Sor Bares he Sea NS | ALBERT RL MANN LIBRARY AY CORNELL UNEVERSTPY ornell University Library The edible mollusks of Great Britain and THE EDIBLE MOLLU SKS or GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND. i del._GB Sowerby, Jith. “Ancent Brooks ,Imp ‘ 1&2. Helix -Pomatia_Apple or Vine snail. 3&4. Helix Nemoralis_Wood snail ; 5. Hehx Aspersa—Common Garden snail. & Hehx Pisana—the Banded snaul. THE EDIBLE MOLLUSKS OF GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND WITH RECIPES FOR COOKING THEM. BY MS. LOVELI, ‘And the recipes and different modes of dressing I am prepared to teach the world for nothing, 4 If men are only wise enough to learn.” Atheneus, Deipnos. Bk. iii. ¢, 69. wy LONDON: REEVE & CO., 5, HENRIETTA STREET, COVENT GARDEN. 1867. Le PREFACE. In these days, when attention has been so much di- rected towards the cultivation of the common kinds of eatable shell-fish, it is surprising that the importance of certain others for food has been hitherto almost en- tirely overlooked. We understand the good qualities of oysters, cockles, and a few other kinds; but some equally nutritious (which are universally eaten on the Continent) are seldom, if ever, seen in our markets, or are only used locally as food, and the proper modes of cooking them are scarcely known. I have therefore endeavoured to call attention to all the eatable species common on our coasts, and also to those which, though not found here in abundance, might be cultivated as easily as oysters, and form valuable articles of food. M. 8S. Lovett. PRINTED BY H. TAYLOR AND CO., WTTLE QUEEN STREET, LINCOLN’S INN FIELDS, CONTENTS. HELICIDE , CARDIADE . SOLENIDE . CYPRINIDE MYTILIDE . OSTREADE . PECTINIDE . HALIOTIDE . PATELLID & ele! ce “4 MURICIDE LITTORINID.Z AVICULIDE VENERIDE . TELLINIDE . A ‘ MACTRIDE . MYADZ . PHOLADIDE SEPIADE : CIDARIDE LIST OF WORKS REFERRED TO OR CONSULTED INDEX ILLUSTRATIONS. Prats I. (Froutispiece.) 1 & 2. 3&4. 5 6 Puate Il. 1. 2 Prats IIT. 1. 2 Prats IV. Prats V. 1. 2 Puate VI. Puate VII. 1. 2. Helix pomatia.—Apple or Vine Snail. Helix nemoralis.—Wood Snail. . Helix aspersa.—Common Garden Snail. . Helix Pisana.—Banded Snail. Cardium edule-—Common Cockle. . Cardium rusticum.—Red-nose Cockle. Mya truncata.—Gaper. . Solen siliqua.—Razor-shell. Isocardia Cor.—Heart-shell, or Oxhorn Cockle. Mytilus edulis.—Common Mussel. . Ostrea edulis.—Oyster. Pinna pectinata.—Sea-wing. Tapes pullastra.—Pullet. Venus verrucosa.—Warty Venus. Prats VITI. 1. Psammobia vespertina.—The Setting Sun. Prats IX. Puate X. Prats XII. poh por vo . Mactra solida.—Trough-shell. Pecten opercularis.—Painted Scallop. . Pecten maximus.—Scallop. . Haliotis tuberculata.—Ormer, or Ear-shell. . Patella vulgata.—Limpet. Prats XI. 1. 2&3. Buccinum undatum.—Whelk. Littorina littorea.—Periwinkle. Pholas dactylus.—Piddock or Clam. EDIBLE BRITISH MOLLUSKS. SNAILS, COCKLES, RAZOR-SHELLS, ETC. Fam. HELICID/. HELIX.—SNAIL. Hetrx pomatia, Linnzeus. Apple Snail._—Shell glo- bular, strong, large, covered with coarse longitudinal strie, 5 volutions, convex; spire short, and the apex blunt; pale cream-colour, with rufous bands; the colu- mella arched ; and of a pale purplish-pink ; the outer lip dark reddish-brown ; mouth almost round. Heurx aspersa, Linneus. Garden Snail.—Shell opaque, nearly globular, 4 to 43 volutions, the last much larger, occupying nearly two-thirds of the shell; mouth nearly ovate; spire short, with a blunt point; the outer lid white, with dark-brown bands or mottlings, subject to great variety of markings; epidermis yellowish-green, and thick. Hewix nemorais, Linneus. Wood Snail_—Shell im- perforate, globular, whorls 5, more or less covered with minute spiral strie ; mouth pyriform; inner margin of ie B w 2 EDIBLE BRITISH MOLLUSKS. lip of a rich, dark chocolate-brown ; in variety hortensis mouth has a white lip. Colours various; yellow, yellow with brown bands, pink, pink and brown, dark choco- late, with darker bands of the same colour, and white. Heurx pisana, Linneus. The Banded Snail.—Shell rather depressed and nearly globular, of a pale yellow- ish-white, with spiral bands of a dark chocolate-brown, which are not always joined together, giving the shell a speckled or streaky appearance ; whorls 5 or 54; mouth pink, and rather large. Varieties nearly white, and also others with the bands of a chestnut-colour, and scarcely to be distinguished. Helix pomatia is the largest of our land snails, being about 13 inches in breadth and length, and is found in Kent, Surrey, Gloucestershire, and other southern coun- ties; and a specimen was met with some time since in a lane near Exmouth, which I believe to be a new locality for it. Some curiousreversed specimens are occasionally found in France, and one variety particularly struck me, which was exhibited in the Museum at the Jardin des Plantes, in Paris. It was something the shape of a Buccinum, the whorls rounded and swollen, and six in number. A beautiful white variety is also found, but rarely, in the environs of Clermont. It is supposed by some to have been originally introduced into England by Sir Kenelm Digby, as food or medicine for his wife, who was suf- fering from consumption; others say that the Romans introduced it; but Mr. Jeffreys believes it to be indi- genous, and observes (in his ‘ British Conchology ’) “that it is not found in many parts of England and Wales where the Romans built cities or had important military stations.” Archeologists often find snail-shells in great abun- HELICID#.—SNAIL. 3 dance, however, in excavating on the sites of Roman stations, and at Lymne, in Kent (Portus Lemanis), Mr. Wright has seen them dug up in masses almost as large as ordinary buckets, and completely embedded to- gether.* In France also empty shells of the apple snail have been met with amongst the ruins of Roman villas, in the neighbourhood of Auch, Agen, and in Pro- vence; and in the Danish “kjékkenméddings,” Helix nemoralis has been found in small quantities. As a medicine, snails were recommended for other diseases besides consumption, and Helix aspersa, the common garden snail, was generally used. In a quaint old book, entitled ‘A Rich Storehouse or Treasurie for the Diseased, wherein are many ap- proved medecines for divers and sundrie diseases which have been longe hidden, and not come to light before this time; first set forth for the benefit of the poorer sorte of people that are not of abilitie to goe to the Phy- sicians,’ by Master Ralph Bower, we find :—‘ Snales which bee in shells, beat together with bay salt and mallowes, and laid to the bottomes of your feet, and to the wristes of your hands, before the fit commeth, ap- peaseth the ague.” Again:—‘“ Take 20 garden snailes, and beate them (shelles and all) in a morter, untill you perceiue them to be come to a salue; then spread a little thereof upon a linnen cloath, and lay it to the place grieued, and when one plaister is dry, then take that of, and put on another, and it will both heale the sore place and draw it.”’ For corns, he recommends “ blacke sope and snailes, of each a like quantitie, stampe them togi- ther, and make a plaister thereof, and spread it upon a piece of fine linnen cloth, or else upon a piece of white * ‘The Celt, the Roman, and the Saxon.’ B2 4 EDIBLE BRITISH MOLLUSKS. Leather, and lay it upon the corne, and it will take it cleane away within 7 dayes space. “ An other soueraigne Medecine for a Web in the eye. —Take a good quantitie of snailes with their shells upon them, and wash them very well, and then distill them in a common Stillatorie; then take of the galles of Hares, Red Currail, and Suger-candie, and mingle them toge- ther with the said water, and then distill them againe; then take the same water, and put it into a glasse or viall, and when you will use it, take a drop thereof, and put it into your eyes both morning and evening, and it will help you.” Dr. Fulier, in his ‘ Pharmacopeia,’ recommends snails in scorbutic affections, and gives the following recipe for @ consumption :— “ Snail-water Pectoral_—Take snails beaten to a mash with their shells 3 pound; crum of white bread, new- baked, 12 ounces; nutmeg, 6 drams; ground-ivy, 6 handfulls ; whey, 3 quarts; distill it in a cold still, with- out burning. If I would have this water not so abso- lutely cold, I add brandy half a pint or a pint. This water humects, dilutes, supplies, tempers, nourishes, comforts, and therefore is highly conducive in hectic consumptive emaciations.” In Dr. John Quincy’s ‘ Pharmacopeia Officinalis, or a complete English Dispensatory,’ are the following :— * Decoctum Limacum, or decoction of snails.—Take garden snails, cleansed from their shells, no. 12; red cows’ milk, new, two pounds; boil to a pound; and add rose-water, an ounce; sugar-candy, half-an-ounce. “It will be very difficult to boil this so long as to waste one-half, because it will be apt both to run over and burn to the bottom, and therefore must be stirred HELICIDZ.—SNAIL. 5 all the while; this quantity is ordered to be drank every morning, and is a noble restorative in consumptions, es- pecially for young people.” “ Decoctum Antiphthisicum, a Decoction against con- sumptions.—Take ox-eye daisy flowers, dried, a handful ; snails, washed clean, numb. 3; candied eryngo-root, half an ounce; pearl-barley, 2 ounces: boil in spring-water from a pound to half a pound, and then strain for use. “This brings a supply of such soft and inoffensive nourishment, as gives no trouble to a weak constitution, and therefore is of service in consumptions, hectic fevers, etc. ete. The patient must drink 4 ounces of this warm, with an equal quantity of milk, twice a day.” In Ireland the snail or “shellimidy” was recom- mended for many diseases, and ‘‘a water distilled from shell-snails in canary wine, in the month of May, isa great restorative in consumptions; also strengthens the liver; outwardly applied it is a cosmetic; it beautifies the face, and the volatile oil and spirit extracted from snails resist poison, open all manner of obstructions, cure the pleurisy, asthma, most disorders of the lugs, and, after a wonderful manner, the consumption. Dose of the volatile salt, from grains 6 to 12; of the spirit * from 30 to 40 drops.’’* The following recipes are from an old manuscript book; but though snails might be tolerated, I doubt any person having sufficient courage to try them with the addition of earthworms ! “ For a Consumption.—Take 12 snails, better house snails, and 12 earthworms, clean washed ; boil them ina pint of new milk to half a pint, then pour it on 1 ounce of eryngo-root. Take some every night and morning.” * ‘Zoologia Medicinalis Hibernica,’ by John Keogh. 6 EDIBLE BRITISH MOLLUSKS. “ Mock Asses’ Milk.—One pound of snails layed in salt and water for 2 days, and then cleaned and washed, a quarter of a pound of barley, 3 pennyworth of eryngo- root; boil all the above together till they become a jelly, and let them be strained off. Half a pint night and morning for a grown person, and 3 of a pitt for a child. It must be taken warm, and a little milk and sugar added after it is warmed. It is an excellent remedy for consumption and any weakness.” “ For a Consumption.—24 garden snails, 2 sheeps’ trotters, half an ounce of comfrey-root, one quart of spring-water, a quart of milk; boil all together till re- duced to half the quantity; take a cup of this night and morning.” “ For a Swelling on the Joints.—Take 3 handfulls of shell snails (off a rabbit-warren), pound them very fine, and mix them with some new milk (not too thin); put them between two pieces of fine linen cloth, and apply them on the part. This is to be applied once a day, or as often as it gets dry.” A modern authority, Francatelli, gives the following recipe in his ‘ Cook’s Guide ’:— Mucilaginous Broth.—Put a cut-up chicken, a pound of veal cutlet, and a calf’s foot into a stewpan, with 3 pints of water, boil and skim; then add a dozen cray- fish and a pint of garden snails, both bruised raw in a mortar; add also a handful of balm, burrage and chervil, 3 ounces of prepared Iceland moss, and a small quan- tity of salt. The broth must boil very gently by the side of the fire for about two hours without much re- duction, and when done is to be strained into a basin for use. Note.~-This is a powerful demulcent, and is much in HELICIDA,.—SNAIL. 7 use in France in cases of phthisis, zatarrh, bronchitis, etc. ete. Oil of Black Snails—Spanish Cure for Consumption. —Make a flannel bag of a triangular shape (like a jelly bag), fit the corner into a wide-mouthed bottle, fill it with black snails in the hottest time of the year; tie up the mouth, and suspend bottle and bag on a wall, the hottest you can find. The proper place is the sunny angle of a wall where the south and west sun fall longest. The snails will give out a larger quantity of frothy liquid, which will drain into the bottle: cork it close for use, and give a teaspoonful at a time, three or four times a day, in milk or any other liquid. The common garden snail, Helix aspersa, also gives out a frothy liquid which might be collected in the same manner, and used with benefit by consumptive patients. The friend who kindly gave me the above recipe tells me that these black snails resemble H. aspersa, but the colour is much darker, and at a distance looks almost black. In an old English medical book, date 1756, syrup of snails is recommended for coughs, weaknesses, etc., and is made by hanging snails up in a bag, with some sugar, by which means the syrup drops into a ves- sel placed to receive it. Popular Spanish Cure for the Headache.—Make a poultice of bruised snails. They must be broken up with their shells and put into a piece of linen folded 4 times so as to make it thick, dip it in brandy, and squeeze it tolerably dry; then apply it to the forehead. M. Figuier remembers when studying botany in the garden of the School of Medicine, as a youth, at Mont- pellier, seeing the celebrated tenor singer, M. Laborde, every morning partake of live snails, as he was suffering 8 EDIBLE BRITISH MOLLUSKS. from a weak chest. M. Figuier assisted in finding the suails in the holes in the garden wall, and under leaves, and M. Laborde crushed the mollusks with a stone, pick- ing off the pieces of broken shells, then rolling the fish in powdered sugar swallowed them. The remedy was evidently efficacious, as twenty years later M. Laborde still held his position as tenor, and sang at the theatre at Brussels and also at the opera in Paris.* In the ‘ Meddygon Myddvai,’ published by the Welsh MSS. Society, the following recipes are found :— For an Impostume (whitlow).—Take a snail out of its shell, and bruising it small, pound it into a plaster and apply it to the finger; it will ripen and break it, and it should then be dressed like any other wound. For “a patient who is burnt ” it recommends a plaster of mallows, snail-shells, pennywort, and linseed pounded, and applied until the part is healed without even uncovering it. In olden times it was supposed that the small grits of sand found in the horns of snails, introduced into hollow teeth, removed the pain instantaneously; and that the ashes of empty snail-shells mixed with myrrh were good for the gums. (Pliny’s Nat. Hist. vol. v. p. 431.)+ Pliny also recommends “snails beaten up raw and taken in 3 cyathiof warm water for a cough,” and a-snail diet for internal pains, the snails to be cooked as fol- lows :—“ They must first be left to simmer in water for some time without touching the cuntents of the shell ; after which, without any other addition, they must be grilled upon hot coals, and eaten with wine and garum ” (chap. 15, book xxx.), (a kind of fish-sauce). * ‘La Vie et les Mceurs des Animaus,’ p. 386. + Throughout this volume I have used the translations of Pliny and Atheneus, in Bohn’s series of Classical Authors. HELICIDA.—SNAIL. 9 Again, that a kind of small, white, elongated snail, dried upon tiles in the sun and reduced to powder, then mixed with bean-meal in equal proportions, forms a cos- metic for whitening and softening the skin. I have been told that a large trade in snails is carried on for Covent Garden market in the Lincolnshire Fens, and that they are sold at 6d. per quart, and upon further inquiry J find that snails are still much used for con- sumptive patients and weakly children ; also as salves for corns put between ivy leaves; and as food for birds. In the manufacture of “cream” they are also much em- ployed, bruised in milk and boiled, and a “retired” milkman pronounced it the most successful imitation known. It appears that not only are the Helicide nourishing to the human species, but that they have a beneficial effect upon sheep, giving a richness to the flavour of the muttun. Mr. Jeffreys, in his ‘British Conchology,’ quotes the following passage from Borlase’s ‘ Natural History of Cornwall ’—‘‘ The sweetest mutton is reckoned to be that of the smallest sheep, which usually feed on the commons where the sands are scarcely covered with the green-sod, and the grass exceedingly short; such are the towens or sand-hillocks in Piran-sand, Gwythian, Philne, and Senan Green, near the Land’s End, and else- where in like situations. From these sands come forth snails of the turbinated kind, but of different species, and all sizes, from the adult to the smallest just from the egg ; these spread themselves over the plains early in the morning, and whilst they are in quest of their own food among the dews, yield a most fattening nourish- ment to the sheep.” Birds also are great eaters of snails. Lister mentions 10 EDIBLE BRITISH MOLLUSKS. the partiality of thrushes for Helix nemoralis ; and owing to the scarcity of this species in South Derbyshire, I have twice brought a large basketful of live specimens from Staffordshire, and turned them out, hoping they would thrive and increase ; but I have not only found the dead and broken shells, but constantly disturbed the feathered depredators themselves at their repast. Helix arbus- torum I have also tried, but with the same success ; they fared no better than the other kind. There is a true saying “ that there is nothing on earth so small that it may not produce great things.”* Thus, the sacred geese at Rome by their cackling awoke Marcus Manlius, and thereby saved the Capitol from the Gauls, who were attempting by night to surprise the garrison; and even such insignificant creatures as snails were the cause of the following disaster to a Numidian king:—A castle on a lofty and steep rock, into which Jugurtha had carried all his treasures, had long been besieged in vain by Marius, when a Ligurian in the Roman army, climbirg up the rocks in quest of snails, was led to continue his search for them, till he had nearly reached the summit, and thus found that the ascent was practicable ; and on reporting this fact to Marius, having been ordered to lead a chosen band up the same part of the rocks, he and his comrades so alarmed the garrison by their unexpected appearance that they gave up the castle to the besiegers. The Romans were very partial to snails as an article of food, and fed them till they grew to a large size. Several sorts are mentioned by Pliny, aud they were all kept separate ; amongst others, white ones that were found in the neighbourhood of Rieti. He describes the Illyrian * Proverbial Philosophy. HELICID#,—SNAIL. 11 snails as the largest, the African as the most prolific ; others from Soletum, in the Neapolitan territory, as the noblest and best. He also speaks of some as attaining to so enormous a size that their shells would contain 80 pieces of money of the common currency,* that is to say, 80 quadrantes, the quadrans being a small copper coin } of an inch in diameter, about the size of a new sixpence, and 5'; of an inch thick. This statement of Pliny’s is really not so improbable as may appear at first sight, for on trying how many sixpences a usual- sized specimen of our largest snail, Helix pomatia, would hold, I find that about 40 could easily be put into it; and in the museum of the Jardin des Plantes, in Paris, there are two specimens of this Helix from Mol- davia, nearly twice the size of the usual ones, measuring about 27 inches in breadth, and which would easily hold 80 sixpences. Fulvius Hirpinus studied the art of fattening them with so much success, that some of his snails would contain about 10 quarts. Pliny, in his letter to Sextus Erucius Clarus, says (complaining of his not fulfilling his engagement to sup with him) :—‘I had prepared, you must know, a lettuce apiece, three snails, two eggs and a barley cake, with some sweet wine and snow.” + In Sir Gardner Wilkinson’s ‘ Dalmatia and Monte- negro,’ he tells us that the Illyrian snails mentioned by Plinyt are very numerous in Veglia or Veggia, the Cyractica of Strabo. Both Helix pomatia and Helix aspersa are eaten abroad to this day, and in England Dr.Gray says§ that the glass- * Kirby’s Hist. of Animals, etc., ‘Bridgewater Treatise,’ vol. i. p. 284. + Pliny’s Letters, p. 30, vol. i. ft Pliny, ix. 56. § Blackwood’s Edin. Mag., no. 561, July, 1862. 12 EDIBLE BRITISH MOLLUSKS. men at Newcastle indulge themselves in a snail-feast once a year, and collect them from the fields and hedge- rows on the Sunday previous.* Addison, in his Travels, mentions having seen a snail garden, or “ escargotiére,”’ at the Capucins, in Friburg. It was a square place boarded in, filled with a vast quantity of large snails. The floor was strewn about half a foot deep with several kinds of plants, for the snails to nestle amongst during the winter. When Lent arrived, their magazines were opened, and a ragoat made of snails. “« Escargotiéres,” or snail gardens, have been in use for a length of time in various parts of Europe. Dr. Ebrard, in his pamphlet, ‘ Des Escargots,’ states that M. Fischer, of Bordeaux, mentions those of Brunswick, Silesia, and Copenhagen, which latter furnished snails for the tables of the noble Danes in the eighteenth cen- tury. In Barrois, an “escargotiére’” consists of a cask with the head staved in, covered with a net; or a square hole with the sides lined with wood, and fastened over at the top with an iron trellis, or with a simple hurdle made of light osier-sticks. The snails are placed in as they find them, until there are sufficient for a repast, or for sale. They are also kept in these places till they are fattened, or till they close their shells with their epi- phragm, which enables them to be more easily trans- ported. In Lorraine, a corner of the garden is often given up to the snails, surrounded with a fine trellis-work to prevent their escaping, and all kinds of vegetables are placed inside which are most appreciated by them. During the winter, the “escargots” (their shells * Since the above was written, a correspondent of ‘ Land and Water’ says the glassmen’s snail feast, at Newcastle, no longer exists. HELICID#.—SNAIL. 13 being closed with their epiphragm) are kept in pots, jars, or baskets, in a dry cold place. The vine-growers in the neighbourhood of Dijon keep them in a dry cellar, or else dig a trench in the vine-slopes, and place at the bottom some leaves, and then their snails, covering them with more leaves and a few spadefuls of earth. In Silesia, the snails are fed with marjoram, wild thyme, and aromatic plants, to give them a flavour. Ulm, in Wiirtemherg, is celebrated for its “ escargo- tiéres,” and, according to Marteni, “‘more than 10 mil- lions of Helix pomatia are sent away to different gardens and ‘escargotiéres”’ to fatten, and when ready for table are sent to various convents in Austria for consumption during Lent. Helicide are considered rather poor food, and therefore suitable as Lenten fare; and this peculiarity has given rise to a singular custom near Bordeaux, mentioned by M. Fischer, who tells us that every year crowds of people direct their steps towards the township of Canderan, to end the Carnival with gaiety, and to have a foretaste of Lent by feasting on snails. The consumption is considerable, and a dish of 25 snails costs 1 franc 50 centimies. A friend told me he had often seen the large apple- snail on the dinner table at Vienna; they were served up plain, boiled in their shells, or stuffed with forcemeat. At Naples, snails are generally kept in bran for a week or two, or for two or three days, before they are con- sidered good for the table. They live on the bran, which is said to fatten them. When first the snails are gathered from the hedges, etc., it is a necessary precaution to starve them for a few days, and not to eat them at once, as they feed on poi- 14 EDIBLE BRITISH MOLLUSKS. sonous plants, such as the deadly nightshade, poppy, datura, black nightshade (Solanum nigrum), etc., cases of poisoning by snails having occurred where they had been gathered near, or had fed upon these noxious plants. It is a mistake to suppose that the only snails used as food are the Helix pomatia and Helix aspersa.* These are naturally preferred on account of their larger size, which makes them less troublesome to eat; but a variety of small kinds of snails, fifteen species in all, including those above mentioned, are also employed in cookery on the Continent, and there is no reason why they should not be as good as the others, nor is there any reason why we should not use snails, and many other molluscous animals, which we now throw aside, but which are doubtless quite as palatable and as wholesome as other kinds which our prejudices permit us to indulge in. M. le Docteur Ebrard, in his ‘Des Escargots, au point de vue de |’Alimentation, de la Viticulture et de VHorticulture,” gives an interesting account of the use of snails both for food and medicine, and he tells us that during a sojourn of some weeks at Hyéres, in the month of April, he was struck by seeing suspended at the side of the door of each cottage, a rush basket of a peculiar form. He was curious to find out the contents, and on looking into one he found it full of snails. At the sight of these creatures he made a slight move- ment of disdain, which was perceived by the master of the house, who said, “These snails disgust you, but we ' * Helix aspersa has » variety of names in France, and in the north it is called colimayon, jardiniére, and aspergille; at Montpellier, cara- guolo; in Bordelais, cagouille, limaou, and limat; in Provence, escar- got and escourgol ; at Avignon, caragoou and contar ; banarut at Arles ; and bajaina at Grasse.—Dr. Ebrard. HELICIDZ.—SNAIL. 15 poor country people eat no other meat all the year, ex- cept at Easter.” Dr. Ebrard adds that, during the famine of 1816 and 1817, snails were most valuable articles of food to the inhabitants of Central France; again, that from the coasts of Saintonge and Aunis, snails have been for a long time exported in casks to Senegal and the Antilles; and that M. Valmont-Bomard saw the peasants, in the neighbourhood of La Rochelle, gathering an immense quantity of small snails, to send to America, in casks filled with branches of trees, crossed again and again, so that the snails might be able to attach themselves firmly, and not be much shaken during the transport. Helix aperta, which is not known in England, but is figured in Messrs. Forbes and Hanley’s ‘ British Concho- logy,’ from a dead specimen having been found in Guern- sey, in 1839, is highly esteemed amongst real connois- seurs of snails, and is found in Provence (where it is called by the Provencaux tapada, tapa, or tapet), in some parts of Italy, and in the islands of the Mediterranean. M. Mogquin-Tandontells us that vessels regularly visited the coasts of Liguria, in search of considerable quantities of Helix aperta, for food for the higher classes at Rome.* The shell is of a yellowish-olive colour and nearly translu- ecut, thin, and of an ovate-globular form. It has a large mouth, with the peristome white, and the whorls four in number. In the heat of summer and during the winter this Helix, like Helix pomatia, buries itself in holes in the ground, shutting up the aperture of its shell with a white calcareous epiphragm. Two of the specimens we have in our collection, which were sent from Italy, still have this epiphragm very perfectly preserved, and it * At Rome, Helia aperta is called Monacello. 16 EDIBLE BRITISH MOLLUSKS. is very glossy and slightly convex. Theophrastus, in his treatise upon animals which live in holes, states that snails have the habit of burying themselves. He says: —Snails live in holes during the winter, and still more in the summer, on which account they are seen in the greatest numbers during the autumn rains. But their holes in the summer are made in the ground, and in the trees.”’* Helix nemoralis is also eaten, and at Toulouse sells for 5 or 10 centimes a dish; but by some, snails with striped shells are not considered good, as they have a bad taste and smell. M. Moquin-Tandon purchased, in 1847, in the market at Toulouse, a basket containing 400 specimens of Heli# aspersa for 60 centimes; and another, with 1503 specimens of Helix nemoralis, for 75 centimes,—making 15 centimes the 100 for the former, and a little less than 5 centimes for the latter. Helix nemoralis and Helix hortensis are known by various names in France; “ for instance, at Bordeaux they are called demoiselles, mogne at Libournes, molimorno at Li- moges, limaio at Agen, limaia at Montpellier, livrée in the north of France, and caracolo in the Pyrenees.’ + Helix Pisana, which is a very local species with us, and only found at Tenby (where I have seen it in pro- fusion), at Manorbeer, in Cornwall, Jersey, and Ireland, is greatly prized as an article of food abroad, and is larger than it is with us,—indeed, almost as large as Helix nemoralis. “ At Marseilles, the average sale of Helix Pisana and Helix rhodostoma is about 20,000 kilogrammes, at 3 francs the 50 kilogrammes, which makes the sum of 1200 francs. By the sale of our common garden snail * Athensus, Deipn. vol. i. p. 104. $ Dr. Ebrard, ‘ Des Escargots.’ HELICIDZ.—SNAIL, 17 (Helix aspersa) the same price is realized, and that of Heliz vermiculata* amounts to 4800 francs. It is also stated, that in the market at Dijon is sold, annually, about 6000 frances’ worth of the vine snail, Helix pomatia (the escargot par excellence, and called also luma, gros luma, and le moucle de vigne), at 1 franc 50 centimes per hundred.”’+ In Corsica the same species are eaten; and it is said that, in the island of Ré the sale of these Helicide amounts annually to 25,000 francs, but probably this sum is exaggerated. In Burgundy, Champagne, and Franche-Comté, a great quantity of snails of all kinds are consumed, and also sent to Paris; and Professor Sim- monds mentions that there are now 50 restaurants, and more than 1200 private tables, in that city, where snails are considered a delicacy by from 8000 to 10,000 consu- mers; that the monthly consumption of this mollusk is estimated at half a million; again, that the market price of the vineyard snail (apple or vine snail, Helix pomatia) is from 2s. to 3s. per hundred, while those of the hedges, woods, and forests bring only 1s. 6d. to 2s. He further adds, that in the vicinity of Dijon the pro- prietor of one snailery is said to clear nearly £300 a year by his snails; and also that there are exported from Crete annually about 20,000 okes (each nearly 8 1b.) of snails, valued at 15,000 Turkish piastres. M. Renou, (as quoted by M. Cailliaud, of Nantes,) in a curious account, read in 1864 before the Academical Society at Nantes, on the importance that the ancients attached to snails, observed, that during 1862 and 1863 * Helix vermiculata is sold at Leghorn under the name of ehiocciola, and at Naples shares in common with other snails that of maruzze. + Dr. Ebvard. Cc 18 EDIBLE BRITISH MOLLUSKS. the escargots brought to the Marché de la Bourse, at Nantes, on Sundays and féfe days, amounted in number to 996,000, producing the sum of 2490 francs.* We read that formerly, in Paris, snails were only to be found in the herbalists’ shops and at the chemists’ ; but now there is a special place for them in the fish market, by the side of the crayfish and other freshwater fishes; and in nearly all the restaurants you may see dishes of Helix pomatia displayed in the windows. They are ready cooked, and only require warming for a few minutes on the gridiron. It is from Troyes, at the price of five francs the hundred, that the apple or vine snail is sent to Paris, boiled in their shells, and seasoned with fresh butter mixed with parsley. When you wish to partake of them, you place them before the fire till the butter melts, and then they are fit to eat. I pur- chased some, and succeeded in eating two, but with difficulty, as the way they were dressed did not disguise the slimy, soapy taste, and the want of salt, pepper, etc., made them most unpalatable. I felt that I could sympathize with Dr. Black and Dr. Hutton, who also endeavoured to eat a dish of stewed snails; but, after vainly attempting to swallow in very small quantities the mess which each internally loathed, “ Dr. Black at length ‘ showed the white feather,’ but in a very delicate manner, as if to sound the opinion of his messmate. ‘Doctor,’ he said, in his precise and quiet manner, ‘Doctor, do you not think that they taste a little—a very little—green?’ ‘Green! green, indeed! Take them awa’! take them awa’!” vociferated Dr. Hutton, * «Catalogue des Radiaires, des Annélides, des Cirrhipédes, et des Mollusques marins, terrestres et fluviatiles, recueillis dans le départe- meut de la Loire-Inférieure,’ par Frédéric Cailliaud, de Nantes, p. 222. HELICIDA.—SNAIL. 19 starting from the table, and giving full vent to his feel- ings of abhorrence.”’* In Paris, snails are not considered in season till the first frost, about the end of October or beginning of November, when they are closed with their white epi- phragm. The Parisians eat about fifteen or twenty for breakfast, and they are also said to give a better flavour to wine. In Spain, also, all snails are eaten, unless they are too small to cook; and they are called caracola, and the men who gather and sell them are called caracoleros. However, they apply the term caracola, to all snail-like shells, only distingishing them thus, caracola del mar, caracola del rio, caracola del huerta, i. e. salt, freshwater, or garden caracoles. Rossmissler mentions having seen fourteen different species of Helicide brought to the markets in Murcia and Valencia, and sold to .be eaten. He adds that suails are not only food for the poor, for that many kinds are too costly. One species, called serranos, is sold for a penny of our English money each; but they are not half that price bought by the dozen. They cook them by stewing them, shells and all, in a richly-spiced sauce, and then put the shell to the mouth, and draw out the animal by sipping or sucking it. Rossmassler states, for the benefit of those who may travel in Spain for scientific purposes, that to collect plants it is useless to visit the north of Spain before the middle of April, and the south before the end of March. For insects and shells, the end of the summer, and above all the autumn, is the best time of the year. The snail-hunters, who daily supply the markets with * Curiosities of Food, p. 348. c2 20 EDIBLE BRITISH MOLLUSKS. large baskets of snails, often have to traverse great tracts of hilly country, and are obliged to go out very early in the morning, before sunrise, in search of these crea- tures, as they are then to be found in more abundance. Much amusement was afforded to the Spaniards, by Rossmissler throwing away the delicate animal, and only retaining its shell, which to them was worthless, but most valuable to him as a conchologist. Upon one oc- casion, on arriving at a posada, he found the hotel people sitting down to their midday meal, before a great dish full of snails. He says :—“One look satisfied me that they were of a rare kind, for which I had sought in vain; and I immediately seized upon some of the empty shells, which caused a universal laugh. I did not care at all for this, but I had actually to pay a real (about 2s. 4d.) for the empty shells, which, when living, I could have got for nothing.” This was thoroughly Spanish. Dr. W. Gottlob Rosenhauer, in his ‘ Die Thiere An- dalusiens,’ says that Helix lactea, which is very abun- dant, and readily found close to stones amongst grass, near Malaga, and San Fernando, is brought in great numbers to the markets in Andalusia, and that the empty shells may be seen there all about the streets, Both Helix aspersa and Helix lactea are used abundantly for food, but the latter tastes better, and is more deli- cate. They are generally cooked in rice, with butter or some other greasy substance, and held in a napkin whilst the animal is picked out with a pin; or some- times the mouth (or head) is first cut off, and the ani- mal is then drawn out by suction,—a proceeding not very elegant, at least according to our English ideas. Helix lactea may also be classed among the edible snails HELICID#.—SNAIL. 21 of France, and is found in the Pyrenees, and also in Corsica. Dr. Ebrard was informed by Dr. Roi, the Inspec- tor of Colonization in Africa, that in the market at Al- giers large heaps of snails are to be seen of the same species as those found in Central France, and are sold by the bushel, and by the hundred, as an article of food ; and a small species, about the size of a pea, is collected in Algeria in great numbers, and given to the ducks. Sir Gardner Wilkinson has seen baskets full of snails carried about for sale in the streets of Cairo; and in ‘Physical Geography of the Holy Land’ it is stated that they are occasionally eaten in Syria, though not often. In Scotland, fortunes are predicted by snails. In Hone’s ‘ Every-day Book,’ we read that “No one will marry in May, but, on the first morning of that month, the maidens rise early to gather May-dew, which they throw over their shoulder in order to propitiate fate in alotting them a good husband. If they can suc- ceed, by the way, in catching a snail by the horns, and throwing it over their shoulder, it is an omen of good luck ; and, if it is placed on a slate, then likewise it will describe by its turning the initials of their future husband’s name.”* According to the ‘ Archzologia Cambrensis,’ in the parish of St. Clear’s, Carmarthenshire, small portions of lands were formerly gambled away by means of snail- * In ‘Folklore of the Northern Counties of England,’ p. 86, it is said that if, on leaving your house, you see a black snail (slug P), seize it boldly by one of its horns and throw it over your left shoulder; you may then go on your way prosperously ; but if you fling it over the right shoulder, you will draw down ill luck. This practice is said to extend as far south as Lancashire. 22 EDIBLE BRITISH MOLLUSKS. races. The rival snails were placed at the foot of a post, and the one that first reached the top, won the land for its master. In the Isle of Wight, the fishermen of Atherfield and Brixton consider snails the best bait for prawns, and horseflesh next. The shells of Helix pomatia are used for making small whistles for children. The apex of the shell is cut off, and a piece of tin added; they are then sold for a penny each; and who does not recollect the wonderful cats made of the shells of the common garden snail, Helix aspersa, with heads of cement or putty, and how anxious we were to become possessors of these beautiful crea- tures! They are now seldom seen, except in some small out-of-the-way shop in a country town or village,—such trifles not suiting the tastes of the precocious juveniles of the present day. The ancients seem to have studied the habits of these mollusks, as besides Theophrastus, whom I have already quoted, Aristotle also mentions them ; and Teucer speaks of the snail as “an animal destitute of feet and spine and bone, whose back is clad with horny shell, with long projecting and retreating eyes,’’* and many others. Hesiod calls the snail the “hero that carries his house on his back,” and Anaxilas says— “You are e’en more distrustful than a snail, Who fears to leave even his house behind him.’’+ Somewhat different is the old English proverbial rhyme, “Good wives to snails should be akin, Always to keep their homes within ; Yet unlike snails they should not pack All they are worth upon their back.” * Atheneus, ‘ Deipnosophists,’ book x. c. 83, p. 720. + Tbid., book ii. c. 63, p. 104, HELICIDZ.—SNAIL, 23 Gwillim, in his ‘ Heraldry,’ informs us that the snail is called Tardigrada domiporta, the “slow-going house- bearer,” and adds, “the bearing of the snail doth sig- nify, that much deliberation must be used in matters of great difficulty and importance; for, although the snail goeth most slowly, yet, in time she ascendeth to the top of the highest tower, as Mr. Carew, of Antony, hath wittily moralized in his poem, intituled ‘The Herring’s Tail’” He gives snails as the armorial bearings of the Shelleys, but he also mentions whelks, which shells are now borne by this family. The crest of the Carpenters of Somersetshire is a snail passant proper, shell argent; and that of the Galay family, a snail, horns erect, proper. To Dress Snails.—Snails that feed on vines are con- sidered the best. Put some water into a saucepan, and when it begins to boil, throw in the snails, and let them ’ boil a quarter of an hour; then take them out of their shells; wash them several times, taking great pains to cleanse them thoroughly, place them in clean water, and boil them again for a quarter of an hour; then take them out, rinse them, dry them, and place them with a little butter in a frying-pan, and fry them gently for a few minutes, sufficient to brown them; then serve with some piquante sauce.* Snails cooked in the French way.—Crack the shells and throw them into boiling water, with a little salt and herbs, sufficient to make the whole savoury ; in a quar- ter of an hour take them out, pick the snails frora the shells, and boil them again; then put them into a sauce- pan, with butter, parsley, a clove of garlic, pepper, thyme, a bay-leaf, and a little flour; when sufficiently * An old French recipe. 24 EDIBLE BRITISH MOLLUSKS. done, add the yolk of an egg, well beaten, and the juice of a lemon, or some vinegar. The following are Spanish recipes for cooking them :— Snails with Parsley—Caracoles con Perejil_—Take a slice of crumb of bread, soak it in vinegar and water, pound it in a mortar with garlic, salt and pepper, parsley and mint; add oil drop by drop, turning the pestle the whole time in the same direction; put the snails which have been already boiled, and taken out of their shells into this, and either serve cold or fry the whole together. Ragottt of Snails—Guisado de Caracoles.—Soak the snails in salt water, then wash them in two or three waters; take thyme, marjoram, bay-leaves, and salt, and fry them with chopped onions in butter or oil; boil the snails, and take them out of their shells, or, if you prefer it, put them, shells and all, into the butter, and fry them. Let them be served as follows:—Soak a piece of bread in vinegar and water, and pound it in a mortar with a clove of garlic, a little pepper, salt, pars- ley, and mint, chopped very fine; add oil drop by drop, turning the pestle all the time till it is quite a smooth paste, and place it round the dish, putting the snails in the centre. Winter Soup.—Place the snails in boiling water for a few minutes, when they will easily come out of the shell. A little bit of hard matter is to be taken from the head, then stew them for a long time in milk.* Another Recipe from the same source.—Scald the snails to get rid of their shells, and then fry them with a few crumbs of bread, and a little seasoning, viz. pep- per, salt, and a finish of fine herbs, or stew them with white or brown sauce.t * ‘Life in Normandy,’ vol. ii. p. 24. + Vol. i. p. 62. HELICIDA.—SNALL. 25 Another French Recipe for dressing Snails.—In spring and autumn, the snails which are found in the vineyards are good to eat, for those who like them; and to clean them and make them easy to get out of the shell they must be dressed as follows :—Take a handful of charcoal ashes, and put it into a saucepan or kettle with some soft water, or water from a river; when it boils, throw in the snails, and leave them for a quarter of an hour. When you find the snails can easily be picked out of the shell, take them and place them in some tepid water to cleanse them ; then, again, put them into fresh water, and let them boil for a minute or so, take them out, and let them drain. Put into a saucepan a piece of butter, with a bunch of parsley, chives, a clove of garlic, two cloves, thyme, a bay-leaf, basil, and some mushrooms then add the snails, being careful that they are well drained. Pass the whole over the fire, adding a little flour moistened with broth, a glass of white wine, salt, and pepper, and let it simmer till the snails are quite tender, and till the sauce is nearly dried up in the pan. Serve them up with a sauce made as follows :—Take the yolks of three eggs, beat them up with some cream, warm it, but do not let it boil, add a little white vinegar or verjuice, with a little nutmeg.* Dijon method of cooking Snails.—Boil them in water with some thyme; take them out of their shells; place in the shells some fresh butter, kneaded with chopped parsley ; replace the animal in its shell, and cover it with some more of the butter, etc. When required for eating, place them on an iron dish, or on one of porce- lain. They are placed side by side, with the mouth of the shell upwards, in little holes in the iron or porcelain * ‘La Cuisiniére Bourgecise.’ 26 EDIBLE BRITISH MOLLUSKS. dish, which is made for the purpose, and they must be warmed till the butter melts. Thus prepared, snails sell at Dijon from 5 to 10 centimes apiece.* Another method of cooking Snails.—In the north and east of France, Helix pomatia, or Hélices vigneronnes, the apple or vine snails, are boiled in water and taken out of their shells, then stewed in a saucepan with some fresh butter and parsley; or else the snails, after they have been taken out of their shells, and are three parts cooked, are put into a saucepan with a little water and some butter, or with some broth, adding a little salt, pepper, white wine, or vinegar. When they are cooked and tender, pour over them a thickening of yolks of eggs, with chopped parsley; the addition of nutmeg and lemon-juice makes them more savoury.* The inhabitants of Central France use several sauces for snails, and the four principal are the following, ac- cording to Dr. Ebrard, viz. :— Payoli, or ail-y-oli, of Languedoc; a paste made with olive oil, and pounded garlic. Pailiado, of Gascony; a most complicated sauce of garlic, onions, chives, leeks, parsley, etc., with spices, cloves, and nutmeg, the whole thickened with oil. La limassade, of Provence, called La vinaigrette in Paris. La cacalaousada, of Montpellier, composed of fiour, ham, sugar, etc. At Bordeaux the aillada is softened with a mixture of bread, flour, and yolk of egg, boiled with milk. Stuffed snails are also considered very good. A fine stuffing is made with snails previously cooked, fillets of anchovies, nutmeg, spice, fine herbs, and a liaison of * Dr. Ebrard. CARDIADA.—COCKLE. 27 yolk of eggs. The snail-shells are filled with this stuff. ing, then placed before the fire, and served very hot. In some countries Blainville states, that snails are eaten, smoked and dried. Fam. CARDIADZ. CARDIUM.—COCKLE. Carpium EDULE, Linneus. Common Cockle.—Shell equivalve, subcordate, with twenty-four or more ribs radiating from the beaks, which are bent inwards; um- bones prominent; the internal margins of the valves fluted or indented. Ligament external, strong, and of a dark horn-colour. Four teeth in each valve; the two primary teeth close together, the lateral teeth remote. Colour yellowish-white. The common Cockle (the ruocane or bruvane of the Irish; Ja bucarde, sourdon, rigardot, or coque of the French, the berizon of the Spaniards) is found all round our coasts, burying itself in sand, or sandy mud, in the neighbourhood of estuaries; and at low tides num- bers of people may be seen busily engaged filling their baskets, as it is everywhere much sought after for food ; and during times of scarcity in some of the northern islands of Scotland, the inhabitants might have perished with hunger, if it had not been for this useful little shell- fish, The quantity of shellfish, particularly of cockles, on the shores of most parts of the Long Island (Western Isles) is almost inconceivable. On the sands of Barra alone, scores of horse-loads may be taken at a single tide. Cockles are considered by the people very nutri- 28 EDIBLE BRITISH MOLLUSKS. tious, especially when boiled with milk.* It is astonishing how quickly an expert cockle-gatherer will fill his basket ; and sometimes they make use of a piece of bent iron, or half an old hoop, to scrape the shells out of the sands. At Starcross, they have small “ cockle-gardens,” where the shellfish are kept ; and the flavour of these cockles is considered superior to those which are found else- where. The costume of the women who gather them is anything but becoming ;—large fishermen’s boots, their dresses so arranged as to resemble very large knicker- bockers, and an old hat or handkerchief on their heads, with their baskets on their backs. I am told that some of the Gower people, on the north side of the seigniory of Gower (a Flemish colony in Gla- morganshire), live nine months in the year on cockles. They also carry large quantities to Swansea market, whence they are sent to London. Mr. Baines, in his ‘Explorations in South-West Africa,’ tells us that cockle-shells are greatly prized by the Da- maras, and, if they are rich enough to afford it, one is worn in the hair over the centre of the forehead ; and he adds, that if some friend at home would invest three- halfpence in these favourite mollusks, and send him the shells after his meal, he might make his fortune. In the British Museum a fishing-net is exhivited, from the Friendly Islands, with cockle-shells fastened on it to sink it, instead of leads. Cockle-shells are also used for making garden walks, and good lime is made from them when they are calcined. In the heraldry of Prussia the cockle-shell is used. “Barry of four, argent and azure, semée of cockle- * © Visits to the Seacoasts: Shipwrecked Mariners,’ vol. xii. p. 32, 1865. CARDIADA.—COCKLE. 29 shells counterchanged, are borne by the Silesian family of Von Strachwitz, which has for crest two wings also charged with cockles,”’* We also find this shell figured on coins. A specimen in the British Museum of the seatans, the sixth part of the as, or piece of two ounces, has on one side a cadu- ceus, a strigil, and two balls, and on the other a cockle- shell. Ossian, in his poem the ‘ War of Inis-thona,’ tells us that the king of that island gave a feast to Oscar, which lasted three days, and that they “ rejoiced in the shell,’—meaning that they feasted sumptuously and drank freely. Again, we meet with the “chief of shells,” and the “halls of shells.” Macpherson calls the cockle the “ heroes’ cup of festivity,” being known by the name of sliga-crechin, or the drinking-shell; and it is also stated that this shell is used in the Hebrides for skimming milk.t This seems, however, hardly pos- sible, for the “ heroes” would probably not be content with so small acup as the little common cockle. It must have been some larger shell, and formerly the word “ cockle” was applied to any shell; besides which, the common cockle could not, from its shape, be used for skimming milk, and from its size, it would be of little use for that purpose. Moreover, we know that the so-called cockle used in the Hebrides for that purpose is a Mya, there called the cockle. The Irish, the South Welsh, and probably others, call the whelk (Buccinum undatum) the goggle, and know it by no other name. It is evidently the same word and is more correctly applied, as we shall presently see. * Sibmacher’s ‘ Wapenbuch,’ Heraldry of Fish, p. 226. + *A Book for the Seaside.’ 380 EDIBLE BRITISH MOLLUSES. “Cockle” was the common name in olden times for the escallop of pilgrims,—“ he wore the cockle in his hat,” etc. ; and it is still often so used in heraldic lan- guage. Lydgate, when he says— “‘ And as the cockille, with heavenly dewe So clene Of kynde, engendreth white perlis rounde.” means evidently the oyster, alluding to the old fable of pearls being formed by the oyster’s rising to the surface at the full moon, and opening its shell to receive the falling dew-drops, which thus hardened into pearls,— an idea which is quaintly detailed by Robinson, in his ‘Essay towards a Natural History of Westmoreland and Cumberland’ (1709), who, in speaking of the pearls procured from the rivers Irt and Iind, says, “ Those large shellfish which we call horse-mussels, which, gap- ing eagerly and sucking in their dewy streams, conceive and bring forth great plenty of them” (the pearls), “which the neighbourhood gather up at low-water, and sell at all prices.” The natives of India have a simi- lar belief with regard to the origin of pearls, viz. that they are congealed dewdrops, which Buddha in certain months showers upon the earth, when they are caught by the oysters whilst floating on the waters to breathe.* The natives of Java have a still stranger belief that the pearls themselves breed and increase if placed in cotton, and they actually sell what they term “ breed- ing pearls” for this purpose, affecting to distinguish the male from the female. Those pearls which are clus- tered together, in the form of a blackberry, are said by them to be thus produced. Nor is this belief pecu- * ‘Household Words,’ vol. iii. p. 80, “ My Pearl-fishing Expedition.” CARDIADA. —COCKLE. 31 liar to Java, as a Spanish lady informed a friend of mine that, if seed-pearls were shut up in cotton-wool, they would increase either in size or in number! The experience of our jewellers is that the effect of cotton- wool on pearls is to injure their colour, and make them yellow. Shakespeare says :— “ Love's feeling is more soft and sensitive Than are the horns of cockled snails.” Here cockled means either shelled or whorled. The Greek xoxAlas, xkoyAXos, means a snail, or a shell with a spiral whorl (hence the name of “ goggle” for the Buccinum) ; but it is also used sometimes for a bivalve shell or “ cockle.”’ KoyAsdpsor is a spoon. Camden, in his ‘ Britannia’ (p. 962), in speaking of Ireland, and of the commodities of the British Ocean, says :—“ There are cockles, also, in great numbers, with which they dye a scarlet colour so strong and fair, that neither the heat of the sun nor the violence of the rain will change it, and the older it is, the better it looks.” Of course, the purple-fish (Purpura lapillus) is here meant. Locke also speaks of the “‘ oyster or cockle.”’ The Latin cochlea is properly a snail; but cochlear (cochleare, or cochlearivm), “a spoon,” or “ spoonful,” seems to be derived from the form of a bivalve shell, rather than of asnail ; it was also a measure for liquids, and in medicine it still signifies a spoonful, hence the Italian cucchiajo, French cuiller. Cochlearium was also used by the Romans for any small shell, as in medizval times. Some authors, indeed, say the spoon was called cochlear, not from its shape, but from the pointed end 32 EDIBLE BRITISH MOLLUSKS. or handle being used for taking the snails (cochlee) out of their shells and eating them, and the broader part for eating eggs, etc. This may be doubted, but a spoon could scarcely resemble a snail-shell, and Martial says (xiv. 121), “Sum cochleis habilis, nec sum minus utilis ovis.” At the meeting of the Ethnological Society, March 4th, 1862, Mr. G. W. Earl gave an interesting description of the singular Malayan shell-mounds, which were formed entirely of cockle-shells. He described them as exist- ing in the province of Wellesley, near the Mudah river ; that they were about five or six miles from the sea, situated on sandy ridges that appeared formerly to bound the narrow estuaries communicating with the ocean. He adds that these mounds of cockle-shells are about 18 to 20 feet high, and that the Chinese immigrants have largely employed them as a source of lime. These mounds are supposed to be of great antiquity, from the fact of the shells being partly cemented toge- ther by crystallized carbonate of lime, the result of the very slow action of atmospheric and aqueous influences. At the bottom of one mound, which contained 20,000 tons of shells, a human pelvis was found; and other re- mains and stone-implements have been obtained from the Chinese lime-burners. Mr. Earl attributes the for- mation of these mounds to the Semangs, a diminutive Negro race now sparingly scattered over the surround- ing country, but who were evidently very numerous and widely spread in former times.* In Grey’s ‘Australia,’ vol. i., mention is made of a hill of broken shells, which it must have taken centuries to form, situated between Port George the Fourth, and * “Tntellectual Observer,’ vol. i. p, 239. CARDIADA.—COCKLE. 33 Hanover Bay. ‘It covered nearly half an acre of ground, and in some places was ten feet high; it was situated over a bed of cockles, and was evidently formed from the remains of native feasts, as their fire-places and the last small heaps of shells were visible on the summit of the hill”? A similar mound noticed near Port Essington, of shells rudely heaped together, is supposed to be a burying-place of the Indians. At Wigwam Cave, Tierra del Fuego, piles of old shells, often amounting to some tons in weight, were noticed by Dr. Darwin, which had at different periods formed the chief food of the inhabitants.* These remind us of the so-called kjékkenméddings (kitchen heaps) of Denmark, or shell mounds, to which the attention of archeologists has been recently at- tracted in Northern Europe, and which consist of thou- sands of shells of the oyster, cockle, and other edible mollusks, with implements of stone, such as flint knives, hatchets, etc., and implements of bone, wood, and horn, with fragments of coarse pottery mixed with charcoal and cinders.t Quite recently, one of these kjdkkenméddings has been discovered at Newhaven, in Sussex, and among the ob- jects found were limpet and other shells, with bones of animals.} In 1868, Sir John Lubbock published in the ‘ Natural History Review’ an account he had received from the Rev. G. Gordon, of Scotch kjékkenmédddings on the Elginshire coast, resembling those in Denmark. Mr. Gordon says:—‘ By far the most striking if not the * Darwin, ‘ Voyage of Adventure and Beagle,’ vol. ili. p. 234. + Sir Charles Lyell’s ‘ Antiquity of Man.’ t ‘Intellectual Observer,’ vol. vii. p. 233. 34 EDIBLE BRITISH MOLLUSKS. most ancient of the kjékkenméddings we have in our vicinity is that one which lies within a small wood on the old margin of the Loch of Spynie, and on a sort of promontory formed of those raised shingle beaches so well developed in that quarter. This mound, or rather two mounds (for there is an intervening portion of the ground which has no shells), must have been of consi- derable extent. A rough measurement gives 80 by 30 yards for the larger, and 26 ‘by 30 for the smaller por- tion. The most abundant shell is the periwinkle; next in order as to frequency is the oyster, which, as well as those who had it as a large item in their bill of fare, has passed away from our coasts. Save in some of the nooks of our Firth, as at Cromarty, Altirlie, and Avoch, we know not where a small dish of them could be pro- cured. As third in order, in this mound, is the mus- sel, and then the cockle.”’ Mr. Gordon further adds that similar refuse-heaps are found all round the shores of the Moray Firth, and that the farmers gradually cart them away to serve as manure or topdressings. These shell-mounds, Sir John Lubbock states, are actually called “shelly-meddings” by the fishermen of that district. Sir Gardner Wilkinson found large masses of cockle- shells embedded in the ditches of an old British camp or earthwork, called “ Nottle Tor,” in the scignory of Gower, in Glamorganshire. This camp stands on a high rock above the sea, and at some distance from any dwell- ing-house ; the shells therefore are from fish eaten by the ancient Britons. Cockle, mussel, and oyster shells are often discovered in great quantities on the sites of Roman stations. CARDIADE.—COCKLF. 35 In the reign of King John, we read of vessels called “cogs.” They were supposed to be short and of great breadth, like a cockle-shell, whence they are said to have derived their name. The name “cog” was variously written, viz. kogge, gogga, kogh, cocka, coqua, etc. “Cogs” were used for the conveyance of passengers from England to France, and as coasting vessels.* Cockle Soup.—Scald, drain, beard, and wash carefully four dozen of cockles, reserving their liquor in a pan, Put 4 ounces of butter into a stewpan to barely dissolve over the fire; mix in 4 ounces of flour; moisten with a pint and a half of good white stock or milk; season with nutmeg, a pinch of cayenne, and a teaspoonful of anchovy; add half a pint of cream; stir over the fire for a quarter of an hour’s gentle boiling, and then, hav- ing cut the cockles in halves, pour the hot soup over them in the tureen.t Cockle Sauce-—Clean cockles thoroughly from all particles of sand, put them into a saucepan with the liquor and a little water, thicken with flour and butter, adding pepper, salt, a little mace, and some cream. Soyer’s Porridge of Cockles, oysters, or mussels, for the poor. They make a most nourishing and palatable food, and on the coast a very economical one.—Take two dozen oysters, or if you use cockles or mussels take a quart of either, put them into an earthen jar with their liquor and three tablespoonfuls of flour; place it on the fire and stir them round and round; add a little salt and pepper and they are done. at them thus or add them to soup or porridge. A little dripping or lard is an improvement, also a bay leaf, mint, or an onion sliced. * See Hist. of the Royal Navy, by Sir N. H. Nicolas, vol. i., note, p. 128, + Francatelli’s ‘Cook’s Guide.’ D2 36 EDIBLE BRITISH MOLLUSKS. Scalloped Cockles.—Wash the cockles well, then scald some dozens of them; strain the liquor into a stew- pan, and add thereto 2 ounces of butter, mixed with 2 ounces of flour, a little cream, anchovy, nutmeg, and cayenne; stir the sauce over the fire to boil and reduce for ten minutes, then add a couple of yolks of eggs, and a little lemon-juice, and some chopped parsley ; add the cockles; stir altogether over the fire for a few minutes, and fill some scallop shells with this preparation. Cover them over with a thick coating of fried bread-crumbs ; place them on a baking-sheet in the oven for five mi- nutes, and serve them quite hot.* To Stew Cockles.—Clean them and wash them from the sand in three or four waters; boil them and pick them out of the shells. To a pint of the fish put half a pint of fish-stock, 2 ounces of butter, and some pepper and salt; add a spoonful of flour, stirred in gradually, and simmer over a slow fire until it is of a proper thick- ness; add a large spoonful of essence of anchovy and one of mushroom ketchup.t The natives of the seignory of Gower cook cockles in various ways; sometimes they fry them with ham. They also make excellent pies of cockles with chopped chives, 2 jayer of bacon being placed at the bottom of the dish; or they fry the cockles with oatmeal and chives, or oat- meal alone; they also make of them an excellent and nutritious soup. In Ireland, the common cockles are cooked in their shells over the fire, and eaten with oaten cake. The shells are separated by twisting them apart, and a little butter is put into the shell, which is then placed on the turf-fire till the fish inside is fried. * Francatelli, + Murray’s Modern Domestic Cookery. CARDIAD#.—COCKLE. 37 Mr. Blackburn, in his ‘ Travelling in Spain in the Pre- sent Day,’ says, that one of the best dishes at Seville is composed of rice, pimentoes, cockles (including sand and shells), well boiled in oily gravy. CaRDIUM RUSTICUM or TUBERCULATUM, Linnzus. Red-nosed Cockie.—Shell nearly 3 inches in length, and 2 in breadth; very solid, subrotund, opaque, with 21 or more broad ribs which radiate from the beaks, with knots or tubercles on them, which on the anterior slope are flat, and even wanting in young specimens, and on the posterior side are more pointed and rugged; the in- terstices between the ribs coarsely striated. Umbones prominent; beaks incurved. Ligament large, central tooth large, and the lateral teeth remote. This large handsome cockle is essentially a Mediter- ranean species, and is rare and local in England. It is found on the Devonshire coast, at Paignton, and occa- sionally at Dawlish, and at certain times of the year, especially in the spring after a gale from the east, num- bers may be gathered. On paying a visit to the Paign- ton sands, for the purpose of shell collecting, in the spring of 1862, the beach was quite strewn with broken single valves of this cockle, and there had evidently been quan- tities of live specimens washed up as well, as we met many persons returning home with their baskets heavily laden with them. Cardium rusticum varies in colour, from nearly white to a rich-rufous brown; sometimes there is a white band round the shell and one of a dark chestnut-brown to- wards the margins. The colouring of the animal is most beautiful, the body being of a pink or pale ver- milion, the mantle yellow or reddish, and the loug foot of a most brilliant crimson. This foot terminates in a 38 EDIBLE BRITISH MOLLUSKS. hooked point, and when stretched to its utmost is nearly 4 inches in length. It is by means of this organ, that the cockle can bury itself in the sands, and also take those wonderful leaps of which we read in Mr. Gosse’s interesting work, ‘The Aquarium,’ and again in his ‘A Year at the Shore,’ where he mentions that a specimen was seen to throw itself over the gunwale of a boat when laid on the bottom boards. Mr. Gosse states, in this latter work, that the mode of leaping is performed as follows :-—“‘ The long taper foot is thrust toits utmost and feels about for some resisting surface, a stone for instance, which it no sooner feels than the hooked point is pressed stiffly against it, the whole foot, by muscular contraction, is made suddenly rigid, aud the entire crea- ture,—mantle, siphons, foot, shell, and all,—is jerked away In an uncouth manner.” There is another cockle found also at Paignton, which is even more scarce than Cardium rusticum, viz. Cardium aculeatum ; it is larger and not so solid, with long spines on each rib, and is of a pale brownish-pink or flesh colour. It is very good to eat. I have had splendid specimens sent to me, alive, from Paignton, in a jar, with seaweed; some measuring more than 3 inches in length and 24 in breadth, and I have taken them myself at Langston Point, near Dawlish. The foot of the animal is long, and of a reddish-pink, but not nearly so vivid or brilliant in colour as that of Cardium rusticum. It is also an inhabitant of the Mediterra- nean. Paignton method of Cooking the Red-nosed Cockle.— Cleanse them for a few hours in cold spring water, and then fry them in a batter made of bread-crumbs.* * Forbes and Hanley, Brit. Moll. vol. ii, p. 15. SOLENIDZ.—RAZOR-SHELL. 39 Cockle Soup.—A fter the cockles have been well washed, place them in a stewpan over a slow fire till they open, and then take them out of their shells, Put an ounce of butter or lard, some finely-chopped parsley, a sliced onion, a little pepper, and a teaspoonful of anchovy, into a saucepan, with a little flour, and fry till it be- comes brown. To this add a pint of water, or a pint and a half of milk, and, when it boils, place in your cockles. Let it boil again for half an hour, then serve. The cockles, being large, will require to be cut in halves or quarters, previous to their being put into the soup; and the quantity required would be about 2 lb. weight. In the Bay of Naples, where these cockles abound, they are eaten, as we are told by Poli,* either raw or cooked with oil, pepper, salt, herbs, and bread-crumbs, and are called cocciola at Naples, and cappa tonda at Venice; and Major Byng Hallt+ speaks of cockles stewed in oil as being greatly prized by the natives of Madrid. Fam. SOLENID. SOLEN.—RAZOR-SHELL. Soren siniqua, Linneus. Razor Shell.—Shell straight, open at both extremities. Two teeth in left valve, and one in the other; exterior covered with an olivaceous epidermis, concentrically striated. Breadth 1 inch, length from 7 to 8 inches. The razor or spout-fishes are all good for food, but Solen siliqua, which is the largest of our British species, is the one generally collected for that purpose. Solen ensis * ¢ Testacea utriusque Sicilie,’ 1795. + ‘Queen’s Messenger,’ p. 341. 40 EDIBLE BRITISH MOLLUSKS. is eaten in the Feroe Isles, and is there called langskoel ; and Solen marginatus, commonly known as vagina, is greatly prized as an article of food by the Neapolitans. This last-named species has a wide range abroad, but is not so common in this country as the two above-men- tioned shells, though it is abundant in some localities, amongst others Rye, Tenby, and the Channel Islands. The razor-shell is the au/o of the Romans; and Aris- totle, in his ‘ History of Animals,’ gives a description of it, stating that “it buries itself in the sand; can rise and sink in, but does not leave, its hole ; is soon alarmed by noise, and buries itself rapidly; and that the valves of the shell are connected together at both sides, and their surface smooth.”’* In the time of Athenzeus it was much eaten, and highly valued, if we may judge from the following quotations in his ‘ Deipnosophists :’— “ Araros says, in his ‘ Campylion ’— “<< These now are most undoubted delicacies, Cockles and solens.’ And Sophron says, in his ‘Mimi ’— “A, What are these long cockles, O my friend, Which you do think so much of ? B. Solens, to be sure ; This, too, is the sweet-flesh’d cockle, dainty food, The dish much loved by widows.’ ”+ Again, Athenzeus says:—‘‘ But the solens, as they are called by some, though some call them atAos and Sdvaxes, or pipes, and some, too, call them dvvyes, or claws, are very juicy, but the juice is bad, and they are very glutinous. And the male fish are striped, and not * Forbes and Hanley, Brit. Moll. vol. i. p. 240. + Athenseus, vol. i. b. ili. p. 144, Bohn’s Classical Library. SOLENIDH.—RAZOR-SHELL. 41 all of one colour, but the female fish is all of one colour, and much sweeter than the male; and they are eaten boiled and fried, but they are best of all when roasted on the coals till their shells open. And the people who collect this sort of oyster are called soleniste, as Phenias the Eresian relates in his book which is entitled ‘The Killing of Tyrants by way of Punishment ;’ where he speaks as follows :—‘ Philoxenus, who was called the Solenist, became a tyrant from having been a dema- gogue. In the beginning he got his living by being a fisherman, and a hunter after solens; and so, having made a little money, he advanced and got a good pro- perty.’” On some parts of our shores great quantities of razor- shells are collected, sometimes by putting a little salt on the holes, which irritates the fish and makes it rise to the surface; and again im the following manner, as described by Messrs. Forbes and Hanley :—‘ A long narrow wire, bent and sharpened at the end, is suddenly thrust into the hollows of the sands indicative of the presence of these animals, and, passing between the valves, the barbed portion fixes itself, on retraction, in the animal, and forces it to the surface.” At Tenby baskets-full are often brought to the door, and they are considered very good to eat. In Japan they are said to be so highly prized that, by the express order of the prince of that country, “it is forbid to fish them, until a sufficient quantity hath been provided for the emperor’s table.”* In the Bay of Concepcion are several species of shell- fish highly esteemed, and Ulloa especially mentions some Venuses and a number of razor-shells. % © Glimpses of Ocean Life,’ by John Harper, F.R.S. 42 EDIBLE BRITISH MOLLUSKS. The German name for this shel] is scheidenmuschel or messerschalenmuschel, and the French call it manche de couteau, and coutoye, and the Andalusians, muergo. At Naples it is considered a great delicacy, and quite a recherché morsel, too expensive for the common peo- ple, a dishful selling at 6 carlines, which is equal to 2s. of our English money. It is cooked in the following manner :— Razor-fish Soup.—Take 2b. of razor-fish, and, after they have been well washed, put them into a saucepan, and keep them on a slow fire till they open, then take out the fish from the shells. Chop up some parsley very fine, and put it, with a tablespoonful of oil or an ounce of butter, into a saucepan, and fry until it be- comes brown. To this add a pint of water, or a pint and a half of milk, and, when boiling, place in your fish, with a little salt and pepper, and let it boil again for half an hour. Add toasted bread before it is served up, or boil some vermicelli with it, of course adding more water. To cook Razor-fish.—Boil them for ten minutes or so, then take them out of their shells, and fry them with butter or lard. Add a little salt and pepper. Another way to cook “ Solens.”’—Stew them in milk till they are tender, add pepper, salt, and butter is a great addition. The razor-fish is much prized on the Scotch coast, where it is merely boiled, and eaten with salt and pepper. Poli says that it is good either raw, or fried with bread- crumbs, pepper, oil, and lemon-juice. 43 Fam. CYPRINIDZ. ISOCARDIA.—_OXHORN-COCKLE. Tsocarp1a cor, Linneus. Heart-shell or Oxhorn Cockle.—Shell very strong, nearly spherical, heart-shaped, concentrically striated, equivalve, smooth, with a dark reddish-brown epidermis; beaks very prominent and curled ; two primary teeth in the right valve, lying pa- rallel to each other ; in the left valve, the outer tooth is indented and is large, the other thin and laminar. The lateral tooth strong and elongated, situated under the ligament, which is external. This magnificent mollusk is very partially distributed, though plentiful in some places. Specimens have been sent to me from Dublin Bay, where I grieve to say they are getting very scarce, and also from Brixham, where they are highly prized by the fishermen. They do not however often bring them on shore, though they bring them up in the dredges, unless they wish to make a pre- sent of a dish to some friend, or know where they can dispose of them. They call them “ Torbay-noses,” and they are also known by the names of “ Oxhorn-cockles” and “ Heart-shells;”? in France, ceur de beuf, in Hol- land, zots-kappen, or fool’s cap, and at Naples, cocciola zizza. Mr. J. G. Jeffreys, quoting an interesting ac- count of Isocardia cor, by the Rev. James Bulwer (who kept a specimen in a vessel of sea-water, and was therefore able to study the habits of the animal), given in the ‘ Zoological Journal,’ states, “that the animal appears insensible both to sound and light, as the presence or absence of either did not interrupt its movements, but its sense of feeling appeared to be 44 EDIBLE BRITISH MOLLUSKS. very delicate; minute substances being dropped into the orifice of the mantle instantly excited the animal, and a column of water strongly directed, expelled them from the shell. With so much strength was the water in some instances ejected that it rose above the surface of three inches of superincumbent fluid... . Locomotion very confined; it is capable, with the assis- tance of its foot, which it uses in the same manner (but in a much more limited degree) as the Cardiacea, of fixing itself firmly in the sand, generally choosing to have the umbones covered by it, and the orifices of the tubes of the mantle nearly perpendicular.”* “Resting in this position on the margin of a sand bank of which the surrounding soil is mud, at too great a depth to be disturbed by storms, the Jsocardia of our Irish Sea patiently collects its food from the surrounding element, assisted in its choice by the current it is capa- ble of creating by the alternate opening and closing of its valves.” The Mediterranean species of this bivalve are smaller than those found on our coasts, and there are no less than “five or six kinds known in the European and Indian seas.” t Epicharmus, in his play of the ‘Marriage of Hebe,’ mentions shell-fish of all kinds, and says :— “And bring too the black Cockle, which keeps the cockle-hunter on the stretch.” f This may possibly refer to the oxhorn-cockle. The wife of a coastguardsman who had lived many years at Brixham, and had often luxuriated in a dish of * Brit. Conchol., by Jeffreys, vol. in. pp. 300, 301. + ‘ Manuel de Conchyliologie,’ par le Dr. J. C. Chenu. } Athensus, Bohn’s Class. Lib. b. iii, p. 142. MYTILID.Z. —MUSSEL. 45 these delicious shell-fish, gave me the following recipe for cooking them :— To dress Torbay-noses.—‘ Wash the shells, then boil them for ten minutes or so; take the fish out of the shells and put them into a frying-pan with some butter, alittle salt and pepper, and fry till they are of a good brown colour; then serve.” Fam. MYTILID. MYTILUS.—MUSSEL. Myrtitvs eputis, Linneus. Common Mussel.—Shell equivalved, wedge-shaped, rather pointed at the beaks. In the hinge are three or four tooth-like crenulations. Ligament internal or nearly so, and very strong. Colour of the shell a greyish blue, sometimes radiated with darker blue. Epidermis olivaceous. The mussel is called in Anglo-Saxon musel, muscel, muscule, muscla, which names mean that which instantly retires on being touched; in Dutch, mossel, in Danish, muskel, in German, muschel, in French, moule, at Bor- deaux, charron (from the village of that name, where there is a large mussel trade) ; in Feroese, kreaklingur, and in Andalusia, longherone. Mussels are used for food in many places, and also for bait, ‘and on some parts of the Northumberland coast the fishermen have made mus- sel gardens for the preservation of these shell-fish ; they are formed by piling up stones round certain places on the seashore, between tide-marks, and are carefully watched by their proprietors.”’* M. de Quatrefages, in his interesting work, ‘ Rambles * ©A Book for the Seaside,’ p. 100. 46 EDIBLE BRITISH MOLLUSKS. of a Naturalist,’ gives an account of the origin and de- velopment of the mussel-trade on the French coast. “ An Irishman of the name of Walton was shipwrecked on the coast in 1235, near the little village of Esnandes, in the Bay of Aiguillon, and was the only person saved out of all the crew of the ill-fated vessel. He amply repaid the services which had been rendered him; some sheep were saved from the wreck, which he crossed with the animals of the country, producing a breed of sheep which is still held in high estimation. He invented a kind of net, the ‘allouret, for catching shore birds which skim the surface of the water at twilight or dark, and in order to make these nets thoroughly effective, it was necessary to go to the centre of the immense bed of mud, where the hirds sought their food, and to secure a number of poles to support the nets, which were between 300 and 400 yards in length. On examining these poles, Walton discovered that they were covered with mussel spawn. He then increased the number of his poles, and after various attempts he constructed his first artificial mussel-bed, or douchot. At the level of the lowest tides he drove into the mud stakes that were strong enough to resist the force of the waves, and placed them in two rows about a yard distant from each other. This double line of poles formed an angle, whose base was directed towards the shore, and whose apex pointed to the sea. This palisade was roughly fenced in with long branches, and a narrow opening having been left at the extremity of the angle, wicker-work cases were arranged in such a manner as to stop any fishes that were being carried back by the retreating tide. It was soon found inexpedient to trust only to the chance of the currents and waves that might bring in the young mussels to the poles and MYTILIDA.—MUSSEL. 47 fences, and men frequently went to a very great distance in search of the young mollusks,—even as far as the plateau of Chatelaillon.” M. de Quatrefages further tells us that the little mussels that appear in the spring are called seeds; they are scarcely larger than lentils till towards the end of May, when they rapidly increase in size, and are then called renouvelains, and in July are ready for transplanting. They are detached from the bouchots which are situated at lowest tide-mark, and are then put into pockets or bags made of old nets, “ which are placed upon the fences that are not quite so far advanced into sea.” The young mussels attach themselves by means of their byssus all round the pockets or bags. As they increase in size and become crowded together, they are taken out and distributed over other poles lying nearer the shore, and the full-grown mussels which are ready for sale are planted on the bouchots nearest the shore. The fishermen gather enormous quantities of fresh mussels every day, and take them in carts or on the backs of horses “to La Rochelle and other places, from whence they are sent as far as Tours, Limoges, Bordeaux.” “Tt appears that the French mussel-breeders have discovered that mussels which live suspended to piles, or ropes of vessels, nets, etc., attain to a larger size, than those which live on the bottom, be it sandy, rocky, or muddy ; they therefore suspend thick ropes to wooden piles, and the mussels adhere by their byssus to them, the ropes are then tightened a little to prevent the ani- mals lying on the bottom.”’* The Billingsgate market is chiefly supplied with mus- * Phipson’s ‘ Utilization of Minute Life, pp. 163, 164. 48 EDIBLE BRITISH MOLLUSKS. sels from Holland, the east coast of England, Cornwall, and Devonshire, in August and September, though smaller quantities are received from other parts of our coasts, besides those above mentioned. About ten or twenty tons weight arrive at a time, though, of course, the quantity varies according to the season, and they are sold at ls. a measure. In the evidence given before the Fisheries Commission, at Exeter, December 24, 1863, it was stated, that the price of these shell-fish taken in the estuary at Lympstone was 8s. per sack of ten pecks, but that the supply was decreasing. Dr. Knapp informed Messrs. Forbes and Hanley that the quantity of mussels consumed in Edinburgh and Leith is about 10 bushels per week, “say for forty weeks in the year, in all 400 bushels annually. Each bushel of mussels, when freed and shelled from all re- fuse, will probably contain from 3 to 4 pints of the ani- mals, or about 900 to 1000, according to their size. Taking the latter number, there will be consumed, in Edinburgh and Leith, about 400,000 mussels. This is a mere trifle compared to the enormous number used as bait for all sorts of fish, especially haddocks, cod, ling, halibut, plaice, skate, etc.; and at Newhaven, the total consumption of mussels for bait may be reckoned at 4,320,000 annually. There are nearly as many used at Musselburgh, Fisherrow, etc., and other places on the Frith of Forth, and we may calculate that 30,000,000 or 40,000,000 of mussels are used for bait alone by the fishermen of that district each year.”* The mussel has the power of attaching itself by means of its “byssus” to rocks and stones; and we read that the bridge at Bideford, in Devonshire, cannot be kept * Forbes and Hanley, Brit. Mollusca, vol. ii. pp. 174, 175. MYTILIDZ.—MUSSEL. 49 in repair by mortar, owing to the rapidity of the tide. “The corporation, therefore, keep boats to bring mus- sels to it, and the interstices of the bridge are filled by hand with these shellfish, and it is supported entirely by the strong byssus or threads these mussels fix to the stonework.”’* This byssus proceeds from a gristly shaft, which, Mr. Jeffreys states, appears to support the bundle of filaments like the handle of a broom; and Aristotle mentions this shell-fish in his list of cartilaginous fish. So valuable are mussels towards the protection of the shores from the inundations of the sea on some parts of our coasts, that it becomes necessary to prevent their being gathered in some places (see ‘ Times,’ August 7th, 1865). An action for trespass was brought some time ago for the purpose of establishing the right of the lord of the manor to prevent the inhabitants of Heacham from taking mussels from the seashore. The locality is the foreshore of the sea, running from Lynn in a north- westerly direction towards Hunstanton, Norfolk ; and “the nature of the shore is such that it requires con- stant attention, and no little expenditure of money, to maintain its integrity, aud guard against the serious danger of inundations of the sea.” A large quantity of shingle, seaweed, and mussels is always to be seen, and beds of mussels extend for miles along the shore, and mix with the seaweed and shingle, which get fixed on the artificial jetties running into the sea, attaching them- selves by means of the byssus to these embanking de- fences, thereby rendering them firm, and thus acting as barriers against the sea; therefore, while it is important for the inhabitants, who claim a right by custom, to * ‘Glimpses of Ocean Life,’ p. 179. E 50 EDIBLE BRITISH MOLLUSKS. take mussels and other shellfish from the shore, it is equally important for the lord of the manor to do his utmost to prevent these natural friends of his embank- ments and jetties from being removed in large quanti- ties from his part of the shore. Neumann tells us that calcined mussel-shells make strong lime, and bind quickly, and that shell-lime is generally considered stronger than stone-lime. Mussel- shells, when polished, make pretty pincushions and needlebooks, and at the colourists, they are filled with gold, silver, and bronze, and sold for heraldic painting and illuminating. It was in one of these shells, also, in which the witch, in the quaint old story, put to sea for the purpose of wrecking her enemy’s ships. A large species of mussel, called awadi or awabee, is used in Japan as a new year’s gift. The day is spent in paying respects, visiting, and giving presents to friends and relatives, and they mostly consist of awabi. Awadi, in days of yore, were the first sustenance and support of the Japanese, as acorns were formerly the primitive dict of the inhabitants of Europe, and the awadi is the em- blem, or rather the memorial, of the frugality of their forefathers.* There is another purpose for which these shells are used, which would astonish the “ Truefitts ” of the pre- sent day; for Grey, in his ‘ Australia,’ mentions that amongst the contents of a native woman’s bag was a mussel-shell for cutting the hair. There is an interesting account in Captain O’Brien’s ‘Adventures during the late War,’ of the method of fishing for mussels in the Bay of Concepcion. A man and woman in a canoe push off from the shore, to a certain * ‘Religious Ceremonies,’ vol. iv. p. 815. MYTILIDZ.—MUSSEL. 51 depth, when the man with a long pole ascertains the depth of the mussel-bed. This pole, which has a sharpened end, is struck into the bed, and serves as the anchor or moor- ing for the boat; the woman, with her arms round it, makes it her line of descent. With this, as a conductor, she slides or slips down, and soon reappears, with her arms crossed round the pole, but with both hands as full as they can hold of mussels. Having deposited her handfuls in the canoe, she descends again and again six or eight times, until her cargo is complete. Upon Cap- tain O’Brien’s remonstrating with a man for imposing such a dangerous duty upon a woman, instead of under- going it himself, he explained to him, that this diving was a privilege of the sex, and that no man would dare to be so unmanly as to rob a woman of her birthright. These Chilian, or Bay of Concepcion belles, sell their produce in the market for dresses and finery. The usual size of the common mussel is about two inches and a half in length, and about half that breadth ; but in 1862 I procured two specimens from Exmouth, which had been dredged, the largest measuring five inches in length and two and a half in breadth, the other four inches long and one and a quarter wide. Mr. Jef- freys also mentions having a specimen which measures nearly five inches in length. Though mussels are a valuable article of food, and considered wholesome, yet many cases of poisoning by mussels have occurred ; but it may generally be traced to their having been gathered from either the sides of docks, or piers, where there are copper bolts or nails, or from ships that are copper- bottomed ; or else from the neighbourhood of large town sewers, the sewerage water running over the rocks on which the mussels grow. In the ‘Field, November B2 52 EDIBLE BRITISH MOLLUSKS. 15th, 1862, is an interesting account of an experiment made on oysters that had become so impregnated with copper as to be as green as verdigris. They were taken from Falmouth harbour. An attempt was made to extract the copper from them; and, after putting a hundred or more into a large crucible, reducing them to ashes, and continuing to increase the heat until the copper was melted, the produce was a bright bead of pure copper, which, according to the description, would be about the size of a large pin’s head. Mr. Penwarne, who communicated this article to the ‘ Field,’ adds, that the oysters may have lain on a lode, or the copper might have accumulated from the wash of the stamping-mills. This proves, without doubt, that shell-fish can be impregnated with copper, or other poi- sonous substances, which probably would affect those ‘who ate them. Some persons consider that mussels are unwholesome if a small species of crab (Pinnotheres pisum or Pinnotheres veterum), which is sometimes found in their shells, is not carefully taken out; others, that they are only fit for food in the winter months; and by some on account of their feeding on the spawn of the star-fish, which is poisonous.* It is said that if a silver spoon is boiled with the mussels, and it turns black, it proves that they are poisonous, and not fit to be eaten. But, whatever may be the cause of the wholesale poisoning by these shell-fish, they have been the means of saving many poor from starvation in times of scarcity. Mr. Patterson, of Belfast, in his ¢ Introduc- tion to Zoology,’ mentions having been informed by an old inhabitant of Holywood, near the above-mentioned town, that in 1792 or 1793 there was a great drought * Jeffreys, Brit. Conchology, vol. ii. p. 109. MYTILID#.—PEARLS, 53 prevailing, which caused much distress, and that, in the month of June or July, twenty poor families from the interior of the country encamped on the roadside, near the beach to the west of Holywood, remaining there about five weeks, subsisting partly on such vegetable matter as they could pick up about the hedgerows and fences, but principally upon the mussels which are so abundant on the extensive mud-banks of the neighbouring coast. No instance of disease from this diet occurred, and during that summer the poorer classes in the village appeared quite as healthy as in other years, though mussels formed their chief food. Athenzeus says that mussels are moderately nutritious, and digestible ; the best being the Ephesian kind, which are particularly good when taken about the end of au- tumn (vol. i. p. 150). In the Feroe Isles, the large horse-mussel, Mydilus modiolus, is eaten, and they call it in Feroese ova. Mr. Alder tells us that at Rothesay they are collected for food* (though not so delicate as Mytilus edulis), and in the Shetland Isles for bait, where they are known by the name of yoags. They are also eaten in the north of Ireland, but not considered very good, on account of their strong scent and flavour; but they are capital bait for cod. At Tenby they call Mytilus modiolus the poisonous mussel, and affirm that no one ever ventures to eat it. Pearls are occasionally found in the common mussel, and also in the oyster, scallop, cockle, periwinkle, and pinna; but they are generally inferior in size and quality to those of the freshwater pearl-mussel, Unio margaritiferus ; and Mr. Beckman, in his ‘ History of * Forbes and Hanley, Brit. Mollusca, vol. ii. p. 185. 54 EDIBLE BRITISH MOLLUSKS. Inventions,’ states that real pearls are found under the shield of the sea-hare (Aplysia), as has been observed by Bohadsch, in his book ‘ De Animalibus Marinis’ (Dresdx, 1761). Our Scotch pearl-fishery has, within the last few years, been most successfully revived; and in 1860 Mr. Moritz Unger, a foreigner, on making a tour through the districts where the pearl-mussel abounds, found that the pearl-fishing was not altoge- ther forgotten, many of the people having pearls in their possession, of which they did not know the value. He purchased all be could obtain; consequently, in the following year, many persons devoted their spare time to pearl-fishing, and during the summer months made as much as £8 to £10 weekly. The sum- mer of 1862 was most favourable for fishing, owing to the dryness of the season, and the average price was from £2. 6s. to 10s., £5 being a high price. They now fetch prices varying from £5 to £20. The Queen purchased one Scotch pearl for 40 guineas; others at high prices have been bought by the Empress of the French and the Duchess of Hamilton; and Mr. Unger has a necklace of these pearls valued at £350.* Pearl- maussels are found in Lochs Earn, Tay, Rannoch, and’ Lubnaig, and in the Don, the Leith, and in many of the other Scotch streams; also in some of the Welsh rivers, from whence I have received fine specimens ; in Ireland, near Enmiskillen, and in the river Bann, which is noted for its fine pearls. They wade for them in the shallow pools, or take them by thrusting a long stick between the valves when the shell is open. When a number have been collected they are left to decom- pose, when the pearls drop out.+ They may also be * The ‘ Times,’ December 24th, 1868. + Tour in Ulster. MYTILIDA.—PEARLS, 55 found in Kerry, in Donegal, in the Moy near Foxford, and in many of the other Irish rivers; and Mr. Buckland states, in the ‘ Field,’ December 10th, 1864, that they abound near Oughterard, and that a man called “ Jemmy the Pearl-catcher”’ told him he knew when a mussel had a pearl in it, without requiring to open it first, because “she (the mussel) sits upright with her mouth in the mud, and her back is crooked,’’—that is, it is corrugated like a cow’s horn. Bruce, in his “ Travels,”’ observes that the pearl-fishers of Bahrein informed him that they had no expectation of finding a pearl when the shell was smooth and perfect, but were sure to find some when the shell was distorted, and deformed; and he adds that this applies equally to the Scotch pearl-mussels. In France they also collect pearls from the pearl-mussels, and they generally sell them as foreign pearls. At Omagh, in the north of Ireland, there was formerly a pearl-fishery ; and Gilbert, Bishop of Limerick, about 1094, sent a pre- sent of lrish pearls to Anselm, Archbishop of Canter- bury. Scotch pearls were in demand abroad as early as the twelfth century. Suetonius says that the great motive of Cesar’s coming to Britain was to obtain its pearls, and states that they were so large that he used to try the weight of them by his hand, and dedicated a breastplate made of them to Venus Genetrix.* Accord- ing to Pliny, the island of Taprobane (Ceylon) was most productive of pearls; and he considers that the most valuable were those found in the vicinity of Arabia, in the Persian Gulf. Oriental pearls are found in the Meleagrina marga- ritifera, or pearl-oyster ; and Chares of Mytilene, in his seventh book of his ‘ Histories of Alexander,’ tells us * Camden’s ‘ Britannia,’ p. 962. 56 EDIBLE BRITISH MOLLUSKS, that “in the Indian Sea, and also off the coast of Ar- menia, Persia, Susiana, and Babylonia, a fish is caught very like an oyster; large and of oblong shape, contain- ing within its shell flesh which is plentiful, white, and very fragrant, and from it the men pick out white bones, called by them pearls. And of these they make neck- laces and chains for the hands and feet, of which the Persians are very fond, as are the Medes and all Asia- tics, esteeming them as much more valuable than golden ornaments.”* Occasionally, they are called stones and bones by Greek authors; and Tertullian calls them mala- dies of shell-fish and warts—‘ concharum vitia et ver- rucas.” Pliny states+ that when pearls grow old they become thick and adhere to the shell, from which they can only be separated by a file; again, that pearls which have one surface flat and the other spherical, opposite to the plane side, are for that reason called tympania, or tambour-pearls, ‘ quibus una tantum est facies, et ab ea rotunditas, aversis planities,ob id tympania nominantur.” The “tympana,” or hand-drums of the ancients, were often of a semi-globular shape, like the kettle-drums of the present day. Shells which had pearls still adhering to them were used as boxes for unguents.t Long pear- shaped pearls, called elenchi, had their peculiar value, re- sembling the alabaster boxes in form which were used for ointments. Earrings were invented by the Roman ladies, called “crotalia, or castanet pendants, from the pearls rattling as they knocked against each other.’’§ The story of Cleopatra swallowing the pearl, in order * Athenzus, vol. i. p. 155. + Pliny, Nat. Hist. vol. ii. b. ix. p. 432. + Pliny, Nat. Hist. b. ix. p. 432, and note. § Pliny’s Nat. Hist. vol. ii. b. ix. p, 485. MYTILIDZ.—PEARLS. 57 that she might say she had expended on a single enter- tainment ten millions of sesterces, is too well known to require repeating here; suffice it to say that Pliny in- forms us, that before the time of Antony and Cleopatra, Clodius, the son of the tragic actor Hsopus, had done the same at Rome; “he, having dissolved in vinegar (or at least attempted to do so) a pearl worth about £8000, which he took from the earring of Cecilia Metella.”’* Pliny further adds that, by way of glorification to his pa- late, Clodius Ausopus was desirous of trying what was the taste of pearls, and as he found it wonderfully pleasing, that he might not be the only one to know it, he had a pearl set before each of his guests for him to swallow.’”’+ It was not unusual for the Romans to adorn their horses, and other favourite animals, with splendid necklaces ;t and we are told that Incitatus, the favourite horse of the Emperor Caligula, wore a pearl collar. The Roman ladies even wore pearls at night, that in their sleep they might be conscious of the possession of these valuable gems. Julius Cesar prohibited the use of purple and pearls to all persons who were not of a certain rank, and the latter also to unmarried women.§ From the twelfth to the sixteenth centuries, extravagance in jewellery was carried to an unlimited extent at the Courts in Europe ; and from the reign of Francis I.to that of Louis XIIT., the greater part of the jewels worn were set with pearls, and these latter were worn in preference to all other orna- ments until the death of Maria Theresa of Austria.|| The French call irregular-shaped pearls “Perles barroques,” * Hor. ii. Sat. ili. 239. + Pliny, Nat. Hist. vol. ii. b. ix. ch. 59. t+ Smith’s Dict. of Greek and Roman Antiquities : “ Monile,” p. 768. § ‘Gems and Jewels,’ p. 27, Madame de Barrera. || ‘Gems and Jewels,’ p. 58. 58 EDIBLE BRITISH MOLLUSKS. and these malformations were ingeniously utilized by the fanciful taste of the Cinque Cento period.* No doubt many of my readers will remember the specimens exhibited in the loan collection at the South Kensing- ton Museum. One was a Cinque Cento pendant in the form of a siren; the head, neck, and arms of white enamel, the body made of a very large “ pearl barroque,” and a fish’s tail enamelled, and set with rubies. It belonged to Colonel Guthrie, and is of fine Italian work of the six- teenth century. Another, in the possession of Messrs. Farrer, was a gold pendant jewel in the form of a ship with three masts, a large pearl barroque forming the hull, ete. The wedding dress of Anne of Cleves was “a gown of rich cloth of gold, embroidered with great flowers of large orient pearls.” The unfortunate Mary, Queen of Scots, possessed pearls which were considered the finest in Europe, and these were purchased in a most iniquitous manner by Queen Elizabeth from the Karl of Moray, for a third part of their value. Miss Strickland states (in her ‘ Lives of the Queens of Scotland,’ pages 82 and 83, vol. vi.) that if anything further than the letters of Drury and Throckmorton be required to prove the confederacy between the English Government and the Earl of Moray, it will only be necessary to expose the disgraceful fact of the traffic for Queen Mary’s costly parure of pearls, her own personal property, which she had brought from France. A few days before she ef- fected her escape from Lochleven Castle, the Regent sent these with a choice selection of her jewels, very secretly, to London, by his trusty agent, Sir Nicholas Elphinstone, who undertook to negotiate their sale with the assistance of Throckmorton. Queen Elizabeth had * ‘Precious Stones, Gems,’ etc., by Rev. C. W. King, p. 232, MYTILID#Z.-—PEARLS. 59 the first offer of them, and the French Ambassador thus describes them :—“ There are six cordons of large pearls strung as paternosters ; but there are five-and-twenty separate from the rest, much finer and larger than those which ave strung. These are, for the most part, like black muscades” (a very rare and valuable variety of pearl, with the deep purple colour and bloom of the muscatel grape) .* They were appraised by various merchants, but Queen Elizabeth was determined to have them at the sum named by the jeweller, though he would have made his profit by selling them again. Others valued them at three thousand pounds sterling ; some Italian merchants at twelve thousand crowns; and a Genevese at sixteen thousand crowns; but twelve thousand was the price Queen Elizabeth was allowed to have them for, and Ca- therine de Medicis was quite as eager to purchase these pearls as her good cousin of England, knowing they were worth nearly double the sum at which they had been valued in London, having presented some of them herself to Mary. She therefore used every endeavour to recover them, but the French Ambassador wrote to inform her that it was impossible to accomplish her desire of obtaining the Queen of Scots’ pearls; “ for, ‘as he had told her from the first, they were intended for the gratification of the Queen of England, who had been allowed to purchase them at her own price, and they were now in her hands.” The possession of wealth and jewels is not always a source of happiness or benefit to their possessors, if we may judge “from the above-mentioned fact in history, and indeed it is even more clearly exemplified in the case of the eminent Mogul, * See note, ‘ Lives of the Queens of Scotland,’ vol. ii. p. 83. 60 EDIBLE BRITISH MOLLUSKS. who died of hunger during a grievous famine, which de- populated part of Guzerat. A large mausoleum or Ma- hometan tomb was erected to his memory in the suburbs of Cambay, with an inscription, telling us that during this terrible scarcity the deceased had offered a measure of pearls for an equal quantity of grain, but not being able to procure it, he died of hunger.* A pearl is described by Madame de Barrera, as nearly the size of a pigeon’s egg, and pear-shaped; it weighed 250 carats, and was known as “ La Peregrina,” and be- longed to the crown of Spain. It was brought from Panama in 1560 by Don Diego de Temes, who presented it to Philip II. “It was then valued at fourteen thou- sand ducats, but Freco, the king’s jeweller, having seen it, said it might be worth £14,000, £30,000, £50,000, £100,000, as such a pearl was priceless.” In 1779 a pearl, which from its shape was called the Sleeping Lion, was offered for sale at St. Petersburg, by a Dutchman; it weighed 578 carats, and was bought in India for £4500. The largest pearl known, I believe, is the one which was exhibited at the South Kensington Museum, in the loan collection, in the possession of A. J. B. Beresford Hope, Esq. It weighs 3 oz., is 2 inches long, 43 inches in so circumference, and is set as a pendant. The most productive pearl-fishery banks lie on the west coast of Ceylon, between the eighth and ninth de- grees of north latitude, near the level dreary beach of Condatchy, Aripo, and Manaar.t The other principal fisheries are those of the Bahrein Islands in the Persian Gulf, Coromandel, Catifa in Arabia (which produced * Forbes’s ‘ Oriental Memoirs,’ vol. ii. p. 18. T ‘Voyage of the Novara,’ vol. i. pp. 379, 380, 381. MYTILIDH.—PEARL FISHERIES. 61 the pearls purchased by Tavernier for £110,000), the Algerine coast, the Sooloo Islands, and, in the western world, the Bay of Panama and the coast of Columbia, which had formerly some very valuable pearl fisheries, for Seville alone is said to have imported thence upwards of 697 1b. in the year 1587. The hardships and suf- ferings endured by the divers are very great. After a long dive, we are told that the natives of the Paamuto Islands may be seen squatting on the reefs with blood gushing from the ears and nose, and become quite blind, for ten or twenty minutes. At the Bahrein fisheries, the trade is in the hands of the merchants, who bear hard on the divers; and even those who make the greatest exertions in diving can scarcely obtain a sufficiency of food.* In Ceylon, the fourth part of the pearls brought up is the diver’s share. In each boat are ten divers, each with an assist- ant. Before the divers descend a number of quaint ceremonies are gone through with incantations, both in the boats and on the shore. So superstitious are these men, that not one of their number, Christian or idolater, would continue their employment without the counte- nance of the sorcerer, and in 1857 Government was compelled to pay these impostors. The chief shark- charmer was a Roman Catholic.t The same authority further states that the utmost depth in which a diver can remain safely is about seventy feet. They can remain under water from fifty to sixty seconds, and the diving is carried on from five to six hours daily; and each of the ten divers can in the course of the day bring up from 1000 to 4000 pearl shells. A single oyster contains some- * M‘Culloch’s Commercial Dictionary. + ‘Voyage of the Novara,’ vol. i. p. 332, 62 EDIBLE BRITISH MOLLUSKS. times thirty or forty pearls, of which some may be worth a sovereign on the spot. The small valueless seed-pearls are burnt, and sold as pearl lime to the wealthy Malays, to add to the betel and cabbage-nuts which they chew. The Ceylonese mix the lustreless pearls with grain, and feed their poultry with them, in whose crops the pearls regain their former brilliancy after a few minutes’ grind- ing. The crops are slit up, and the pearls are taken out. It is said to be done by other Indian races, but that the pearls lose weight.t In India the priests of Buddha keep up the strange belief as to the origin of pearls which I have mentioned elsewhere, and make it a pre- text for exacting what they term “ charity oysters” from the divers and boatmen of their faith for the use of Buddha, who, when thus propitiated, will make the fish yield more pearls in future seasons. The pearl fishery of Ceylon in 1864 suffered con- siderably, owing to an irruption of the skate fish, which was said to have killed the oysters; and the loss of re- venue was calculated at £50,000. The common freshwater Unio (Unio tumidus), and also Unio pictorum, both produce pearls, but they are generally small, and of a bad colour; sometimes I have found several in one shell, and, again, I have opened many, and not been successful. A species of freshwater mussel, Anodonta cygnea, is said to be eaten in the county of Leitrim by the pea- santry, and Unionide are eaten in the south of Europe, either roasted in their shells and drenched with oil, or covered with breadcrumbs and scalloped; and, accord- ing to Dr. Wilhelm Gottlob Rosenhauer, Unio Requienii * ‘Voyage of the Novara,’ vol. i. p. 385. } ‘Household Words ;’ “ My Pearl-fishing Expedition,” vol. iii. p. 80. MYTLLIDZ,— MUSSEL. 63 and Unio litoralis, which are found near Granada, in the river Jenil, are often brought to the market; but when the fish are taken out of their shells and cooked, they are described as very tough food. Anodonte and Unionide (Anodontes et Mulettes) are employed by the fishermen in the neighbourhood of Nantes for bait ;* and I have occasionally used Dreissena polymorpha for the same purpose, which seemed to be greatly appreciated by the fish in the pond where I was fishing, as they greedily sucked off the bait as fast as it was put on the hook. The Dreissene were brought from the canal at Sawley, Leicestershire, and turned into the ponds, where they have thriven wonderfully, aud are the favourite food of water rats, if one may judge from the number of empty shells deposited on the banks amongst the rushes, in small heaps sometimes two or three inches deep. In some countries the shells of the large Anodonte are used for skimming milk. In the north-western part of Australia, a freshwater mussel forms a staple article of food, while in the south- western part of the continent the natives will not touch them, but regard them with a superstitious dread and abhorrence. In Grey’s ‘ Australia,’ he gives an account of a native, Kaiber by uame, whom he ordered to ga- ther some of these shellfish for food, as they were nearly dying from hunger, but the man steadfastly refused, as he affirmed that by touching them, the native sorcerer, or Boyl-yas, would acquire a mysterious influence over him, which would end in his death. At last, however, he was ordered to bring some instantly, as Mr. Grey intended eating them. After thinking for a moment or so, Kaiber walked away for this purpose, but bitterly * Catalogue des Radiaires,’ etc., par Frédéric Cailliaud de Nantes. 64: EDIBLE BRITISH MOLLUSKS. lamented his fate whilst occupied with his task. It was true, he said, he had not died of hunger or thirst, but this was all owing to his courage and strong sinews ; yet, what would these avail against the supernatural powers of the Boyl-yas. “They will eat me at night, whilst worn-out by fatigue I must sleep.” However, the mussels were brought, and Mr. Grey made a meal of them.* It is not only of late years that Mytilus edulis has been thought worthy to grace our tables, for in 1890 we have the following recipes given in a “role” of ancient English cookery, compiled by the master cooks of King Richard IT., called the ‘ Forme of Cury ’ — “ Muskels in brewet (broth), 122.—Take muskels (mus- sels), pyke them, seeth hem with the own broth (in their own liquor). Make a lyor (mixture) of crustes i.e. of brede) and vinegar ; do in onyons mynced, and cast the muskels thereto, and seeth it, and do thereto powder, with a lytel salt and safron. The samewise make of oysters. “ Cawdel of Muskels, 124.—Take and seeth mus- kels, pyke (pick) hem clene, and waishe hem clene in wyne. Take almandes and bray hem. Take some of the muskels and grynde hem, and some hewe small. Draw (mix up) the muskels yground (that are ground) with the self (same) broth. Wryng the almandes with faire (clean) water. Do all this togider. Do thereto verjous (verjuice) and vinegar. Take whyte of lekes, and par- boil hem wel. Wryng out the water, and hew hem small. Cast oile thereto, with onyons parboiled, and mynced small. Do thereto powder, fort, safron, and salt; a lytel seeth it, not to stondyng (too thick), and messe it forth.” + “ Soyer’s Recipe for Cooking Mussels.—Take 8 dozen * Vol. ii. pp. 84, 85. t ‘ Antiquitates Culinarie,’ by the Rev. Richard Warner, p. 23. MYTILIDA. 65 mussels, wash them and place in a stewpan over the fire for ten minutes, to open the shell (sometimes a small crab will be found in them, which remove, as they are rather unwholesome) ; replace them, with their liquor, and bot- tom shell, in the pan ; adda spoonful of flour, mixed with some butter or lard, and a spoonful of chopped parsley ; stir it, and stew for five minutes, and serve. If re- quired in large quantities, take the large boiler, put therein 4 1b. of lard or butter, and 4b. of sliced onions ; fry for five minutes. Have ready 2 pailfuls of mussels out of the shell, and in their liquor, which put in the boiler with 1 lb. of salt, 2 oz. of pepper, 2 oz. of sugar, 2 lb. of chopped parsley, and 2 lb. of flour, mixed with water to the thickness of good cream; boil ten or fifteen mi- nutes, stir it gently with a wooden spatula, and serve. If not required maigre, use instead of water the same quantity of boiling stock mixed with flour; a flavour of herbs may be given if liked, and bits of meat added to it.” “* Mussel Sauce.—Cleanse, beard, wash, and blanch or parboil two quarts of mussels, take all the white fat mussels out of their shells, and place in a bain-marie, reserving their liquor in a basin. Then knead 4 oz. of butter with 2 oz. of flour, some nutmeg, pepper, and salt, add the liquor from the mussels, a piece of glaze, and half a pint of cream; stir the whole on the stove: fire till it boils, and keep it boiling for ten minutes, then add a season of 4 yolks of eggs, and pass through a tammy on the mussels; just before sending the sauce to table, throw in a tablespoonful of chopped and blanched parsley, and a little lemon-juice. This sauce is well adapted for boiled whitings, turbot, cod, haddock, and gurnet.’’* * Francatelli’s ‘ Modern Cook.’ 66 EDIBLE BRITISH MOLLUSKS. “To Dress Mussels.— After having well washed and scraped their shells, drain them, and put them to dry into a stewpan upon a good fire, letting them remain till the heat opens them. Then take them out of the shells one by one, being careful to pick off the beards where you find any; and put them into a stewpan, with a bit of butter, parsley, and scallions, shred small; shake them over the fire, and put a little flour, moistening them with broth ; when the sauce is consumed, put in the yolks of 8 eggs, beat up with cream, thicken it over the fire, and add afterwards a dash of verjuice (or lemon).”’* * Mussel Soup.—Take the liquor that flows from the mussels when open in the fire, and strain it through a fine napkin ; put it into some good broth; add the yolks of six eggs beat up with it, thicken it over the fire, and put it into your soup, when ready to serve, arranging the mussels round the dish.” “* Mussel Fritters.—Take them out of their shells, and steep them two hours in a quart of vinegar, some water, and a little butter rolled in flour, with salt, pepper, pars- ley, scallions, tarragon, garlic, a little carrot and parsnip, thyme, laurel, and basil ; the whole make lukewarm, then take out your mussels, dry, and dip them in a batter, made with flour, white wine, and a spoonful of oil, and salt, and fry them.” t The Neapolitans, as mentioned by Poli, cat mussels raw and fried, besides making patties and sauces of them. “ Francatelli’s Recipe for Scalloped Mussels.——Scald and beard some dozens of mussels ; strain the liquor into a stewpan, and add thereto 2 oz. of butter, mixed or * ‘French Family Cook.’ + ‘French Family Cook.’ t Idem. MYTILIDA.—MUSSEL. 67 kneaded with 2 oz. of flour, a little cream, anchovy, nutmeg, and cayenne; stir the sauce over the fire to boil and reduce for ten minutes, then add a couple of yolks of eggs, a little lemon-juice, some chopped parsley, and add the mussels. Stir all together over the fire for a few minutes, and fill some scallop-shells with this preparation ; cover them over with a thick coating of fried breadcrumbs, place them on a baking-sheet in the oven for five minutes, and serve them quite hot. They may also be served upon neatly-shaped pieces of dry toast.” “ Mussels dressed a la Provencale.—Wash the mus- sels well several times, changing the water so as to cleanse them thoroughly ; put them to dry in a sauce- pan over a hot fire, till the shells open. Take off one. valve of the shell only. Put into a saucepan, half a glass of oil, parsley, chives, mushrooms, truffles, half a clove of garlic, all chopped very fine. Put it on the fire. Moisten it with a glass of white wine, a spoonful of broth, and half the quantity of liquor from the mussels. Boil this sauce, and when it is nearly reduced to half, add the mussels, with a spoonful of gravy ; let the whole boil a few minutes; then add a spoonful of lemon-juice, pepper, and grated nutmeg,—then serve.”’* “ Chilian Method of Cooking Shell-fish.—A hole is dug in the ground, in which large smooth stones are laid, and upon them a fire is kindled. When they are suffi- ciently heated, the ashes are cleared away, and shellfish are heaped upon the stones, and covered first with leaves or straw, and then with earth. The fish thus baked are exceedingly good and tender, and this mode of cooking them is very superior to any other, as they retain, within * Dictionnaire Général de la Cuisine Frangaise ancienne et moderne. F2 68 EDIBLE BRITISH MOLLUSKS. the shell, all their own juiciness.”* Meat dressed in the same manner is most delicious. Cullis of Mussels —Stew them and strain them ; fry carrots, parsnips, parsley, basil, lemon, crumbs, a dozen of almonds; moisten them with broth; strain and keep the broth for use. Mussels and Cockles must first be well washed in se- veral waters, and then boiled in a closely covered sauce- pan, without water. When the shells open, take out the fish, strain the liquor, pick out the meat, carefully re- moving a tough membrane from the tongue of each mussel, and a substance resembling a small crab, which would be highly pernicious. To ascertain that nothing injurious remains, dip a silver spoon into the hot liquor. If it turns black, the next thing is throw the whole away ; but, if otherwise, proceed to simmer the fish in the liquor, with a little salt and nutmeg, and a good piece of butter rolled in flour. Serve on toasted bread. N.B.—This dish may be enriched by the addition of strong gravy, chopped mushrooms, anchovy, lemon-juice, and a larger proportion of butter, butit is generally pre- ferred in its more simple form; indeed, many persons prefer having the fish served in the shells, to pick them out themselves, and eat with cold buatter.t Fam. OSTREADZ. OSTREA.—OYSTER. Ostrea eputis, Linneus. Edible Oyster.—Shell nearly round, though variously shaped, inequivalve ; the * King’s ‘ Adventures of the Beagle,’ vol. i. p. 291. + ‘The Housekeeper’s Guide,’ by Esther Copley, pp. 194, 195. OSTREAD E.—OYSTER, 69 upper valve flat, or nearly so, with scales or laminz of a yelluwish-brown ; the lower valve convex, and foliaceous, of a pale pinkish-white, with streaks of purplish-pink ; transversely striated. Hinge toothless ; ligament inter- nal, of an olivaceous-brown; beaks small. The interior of the shell white and polished ; sometimes the purplish- pink colour of the margins showing through. The edible oyster of Great Britain is supposed to be superior to those of other European countries, and to attain to a greater degree of perfection on our coasts ; and it was much valued by the Romans, who transplanted numbers from our shores, and placed them in artificial beds in the Lucrine Lake. Sergius Orata first invented these oyster-beds, “not for the gratification of gluttony, but of avarice, as he contrived to make a large income by this exercise of his ingenuity.”* Apicius first dis- covered the art of preserving oysters fresh for a consi- derable time, and sent some from Italy to the Emperor Trajan, while he was on an expedition against the Par- thians, which were found on their arrival to be as good as on the day they were gathered.t This mode may possibly have been the same as that which is practised in Italy at the present day, where, as Poli tells us, they are carried from Tarentum to Naples in bags, tightly packed with snow, which not only by its coolness pre- serves them, but also by preventing them from opening their bivalves, enables them to retain in the shells suffi- cient moisture to preserve their lives for a long period. There were other places from whence oysters were procured, and Mucianus speaks with rapture of those * Pliny, Nat. Hist. vol. ii. bk. ix. chap. 79. + Daniel’s ‘Rural Sports,’ vol. iv. p. 194, { Poli, ‘Testacea utriusque Sicilie.’ 70 EDIBLE BRITISH MOLLUSKS. found at Cyzicus, a town in Asia Minor,* on the shores of the Sea of Marmora, the ruins now called by the Turks, Bal Kiz. He describes them as larger than those of Lake Lucrinus; fresher than those of the British coasts; sweeter than those of Medule (the dis- trict in the vicinity of Bordeaux, now called Medoc) ; more tasty than those of Ephesus; more plump than those of Lucus; less slimy than those of Coryphas (a town of Mysia, opposite Lesbos) ; more delicate than those of Istria, and whiter than those of Circeii (a town of Latium). Pliny mentions that according to the his- torians of Alexander’s expedition, oysters were found in the Indian Sea a foot in diameter,t and Sir James E. Tennent unexpectedly attested the correctness of this statement, as at Kottiar, near Trincomalee, enormous specimens of the edible oysters were brought to the rest- house. One shell measured more than eleven inches in length, by half as many broad.t The Greeks preferred the oysters of Abydos, and Archestratus, in his ‘Gastronomy,’ says :— “ 7Rnus has mussels fine ; Abydus too Is famous for its oysters; Parium produces Crabs, the bears of the sea, and Mitylene periwinkles ; Ambracia in all kinds of fish abounds, And the boar-fish sends forth ; and in its narrow strait Messene cherishes the largest cockles. In Ephesus you shall catch cheme, which are not bad, And Chalcedon will give you oysters.’’§ Great Britain is still celebrated for its oysters, and large artificial beds are formed for the better rearing and breeding of these shellfish, besides the natural oyster- * See Pliny, vol. vi. bk. xxxii. ch. 21 (6). + Pliny, Nat. Hist. bk. xxxii. chap. 21 (6). t See note, Nat. Hist. Ceylon, p. 371. § ‘The Deipnosophists,’ vol. i. bk. iii. p. 154. OSTREAD.Z.—OYSTER, 71 beds, which are found on many parts of our coasts. The artificial beds require much labour to keep them in order, and free from shells and rubbish. The common mussel is an enemy to the oyster, as it causes mud to collect; and the starfish and whelk feed upon them, as do crabs and other shell-fishes. Dr. Paul Fischer states that the oyster-beds at Arcachon have suffered consider- ably from the havoc caused by Murex erinaceus, which has appeared in great numbers within the last ten years. It is known by the name of cormaillot, or perceur, and incessant war is waged against it; but the numbers do not decrease. Again, cold weather has a most per- nicious effect upon the spat, for if the water is not warm enough the spat dies. Oysters will not even spawn if the weather is too cold.* Some of our prin- cipal beds are those of Whitstable, Rochester, Colches- ter, Milton, Faversham, Queensborough, and Burnham. Colchester has been celebrated for its oysters from a remote period, and they were deemed an appropriate present from the authorities of the town to ministers of state, and other eminent persons. We hear of their having been sent, in the reign of Queen Elizabeth, to Leicester and Walsingham.t At the annual Colchester Oyster Feast, held in the Townhall, October, 1862, Mr. Miller, M.P., mentioned that Mr. Goody, clerk to the Colne Fishery Company, with himself and a few other gentlemen, had appealed to the Treasury, because it was apprehended that Belgium, to which a large number of oysters are sent, was about to impose a duty which would inflict a serious injury upon the town. However, it was found from the interview that * ‘Times, Mr. Buckland’s Letter on Oysters, Aug. 3, 1864. + Cromwell’s Hist. of Colchester, vol. 11. 72 EDIBLE BRITISH MOLLUSKS. there was no immediate prospect of the anticipated danger, and a treaty was concluded with Belgium, in which a special reservation had been made in respect to oysters.* The oysters sent to Belgium are fattened in the Ostend beds, and then called “Ostend oysters ;” though, in reality, they are British. They are very small and plump, and are highly thought of by the oyster-eaters in Paris; their flavour is certainly quite equal to the natives, at least I thought so, and the shells appeared thinner. Oysters, mussels, and periwinkles, with shrimps, are the fisheries which engage a good number of fishermen at Leigh, near Southend. The Leigh shore has been found particularly well adapted to grow and fatten oysters.+ Whitstable was a fishing-town of note in the reign of Henry VIIT., and was called in ancient records “ North- wood.” Leland, in his ‘ Itinerary,’ thus describes it :— “Whitstable is upward junto Kent, aii miles or more beyond Faversham, on the same shore, a great fisher- towne of one paroche, belonging to Plaze College, in Essex, and yt standeth on the se-shore. Ther about they dragge for oysters.” The dredgers of Whitstable do not trust entirely to the natural resources of their oyster-beds, but purchase at Colchester or elsewhere, what is called the brood, which is the spat in its second stage. The following interesting account of the Whitstable beds appeared in “Macmillan’s Magazine, No. 386, October, 1862 :— “The brood is carefully laid down in the oyster-beds off Whitstabie, and allowed to grow for three, perhaps four years. The oysters in different stages are marked *