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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #56285 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/56285)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Oyster, by Eustace Clare Grenville Murray
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: The Oyster
- Where, How and When to Find, Breed, Cook and Eat It
-
-Author: Eustace Clare Grenville Murray
-
-Release Date: January 1, 2018 [EBook #56285]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE OYSTER ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Larry B. Harrison and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by the
-Library of Congress)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration:
-
- ANCIENT NATIVES OF BRITAIN, ENCAMPED NEAR COLCHESTER.
-
- (_From a curious Glyptic in possession of the Author._)]
-
-
-
-
- THE OYSTER;
-
- WHERE, HOW, AND WHEN
- TO
- FIND, BREED, COOK,
- AND
- EAT IT.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- LONDON:
- TRÜBNER & CO., 60, PATERNOSTER ROW.
- MDCCCLXI.
-
-
-
-
- LONDON:
- WILLIAM STEVENS, PRINTER, 37, BELL YARD,
- TEMPLE BAR.
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS.
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
- THE OYSTER IN SEASON.
-
- The R. canon correct; Alimentary Qualities of the
- Oyster; Profitable Investment; Billingsgate, and
- London Consumption; English Oyster-beds; Jersey
- Oysters; French Oyster-beds on the Coast of Brittany 9
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
- ANCIENT HISTORY OF THE OYSTER.
-
- The Ancients; Oysters a Greek and Roman Luxury;
- Sergius Orata, and the Oyster-beds of Baia; Immense
- Consumption at Rome; Failure of the Circean and
- Lucrinian Oyster-beds under Domitian, and Introduction
- of Rutupians from Britain; Agricola, Constantine, and
- Helena; Athenian Oysters, and Aristides. 21
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
- MODERN HISTORY OF THE OYSTER.
-
- Fall of the Rutupian Supremacy; Louis IV. and William
- of Normandy; Conquest of England, and Revival of
- Oyster-eating in England; The Oyster under Legal
- Protection; American Oysters 24
-
- CHAPTER IV.
-
- THE OYSTER AT HOME.
-
- Its Nature, Colour, and Structure; Natural Food;
- Perception of the changes of Light; Uses of the Celia;
- Fecundity and Means of Propagation; Age; Fossil
- Oysters in Berkshire and in the Pacific; Power of
- Locomotion 28
-
- CHAPTER V.
-
- THE OYSTER IN ITS NEW SETTLEMENT.
-
- Dredging for Oysters; Oyster-beds and their formation;
- Sergius Orata; Pliny the Elder; Baia and the Lucrine
- Sea; Roman Epicurism and Gluttony; Martial and Horace,
- Cicero and Seneca; Masticate Oysters, and do not bolt
- them whole; Mediterranean and Atlantic Oysters;
- Agricola and the Rutupians; Apicius Cœlius, Trajan,
- Pliny, and the Vivarium 37
-
- CHAPTER VI.
-
- THE OYSTER ON ITS TRAVELS.
-
- The Isle of Sheppey, the Medway, and Whitstable;
- Milton, Queenborough, Rochester, and Faversham
- Oysters; Colchester and Essex Beds; Edinburgh Pandores
- and Aberdours; Dublin Carlingfords and Powldoodies;
- Poole and its Oyster-bank; Cornish Oysters and the
- Helford Beds; Poor Tyacke, and How he was Done;
- Dredgers and their Boats; Auld Reekie's Civic
- Ceremonial; Song of the Oyster; its Voyage to Market,
- and Journey by Coach and Rail 45
-
- CHAPTER VII.
-
- THE OYSTER AT ITS JOURNEY'S END.
-
- Oyster Stalls; How to Open the Oyster; an Oyster
- Supper; Beer, Wines, and Spirits; Roasted, Fried,
- Stewed, and Scolloped Oysters; Oyster Soup, and Oyster
- Sauce; Broiled Oysters; Oyster Pie; Oyster Toast;
- Oyster Patties; Oyster Powder; Pickled Oysters; Oyster
- Loaves; Oyster Omelet; Cabbage, Larks, and Oysters;
- and Frogs and Oysters 54
-
- CHAPTER VIII.
-
- THE OYSTER AND THE DOCTOR.
-
- Oyster-eating in Prussia; Disgusting Wagers; Oysters
- better than Pills, A Universal Remedy; Professional
- Opinions; When Ladies should eat them; Repugnance
- overcome; Oysters as an External Application; Chemical
- Analysis; How to tell if Dead before Opening 68
-
- CHAPTER IX.
-
- THE OYSTER ABROAD.
-
- British Oysters in Ostend Quarters; the Whitstable in
- a Slow Coach; Holstein, Schleswig, and Heligoland
- Natives; Norwegian and Bremer Oysters; American
- Oysters; French Oysters; Dutch Oysters; Mediterranean
- Oysters and Classical Judges 75
-
- CHAPTER X.
-
- "THE TREASURE OF AN OYSTER."
-
- Sweet names given to Pearls; Barry Cornwall Proctor's
- lines; Component parts of Pearls; Mother-of-pearl; How
- Pearls are formed, Sorrows into Gems; Their nucleus;
- Sir Everard Home and Sir David Brewster; Curious
- shapes and fancy Jewellery; Pearl Fisheries; Bahrein
- Island and Bay of Candalchy; Miseries of the Divers;
- Pearls as Physic; Immense value of recorded Pearls; A
- Perle for a Prince; Most precious Pearls 82
-
-
-
-
- THE OYSTER
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
- THE OYSTER IN SEASON.
-
-The R. canon correct; Alimentary Qualities of the Oyster; Profitable
-Investment; Billingsgate, and London Consumption; English Oyster-beds;
-Jersey Oysters; French Oyster-beds on the Coast of Brittany.
-
-
-Of the Millions who live to eat and eat to live in this wide world of
-ours, how few are there who do not, at proper times and seasons, enjoy a
-good oyster. It may not be an ungrateful task, therefore, if I endeavour
-to inform them what species of animal the little succulent shell-fish
-is, that affords to man so much gastronomical enjoyment—how born and
-bred and nurtured; when, and where; and, lastly, how best it may be
-eaten, whether in its living and natural state, or having undergone the
-ordeal of cooking by the skill of a superior artist.
-
-I have oftentimes been told that it is a mere question of
-fastidiousness, or fashion, that oysters should be served for human food
-only at a certain fixed period of the year—those months possessing the
-letter _r_ being proverbially the only months when the oyster is fit for
-human food. Why not, such reasoners have said, eat oysters all the year
-round? Life is short. Why not obtain the first of gastronomical
-enjoyments every month of the year and every day of the month? I can in
-no manner go with these opinions, either from my practical knowledge of
-the oyster, or from any just reasoning.
-
-I am aware that there are many good men and true, and others calling
-themselves, somewhat erroneously, sportsmen, beyond the white cliffs of
-Britain, who would eat an oyster on the hottest day of June and July as
-they would a partridge, a pheasant, or a salmon at any season of the
-year. Sufficient the names oyster, partridge, pheasant—all gastronomical
-delights—all to be eaten, and by them eaten whensoever and wheresoever
-served, what matters it? I am also aware that in our good City of
-London, in the hottest and earliest days of August,[1] oysters are
-gulped down by the thousand: it is, nevertheless, an error—a revolting,
-unhealthy, unclean error—which ought to be denied, both at home and
-abroad, by the strong hand of the law.
-
-I, for my part, utterly and entirely ignore fish or fowl of the game
-species, as fit for human food during the seasons of breeding; and
-although an oyster may be eatable in August, if the month be hot it is
-rarely fresh; and what is more disgusting or more likely to be injurious
-to man than a stale oyster? That which I have said, however, on the
-oyster in this little book which I offer to the million—for the million
-are interested in the subject—will, I hope, induce those who have
-hitherto broken through a rule strictly adhered to by all gastronomes,
-to abstain in future; and those who have hitherto enjoyed oyster-eating,
-fearlessly to eat on and secure the first and foremost of all
-gastronomical indulgences provided for man—only in due season.
-
-On the 25th of July, says Brand, the antiquary, being St. James the
-Apostle's Day, the priests of old were wont to bless apples; and a
-popular belief too, in 1588, though generally ignored in the more
-enlightened days in which we live, was, that whoever ate oysters on that
-day would not be without money for the remainder of the year. This is
-very probable, for without they were selected with great care, disease
-and even death might follow. This conjunction of apples and oysters on
-St. James's Day may have suggested Bianca's remark in the "Taming of the
-Shrew," when comparing the resemblance of the old Pedant to that of
-Vincentio, which she remarks was as complete as that of an oyster to an
-apple.
-
-One must, therefore, take care not to eat oysters during the months of
-June and July, because they are unwholesome on account of the
-spawning-time; and also be careful in their selection in August. There
-are instances when persons, after having eaten oysters during these
-months, have become ill, and have even died. Last summer, at Ostend,
-thirty persons were taken ill in consequence of having eaten oysters in
-the month of July. They are, during these months, very thin, and without
-taste; in the month of September they become again fat and eatable,
-which may be accounted for by the fact of their being self-generated.
-The strength of the poor oysters is entirely spent in fattening
-themselves, in order the more to tickle the palate of the epicure in the
-proper season.
-
-Now let us proceed to open the oyster.
-
-The Oyster! The mere writing of the word creates sensations of
-succulence—gastronomical pleasures, nutritive food, easy digestion,
-palatable indulgence—then go sleep in peace!
-
-Lobster salads, beef and veal, truffles and chestnuts, all good in their
-way, are, nevertheless, attended with evil consequences to the human
-frame.
-
-But oysters—ye pleasant companions of the midnight hours, or the mid-day
-feast; is there a man, woman or child in all Europe—ay, or in Asia,
-Africa, or America—who does not owe you a debt of gratitude which they
-repay to the full by the enjoyment of your society _tête-à-tête_? You
-are eaten raw and alive, cooked and scolloped, in sauce and without
-sauce. True, true, oh oyster! thou art the best beloved of the loved!
-
-The oyster, when eaten moderately, is, without contradiction, a
-wholesome food, and one of the greatest delicacies in the world. It
-contains much nutritive substance, which is very digestive, and produces
-a peculiar charm and an inexplicable pleasure. After having eaten
-oysters we feel joyous, light, and agreeable—yes, one might say,
-fabulously well. He who has eaten for the first time oysters is best
-enabled to judge of this; for, soon after having eaten them, he will
-experience a sensation he never felt before, and never had an idea of.
-This sensation scarcely remains with people who eat oysters every day;
-it is more practically felt when oysters are eaten for breakfast or
-before dinner, although they are also very wholesome in the evening,
-when taken moderately. Gourmets and epicures eat the oyster in its
-natural state, except that the beard is taken away. In England it is
-eaten with pepper, in Holland with vinegar, in Germany frequently with
-lemon-juice; but I am of the opinion, and am convinced, that when taken
-with the liquor they still contain, they are more digestible and more
-tasty. The opinion that this fluid is salt water, is an error; it is the
-white blood of the oyster itself, which it emits when injured in having
-its upper shell broken off. If it were sea-water, it would have a
-disagreeable bitter taste, and cause sickness; but as this does not take
-place, but on the contrary gives a fine taste to the oyster, the error
-is evident. The error appears to arise from the fact that
-unconscientious oyster dealers wash the oysters with salt and water in
-order to give them a better appearance, as they say.
-
-"The oyster," says a writer in No. 824 of the "Family Herald"—that most
-agreeable of all window-seat books—"is a species of food combining the
-most precious alimentary qualities. Its meat is soft, firm, and
-delicate. It has sufficient flavour to please the taste, but not enough
-to excite to surfeit. Through a quality peculiar to itself, it favours
-the intestinal and gastric absorption, mixing easily with other food;
-and, assimilating with the juices of the stomach, it aids and favours
-the digestive functions. There is no other alimentary substance, not
-even excepting bread, which does not produce indigestion under certain
-given circumstances, but oysters never. This is a homage due to them.
-They may be eaten to-day, to-morrow, for ever, in profusion; indigestion
-is not to be feared, and we may be certain that no doctor was ever
-called in through their fault. Of course we except cooked oysters.
-Besides their valuable digestive qualities, oysters supply a recipe not
-to be despised in the liquor they contain. It is produced by the
-sea-water they have swallowed, but which, having been digested, has lost
-the peculiar bitterness of salt water. This oyster-water is limpid, and
-slightly saline in taste. Far from being purgative, like sea-water, it
-promotes digestion. It keeps the oysters themselves fresh, prolongs
-their life for some time until it is destroyed in our stomachs, or until
-the oyster has been transformed into a portion of ourselves."
-
-The degree of importance which different persons attach to matters
-connected with the world in which we live, depends, of course, in a
-great measure, on the manner in which they view them.
-
-One person considers a loving wife, and four hundred a year, wealth and
-happiness; another would be miserable without four thousand, and could
-dispense with the wife. Some consider a post with five thousand a year a
-tolerable means of existence; others a commissionership with twelve
-hundred. Some seek a good consulship; others, till they have travelled
-from St. Petersburg and back in a telega, or sledge, half a dozen times
-during mid-winter, use the interest, which in other days would have
-secured a snug governorship, even in the Island of Barataria, to obtain
-a queen's messenger's place. At least so it used to be. Whether
-competitive examinations will lead to our having the right man in the
-right place, the round pegs in round holes, and the square pegs in
-square ones, still remains to be seen. And so is it with most things in
-life, whether personal or gastronomical. Different men are of different
-opinions; some like apples, and some like—onions; but I have scarcely
-ever yet met with the man who has refused a thoroughly good oyster.
-
-There is not a man, however unobservant, but knows that oysters are a
-great source of profit to some of that multitude which rises every
-morning without knowing exactly how, when, and where it shall dine.
-Billingsgate in the oyster season is a sight and a caution. Boats coming
-in loaded; porters struggling with baskets and sacks; early loungers
-looking on—it is so pleasant to see other people work—buyers and
-cheapeners, the fish salesman in his rostrum, the wealthy purchaser who
-can lay out his hundreds and buy his thousands—all to be met with,
-together with that noise and bustle, and, far beyond it, all that
-incredible earnestness which always distinguishes an English market.
-
-Oysters, says Dryasdust, in his very useful commercial work—in which,
-however, he makes alarming mis-statements—oysters are consumed in London
-in incredible quantities, "and notwithstanding their high price, are
-largely eaten by the middle and lower classes!"
-
-Thanking Dryasdust for his information, and being one of the great
-middle class ourselves, we can safely assert that oysters are _not_ high
-in price. Fancy being able to purchase twelve succulent dainties for one
-six-pence at Ling's or Quin's, at Proctor's or Pim's, or any other
-celebrated shell-fish shop! Twelve "lumps of delight," as the
-Mussulman—not mussel man—calls his sweetmeats! and then fancy Dryasdust
-saying that they are high in price! Oh shame, where is thy blush!
-
-A farm of four acres, if well handled, may give occupation, and even
-bring pecuniary gain, to the possessor. A garden, for those who
-thoroughly understand and enjoy it, may secure untold pleasures, and
-perhaps help to pay the rent of the cottage. But an "oyster-bed" is a
-pleasure—an _el dorado_—a mine of wealth, in fact, which fills the
-owners' pockets with gold, and affords to the million untold
-gastronomical enjoyment and healthy food. On the money part of the
-question, the Scientific and Useful column of Number 825 of the "Family
-Herald" furnishes the following information: "A very interesting report
-has been recently made to the French Government on the results of
-experiments made for the improvement of oyster-beds. The locality chosen
-was the Bay of St. Brieux, on the coast of Brittany. Between March and
-May, 1859, about 3,000,000 oysters, taken from different parts of the
-sea, were distributed in ten longitudinal beds in the above bay. The
-bottom was previously covered with old oyster shells and boughs of trees
-arranged like fascines. To these the young oysters attach themselves,
-and so fruitful are the results that one of the fascines was found at
-the end of six months to have no less than 20,000 young oysters on it.
-The report further states that 12,000 hectares may be brought into full
-bearing in three years at an annual expense not exceeding 10,000
-francs."
-
-M. Laviciare, Commissary of the Maritime Inscription, in his 1860 report
-to M. Coste, of the success of these operations in the Bay of St.
-Brieux, states that "a recent examination has fully and satisfactorily
-proved the advantageous results obtained on the five banks which have
-been laid down, and which have exceeded the most sanguine expectations.
-Three fascines, which were taken up indiscriminately from one of the
-banks formed in June, 1859, contained about 20,000 oysters each, of from
-one inch to two inches in diameter. The total expense for forming the
-above bank was 221f.; and if the 300 fascines laid down on it be
-multiplied by 20,000, 600,000 oysters will be obtained, which, if sold
-at 20f. a thousand, will produce 120,000f. If, however, the number of
-oysters on each fascine were to be reckoned at only 10,000, the sum of
-60,000f. would be received, which, for an expenditure of only 221f.
-would give a larger profit than any other known branch of industry."
-
-But the breeding and fattening of the London oyster has long been a
-lucrative branch of trade, of which Cockaine may well be proud. It is
-carried on "contagious" to London, as Mrs. Malaprop would
-say—principally in Essex and Kent. The rivers Crouch, Blackwater, and
-Colne are the chief breeding places in the former, and the channel of
-the Swale and the Medway in the latter. These are contiguous to Milton;
-hence Dibdin's song, and hence also the corruption of "melting
-hoysters;" melting they are too. The corruption is classical, so let it
-stand.
-
-Exclusive of oysters bred in Essex and Kent, vast numbers are brought
-from Jersey, Poole, and other places along the coast, and are fattened
-in beds. The export of oysters from Jersey alone is very considerable,
-having amounted on an average of the four years ending with 1832[2] to
-208,032 bushels a year. The Jersey fishing then employed, during the
-season, about 1500 men, 1000 women and children, and 250 boats. Think of
-this, ye oyster-eaters! Think that ye are doing—such is the wise
-ordination of an overruling Providence—some good when you are swallowing
-your ante-prandial oyster, and are giving employment to some portion of
-those 3000 people who work for you at Jersey, besides helping to feed
-the cold-fingered fishmonger, who, with blue apron and skilful knife,
-tempts you to "Hanother dazzen, sir?"
-
-Of the quantity of oysters consumed in London we cannot give even an
-approximate guess. It must amount to millions of bushels. Fancy, if you
-can, also, that curiously courteous exchange which goes on every
-Christmas between our oyster-eating country cousins and our turkey and
-goose-loving Londoners. To the man
-
- "Who hath been long in city pent,
- 'Tis very sweet to gaze upon the fair
- And open brow of heaven;—to breathe a prayer
- Full in the face of the blue firmament"—
-
-sings John Keats. Oh, if he had been but an oyster-eater, that article
-from the "Quarterly," savage and slaughterly, would not have killed him;
-but it is also very sweet to gaze upon a turkey, a leash of birds, a
-brace of pheasants, and, as Mrs. Tibbetts hath it, "a real country
-hare." Such a present is promptly repaid by a fine cod packed in ice,
-and two barrels of oysters. How sweet are these when eaten at a country
-home, and opened by yourselves, the barrel being paraded on the table
-with its top knocked out, and with the whitest of napkins round it, as
-we shall presently have occasion to show. How sweet it is, too, to open
-some of the dear natives for your pretty cousin, and to see her open her
-sweet little mouth about as wide as Lesbia's sparrow did for his lump
-of—not sugar, it was not then invented—but lump of honey! How sweet it
-is, after the young lady has swallowed her half dozen, to help yourself!
-The oyster never tastes sweeter than when thus operated on by yourself,
-so that you do not "job" the knife into your hand! True labour has a
-dignity about it. The only time when I, who have seen most people, from
-Tom Thumb to the Benicia Boy, from Madame Doche to the Empress Eugenie,
-and from manly, sea-going Prince Alfred to the Staleybridge Infant and
-Jemmy Shaw's "Spider"—the only time, I say, that I have ever seen a
-nobleman look like a nobleman, was when a noble duke, a peer not only of
-England and Scotland, but of _la belle France_ also, owned that he could
-do two things better than most people, and that was, open oysters and
-polish his own boots. I, like Othello, when he upbraided Iago for the
-last time, "looked down to his feet," but found that it was no fable.
-
-So important is our illustrious bivalve as an article of trade, that it
-is protected by law. It is said that the only two things that George the
-Fourth ever did—the great Georgius, whom Mr. Thackeray envies and
-satirises—were to invent a shoe-buckle and an exquisite hair-dye. The
-brains of the black Brunswicker could do no more. But there is one act
-also—an Act of Parliament[3]—which was passed in his reign, for which he
-is to be thanked. The man who was at once the Lucullus and Apicius of
-his times must have had some hand in the framing of that Act.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1:
-
- The common Colchester and Faversham oysters are brought to market on
- the 5th of August. They are called _Common oysters_, and are picked up
- on the French coast, and then transferred to those beds; the Milton,
- or, as they are commonly called, the _melting Natives_, the true
- Rutupians, do not come in till the beginning of October, continue in
- season till the 12th of May, and approach the meridian of their
- perfection about Christmas. The denizens from France are not to be
- compared to British _Native_ oysters, which are so called because they
- are born, bred, and fed in this country. These do not come to
- perfection till they are four years old.
-
-Footnote 2:
-
- The exportation has by this time nearly doubled, but these are the
- latest statistics we can arrive at.
-
-Footnote 3:
-
- See page 25.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
- ANCIENT HISTORY OF THE OYSTER.
-
-The Ancients; Oysters a Greek and Roman Luxury; Sergius Orata and the
-Oyster-beds of Baia; Immense Consumption at Rome; Failure of the Circean
-and Lucrinian Oyster-beds under Domitian, and Introduction of Rutupians
-from Britain; Agricola, Constantine, and Helena; Athenian Oysters and
-Aristides.
-
-
-Horace, Martial, and Juvenal, Cicero and Seneca, Pliny, Ætius, and the
-old Greek doctor Oribasius, whom Julian the Apostate delighted to
-honour, and other men of taste amongst the ancients, have enlarged upon
-the various qualities of the oyster; and was it not to Sergius Orata
-that we owe our present oyster-beds; for he it was who introduced layers
-or stews for oysters at Baia, the Brighton of ancient Rome, as we have
-them at present. That was in the days when luxury was rampant, and when
-men of great wealth, like Licinius Crassus, the leviathan slave
-merchant, rose to the highest honours; for this dealer in human flesh in
-the boasted land of liberty, served the office of consul along with
-Pompey the Great, and on one occasion required no less than 10,000
-tables to accommodate all his guests. How many barrels of oysters were
-eaten at that celebrated dinner, the "Ephemerides"—as Plutarch calls
-"The Times" and "Morning Post" of that day—have omitted to state; but as
-oysters then took the place that turtle-soup now does at our great City
-feeds, imagination may busy itself if it likes with the calculation. All
-we know is, that oysters then fetched very long prices at Rome, as the
-author of the "Tabella Cibaria" has not failed to tell us; and then, as
-now, the high price of any luxury of the table was sure to make a
-liberal supply of it necessary, when a man like Crassus entertained half
-the city as his guests, to rivet his popularity.
-
-But the Romans had a weakness for the "breedy creatures," as our dear
-old friend Christopher North calls them in his inimitable "Noctes." In
-the time of Nero, some sixty years later, the consumption of oysters in
-the "Imperial City" was nearly as great as it now is in the "World's
-Metropolis;" and there is a statement, which I recollect to have read
-somewhere, that during the reign of Domitian, the last of the twelve
-Cæsars, a greater number of millions of bushels were annually consumed
-at Rome than I should care to swear to. These oysters, however, were but
-Mediterranean produce—the small fry of Circe, and the smaller
-Lucrinians; and this unreasonable demand upon them quite exhausted the
-beds in that great fly-catcher's reign; and it was not till under the
-wise administration of Agricola in Britain, when the Romans got their
-far-famed Rutupians from the shores of Kent, from Richborough and the
-Reculvers—the _Rutupi Portus_ of the "Itinerary," of which the latter,
-the _Regulbium_, near Whitstable, in the mouth of the Thames, was the
-northern boundary—that Juvenal praised them as he does; and he was
-right: for in the whole world there are no oysters like them; and of all
-the "breedy creatures" that glide, or have ever glided down the throats
-of the human race, our "Natives" are probably the most delectable. Can
-we wonder, then, when Macrobius tells us that the Roman pontiffs in the
-fourth century never failed to have these Rutupians at table,
-particularly, feeling sure that Constantine the Great, and his mother,
-the pious Helena, must have carried their British tastes with them to
-Rome at that period.
-
-The Greeks have not said much in praise of oysters; but then they knew
-nothing of Britain beyond its name, and looked upon it very much in the
-same light as we now regard the regions of the Esquimaux; and as to the
-little dabs of watery pulps found in the Mediterranean, what are they
-but oysters in name? Indeed, the best use the Athenians could make of
-them was to use their shells to ostracise any good citizen who, like
-Aristides, was too virtuous for a "Greek." However, on the plea that
-oysters are oysters, we presume—for it could not be on account of their
-flavour—"oysters," says the author of the "Tabella Cibaria," "were held
-in great esteem by the Athenians." No doubt when Constantine moved the
-seat of the Empire from Rome to Constantinople, he did not forget to
-have his Rutupians regularly forwarded; so, perhaps, after all it was
-our "Natives," which thus found their way into Greece, that they
-delighted in; and if so, the good taste of the Athenians need not be
-called into question; but, as in literature and the arts, in
-oyster-eating too, it deserves to be held up to commendation.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
- MODERN HISTORY OF THE OYSTER.
-
-Fall of the Rutupian Supremacy; Louis IV. and William of Normandy;
-Conquest of England, and Revival of Oyster-eating in England; The Oyster
-under Legal Protection; American Oysters.
-
-
-With the fall of the Empire came also the fall of the Rutupian
-supremacy; and even the Roman Britons, driven into Brittany and the
-mountains of Wales by their truculent Saxon persecutors, had to forego
-these luxuries of the table, unless, perhaps, Prince Arthur and his
-knights may now and then have opened a bushel when they were seated over
-their wine in that free and easy circle, which has become so celebrated
-as to have formed a literature of its own. From the fourth century, to
-which Macrobius brought us, to the reign of Louis IV. of France, the
-history of the oyster is a blank; but that king revived the taste for
-our favourite, and during his captivity in Normandy brought it again
-into request with his conqueror, Duke William; so, when the Normans
-invaded England under William the Conqueror—the descendant of that Duke
-William, little more than a century later—they were not long in finding
-out how much Kentish and Essex oysters were preferable to those of
-France.
-
-Since then the Oyster has held its own against all comers, as one of the
-most welcome accessories to the table of rich and poor, and has been
-protected in his rights and immunities by various Acts of Parliament.
-"In the month of May oysters cast their spawn," says an old writer in
-the "Transactions of the Royal Society," "which the dredgers call spat,
-and this spawn cleaves to stones, old oyster-shells, pieces of wood, and
-other substances at the bottom of the sea, which is called cultch.
-During that month, by the law of the Admiralty Court, the dredgers have
-liberty to take every kind of oyster, whatsoever be its size. When they
-have taken them they gently raise with a knife the small brood from the
-cultch, and then they throw the cultch in again, to preserve the ground
-for the future, unless they are so newly spat, that they cannot be
-safely severed from the cultch, in which case they are permitted to take
-the stone or shell, which the spat is upon, one shell having often
-twenty spats. After the month of May, it is felony to carry away the
-cultch, and punishable to take any other oysters except those of the
-size of a half-crown piece, or such as when the two shells are shut will
-admit of a shilling to rattle between them." These brood and other
-oysters are carried to creeks of the sea, and thrown into the channel,
-which are called their beds or layers, where they grow and fatten, and
-in two or three years oysters of the smallest brood reach the standard
-size.
-
-The property in oyster beds is defined by the 7 & 8 George IV., c. 29,
-s. 36, which makes it larceny for any person to steal any oyster or
-oyster brood from any oyster bed belonging to another person, if such
-bed is sufficiently marked out and known as such; and even the attempt
-to take either oysters or oyster brood from such an oyster bed, though
-none be actually disturbed, is a misdemeanor, punishable by fine or
-imprisonment, or both, though nothing is to prevent the fishing for
-floating fish within the limits of any oyster fishery.
-
-The Admiralty Court also imposes great penalties upon those who do not
-destroy a fish, which they call Fivefingers (the crossfish, or common
-starfish of our coasts), because it is supposed that that fish gets into
-the oysters when they gape, and sucks them out. That it is injurious to
-oyster beds may be true; for its food, in part, consists of mollusks. It
-does not, however, walk into the oyster bodily, as the Admiralty Court
-suggests, but rather appears to overpower its prey by applying some
-poisonous secretion, and pouting out the lobes of the stomach, so as to
-convert them into a kind of proboscis, and thus suck the mollusks from
-their shells.
-
-The reason of the penalty for destroying the cultch is that the ouse
-then will increase, and mussels and cockles will breed there and destroy
-the oysters, because they have no convenience for depositing their spat.
-Hence, mud and sea-weeds are extremely injurious to the "breedy
-creatures'" propagation and increase; for no less than starfish,
-cockles, and mussels, other enemies amongst shellfish and crustaceous
-animals, particularly crabs and scollops, eagerly devour the oyster,
-when they can capture it.
-
-In America, where the quality of the native oyster, though little
-inferior to the larger species of Britain, is greatly over-rated, the
-legislature is now called upon to make a similar provision for its
-protection against its greatest enemy, man. "It has been estimated,"
-says a correspondent in No. 769 of the "Family Herald," "that the State
-of Virginia possesses an area of about 1,680,000 acres of oyster beds,
-containing about 784,000,000 bushels of oysters. It is also stated that
-the mother oyster spawns annually at least 3,000,000; yet,
-notwithstanding this enormous productive power, and the vast extent of
-oyster beds, there is danger of the oyster being exterminated unless
-measures are adopted to prevent fishermen from taking them at improper
-seasons of the year. It is therefore proposed to have either a flotilla
-of four steamboats employed to protect the oyster beds from piratical
-intruders, or to farm out the oyster beds to private contractors to do
-with them as they please."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
-
- THE OYSTER AT HOME.
-
-Its Nature, Colour, and Structure; Natural Food; Perception of the
-changes of Light; Uses of the Cilia; Fecundity and Means of Propagation;
-Age; Fossil Oysters in Berkshire and in the Pacific; Power of
-Locomotion.
-
-
-The Oyster belongs to those Mollusks which are headless, having
-their gills in the form of membranous plates, and are named
-_Lamellibranchiata_, from the Latin word _Lamella_, a plate; or
-_Conchæ_, the Latin name for the whole family of oyster, scollop,
-cockle, mussel, and other well-known bivalves. Properly speaking,
-only six kinds are fit to take part in the gastromal treat, to say
-nothing of the sanitary advantages the family are good enough to
-provide for the world at large. These six peculiar and most
-agreeable aristocrats all belong to the family of the common oyster,
-_Ostrea edulis_, by far the most important tribe, and in fact, that
-in behalf of whose meritorious qualities I have more particularly
-taken up my pen.
-
-The oyster bears different names in accordance to the localities in
-which it is found, whether on rocky ground, mud, or sand, and has
-different colours in different places. In Spain, oysters are found of a
-red and russet colour; in Illyria they are brown, but the fish is black,
-and in the Red Sea, of the colours of the rainbow. The green oyster, the
-Parisian delicacy, is brought from Brittany; but the same flavour and
-colour can be produced by putting oysters into pits where the water is
-about three feet deep in the salt marshes, and where the sun has great
-power. In these they become green in three or four days; for these
-colours are derived from the elementary substance on which they feed;
-not, however, that it produces any peculiar difference as to flavour. I
-may, however, as well decide at once that the green oyster is, to my
-taste, the oyster _par excellence_, in which decision I shall doubtless
-be borne out by most _gourmets_ whose knowledge extends to a choice of
-the good things of this life.
-
-I know, in this, some of my friends north of the Tweed may differ, and,
-if still living, amongst them I should have had to include Professor
-Wilson, so long the very life and soul of oyster-suppers and
-whisky-toddy. But nobody can judge of the true flavour of an oyster
-without well _masticating_ his delicious food; and, by his own showing,
-both he and the "Shepherd" bolted their "Pandores." These same
-"Pandores," by the way, are large fat oysters, much relished in modern
-Athens, which are said to owe their superior excellence to the brackish
-contents of the pans of the adjacent salt-works of Prestonpans flowing
-out upon the beds. Taken away young and transferred to the Ostend beds,
-these Pandores furnish the very best oysters to be met with on the
-Continent, surpassing even the far-famed ones of Flensburg, in Holstein.
-Had "Christopher North" tickled the fish first to death with his
-incisors before he swallowed it, I might have submitted my judgment to
-his; but how can a man who bolted his food be quoted as an authority in
-matters of taste? At best, his must have been but an after-taste, a mere
-bilious reminder of what the repast had been, in which the whisky played
-as prominent a part as the "breedy creatures" themselves.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-But let us return. The lower shell (*) of the oyster is concave, the
-upper flat. These shells are opened and closed by the medium of a strong
-muscle acting upon a hinge (+), far more complete in its structure than
-ever locksmith could produce, even at the forthcoming Exhibition of all
-Nations.
-
-On the outside of the shell, when placed in a dark place, we may often
-observe a shining matter of blueish light, like a flame of brimstone,
-which sticks to the fingers when touched, and continues shining and
-giving light for a considerable time, though without any sensible heat.
-This light is produced by three varieties of minute animalcules, most
-interesting when examined under the microscope.
-
-The oyster possesses an organ of respiration similar to that of a
-fish—branchiæ or gills, in fact (_br_), which are fringed by a mantle or
-beard divided into two lobes (_m_), filled up by small membranous fibres
-which terminate in the mouth (_b_), in the form of rays, serving the
-animal also with power to catch and eat. Unlike other shelled mussels
-the oyster has no feet; thus it is unable to make any other voluntary
-movement, save that of opening and closing its shell, as already named,
-in order to receive its food, which consists principally of small
-microscopical spores and young shoots of marine plants, made soft and
-thin by the action of the waves; whence arise the green beards or
-mantles. With some difficulty I have been enabled to separate a small
-portion of this vegetation from the mantle of an oyster, and having
-placed it under a strong microscope, discovered sea weed, of precisely
-the same species as that in which oysters are packed. They also feed on
-an infusion of sea worms called oyster animalcules. These are very
-accurately described in the "Journal des Savans," by M. Auzout. Some are
-irridescent, but others are not, and good specimens of all may be
-secured immediately the oyster has been taken from the sea.
-
-By means of the beard or mantle described (_m_), the oyster secures his
-food, bringing it gradually, by means of little hooks bent inwards, to
-its mouth (_b_), wherein it is crushed and slowly consumed.
-
-The stomach (_i_) is situated near the mouth, and all the organs are
-very simple. The mantle (_m_ and _m'_) above-named replaces the lungs.
-The liver (_f_) is small; the gall, comparatively speaking, large; the
-larger blood vessels little rarefied. The heart (_h_) consists of two
-cameras at a tolerable distance from one another, resembling small round
-bladders. The pulse beats rather slowly (caused by, perhaps, the want of
-food and sea water). From the stomach the rectum (_a_) leads directly to
-the anus. How digestion is effected in this short and simple way, I can
-scarce venture to assert. But it is a fact well known, that, after the
-spawning season, the oyster becomes thin, but a very short time enables
-it to recover its fat and succulence.
-
-On examining the oyster the mantle (_m_), divided into two lobes (_m_
-and _m'_), the edges of which are fringed, will be perceived filling the
-greater part of the shell; also four membranous leaves crossed with
-stripes, which at their hinder extremities have as many capillary tubes.
-These leaves, or veins, unequally divided around the edges of the body
-perform the functions of the lungs, and separate from the water the
-necessary air for the maintenance of the animal.
-
-The mouth (_b_) is a kind of trunk, or long aperture surrounded by four
-lips nearly resembling those of a gill, but far shorter.
-
-Behind the muscles is to be seen a large fleshy white and cylindrical
-substance moving on a central muscle, and containing the stomach and
-intestines (_i_). This part resembles the trunk of other conchæ, but it
-has no power of opening or contracting. The canal of the intestines is
-situated on the top of the muscle (_a_).
-
-The oyster has circular vessels, on the bottom of which are to be seen
-deep muscular cavities, occupying the place of the heart (_h_), and
-sending their moisture to the small skin through which they come in
-contact with the water or the air.
-
-In his "Outline of the Animal Kingdom," Professor Rymer Jones most
-happily describes all these peculiarities. "Wonderful indeed is the
-elaborate mechanism," are his words, "employed to effect the double
-purpose of renewing the respired fluid and feeding the helpless
-inhabitants of these shells! Every filament of the branchial fringe,
-examined under a powerful microscope, is found to be covered with
-countless cilia in constant vibration, causing, by their united efforts,
-powerful and rapid currents, which, sweeping over the surface of the
-gills, hurry towards the mouth whatever floating animalcules, or
-nutritious particles, may be brought within the limits of their action,
-and thus bring streams of nutritive molecules to the very aperture
-through which they are conveyed to the stomach, the lips and labial
-fringes acting as sentinels to admit or refuse entrance, as the matter
-may be of a wholesome or pernicious character."
-
-Nature, too, has given the oyster a sensitive perception of the changes
-of light as the means of its protection from the many enemies it has to
-contend with; for if the shadow of an approaching boat is thrown forward
-so as to cover it, it closes the valves of its shell before any
-undulation of the water can have reached it. This sensitiveness is
-easily studied in the marine vivary, where the oyster, with its
-beautiful cilia, more beautiful by far than the richest lace of a
-bride's wedding dress, is always an object of great interest.
-
-The oyster is an hermaphrodite animal, and hence its propagation is
-effected by self-produced eggs, which it bears within in the form of a
-greenish milky juice which it casts as spat in May, and which, as has
-already been stated, in this country is protected by wise and prudent
-acts of the Legislature. "The liquor in the lower shell of the oyster,"
-says a writer in No. 587 of the "Family Herald," "if viewed through a
-microscope, will be found to contain multitudes of small oysters,
-covered with shells and swimming nimbly about—120 of which extend about
-an inch! Besides these young oysters, the liquor contains a variety of
-animalcules." Indeed, with the aid of a microscope one million of young
-have been discovered in a single oyster. Guarded by their two tender
-shells, these swim freely in the sea when ejected by the parent oyster,
-until, by means of a glutinous substance, they fix themselves so fast to
-some object that they can be separated only by force. These young are
-very soon able to produce others, many say at four months after their
-birth. When the oyster attains the size of a crown the shell is still
-very tender and thin; it is only after the second, third, or fourth year
-that it becomes fit for human food.
-
-If we cannot answer the Fool's question in Lear, and "tell how an oyster
-makes his shell," we can, nevertheless, tell by his shell what is his
-age.
-
-"A London oysterman," says a correspondent of No. 623 of the "Family
-Herald," "can tell the ages of his flock to a nicety. The age of an
-oyster is not to be found out by looking into its mouth. It bears its
-years upon its back. Everybody who has handled an oyster-shell must have
-observed that it seemed as if composed of successive layers or plates
-overlapping each other. These are technically termed 'shoots' and each
-of them marks a year's growth; so that, by counting them, we can
-determine at a glance the year when the creature came into the world. Up
-to the time of its maturity, the shoots are regular and successive; but
-after that time they become irregular, and are piled one over the other,
-so that the shell becomes more and more thickened and bulky. Judging
-from the great thickness to which some oyster-shells have attained, this
-mollusk is capable, if left to its natural changes unmolested, of
-attaining a great age." Indeed, fossil oysters have been seen, of which
-each shell was nine inches thick, whence they may be concluded to have
-been more than 100 years old.
-
-For the most part the offspring remains near the mother, which accounts
-for the large oyster banks or beds which are found in almost all the
-seas of the temperate and torrid zones, and which in some places have
-been known to attain such magnitude as to cause ships to be wrecked upon
-them. The lower stratum is necessarily lifeless, being pressed upon by
-the upper one, so that the oysters beneath are unable to open
-themselves, and are consequently deprived of food.
-
-The immense propagation of the oyster may be understood from the fossil
-oyster bed near Reading, in Berkshire. These fossils have the entire
-shape, figure, and are of the same substance as our recent
-oyster-shells, and yet must have lain there from time immemorial. This
-bed occupies about six acres, forming a stratum of about two feet in
-thickness. But the largest fossil oyster banks are those raised by
-earth-quakes along the western shores of South America, which measure
-from sixty to eighty feet in depth, are often forty miles in length, and
-in many places stretch above two miles into the interior.
-
-The Abbé Dicquemare, fond of trying experiments in the spread of
-gastronomy, even to the stewing a mess of _Gemmaceæ_, the _Gems_ of our
-water-vivaries, till they had something of the flavour of oysters,
-asserts that, when in a state of liberty, oysters can move from one
-place to another by suddenly admitting sea water into the shell, which
-they are able to open and shut with extraordinary power and rapidity,
-whereby they produce a strange sound; and this observation has been
-confirmed by other naturalists, and is recorded as an ascertained fact
-in several books of natural science. In like manner they defend
-themselves against smaller animals, especially against the spider crab,
-which constantly tries to penetrate into their half open shells. Much
-natural instinct or foresight is also attributed to the oyster; in proof
-of which I may name that, when in a position which is exposed to the
-variations of the tide, oysters seem to be aware that they remain for
-some hours without water, and consequently provide it within their
-shells.
-
-This makes such oysters far more fit to be conveyed to a distance, than
-those taken nearer to the shore, which evacuate the water, thus exposing
-themselves to the heat of the sun, the cold, or an attack from their
-enemies; and this, too, is the reason why Colchester or Pyfleet oysters,
-packed at the beds, are in such request.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V.
-
- THE OYSTER IN ITS NEW SETTLEMENT.
-
-Dredging for Oysters; Oyster-beds and their formation; Sergius Orata;
-Pliny the Elder; Baia and the Lucrine Sea; Roman Epicurism and Gluttony;
-Martial and Horace, Cicero and Seneca; Masticate Oysters, and do not
-bolt them whole; Mediterranean and Atlantic Oysters; Agricola and the
-Rutupians; Apicius Cœlius, Trajan, Pliny, and the Vivarium.
-
-
-The Oyster does not leave his home like the duckling, upon the call of
-"come here and be killed." If he is wanted, like Mrs. Glasse's hare, we
-must "first catch him." This is done by dredging, and this dredging for
-oysters is performed by means of rakes and scrapers, on which is
-fastened a bag of sail-cloth, leather, or net-work. These are lowered
-into the sea by means of ropes and chains, and are dragged along its
-bottom by boats in full sail, or by rowing-boats. When the net or
-scraper is drawn to the surface, the oysters are immediately separated
-from all else which may be swept up. These oysters are then stowed away
-and sent up to market in due course. But it is not of these that are
-formed the new settlements or oyster-beds, which I am about to describe.
-
-These oyster-beds are cavities or reservoirs which communicate with the
-sea by means of canals, and are placed in such manner that the level
-beds remain dry when the tide is high. These beds are made with
-sand-stones or other hewn stones; and the water is kept in or let out at
-low tide by means of locks, or traps, as may be most readily effected.
-
-At some periods, however, the water is kept in for many days, or even
-weeks together. In the latter case the oyster becomes, for the most
-part, very tender, and green and fat, because the stagnant water
-promotes the germination of those microscopical spores of marine plants,
-which always abound in natural sea-water, and upon which it delights to
-feed. These reservoirs, therefore, are not only the means of preserving
-them for sale, but of purifying them from the muddy odour which they
-have imbibed at sea, and which indicates them to be hard and devoid of
-that luscious and somewhat gastronomic quality so much prized by the
-world at large.
-
-The bottom and sides of these caves or reservoirs are paved with stones
-and thick layers of sand, to keep them free from all mud, which is not
-only very injurious to the animal, but sure to harbour its enemies; and
-great care is also observed not to admit too great a flow of water at
-one time, as that might drive particles of sand into the shells. When
-the reservoir is properly prepared, the oysters are placed in their
-natural position—the flat side being upwards, in a sloping or horizontal
-direction. The more care that is taken in keeping their beds clean and
-free from mud, by washing the sides of the reservoirs, pouring water
-over the oysters, especially those which are dry, and removing the dead
-ones, which can be recognised by their shells being open, the better;
-for the more valuable will they be as human food, both as to profit and
-condition, and the more appreciated by the gastronomic million, who hail
-the oyster season as does a sportsman the advent of grouse and
-partridges, hares and pheasants.
-
-The oysters, which are thus preserved, cleaned, nursed, and fattened are
-taken from their beds at the low tide when the water is out.
-
-There are doubts, various and conflicting, as to whether oysters
-contained in reservoirs, where the water is changed each successive
-tide, are not on that account preferable to those which exist in the
-same water for two weeks at a time. I give a decided preference to the
-latter, though the water must be kept very clean by constant care and
-attention to the removal of the dead, the decomposition of which would
-otherwise, but for the frequent change of water, seriously affect the
-health of the whole settlement, by an accumulation of sulphuretted
-hydrogen, with a smell like that emitted by the Thames and other
-drainage rivers in the dog-days. These oysters slip down the human
-throat divine with a tenderness and sublime relish which no words can
-describe.
-
-Let me pass over, for the nonce, the mode of packing and sending them to
-the interior. Thanks to the railways, the gastronomical delight of
-oyster eating is now secured to many who for years scarcely knew what an
-oyster meant in its entire freshness and best qualities.
-
-Sergius Orata, as Pliny the Elder tells us in the eighty-ninth book of
-his invaluable Natural History, and, as we have already stated, first
-conceived the idea of planting oysters in beds. This epicure had large
-reservoirs made at Baia, where he gathered thousands of these mollusks.
-Not far from these oyster-beds rose a palace in which the wealthy Roman
-used to assemble his choicest friends and feast with them the whole day
-and night. Oysters occupied the place of honour on the table of Sergius
-Orata; at every feast thousands of them were consumed. Satiated, but not
-yet satisfied, these gourmets were in the habit of adjourning into an
-adjoining room, where they relieved the stomach of its load by
-artificial means, and then returned to indulge again their appetite with
-a fresh supply of oysters.
-
-Strange as it may appear to us in the nineteenth century, this custom
-was universal amongst the wealthy of Imperial Rome, Cæsar himself often
-indulging in it, when the repast was to his taste; and ladies, the cream
-of the cream of that luxurious period, carried about with them peacocks'
-feathers and other dainty throat ticklers for the purpose, when they
-anticipated a more luxurious feed than usual.
-
-Who amongst us cares to eat white-bait in the crowded city? When the
-mood seizes us, do not we take boat and proceed up or down the river, as
-the whim dictates? The old Roman had no white-bait; and the oyster to
-him was therefore doubly welcome. To him the journey to his marine
-villa, by water or land, as with us, added but a zest to the anticipated
-treat. In the Bay of Naples is a smaller bay close to its most
-north-western point, bounded on the west by the pretty town of Baia and
-its hot wells, and on the north-east by the no less charming town of
-Pozzuoli. These little bays on the Italian coasts are dignified by the
-name of seas by the writers of classical antiquity, and round the
-headland of Baia, to the north, in the open Mediterranean—the Tyrrhenian
-Sea—just such another bay, the present Lago di Fusaro, was called the
-Lucrine Sea, with its far-famed oyster-beds, easy of access from Baia
-and Pozzuoli, both situated in a charming country. Here, close to the
-Lucrine, under a clear sky, surrounded by a delightful atmosphere, were
-situated the country houses of the more wealthy Romans, where, far away
-from business and the noise and turmoil of the forum, these accomplished
-disciples of Epicurus, without fear or care, used to give themselves up
-to the delights of the table. Here they tasted the little-shelled
-oysters which Martial liked so much, and which, but a few hours
-previously to being served up, had been gathered on the sea-shore.
-
-Gastronomic annals mention the names of some of these dainty persons who
-daily swallowed several hundreds of oysters; but Vitellius in this
-respect beat them all. That emperor, it is said, ate oysters four times
-a day, and at each meal swallowed neither more nor less than 1200 of
-them. Seneca himself, who so admirably praises the charms of poverty,
-yet left prodigious wealth behind him; Seneca the wise and moderate, ate
-several hundreds of them every week.
-
-"Oyster, so dear to people of taste!" he exclaims; "thou dost but excite
-instead of satisfying the appetite, never causing indisposition, not
-even when eaten to excess; for thou art easy of digestion, and the
-stomach yields thee back with facility." Cicero did not hesitate to
-confess that he had a special predilection for oysters; but he adds,
-that he could renounce them without any difficulty; which, by the way,
-he might as well have told to the Marines, if they were in existence in
-his day, for all the credence this remark of his has gained from
-posterity.
-
-We prefer Horace, who in every passage honestly makes known his love for
-oysters, and eats them himself with as much gusto as he extols them to
-others. Carefully, too, does he note down from whom he procured them,
-and the name of the famous gourmet who at the first bite was able to
-tell whether an oyster came from Circe or the Lucrine Sea, or from any
-part of Natolia. The ancients, our teachers in all arts, but especially
-in æsthetics, did not bolt the oyster, but masticated it. With true
-Epicurean tact, they always extracted the full enjoyment out of the good
-things set before them. Not so we; most of us now bolt them; but this is
-a mistake, for the oyster has a much finer flavour, and is far more
-nourishing, when well masticated.
-
-"Those who wish to enjoy this delicious restorative in its utmost
-perfection," says Dr. Kitchener, "must _eat_ it the moment it is opened,
-with its own gravy in the under shell; if not _eaten_ absolutely alive,
-its flavour and spirit are lost. The true lover of an oyster will have
-some regard for the feelings of his little favourite, and contrive to
-detach the fish from the shell so dexterously that the oyster is hardly
-conscious he has been ejected from his lodging till he _feels the teeth_
-of the piscivorous gourmet tickling him to death."
-
-The Romans needed not even the use of their teeth to tell from whence
-the oyster came; a mere look sufficed to distinguish it, as may be seen
-in the following lines ascribed to Lucilius.
-
- "When I but see the oyster's shell,
- I look and recognize the river, marsh or mud,
- Where it was raised."
-
-Nor was this so very difficult a matter, for the shell, no less than the
-animal itself, as has already been shown, exhibits the nature of the
-food upon which the oyster has fed.
-
-In Italy and Gaul it was for a long time a matter of dispute, which
-country produced the best oysters. At that time the Lucrine Sea
-maintained the superiority; but Pliny preferred those from Circe.
-"According to my opinion," he says, "the most delicious and most tender
-oysters are those from Circe."
-
-At last, however, the preference was given to those of Britain, which
-under the wise administration of Julius Agricola had conformed to the
-manners and customs of her conquerors, and there no longer was need of
-dispute as to whether the Mediterranean oysters of Italy or Gaul should
-have the precedence. The little watery pulpy dabs, which had hitherto
-delighted the conquerors of the world, were cast aside in disgust. They
-had found a real oyster at last, and the insignificant and flavourless
-bivalves of the coasts of Italy ceased to be in demand. From that time,
-on the shores of the Atlantic, thousands of slaves were employed in
-procuring the oysters, which in Rome were paid for by their weight in
-gold. The expenses were so great that the censors felt themselves
-obliged to interfere. Not content with getting their oysters from
-distant shores, they had means by which to preserve them for some time
-in hot weather; for which purpose, as we see in the Pompeian model-house
-at the Crystal Palace, their domiciles were furnished with a receptacle
-for water; for with those famous epicures the water-vivary was an
-essential necessary for the preservation of living fish, and all that
-was necessary was to substitute sea-water for fresh. Probably by some
-such means, Apicius Cœlius, who must not be confounded with the writer
-of a book of cookery which bears his name, sent Trajan, when that
-emperor was in the country of the Parthians, oysters, which when
-received were as fresh as they ever could be eaten when just taken from
-their beds; and Pliny even believed that the journey had proved
-beneficial to their flavour.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI.
-
- THE OYSTER ON ITS TRAVELS.
-
-The Isle of Sheppey, the Medway, and Whitstable; Milton, Queenborough,
-Rochester, and Faversham Oysters; Colchester and Essex Beds; Edinburgh
-Pandores and Aberdours; Dublin Carlingfords and Powldoodies; Poole and
-its Oyster-bank; Cornish Oysters and the Helford Beds; Poor Tyacke, and
-How he was Done; Dredgers and their Boats; Auld Reekie's Civic
-Ceremonials; Song of the Oyster; its Voyage to Market, and Journey by
-Coach and Rail.
-
-
-Who that has travelled by water from London Bridge to Herne Bay—and who
-among us who live within the sound of Bow bells has not?—should the trip
-have been made in the beginning of August, but must have noticed, after
-having passed the Isle of Sheppey, a little fishing-town to his right,
-in East Swale Bay, raising its head out of the river like a joyous child
-dressed in its gayest attire, anticipating a long-looked-for holiday? It
-is the 4th of August, and its holiday is at hand, for to-morrow the
-oyster season begins; and the town is Whitstable, in Kent, standing out
-gaily with its bright flags and pennons in beautiful relief from the low
-marshy soil by which it is surrounded. Then, too, the dredgers, in their
-picturesque costume, add greatly to the gay appearance of the place,
-whilst some seventy or eighty vessels lying in the offing bespeak the
-importance of the oyster traffic between it and the Great Metropolis.
-What the Lucrine was to the citizen of Rome is the estuary of the Medway
-with the Swale to the citizen of London. The "Natives" obtained at
-Milton are in the highest repute, and consumed in every part of England;
-nor are the Faversham, Queenborough, and Rochester denizens less so;
-nor, indeed, any of the "breedy creatures" which are raised in the other
-beds of the Swale or the Medway.
-
-The trade in oysters, as we have seen, has been an object of
-consideration in England for many ages, and now ranks in importance with
-the herring, pilchard, and other fisheries. The excellence of our
-oysters made the formation of artificial beds an object of attention
-soon after the Roman conquest; and the Kentish and Essex beds show a
-pedigree in consequence much older than that of the noble descendant of
-any Norman adventurer who came over with the Conqueror, claiming, on
-this head alone, precedence for our "Natives" amongst all the oysters of
-the known world. But Britain is the boasted land of liberty, and the
-"Natives" of one part of her coast boldly assert their equality with the
-"Natives" of any other. If London delights in Milton and Colchester
-oysters, Edinburgh has her "whispered Pandores" and Aberdours, and
-Dublin her Carlingfords[4] and "Powldoodies of Burran;" whilst all
-round our shores each locality boasts of its own "Natives" as the best
-oysters in the land. Poole points proudly to her oyster-bank, and tells
-miraculous tales of her fishery, and of the number of oysters she sends
-to the London market, besides those which are pickled at sea for the
-export trade to lands where a fresh oyster is still a luxury unknown.
-The Poole fishermen who open oysters in their boats for pickling are
-compelled, by an Act of the Legislature, to throw the shells on the
-strand, and these, in the course of time, have formed a strong barrier
-against the waves of the sea at the flow of the tide, having the
-appearance of an island at high-water; and, simple as it is, such is the
-sole construction of this celebrated breakwater.
-
-I cannot be expected to take the reader on a voyage of discovery all
-round the coast, nor to the Channel Islands, to taste the oysters which
-Providence has spread out for our enjoyment with such a lavish hand. But
-there is one little spot on the shores of Cornwall which I cannot pass
-over, because from it came one of the colonies on the banks of the
-Thames, from which the Whitstable boats still draw their annual supply.
-Into Mount's Bay the Helford River, upon which stands the little town of
-Helstone, empties itself, opposite Mount St. Michael's, into the sea,
-and in the estuary of that little river, a person of the name of Tyacke,
-within the memory of the "oldest inhabitant," rented certain
-oyster-beds, famous amongst Cornish gourmets for a breed of oysters,
-which, it is said, the Phœnicians, "a long time ago," had discovered to
-be infinitely preferable to the watery things they got at home. These
-Helford oysters are regularly brought to London; but when Tyacke rented
-the beds they were unknown to the good citizens who frequented the
-oyster taverns, of which the Cock in Fleet Street is but a last
-lingering type. Determined to make his venture, Tyacke loaded a fishing
-smack with the best produce of his beds, and coasted along the southern
-shores, till passing round the Isle of Thanet he found himself in the
-Mouth of the Thames. Little did the elated oyster dredger think that
-that Mouth would swallow up the whole of his cargo; but so it came to
-pass. It had long been evident to those on board that oysters that
-travel, no less than men, must have rations allowed on the voyage, if
-they are to do credit to the land of their birth. Now the voyage had
-been long and tedious, and the oysters had not been fed, so Tyacke got
-into his boat, and obtained an interview with the owner of the spot at
-which it touched land. He asked permission to lay down his oysters, and
-feed them. This was granted, and after a few days the spores of _ulva
-latissima_ and _enteromorpha_, and of the host of delicate fibrous
-plants which there abound, and all of which are the oyster's great
-delight, made the whole green and fat, and in the finest condition for
-reshipment. Four days, it is said, will suffice to make a lean oyster,
-on such a diet, both green and plump; and Tyacke, joyful at the
-improvement which he daily witnessed, let his stock feed on for a week.
-It was towards evening that he bethought himself, as the tide was out,
-that if he meant to reach Billingsgate by the next morning, it would be
-wise to reship his oysters before turning in for the night. The boat was
-lowered; but, as he attempted to land, he was warned off by the owner of
-the soil, who stood there with several fierce looking fellows, armed
-with cutlasses and fowling-pieces, evidently anticipating the
-Cornishman's intention, and determined to frustrate it at all hazards.
-
-"What do you want here?" he asked of Tyacke.
-
-"The oysters I put down to feed," was the reply. "They were placed there
-by your permission, and now I am anxious to reship them, to be in time
-for to-morrow's market."
-
-"True," replied the Kentishman, "I gave you leave to lay down the
-oysters and feed them, but not a word was said about reshipping them.
-Where they are, there they stay; and if you persist in trespassing, I
-shall know what to do."
-
-Poor Tyacke found himself much in the predicament of many a flat who has
-been picked up by a sharp. A century ago law was not justice, nor
-justice law. Perhaps it may not even be so now; and the story of the
-lawyer who ate the oyster in dispute, and gave each of the disputants a
-shell, may hold as good in our day as it did in that when the author of
-the "Beggar's Opera" put it into verse.
-
-The demand for oysters, wherever it exists along our coasts, creates a
-profitable source of employment to a class of men who necessarily become
-experienced seamen; and dredging for oysters is carried on in fleets, as
-the beds mostly lie within a comparatively small space. The boats, which
-are about fifteen feet long, usually carry a man and a boy, or two men.
-The dredge is about eighteen pounds weight, and is required to be
-heavier on a hard than on a soft bottom, and each boat is usually
-provided with two dredges.
-
-In former days the commencement of the dredging season was held
-sufficiently important to entitle it to a civic ceremonial, at least
-such was the wont of the municipal authorities of "Auld Reekie," who
-also paid a particular regard both as to the supply and the price of
-the"breedy creatures" furnished to the good citizens of Edinburgh. The
-"Feast of Shells" was ushered in by the municipality of the ancient city
-making, for provosts and bailiffs, a somewhat perilous voyage to the
-oyster-beds in the Frith of Forth; and though the solemnity of wedding
-the Frith formed no part of the chief magistrate's office, as wedding
-the Adriatic with a gold ring did that of the Doge of Venice, the welkin
-was made to ring, as three cheers from all present uprose and announced
-the lifting of the first dredge upon the deck of the civic barge.
-
-There is something poetical and pretty in the idea, which once
-prevailed, that the oyster was a lover of music, and as the fishermen
-trolled their dredging nets they sang,
-
- "To charm the spirits of the deep."
-
-The old ballad in use is still found in the mouth of many a hardy seaman
-as he pursues his toil to the melodious words—
-
- "The herring loves the merry moonlight,
- The mackerel loves the wind,
- But the oyster loves the dredger's song,
- For he comes of a gentle kind."
-
-Raised out of his native waters, the oyster makes the voyage to the
-first station in his destined travels in the company of those to whom
-long and kindred ties have bound him, on board the smack upon the deck
-of which they were jointly landed from the deep; and during the whole
-voyage, if it prove a long one, he is attentively supplied with
-refreshing water, so that when the smack lays alongside the wharf at
-which he is to part company with his captors, he is still as lively as
-when they first took him as a passenger on board.
-
-Arrived in port, the oyster first truly becomes sensible of the miseries
-of slavery. Shovelled into sacks, or cast anyhow into carts and
-handbarrows, he may consider himself fortunate if a kindly hand but
-extends to him, in his great necessity, a drink of water impregnated
-with salt, instead of his own delicious beverage from the sea. Yet this
-is a cruelty which should be avoided wherever sea-water can be obtained,
-because it is neither the salt nor the water which sustains the oyster's
-life, but the spores of vegetation which abound in the sea, and by
-mixing salt with fresh water we destroy even the life of the incipient
-fresh-water plants which the latter contains. It is as great a mockery
-as when Grumio proposes to give the famished Katherine the mustard
-without the brawn, and need no longer exist if oyster dealers, who
-cannot obtain sea-water, would provide themselves with the prepared
-salts for the instantaneous production of artificial sea-water, the
-recipe for the preparation of which is thus given in No. 735 of the
-"Family Herald:"—
-
- "For ten gallons it requires, sulphate of magnesia, 7-1/2 ounces;
-sulphate of lime, 2-3/4 ounces; chloride of sodium, 43-1/4 ounces;
-chloride of magnesia, 6 ounces; chloride of potassium, 1-1/4 ounce;
-bromide of magnesium, 21 grains; carbonate of lime, 21 grains."
-
-This should be allowed to stand exposed to the air in a strong sunlight
-for a fortnight before it is used, during which time a few growing
-plants of _enteromorpha_, or _ulva_ should be introduced to throw off
-spores. These plants cost about one shilling each in London. The water
-then, when under the microscope, will be found to contain a confervoid
-vegetable growth, which forms as nourishing a food for the oyster as the
-spores of sea-weed in its ocean bed. Oysters laid down in a large trough
-and covered with this water will continue to live and thrive for months;
-and it was to some such method as this that the Romans were indebted for
-the preservation of their oysters in inland stews. On no account should
-oatmeal, flour, or any such _dead_ stuff, be added, which only serves to
-make the water foul and the oyster sick.
-
-When oysters are to travel by coach or rail, they are usually dispatched
-in barrels. Where the barrels are packed at the beds, as the Colchester
-or "Pyfleet barrelled oysters" are, they should not be disturbed till
-wanted for the table, as they will keep good as they are for a week or
-ten days; for being carefully packed so as not to spill the water each
-carries in a reservoir of Nature's providing, they need no other
-viaticum for the journey.
-
-The moment an oyster in the barrel opens its mouth it dies, because
-there is nothing in the barrel to sustain its life. It is therefore as
-well, on the receipt of the little cask, to open it at once by removing
-the top and the first hoop, and then to place the top on the upper-most
-layer of oysters, keeping it in position by the addition of some heavy
-weight, which causes the staves to spread and stand erect; and as the
-layers of oysters are required for the table, it is only necessary each
-time to replace the top and the weight to a similar position to keep the
-remainder fresh for a few days. But the true lover of an oyster will
-have some regard for his little favourite. Sea-water may be had in
-London and other large towns for sixpence per gallon, and when that
-cannot be procured the pound packet of salts, according to the recipe we
-have given, will not cost more than eighteen-pence at any chemist's, and
-that quantity will produce three gallons of artificial sea-water. Thus
-provided, unpack the barrel, and spread out the oysters in a large flat
-earthenware dish, just covering them with water, and you may keep them
-for many weeks as fresh as when they first left their beds.
-
------
-
-Footnote 4:
-
- The Carlingford oyster is the best in Ireland; a black-bearded fellow,
- delicate and of fine flavour, to be eaten in Dublin alternately with
- the Redbank oyster, at a magnificent establishment in Sackville
- Street, and to be washed down with alternate draughts of brown stout.
- The Hibernian will tell you that even our Natives are inferior to
- these. He is right in his patriotism, but wrong in his assertion. How
- often do our prejudices trip up our judgment!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII.
- THE OYSTER AT ITS JOURNEY'S END.
-
-Oyster Stalls; How to Open the Oyster; an Oyster Supper; Beer, Wines,
-and Spirits; Roasted, Fried, Stewed, and Scolloped Oysters; Oyster Soup,
-and Oyster Sauce; Broiled Oysters; Oyster Pie; Oyster Toast; Oyster
-Patties; Oyster Powder; Pickled Oysters; Oyster Loaves; Oyster Omelet;
-Cabbage, Larks, and Oysters; and Frogs and Oysters.
-
- "If where Fleet Ditch with muddy current flows
- You chance to roam, where oyster-tubs in rows
- Are ranged beside the posts, there stay thy haste,
- And with the savoury fish indulge thy taste."—GAY.
-
-
-I am writing for the Million, and the least the Million can do in return
-is every one to buy a copy of my book, and bid everybody to recommend
-everybody to do the same. The Fleet Ditch, which was once in the centre
-of the old Fleet Market, has disappeared since Gay wrote the lines I
-have just quoted, and now forms the great sewer of Farringdon Street;
-but with the Ditch have not disappeared the oyster-stalls; they have
-only changed their locality, and, like the Wandering Jew, have turned up
-in the most out-of-the-way places, where nobody would expect to find
-them. I know what stall-oysters are; for when I was a school-boy many
-and oft is the time I spent my pennies, on the sly, at a stall behind
-the old cathedral that just abutted the ancient Market Cross. The maiden
-that opened them had clean white hands—for, boy as I was, I could not
-have endured a baronet's hand to open oysters for me; for—
-
- "The damsel's knife the gaping shell commands,
- While the salt liquor streams between her hands."
-
-Never have I eaten finer oysters than those, fresh almost within a few
-hours from the placid Solent, upon which now the palace of Osborne looks
-down, and calls forth the heartfelt prayer of "God bless the Queen," as
-we pass beneath the grass-covered slopes, reminding every Wykehamist of
-the founder's motto, "Manners maketh Men;" for Her Majesty is the tenant
-of Wykeham's College, and his arms and motto are carved upon the gates
-of the Queen's royal residence of Osborne.
-
-Yes, "Manners maketh Men" no less than _Honores mutant Mores_, as the
-punster told the great Sir Thomas More, when he stood so high in favour
-with Henry VIII., and was just appointed Treasurer of the Exchequer. It
-is not riches that make man, any more than they need change him; and if
-there is any good gift of Providence more than another which teaches
-equality, it will not be far from the mark to say it is the Oyster. You
-cannot eat the oyster in greater perfection than at a street-stall,
-because, as the capital of the owner is small, so, too, is the stock;
-and, to be sure of a rapid sale, it must also be well and carefully
-selected, and therefore does not need the announcement we read in many a
-by-way one passes along, where "the tale of a tub" would seem to
-contradict it: "Oysters fresh every day." The poor man has no need to
-bid his cook, like his wealthy neighbour, buy real sea-water, or salts
-for the preparation of artificial sea-water, for the preservation of his
-oysters. There are thousands of hands outstretched to receive his nimble
-penny, and to give him in return oysters as fine as any which can grace
-the table of the wealthiest in the land. To me it is a treat to stand by
-and see how rapidly oyster after oyster disappears down the capacious
-throat of some stalwart son of toil, and to think that my favourite
-health-giving mollusk, in every one that is swallowed, is adding
-strength and muscle to those upon whom we so greatly depend for the
-nation's wealth and prosperity.
-
-People generally, however, are somewhat indifferent about the manner of
-opening oysters, and the time of eating them after they are opened; yet
-nothing deserves more consideration at the hands of your true
-oyster-eater. The oyster should be eaten the moment it is opened, if
-eaten raw, with its own liquor in the under shell, as we have already
-stated on the very highest of all gastronomical authorities. It is well
-worth a little practice to learn to open the oyster oneself, for a
-bungling operator injures our little favourite, and baulks the expectant
-appetite by his unsightly incisions. I learnt the art years ago in one
-of the Midland counties, where Christmas-eve would scarce be
-Christmas-eve, without an oyster supper. Let me sketch the scene. In the
-centre of the table, covered with a clean white cloth up to the top
-hoop, stands the barrel of oysters, a kindly remembrance from a friend,
-and the more kind because oysters are not found in fresh-water streams.
-Each gentleman at table finds an oyster-knife and a clean coarse towel
-by the side of his plate, and he is expected to open oysters for himself
-and the lady seated by his side, unless she is wise enough to open them
-for herself. By the side of every plate is the _panis ostrearius_, the
-oyster-loaf made and baked purposely for the occasion, and all down the
-centre of the table, interspersed with vases of bright holly and
-evergreens, are plates filled with pats of butter, or lemons cut in
-half, and as many vinegar and pepper castors as the establishment can
-furnish. As the attendance of servants at such gatherings is usually
-dispensed with, bottled Bass or Guinness, or any equally unsophisticated
-pale ale or porter, is liberally provided; and where the means allow,
-light continental wines, such as Chablis, Sauterne, Mousseux, Marsault
-or Medoc, still Champagne, Moselle, or any light Rhenish wine, and
-failing any of these, Madeira or Sherry, are placed upon the table. In
-this list is contained the names of such wines only as are best suited
-to enhance the taste of the oyster, and to assist digestion. Of spirits,
-only good English gin, genuine Schiedam, or Irish or Scotch whisky, are
-admissible, as rum and brandy, taken upon oysters, will almost always be
-sure to make them indigestible; and liqueurs are quite out of place.
-
-At some of these oyster suppers, oysters roasted in the shell are
-brought in "hot and hot," and dishes of fried, stewed, and scolloped
-oysters follow each other in quick succession, and even oyster patties
-are sometimes introduced; but I hold up both hands against an American
-innovation which is creeping in, and introducing crabs and lobsters, and
-mixed pickles, and other foreigners into the _carte_ on such an
-occasion.
-
-The mention of these various dishes of dressed oysters, reminds me of my
-promise at starting, to give some directions as to the proper mode of
-cooking them. So to begin:—
-
-1. _The Fried Oyster._—It is the most common one, and is fried in its
-own shell; but as it frequently takes the taste of lime when just fried,
-it is better to make use of another shell, or a porcelain one. The beard
-is taken off, the oyster loosened from its shell, and with the liquor it
-still contains is put into the vessel prepared for it, with some good
-butter, some Parmesan cheese, and pepper, and thus it is put into the
-oven, or on the gridiron, and when it has turned a little brown some
-lemon-juice is poured on it, after which it may be served up. Having no
-Parmesan, good dry Cheshire, or even bread crumbs, are desirable. The
-largest and finest oysters should be chosen for this purpose; and many
-persons fry oysters by simply allowing them to simmer in their own
-shells for a couple of minutes, when they take them out and lay them on
-a cloth to drain, beard them, and then flour them, put them into boiling
-fat, and fry them to a delicate brown.
-
-2. _The Oyster roasted in its own shell._—Open the oyster carefully, so
-as not to lose any of its own liquor, add a little butter and pepper,
-according to taste, place it upon a gridiron over a fierce clear fire,
-and serve up "hot and hot" in quick succession. Bachelors may manage to
-dress oysters in this way by placing them between the bars of the grate
-till done, and adding the butter and pepper as they eat them.
-
-3. _Stewed Oysters._—Open the oysters, and put their liquor in a
-stew-pan with a little beaten mace; thicken it with flour and butter;
-boil it three or four minutes; put in a spoonful of cream; put in the
-oysters, and shake them round in the pan, but do not let them boil.
-Serve them in a small deep dish, or if for one person only in a
-soup-plate.
-
-4. _Scolloped Oysters._—Open the oysters, put them in a basin, with
-their own liquor; put them into a small deep dish, or some of them, if
-preferred, into scollop shells; strew over them a few crumbs of bread,
-and lay a slice of butter on them; then more oysters, bread crumbs, and
-a slice of butter on the top; put them into a Dutch-oven to brown, and
-serve them up.
-
-5. _Oyster Soups._—(Each of the following is calculated for one person).
-
-(_a_). _The English Soup._—Take one pound of good lean beef, half a
-pound of raw lean ham, much parsley, and carrot roots, and a few onions;
-cut all in very small pieces, and burnish it into a dark-brownish colour
-with spices, bay-leaves, whole pepper and butter: after having boiled
-this with water for five hours, pour it through a hair sieve, and then
-put to it a little brown flour, and two ounces of Sherry or Madeira, and
-after having boiled again for an hour, take all the fat clean off, and
-put into it the oysters with their beards and liquor, and with cayenne
-pepper; all this is to be boiled up again, and then served. This soup is
-to be recommended, especially in winter when it is very cold. For
-invalids, the wine, spices, and pepper are omitted. This soup is
-valuable for convalescents, being very strengthening and nourishing.
-
-(_b_). _The American Soup._—Take half a pint of good fresh milk, or
-cream if possible; three ounces of good butter; boil this together, beat
-it up with the yolks of three eggs, and put into it six or twelve
-oysters with their beards and liquor; boil this up again, and in serving
-it up put into it a little cayenne pepper and a few drops of lemon
-juice. This soup is delicate; but no prejudice! Everybody must try it
-first. For invalids, butter, eggs, and pepper are omitted.
-
-(_c_). _The Holstein Soup._—Take good beef-stock, one-eighth of a pound
-of Sherry or Madeira, burnt flour, and proceed as with (_a_); and then
-beat it up with the yolks of two or three eggs. (The beard and the
-liquor must always be made use of, as they impart the strongest flavour
-of the oyster.)
-
-6. _Oyster Sauce._—I cannot do better than copy Dr. Kitchener's valuable
-recipe for making oyster sauce, which was one of the great luxuries at
-the table of that celebrated gastronome:—"Choose plump and juicy natives
-for this purpose; do not take them out of their shells till you put them
-into the stew-pan. To make good oyster sauce for half a dozen hearty
-fish-eaters, you cannot have less than three or four dozen oysters; save
-their liquor, strain it, and put it and them into a stew-pan; as soon as
-they boil, and the fish plump, take them off the fire, and pour the
-contents of the stew-pan into a sieve over a clean basin; wash the
-stew-pan out with hot water, and put into it the strained liquor, with
-about an equal quantity of milk, and about two and a half ounces of
-butter, with which you have well rubbed a large table-spoonful of flour;
-give it a boil up, and pour it through a sieve into a basin, that the
-sauce may be quite smooth, and then back again into the saucepan; now
-shave the oysters, and (if you have the honour of making sauce for "a
-Committee of Taste," take away the gristly part also) put in only the
-soft part of the oysters; if they are very large, cut them in half, and
-set them by the fire to keep hot; 'if they boil after, they will become
-hard.' If you have not liquor enough, add a little melted butter, or
-cream, or milk beat up with the yolk of an egg (this must not be put in
-till the sauce is done). Some barbarous cooks add pepper, or mace, the
-juice or peel of a lemon, horse-radish essence of anchovy, cayenne,
-etc.; plain sauces are only to taste of the ingredients from which they
-derive their name. It will very much heighten the flavour of this sauce
-to pound the soft part of half a dozen unboiled oysters; rub it through
-a hair sieve, and then stir it into the sauce. This essence of oyster,
-and for some palates a few grains of cayenne, is the only addition we
-recommend."
-
-Notwithstanding Dr. Kitchener's objection to the introduction of
-extraneous substances by "_barbarous cooks_," because _de Gustibus_, as
-the adage of "the apple and the onion" has already reminded me, is
-always a matter not to be disputed, I shall add Alexis Soyer's
-"barbarous" method of preparing oyster sauce, which was introduced by
-him at the Reform Club in 1852:—
-
-"Mix three ounces of butter in a stewpan with two ounces of flour, then
-blanch and beard three dozen oysters, put the oysters into another
-stewpan, add beards and liquor to the flour and butter, with a pint and
-a half of milk, a teaspoonful of salt, half a salt-spoonful of cayenne,
-two cloves, half a blade of mace, and six peppercorns; place it over the
-fire, keep stirring, and boil it ten minutes, then add a tablespoonful
-of essence of anchovies, and one of Harvey sauce; pass it through a
-hair-sieve over the oysters; make the whole very hot without boiling,
-and serve. A less quantity may be made, using less proportions."
-
-He also gives the following:—
-
-"Put a pint of white sauce into a stew-pan, with the liquor and beards
-of three dozen oysters (as above), six peppercorns, two cloves, and half
-a blade of mace; boil it ten minutes, then add a spoonful of essence of
-anchovies, a little cayenne and salt if required; pass it through a
-tammy, or hair-sieve, over the oysters, as in the last."
-
-This is somewhat similar to that given in that most useful pennyworth
-"The Family Herald Economical Cookery," which is also preferred by many,
-and is as follows:—
-
-"Simmer the oysters in their own liquor till they are plump: strain off
-the liquor through a sieve, wash the oysters clean, and beard them; put
-them into a saucepan, and pour the liquor over them, taking care you do
-not pour in any of the sediment; add a blade of mace, a quarter of a
-lemon, a spoonful of anchovy liquor, and a bit of horseradish; boil it
-up gently, then take out the horseradish, the mace, and the lemon, the
-juice of which must be squeezed into the sauce. Now add some thick
-melted butter, toss it together, and boil it up."
-
-I am bound to admit that my own opinion coincides with that of Dr.
-Kitchener, and would only add that no trouble is too great to render the
-sauce perfectly smooth, and that no niggard hand should have the
-supplying it for the table.
-
-6. _Large Oysters Broiled._—Take the largest and finest oysters you can
-get, such as you find in the West of England and in America; clean the
-gridiron as if a fairy had done the work for Cinderella in her sleep;
-rub the bars with _fresh_ butter, and set it over a clear fire, quite
-free from smoke; then place the oysters upon it, being careful not to
-let them burn, and when done on one side, turn them quickly on the other
-with a fork. Put some fresh butter in the bottom of a hot dish, and lay
-the oysters upon it, sprinkling them slightly with pepper. They must be
-served quite hot with fried parsley.
-
-7. _Oyster Pie._—Having buttered the inside of a deep dish, spread a
-rich paste over the sides and round the edge, but not at the bottom. The
-oysters should be as large and fine as possible, and when opened drain
-off part of the liquor from them. Put them into a pan, and season them
-with pepper, salt, and spice, and stir them well with the seasoning.
-Pour the oysters with their liquor into the dish, and strew over them
-the yolks of eggs chopped fine and grated bread. Roll out the lid of the
-pie, and put it on, crimping the edges handsomely. Take a small sheet of
-paste, cut it into a square, and roll it up. Cut it with a sharp knife
-into the form of a double tulip. Make a slit in the centre of the upper
-crust, and stick the tulip in it. Cut out some large leaves of paste,
-and lay them on the lid, and bake the pie in a quick oven.
-
-Another way of preparing this favourite French dish is this,
-communicated to me by a lady of some experience in matters
-gastronomical:—
-
-"Having buttered the inside of a deep dish, line it with puff-paste
-rolled out rather thick, and prepare another sheet of paste for the lid.
-Put a clean towel into the dish (folded so as to support the lid) and
-then put on the lid; set it into the oven, and bake the paste well. When
-done, remove the lid, and take out the folded towel. While the paste is
-baking, prepare the oysters. Having picked off carefully any bits of
-shell that may be found about them, lay them in a sieve and drain off
-the liquor into a pan. Put the oysters into a skillet or stew-pan, with
-barely enough of the liquor to keep them from burning. Season them with
-whole pepper, blades of mace, some grated nutmeg, and some grated
-lemon-peel, (the yellow rind only,) and a little finely minced celery.
-Then add a large portion of fresh butter, divided into bits, and very
-slightly dredged with flour. Let the oysters simmer over the fire, but
-do not allow them to come to a boil, as that will shrivel them. Next
-beat the yolks only, of three, four, or five eggs, (in proportion to the
-size of the pie,) and stir the beaten egg into the stew a few minutes
-before you take it from the fire. Keep it warm till the paste is baked.
-Then carefully remove the lid of the pie; and replace it, after you have
-filled the dish with the oysters and gravy.
-
-"The lid of the pie may be ornamented with a wreath of leaves cut out of
-paste, and put on before baking. In the centre, place a paste-knot or
-flower.
-
-"Oyster pies are generally eaten warm; but they are very good cold."
-
-8. _Oyster Toast._—Cut four slices of bread, pare off the crusts, and
-toast them. Butter the toast on both sides. Then select a dozen of fine
-fat and plump oysters, and mince them; place them thickly between the
-slices of toast, seasoning them with cayenne pepper. Beat the yolks of
-four eggs, and mix them with half-a-pint of cream, adding, if thought
-necessary, a few blades of mace. Put the whole into a saucepan, and set
-it over the fire to simmer till thick; but do not allow it to boil, and
-stir it well, lest it should curdle. When it is _near_ boiling heat,
-take it off and pour it over the toast.
-
-9. _Oyster Patties._—"Roll out puff-paste a quarter of an inch thick,"
-says Dr. Kitchener, "cut it into squares with a knife, sheet eight or
-ten patty pans, put upon each a bit of bread the size of half a walnut;
-roll out another layer of paste of the same thickness, cut it as above,
-wet the edge of the bottom paste, and put on the top, pare them round to
-the pan, and notch them about a dozen times with the back of the knife,
-rub them lightly with yolk of egg, bake them in a hot oven about a
-quarter of an hour: when done, take a thin slice off the top, then, with
-a small knife or spoon, take out the bread and the inside paste, leaving
-the outside quite entire: then parboil two dozen of large oysters,
-strain them from their liquor, wash, beard, and cut them into four, put
-them into a stew-pan with an ounce of butter rolled in flour, half a
-gill of good cream, a little grated lemon-peel, the oyster liquor free
-from sediment, reduced by boiling to one half, some cayenne pepper,
-salt, and a tea-spoonful of lemon-juice; stir it over a fire five
-minutes, and fill the patties."
-
-10. _Oyster Powder._—Open the oysters carefully, so as not to cut them,
-except in dividing the gristle which attaches the shells; put them into
-a mortar, and when you have got as many as you can conveniently pound at
-once, add about two drachms of salt to a dozen oysters; pound them and
-rub them through the back of a hair sieve, and put them into the mortar
-again, with as much flour (which has been previously thoroughly dried)
-as will make them into a paste; roll the paste out several times, and
-lastly, flour it, and roll it out the thickness of a half-crown, and
-divide it into pieces about one inch square; lay them in a Dutch oven,
-where they will dry so gently as not to get burned; turn them every half
-hour, and when they begin to dry, crumble them. They will take about
-four hours to dry; then pound them fine, sift them, and put them into
-dry bottles and seal them. Three dozens of natives require seven ounces
-and a half of flour to make them into a paste weighing eleven ounces, or
-when dried and powdered, six and a half ounces. To make half a pint of
-sauce, put one ounce of butter into a stew-pan with three drachms of
-oyster powder, and six table-spoonfuls of milk; set it on a slow fire,
-stir it till it boils, and season it with salt. This makes an excellent
-sauce for fish, fowls, or rump steaks. Sprinkled on bread and butter, it
-makes a good sandwich. But only use plump juicy natives in the
-preparation.
-
-11. _Pickled Oysters_ are mostly used for salads when no fresh oysters
-can be got. Take good wine, or Tarragon vinegar, some onions cut in
-pieces, some slices of lemon, some spices, whole pepper, bay leaves, and
-salt. Boil this together, and whilst boiling put the oysters into it,
-and let the whole boil up once more. Put the result into bottles with a
-little good oil, and, tied over with bladder, it will keep for a long
-time.
-
-However, pickled oysters also appear as a supper dish, when they are
-thus prepared:—
-
-Take two dozen oysters; strain the liquor; add three blades of mace, six
-peppercorns, a little grated lemon peel, and one or two bay leaves; boil
-the liquor, and, when boiling, add the oysters for two minutes. When
-cold, strain off the liquor; place the oysters in a small dish, and
-garnish with parsley. According to this rate of ingredients the dish may
-be made to suit the number of guests likely to partake of it.
-
-12. _Oyster Loaves._—Make an oval hole in the top of some rasped French
-rolls, and scrape out all the crumb: then put the oysters into a
-stew-pan, with their liquor, and the crumbs that came out of the rolls,
-and a good lump of butter; stew them together five or six minutes: then
-put in a spoonful of good cream; fill the skeleton rolls with the
-compound, and lay the bit of crust carefully on the top again, setting
-them in the oven to crisp. Three form a side dish.
-
-13. _Oyster Omelet._—Having strained the liquor from three dozen plump
-native oysters, mince them small; omitting the hard part, or gristle. If
-you cannot get large oysters, you should have forty or fifty small ones.
-Break into a shallow pan six, seven, or eight eggs, according to the
-quantity of minced oysters. Omit half the whites, and (having beaten the
-eggs till very light, thick, and smooth,) mix the oysters gradually into
-them, adding a little cayenne pepper, and some powdered nutmeg. Put
-three ounces or more of the best fresh butter into a small frying-pan,
-if you have no pan especially for omelets. Place it over a clear fire,
-and when the butter (which should be previously cut up) has come to a
-boil, put in the omelet-mixture; stir it till it begins to set; and fry
-it a light brown, lifting the edge several times by slipping a knife
-under it, and taking care not to cook it too much or it will shrivel and
-become tough. When done, clap a large hot plate or dish on the top of
-the omelet, and turn it quickly and carefully out of the pan. Fold it
-over, and serve it up immediately. This quantity will make one large or
-two small omelets. The omelet pan should be smaller than a common
-frying-pan, and lined with tin. In a large pan the omelet will spread
-too much, and become thin like a pancake. Never turn an omelet while
-frying, as that will make it heavy and tough. When done, brown it by
-holding a red-hot salamander close above the top.
-
-Having given a baker's dozen of the most approved receipts for dressing
-oysters, I have only to add that the oyster, as an accessory, enters
-into many dishes, particularly into fricassees, is served with
-sweetbreads, fowl, and veal, and, as we all know from "Tom and Jerry,"
-"gentlemen" eat oysters as sauce to rump steak; which, by the way, I,
-for one, regard as the ruin of both oyster and steak. I cannot refrain
-from adding the following, both little known in this country, yet both
-equally good:—
-
-14. _Cabbage with Oysters and Fried Larks._—When the cabbage has been
-cooked with a little Rhenish wine, Chablis, or Champagne, some good
-butter is melted, in which the oysters are put with their beards and
-liquor, and having been fried a little with the butter, they are put
-with the cabbage and cooked again together, and then served up with the
-larks.
-
-15.—_Fried Hind Legs of Frogs with Oysters._—The hind legs of frogs are
-fried in the usual manner; when they are nearly done, some oysters with
-Parmesan cheese and a little pepper are added to them, and when done
-they are served up. This dish is undeniable, and is as much relished
-abroad as whitebait with us.
-
-In closing this chapter, let me remind all cooks that the success in
-preparing the above-mentioned dishes depends on the goodness and
-freshness of the oysters used for this purpose. Very erroneous is the
-opinion that oysters which are not fresh are yet good enough to be fried
-and to be used for sauces. The greatest delicacy is a fresh oyster, but
-a stale one is a source of the greatest disgust, and only fit to regale
-the ghost of that Royal George who, when living, never relished a raw
-oyster unless the shell was self-opened on the dish.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII.
-
- THE OYSTER AND THE DOCTOR.
-
-Oyster-eating in Prussia; Disgusting Wagers; Oysters better than Pills;
-A Universal Remedy; Professional Opinions; When Ladies should eat them;
-Repugnance overcome; Oysters as an external application; Chemical
-Analysis; How to tell if dead before opening.
-
-
-When in Prussia, I once asked a person who did a large retail business
-in oysters, what class of persons he found to be his best customers, and
-what was the number of oysters daily consumed by each individual?
-
-"The morning scarcely begins to dawn," he replied, "ere ladies and
-gentlemen, boys and girls, and servants, both male and female, make
-their appearance, not only from my immediate neighbourhood, but also
-from the most remote parts of the city, when, on an average, every one
-buys from half a dozen up to a dozen, in addition to their purchases for
-the several families, and in accordance with their requirements."
-
-And those who do likewise in Great Britain and Ireland will soon find
-out the benefit of this nutritive food taken thus early on an empty
-stomach. I once heard of an individual who made a bet that he would eat
-twelve dozen oysters, washed down by twelve glasses of Champagne, while
-the cathedral clock of the city which he inhabited was striking twelve.
-He won his bet by placing a dozen fresh oysters in twelve wine glasses,
-and having swallowed the oysters, he washed down each dozen with a glass
-of Champagne. I should not have mentioned this disgusting feat, but to
-add that he felt no evil effects from the oysters, proving incontestably
-the digestive and sanitary properties of this mollusk.
-
-There is a similar tale showing equally the effects of oysters on the
-human digestion. Four persons met one Saturday night at an hotel, and
-made the following bet: each person was to call for whatever he might
-fancy, either to eat or to drink, and he who kept longest awake was to
-have no share in the liquidation of the bill. This settled, one of the
-party made a private arrangement with one of the waiters, promising him
-a reward if, in case of his evincing the slightest drowsiness, he would
-bring him forthwith twenty-five oysters.
-
-This was accordingly done; but the waiters had to be constantly relieved
-until 11 o'clock on the following Monday morning, when, observing his
-three companions quietly asleep, our oyster-eating friend called for the
-landlord, and declared himself triumphantly the winner, attributing his
-good fortune entirely to the oyster.
-
-Wise people eat oysters and eschew pills; take lumps of delight, instead
-of lumps of nausea; uphold the Sweetings, Pims, and Lynns, and have
-nothing to do with the Holloways, Morisons, and "Old Parrs."
-
-When suffering from almost incurable indigestion, by taking oysters
-daily, they very soon find the most agreeable effects on the human
-kitchen and laboratory; its functions become regular, without the use of
-strong medicines, always dangerous. Depression of spirits and other
-disagreeable feelings consequent on impaired digestion soon cease to
-affect them; they become cheerful and happy, and are enabled again to
-see clearly through the misty atmosphere which has hitherto enclosed
-them in a kind of living shroud; physical powers return, headaches
-disappear, and the heretofore dyspeptic, sour, unhappy tempered man
-becomes a pleasant and joyous companion, full of life himself, and
-inspiriting to those around him.
-
-I have lived a good deal abroad, and am induced to ascribe much of the
-vivacity of the French to their intense love of oysters. During a long
-residence in France, I never met with a Frenchman or Frenchwoman who
-said nay to a dish of good fresh oysters; in fact, they have a craving
-for the "breedy creatures," which in many persons almost amounts to
-gluttony, and then, and then only, does this craving lead to mischief.
-
-Physicians of old recommended the oyster as a general remedy, and
-employed it on all occasions with success. It has been proved beyond
-dispute that it possesses a remarkable vivifying influence in all cases
-where the nervous organs are affected, more than any other food. Oysters
-taken before mid-day with a glass of wine produce a most salutary
-effect. The nerves and muscles regain their strength, and the body its
-mental and physical powers, bringing cheerfulness and energy to compete
-with the duties of the day. If not a cure, at all events, an oyster
-diet, under medical supervision, brings unquestionable relief to those
-who are suffering from pulmonary complaints, indigestion, or nervous
-affections.
-
-Dr. Leroy was in the habit of swallowing, every morning before
-breakfast, two dozen oysters, and used always to say to his friends,
-presenting them with the shells: "There, behold the fountain of my
-youthful strength!"
-
-Percy relates having seen a large number of wounded persons, exhausted
-by the loss of blood and bad treatment, who were entirely kept up by
-eating oysters; and Dr. Lenac considered them the most nourishing food
-in existence.
-
-Oysters are strongly recommended to all persons suffering from weak
-digestion; and Dr. Pasquier adds, that "they may be given with great
-advantage to persons of intemperate habits, who, by inefficacious
-medical treatment have fallen into debility and lowness of spirits." He
-also recommends oysters to all who are suffering from the gout. I myself
-knew a person last winter, who was suffering from influenza, which, from
-his being an aged man, threatened the most serious consequences, who was
-entirely cured by eating oysters.
-
-Oysters increase the blood without heating the system, and hence when a
-wound has caused much loss of blood, the eating of oysters not only
-prevents fever, but replaces the loss which no other remedy can effect.
-The great Boerhaave affirms to have known a tall, strong man, who had
-fallen into a decline, and who, after all other remedies had proved
-useless, by the use of oysters rapidly recovered, became strong, and
-died ninety-three years old.
-
-But to ladies, particularly, do I recommend oysters as the best of all
-light meals between breakfast and dinner. At the period of a lady's
-married life, when nausea is prevalent, a few fresh oysters, taken raw
-in their own liquor, with no addition but a little pepper, and a fairy
-slice of French roll or other light bread, stops the feeling of
-sickness, and keeps up the stamina unimpaired. During the time, too,
-when a young child most requires maternal care and attention, the
-mother's diet of oysters will impart strength to the infant, and tend
-much to alleviate the pains of its first teething.
-
-I am well aware that some persons have a repugnance to the eating of
-oysters, and that it may be difficult to overcome the dislike. However,
-as a proof that oysters in general are nice to the taste, let me mention
-that children under two years of age eat them with great appetite; and
-it is only after having discontinued eating any for some time that they
-take a dislike to them.
-
-I have often had the opportunity of overcoming this dislike, and the
-result was always satisfactory. The method is very simple. Take a French
-roll (or a piece of milk-bread) thinly buttered, and put on it the
-oyster deprived of its beard, squeezing a few drops of lemon and
-peppering it. "Well, after all, the taste of the oyster is really fine!"
-is the usual exclamation, and after that the person has eaten them in
-their natural state with gusto.
-
-When eaten for health, an oyster is best swallowed in its own liquor the
-moment the shell is opened; or if too cold for the stomach, a sprinkling
-of pepper will remedy the evil. Vinegar counteracts the effect of the
-oyster enriching the blood; so when the oyster is eaten medicinally it
-must be excluded. Dr. Evans, in No. 834 of the "Family Herald" says,
-that when too many oysters or other shell-fish has been taken, the
-unpleasant sensation excited by such excess may be removed by drinking
-half a pint of hot milk. Persons of delicate constitutions will do well
-always to take hot milk after oysters.
-
-But the oyster was also formerly used externally as a remedy no less
-than taken internally for its medicinal properties. Its very abundance
-is a clear proof of the bounty and goodness of Providence, furnishing
-us, at one and the same time, with such delicious food, and so universal
-a remedy for the ills which man is heir to. Ambrois Paré, physician to
-Charles IX., and the only Protestant whom the king sought to save from
-the terrible massacre of St. Bartholomew, by shutting him up in his own
-closet, recommends oysters smashed in their shells as an excellent
-poultice. "This animal, so used," says he, "diminishes pain, and removes
-all heat and inflammation in a remarkable manner." As the opinion of
-one, of whom the king himself declared that "a man so useful to all the
-world ought not to perish like a dog," it may be admitted to a place in
-my little book, more particularly as it is borne out by Paul Egona, who
-also recommends oysters being smashed and saturated with their own
-liquor as the very best of all poultices for sores or boils.
-
-Let me, as a close to this chapter, add a few words on the chemical
-analysis of the oyster. The animal itself contains a great proportion of
-phosphate of iron and lime, a considerable quantity of osmozone, and a
-certain amount of gluten and isinglass, being of a peculiar nature,
-which phosphorus penetrates like an element. It also contains a great
-quantity of particles of salt, the same as that of the sea-water in
-which it lives.
-
-The oyster-liquor, or, as I have said, more properly speaking, its
-life's blood, contains a great amount of hydroidum, kali, sulphur of
-lime, sulphur of magnesia, some organic matter, osmazone, and a very
-little salt. The shell is composed of a very intimate mixture of salt,
-carbonic lime, and animal mucus. It exhibits, also, phosphate of lime
-and magnesia in small quantities, as also sulphuretted hydrogen.
-
-At the moment in which natural death ensues, all animal matter begins to
-show its chemical affinities by separating again into the elements of
-which it consists; and as at such times it is always more or less of a
-poisonous nature, it is well to study the method by which it may be
-known whether an oyster was living or dead when its shell is opened.
-This can be seen at a glance. If the muscle appears sunk, it is a proof
-that the animal was living; but if it appears higher and above the
-oyster, it was dead before it was opened, and the animal is,
-consequently, unwholesome and unfit for food.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX.
-
- THE OYSTER ABROAD.
-
-British Oysters in Ostend Quarters; the Whitstable in a Slow Coach;
-Holstein, Schleswig, and Heligoland Natives; Norwegian and Bremer
-Oysters; American Oysters; French Oysters; Dutch Oysters; Mediterranean
-Oysters, and Classical Judges.
-
-
-I am not writing a book for the man of science. I could not if I would.
-It is for those who love oysters for the eating that I have turned
-author; and all the facts which are strung together in the last chapters
-were put there for their delectation, and not for the sake of raising
-the smile which I saw just now pass over the face of my friend Sawbones
-when I mentioned oyster-poultices. Just because I am not scientific, but
-only practical, I shall not trouble myself to notice any of the many
-species of oysters, both at home and abroad, which, though pretty in
-themselves, never find their way to the table, which is the sole field
-of my discoveries.
-
-I shall therefore begin my list of foreign oysters with the best of them
-all, the next of kin to our Native, and next to it the best oyster in
-the world.
-
-1. _The Ostend Oyster_ is nothing more than the real British oyster,
-cleaned and fattened in the Ostend oyster-beds. It has a fine, thin,
-transparent but deep shell, the upper shell being quite flat; it is very
-full, white, and fat, has a very small beard, and is very digestible.
-During a south-west wind, which brings to these beds the microscopic
-spores of sea vegetation and animalcules upon which it delights to feed,
-from the channel, its beard is of a green colour. The Ostend oyster is
-much prized in Berlin, which it reaches the quickest of any from the
-sea, (in thirty-six to forty hours,) and consequently lives there
-several days, remains the longest fresh, and can be sent farthest. Last
-winter Ostend oysters were sent to Moscow and Odessa, where they arrived
-still good and tasty. The former were seventeen days, and the latter
-eleven days on their way. Scarcely any other kind of oysters could be
-sent to such a distance. In the autumn of 1847, after the opening of the
-Cologne-Minden Railway, the first trial was made of sending these
-oysters to Berlin, via Cologne. The result was most satisfactory; they
-sold for 1-1/2 thalers the hundred. This caused no little sensation,
-especially among the old oyster dealers, who were accustomed to receive
-from five to six, even from eight to nine thalers per hundred. The good
-folks of Berlin are now supplied with abundant fresh and fine oysters.
-The Ostend natives may be obtained from the owner of the oyster beds in
-Ostend. I speak of Berlin, as the Germans are great oyster-eaters, and
-the North, in a great measure, is supplied from thence.
-
-In Brussels, Antwerp, Ghent, Bruges, and Lille, Ostend oysters are eaten
-with slices of home-baked bread, and butter. They are served up in their
-shells, open, and not broken apart. They have a tender, fragrant, and
-melting flesh, and are only half the size of ordinary oysters; but they
-gain in thickness what they lose in size. In Flanders and the
-Netherlands they are known under the name of "English oysters," but are
-called in Paris after the name of the beds where they are reared. They
-are in reality Edinburgh "Natives," cleaned and fattened in the Ostend
-oyster-beds, and hence called Belgian or Ostend oysters.
-
-The oyster of Ostend cannot be too much recommended to gourmets. It is
-to the common oyster what a chicken is to an old hen. It is a draught of
-bitter ale to a thirsty palate. It is a known fact, that after having
-abstained from food for a long time, the first oyster one eats produces
-a kind of unusual rictus (or opening of the mouth), the reason of which
-physiologists have never been able to explain. This same sensation is
-produced in eating an Ostend oyster, but it is much sweeter, more
-lasting, and much more delightful. If the Romans had ever known them
-they would have sung their praises both in verse and prose, and would by
-far have preferred them to their sadly over-praised oysters from the
-Lucrine Sea.
-
-The only oysters which can be brought into competition with those of
-Ostend in the same markets are the Whitstable oysters, which have only
-recently become an article of trade on the Continent. These are also
-"natives" from the Channel, generally larger than the former, but
-unequal, not being sorted, very fat and full, but much more tender, and
-do not keep fresh so long. The cause of this may be that they are first
-taken from Whitstable to London, where they are packed up and sent by
-sea and rail to Hamburgh and Berlin, which takes always from six to
-seven days. They have a fine flavour, and are by some people preferred
-to the Ostend oysters: although the latter, generally speaking, occupy
-the first rank. These two species, and that of Holstein, are the best
-oysters to be met with in the north of Europe.
-
-2. _Channel Oysters._—The oysters which, more particularly in the north
-of Germany, are an article of trade, come from the Bay of St. Brieux and
-the Rock of Cancale, on the British Channel, between the castle of that
-name, Mount St. Michael, and St. Malo, and from the Channel between
-Calais and its extreme point near Falmouth. The bottom of this sea is
-flat and firm, and its stream near the bottom not very strong, both
-favourable circumstances for the propagation of oysters. This
-propagation must be very considerable, and the banks where the oysters
-breed very extensive, since, in spite of the continual dredging, they
-produce a sufficient quantity without any apparent decrease, to guard
-against which, the new beds of St. Brieux, mentioned in the first
-chapter, are carefully supplied. The dredging lasts generally from the
-middle of September till the end of May; during the other months the
-fishing should properly be discontinued, because the spawning, which
-then takes place, would be disturbed, and because during that time the
-oyster is generally not fit for food.
-
-3. _Holstein Oysters_ are very good and fine, but the sea-banks do not
-afford enough for the present consumption, so that it is necessary to
-have good connexions in order to obtain real and good Holstein oysters.
-They are easily distinguished from all the other oysters by their size,
-the thin, greenish-blue shells, especially the lower shell. The upper
-shell is always concave, by which they are the more easily distinguished
-from the Heligolanders, which have always a strong convex upper shell.
-As to the little animal itself, it is very fat, white, thick, and
-tender, and therefore very digestible. It has only a small beard, by
-which it is distinguished from the Norwegian and Scottish oyster, which,
-by the appearance of the shell, might be mistaken for the Holstein
-oyster by novices in gastronomy. These delicate favourites are to be
-obtained from the lessees of the Royal Oyster-banks on the western coast
-of Holstein in Flensburg, in the kingdom of Denmark.
-
-4. _The Schleswick Oyster of Husum and Silt_ is very like the
-former—almost undistinguishable. It is very excellent, but seldom
-exported, and consumed for the most part in Kiel. The two last-named
-oysters are often taken to St. Petersburg by sailors, when making the
-passage to and fro.
-
-5. _The Heligolanders_ are very large; have thick shells, which renders
-the duty and carriage very high, but are not at all fine, and generally
-sold in all the innocence of ignorance by dealers as Holstein oysters.
-
-Have nothing to do with _Norwegian oysters_; I only mention them here as
-things to be shunned. _Bremer oysters_, the _Neuwerkers_, and the
-_Wangerogers_, however, deserve a better fate.
-
-6. _The Oyster of the Bay of Biscay_ is of the same size as that of
-Holstein, with a very large beard, like those caught in the south of
-England. The beard, like the oyster itself, is quite grass green—a
-quality which is to be found generally only with oysters from Dieppe,
-Cancale, and the Marennes. Its flavour is very fine and good, but great
-care must be taken, in opening the shell and detaching the oyster, not
-to break the double shell, which they mostly possess, for this contains
-sulphuretted hydrogen, which gives a bad smell and flavour to the
-oyster, and poisons the stomach of the consumer.
-
-7. _American Oysters_, though, to my taste, by no means so delicate as
-others I have mentioned, are nevertheless superior for cooking. For my
-own part, although I have stated that pepper, vinegar, lemon juice, and
-other stimulating ingredients, are commonly made use of when eating the
-oyster, I offer, in all courtesy, the decided opinion, that the taste
-must be vitiated that can swallow such in preference to the delicate,
-fresh, luscious, charming little morsel, saturated merely, or perhaps
-the word ought to be merely bedewed, like the rose on a summer morning,
-by its own liquid life's blood. Americans, themselves, generally prefer
-their large oysters even to our British Natives.
-
-8. _French Oysters._—The French oysters are chiefly taken from beds in
-the Bays of Cancale and St. Brieux, from Marennes, from Havre and
-Dieppe, from Dunkirk, and from the Bay of Biscay. The three first are
-very fine, but the distance to Paris is too great; they are therefore
-dear in that capital. Those from Dunkirk are similar to those of Ostend,
-but not quite so fine; and those from the Bay of Biscay are quite green,
-and highly esteemed in the south of France, especially at Bordeaux.
-
-9. _Dutch Oysters_ are both good and dear. The four sorts I recommend
-are Seelanders, Vliessingers, Middleburgers, and Vieringers. The latter
-are almost the finest and best, but uncommonly dear, and are mostly
-consumed in Holland.
-
-10. _Mediterranean Oysters._—I have already referred to classical
-authorities for the character the ancients gave those of Circe and the
-Lucrine Sea; and the old rule, "_de mortius nil_," forbids me to say in
-what rank I place Horace the inimitable, Seneca the wise, and Pliny the
-naturalist, as judges of what an oyster should be. Where ignorance is
-bliss, people can be very happy. Till the Turk, by an accidental fire,
-had become acquainted with the taste of roast pork, there were many less
-fires in Stamboul than now. Till the Romans found the Rutupians, the
-Lucrine flourished; so did Circe.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X.
-
- "THE TREASURE OF AN OYSTER."
-
-Sweet names given to Pearls; Barry Cornwall Proctor's lines; Component
-parts of Pearls; Mother-of-pearl; How Pearls are formed, Sorrows into
-Gems; Their nucleus; Sir Everard Home and Sir David Brewster; Curious
-shapes and fancy Jewellery; Pearl Fisheries: Bahrein Island and Bay of
-Candalchy; Miseries of the Divers; Pearls as Physic; Immense value of
-recorded Pearls.
-
-
-Of all beautiful things in the world the pearl is the rarest and most
-beautiful. Nothing can exceed it, nothing can equal it, although they
-try very hard in "French" and "Roman" ways, in glassy globules which
-continually crack, or in round spots of wax, which, instead of adorning,
-adhere to the neck of beauty, and when old age comes upon it, turn
-yellow and wrinkled like the skin of a dowager. Nay, nothing can well
-imitate it, although art has gone somewhat near it. But to a knowing eye
-one might as well seek to imitate truth, or palm away upon the unwary a
-copy of true virgin innocence as to imitate a pearl. We know all the
-answers that the dowagers can make; we know that the imitations are "so
-cheap," so pretty; we know that certain dowagers—witness Margaret,
-Duchess Dowager of Lancaster—sell their real pearls and wear cunning
-imitations; we know that they in vain try to persuade themselves that
-the false are as good as the true ones; but only look hard at the
-ornaments, and the duchess is abashed. To test false pearls, one has
-only to put a true one by them, and the "difference," as advertisers
-say, "will be at once perceived."
-
-Let us devote this last portion of our book to the history of the pearl.
-Its very names are pretty. _Looloo_, _Mootoo_, _Mootie_, _Margaritæ_,
-_Perles_, _Perlii_, _Perlas_, _Pearls_, all sweet, pretty,
-mouth-rounding names, but worthy to be applied to the lustrous and
-beautiful spheres which we call pearls. _Principium culmenque omnium,
-rerum pretii tenent_: "Of all things, pearls," said Pliny, two thousand
-years ago, "kept the very top, highest, best, and first price." What was
-true then is true now. There are few things so immortal as good taste.
-Let us pay something "on account" of our debt to the oyster. Having
-regarded that placid creditor as an article of food, I now propose to
-treat him as an assistant to the toilet. And, looking at him in that
-point of view, here is not a bad instalment of the aforesaid debt,
-contributed by Barry Cornwall.
-
- "Within the midnight of her hair,
- Half-hidden in its deepest deeps,
- A single peerless, priceless pearl
- (All filmy-eyed) for ever sleeps.
- Without the diamond's sparkling eyes,
- The ruby's blushes—there it lies,
- Modest as the tender dawn,
- When her purple veil's withdrawn—
- The flower of gems, a lily cold and pale.
- Yet, what doth all avail?—
- All its beauty, all its grace?
- All the honours of its place?
- He who pluck'd it from its bed,
- In the far blue Indian Ocean,
- Lieth, without life or motion,
- In his earthy dwelling—dead!
- All his children, one by one,
- When they look up to the sun,
- Curse the toil by which he drew
- The treasure from its bed of blue."
-
-Costly as pearls are, they are merely the calcareous production of
-Mollusks. Diamonds have elsewhere been shown to be merely charcoal; the
-pearl is little else but concentric layers of membrane and carbonate of
-lime. All Mollusks are instances of that beneficent law of nature, that
-the hard parts accommodate themselves to the soft. The common naked
-snail, the mussel, cockle, oyster, garden helix, strombus, and nautilus,
-elegant or rough, rare or common, each illustrate this grand law. The
-body of a soft consistence is enclosed in an elastic skin. From this
-skin calcareous matter is continually exuded. This protects the animal,
-and forms the shell. Where the waves are rough, and rocks superabundant,
-then the shell is rough, hard, stony, fit to weather anything; where
-only smooth water and halcyon days are to be looked for, Nature, which
-never works in vain, provides but paper sides and an egg-shell boat,
-such as the little nautilus navigates and tacks and steers in.
-
-Besides forming the rough outside, the calcareous exuvium, the mucus of
-the oyster, and other mollusks, form that beautiful substance, so smooth
-and polished, and dyed with rainbow tints and a glorious opalescence,
-which, be it as common as luxury has made it, still charms the eye. This
-is the lining of the shell, the mother-of-pearl, nacre. "The inside of
-the shell," said old Dampier—that old sailor with a poet's mind—"is more
-glorious even than the pearl itself."
-
-It is glorious; it has the look of the morning, and the tint of the
-evening sky; the colours of the prism chastened, softened, retained, and
-made perpetual in it: this is mother-o'-pearl.
-
-To render its bed always soft and cosy, to lie warm, packed as one might
-at Malvern in wet sheets, seems to be the oyster's pleasure. This
-singular exuvium, this mucus, not only creates pleasure, but alleviates
-pain. Some irritating substance, some internal worry and annoyance, it
-may be a dead embryo, or a grain of sand insinuates itself, and, lo! the
-creature covers it with this substance to ease off its unkind tooth, and
-converts it into a pearl.
-
-That is the way they are made, these wondrous gems! And very beautiful
-is the thought that the most highly prized of gems should be but the
-effect of a creature to ease off a sorrow. Every one knows Shakspeare's
-wondrously fine reflection upon the uses of sorrow and adversity, which,
-
- "Like the toad, ugly and venomous,
- Bears yet a precious jewel in its head."
-
-The precious jewel of the toad, which some critics and commentators have
-endeavoured to prove its glittering eye, has long been exploded. Our old
-alchemists believed in the toadstone; we do not. The fable remains in
-its pristine beauty; but here is one truth equally beautiful, that the
-adversity of the oyster turns to a jewel so costly and glorious, that
-monarchs reckon it amongst the records of their houses and conquered
-provinces. May we ever turn our sorrows and troubles to as good an
-account; may we ever continue to do so, for assuredly some men do. The
-best of men are those who are tried by affliction and trouble, or those
-who have some deep and secret care, which they hide in their hearts, and
-which makes them wiser and better. Shelley has a theory that poets are
-made somewhat after the fashion of pearls, or that, at any rate, their
-poetry is so produced. He sings—
-
- "Most wretched men
- Are cradled into poetry by wrong;
- They learn in suffering, what they teach in song."
-
-We have very little doubt but that the true poetry from which the world
-learns anything worth learning is so produced.
-
-There have been other theories as to the production of the pearl, some
-holding that the interior formation which we state to be a grain of
-sand, is a dead ovum which the fish attempts to exude. This theory, too,
-has its supporters.
-
-"If," said Sir Everard Home, "if I can prove that this, the richest
-jewel in a monarch's crown, which cannot be imitated by any art of man"
-(he is rather wrong there; it can be imitated, and wonderfully imitated
-too,) "either in beauty of form or brilliancy of lustre, is the abortive
-egg of an oyster enveloped in its own nacre, who will not be struck with
-wonder and astonishment?" Wonder and astonishment are words which
-scarcely exist now. Science has shown so many wonders that we are hardly
-astonished at anything; but Sir Everard's assertion admits of proof. A
-pearl cut in two exhibits the concentric layers like an onion, as may be
-seen through a strong lens; and in the centre is a round hole, very
-minute it may be, but wherein the ovum has been deposited.
-
-Sometimes the ovum, or sand, or enclosed substance has attached itself
-to the shell, and has then been covered with mucus, forming a pearl
-which cannot be separated from the shell. There are several specimens of
-such pearls in the British Museum.
-
-The great beauty in pearls is their opalescence, and a lustre which, as
-we have before observed, however clever the imitation, has never yet
-been given to artificial pearls. Sir Everard Home supposes that this
-lustre arises from the highly polished coat of the centre shell, the
-pearl itself being diaphanous. Sir David Brewster accounts for it by the
-pearl and mother-of-pearl having a grooved substance on its surface
-resembling the minute corrugations often seen on substances covered with
-oil, paint, or varnish. Philosophers are sometimes not very explanatory.
-Sir David means to say that beneath the immediate polish of the pearl
-there are certain wavelets and dimples from which the light is
-reflected. "The direction of the grooves," again to quote Sir David, "is
-in every case at right angles to the line joining the coloured image;
-hence, in irregularly formed mother-of-pearl, where the grooves are
-often circular, and have every possible direction, the coloured images
-appear irregularly scattered round the ordinary image."
-
-In the regular pearl these are crowded, from its spherical form, into a
-small space; hence its marvellous appearance of white unformed light,
-and hence its beauty and value.
-
-To prove the translucency of the pearl, we have only to hold one which
-is split to a candle, where, by interposing coloured substance or light,
-we shall have the colour transmitted through the pearl. Curious as is
-the formation of the pearl, we have yet a cognate substance to it. What
-we call _bezoar_, and the Hindoos _faduj_, is a concretion of a deepish
-olive-green colour found in the stomach of goats, dogs, cows, or other
-animals: the hog bezoar, the bovine bezoar, and the camel bezoar; this
-last the Hindoos turn into a yellow paint; but the harder substances the
-Hindoo jewellers polish and thread and use as jewels; so that from the
-stomach of the lower animals, and from the secretions of a shell-fish,
-the still grasping, prying, worrying, proud, vain-glorious, busy man
-gets him an ornament for her whom he most loves, for him whom he most
-honours.
-
-The question of obtaining pearls and of slaying divers, of feeding
-sharks with human limbs, of the eye-balls starting and the tympanum of
-the ear bursting, of the pains, perils, and penalties of the pearl
-divers, must be touched incidentally in any true account of this
-precious gem.
-
-Vanity demands the aid of Cruelty, and for her gratification human
-sacrifices are still made.
-
-In the Persian Gulf, at Ceylon, and in the Red Sea, the early sources of
-the Greeks and Romans, we yet find our supply. Pearls are also found in
-the Indian Ocean along the Coromandel coast and elsewhere; as also in
-the Gulf of California; but the two grand headquarters are in Bahrein
-Island, in the Persian Gulf, and in the Bay of Condalchy, in the Gulf of
-Manaar, off the Island of Ceylon.
-
-The fishery at Ceylon is a monopoly of the British Government, but, like
-many Government monopolies, it is said to cost a great deal more than it
-produces. In 1804 Government leased it for £120,000 per annum; in 1828
-it only yielded £28,000.[5] It is a desert and barren spot; no one can
-fall in love with it; sands and coral reefs are not picturesque; yet, in
-its season, it attracts more to its shores than one of our best
-watering-places. Divers, merchants, Arab-hawkers, drillers, jewellers,
-and talkers; fish-sellers, butchers, boat-caulkers, and Hindoo Robinsons
-and Walkers are all found there. The period is limited to six weeks, or
-two months at most, from February to April; and whilst they are making
-money these people are rather eager, look you. But the fishers
-themselves, victims of cruelty as they are, are also victims to their
-own superstition and ignorance. A Hindoo or Parsee blesses the water to
-drive away the sharks; a diver may be frightened or ill, and the
-holidays are so numerous, that the actual work-days amount only to
-thirty in the season.
-
-The boats assembled sail at ten at night, a signal gun being then let
-off. They then set sail, reach the banks before daybreak, and at sunrise
-the divers begin to take their "headers." They continue at this work
-till noon, when a breeze starting up, they return. The cargoes are taken
-out before the night sets in, and the divers are refreshed.
-
-Each boat carries twenty men—ten rowers and ten divers—besides a chief,
-or pilot. The divers work five at a time alternately, leaving the others
-time to recruit. To go down quickly they use a large stone of red
-granite, which they catch hold of with their foot. Each diver holds a
-net-work bag in his right hand, closes his nostrils with his left, or
-with a piece of bent horn, and descends to the bottom. There he darts
-about him as quickly as he can, picking up with toes and fingers, and
-putting the oysters into his net-work bag. When this is full, or he is
-exhausted, he pulls the rope, and is drawn, leaving the stone to be
-pulled up after him. When the oysters are very plentiful, the diver may
-bring up one hundred and fifty at a dip.
-
-After this violent exertion, blood flows from nose, ears, and eyes. The
-divers cannot exceed generally one minute's immersion. One and a half,
-and even two, have been reached by extraordinary efforts. Those who can
-endure four and five minutes are spoken of. One also we are told of—an
-apocryphal fellow, we should think—who coming in 1797 from Arjango,
-stayed under water six minutes.
-
-The divers live not to a great age. Heart diseases, surfeits, sores,
-blood-shot eyes, staggering limbs, and bent backs—these are part of
-their wages. Sometimes they die on reaching the surface, suddenly, as if
-struck by a shot.
-
-At Bahrein, the annual amount produced by the pearl fishery may be
-reckoned at from £200,000 to £240,000; add to this purchases made by the
-merchants of Abootabee, and we have £360,000 to include the whole pearl
-trade of the Gulf, since, through their agents at Bahrein, merchants
-from Constantinople, Bagdad, Alexandria, Timbuctoo, New York, Calcutta,
-Paris, St. Petersburg, Holy Moscowa, or London, make their purchases.
-
-"But," says our credible informant, "I have not put down the sum at
-_one-sixth_ of that told me by the native merchants." But even then an
-enormous amount is that, to be used in mere ornament, and in one article
-only.
-
-Well, not exactly ornament. "In Eastern lands," says Mr. Thomas Moore,
-"they talk in flowers." Very flowery certainly is their talk. They also,
-good easy people, take pearls for physic—not for dentifrice—Easterns
-always having white teeth, apparently, so far as I have been able to
-judge, without the trouble of cleaning them—but as a regular dose. They
-call it _majoon_; it is an electuary, and myriads of small seed pearls
-are ground to impalpable powder to make it. As for the adulteration in
-this article, doubtless to be found, I say nothing. The simple lime from
-the inside of the shell would be just as white and just as good. Common
-magnesia would have the same effect; but, good sirs, if an old Emir, or
-rich Bonze, wishes to pay an enormous price for something to swallow to
-comfort his good old inside, why not? Do not let us brag too much: from
-the time of old Gower, doctor of physic, to Dr. Cheyne, we have, sir,
-swallowed everything, from toads' brains to the filings of a murderer's
-irons, as very proper physic.
-
-The Bahrein fishery-boats amount to 1500, and the trade is in the hands
-of merchants who possess much capital. This they lend out at cent. per
-cent.; they buy up, and they beat down; they juggle, cheat, rig the
-market, rob in a legal way a whole boat's crew, grow enormously rich,
-and preach morality.
-
-Nor do they forget superstition. In the chief boat, when they fish, sits
-a jolly old cheat, a magician, called the binder of sharks, who waves
-about his skinny hands, jumps, howls, incants, and otherwise exerts his
-cabalistic powers, and will not allow the divers, nor are they willing,
-to descend till he declares the moment propitious. To add some weight to
-their devotions, they debar themselves of food or drink during this
-_Mumbo-Jumbo_ play, but afterwards a species of toddy makes them like
-"Roger the Monk,"—"excessively drunk."
-
-The true shape of the pearl should be a perfect sphere. In India, and
-elsewhere, those of the largest size find the readiest sale, and realize
-immense prices. The very finest pearls are sent to Europe, and of these
-the very finest of the fine are sent to London and Paris. Thence the
-great people of the land procure their choice specimens. The late
-Emperor of Russia used to purchase for his wife—of whom he was
-exceedingly fond, and who has lately joined him in that bourne from
-which neither traveller, emperor, king, nor beggar ever returns—the very
-finest pearl he could procure: a virgin pearl and a perfect sphere was
-what he sought, for he would not have any that had been worn by others.
-After five-and-twenty years' search, he presented to the Empress such a
-necklace as had never been seen before.
-
-Immense prices have been given and are still given for pearls. Julius
-Cæsar, in love with the mother of Marcus Brutus, is said to have
-presented her with a pearl worth £48,417 10_s._, which we can believe or
-not, according to our natures. Cleopatra, as all the world has read,
-drank, dissolved in vinegar, a pearl which cost £80,729 of our money,
-and, as we know from Shakspeare, Marc Antony sent to her "a treasure of
-an oyster" of wondrous beauty. Clodius, the glutton (surely a gourmet,
-not a gourmand), swallowed one worth £8072 18_s._ One of the modern
-pearls was bought by Tavernier at Catifa, and sold by him to the Shah of
-Persia for £110,000; another was obtained by Philip II. of Spain, off
-the Columbian coast, which weighed 250 carats, and was valued at 14,400
-ducats, which is equal to about £13,996.
-
-Pliny, the naturalist, tells us of a pearl which was valued at £80,000
-sterling. That which Philip II. had was nearly as large as a pigeon's
-egg. Pliny's was somewhat smaller. But size is not alone the test of
-value. Shape and form must be taken into consideration. Some pearls are
-very curiously misshapen, and of so large a size that it would seem a
-wonder how the fish could exist with them in the shell. These misshapen
-pearls are generally of an uneven surface and lustre, and are prized by
-the Eastern jewellers very much, and were also sought after by the
-fanciful goldsmiths and enamellers of the _cinque-cento_ period, when
-they were set into sword-hilts, or formed into toys or gems, just as the
-fancy and shape might suggest. We have seen one large long pearl mounted
-by a Spanish jeweller into the order of the golden fleece, the legs and
-head of the sheep being of gold, the body formed by the pearl. Amongst
-the loot taken at Lucknow was a set of miniature animals and birds, all
-formed of large but misshapen pearls, the tails, heads, eyes, &c., of
-the creatures being of gold set with diamonds. Any one who has seen much
-mediæval work in the precious metals, or the illuminated pages of early
-printed books on vellum, of Italian execution, will be able to recall
-many curious instances of this quaint kind of _vertu_.
-
-The largest pearl of which we have heard was one spoken of by Böethius,
-the size of a muscadine pear. It was named the _Incomparable_, and
-weighed thirty carats or five pennyweights. Tavernier's pearl would, if
-engraved, well illustrate the rocky, eccentric, and oft-times triangular
-shapes in which these gems are found. They often adhere to the shell,
-and cannot be removed without the saw. After such an operation they
-would merely rank as half pearls, which, by the way, are those generally
-mounted in jewellery and rings.
-
-Did our scope allow of a description of the manufacture from fish scales
-of the substitute for the real pearl, the marvellously clever imitation
-which is worn, wittingly, by many a gracious lady, and unwittingly by
-many another, we should have another interesting story to tell. But
-these imitations may be considered as frauds upon our placid creditor
-the oyster—or, shall we say, compositions with him, and beneath the
-notice of, debtors who are trying to behave honestly to a bivalve.
-
-Properly speaking, however, the Pearl oyster (_Avicula margaritacea_),
-from which the greater number of pearls, and the largest quantity of
-mother-of-pearl is obtained, is not an oyster strictly so called, but
-belongs to an allied genus. The pearl oyster is an oval-pointed
-recurved-edged mussel; the lower shell with a hood-shaped hollow point,
-the upper one like a cover, leafy and pearly, of a rosy purple-white
-colour. The common oyster (_Ostrea edulis_), on the contrary, has a
-round-oval mussel-shell, thin towards the edges, with tiled leaves
-adhering to one another, the upper shell quite flat. Some variety exists
-in these, some having elongated edges, owing to the difference of age.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Gentle reader! when Queen Mary, whom men call "Bloody Mary," died, and
-Queen Elizabeth, Protestant Elizabeth, came to the throne, Osorius, the
-good Bishop of Arcoburge, a staunch bishop of the Church of Rome, sent
-her a sugared pill, which he hoped would at once convert the queen, and
-drive out the "obnoxious heresy" from the land. That all might read it,
-he himself wrote it in Latin: "_Epistola ad Clarissimam Principam
-Elizabetham_;" had it translated into French, which honest old Strype
-says "gave great offence," as "_une bien longue_ _et docte Epistre à
-Madame Elizabeth, Royne d' Angleterre_;" and to gild the nasty thing,
-called it, in English, "A Perle for a Prince;" but all the ingenuity of
-quackery could not disguise the drastic pill, and neither the queen nor
-her lieges would swallow it. I have seen all three books in the
-Grenville Library in the British Museum, and at once pronounce them
-nothing but "mock" pearls. Now, I have extracted for your delectation a
-real pearl out of the Oyster, in the shape of this little book. It is
-Christmas-tide. Cherish it for those best of pearls, kindly thoughts and
-loving remembrances, which the Oyster calls into being when the Holly
-and the Mistletoe deck our walls.
-
------
-
-Footnote 5:
-
- The pearl fishery at Ceylon, however, has been very profitable during
- the present year, the yield being sometimes worth from 10,000 dollars
- to 30,000 dollars per day. An attempt is being made to re-establish
- the pearl fishery in the Gulf of California. Some very fine pearls
- were found there nearly a century ago.
-
-
- LONDON: WILLIAM STEVENS, PRINTER, BELL YARD, TEMPLE BAR.
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- FOOTNOTES:
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber's Note
-
-The original spelling and punctuation has been retained.
-
-Variations in hyphenation and compound words have been preserved.
-
-Italicized words and phrases in the text version are presented by
-surrounding the text with underscores.
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Oyster, by Eustace Clare Grenville Murray
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: The Oyster
- Where, How and When to Find, Breed, Cook and Eat It
-
-Author: Eustace Clare Grenville Murray
-
-Release Date: January 1, 2018 [EBook #56285]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE OYSTER ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Larry B. Harrison and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by the
-Library of Congress)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/cover.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_i'>i</span>
-<img src='images/i_001.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p>ANCIENT NATIVES OF BRITAIN, ENCAMPED NEAR COLCHESTER.<br /><br />(<i>From a curious Glyptic in possession of the Author.</i>)</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_ii'>ii</span>
- <h1 class='c001'><span class='xxlarge'>THE OYSTER;</span><br /> <br />WHERE, HOW, AND WHEN<br /><span class='small'>TO</span><br /><span class='xlarge'>FIND, BREED, COOK,</span><br /><span class='small'>AND</span><br /><span class='xlarge'>EAT IT.</span></h1>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/i_002.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c000'>
- <div>LONDON:</div>
- <div>TRÜBNER &amp; CO., 60, PATERNOSTER ROW.</div>
- <div><span class='small'>MDCCCLXI.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_iii'>iii</span>LONDON:</div>
- <div>WILLIAM STEVENS, PRINTER, 37, BELL YARD,</div>
- <div>TEMPLE BAR.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_iv'>iv</span>
- <h2 class='c003'>CONTENTS.</h2>
-</div>
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='91%' />
-<col width='8%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr><td class='c004' colspan='2'>CHAPTER I.</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c004' colspan='2'>THE OYSTER IN SEASON.</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c005'>The R. canon correct; Alimentary Qualities of the Oyster; Profitable Investment; Billingsgate, and London Consumption; English Oyster-beds; Jersey Oysters; French Oyster-beds on the Coast of Brittany</td>
- <td class='c006'><a href='#Page_9'>9</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c004' colspan='2'>CHAPTER II.</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c004' colspan='2'>ANCIENT HISTORY OF THE OYSTER.</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c005'>The Ancients; Oysters a Greek and Roman Luxury; Sergius Orata, and the Oyster-beds of Baia; Immense Consumption at Rome; Failure of the Circean and Lucrinian Oyster-beds under Domitian, and Introduction of Rutupians from Britain; Agricola, Constantine, and Helena; Athenian Oysters, and Aristides.</td>
- <td class='c006'><a href='#Page_21'>21</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c004' colspan='2'>CHAPTER III.</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c004' colspan='2'>MODERN HISTORY OF THE OYSTER.</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c005'>Fall of the Rutupian Supremacy; Louis IV. and William of Normandy; Conquest of England, and Revival of Oyster-eating in England; The Oyster under Legal Protection; American Oysters</td>
- <td class='c006'><a href='#Page_24'>24</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c004' colspan='2'><span class='pageno' id='Page_v'>v</span>CHAPTER IV.</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c004' colspan='2'>THE OYSTER AT HOME.</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c005'>Its Nature, Colour, and Structure; Natural Food; Perception of the changes of Light; Uses of the Celia; Fecundity and Means of Propagation; Age; Fossil Oysters in Berkshire and in the Pacific; Power of Locomotion</td>
- <td class='c006'><a href='#Page_28'>28</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c004' colspan='2'>CHAPTER V.</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c004' colspan='2'>THE OYSTER IN ITS NEW SETTLEMENT.</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c005'>Dredging for Oysters; Oyster-beds and their formation; Sergius Orata; Pliny the Elder; Baia and the Lucrine Sea; Roman Epicurism and Gluttony; Martial and Horace, Cicero and Seneca; Masticate Oysters, and do not bolt them whole; Mediterranean and Atlantic Oysters; Agricola and the Rutupians; Apicius Cœlius, Trajan, Pliny, and the Vivarium</td>
- <td class='c006'><a href='#Page_37'>37</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c004' colspan='2'>CHAPTER VI.</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c004' colspan='2'>THE OYSTER ON ITS TRAVELS.</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c005'>The Isle of Sheppey, the Medway, and Whitstable; Milton, Queenborough, Rochester, and Faversham Oysters; Colchester and Essex Beds; Edinburgh Pandores and Aberdours; Dublin Carlingfords and Powldoodies; Poole and its Oyster-bank; Cornish Oysters and the Helford Beds; Poor Tyacke, and How he was Done; Dredgers and their Boats; Auld Reekie's Civic Ceremonial; Song of the Oyster; its Voyage to Market, and Journey by Coach and Rail</td>
- <td class='c006'><a href='#Page_45'>45</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c004' colspan='2'><span class='pageno' id='Page_vi'>vi</span>CHAPTER VII.</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c004' colspan='2'>THE OYSTER AT ITS JOURNEY'S END.</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c005'>Oyster Stalls; How to Open the Oyster; an Oyster Supper; Beer, Wines, and Spirits; Roasted, Fried, Stewed, and Scolloped Oysters; Oyster Soup, and Oyster Sauce; Broiled Oysters; Oyster Pie; Oyster Toast; Oyster Patties; Oyster Powder; Pickled Oysters; Oyster Loaves; Oyster Omelet; Cabbage, Larks, and Oysters; and Frogs and Oysters</td>
- <td class='c006'><a href='#Page_54'>54</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c004' colspan='2'>CHAPTER VIII.</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c004' colspan='2'>THE OYSTER AND THE DOCTOR.</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c005'>Oyster-eating in Prussia; Disgusting Wagers; Oysters better than Pills, A Universal Remedy; Professional Opinions; When Ladies should eat them; Repugnance overcome; Oysters as an External Application; Chemical Analysis; How to tell if Dead before Opening</td>
- <td class='c006'><a href='#Page_68'>68</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c004' colspan='2'>CHAPTER IX.</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c004' colspan='2'>THE OYSTER ABROAD.</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c005'>British Oysters in Ostend Quarters; the Whitstable in a Slow Coach; Holstein, Schleswig, and Heligoland Natives; Norwegian and Bremer Oysters; American Oysters; French Oysters; Dutch Oysters; Mediterranean Oysters and Classical Judges</td>
- <td class='c006'><a href='#Page_75'>75</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c004' colspan='2'><span class='pageno' id='Page_vii'>vii</span>CHAPTER X.</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c004' colspan='2'>"THE TREASURE OF AN OYSTER."</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c005'>Sweet names given to Pearls; Barry Cornwall Proctor's lines; Component parts of Pearls; Mother-of-pearl; How Pearls are formed, Sorrows into Gems; Their nucleus; Sir Everard Home and Sir David Brewster; Curious shapes and fancy Jewellery; Pearl Fisheries; Bahrein Island and Bay of Candalchy; Miseries of the Divers; Pearls as Physic; Immense value of recorded Pearls; A Perle for a Prince; Most precious Pearls</td>
- <td class='c006'><a href='#Page_82'>82</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>
- <h2 class='c003'>THE OYSTER</h2>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c003'>CHAPTER I.<br /> <br />THE OYSTER IN SEASON.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='small'>The R. canon correct; Alimentary Qualities of the Oyster;
-Profitable Investment; Billingsgate, and London Consumption;
-English Oyster-beds; Jersey Oysters; French
-Oyster-beds on the Coast of Brittany.</span></p>
-<div class='c007'>
- <img class='drop-capi' src='images/i_003.jpg' width='200' height='301' alt='' />
-</div><p class='drop-capi1_1'>
-OF the Millions who live to eat
-and eat to live in this wide
-world of ours, how few are
-there who do not, at proper
-times and seasons, enjoy a
-good oyster. It may not
-be an ungrateful task,
-therefore, if I endeavour
-to inform them what species
-of animal the little
-succulent shell-fish is,
-that affords to man so
-much gastronomical enjoyment—how
-born and
-bred and nurtured; when,
-and where; and, lastly, how best it may be eaten,
-whether in its living and natural state, or having
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>undergone the ordeal of cooking by the skill of a
-superior artist.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>I have oftentimes been told that it is a mere question
-of fastidiousness, or fashion, that oysters should be served
-for human food only at a certain fixed period of the
-year—those months possessing the letter <i>r</i> being proverbially
-the only months when the oyster is fit for
-human food. Why not, such reasoners have said, eat
-oysters all the year round? Life is short. Why not
-obtain the first of gastronomical enjoyments every month
-of the year and every day of the month? I can in no
-manner go with these opinions, either from my practical
-knowledge of the oyster, or from any just reasoning.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>I am aware that there are many good men and true,
-and others calling themselves, somewhat erroneously,
-sportsmen, beyond the white cliffs of Britain, who
-would eat an oyster on the hottest day of June and July
-as they would a partridge, a pheasant, or a salmon at
-any season of the year. Sufficient the names oyster,
-partridge, pheasant—all gastronomical delights—all to
-be eaten, and by them eaten whensoever and wheresoever
-served, what matters it? I am also aware
-that in our good City of London, in the hottest and
-earliest days of August,<a id='r1' /><a href='#f1' class='c009'><sup>[1]</sup></a> oysters are gulped down by
-the thousand: it is, nevertheless, an error—a revolting,
-unhealthy, unclean error—which ought to be
-denied, both at home and abroad, by the strong hand of
-the law.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>I, for my part, utterly and entirely ignore fish or
-fowl of the game species, as fit for human food during
-the seasons of breeding; and although an oyster may
-be eatable in August, if the month be hot it is rarely
-fresh; and what is more disgusting or more likely
-to be injurious to man than a stale oyster? That
-which I have said, however, on the oyster in this little
-book which I offer to the million—for the million are
-interested in the subject—will, I hope, induce those who
-have hitherto broken through a rule strictly adhered to
-by all gastronomes, to abstain in future; and those
-who have hitherto enjoyed oyster-eating, fearlessly to
-eat on and secure the first and foremost of all gastronomical
-indulgences provided for man—only in due season.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>On the 25th of July, says Brand, the antiquary, being
-St. James the Apostle's Day, the priests of old were
-wont to bless apples; and a popular belief too, in 1588,
-though generally ignored in the more enlightened days
-in which we live, was, that whoever ate oysters on
-that day would not be without money for the remainder
-of the year. This is very probable, for without they
-were selected with great care, disease and even death
-might follow. This conjunction of apples and oysters
-on St. James's Day may have suggested Bianca's remark
-in the "Taming of the Shrew," when comparing the
-resemblance of the old Pedant to that of Vincentio, which
-she remarks was as complete as that of an oyster to an
-apple.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>One must, therefore, take care not to eat oysters during
-the months of June and July, because they are unwholesome
-on account of the spawning-time; and also be
-careful in their selection in August. There are instances
-when persons, after having eaten oysters during these
-months, have become ill, and have even died. Last
-summer, at Ostend, thirty persons were taken ill in
-consequence of having eaten oysters in the month of
-July. They are, during these months, very thin, and
-without taste; in the month of September they become
-again fat and eatable, which may be accounted for by
-the fact of their being self-generated. The strength
-of the poor oysters is entirely spent in fattening themselves,
-in order the more to tickle the palate of the
-epicure in the proper season.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Now let us proceed to open the oyster.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Oyster! The mere writing of the word creates
-sensations of succulence—gastronomical pleasures, nutritive
-food, easy digestion, palatable indulgence—then
-go sleep in peace!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Lobster salads, beef and veal, truffles and chestnuts,
-all good in their way, are, nevertheless, attended with
-evil consequences to the human frame.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>But oysters—ye pleasant companions of the midnight
-hours, or the mid-day feast; is there a man, woman or
-child in all Europe—ay, or in Asia, Africa, or America—who
-does not owe you a debt of gratitude which they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>repay to the full by the enjoyment of your society <i>tête-à-tête</i>?
-You are eaten raw and alive, cooked and scolloped,
-in sauce and without sauce. True, true, oh oyster! thou
-art the best beloved of the loved!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The oyster, when eaten moderately, is, without contradiction,
-a wholesome food, and one of the greatest
-delicacies in the world. It contains much nutritive
-substance, which is very digestive, and produces a peculiar
-charm and an inexplicable pleasure. After having
-eaten oysters we feel joyous, light, and agreeable—yes,
-one might say, fabulously well. He who has eaten
-for the first time oysters is best enabled to judge of this;
-for, soon after having eaten them, he will experience a
-sensation he never felt before, and never had an idea of.
-This sensation scarcely remains with people who eat
-oysters every day; it is more practically felt when
-oysters are eaten for breakfast or before dinner, although
-they are also very wholesome in the evening, when taken
-moderately. Gourmets and epicures eat the oyster in
-its natural state, except that the beard is taken away.
-In England it is eaten with pepper, in Holland with
-vinegar, in Germany frequently with lemon-juice; but
-I am of the opinion, and am convinced, that when taken
-with the liquor they still contain, they are more digestible
-and more tasty. The opinion that this fluid is
-salt water, is an error; it is the white blood of the
-oyster itself, which it emits when injured in having its
-upper shell broken off. If it were sea-water, it would
-have a disagreeable bitter taste, and cause sickness; but
-as this does not take place, but on the contrary gives a
-fine taste to the oyster, the error is evident. The error
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>appears to arise from the fact that unconscientious oyster
-dealers wash the oysters with salt and water in order to
-give them a better appearance, as they say.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>"The oyster," says a writer in No. 824 of the
-"Family Herald"—that most agreeable of all window-seat
-books—"is a species of food combining the most
-precious alimentary qualities. Its meat is soft, firm,
-and delicate. It has sufficient flavour to please the
-taste, but not enough to excite to surfeit. Through
-a quality peculiar to itself, it favours the intestinal and
-gastric absorption, mixing easily with other food; and,
-assimilating with the juices of the stomach, it aids and
-favours the digestive functions. There is no other alimentary
-substance, not even excepting bread, which does not
-produce indigestion under certain given circumstances,
-but oysters never. This is a homage due to them. They
-may be eaten to-day, to-morrow, for ever, in profusion;
-indigestion is not to be feared, and we may be certain
-that no doctor was ever called in through their fault.
-Of course we except cooked oysters. Besides their
-valuable digestive qualities, oysters supply a recipe not
-to be despised in the liquor they contain. It is produced
-by the sea-water they have swallowed, but which, having
-been digested, has lost the peculiar bitterness of salt
-water. This oyster-water is limpid, and slightly saline
-in taste. Far from being purgative, like sea-water, it
-promotes digestion. It keeps the oysters themselves
-fresh, prolongs their life for some time until it is destroyed
-in our stomachs, or until the oyster has been
-transformed into a portion of ourselves."</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The degree of importance which different persons
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>attach to matters connected with the world in which
-we live, depends, of course, in a great measure, on the
-manner in which they view them.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>One person considers a loving wife, and four hundred
-a year, wealth and happiness; another would be
-miserable without four thousand, and could dispense
-with the wife. Some consider a post with five thousand
-a year a tolerable means of existence; others a commissionership
-with twelve hundred. Some seek a good
-consulship; others, till they have travelled from St.
-Petersburg and back in a telega, or sledge, half a dozen
-times during mid-winter, use the interest, which in
-other days would have secured a snug governorship,
-even in the Island of Barataria, to obtain a queen's
-messenger's place. At least so it used to be. Whether
-competitive examinations will lead to our having the
-right man in the right place, the round pegs in round
-holes, and the square pegs in square ones, still remains
-to be seen. And so is it with most things in life,
-whether personal or gastronomical. Different men are
-of different opinions; some like apples, and some like—onions;
-but I have scarcely ever yet met with the man
-who has refused a thoroughly good oyster.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>There is not a man, however unobservant, but knows
-that oysters are a great source of profit to some of that
-multitude which rises every morning without knowing
-exactly how, when, and where it shall dine. Billingsgate
-in the oyster season is a sight and a caution. Boats
-coming in loaded; porters struggling with baskets and
-sacks; early loungers looking on—it is so pleasant to
-see other people work—buyers and cheapeners, the fish
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>salesman in his rostrum, the wealthy purchaser who can
-lay out his hundreds and buy his thousands—all to be
-met with, together with that noise and bustle, and, far
-beyond it, all that incredible earnestness which always
-distinguishes an English market.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Oysters, says Dryasdust, in his very useful commercial
-work—in which, however, he makes alarming mis-statements—oysters
-are consumed in London in incredible
-quantities, "and notwithstanding their high price,
-are largely eaten by the middle and lower classes!"</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Thanking Dryasdust for his information, and being
-one of the great middle class ourselves, we can safely
-assert that oysters are <i>not</i> high in price. Fancy being
-able to purchase twelve succulent dainties for one six-pence
-at Ling's or Quin's, at Proctor's or Pim's, or any
-other celebrated shell-fish shop! Twelve "lumps of
-delight," as the Mussulman—not mussel man—calls his
-sweetmeats! and then fancy Dryasdust saying that they
-are high in price! Oh shame, where is thy blush!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>A farm of four acres, if well handled, may give occupation,
-and even bring pecuniary gain, to the possessor. A
-garden, for those who thoroughly understand and enjoy
-it, may secure untold pleasures, and perhaps help to pay
-the rent of the cottage. But an "oyster-bed" is a pleasure—an
-<i>el dorado</i>—a mine of wealth, in fact, which fills
-the owners' pockets with gold, and affords to the million
-untold gastronomical enjoyment and healthy food. On
-the money part of the question, the Scientific and Useful
-column of Number 825 of the "Family Herald" furnishes
-the following information: "A very interesting
-report has been recently made to the French Government
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>on the results of experiments made for the improvement
-of oyster-beds. The locality chosen was the Bay of St.
-Brieux, on the coast of Brittany. Between March and
-May, 1859, about 3,000,000 oysters, taken from different
-parts of the sea, were distributed in ten longitudinal beds
-in the above bay. The bottom was previously covered
-with old oyster shells and boughs of trees arranged like
-fascines. To these the young oysters attach themselves,
-and so fruitful are the results that one of the fascines
-was found at the end of six months to have no less than
-20,000 young oysters on it. The report further states
-that 12,000 hectares may be brought into full bearing
-in three years at an annual expense not exceeding 10,000
-francs."</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>M. Laviciare, Commissary of the Maritime Inscription,
-in his 1860 report to M. Coste, of the success of these
-operations in the Bay of St. Brieux, states that "a
-recent examination has fully and satisfactorily proved
-the advantageous results obtained on the five banks
-which have been laid down, and which have exceeded
-the most sanguine expectations. Three fascines, which
-were taken up indiscriminately from one of the banks
-formed in June, 1859, contained about 20,000 oysters
-each, of from one inch to two inches in diameter. The
-total expense for forming the above bank was 221f.; and if
-the 300 fascines laid down on it be multiplied by 20,000,
-600,000 oysters will be obtained, which, if sold at 20f.
-a thousand, will produce 120,000f. If, however, the
-number of oysters on each fascine were to be reckoned
-at only 10,000, the sum of 60,000f. would be received,
-which, for an expenditure of only 221f. would give
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>a larger profit than any other known branch of industry."</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>But the breeding and fattening of the London oyster
-has long been a lucrative branch of trade, of which
-Cockaine may well be proud. It is carried on "contagious"
-to London, as Mrs. Malaprop would say—principally
-in Essex and Kent. The rivers Crouch,
-Blackwater, and Colne are the chief breeding places
-in the former, and the channel of the Swale and the
-Medway in the latter. These are contiguous to Milton;
-hence Dibdin's song, and hence also the corruption of
-"melting hoysters;" melting they are too. The corruption
-is classical, so let it stand.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Exclusive of oysters bred in Essex and Kent, vast
-numbers are brought from Jersey, Poole, and other places
-along the coast, and are fattened in beds. The export
-of oysters from Jersey alone is very considerable, having
-amounted on an average of the four years ending
-with 1832<a id='r2' /><a href='#f2' class='c009'><sup>[2]</sup></a> to 208,032 bushels a year. The Jersey
-fishing then employed, during the season, about 1500
-men, 1000 women and children, and 250 boats. Think
-of this, ye oyster-eaters! Think that ye are doing—such
-is the wise ordination of an overruling Providence—some
-good when you are swallowing your ante-prandial
-oyster, and are giving employment to some portion of
-those 3000 people who work for you at Jersey, besides
-helping to feed the cold-fingered fishmonger, who, with
-blue apron and skilful knife, tempts you to "Hanother
-dazzen, sir?"</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>Of the quantity of oysters consumed in London we
-cannot give even an approximate guess. It must
-amount to millions of bushels. Fancy, if you can, also,
-that curiously courteous exchange which goes on every
-Christmas between our oyster-eating country cousins
-and our turkey and goose-loving Londoners. To the
-man</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>"Who hath been long in city pent,</div>
- <div class='line'> 'Tis very sweet to gaze upon the fair</div>
- <div class='line'> And open brow of heaven;—to breathe a prayer</div>
- <div class='line'>Full in the face of the blue firmament"—</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c010'>sings John Keats. Oh, if he had been but an oyster-eater,
-that article from the "Quarterly," savage and
-slaughterly, would not have killed him; but it is also
-very sweet to gaze upon a turkey, a leash of birds, a
-brace of pheasants, and, as Mrs. Tibbetts hath it, "a
-real country hare." Such a present is promptly repaid
-by a fine cod packed in ice, and two barrels of oysters.
-How sweet are these when eaten at a country home,
-and opened by yourselves, the barrel being paraded on
-the table with its top knocked out, and with the
-whitest of napkins round it, as we shall presently have
-occasion to show. How sweet it is, too, to open
-some of the dear natives for your pretty cousin, and
-to see her open her sweet little mouth about as wide as
-Lesbia's sparrow did for his lump of—not sugar, it was
-not then invented—but lump of honey! How sweet it
-is, after the young lady has swallowed her half dozen,
-to help yourself! The oyster never tastes sweeter than
-when thus operated on by yourself, so that you do not
-"job" the knife into your hand! True labour has a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>dignity about it. The only time when I, who have
-seen most people, from Tom Thumb to the Benicia Boy,
-from Madame Doche to the Empress Eugenie, and from
-manly, sea-going Prince Alfred to the Staleybridge
-Infant and Jemmy Shaw's "Spider"—the only time, I
-say, that I have ever seen a nobleman look like a nobleman,
-was when a noble duke, a peer not only of
-England and Scotland, but of <i>la belle France</i> also, owned
-that he could do two things better than most people,
-and that was, open oysters and polish his own boots.
-I, like Othello, when he upbraided Iago for the last
-time, "looked down to his feet," but found that it
-was no fable.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>So important is our illustrious bivalve as an article
-of trade, that it is protected by law. It is said that the
-only two things that George the Fourth ever did—the
-great Georgius, whom Mr. Thackeray envies and satirises—were
-to invent a shoe-buckle and an exquisite hair-dye.
-The brains of the black Brunswicker could do no more.
-But there is one act also—an Act of Parliament<a id='r3' /><a href='#f3' class='c009'><sup>[3]</sup></a>—which
-was passed in his reign, for which he is to be thanked.
-The man who was at once the Lucullus and Apicius of
-his times must have had some hand in the framing of
-that Act.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>
- <h2 class='c003'>CHAPTER II.<br /> <br />ANCIENT HISTORY OF THE OYSTER.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='small'>The Ancients; Oysters a Greek and Roman Luxury; Sergius
-Orata and the Oyster-beds of Baia; Immense Consumption
-at Rome; Failure of the Circean and Lucrinian
-Oyster-beds under Domitian, and Introduction of Rutupians
-from Britain; Agricola, Constantine, and Helena; Athenian
-Oysters and Aristides.</span></p>
-<p class='drop-capa0_4_0_6 c011'>Horace, Martial, and Juvenal, Cicero and Seneca,
-Pliny, Ætius, and the old Greek doctor Oribasius,
-whom Julian the Apostate delighted to honour, and
-other men of taste amongst the ancients, have enlarged
-upon the various qualities of the oyster; and was it
-not to Sergius Orata that we owe our present oyster-beds;
-for he it was who introduced layers or stews for
-oysters at Baia, the Brighton of ancient Rome, as we
-have them at present. That was in the days when
-luxury was rampant, and when men of great wealth, like
-Licinius Crassus, the leviathan slave merchant, rose to
-the highest honours; for this dealer in human flesh
-in the boasted land of liberty, served the office of consul
-along with Pompey the Great, and on one occasion required
-no less than 10,000 tables to accommodate all
-his guests. How many barrels of oysters were eaten at
-that celebrated dinner, the "Ephemerides"—as Plutarch
-calls "The Times" and "Morning Post" of that day—have
-omitted to state; but as oysters then took the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>place that turtle-soup now does at our great City feeds,
-imagination may busy itself if it likes with the calculation.
-All we know is, that oysters then fetched very
-long prices at Rome, as the author of the "Tabella
-Cibaria" has not failed to tell us; and then, as now, the
-high price of any luxury of the table was sure to make
-a liberal supply of it necessary, when a man like Crassus
-entertained half the city as his guests, to rivet his popularity.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>But the Romans had a weakness for the "breedy
-creatures," as our dear old friend Christopher North
-calls them in his inimitable "Noctes." In the time of
-Nero, some sixty years later, the consumption of oysters
-in the "Imperial City" was nearly as great as it now is
-in the "World's Metropolis;" and there is a statement,
-which I recollect to have read somewhere, that during
-the reign of Domitian, the last of the twelve Cæsars, a
-greater number of millions of bushels were annually
-consumed at Rome than I should care to swear to.
-These oysters, however, were but Mediterranean produce—the
-small fry of Circe, and the smaller Lucrinians;
-and this unreasonable demand upon them quite exhausted
-the beds in that great fly-catcher's reign; and it was not
-till under the wise administration of Agricola in Britain,
-when the Romans got their far-famed Rutupians from
-the shores of Kent, from Richborough and the Reculvers—the
-<i>Rutupi Portus</i> of the "Itinerary," of which the
-latter, the <i>Regulbium</i>, near Whitstable, in the mouth of
-the Thames, was the northern boundary—that Juvenal
-praised them as he does; and he was right: for in the
-whole world there are no oysters like them; and of all
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>the "breedy creatures" that glide, or have ever glided
-down the throats of the human race, our "Natives"
-are probably the most delectable. Can we wonder,
-then, when Macrobius tells us that the Roman pontiffs
-in the fourth century never failed to have these Rutupians
-at table, particularly, feeling sure that Constantine
-the Great, and his mother, the pious Helena, must have
-carried their British tastes with them to Rome at that
-period.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Greeks have not said much in praise of oysters;
-but then they knew nothing of Britain beyond its name,
-and looked upon it very much in the same light as we
-now regard the regions of the Esquimaux; and as to the
-little dabs of watery pulps found in the Mediterranean,
-what are they but oysters in name? Indeed, the best use
-the Athenians could make of them was to use their shells
-to ostracise any good citizen who, like Aristides, was
-too virtuous for a "Greek." However, on the plea
-that oysters are oysters, we presume—for it could not
-be on account of their flavour—"oysters," says the
-author of the "Tabella Cibaria," "were held in great
-esteem by the Athenians." No doubt when Constantine
-moved the seat of the Empire from Rome to Constantinople,
-he did not forget to have his Rutupians regularly
-forwarded; so, perhaps, after all it was our "Natives,"
-which thus found their way into Greece, that they
-delighted in; and if so, the good taste of the Athenians
-need not be called into question; but, as in literature
-and the arts, in oyster-eating too, it deserves to be held
-up to commendation.</p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>
- <h2 class='c003'>CHAPTER III.<br /> <br />MODERN HISTORY OF THE OYSTER.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='small'>Fall of the Rutupian Supremacy; Louis IV. and William of Normandy;
-Conquest of England, and Revival of Oyster-eating
-in England; The Oyster under Legal Protection; American
-Oysters.</span></p>
-<p class='drop-capa0_3_0_5 c011'>With the fall of the Empire came also the fall of the
-Rutupian supremacy; and even the Roman Britons,
-driven into Brittany and the mountains of Wales
-by their truculent Saxon persecutors, had to forego
-these luxuries of the table, unless, perhaps, Prince
-Arthur and his knights may now and then have opened
-a bushel when they were seated over their wine in that
-free and easy circle, which has become so celebrated as
-to have formed a literature of its own. From the fourth
-century, to which Macrobius brought us, to the reign of
-Louis IV. of France, the history of the oyster is a blank;
-but that king revived the taste for our favourite, and
-during his captivity in Normandy brought it again into
-request with his conqueror, Duke William; so, when
-the Normans invaded England under William the Conqueror—the
-descendant of that Duke William, little
-more than a century later—they were not long in finding
-out how much Kentish and Essex oysters were
-preferable to those of France.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Since then the Oyster has held its own against all
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>comers, as one of the most welcome accessories to the
-table of rich and poor, and has been protected in his
-rights and immunities by various Acts of Parliament.
-"In the month of May oysters cast their spawn," says
-an old writer in the "Transactions of the Royal Society,"
-"which the dredgers call spat, and this spawn cleaves
-to stones, old oyster-shells, pieces of wood, and other
-substances at the bottom of the sea, which is called
-cultch. During that month, by the law of the Admiralty
-Court, the dredgers have liberty to take every kind of
-oyster, whatsoever be its size. When they have taken
-them they gently raise with a knife the small brood
-from the cultch, and then they throw the cultch in
-again, to preserve the ground for the future, unless they
-are so newly spat, that they cannot be safely severed
-from the cultch, in which case they are permitted to
-take the stone or shell, which the spat is upon, one shell
-having often twenty spats. After the month of May, it
-is felony to carry away the cultch, and punishable to
-take any other oysters except those of the size of a half-crown
-piece, or such as when the two shells are shut will
-admit of a shilling to rattle between them." These
-brood and other oysters are carried to creeks of the sea,
-and thrown into the channel, which are called their
-beds or layers, where they grow and fatten, and in two
-or three years oysters of the smallest brood reach the
-standard size.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The property in oyster beds is defined by the 7 &amp; 8
-George IV., c. 29, s. 36, which makes it larceny for
-any person to steal any oyster or oyster brood from any
-oyster bed belonging to another person, if such bed is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>sufficiently marked out and known as such; and even
-the attempt to take either oysters or oyster brood from
-such an oyster bed, though none be actually disturbed,
-is a misdemeanor, punishable by fine or imprisonment,
-or both, though nothing is to prevent the fishing for
-floating fish within the limits of any oyster fishery.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Admiralty Court also imposes great penalties
-upon those who do not destroy a fish, which they call
-Fivefingers (the crossfish, or common starfish of our
-coasts), because it is supposed that that fish gets into the
-oysters when they gape, and sucks them out. That it
-is injurious to oyster beds may be true; for its food, in
-part, consists of mollusks. It does not, however, walk
-into the oyster bodily, as the Admiralty Court suggests,
-but rather appears to overpower its prey by applying
-some poisonous secretion, and pouting out the lobes of
-the stomach, so as to convert them into a kind of proboscis,
-and thus suck the mollusks from their shells.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The reason of the penalty for destroying the cultch is
-that the ouse then will increase, and mussels and cockles
-will breed there and destroy the oysters, because they
-have no convenience for depositing their spat. Hence,
-mud and sea-weeds are extremely injurious to the
-"breedy creatures'" propagation and increase; for no
-less than starfish, cockles, and mussels, other enemies
-amongst shellfish and crustaceous animals, particularly
-crabs and scollops, eagerly devour the oyster, when they
-can capture it.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In America, where the quality of the native oyster,
-though little inferior to the larger species of Britain, is
-greatly over-rated, the legislature is now called upon to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>make a similar provision for its protection against its
-greatest enemy, man. "It has been estimated," says a
-correspondent in No. 769 of the "Family Herald,"
-"that the State of Virginia possesses an area of about
-1,680,000 acres of oyster beds, containing about
-784,000,000 bushels of oysters. It is also stated
-that the mother oyster spawns annually at least
-3,000,000; yet, notwithstanding this enormous productive
-power, and the vast extent of oyster beds, there
-is danger of the oyster being exterminated unless measures
-are adopted to prevent fishermen from taking
-them at improper seasons of the year. It is therefore
-proposed to have either a flotilla of four steamboats
-employed to protect the oyster beds from piratical intruders,
-or to farm out the oyster beds to private contractors
-to do with them as they please."</p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>
- <h2 class='c003'>CHAPTER IV.<br /> <br />THE OYSTER AT HOME.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='small'>Its Nature, Colour, and Structure; Natural Food; Perception
-of the changes of Light; Uses of the Cilia; Fecundity and
-Means of Propagation; Age; Fossil Oysters in Berkshire
-and in the Pacific; Power of Locomotion.</span></p>
-<p class='drop-capa0_3_0_4 c011'>The Oyster belongs to those Mollusks which are
-headless, having their gills in the form of membranous
-plates, and are named <i>Lamellibranchiata</i>, from
-the Latin word <i>Lamella</i>, a plate; or <i>Conchæ</i>, the Latin
-name for the whole family of oyster, scollop, cockle,
-mussel, and other well-known bivalves. Properly
-speaking, only six kinds are fit to take part in the
-gastromal treat, to say nothing of the sanitary advantages
-the family are good enough to provide for the
-world at large. These six peculiar and most agreeable
-aristocrats all belong to the family of the common
-oyster, <i>Ostrea edulis</i>, by far the most important tribe,
-and in fact, that in behalf of whose meritorious qualities
-I have more particularly taken up my pen.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The oyster bears different names in accordance to the
-localities in which it is found, whether on rocky ground,
-mud, or sand, and has different colours in different
-places. In Spain, oysters are found of a red and russet
-colour; in Illyria they are brown, but the fish is black,
-and in the Red Sea, of the colours of the rainbow. The
-green oyster, the Parisian delicacy, is brought from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>Brittany; but the same flavour and colour can be produced
-by putting oysters into pits where the water is
-about three feet deep in the salt marshes, and where
-the sun has great power. In these they become green
-in three or four days; for these colours are derived
-from the elementary substance on which they feed; not,
-however, that it produces any peculiar difference as to
-flavour. I may, however, as well decide at once that
-the green oyster is, to my taste, the oyster <i>par excellence</i>,
-in which decision I shall doubtless be borne out by most
-<i>gourmets</i> whose knowledge extends to a choice of the
-good things of this life.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>I know, in this, some of my friends north of the
-Tweed may differ, and, if still living, amongst them I
-should have had to include Professor Wilson, so long
-the very life and soul of oyster-suppers and whisky-toddy.
-But nobody can judge of the true flavour of an
-oyster without well <i>masticating</i> his delicious food; and,
-by his own showing, both he and the "Shepherd"
-bolted their "Pandores." These same "Pandores,"
-by the way, are large fat oysters, much relished in
-modern Athens, which are said to owe their superior
-excellence to the brackish contents of the pans of the
-adjacent salt-works of Prestonpans flowing out upon the
-beds. Taken away young and transferred to the Ostend
-beds, these Pandores furnish the very best oysters to be
-met with on the Continent, surpassing even the far-famed
-ones of Flensburg, in Holstein. Had "Christopher
-North" tickled the fish first to death with his
-incisors before he swallowed it, I might have submitted
-my judgment to his; but how can a man who bolted
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>his food be quoted as an authority in matters of taste?
-At best, his must have been but an after-taste, a mere
-bilious reminder of what the repast had been, in which
-the whisky played as prominent a part as the "breedy
-creatures" themselves.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_004.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>But let us return. The lower shell (*) of the oyster
-is concave, the upper flat. These shells are opened and
-closed by the medium of a strong muscle acting upon
-a hinge (+), far more complete in its structure than ever
-locksmith could produce, even at the forthcoming Exhibition
-of all Nations.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>On the outside of the shell, when placed in a dark
-place, we may often observe a shining matter of blueish
-light, like a flame of brimstone, which sticks to the
-fingers when touched, and continues shining and giving
-light for a considerable time, though without any sensible
-heat. This light is produced by three varieties of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>minute animalcules, most interesting when examined
-under the microscope.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The oyster possesses an organ of respiration similar
-to that of a fish—branchiæ or gills, in fact (<i>br</i>), which
-are fringed by a mantle or beard divided into two
-lobes (<i>m</i>), filled up by small membranous fibres which
-terminate in the mouth (<i>b</i>), in the form of rays, serving
-the animal also with power to catch and eat. Unlike
-other shelled mussels the oyster has no feet; thus it
-is unable to make any other voluntary movement, save
-that of opening and closing its shell, as already named,
-in order to receive its food, which consists principally
-of small microscopical spores and young shoots of
-marine plants, made soft and thin by the action of the
-waves; whence arise the green beards or mantles. With
-some difficulty I have been enabled to separate a small
-portion of this vegetation from the mantle of an oyster,
-and having placed it under a strong microscope, discovered
-sea weed, of precisely the same species as that
-in which oysters are packed. They also feed on an
-infusion of sea worms called oyster animalcules. These
-are very accurately described in the "Journal des
-Savans," by M. Auzout. Some are irridescent, but
-others are not, and good specimens of all may be secured
-immediately the oyster has been taken from the sea.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>By means of the beard or mantle described (<i>m</i>), the
-oyster secures his food, bringing it gradually, by means
-of little hooks bent inwards, to its mouth (<i>b</i>), wherein
-it is crushed and slowly consumed.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The stomach (<i>i</i>) is situated near the mouth, and all
-the organs are very simple. The mantle (<i>m</i> and <i>m'</i>)
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>above-named replaces the lungs. The liver (<i>f</i>) is small;
-the gall, comparatively speaking, large; the larger
-blood vessels little rarefied. The heart (<i>h</i>) consists of
-two cameras at a tolerable distance from one another,
-resembling small round bladders. The pulse beats rather
-slowly (caused by, perhaps, the want of food and sea
-water). From the stomach the rectum (<i>a</i>) leads directly
-to the anus. How digestion is effected in this short
-and simple way, I can scarce venture to assert. But it
-is a fact well known, that, after the spawning season, the
-oyster becomes thin, but a very short time enables it to
-recover its fat and succulence.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>On examining the oyster the mantle (<i>m</i>), divided into
-two lobes (<i>m</i> and <i>m'</i>), the edges of which are fringed,
-will be perceived filling the greater part of the shell;
-also four membranous leaves crossed with stripes, which
-at their hinder extremities have as many capillary tubes.
-These leaves, or veins, unequally divided around the
-edges of the body perform the functions of the lungs,
-and separate from the water the necessary air for the
-maintenance of the animal.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The mouth (<i>b</i>) is a kind of trunk, or long aperture
-surrounded by four lips nearly resembling those of a gill,
-but far shorter.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Behind the muscles is to be seen a large fleshy white
-and cylindrical substance moving on a central muscle,
-and containing the stomach and intestines (<i>i</i>). This part
-resembles the trunk of other conchæ, but it has no power
-of opening or contracting. The canal of the intestines
-is situated on the top of the muscle (<i>a</i>).</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The oyster has circular vessels, on the bottom of which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>are to be seen deep muscular cavities, occupying the
-place of the heart (<i>h</i>), and sending their moisture to the
-small skin through which they come in contact with
-the water or the air.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In his "Outline of the Animal Kingdom," Professor
-Rymer Jones most happily describes all these peculiarities.
-"Wonderful indeed is the elaborate mechanism,"
-are his words, "employed to effect the double purpose
-of renewing the respired fluid and feeding the helpless
-inhabitants of these shells! Every filament of the branchial
-fringe, examined under a powerful microscope, is
-found to be covered with countless cilia in constant
-vibration, causing, by their united efforts, powerful and
-rapid currents, which, sweeping over the surface of the
-gills, hurry towards the mouth whatever floating animalcules,
-or nutritious particles, may be brought within the
-limits of their action, and thus bring streams of nutritive
-molecules to the very aperture through which they are
-conveyed to the stomach, the lips and labial fringes acting
-as sentinels to admit or refuse entrance, as the matter
-may be of a wholesome or pernicious character."</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Nature, too, has given the oyster a sensitive perception
-of the changes of light as the means of its protection
-from the many enemies it has to contend with; for
-if the shadow of an approaching boat is thrown forward
-so as to cover it, it closes the valves of its shell before
-any undulation of the water can have reached it. This
-sensitiveness is easily studied in the marine vivary,
-where the oyster, with its beautiful cilia, more beautiful
-by far than the richest lace of a bride's wedding dress,
-is always an object of great interest.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>The oyster is an hermaphrodite animal, and hence its
-propagation is effected by self-produced eggs, which it
-bears within in the form of a greenish milky juice
-which it casts as spat in May, and which, as has already
-been stated, in this country is protected by wise and
-prudent acts of the Legislature. "The liquor in the
-lower shell of the oyster," says a writer in No. 587 of
-the "Family Herald," "if viewed through a microscope,
-will be found to contain multitudes of small oysters,
-covered with shells and swimming nimbly about—120
-of which extend about an inch! Besides these young
-oysters, the liquor contains a variety of animalcules."
-Indeed, with the aid of a microscope one million of
-young have been discovered in a single oyster. Guarded
-by their two tender shells, these swim freely in the sea
-when ejected by the parent oyster, until, by means of
-a glutinous substance, they fix themselves so fast to
-some object that they can be separated only by force.
-These young are very soon able to produce others,
-many say at four months after their birth. When the
-oyster attains the size of a crown the shell is still very
-tender and thin; it is only after the second, third, or
-fourth year that it becomes fit for human food.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>If we cannot answer the Fool's question in Lear, and
-"tell how an oyster makes his shell," we can, nevertheless,
-tell by his shell what is his age.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>"A London oysterman," says a correspondent of
-No. 623 of the "Family Herald," "can tell the ages
-of his flock to a nicety. The age of an oyster is
-not to be found out by looking into its mouth.
-It bears its years upon its back. Everybody who
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>has handled an oyster-shell must have observed that
-it seemed as if composed of successive layers or
-plates overlapping each other. These are technically
-termed 'shoots' and each of them marks a year's
-growth; so that, by counting them, we can determine
-at a glance the year when the creature came into the
-world. Up to the time of its maturity, the shoots are
-regular and successive; but after that time they become
-irregular, and are piled one over the other, so that the
-shell becomes more and more thickened and bulky.
-Judging from the great thickness to which some oyster-shells
-have attained, this mollusk is capable, if left to
-its natural changes unmolested, of attaining a great age."
-Indeed, fossil oysters have been seen, of which each
-shell was nine inches thick, whence they may be concluded
-to have been more than 100 years old.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>For the most part the offspring remains near the
-mother, which accounts for the large oyster banks or
-beds which are found in almost all the seas of the
-temperate and torrid zones, and which in some places
-have been known to attain such magnitude as to cause
-ships to be wrecked upon them. The lower stratum is
-necessarily lifeless, being pressed upon by the upper
-one, so that the oysters beneath are unable to open
-themselves, and are consequently deprived of food.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The immense propagation of the oyster may be understood
-from the fossil oyster bed near Reading, in
-Berkshire. These fossils have the entire shape, figure,
-and are of the same substance as our recent oyster-shells,
-and yet must have lain there from time immemorial.
-This bed occupies about six acres, forming
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>a stratum of about two feet in thickness. But the
-largest fossil oyster banks are those raised by earth-quakes
-along the western shores of South America,
-which measure from sixty to eighty feet in depth, are
-often forty miles in length, and in many places stretch
-above two miles into the interior.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Abbé Dicquemare, fond of trying experiments in
-the spread of gastronomy, even to the stewing a mess of
-<i>Gemmaceæ</i>, the <i>Gems</i> of our water-vivaries, till they had
-something of the flavour of oysters, asserts that, when
-in a state of liberty, oysters can move from one place
-to another by suddenly admitting sea water into the
-shell, which they are able to open and shut with extraordinary
-power and rapidity, whereby they produce a
-strange sound; and this observation has been confirmed
-by other naturalists, and is recorded as an ascertained
-fact in several books of natural science. In like manner
-they defend themselves against smaller animals, especially
-against the spider crab, which constantly tries to penetrate
-into their half open shells. Much natural instinct
-or foresight is also attributed to the oyster; in proof of
-which I may name that, when in a position which is
-exposed to the variations of the tide, oysters seem to be
-aware that they remain for some hours without water,
-and consequently provide it within their shells.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>This makes such oysters far more fit to be conveyed
-to a distance, than those taken nearer to the shore, which
-evacuate the water, thus exposing themselves to the heat
-of the sun, the cold, or an attack from their enemies;
-and this, too, is the reason why Colchester or Pyfleet
-oysters, packed at the beds, are in such request.</p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>
- <h2 class='c003'>CHAPTER V.<br /> <br />THE OYSTER IN ITS NEW SETTLEMENT.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='small'>Dredging for Oysters; Oyster-beds and their formation; Sergius
-Orata; Pliny the Elder; Baia and the Lucrine Sea; Roman
-Epicurism and Gluttony; Martial and Horace, Cicero and
-Seneca; Masticate Oysters, and do not bolt them whole;
-Mediterranean and Atlantic Oysters; Agricola and the
-Rutupians; Apicius Cœlius, Trajan, Pliny, and the Vivarium.</span></p>
-<p class='drop-capa0_3_0_5 c011'>The Oyster does not leave his home like the duckling,
-upon the call of "come here and be killed." If he
-is wanted, like Mrs. Glasse's hare, we must "first catch
-him." This is done by dredging, and this dredging for
-oysters is performed by means of rakes and scrapers, on
-which is fastened a bag of sail-cloth, leather, or net-work.
-These are lowered into the sea by means of ropes and
-chains, and are dragged along its bottom by boats in full
-sail, or by rowing-boats. When the net or scraper is
-drawn to the surface, the oysters are immediately
-separated from all else which may be swept up. These
-oysters are then stowed away and sent up to market in
-due course. But it is not of these that are formed the
-new settlements or oyster-beds, which I am about to
-describe.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>These oyster-beds are cavities or reservoirs which communicate
-with the sea by means of canals, and are placed
-in such manner that the level beds remain dry when
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>the tide is high. These beds are made with sand-stones
-or other hewn stones; and the water is kept in or let
-out at low tide by means of locks, or traps, as may he
-most readily effected.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>At some periods, however, the water is kept in for
-many days, or even weeks together. In the latter case
-the oyster becomes, for the most part, very tender, and
-green and fat, because the stagnant water promotes the
-germination of those microscopical spores of marine
-plants, which always abound in natural sea-water, and
-upon which it delights to feed. These reservoirs, therefore,
-are not only the means of preserving them for sale,
-but of purifying them from the muddy odour which they
-have imbibed at sea, and which indicates them to be hard
-and devoid of that luscious and somewhat gastronomic
-quality so much prized by the world at large.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The bottom and sides of these caves or reservoirs are
-paved with stones and thick layers of sand, to keep them
-free from all mud, which is not only very injurious to
-the animal, but sure to harbour its enemies; and great
-care is also observed not to admit too great a flow of
-water at one time, as that might drive particles of sand
-into the shells. When the reservoir is properly prepared,
-the oysters are placed in their natural position—the flat
-side being upwards, in a sloping or horizontal direction.
-The more care that is taken in keeping their beds clean
-and free from mud, by washing the sides of the reservoirs,
-pouring water over the oysters, especially those
-which are dry, and removing the dead ones, which can
-be recognised by their shells being open, the better; for
-the more valuable will they be as human food, both as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>to profit and condition, and the more appreciated by the
-gastronomic million, who hail the oyster season as
-does a sportsman the advent of grouse and partridges,
-hares and pheasants.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The oysters, which are thus preserved, cleaned,
-nursed, and fattened are taken from their beds at the
-low tide when the water is out.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>There are doubts, various and conflicting, as to
-whether oysters contained in reservoirs, where the
-water is changed each successive tide, are not on that
-account preferable to those which exist in the same
-water for two weeks at a time. I give a decided preference
-to the latter, though the water must be kept very
-clean by constant care and attention to the removal of
-the dead, the decomposition of which would otherwise,
-but for the frequent change of water, seriously affect
-the health of the whole settlement, by an accumulation
-of sulphuretted hydrogen, with a smell like that emitted
-by the Thames and other drainage rivers in the dog-days.
-These oysters slip down the human throat divine
-with a tenderness and sublime relish which no words
-can describe.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Let me pass over, for the nonce, the mode of packing
-and sending them to the interior. Thanks to the railways,
-the gastronomical delight of oyster eating is now
-secured to many who for years scarcely knew what an
-oyster meant in its entire freshness and best qualities.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Sergius Orata, as Pliny the Elder tells us in the
-eighty-ninth book of his invaluable Natural History,
-and, as we have already stated, first conceived the idea
-of planting oysters in beds. This epicure had large
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>reservoirs made at Baia, where he gathered thousands
-of these mollusks. Not far from these oyster-beds rose
-a palace in which the wealthy Roman used to assemble
-his choicest friends and feast with them the whole day
-and night. Oysters occupied the place of honour on the
-table of Sergius Orata; at every feast thousands of them
-were consumed. Satiated, but not yet satisfied, these
-gourmets were in the habit of adjourning into an
-adjoining room, where they relieved the stomach of its
-load by artificial means, and then returned to indulge
-again their appetite with a fresh supply of oysters.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Strange as it may appear to us in the nineteenth
-century, this custom was universal amongst the wealthy
-of Imperial Rome, Cæsar himself often indulging in it,
-when the repast was to his taste; and ladies, the cream
-of the cream of that luxurious period, carried about
-with them peacocks' feathers and other dainty throat
-ticklers for the purpose, when they anticipated a more
-luxurious feed than usual.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Who amongst us cares to eat white-bait in the
-crowded city? When the mood seizes us, do not we
-take boat and proceed up or down the river, as the
-whim dictates? The old Roman had no white-bait;
-and the oyster to him was therefore doubly welcome.
-To him the journey to his marine villa, by water or
-land, as with us, added but a zest to the anticipated
-treat. In the Bay of Naples is a smaller bay close to
-its most north-western point, bounded on the west by
-the pretty town of Baia and its hot wells, and on the
-north-east by the no less charming town of Pozzuoli.
-These little bays on the Italian coasts are dignified by
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>the name of seas by the writers of classical antiquity,
-and round the headland of Baia, to the north, in the
-open Mediterranean—the Tyrrhenian Sea—just such
-another bay, the present Lago di Fusaro, was called the
-Lucrine Sea, with its far-famed oyster-beds, easy of
-access from Baia and Pozzuoli, both situated in a
-charming country. Here, close to the Lucrine, under
-a clear sky, surrounded by a delightful atmosphere,
-were situated the country houses of the more wealthy
-Romans, where, far away from business and the noise
-and turmoil of the forum, these accomplished disciples
-of Epicurus, without fear or care, used to give themselves
-up to the delights of the table. Here they tasted
-the little-shelled oysters which Martial liked so much,
-and which, but a few hours previously to being served
-up, had been gathered on the sea-shore.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Gastronomic annals mention the names of some of
-these dainty persons who daily swallowed several
-hundreds of oysters; but Vitellius in this respect beat
-them all. That emperor, it is said, ate oysters four
-times a day, and at each meal swallowed neither more
-nor less than 1200 of them. Seneca himself, who so
-admirably praises the charms of poverty, yet left prodigious
-wealth behind him; Seneca the wise and moderate,
-ate several hundreds of them every week.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>"Oyster, so dear to people of taste!" he exclaims;
-"thou dost but excite instead of satisfying the appetite,
-never causing indisposition, not even when eaten to
-excess; for thou art easy of digestion, and the stomach
-yields thee back with facility." Cicero did not hesitate
-to confess that he had a special predilection for oysters;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>but he adds, that he could renounce them without any
-difficulty; which, by the way, he might as well have
-told to the Marines, if they were in existence in his day,
-for all the credence this remark of his has gained from
-posterity.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We prefer Horace, who in every passage honestly
-makes known his love for oysters, and eats them himself
-with as much gusto as he extols them to others.
-Carefully, too, does he note down from whom he procured
-them, and the name of the famous gourmet
-who at the first bite was able to tell whether an oyster
-came from Circe or the Lucrine Sea, or from any part
-of Natolia. The ancients, our teachers in all arts, but
-especially in æsthetics, did not bolt the oyster, but
-masticated it. With true Epicurean tact, they always
-extracted the full enjoyment out of the good things set
-before them. Not so we; most of us now bolt them; but
-this is a mistake, for the oyster has a much finer flavour,
-and is far more nourishing, when well masticated.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>"Those who wish to enjoy this delicious restorative
-in its utmost perfection," says Dr. Kitchener, "must
-<i>eat</i> it the moment it is opened, with its own gravy in
-the under shell; if not <i>eaten</i> absolutely alive, its flavour
-and spirit are lost. The true lover of an oyster will
-have some regard for the feelings of his little favourite,
-and contrive to detach the fish from the shell so
-dexterously that the oyster is hardly conscious he has
-been ejected from his lodging till he <i>feels the teeth</i> of the
-piscivorous gourmet tickling him to death."</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Romans needed not even the use of their teeth to
-tell from whence the oyster came; a mere look sufficed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>to distinguish it, as may be seen in the following lines
-ascribed to Lucilius.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in8'>"When I but see the oyster's shell,</div>
- <div class='line'>I look and recognize the river, marsh or mud,</div>
- <div class='line'>Where it was raised."</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Nor was this so very difficult a matter, for the shell,
-no less than the animal itself, as has already been
-shown, exhibits the nature of the food upon which the
-oyster has fed.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In Italy and Gaul it was for a long time a matter of
-dispute, which country produced the best oysters. At
-that time the Lucrine Sea maintained the superiority;
-but Pliny preferred those from Circe. "According to
-my opinion," he says, "the most delicious and most
-tender oysters are those from Circe."</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>At last, however, the preference was given to those of
-Britain, which under the wise administration of Julius
-Agricola had conformed to the manners and customs of
-her conquerors, and there no longer was need of dispute
-as to whether the Mediterranean oysters of Italy or
-Gaul should have the precedence. The little watery
-pulpy dabs, which had hitherto delighted the conquerors
-of the world, were cast aside in disgust. They had
-found a real oyster at last, and the insignificant and
-flavourless bivalves of the coasts of Italy ceased to be in
-demand. From that time, on the shores of the Atlantic,
-thousands of slaves were employed in procuring the
-oysters, which in Rome were paid for by their weight
-in gold. The expenses were so great that the censors
-felt themselves obliged to interfere. Not content with
-getting their oysters from distant shores, they had means
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>by which to preserve them for some time in hot weather;
-for which purpose, as we see in the Pompeian model-house
-at the Crystal Palace, their domiciles were
-furnished with a receptacle for water; for with those
-famous epicures the water-vivary was an essential
-necessary for the preservation of living fish, and all that
-was necessary was to substitute sea-water for fresh.
-Probably by some such means, Apicius Cœlius, who
-must not be confounded with the writer of a book of
-cookery which bears his name, sent Trajan, when that
-emperor was in the country of the Parthians, oysters,
-which when received were as fresh as they ever could
-be eaten when just taken from their beds; and Pliny
-even believed that the journey had proved beneficial to
-their flavour.</p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>
- <h2 class='c003'>CHAPTER VI.<br /> <br />THE OYSTER ON ITS TRAVELS.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='small'>The Isle of Sheppey, the Medway, and Whitstable; Milton,
-Queenborough, Rochester, and Faversham Oysters; Colchester
-and Essex Beds; Edinburgh Pandores and Aberdours;
-Dublin Carlingfords and Powldoodies; Poole and
-its Oyster-bank; Cornish Oysters and the Helford Beds;
-Poor Tyacke, and How he was Done; Dredgers and their
-Boats; Auld Reekie's Civic Ceremonials; Song of the
-Oyster; its Voyage to Market, and Journey by Coach and
-Rail.</span></p>
-<p class='drop-capa0_3_0_5 c011'>Who that has travelled by water from London
-Bridge to Herne Bay—and who among us who
-live within the sound of Bow bells has not?—should
-the trip have been made in the beginning of August,
-but must have noticed, after having passed the Isle of
-Sheppey, a little fishing-town to his right, in East
-Swale Bay, raising its head out of the river like a
-joyous child dressed in its gayest attire, anticipating a
-long-looked-for holiday? It is the 4th of August, and
-its holiday is at hand, for to-morrow the oyster season
-begins; and the town is Whitstable, in Kent, standing
-out gaily with its bright flags and pennons in beautiful
-relief from the low marshy soil by which it is surrounded.
-Then, too, the dredgers, in their picturesque
-costume, add greatly to the gay appearance of
-the place, whilst some seventy or eighty vessels lying
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>in the offing bespeak the importance of the oyster traffic
-between it and the Great Metropolis. What the
-Lucrine was to the citizen of Rome is the estuary of the
-Medway with the Swale to the citizen of London. The
-"Natives" obtained at Milton are in the highest repute,
-and consumed in every part of England; nor are
-the Faversham, Queenborough, and Rochester denizens
-less so; nor, indeed, any of the "breedy creatures"
-which are raised in the other beds of the Swale or the
-Medway.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The trade in oysters, as we have seen, has been an
-object of consideration in England for many ages, and
-now ranks in importance with the herring, pilchard,
-and other fisheries. The excellence of our oysters made
-the formation of artificial beds an object of attention
-soon after the Roman conquest; and the Kentish and
-Essex beds show a pedigree in consequence much older
-than that of the noble descendant of any Norman adventurer
-who came over with the Conqueror, claiming,
-on this head alone, precedence for our "Natives"
-amongst all the oysters of the known world. But
-Britain is the boasted land of liberty, and the "Natives"
-of one part of her coast boldly assert their equality with
-the "Natives" of any other. If London delights in
-Milton and Colchester oysters, Edinburgh has her
-"whispered Pandores" and Aberdours, and Dublin her
-Carlingfords<a id='r4' /><a href='#f4' class='c009'><sup>[4]</sup></a> and "Powldoodies of Burran;" whilst all</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>round our shores each locality boasts of its own "Natives"
-as the best oysters in the land. Poole points
-proudly to her oyster-bank, and tells miraculous tales
-of her fishery, and of the number of oysters she sends
-to the London market, besides those which are pickled
-at sea for the export trade to lands where a fresh oyster
-is still a luxury unknown. The Poole fishermen who
-open oysters in their boats for pickling are compelled,
-by an Act of the Legislature, to throw the shells on the
-strand, and these, in the course of time, have formed a
-strong barrier against the waves of the sea at the flow
-of the tide, having the appearance of an island at high-water;
-and, simple as it is, such is the sole construction
-of this celebrated breakwater.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>I cannot be expected to take the reader on a voyage
-of discovery all round the coast, nor to the Channel
-Islands, to taste the oysters which Providence has
-spread out for our enjoyment with such a lavish
-hand. But there is one little spot on the shores of
-Cornwall which I cannot pass over, because from it
-came one of the colonies on the banks of the Thames,
-from which the Whitstable boats still draw their
-annual supply. Into Mount's Bay the Helford River,
-upon which stands the little town of Helstone, empties
-itself, opposite Mount St. Michael's, into the sea,
-and in the estuary of that little river, a person of the
-name of Tyacke, within the memory of the "oldest
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>inhabitant," rented certain oyster-beds, famous amongst
-Cornish gourmets for a breed of oysters, which, it is
-said, the Phœnicians, "a long time ago," had discovered
-to be infinitely preferable to the watery things they got
-at home. These Helford oysters are regularly brought
-to London; but when Tyacke rented the beds they were
-unknown to the good citizens who frequented the oyster
-taverns, of which the Cock in Fleet Street is but a
-last lingering type. Determined to make his venture,
-Tyacke loaded a fishing smack with the best produce of
-his beds, and coasted along the southern shores, till
-passing round the Isle of Thanet he found himself in the
-Mouth of the Thames. Little did the elated oyster
-dredger think that that Mouth would swallow up the
-whole of his cargo; but so it came to pass. It had long
-been evident to those on board that oysters that travel,
-no less than men, must have rations allowed on the
-voyage, if they are to do credit to the land of their birth.
-Now the voyage had been long and tedious, and the
-oysters had not been fed, so Tyacke got into his boat,
-and obtained an interview with the owner of the spot at
-which it touched land. He asked permission to lay
-down his oysters, and feed them. This was granted, and
-after a few days the spores of <i>ulva latissima</i> and <i>enteromorpha</i>,
-and of the host of delicate fibrous plants which
-there abound, and all of which are the oyster's great
-delight, made the whole green and fat, and in the finest
-condition for reshipment. Four days, it is said, will
-suffice to make a lean oyster, on such a diet, both green
-and plump; and Tyacke, joyful at the improvement
-which he daily witnessed, let his stock feed on for a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>week. It was towards evening that he bethought himself,
-as the tide was out, that if he meant to reach
-Billingsgate by the next morning, it would be wise to
-reship his oysters before turning in for the night. The
-boat was lowered; but, as he attempted to land, he was
-warned off by the owner of the soil, who stood there with
-several fierce looking fellows, armed with cutlasses and
-fowling-pieces, evidently anticipating the Cornishman's
-intention, and determined to frustrate it at all hazards.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>"What do you want here?" he asked of Tyacke.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>"The oysters I put down to feed," was the reply.
-"They were placed there by your permission, and now
-I am anxious to reship them, to be in time for to-morrow's
-market."</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>"True," replied the Kentishman, "I gave you leave
-to lay down the oysters and feed them, but not a word
-was said about reshipping them. Where they are, there
-they stay; and if you persist in trespassing, I shall know
-what to do."</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Poor Tyacke found himself much in the predicament
-of many a flat who has been picked up by a sharp.
-A century ago law was not justice, nor justice law.
-Perhaps it may not even be so now; and the story of the
-lawyer who ate the oyster in dispute, and gave each of
-the disputants a shell, may hold as good in our day as it
-did in that when the author of the "Beggar's Opera"
-put it into verse.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The demand for oysters, wherever it exists along our
-coasts, creates a profitable source of employment to a
-class of men who necessarily become experienced seamen;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>and dredging for oysters is carried on in fleets, as
-the beds mostly lie within a comparatively small space.
-The boats, which are about fifteen feet long, usually
-carry a man and a boy, or two men. The dredge is
-about eighteen pounds weight, and is required to be
-heavier on a hard than on a soft bottom, and each boat
-is usually provided with two dredges.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In former days the commencement of the dredging
-season was held sufficiently important to entitle it to a
-civic ceremonial, at least such was the wont of the
-municipal authorities of "Auld Reekie," who also paid
-a particular regard both as to the supply and the price of
-the"breedy creatures" furnished to the good citizens of
-Edinburgh. The "Feast of Shells" was ushered in by
-the municipality of the ancient city making, for provosts
-and bailiffs, a somewhat perilous voyage to the oyster-beds
-in the Frith of Forth; and though the solemnity
-of wedding the Frith formed no part of the chief
-magistrate's office, as wedding the Adriatic with a gold
-ring did that of the Doge of Venice, the welkin was
-made to ring, as three cheers from all present uprose
-and announced the lifting of the first dredge upon the
-deck of the civic barge.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>There is something poetical and pretty in the idea,
-which once prevailed, that the oyster was a lover of
-music, and as the fishermen trolled their dredging nets
-they sang,</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>"To charm the spirits of the deep."</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The old ballad in use is still found in the mouth of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>many a hardy seaman as he pursues his toil to the
-melodious words—</p>
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>"The herring loves the merry moonlight,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>The mackerel loves the wind,</div>
- <div class='line'>But the oyster loves the dredger's song,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>For he comes of a gentle kind."</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Raised out of his native waters, the oyster makes the
-voyage to the first station in his destined travels in the
-company of those to whom long and kindred ties have
-bound him, on board the smack upon the deck of which
-they were jointly landed from the deep; and during
-the whole voyage, if it prove a long one, he is attentively
-supplied with refreshing water, so that when the
-smack lays alongside the wharf at which he is to part
-company with his captors, he is still as lively as when
-they first took him as a passenger on board.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Arrived in port, the oyster first truly becomes sensible
-of the miseries of slavery. Shovelled into sacks, or cast
-anyhow into carts and handbarrows, he may consider
-himself fortunate if a kindly hand but extends to him, in
-his great necessity, a drink of water impregnated with
-salt, instead of his own delicious beverage from the sea.
-Yet this is a cruelty which should be avoided wherever
-sea-water can be obtained, because it is neither the salt
-nor the water which sustains the oyster's life, but the
-spores of vegetation which abound in the sea, and by
-mixing salt with fresh water we destroy even the life of
-the incipient fresh-water plants which the latter contains.
-It is as great a mockery as when Grumio proposes
-to give the famished Katherine the mustard
-without the brawn, and need no longer exist if oyster
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>dealers, who cannot obtain sea-water, would provide
-themselves with the prepared salts for the instantaneous
-production of artificial sea-water, the recipe for the
-preparation of which is thus given in No. 735 of the
-"Family Herald:"—</p>
-
-<p class='c012'><span class='small'>"For ten gallons it requires, sulphate of magnesia, 7-1/2 ounces;
-sulphate of lime, 2-3/4 ounces; chloride of sodium, 43-1/4 ounces;
-chloride of magnesia, 6 ounces; chloride of potassium, 1-1/4
-ounce; bromide of magnesium, 21 grains; carbonate of lime,
-21 grains."</span></p>
-
-<p class='c008'>This should be allowed to stand exposed to the air in
-a strong sunlight for a fortnight before it is used, during
-which time a few growing plants of <i>enteromorpha</i>, or <i>ulva</i>
-should be introduced to throw off spores. These plants
-cost about one shilling each in London. The water
-then, when under the microscope, will be found to contain
-a confervoid vegetable growth, which forms as nourishing
-a food for the oyster as the spores of sea-weed in
-its ocean bed. Oysters laid down in a large trough and
-covered with this water will continue to live and thrive
-for months; and it was to some such method as this that
-the Romans were indebted for the preservation of their
-oysters in inland stews. On no account should oatmeal,
-flour, or any such <i>dead</i> stuff, be added, which only
-serves to make the water foul and the oyster sick.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>When oysters are to travel by coach or rail, they are
-usually dispatched in barrels. Where the barrels are
-packed at the beds, as the Colchester or "Pyfleet
-barrelled oysters" are, they should not be disturbed till
-wanted for the table, as they will keep good as they are
-for a week or ten days; for being carefully packed so as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>not to spill the water each carries in a reservoir of
-Nature's providing, they need no other viaticum for the
-journey.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The moment an oyster in the barrel opens its mouth
-it dies, because there is nothing in the barrel to sustain
-its life. It is therefore as well, on the receipt of the
-little cask, to open it at once by removing the top and
-the first hoop, and then to place the top on the upper-most
-layer of oysters, keeping it in position by the
-addition of some heavy weight, which causes the staves
-to spread and stand erect; and as the layers of oysters
-are required for the table, it is only necessary each time
-to replace the top and the weight to a similar position
-to keep the remainder fresh for a few days. But the
-true lover of an oyster will have some regard for his
-little favourite. Sea-water may be had in London and
-other large towns for sixpence per gallon, and when
-that cannot be procured the pound packet of salts,
-according to the recipe we have given, will not cost
-more than eighteen-pence at any chemist's, and that
-quantity will produce three gallons of artificial sea-water.
-Thus provided, unpack the barrel, and spread
-out the oysters in a large flat earthenware dish, just
-covering them with water, and you may keep them for
-many weeks as fresh as when they first left their beds.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>
- <h2 class='c003'>CHAPTER VII.<br />THE OYSTER AT ITS JOURNEY'S END.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='small'>Oyster Stalls; How to Open the Oyster; an Oyster Supper;
-Beer, Wines, and Spirits; Roasted, Fried, Stewed, and Scolloped
-Oysters; Oyster Soup, and Oyster Sauce; Broiled
-Oysters; Oyster Pie; Oyster Toast; Oyster Patties; Oyster
-Powder; Pickled Oysters; Oyster Loaves; Oyster Omelet;
-Cabbage, Larks, and Oysters; and Frogs and Oysters.</span></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>"If where Fleet Ditch with muddy current flows</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>You chance to roam, where oyster-tubs in rows</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>Are ranged beside the posts, there stay thy haste,</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>And with the savoury fish indulge thy taste."</span>—<span class='sc'>Gay.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_3_0_6 c011'>I am writing for the Million, and the least the Million
-can do in return is every one to buy a copy of my book,
-and bid everybody to recommend everybody to do the
-same. The Fleet Ditch, which was once in the centre
-of the old Fleet Market, has disappeared since Gay wrote
-the lines I have just quoted, and now forms the great
-sewer of Farringdon Street; but with the Ditch have
-not disappeared the oyster-stalls; they have only
-changed their locality, and, like the Wandering Jew,
-have turned up in the most out-of-the-way places,
-where nobody would expect to find them. I know
-what stall-oysters are; for when I was a school-boy
-many and oft is the time I spent my pennies, on the sly,
-at a stall behind the old cathedral that just abutted the
-ancient Market Cross. The maiden that opened them
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>had clean white hands—for, boy as I was, I could not
-have endured a baronet's hand to open oysters for me;
-for—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>"The damsel's knife the gaping shell commands,</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>While the salt liquor streams between her hands."</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Never have I eaten finer oysters than those, fresh
-almost within a few hours from the placid Solent, upon
-which now the palace of Osborne looks down, and calls
-forth the heartfelt prayer of "God bless the Queen,"
-as we pass beneath the grass-covered slopes, reminding
-every Wykehamist of the founder's motto, "Manners
-maketh Men;" for Her Majesty is the tenant of
-Wykeham's College, and his arms and motto are carved
-upon the gates of the Queen's royal residence of
-Osborne.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Yes, "Manners maketh Men" no less than <i>Honores
-mutant Mores</i>, as the punster told the great Sir Thomas
-More, when he stood so high in favour with Henry VIII.,
-and was just appointed Treasurer of the Exchequer. It
-is not riches that make man, any more than they need
-change him; and if there is any good gift of Providence
-more than another which teaches equality, it will not
-be far from the mark to say it is the Oyster. You cannot
-eat the oyster in greater perfection than at a
-street-stall, because, as the capital of the owner is
-small, so, too, is the stock; and, to be sure of a rapid
-sale, it must also be well and carefully selected, and
-therefore does not need the announcement we read in
-many a by-way one passes along, where "the tale of a
-tub" would seem to contradict it: "Oysters fresh every
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>day." The poor man has no need to bid his cook,
-like his wealthy neighbour, buy real sea-water, or
-salts for the preparation of artificial sea-water, for the
-preservation of his oysters. There are thousands of
-hands outstretched to receive his nimble penny, and to
-give him in return oysters as fine as any which can
-grace the table of the wealthiest in the land. To me it
-is a treat to stand by and see how rapidly oyster after
-oyster disappears down the capacious throat of some
-stalwart son of toil, and to think that my favourite
-health-giving mollusk, in every one that is swallowed,
-is adding strength and muscle to those upon whom we
-so greatly depend for the nation's wealth and prosperity.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>People generally, however, are somewhat indifferent
-about the manner of opening oysters, and the time of
-eating them after they are opened; yet nothing deserves
-more consideration at the hands of your true oyster-eater.
-The oyster should be eaten the moment it is opened, if
-eaten raw, with its own liquor in the under shell, as we
-have already stated on the very highest of all gastronomical
-authorities. It is well worth a little practice to
-learn to open the oyster oneself, for a bungling operator
-injures our little favourite, and baulks the expectant
-appetite by his unsightly incisions. I learnt the art
-years ago in one of the Midland counties, where Christmas-eve
-would scarce be Christmas-eve, without an
-oyster supper. Let me sketch the scene. In the centre
-of the table, covered with a clean white cloth up to the
-top hoop, stands the barrel of oysters, a kindly remembrance
-from a friend, and the more kind because oysters
-are not found in fresh-water streams. Each gentleman at
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>table finds an oyster-knife and a clean coarse towel by
-the side of his plate, and he is expected to open oysters
-for himself and the lady seated by his side, unless she
-is wise enough to open them for herself. By the side of
-every plate is the <i>panis ostrearius</i>, the oyster-loaf
-made and baked purposely for the occasion, and all
-down the centre of the table, interspersed with vases of
-bright holly and evergreens, are plates filled with pats
-of butter, or lemons cut in half, and as many vinegar
-and pepper castors as the establishment can furnish.
-As the attendance of servants at such gatherings is
-usually dispensed with, bottled Bass or Guinness, or
-any equally unsophisticated pale ale or porter, is liberally
-provided; and where the means allow, light continental
-wines, such as Chablis, Sauterne, Mousseux, Marsault
-or Medoc, still Champagne, Moselle, or any light Rhenish
-wine, and failing any of these, Madeira or Sherry,
-are placed upon the table. In this list is contained the
-names of such wines only as are best suited to enhance
-the taste of the oyster, and to assist digestion. Of spirits,
-only good English gin, genuine Schiedam, or Irish or
-Scotch whisky, are admissible, as rum and brandy,
-taken upon oysters, will almost always be sure to
-make them indigestible; and liqueurs are quite out of
-place.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>At some of these oyster suppers, oysters roasted in the
-shell are brought in "hot and hot," and dishes of fried,
-stewed, and scolloped oysters follow each other in quick
-succession, and even oyster patties are sometimes introduced;
-but I hold up both hands against an American
-innovation which is creeping in, and introducing crabs
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>and lobsters, and mixed pickles, and other foreigners into
-the <i>carte</i> on such an occasion.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The mention of these various dishes of dressed oysters,
-reminds me of my promise at starting, to give some directions
-as to the proper mode of cooking them. So to
-begin:—</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>1. <i>The Fried Oyster.</i>—It is the most common one, and is fried
-in its own shell; but as it frequently takes the taste of lime
-when just fried, it is better to make use of another shell, or a
-porcelain one. The beard is taken off, the oyster loosened
-from its shell, and with the liquor it still contains is put into
-the vessel prepared for it, with some good butter, some Parmesan
-cheese, and pepper, and thus it is put into the oven, or on
-the gridiron, and when it has turned a little brown some lemon-juice
-is poured on it, after which it may be served up. Having
-no Parmesan, good dry Cheshire, or even bread crumbs, are
-desirable. The largest and finest oysters should be chosen for
-this purpose; and many persons fry oysters by simply allowing
-them to simmer in their own shells for a couple of minutes,
-when they take them out and lay them on a cloth to drain,
-beard them, and then flour them, put them into boiling fat, and
-fry them to a delicate brown.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>2. <i>The Oyster roasted in its own shell.</i>—Open the oyster carefully,
-so as not to lose any of its own liquor, add a little butter
-and pepper, according to taste, place it upon a gridiron
-over a fierce clear fire, and serve up "hot and hot" in quick
-succession. Bachelors may manage to dress oysters in this
-way by placing them between the bars of the grate till done, and
-adding the butter and pepper as they eat them.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>3. <i>Stewed Oysters.</i>—Open the oysters, and put their liquor in
-a stew-pan with a little beaten mace; thicken it with flour
-and butter; boil it three or four minutes; put in a spoonful
-of cream; put in the oysters, and shake them round in the
-pan, but do not let them boil. Serve them in a small deep dish,
-or if for one person only in a soup-plate.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>4. <i>Scolloped Oysters.</i>—Open the oysters, put them in a basin,
-with their own liquor; put them into a small deep dish, or
-some of them, if preferred, into scollop shells; strew over them
-a few crumbs of bread, and lay a slice of butter on them; then
-more oysters, bread crumbs, and a slice of butter on the top;
-put them into a Dutch-oven to brown, and serve them up.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>5. <i>Oyster Soups.</i>—(Each of the following is calculated for one
-person).</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>(<i>a</i>). <i>The English Soup.</i>—Take one pound of good lean beef, half
-a pound of raw lean ham, much parsley, and carrot roots, and a
-few onions; cut all in very small pieces, and burnish it into a
-dark-brownish colour with spices, bay-leaves, whole pepper
-and butter: after having boiled this with water for five hours,
-pour it through a hair sieve, and then put to it a little brown
-flour, and two ounces of Sherry or Madeira, and after having
-boiled again for an hour, take all the fat clean off, and put into
-it the oysters with their beards and liquor, and with cayenne
-pepper; all this is to be boiled up again, and then served.
-This soup is to be recommended, especially in winter when it
-is very cold. For invalids, the wine, spices, and pepper are
-omitted. This soup is valuable for convalescents, being very
-strengthening and nourishing.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>(<i>b</i>). <i>The American Soup.</i>—Take half a pint of good fresh milk,
-or cream if possible; three ounces of good butter; boil this
-together, beat it up with the yolks of three eggs, and put into
-it six or twelve oysters with their beards and liquor; boil this
-up again, and in serving it up put into it a little cayenne pepper
-and a few drops of lemon juice. This soup is delicate; but
-no prejudice! Everybody must try it first. For invalids, butter,
-eggs, and pepper are omitted.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>(<i>c</i>). <i>The Holstein Soup.</i>—Take good beef-stock, one-eighth
-of a pound of Sherry or Madeira, burnt flour, and proceed as
-with (<i>a</i>); and then beat it up with the yolks of two or three eggs.
-(The beard and the liquor must always be made use of, as they
-impart the strongest flavour of the oyster.)</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>6. <i>Oyster Sauce.</i>—I cannot do better than copy Dr. Kitchener's
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>valuable recipe for making oyster sauce, which was one of
-the great luxuries at the table of that celebrated gastronome:—"Choose
-plump and juicy natives for this purpose; do not take
-them out of their shells till you put them into the stew-pan.
-To make good oyster sauce for half a dozen hearty fish-eaters,
-you cannot have less than three or four dozen oysters; save
-their liquor, strain it, and put it and them into a stew-pan;
-as soon as they boil, and the fish plump, take them off the fire,
-and pour the contents of the stew-pan into a sieve over a clean
-basin; wash the stew-pan out with hot water, and put into it the
-strained liquor, with about an equal quantity of milk, and about
-two and a half ounces of butter, with which you have well rubbed
-a large table-spoonful of flour; give it a boil up, and pour it through
-a sieve into a basin, that the sauce may be quite smooth, and
-then back again into the saucepan; now shave the oysters, and
-(if you have the honour of making sauce for "a Committee of
-Taste," take away the gristly part also) put in only the soft part
-of the oysters; if they are very large, cut them in half, and set
-them by the fire to keep hot; 'if they boil after, they will become
-hard.' If you have not liquor enough, add a little melted
-butter, or cream, or milk beat up with the yolk of an egg (this
-must not be put in till the sauce is done). Some barbarous
-cooks add pepper, or mace, the juice or peel of a lemon, horse-radish
-essence of anchovy, cayenne, etc.; plain sauces are only
-to taste of the ingredients from which they derive their name.
-It will very much heighten the flavour of this sauce to pound the
-soft part of half a dozen unboiled oysters; rub it through a
-hair sieve, and then stir it into the sauce. This essence of oyster,
-and for some palates a few grains of cayenne, is the only addition
-we recommend."</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Notwithstanding Dr. Kitchener's objection to the
-introduction of extraneous substances by "<i>barbarous
-cooks</i>," because <i>de Gustibus</i>, as the adage of "the
-apple and the onion" has already reminded me, is
-always a matter not to be disputed, I shall add Alexis
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>Soyer's "barbarous" method of preparing oyster sauce,
-which was introduced by him at the Reform Club in
-1852:—</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>"Mix three ounces of butter in a stewpan with two ounces
-of flour, then blanch and beard three dozen oysters, put the
-oysters into another stewpan, add beards and liquor to the
-flour and butter, with a pint and a half of milk, a teaspoonful
-of salt, half a salt-spoonful of cayenne, two cloves, half a blade
-of mace, and six peppercorns; place it over the fire, keep
-stirring, and boil it ten minutes, then add a tablespoonful of
-essence of anchovies, and one of Harvey sauce; pass it through
-a hair-sieve over the oysters; make the whole very hot without
-boiling, and serve. A less quantity may be made, using less
-proportions."</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>He also gives the following:—</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>"Put a pint of white sauce into a stew-pan, with the liquor
-and beards of three dozen oysters (as above), six peppercorns,
-two cloves, and half a blade of mace; boil it ten minutes, then
-add a spoonful of essence of anchovies, a little cayenne and salt
-if required; pass it through a tammy, or hair-sieve, over the
-oysters, as in the last."</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>This is somewhat similar to that given in that most
-useful pennyworth "The Family Herald Economical
-Cookery," which is also preferred by many, and is as
-follows:—</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>"Simmer the oysters in their own liquor till they are plump:
-strain off the liquor through a sieve, wash the oysters clean,
-and beard them; put them into a saucepan, and pour the
-liquor over them, taking care you do not pour in any of the
-sediment; add a blade of mace, a quarter of a lemon, a spoonful
-of anchovy liquor, and a bit of horseradish; boil it up
-gently, then take out the horseradish, the mace, and the lemon,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>the juice of which must be squeezed into the sauce. Now add
-some thick melted butter, toss it together, and boil it up."</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>I am bound to admit that my own opinion coincides
-with that of Dr. Kitchener, and would only add that no
-trouble is too great to render the sauce perfectly smooth,
-and that no niggard hand should have the supplying
-it for the table.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>6. <i>Large Oysters Broiled.</i>—Take the largest and finest
-oysters you can get, such as you find in the West of England
-and in America; clean the gridiron as if a fairy had done the
-work for Cinderella in her sleep; rub the bars with <i>fresh</i> butter,
-and set it over a clear fire, quite free from smoke; then place
-the oysters upon it, being careful not to let them burn, and
-when done on one side, turn them quickly on the other with a
-fork. Put some fresh butter in the bottom of a hot dish, and
-lay the oysters upon it, sprinkling them slightly with pepper.
-They must be served quite hot with fried parsley.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>7. <i>Oyster Pie.</i>—Having buttered the inside of a deep dish,
-spread a rich paste over the sides and round the edge, but not
-at the bottom. The oysters should be as large and fine as possible,
-and when opened drain off part of the liquor from them.
-Put them into a pan, and season them with pepper, salt, and
-spice, and stir them well with the seasoning. Pour the oysters
-with their liquor into the dish, and strew over them the yolks
-of eggs chopped fine and grated bread. Roll out the lid of the
-pie, and put it on, crimping the edges handsomely. Take a
-small sheet of paste, cut it into a square, and roll it up. Cut
-it with a sharp knife into the form of a double tulip. Make a
-slit in the centre of the upper crust, and stick the tulip in it.
-Cut out some large leaves of paste, and lay them on the lid,
-and bake the pie in a quick oven.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Another way of preparing this favourite French dish
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>is this, communicated to me by a lady of some experience
-in matters gastronomical:—</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>"Having buttered the inside of a deep dish, line it with puff-paste
-rolled out rather thick, and prepare another sheet of paste
-for the lid. Put a clean towel into the dish (folded so as to
-support the lid) and then put on the lid; set it into the oven,
-and bake the paste well. When done, remove the lid, and take
-out the folded towel. While the paste is baking, prepare the
-oysters. Having picked off carefully any bits of shell that may
-be found about them, lay them in a sieve and drain off the
-liquor into a pan. Put the oysters into a skillet or stew-pan,
-with barely enough of the liquor to keep them from burning.
-Season them with whole pepper, blades of mace, some grated
-nutmeg, and some grated lemon-peel, (the yellow rind only,)
-and a little finely minced celery. Then add a large portion of
-fresh butter, divided into bits, and very slightly dredged with
-flour. Let the oysters simmer over the fire, but do not allow
-them to come to a boil, as that will shrivel them. Next beat
-the yolks only, of three, four, or five eggs, (in proportion to the
-size of the pie,) and stir the beaten egg into the stew a few
-minutes before you take it from the fire. Keep it warm till the
-paste is baked. Then carefully remove the lid of the pie; and
-replace it, after you have filled the dish with the oysters and
-gravy.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>"The lid of the pie may be ornamented with a wreath of
-leaves cut out of paste, and put on before baking. In the centre,
-place a paste-knot or flower.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>"Oyster pies are generally eaten warm; but they are very
-good cold."</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>8. <i>Oyster Toast.</i>—Cut four slices of bread, pare off the crusts,
-and toast them. Butter the toast on both sides. Then select
-a dozen of fine fat and plump oysters, and mince them; place
-them thickly between the slices of toast, seasoning them with
-cayenne pepper. Beat the yolks of four eggs, and mix them
-with half-a-pint of cream, adding, if thought necessary, a few lades of mace. Put the whole into a saucepan, and set it over
-the fire to simmer till thick; but do not allow it to boil, and
-stir it well, lest it should curdle. When it is <i>near</i> boiling heat,
-take it off and pour it over the toast.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>9. <i>Oyster Patties.</i>—"Roll out puff-paste a quarter of an inch
-thick," says Dr. Kitchener, "cut it into squares with a knife,
-sheet eight or ten patty pans, put upon each a bit of bread the
-size of half a walnut; roll out another layer of paste of the
-same thickness, cut it as above, wet the edge of the bottom
-paste, and put on the top, pare them round to the pan, and
-notch them about a dozen times with the back of the knife, rub
-them lightly with yolk of egg, bake them in a hot oven about a
-quarter of an hour: when done, take a thin slice off the top,
-then, with a small knife or spoon, take out the bread and the
-inside paste, leaving the outside quite entire: then parboil two
-dozen of large oysters, strain them from their liquor, wash,
-beard, and cut them into four, put them into a stew-pan with
-an ounce of butter rolled in flour, half a gill of good cream, a
-little grated lemon-peel, the oyster liquor free from sediment,
-reduced by boiling to one half, some cayenne pepper, salt, and
-a tea-spoonful of lemon-juice; stir it over a fire five minutes,
-and fill the patties."</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>10. <i>Oyster Powder.</i>—Open the oysters carefully, so as not to
-cut them, except in dividing the gristle which attaches the
-shells; put them into a mortar, and when you have got as
-many as you can conveniently pound at once, add about two
-drachms of salt to a dozen oysters; pound them and rub them
-through the back of a hair sieve, and put them into the mortar
-again, with as much flour (which has been previously thoroughly
-dried) as will make them into a paste; roll the paste out several
-times, and lastly, flour it, and roll it out the thickness of a half-crown,
-and divide it into pieces about one inch square; lay
-them in a Dutch oven, where they will dry so gently as not to
-get burned; turn them every half hour, and when they begin
-to dry, crumble them. They will take about four hours to dry;
-then pound them fine, sift them, and put them into dry bottles
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>and seal them. Three dozens of natives require seven ounces
-and a half of flour to make them into a paste weighing eleven
-ounces, or when dried and powdered, six and a half ounces.
-To make half a pint of sauce, put one ounce of butter into a
-stew-pan with three drachms of oyster powder, and six table-spoonfuls
-of milk; set it on a slow fire, stir it till it boils, and
-season it with salt. This makes an excellent sauce for fish,
-fowls, or rump steaks. Sprinkled on bread and butter, it makes
-a good sandwich. But only use plump juicy natives in the
-preparation.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>11. <i>Pickled Oysters</i> are mostly used for salads when no fresh
-oysters can be got. Take good wine, or Tarragon vinegar, some
-onions cut in pieces, some slices of lemon, some spices, whole
-pepper, bay leaves, and salt. Boil this together, and whilst
-boiling put the oysters into it, and let the whole boil up once
-more. Put the result into bottles with a little good oil, and,
-tied over with bladder, it will keep for a long time.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>However, pickled oysters also appear as a supper dish,
-when they are thus prepared:—</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Take two dozen oysters; strain the liquor; add three blades
-of mace, six peppercorns, a little grated lemon peel, and one
-or two bay leaves; boil the liquor, and, when boiling, add the
-oysters for two minutes. When cold, strain off the liquor;
-place the oysters in a small dish, and garnish with parsley.
-According to this rate of ingredients the dish may be made to
-suit the number of guests likely to partake of it.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>12. <i>Oyster Loaves.</i>—Make an oval hole in the top of some
-rasped French rolls, and scrape out all the crumb: then put the
-oysters into a stew-pan, with their liquor, and the crumbs that
-came out of the rolls, and a good lump of butter; stew them
-together five or six minutes: then put in a spoonful of good
-cream; fill the skeleton rolls with the compound, and lay the
-bit of crust carefully on the top again, setting them in the oven
-to crisp. Three form a side dish.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>13. <i>Oyster Omelet.</i>—Having strained the liquor from three
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>dozen plump native oysters, mince them small; omitting the
-hard part, or gristle. If you cannot get large oysters, you
-should have forty or fifty small ones. Break into a shallow pan
-six, seven, or eight eggs, according to the quantity of minced
-oysters. Omit half the whites, and (having beaten the eggs
-till very light, thick, and smooth,) mix the oysters gradually
-into them, adding a little cayenne pepper, and some powdered
-nutmeg. Put three ounces or more of the best fresh butter
-into a small frying-pan, if you have no pan especially for
-omelets. Place it over a clear fire, and when the butter (which
-should be previously cut up) has come to a boil, put in the
-omelet-mixture; stir it till it begins to set; and fry it a
-light brown, lifting the edge several times by slipping a knife
-under it, and taking care not to cook it too much or it will
-shrivel and become tough. When done, clap a large hot plate
-or dish on the top of the omelet, and turn it quickly and carefully
-out of the pan. Fold it over, and serve it up immediately.
-This quantity will make one large or two small
-omelets. The omelet pan should be smaller than a common
-frying-pan, and lined with tin. In a large pan the omelet will
-spread too much, and become thin like a pancake. Never
-turn an omelet while frying, as that will make it heavy and
-tough. When done, brown it by holding a red-hot salamander
-close above the top.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Having given a baker's dozen of the most approved
-receipts for dressing oysters, I have only to add that
-the oyster, as an accessory, enters into many dishes, particularly
-into fricassees, is served with sweetbreads, fowl,
-and veal, and, as we all know from "Tom and Jerry,"
-"gentlemen" eat oysters as sauce to rump steak; which,
-by the way, I, for one, regard as the ruin of both oyster
-and steak. I cannot refrain from adding the following,
-both little known in this country, yet both equally good:—</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>14. <i>Cabbage with Oysters and Fried Larks.</i>—When the cabbage
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>has been cooked with a little Rhenish wine, Chablis, or
-Champagne, some good butter is melted, in which the oysters
-are put with their beards and liquor, and having been fried a
-little with the butter, they are put with the cabbage and
-cooked again together, and then served up with the larks.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>15.—<i>Fried Hind Legs of Frogs with Oysters.</i>—The hind legs
-of frogs are fried in the usual manner; when they are nearly
-done, some oysters with Parmesan cheese and a little pepper
-are added to them, and when done they are served up. This
-dish is undeniable, and is as much relished abroad as whitebait
-with us.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In closing this chapter, let me remind all cooks that
-the success in preparing the above-mentioned dishes
-depends on the goodness and freshness of the oysters
-used for this purpose. Very erroneous is the opinion
-that oysters which are not fresh are yet good enough to
-be fried and to be used for sauces. The greatest delicacy
-is a fresh oyster, but a stale one is a source of the
-greatest disgust, and only fit to regale the ghost of that
-Royal George who, when living, never relished a raw
-oyster unless the shell was self-opened on the dish.</p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>
- <h2 class='c003'>CHAPTER VIII.<br /> <br />THE OYSTER AND THE DOCTOR.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='small'>Oyster-eating in Prussia; Disgusting Wagers; Oysters better
-than Pills; A Universal Remedy; Professional Opinions;
-When Ladies should eat them; Repugnance overcome;
-Oysters as an external application; Chemical Analysis;
-How to tell if dead before opening.</span></p>
-<p class='drop-capa0_3_0_5 c011'>When in Prussia, I once asked a person who did a
-large retail business in oysters, what class of
-persons he found to he his best customers, and what
-was the number of oysters daily consumed by each individual?</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>"The morning scarcely begins to dawn," he replied,
-"ere ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls, and servants,
-both male and female, make their appearance, not only
-from my immediate neighbourhood, but also from the most
-remote parts of the city, when, on an average, every one
-buys from half a dozen up to a dozen, in addition to
-their purchases for the several families, and in accordance
-with their requirements."</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>And those who do likewise in Great Britain and Ireland
-will soon find out the benefit of this nutritive food
-taken thus early on an empty stomach. I once heard of
-an individual who made a bet that he would eat twelve
-dozen oysters, washed down by twelve glasses of Champagne,
-while the cathedral clock of the city which he inhabited
-was striking twelve. He won his bet by placing a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>dozen fresh oysters in twelve wine glasses, and having
-swallowed the oysters, he washed down each dozen with
-a glass of Champagne. I should not have mentioned this
-disgusting feat, but to add that he felt no evil effects
-from the oysters, proving incontestably the digestive and
-sanitary properties of this mollusk.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>There is a similar tale showing equally the effects of
-oysters on the human digestion. Four persons met one
-Saturday night at an hotel, and made the following bet:
-each person was to call for whatever he might fancy,
-either to eat or to drink, and he who kept longest awake
-was to have no share in the liquidation of the bill.
-This settled, one of the party made a private arrangement
-with one of the waiters, promising him a reward
-if, in case of his evincing the slightest drowsiness, he
-would bring him forthwith twenty-five oysters.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>This was accordingly done; but the waiters had to be
-constantly relieved until 11 o'clock on the following
-Monday morning, when, observing his three companions
-quietly asleep, our oyster-eating friend called for the
-landlord, and declared himself triumphantly the winner,
-attributing his good fortune entirely to the oyster.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Wise people eat oysters and eschew pills; take lumps
-of delight, instead of lumps of nausea; uphold the
-Sweetings, Pims, and Lynns, and have nothing to do
-with the Holloways, Morisons, and "Old Parrs."</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>When suffering from almost incurable indigestion,
-by taking oysters daily, they very soon find the most
-agreeable effects on the human kitchen and laboratory;
-its functions become regular, without the use
-of strong medicines, always dangerous. Depression
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>of spirits and other disagreeable feelings consequent
-on impaired digestion soon cease to affect them; they
-become cheerful and happy, and are enabled again
-to see clearly through the misty atmosphere which
-has hitherto enclosed them in a kind of living shroud;
-physical powers return, headaches disappear, and the
-heretofore dyspeptic, sour, unhappy tempered man becomes
-a pleasant and joyous companion, full of life himself,
-and inspiriting to those around him.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>I have lived a good deal abroad, and am induced to
-ascribe much of the vivacity of the French to their intense
-love of oysters. During a long residence in France,
-I never met with a Frenchman or Frenchwoman who said
-nay to a dish of good fresh oysters; in fact, they have a
-craving for the "breedy creatures," which in many
-persons almost amounts to gluttony, and then, and
-then only, does this craving lead to mischief.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Physicians of old recommended the oyster as a general
-remedy, and employed it on all occasions with success.
-It has been proved beyond dispute that it possesses a
-remarkable vivifying influence in all cases where the
-nervous organs are affected, more than any other food.
-Oysters taken before mid-day with a glass of wine produce
-a most salutary effect. The nerves and muscles
-regain their strength, and the body its mental and physical
-powers, bringing cheerfulness and energy to compete
-with the duties of the day. If not a cure, at all events,
-an oyster diet, under medical supervision, brings unquestionable
-relief to those who are suffering from
-pulmonary complaints, indigestion, or nervous affections.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Dr. Leroy was in the habit of swallowing, every
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>morning before breakfast, two dozen oysters, and used
-always to say to his friends, presenting them with the
-shells: "There, behold the fountain of my youthful
-strength!"</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Percy relates having seen a large number of wounded
-persons, exhausted by the loss of blood and bad treatment,
-who were entirely kept up by eating oysters; and
-Dr. Lenac considered them the most nourishing food in
-existence.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Oysters are strongly recommended to all persons suffering
-from weak digestion; and Dr. Pasquier adds, that
-"they may be given with great advantage to persons of
-intemperate habits, who, by inefficacious medical treatment
-have fallen into debility and lowness of spirits."
-He also recommends oysters to all who are suffering from
-the gout. I myself knew a person last winter, who was
-suffering from influenza, which, from his being an aged
-man, threatened the most serious consequences, who was
-entirely cured by eating oysters.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Oysters increase the blood without heating the system,
-and hence when a wound has caused much loss of blood,
-the eating of oysters not only prevents fever, but replaces
-the loss which no other remedy can effect. The great
-Boerhaave affirms to have known a tall, strong man, who
-had fallen into a decline, and who, after all other remedies
-had proved useless, by the use of oysters rapidly recovered,
-became strong, and died ninety-three years old.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>But to ladies, particularly, do I recommend oysters as
-the best of all light meals between breakfast and dinner.
-At the period of a lady's married life, when nausea is
-prevalent, a few fresh oysters, taken raw in their own
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>liquor, with no addition but a little pepper, and a fairy
-slice of French roll or other light bread, stops the feeling
-of sickness, and keeps up the stamina unimpaired.
-During the time, too, when a young child most requires
-maternal care and attention, the mother's diet of oysters
-will impart strength to the infant, and tend much to
-alleviate the pains of its first teething.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>I am well aware that some persons have a repugnance
-to the eating of oysters, and that it may be difficult to
-overcome the dislike. However, as a proof that oysters
-in general are nice to the taste, let me mention that
-children under two years of age eat them with great
-appetite; and it is only after having discontinued eating
-any for some time that they take a dislike to
-them.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>I have often had the opportunity of overcoming this
-dislike, and the result was always satisfactory. The
-method is very simple. Take a French roll (or a piece
-of milk-bread) thinly buttered, and put on it the oyster
-deprived of its beard, squeezing a few drops of lemon
-and peppering it. "Well, after all, the taste of the
-oyster is really fine!" is the usual exclamation, and
-after that the person has eaten them in their natural
-state with gusto.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>When eaten for health, an oyster is best swallowed in
-its own liquor the moment the shell is opened; or if too
-cold for the stomach, a sprinkling of pepper will remedy
-the evil. Vinegar counteracts the effect of the oyster
-enriching the blood; so when the oyster is eaten medicinally
-it must be excluded. Dr. Evans, in No. 834 of
-the "Family Herald" says, that when too many oysters
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>or other shell-fish has been taken, the unpleasant sensation
-excited by such excess may be removed by drinking
-half a pint of hot milk. Persons of delicate constitutions
-will do well always to take hot milk after
-oysters.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>But the oyster was also formerly used externally as a
-remedy no less than taken internally for its medicinal
-properties. Its very abundance is a clear proof of the
-bounty and goodness of Providence, furnishing us, at
-one and the same time, with such delicious food, and so
-universal a remedy for the ills which man is heir to.
-Ambrois Paré, physician to Charles IX., and the only
-Protestant whom the king sought to save from the terrible
-massacre of St. Bartholomew, by shutting him up
-in his own closet, recommends oysters smashed in their
-shells as an excellent poultice. "This animal, so used,"
-says he, "diminishes pain, and removes all heat and
-inflammation in a remarkable manner." As the opinion
-of one, of whom the king himself declared that "a man
-so useful to all the world ought not to perish like a
-dog," it may be admitted to a place in my little book,
-more particularly as it is borne out by Paul Egona, who
-also recommends oysters being smashed and saturated
-with their own liquor as the very best of all poultices
-for sores or boils.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Let me, as a close to this chapter, add a few words on
-the chemical analysis of the oyster. The animal itself
-contains a great proportion of phosphate of iron and
-lime, a considerable quantity of osmozone, and a certain
-amount of gluten and isinglass, being of a peculiar
-nature, which phosphorus penetrates like an element.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>It also contains a great quantity of particles of salt, the
-same as that of the sea-water in which it lives.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The oyster-liquor, or, as I have said, more properly
-speaking, its life's blood, contains a great amount of
-hydroidum, kali, sulphur of lime, sulphur of magnesia,
-some organic matter, osmazone, and a very little salt.
-The shell is composed of a very intimate mixture of
-salt, carbonic lime, and animal mucus. It exhibits,
-also, phosphate of lime and magnesia in small quantities,
-as also sulphuretted hydrogen.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>At the moment in which natural death ensues, all
-animal matter begins to show its chemical affinities by
-separating again into the elements of which it consists;
-and as at such times it is always more or less of a
-poisonous nature, it is well to study the method by
-which it may be known whether an oyster was living
-or dead when its shell is opened. This can be seen at
-a glance. If the muscle appears sunk, it is a proof
-that the animal was living; but if it appears higher
-and above the oyster, it was dead before it was opened,
-and the animal is, consequently, unwholesome and unfit
-for food.</p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>
- <h2 class='c003'>CHAPTER IX.<br /> <br />THE OYSTER ABROAD.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='small'>British Oysters in Ostend Quarters; the Whitstable in a Slow
-Coach; Holstein, Schleswig, and Heligoland Natives; Norwegian
-and Bremer Oysters; American Oysters; French
-Oysters; Dutch Oysters; Mediterranean Oysters, and Classical
-Judges.</span></p>
-<p class='drop-capa0_3_0_6 c011'>I am not writing a book for the man of science. I
-could not if I would. It is for those who love oysters
-for the eating that I have turned author; and all the
-facts which are strung together in the last chapters were
-put there for their delectation, and not for the sake of
-raising the smile which I saw just now pass over the
-face of my friend Sawbones when I mentioned oyster-poultices.
-Just because I am not scientific, but only
-practical, I shall not trouble myself to notice any of the
-many species of oysters, both at home and abroad,
-which, though pretty in themselves, never find their
-way to the table, which is the sole field of my discoveries.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>I shall therefore begin my list of foreign oysters
-with the best of them all, the next of kin to our Native,
-and next to it the best oyster in the world.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>1. <i>The Ostend Oyster</i> is nothing more than the
-real British oyster, cleaned and fattened in the Ostend
-oyster-beds. It has a fine, thin, transparent but deep
-shell, the upper shell being quite flat; it is very full,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>white, and fat, has a very small beard, and is very
-digestible. During a south-west wind, which brings to
-these beds the microscopic spores of sea vegetation and
-animalcules upon which it delights to feed, from the
-channel, its beard is of a green colour. The Ostend oyster
-is much prized in Berlin, which it reaches the quickest
-of any from the sea, (in thirty-six to forty hours,)
-and consequently lives there several days, remains the
-longest fresh, and can be sent farthest. Last winter
-Ostend oysters were sent to Moscow and Odessa, where
-they arrived still good and tasty. The former were
-seventeen days, and the latter eleven days on their
-way. Scarcely any other kind of oysters could be sent
-to such a distance. In the autumn of 1847, after the
-opening of the Cologne-Minden Railway, the first trial
-was made of sending these oysters to Berlin, via
-Cologne. The result was most satisfactory; they sold
-for 1-1/2 thalers the hundred. This caused no little sensation,
-especially among the old oyster dealers, who
-were accustomed to receive from five to six, even from
-eight to nine thalers per hundred. The good folks of
-Berlin are now supplied with abundant fresh and fine
-oysters. The Ostend natives may be obtained from the
-owner of the oyster beds in Ostend. I speak of Berlin,
-as the Germans are great oyster-eaters, and the North,
-in a great measure, is supplied from thence.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In Brussels, Antwerp, Ghent, Bruges, and Lille,
-Ostend oysters are eaten with slices of home-baked bread,
-and butter. They are served up in their shells, open,
-and not broken apart. They have a tender, fragrant,
-and melting flesh, and are only half the size of ordinary
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>oysters; but they gain in thickness what they lose in
-size. In Flanders and the Netherlands they are known
-under the name of "English oysters," but are called in
-Paris after the name of the beds where they are reared.
-They are in reality Edinburgh "Natives," cleaned and
-fattened in the Ostend oyster-beds, and hence called
-Belgian or Ostend oysters.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The oyster of Ostend cannot be too much recommended
-to gourmets. It is to the common oyster what a chicken
-is to an old hen. It is a draught of bitter ale to a thirsty
-palate. It is a known fact, that after having abstained
-from food for a long time, the first oyster one eats produces
-a kind of unusual rictus (or opening of the mouth),
-the reason of which physiologists have never been able
-to explain. This same sensation is produced in eating
-an Ostend oyster, but it is much sweeter, more lasting,
-and much more delightful. If the Romans had ever
-known them they would have sung their praises both
-in verse and prose, and would by far have preferred them
-to their sadly over-praised oysters from the Lucrine
-Sea.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The only oysters which can be brought into competition
-with those of Ostend in the same markets are the
-Whitstable oysters, which have only recently become an
-article of trade on the Continent. These are also "natives"
-from the Channel, generally larger than the former,
-but unequal, not being sorted, very fat and full, but much
-more tender, and do not keep fresh so long. The cause
-of this may be that they are first taken from Whitstable
-to London, where they are packed up and sent by sea and
-rail to Hamburgh and Berlin, which takes always from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>six to seven days. They have a fine flavour, and are by
-some people preferred to the Ostend oysters: although
-the latter, generally speaking, occupy the first rank.
-These two species, and that of Holstein, are the best
-oysters to be met with in the north of Europe.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>2. <i>Channel Oysters.</i>—The oysters which, more particularly
-in the north of Germany, are an article of trade,
-come from the Bay of St. Brieux and the Rock of Cancale,
-on the British Channel, between the castle of that
-name, Mount St. Michael, and St. Malo, and from the
-Channel between Calais and its extreme point near
-Falmouth. The bottom of this sea is flat and firm, and
-its stream near the bottom not very strong, both favourable
-circumstances for the propagation of oysters. This
-propagation must be very considerable, and the banks
-where the oysters breed very extensive, since, in spite
-of the continual dredging, they produce a sufficient
-quantity without any apparent decrease, to guard against
-which, the new beds of St. Brieux, mentioned in the
-first chapter, are carefully supplied. The dredging
-lasts generally from the middle of September till the end
-of May; during the other months the fishing should
-properly be discontinued, because the spawning, which
-then takes place, would be disturbed, and because during
-that time the oyster is generally not fit for food.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>3. <i>Holstein Oysters</i> are very good and fine, but the
-sea-banks do not afford enough for the present consumption,
-so that it is necessary to have good connexions in
-order to obtain real and good Holstein oysters. They
-are easily distinguished from all the other oysters by
-their size, the thin, greenish-blue shells, especially the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>lower shell. The upper shell is always concave, by
-which they are the more easily distinguished from the
-Heligolanders, which have always a strong convex upper
-shell. As to the little animal itself, it is very fat, white,
-thick, and tender, and therefore very digestible. It has
-only a small beard, by which it is distinguished from
-the Norwegian and Scottish oyster, which, by the
-appearance of the shell, might be mistaken for the
-Holstein oyster by novices in gastronomy. These delicate
-favourites are to be obtained from the lessees of
-the Royal Oyster-banks on the western coast of Holstein
-in Flensburg, in the kingdom of Denmark.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>4. <i>The Schleswick Oyster of Husum and Silt</i> is very
-like the former—almost undistinguishable. It is very
-excellent, but seldom exported, and consumed for the
-most part in Kiel. The two last-named oysters are often
-taken to St. Petersburg by sailors, when making the
-passage to and fro.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>5. <i>The Heligolanders</i> are very large; have thick shells,
-which renders the duty and carriage very high, but are
-not at all fine, and generally sold in all the innocence of
-ignorance by dealers as Holstein oysters.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Have nothing to do with <i>Norwegian oysters</i>; I only
-mention them here as things to be shunned. <i>Bremer
-oysters</i>, the <i>Neuwerkers</i>, and the <i>Wangerogers</i>, however,
-deserve a better fate.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>6. <i>The Oyster of the Bay of Biscay</i> is of the same
-size as that of Holstein, with a very large beard, like
-those caught in the south of England. The beard, like
-the oyster itself, is quite grass green—a quality which
-is to be found generally only with oysters from Dieppe,
-Cancale, and the Marennes. Its flavour is very fine and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>good, but great care must be taken, in opening the shell
-and detaching the oyster, not to break the double shell,
-which they mostly possess, for this contains sulphuretted
-hydrogen, which gives a bad smell and flavour to the
-oyster, and poisons the stomach of the consumer.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>7. <i>American Oysters</i>, though, to my taste, by no
-means so delicate as others I have mentioned, are nevertheless
-superior for cooking. For my own part, although
-I have stated that pepper, vinegar, lemon juice, and
-other stimulating ingredients, are commonly made use
-of when eating the oyster, I offer, in all courtesy, the
-decided opinion, that the taste must be vitiated that can
-swallow such in preference to the delicate, fresh, luscious,
-charming little morsel, saturated merely, or perhaps the
-word ought to be merely bedewed, like the rose on a
-summer morning, by its own liquid life's blood. Americans,
-themselves, generally prefer their large oysters
-even to our British Natives.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>8. <i>French Oysters.</i>—The French oysters are chiefly
-taken from beds in the Bays of Cancale and St. Brieux,
-from Marennes, from Havre and Dieppe, from Dunkirk,
-and from the Bay of Biscay. The three first are very
-fine, but the distance to Paris is too great; they are therefore
-dear in that capital. Those from Dunkirk are
-similar to those of Ostend, but not quite so fine; and
-those from the Bay of Biscay are quite green, and highly
-esteemed in the south of France, especially at Bordeaux.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>9. <i>Dutch Oysters</i> are both good and dear. The four
-sorts I recommend are Seelanders, Vliessingers, Middleburgers,
-and Vieringers. The latter are almost the
-finest and best, but uncommonly dear, and are mostly
-consumed in Holland.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>10. <i>Mediterranean Oysters.</i>—I have already referred
-to classical authorities for the character the ancients
-gave those of Circe and the Lucrine Sea; and the old
-rule, "<i>de mortius nil</i>," forbids me to say in what rank
-I place Horace the inimitable, Seneca the wise, and
-Pliny the naturalist, as judges of what an oyster should
-be. Where ignorance is bliss, people can be very happy.
-Till the Turk, by an accidental fire, had become acquainted
-with the taste of roast pork, there were many
-less fires in Stamboul than now. Till the Romans found
-the Rutupians, the Lucrine flourished; so did Circe.</p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>
- <h2 class='c003'>CHAPTER X.<br /> <br />"THE TREASURE OF AN OYSTER."</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='small'>Sweet names given to Pearls; Barry Cornwall Proctor's lines;
-Component parts of Pearls; Mother-of-pearl; How Pearls
-are formed, Sorrows into Gems; Their nucleus; Sir Everard
-Home and Sir David Brewster; Curious shapes and fancy
-Jewellery; Pearl Fisheries: Bahrein Island and Bay of Candalchy;
-Miseries of the Divers; Pearls as Physic; Immense
-value of recorded Pearls.</span></p>
-<p class='drop-capa0_3_0_5 c011'>Of all beautiful things in the world the pearl is the
-rarest and most beautiful. Nothing can exceed it,
-nothing can equal it, although they try very hard in
-"French" and "Roman" ways, in glassy globules
-which continually crack, or in round spots of wax,
-which, instead of adorning, adhere to the neck of
-beauty, and when old age comes upon it, turn yellow
-and wrinkled like the skin of a dowager. Nay, nothing
-can well imitate it, although art has gone somewhat
-near it. But to a knowing eye one might as well seek
-to imitate truth, or palm away upon the unwary a copy
-of true virgin innocence as to imitate a pearl. We
-know all the answers that the dowagers can make; we
-know that the imitations are "so cheap," so pretty;
-we know that certain dowagers—witness Margaret,
-Duchess Dowager of Lancaster—sell their real pearls
-and wear cunning imitations; we know that they in
-vain try to persuade themselves that the false are as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>good as the true ones; but only look hard at the ornaments,
-and the duchess is abashed. To test false pearls,
-one has only to put a true one by them, and the "difference,"
-as advertisers say, "will be at once perceived."</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Let us devote this last portion of our book to the history
-of the pearl. Its very names are pretty. <i>Looloo</i>,
-<i>Mootoo</i>, <i>Mootie</i>, <i>Margaritæ</i>, <i>Perles</i>, <i>Perlii</i>, <i>Perlas</i>, <i>Pearls</i>,
-all sweet, pretty, mouth-rounding names, but worthy
-to be applied to the lustrous and beautiful spheres
-which we call pearls. <i>Principium culmenque omnium,
-rerum pretii tenent</i>: "Of all things, pearls," said
-Pliny, two thousand years ago, "kept the very top,
-highest, best, and first price." What was true then
-is true now. There are few things so immortal as
-good taste. Let us pay something "on account"
-of our debt to the oyster. Having regarded that
-placid creditor as an article of food, I now propose
-to treat him as an assistant to the toilet. And, looking
-at him in that point of view, here is not a bad instalment
-of the aforesaid debt, contributed by Barry Cornwall.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>"Within the midnight of her hair,</div>
- <div class='line'>Half-hidden in its deepest deeps,</div>
- <div class='line'>A single peerless, priceless pearl</div>
- <div class='line'>(All filmy-eyed) for ever sleeps.</div>
- <div class='line'>Without the diamond's sparkling eyes,</div>
- <div class='line'>The ruby's blushes—there it lies,</div>
- <div class='line'>Modest as the tender dawn,</div>
- <div class='line'>When her purple veil's withdrawn—</div>
- <div class='line'>The flower of gems, a lily cold and pale.</div>
- <div class='line'>Yet, what doth all avail?—</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>All its beauty, all its grace?</div>
- <div class='line'>All the honours of its place?</div>
- <div class='line'>He who pluck'd it from its bed,</div>
- <div class='line'>In the far blue Indian Ocean,</div>
- <div class='line'>Lieth, without life or motion,</div>
- <div class='line'>In his earthy dwelling—dead!</div>
- <div class='line'>All his children, one by one,</div>
- <div class='line'>When they look up to the sun,</div>
- <div class='line'>Curse the toil by which he drew</div>
- <div class='line'>The treasure from its bed of blue."</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Costly as pearls are, they are merely the calcareous
-production of Mollusks. Diamonds have elsewhere
-been shown to be merely charcoal; the pearl is little
-else but concentric layers of membrane and carbonate
-of lime. All Mollusks are instances of that beneficent
-law of nature, that the hard parts accommodate themselves
-to the soft. The common naked snail, the
-mussel, cockle, oyster, garden helix, strombus, and
-nautilus, elegant or rough, rare or common, each illustrate
-this grand law. The body of a soft consistence
-is enclosed in an elastic skin. From this skin calcareous
-matter is continually exuded. This protects
-the animal, and forms the shell. Where the waves are
-rough, and rocks superabundant, then the shell is
-rough, hard, stony, fit to weather anything; where
-only smooth water and halcyon days are to be looked
-for, Nature, which never works in vain, provides but
-paper sides and an egg-shell boat, such as the little
-nautilus navigates and tacks and steers in.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Besides forming the rough outside, the calcareous
-exuvium, the mucus of the oyster, and other mollusks,
-form that beautiful substance, so smooth and polished,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>and dyed with rainbow tints and a glorious opalescence,
-which, be it as common as luxury has made it, still
-charms the eye. This is the lining of the shell, the
-mother-of-pearl, nacre. "The inside of the shell,"
-said old Dampier—that old sailor with a poet's mind—"is
-more glorious even than the pearl itself."</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It is glorious; it has the look of the morning, and
-the tint of the evening sky; the colours of the prism
-chastened, softened, retained, and made perpetual in
-it: this is mother-o'-pearl.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>To render its bed always soft and cosy, to lie warm,
-packed as one might at Malvern in wet sheets, seems
-to be the oyster's pleasure. This singular exuvium,
-this mucus, not only creates pleasure, but alleviates
-pain. Some irritating substance, some internal worry
-and annoyance, it may be a dead embryo, or a grain of
-sand insinuates itself, and, lo! the creature covers it
-with this substance to ease off its unkind tooth, and
-converts it into a pearl.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>That is the way they are made, these wondrous gems!
-And very beautiful is the thought that the most highly
-prized of gems should be but the effect of a creature to
-ease off a sorrow. Every one knows Shakspeare's wondrously
-fine reflection upon the uses of sorrow and
-adversity, which,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in6'>"Like the toad, ugly and venomous,</div>
- <div class='line'>Bears yet a precious jewel in its head."</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c010'>The precious jewel of the toad, which some critics and
-commentators have endeavoured to prove its glittering
-eye, has long been exploded. Our old alchemists
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>believed in the toadstone; we do not. The fable
-remains in its pristine beauty; but here is one truth
-equally beautiful, that the adversity of the oyster
-turns to a jewel so costly and glorious, that monarchs
-reckon it amongst the records of their houses and
-conquered provinces. May we ever turn our sorrows
-and troubles to as good an account; may we ever continue
-to do so, for assuredly some men do. The best
-of men are those who are tried by affliction and trouble,
-or those who have some deep and secret care, which
-they hide in their hearts, and which makes them wiser
-and better. Shelley has a theory that poets are made
-somewhat after the fashion of pearls, or that, at any
-rate, their poetry is so produced. He sings—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in6'>"Most wretched men</div>
- <div class='line'>Are cradled into poetry by wrong;</div>
- <div class='line'>They learn in suffering, what they teach in song."</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c010'>We have very little doubt but that the true poetry from
-which the world learns anything worth learning is so
-produced.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>There have been other theories as to the production
-of the pearl, some holding that the interior formation
-which we state to be a grain of sand, is a dead ovum
-which the fish attempts to exude. This theory, too, has
-its supporters.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>"If," said Sir Everard Home, "if I can prove that
-this, the richest jewel in a monarch's crown, which
-cannot be imitated by any art of man" (he is rather
-wrong there; it can be imitated, and wonderfully
-imitated too,) "either in beauty of form or brilliancy of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>lustre, is the abortive egg of an oyster enveloped in its
-own nacre, who will not be struck with wonder and
-astonishment?" Wonder and astonishment are words
-which scarcely exist now. Science has shown so many
-wonders that we are hardly astonished at anything; but
-Sir Everard's assertion admits of proof. A pearl cut in
-two exhibits the concentric layers like an onion, as may
-be seen through a strong lens; and in the centre is a
-round hole, very minute it may be, but wherein the
-ovum has been deposited.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Sometimes the ovum, or sand, or enclosed substance
-has attached itself to the shell, and has then been
-covered with mucus, forming a pearl which cannot be
-separated from the shell. There are several specimens
-of such pearls in the British Museum.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The great beauty in pearls is their opalescence, and a
-lustre which, as we have before observed, however clever
-the imitation, has never yet been given to artificial
-pearls. Sir Everard Home supposes that this lustre
-arises from the highly polished coat of the centre shell,
-the pearl itself being diaphanous. Sir David Brewster
-accounts for it by the pearl and mother-of-pearl having
-a grooved substance on its surface resembling the
-minute corrugations often seen on substances covered
-with oil, paint, or varnish. Philosophers are sometimes
-not very explanatory. Sir David means to say
-that beneath the immediate polish of the pearl there are
-certain wavelets and dimples from which the light is
-reflected. "The direction of the grooves," again to
-quote Sir David, "is in every case at right angles to
-the line joining the coloured image; hence, in irregularly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>formed mother-of-pearl, where the grooves are
-often circular, and have every possible direction, the
-coloured images appear irregularly scattered round the
-ordinary image."</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In the regular pearl these are crowded, from its
-spherical form, into a small space; hence its marvellous
-appearance of white unformed light, and hence its
-beauty and value.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>To prove the translucency of the pearl, we have only
-to hold one which is split to a candle, where, by interposing
-coloured substance or light, we shall have the
-colour transmitted through the pearl. Curious as is
-the formation of the pearl, we have yet a cognate substance
-to it. What we call <i>bezoar</i>, and the Hindoos
-<i>faduj</i>, is a concretion of a deepish olive-green colour
-found in the stomach of goats, dogs, cows, or other
-animals: the hog bezoar, the bovine bezoar, and the
-camel bezoar; this last the Hindoos turn into a yellow
-paint; but the harder substances the Hindoo jewellers
-polish and thread and use as jewels; so that from the
-stomach of the lower animals, and from the secretions
-of a shell-fish, the still grasping, prying, worrying,
-proud, vain-glorious, busy man gets him an ornament
-for her whom he most loves, for him whom he most
-honours.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The question of obtaining pearls and of slaying
-divers, of feeding sharks with human limbs, of the eye-balls
-starting and the tympanum of the ear bursting, of
-the pains, perils, and penalties of the pearl divers, must
-be touched incidentally in any true account of this precious
-gem.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>Vanity demands the aid of Cruelty, and for her gratification
-human sacrifices are still made.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In the Persian Gulf, at Ceylon, and in the Red Sea,
-the early sources of the Greeks and Romans, we yet
-find our supply. Pearls are also found in the Indian
-Ocean along the Coromandel coast and elsewhere; as
-also in the Gulf of California; but the two grand headquarters
-are in Bahrein Island, in the Persian Gulf,
-and in the Bay of Condalchy, in the Gulf of Manaar,
-off the Island of Ceylon.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The fishery at Ceylon is a monopoly of the British
-Government, but, like many Government monopolies, it
-is said to cost a great deal more than it produces. In
-1804 Government leased it for £120,000 per annum;
-in 1828 it only yielded £28,000.<a id='r5' /><a href='#f5' class='c009'><sup>[5]</sup></a> It is a desert and
-barren spot; no one can fall in love with it; sands and
-coral reefs are not picturesque; yet, in its season, it
-attracts more to its shores than one of our best watering-places.
-Divers, merchants, Arab-hawkers, drillers,
-jewellers, and talkers; fish-sellers, butchers, boat-caulkers,
-and Hindoo Robinsons and Walkers are all
-found there. The period is limited to six weeks, or
-two months at most, from February to April; and
-whilst they are making money these people are rather
-eager, look you. But the fishers themselves, victims of
-cruelty as they are, are also victims to their own superstition
-and ignorance. A Hindoo or Parsee blesses the
-water to drive away the sharks; a diver may be frightened
-or ill, and the holidays are so numerous, that the
-actual work-days amount only to thirty in the season.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>The boats assembled sail at ten at night, a signal gun
-being then let off. They then set sail, reach the banks
-before daybreak, and at sunrise the divers begin to take
-their "headers." They continue at this work till noon,
-when a breeze starting up, they return. The cargoes
-are taken out before the night sets in, and the divers
-are refreshed.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Each boat carries twenty men—ten rowers and ten
-divers—besides a chief, or pilot. The divers work five
-at a time alternately, leaving the others time to recruit.
-To go down quickly they use a large stone of red
-granite, which they catch hold of with their foot.
-Each diver holds a net-work bag in his right hand,
-closes his nostrils with his left, or with a piece of bent
-horn, and descends to the bottom. There he darts
-about him as quickly as he can, picking up with toes
-and fingers, and putting the oysters into his net-work
-bag. When this is full, or he is exhausted, he pulls the
-rope, and is drawn, leaving the stone to be pulled up
-after him. When the oysters are very plentiful, the
-diver may bring up one hundred and fifty at a dip.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>After this violent exertion, blood flows from nose,
-ears, and eyes. The divers cannot exceed generally one
-minute's immersion. One and a half, and even two,
-have been reached by extraordinary efforts. Those who
-can endure four and five minutes are spoken of. One
-also we are told of—an apocryphal fellow, we should
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>think—who coming in 1797 from Arjango, stayed under
-water six minutes.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The divers live not to a great age. Heart diseases,
-surfeits, sores, blood-shot eyes, staggering limbs, and
-bent backs—these are part of their wages. Sometimes
-they die on reaching the surface, suddenly, as if
-struck by a shot.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>At Bahrein, the annual amount produced by the pearl
-fishery may be reckoned at from £200,000 to £240,000;
-add to this purchases made by the merchants of Abootabee,
-and we have £360,000 to include the whole pearl
-trade of the Gulf, since, through their agents at Bahrein,
-merchants from Constantinople, Bagdad, Alexandria,
-Timbuctoo, New York, Calcutta, Paris, St. Petersburg,
-Holy Moscowa, or London, make their purchases.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>"But," says our credible informant, "I have not
-put down the sum at <i>one-sixth</i> of that told me by the
-native merchants." But even then an enormous amount
-is that, to be used in mere ornament, and in one article
-only.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Well, not exactly ornament. "In Eastern lands,"
-says Mr. Thomas Moore, "they talk in flowers." Very
-flowery certainly is their talk. They also, good easy people,
-take pearls for physic—not for dentifrice—Easterns
-always having white teeth, apparently, so far as I have
-been able to judge, without the trouble of cleaning them—but
-as a regular dose. They call it <i>majoon</i>; it is an
-electuary, and myriads of small seed pearls are ground
-to impalpable powder to make it. As for the adulteration
-in this article, doubtless to be found, I say nothing.
-The simple lime from the inside of the shell would be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>just as white and just as good. Common magnesia
-would have the same effect; but, good sirs, if an old
-Emir, or rich Bonze, wishes to pay an enormous price
-for something to swallow to comfort his good old inside,
-why not? Do not let us brag too much: from the
-time of old Gower, doctor of physic, to Dr. Cheyne,
-we have, sir, swallowed everything, from toads' brains
-to the filings of a murderer's irons, as very proper
-physic.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Bahrein fishery-boats amount to 1500, and the
-trade is in the hands of merchants who possess much
-capital. This they lend out at cent. per cent.; they buy
-up, and they beat down; they juggle, cheat, rig the
-market, rob in a legal way a whole boat's crew, grow
-enormously rich, and preach morality.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Nor do they forget superstition. In the chief boat,
-when they fish, sits a jolly old cheat, a magician, called
-the binder of sharks, who waves about his skinny hands,
-jumps, howls, incants, and otherwise exerts his cabalistic
-powers, and will not allow the divers, nor are they
-willing, to descend till he declares the moment propitious.
-To add some weight to their devotions, they
-debar themselves of food or drink during this <i>Mumbo-Jumbo</i>
-play, but afterwards a species of toddy makes
-them like "Roger the Monk,"—"excessively drunk."</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The true shape of the pearl should be a perfect sphere.
-In India, and elsewhere, those of the largest size find
-the readiest sale, and realize immense prices. The very
-finest pearls are sent to Europe, and of these the very
-finest of the fine are sent to London and Paris. Thence
-the great people of the land procure their choice specimens.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>The late Emperor of Russia used to purchase for
-his wife—of whom he was exceedingly fond, and who
-has lately joined him in that bourne from which neither
-traveller, emperor, king, nor beggar ever returns—the
-very finest pearl he could procure: a virgin pearl
-and a perfect sphere was what he sought, for he would
-not have any that had been worn by others. After five-and-twenty
-years' search, he presented to the Empress
-such a necklace as had never been seen before.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Immense prices have been given and are still given
-for pearls. Julius Cæsar, in love with the mother of
-Marcus Brutus, is said to have presented her with a pearl
-worth £48,417 10<i>s.</i>, which we can believe or not, according
-to our natures. Cleopatra, as all the world has
-read, drank, dissolved in vinegar, a pearl which cost
-£80,729 of our money, and, as we know from Shakspeare,
-Marc Antony sent to her "a treasure of an oyster"
-of wondrous beauty. Clodius, the glutton (surely a
-gourmet, not a gourmand), swallowed one worth £8072 18<i>s.</i>
-One of the modern pearls was bought by Tavernier
-at Catifa, and sold by him to the Shah of Persia for
-£110,000; another was obtained by Philip II. of Spain,
-off the Columbian coast, which weighed 250 carats, and
-was valued at 14,400 ducats, which is equal to about
-£13,996.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Pliny, the naturalist, tells us of a pearl which was
-valued at £80,000 sterling. That which Philip II. had
-was nearly as large as a pigeon's egg. Pliny's was
-somewhat smaller. But size is not alone the test of
-value. Shape and form must be taken into consideration.
-Some pearls are very curiously misshapen, and of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>so large a size that it would seem a wonder how the fish
-could exist with them in the shell. These misshapen
-pearls are generally of an uneven surface and lustre, and
-are prized by the Eastern jewellers very much, and
-were also sought after by the fanciful goldsmiths and
-enamellers of the <i>cinque-cento</i> period, when they were set
-into sword-hilts, or formed into toys or gems, just as
-the fancy and shape might suggest. We have seen one
-large long pearl mounted by a Spanish jeweller into the
-order of the golden fleece, the legs and head of the sheep
-being of gold, the body formed by the pearl. Amongst
-the loot taken at Lucknow was a set of miniature animals
-and birds, all formed of large but misshapen pearls,
-the tails, heads, eyes, &amp;c., of the creatures being of gold
-set with diamonds. Any one who has seen much mediæval
-work in the precious metals, or the illuminated
-pages of early printed books on vellum, of Italian execution,
-will be able to recall many curious instances of
-this quaint kind of <i>vertu</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The largest pearl of which we have heard was one
-spoken of by Böethius, the size of a muscadine pear. It
-was named the <i>Incomparable</i>, and weighed thirty carats
-or five pennyweights. Tavernier's pearl would, if engraved,
-well illustrate the rocky, eccentric, and oft-times
-triangular shapes in which these gems are found.
-They often adhere to the shell, and cannot be removed
-without the saw. After such an operation they would
-merely rank as half pearls, which, by the way, are
-those generally mounted in jewellery and rings.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Did our scope allow of a description of the manufacture
-from fish scales of the substitute for the real pearl,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>the marvellously clever imitation which is worn, wittingly,
-by many a gracious lady, and unwittingly by
-many another, we should have another interesting story
-to tell. But these imitations may be considered as
-frauds upon our placid creditor the oyster—or, shall we
-say, compositions with him, and beneath the notice of,
-debtors who are trying to behave honestly to a bivalve.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Properly speaking, however, the Pearl oyster (<i>Avicula
-margaritacea</i>), from which the greater number
-of pearls, and the largest quantity of mother-of-pearl
-is obtained, is not an oyster strictly so called, but belongs
-to an allied genus. The pearl oyster is an oval-pointed
-recurved-edged mussel; the lower shell with a
-hood-shaped hollow point, the upper one like a cover,
-leafy and pearly, of a rosy purple-white colour. The
-common oyster (<i>Ostrea edulis</i>), on the contrary, has a
-round-oval mussel-shell, thin towards the edges, with
-tiled leaves adhering to one another, the upper shell
-quite flat. Some variety exists in these, some having
-elongated edges, owing to the difference of age.</p>
-
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c008'>Gentle reader! when Queen Mary, whom men call
-"Bloody Mary," died, and Queen Elizabeth, Protestant
-Elizabeth, came to the throne, Osorius, the good Bishop of
-Arcoburge, a staunch bishop of the Church of Rome, sent
-her a sugared pill, which he hoped would at once convert
-the queen, and drive out the "obnoxious heresy" from
-the land. That all might read it, he himself wrote it in
-Latin: "<i>Epistola ad Clarissimam Principam Elizabetham</i>;"
-had it translated into French, which honest old
-Strype says "gave great offence," as "<i>une bien longue</i>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span><i>et docte Epistre à Madame Elizabeth, Royne d' Angleterre</i>;"
-and to gild the nasty thing, called it, in English, "A
-Perle for a Prince;" but all the ingenuity of quackery
-could not disguise the drastic pill, and neither the queen
-nor her lieges would swallow it. I have seen all three
-books in the Grenville Library in the British Museum,
-and at once pronounce them nothing but "mock" pearls.
-Now, I have extracted for your delectation a real pearl
-out of the Oyster, in the shape of this little book. It is
-Christmas-tide. Cherish it for those best of pearls,
-kindly thoughts and loving remembrances, which the
-Oyster calls into being when the Holly and the Mistletoe
-deck our walls.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c015'>
- <div><span class='small'>LONDON: WILLIAM STEVENS, PRINTER, BELL YARD, TEMPLE BAR.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='footnotes'>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c016'>FOOTNOTES:</h2>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1'>
-<p class='c008'><a href='#r1'>1</a>. The common Colchester and Faversham oysters are
-brought to market on the 5th of August. They are called
-<i>Common oysters</i>, and are picked up on the French coast, and
-then transferred to those beds; the Milton, or, as they are
-commonly called, the <i>melting Natives</i>, the true Rutupians, do
-not come in till the beginning of October, continue in season
-till the 12th of May, and approach the meridian of their perfection
-about Christmas. The denizens from France are not
-to be compared to British <i>Native</i> oysters, which are so called
-because they are born, bred, and fed in this country. These
-do not come to perfection till they are four years old.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f2'>
-<p class='c008'><a href='#r2'>2</a>. The exportation has by this time nearly doubled, but these
-are the latest statistics we can arrive at.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f3'>
-<p class='c008'><a href='#r3'>3</a>. See page 25.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f4'>
-<p class='c008'><a href='#r4'>4</a>. The Carlingford oyster is the best in Ireland; a black-bearded
-fellow, delicate and of fine flavour, to be eaten in
-Dublin alternately with the Redbank oyster, at a magnificent
-establishment in Sackville Street, and to be washed down with
-alternate draughts of brown stout. The Hibernian will tell
-you that even our Natives are inferior to these. He is right
-in his patriotism, but wrong in his assertion. How often do
-our prejudices trip up our judgment!</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f5'>
-<p class='c008'><a href='#r5'>5</a>. The pearl fishery at Ceylon, however, has been very profitable
-during the present year, the yield being sometimes worth from
-10,000 dollars to 30,000 dollars per day. An attempt is being
-made to re-establish the pearl fishery in the Gulf of California.
-Some very fine pearls were found there nearly a century ago.</p>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c003'>Transcriber's Note</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>The original spelling and punctuation has been retained.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Variations in hyphenation and compound words have been
-preserved.</p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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