated of the pearl fisheries in France are those of the Vologne, a small river in the extreme eastern part of the country, in the department of Vosges. Its sources are in Lake Longmere in the Vosges mountains on the Alsace frontier, and it flows into the Moselle at Jarmenil, between Remiremont and Épinal. While the pearl-mussel occurs to some extent in nearly the whole length of this river, and, in­deed, is to be met with in the wild brooks and forest streams of nearly all the mountainous parts of France, it is most abundant in the vicinity of Bruyères, where the Vologne receives the waters of the Neuré. These resources were described in 1845 by Ernest Puton,1 and in 1869 by D. A. Godron;2 to whom—and especially to Godron—we are in­debted for much of our information.
The fisheries of the Vologne have been celebrated for nearly four centuries. Writing in 1530, Volcyr stated: "In the river Vologne be­tween Arche and Bruyères, near the ancient castle of Perle, beautiful pearls are found. In the opinion of jewelers and artists they closely resemble the oriental." 3 A few years later Francis Reues wrote : "There is near the Vosges mountains in Lorraine a river fertile in pearls, yet they are not very brilliant. The strange thing is that the quality which they lack by nature is supplied by the aid of pigeons, which swallow them and restore them purer than before." 4 Ina pub­lication of 1609, this little river is represented in the frontispiece by the figure of a nymph bearing many pearls, while beneath is the em­blem : Vologna margaritifera suas margaritas ostentat.5
In his paper above noted, Godron recites several orders issued from 1616 to 1619 by the Duke of Lorraine, who then had jurisdiction over the present department of Vosges, showing that a high value was
Ch. 8: Pearl Fisheries of the British Isles Page of 650 Ch. 8: Pearl Fisheries of the British Isles
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