EUROPEAN PEARL FISHERIES 185
only
difference is that, in the case of the wealthy, the pearls are larger,
and sometimes a number of small pearls and precious stones are
suspended here and there, set in the same way as the ear-rings of our
ladies. It is common for them to wear half their fortune on their heads
in this way. For these caps generally cost from five hundred to one
thousand roubles, and many are worth five or six thousand and even
more; they wear them every day, holidays as well as ordinary days, and
strut around the kitchens and cellars with their "mushka." They spend
their last penny in order to secure such a pearl-cap, and even when
they are clad in rags their head is covered with pearls. In order to
furnish the requisite material for this wide-spread fashion, the
commerce in pearls of Odessa, Taganrog and some other places in
southern Russia is not unimportant. There may live in the region where
the pearl-caps of which I speak are worn at least 2,000,000 Jewesses.
Let us estimate that among them there are but 300,000 adults, and that
only half of these, 150,000, wear pearl-caps (only the most indigent
and the most aristocratic do not wear the "mushka") ; let us then
estimate the average value of such a cap at only five hundred
roubles—these are the lowest minima and fall far short of the real
figures—and we have a total capital of 76,000,000 roubles, which the
Jewesses of this region wear upon their heads. Naturally the annual
diminution of this capital is small, since these pearls are transmitted
from the mothers to their daughters and granddaughters. Still, if we
estimate that they last for a century, the necessary yearly
contribution amounts to nearly one million. It is, however, probable
that a much larger capital is employed in the commerce of pearls. They
are, for the most part, oriental and come by way of Turkey and Odessa
or else by way of Armenia and Tiflis. We inquired of our beautiful
Jewess whether she was not in perpetual dread on account of her
pearl-cap, and how she protected it from thieves. She answered that she
wore it on her head all day and at night placed it in a casket which
rested under her pillow. So that the whole short life of these Jewesses
of the steppes revolves around their pearl-cap as the earth does around
the sun.1
Several
species of marine mollusks on the coasts of Europe yield pearly
formations, but none of much ornamental or commercial value. Probably
the most interesting of these are from the Pinna on the Mediterranean
coasts, and especially on the coast of Sardinia and the shores of the
Adriatic. An interesting collection of these Pinna pearls was furnished
to the writers by Alexandro Castellani of Rome.
1 Kohl, "Reisen in Südrussland," 2nd edition, Leipzig, 1846, Vol. I, p. 15.