Alberti, Leone Battista, Architecture, 1755

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CHAP. XVI.
I now return to my Subject. It is a
wonderful
Thing, that if you cover a Wall
with
Hangings woven of Wool it will make
the
Room warmer, and if they are of Flax,
colder
.
If the Platform be damp, dig Pits
and
Drains under it, and fill them up either
with
Pumice-ſtone or Gravel, to prevent the
Water
from rotting in them.
Then ſtrew
the
Ground with Coal to the Height of one
Foot
, and cover that with Sand or rather
with
Tiles, and over all this lay your Floor.
It will be all to no Purpoſe if there is Room
for
the Air to paſs under the firſt Pavement
or
Floor.
But againſt the Heat of the Sun in
Summer
, and the Severity of the Cold in Win­
ter
, it will be of very great Service, if the Soil
thereabouts
in general is not damp but dry.
Under the Area of your Parlour dig away the
Earth
to the Depth of twelve Foot, and then
floor
it with nothing but naked Boards; the
Space
beneath which is floored only with Plai­
ſter
will make the Air in your Parlour much
cooler
than you would imagine, inſomuch that
you
ſhall find it make your Feet cold even
when
your Shoes are on, nothing being over
the
ſubterraneous Pavement but plain Boards.
The Ceiling of this Parlour ſhould be arched;
and
then you will be ſurprized how warm it
will
be in Winter and how cold in Summer.
If you are troubled with the Inconvenience
which
the Satyriſt complains of the Noiſe of
Carriages
paſſing through a narrow Street, to­
gether
with that of the rough Language of
their
bruitiſh Drivers, ſo dreadful to the poor
Man
in his ſick Bed; Pliny the younger tells
us
, in one of his Epiſtles, how to prevent this
Diſturbance
, in the following Words.
Next
to
this Room lies the Chamber of Night and
of
Repoſe, in which was never heard the Voice
of
Servants, nor the hollow Murmur of the Sea,
nor
the Crack of Tempeſt, nor can you here
perceive
the Gleam of Lightening, nor even
the
Light of the Sun, unleſs you open the
Windows
, ſo retired is the Place.
The Reaſon
is
, that there is a Lobby between this Cham­
ber
and the Garden, in which intermediate
Space
all the Sounds are loſt, let us now come
to
the Walls.
The Defects in theſe are as fol­
lows
; either they ſcale off, or they crack, or
the
Ribs give Way, or they lean from their
Perpendicular
.
The Cauſes of theſe Defects
are
various, and ſo are their Remedies.
Some
of
the Cauſes indeed are manifeſt, others more
concealed
, ſo that often we know not what
Remedies
to apply, till we have ſeverely felt
the
Miſchief.
Others are not in the leaſt ob­
ſcure
; but then perhaps the Negligence of
Men
makes them inclined to hope that they
may
not do ſo much Hurt as they certainly
will
do.
The manifeſt Cauſes of Defects in
the
Wall are, when it is too thin, when it is
not
well knit together, when it is full of im­
proper
dangerous Apertures, or laſtly, when it
is
not ſufficiently ſtrengthened with Ribs
againſt
the Violence of Storms.
Thoſe Cauſes
which
happen unexpected or unforeſeen, are
Earthquakes
, Lightening, the Inconſtancy of
the
Foundation, and indeed of Nature itſelf.
But in ſhort, the greateſt Injury to all Parts
of
a Building is the Negligence and Heedleſſ­
neſs
of Men.
A certain Author ſays, that a
Weed
is a ſecret Battering-ram againſt a Wall;
nor
is it to be believed what vaſt Stones I have
myſelf
ſeen removed and puſhed out of their
Places
by the Force, or indeed by the Wedge
of
a little Root that grew between the Joints;
which
if you had only pulled out while it was
young
, the Work would have been preſerved
from
that Injury.
I greatly commend the
Ancients
, who kept a Number of People in

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