Alberti, Leone Battista, Architecture, 1755

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1pened at Philippi, where, as we are informed
by
Theophraſtus, upon drawing off the Water
and
drying up a Lake, the Country was made
warmer
.
The Cauſe of theſe Alterations is
ſuppoſed
to have lain in the Purity or Groſſ­
neſs
of the Air; for a thick Air is more dif­
ficultly
moved, and longer retains either the
Heat
or the Cold than a thin one, which is
ſoon
apt to be frozen with Cold, or on a Change
of
Weather, to be warmed again with the Sun's
Heat
.
A Country which lies uncultivated and
neglected
is ſaid to afford a thick and unhealthy
Air
; and in Places ſo much covered with
Wood
, that neither Sun nor Wind can eaſily
get
through, the Air is generally crude.
The
Caves
about the Lake Avernus were ſo ſur­
rounded
with thick Woods that the Sulphur
which
exhaled from them uſed to kill the Birds
which
flew over them: But Cæſar, by cutting
down
thoſe Woods, made that peſtilential Spot
of
Ground very healthy.
At Leghorn a Sea-port
Town
in Tuſcany, the Inhabitants uſed always
to
be afflicted with ſevere Fevers in the Dog­
days
: By banking off the Sea with a
good
Wall, the Town was freed from thoſe
Diſtempers
; but afterwards, when they let the
Water
again into their Ditches, for the better
Fortification
of the Place, their Fevers return'd.
Varro writes, that when his Camp lay in the
Iſland
of Coroyra (now Corfu) and his Soldiers
died
apace of Peſtilence; by keeping all the
Windows
towards the South cloſe ſhut, he
preſerved
his Army.
At Murano, a famous
Town
belonging to the Venetians, they are
very
ſeldom touched with the Plague, though,
their
neighbouring Metropolis, Venice, is ſre­
quently
and ſeverely afflicted with it.
The
Reaſon
of this is ſuppoſed to be the great
Number
of Glaſs-houſes there; for it is very
certain
that the Air is wonderfully purged by
Fire
.
And for a Proof that all Manner of
Poiſons
hate the Fire, it is obſerved, that the
dead
Bodies of poiſonous Animals do not breed
Worms
, like others; becauſe it is the Nature
of
Poiſon to deſtroy and totally to extinguiſh
the
Principles of Life: But if ſuch Bodies are
touched
by Lightening they will engender
Worms
, becauſe then their Poiſon is deſtroyed
by
Fire; for Worms are bred in the dead Bo­
dies
of Animals from no other Cauſe than a
certain
fiery Power in Nature working upon a
Humidity
which is apt to be put in Motion by
a
Heat which it is the Property of Poiſon to
extinguiſh
, where it prevails, as it is itſelf ex­
tinguiſhed
by it, where that Heat is the moſt
powerful
.
If you root out poiſonous Herbs,
and
eſpecially Squills, the good Plants will
draw
to themſelves the bad Nouriſhment which
they
uſed to imbibe from the Earth, by which
means
our Food will be corrupted.
It may be
of
Service to ſhelter your Houſe from unwhole­
ſome
Winds by a Grove and eſpecially of Ap­
ple-trees
; for it is of a good deal of Conſe­
quence
out of the Shade of what Leaves you
receive
you Air.
Pitch-trees are faid to be
very
good for Phthyſical Folks, or for thoſe
who
are recovering their Health ſlowly after
long
Sickneſs.
It is contrary with Trees which
have
a bitter Leaf, for they yield an unwhole­
ſome
Air.
Thus where-ever the Country is
low
, cloſe and maſhy, it will be of Service to
lay
it quite open to the Sun and Air; becauſe
the
Damps and noxious Animals which ariſe
from
ſuch Places will be preſently deſtroyed
by
Dryneſs and Winds.
At Alexandria is a
publick
Place to which the Filth and Rubbiſh
of
the Town is carried, and it is now grown
up
to ſuch a Hill, that it ſerves as a Land-mark
to
Mariners to find their Way into the Port.
How much more convenient would it not be
to
fill up low hollow Places with ſuch Stuff?
Thus at Venice, (for which I highly applaud
them
) they have in my Time filled up ſeveral
of
their Marſhes with the Rubbiſh of the Town.
Herodotus tells us, that the People who live
mong
the Marſhes in Ægypt, in order to avoid
the
Gnats, lie a Nights in very high Towers.
At Ferrara by the Po few or no Gnats appear
within
the City; but out of Town, to thoſe
who
are not uſed to them, they are execrable.
It is ſuppoſed that they are driven from the
Town
by the great Quantity of Smoke and
Fire
.
Flies do not haunt Places which are
cold
or expoſed to much Wind, and eſpecial­
ly
where the Windows are very high.
Some
ſay
that Flies will not enter where the Tail of
a
Wolf is buried, and that a Squill hung up
will
alſo drive away venomous Animals.
The
Ancients
made uſe of a great many Defences
againſt
the violent Heats; among which I am
very
well pleaſed with their Crypts or ſubter­
raneous
Porticoes, Vaults, which received Light
no
where but from the Top.
They were alſo
fond
of Halls with large Windows turned away
from
the South, open to a cool Air, and ſhad­
ed
by ſome neighbouring Edifice. Metellus,
the
Son of Octavia, Auguſtus's Siſter, made an
Awning
over the Forum with Sails, that
the
People might follow their Cauſes without
prejudicing
their Healths.
But Air is more

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