CHAP. 60.—THE NATURE OF THE MUREX AND THE PURPLE.
And yet pearls may be looked upon as pretty nearly a possession of everlasting duration—they descend from a man to
his heir, and they are alienated from one to another just like
any landed estate. But the colours that are extracted from
the murex[1] and the purple fade from hour to hour; and yet
luxury, which has similarly acted as a mother to them, has
set upon them prices almost equal to those of pearls.
(36.) Purples live mostly seven[2] years. Like the murex,
they keep themselves in concealment for thirty days, about the
time of the rising of the Dog-star; in the spring season they unite
in large bodies, and by rubbing against each other, produce a
viscous spittle, from which a kind of wax is formed. The
murex does the same; but the purple[3] has that exquisite
juice which is so greatly sought after for the purpose of dyeing
cloth, situate in the middle of the throat. This secretion
consists of a tiny drop contained in a white vein, from which
the precious liquid used for dyeing is distilled, being of the
tint of a rose somewhat inclining to black. The rest of the
body is entirely destitute of this juice. It is a great point to
take the fish alive; for when it dies, it spits out this juice.
From the larger ones it is extracted after taking off the shell;
but the small fish are crushed alive, together with the shells,
upon which they eject this secretion.
In Asia the best purple is that of Tyre, in Africa that
of Meninx[4] and the parts of Gætulia that border on the
Ocean, and in Europe that of Laconia. It is for this colour
that the fasces and the axes[5] of Rome make way in the
crowd; it is this that asserts the majesty of childhood;[6] it is
this that distinguishes the senator[7] from the man of equestrian
rank; by persons arrayed in this colour are prayers[8] ad-
dressed to propitiate the gods; on every garment[9] it sheds a
lustre, and in the triumphal vestment[10] it is to be seen mingled with gold. Let us be prepared then to excuse this
frantic passion for purple, even though at the same time we
are compelled to enquire, why it is that such a high value has
been set upon the produce of this shell-fish, seeing that while
in the dye the smell of it is offensive, and the colour itself
is harsh, of a greenish hue, and strongly resembling that of
the sea when in a tempestuous state?
The tongue of the purple is a finger[11] in length, and by
means of this it finds subsistence, by piercing other shellfish,[12] so hard is the point of it. They die in fresh water, and
in places where rivers discharge themselves into the sea;
otherwise, when taken, they will live as long as fifty days on
their saliva. All shell-fish grow very fast, and purples more
especially; they come to their full size at the end of a year.
1. Or "conchylium." We find that Pliny generally makes a difference
between the colours of the "murex," or "conchylium," and those of the
"purpura," or "purple." Cuvier says, that they were the names of different shell-fish which the ancients employed for dyeing in purple of
various shades. It is not known exactly, at the present day, what species
they employed; but it is a fact well ascertained, that the greater part of
the univalve shell-fish, more especially the Buccini and Murices of Linnæus, distil a kind of red liquid. The dearness of it arose, Cuvier thinks,
from the remarkably small quantity that each animal afforded. Since the
coccus, or kermes, he says, came to be well known, and more especially
since the New World has supplied us with cochineal, we are no longer
necessitated to have recourse to the juices of the murex.
2. Aristotle, Hist. Anim. B. v. c. 14, says, "about six." The murex of
Pliny is the kh/ruc of Aristotle.
3. Aristotle says, that the purple consists of three parts, the upper being
the tra/xhlos, or neck; the middle the mh/xwn,, or poppy; and the lower
the puqmh/n, or trunk; and that the juice lies between the first and second
of these parts, or the throat. This juice, which Pliny calls "flos,"
"flower," "ros," "dew," and "succus," "juice," is distilled, Cuvier
says, not from the fauces of the animal, but from the mantle or membranous tissue which lines the shell.
4. See B. v. c. 7. See also B. vi. c. 36.
5. Which preceded the Roman consuls, who were clothed with the toga
prætexta, the colour of which was Syrian purple.
6. Hardouin seems to think that "majestate pueritia" means "children
of high birth;" but it was the fact that all children of free birth wore the
prætexta, edged with purple, till they attained puberty. It is much more
probable that by these words Pliny means the "majesty of youth," in its
simplicity and guileless nature, that commands our veneration and respect.
7. He means that the purple laticlave or broad hem of the senator's toga
distinguished him from the eques, who wore a toga with an angusticlave,
or narrow hem.
8. From Cicero, Epist. Ad. Attic. B. ii. Ep. 9, we learn that purple
was worn by the priests when performing sacrifice. Ajasson, however,
agrees with Dalechamps in thinking that this passage bears reference to
the consuls, who wore purple when sacrificing to the gods.
9. The prætexta, for instance, the laticlave, the chlamys, the paludamentum, and the trabea.
10. On the occasion of a triumph, the victor was arrayed in a "toga
picta," an embroidered garment, which, from the present passage, would
appear to have been of purple and gold. Pliny tells us, B. xxxiii. c. 19,
that Tarquinius, on his triumph over the Sabines, wore a robe of cloth of
gold.
11. Aristotle says the same, Hist. Anim. B. v. c. 14, and De Partib.
Anim. B. ii. c. 17. Cuvier says, that the buccinus and murex have a long
neck, in which there is a tongue armed with little teeth, but very sharp,
by means of which the animal is enabled to pierce other shell-fish.
12. "Conchylia;" other fish of the same kind apparently; as Pliny uses
the word "conchylium" synonymously with "murex."