Agricola, Georgius, De re metallica, 1912/1950

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1field is hoed and weeded; the ripe grain with part of the stalk is cut down
by scythes and threshed on the floor, or its ears are cut off and stored in the
barn and later beaten with flails and winnowed with fans, until finally the
pure grain is stored in the granary, whence it is brought forth again when
occasion demands or necessity arises.
Again, if we wish to procure better
and more productive fruits from trees and bushes, we must resort to
cultivating, pruning, and grafting, which cannot be done without tools.
Even as without vessels we cannot keep or hold liquids, such as milk, honey,
wine, or oil, neither could so many living things be cared for without
buildings to protect them from long-continued rain and intolerable cold.
Most of the rustic instruments are made of iron, as ploughshares, share­
beams, mattocks, the prongs of harrows, hoes, planes, hay-forks, straw
cutters, pruning shears, pruning hooks, spades, lances, forks, and weed
cutters.
Vessels are also made of copper or lead. Neither are wooden
instruments or vessels made without iron.
Wine cellars, oil-mills, stables,
or any other part of a farm building could not be built without iron tools.
Then if the bull, the wether, the goat, or any other domestic animal is led
away from the pasture to the butcher, or if the poulterer brings from the farm
a chicken, a hen, or a capon for the cook, could any of these animals be cut
up and divided without axes and knives?
I need say nothing here about
bronze and copper pots for cooking, because for these purposes one could
make use of earthen vessels, but even these in turn could not be made and
fashioned by the potter without tools, for no instruments can be made out
of wood alone, without the use of iron.
Furthermore, hunting, fowling, and
fishing supply man with food, but when the stag has been ensnared does not
the hunter transfix him with his spear?
As he stands or runs, does he not
pierce him with an arrow?
Or pierce him with a bullet? Does not the
fowler in the same way kill the moor-fowl or pheasant with an arrow?
Or
does he not discharge into its body the ball from the musket?
I will not
speak of the snares and other instruments with which the woodcock, wood­
pecker, and other wild birds are caught, lest I pursue unseasonably and too
minutely single instances.
Lastly, with his fish-hook and net does not the
fisherman catch the fish in the sea, in the lakes, in fish-ponds, or in rivers?
But the hook is of iron, and sometimes we see lead or iron weights attached
to the net.
And most fish that are caught are afterward cut up and dis­
embowelled with knives and axes.
But, more than enough has been said on
the matter of food.
Now I will speak of clothing, which is made out of wool, flax, feathers,
hair, fur, or leather.
First the sheep are sheared, then the wool is combed.
Next the threads are drawn out, while later the warp is suspended in the
shuttle under which passes the wool.
This being struck by the comb, at length
cloth is formed either from threads alone or from threads and hair.
Flax,
when gathered, is first pulled by hooks.
Then it is dipped in water and
afterward dried, beaten into tow with a heavy mallet, and carded, then
drawn out into threads, and finally woven into cloth.
But has the artisan
or weaver of the cloth any instrument not made of iron?
Can one be made

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