Alberti, Leone Battista, Architecture, 1755

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CHAP. III.
The Ancients uſed the utmoſt Caution
to
ſix upon a Region that had in it
nothing
noxious, and was furniſhed with all
Conveniences
; and eſpecially they took parti­
cular
Care that the Air was not unwholeſome
or
intemperate; in which they ſhewed a great
Deal
of Prudence; for they knew that if the
Earth
or Water had any Defect in them, Art
and
Induſtry might correct it; but they affirm­
ed
, that neither Contrivance nor Multitude of
Hands
was able ſufficiently to correct and
mend
the Air.
And it muſt be allowed, that,
as
what we breathe is ſo conducive to the
Nouriſhment
and Support of Life, the purer
it
is, the more it muſt preſerve and main­
tain
our Health.
Beſides, how great an In­
fluence
the Air has in the Generation, Pro­
duction
, Aliment, and Preſervation of Things,
is
unknown to nobody.
It is even obſerved,
that
they who draw a pure Air, have better
Underſtandings
than thoſe who breathe a heavy
moiſt
one: Which is ſuppoſed to be the Rea­
ſon
that the Athenians had much ſharper Wits
than
the Thebans. We know that the Air,
according
to the different Situation and Poſiti­
on
of Places, affects us ſometimes in one Man­
ner
, and ſometimes in another.
Some of the
Cauſes
of this Variety we imagine we under­
ſtand
; others by the Obſcurity of their Natures
are
altogether hidden and unknown to us.
We
ſhall
firſt ſpeak of the manifeſt Cauſes, and
conſider
afterwards of the more occult; that
we
may know how to chuſe a Region com­
modious
and healthful.
The Ancient Theo­
logiſts
called the Air Pallas. Homer makes
her
a Goddeſs, and names her Glaucopis, which
ſignifies
an Air naturally clear and tranſparent.
And it is certain, that Air is the moſt healthy,
which
is the moſt purged and purified, and
which
may moſt eaſily be pierced by the Sight,
the
cleareſt and lighteſt, and the leaſt Subject
to
Variations.
And on the contrary we af­
firm
the Air to be peſtiferous, where there is a
continued
Collection of thick Clouds and ſtink­
ing
Vapours, and which always hangs like a
great
Weight upon the Eyes, and obſtructs
the
Sight.
The Occaſion of this Difference
proceeds
from ſeveral Cauſes, but chiefly I
take
it, from the Sun and Winds.
But we are
not
here to ſpend Time in theſe phyſical En­
quiries
, how the Vapours by the Power of the
Sun
are raiſed from the moſt profound and
hidden
Parts of the Earth, and drawn up to
the
Sky, where gathering themſelves together
in
vaſt Bodies in the immenſe Spaces of the
Air
, either by their own huge Weight, or by
receiving
the Rays of the Sun upon their rari­
fied
Parts, they fall and thereby preſs upon the
Air
and occaſion the Winds; and being after­
wards
carried to the Ocean by their Drought,
they
plunge, and having bathed and impregna­
ted
themſelves with Moiſture from the Sea,
they
once more aſcend through the Air, where
being
preſſed by the Winds, and as it were
ſqueezed
like a Sponge, they diſcharge their
Burthen
of Water in Rains, which again
create
new Vapours.
Whether theſe Conjec­
tures
be true, or whether the Wind be occaſi­
oned
by a dry Fumoſity of the Earth, or a hot
Evaporation
ſtirred by the Preſſure of the Cold;
or
that it be, as we may call it, the Breath of
the
Air; or nothing but the Air itſelf put into
Agitation
by the Motion of the World, or by
the
Courſe and Radiation of the Stars; or by
the
generating Spirit of all Things in its own
Nature
active, or ſomething elſe not of a ſepa­
rate
Exiſtence, but conſiſting in the Air itſelf
acted
upon and inflamed by the Heat of the
higher
Air; or whatever other Opinion or
Way
of accounting for theſe Things be truer
or
more ancient, I ſhall paſs it over as not
making
to my Purpoſe.
However, unleſs I am
miſtaken
, we may conceive from what has been
ſaid
already, why ſome Countries in the World
enjoy
a pleaſant chearful Air, while others,
cloſe
adjoyning to them, and as it were laid
by
Nature in the ſame Lap, are ſtupified and
afflicted
with a heavy and diſmal Climate.
For I ſuppoſe, that this happens from no other
Cauſe
, but their being ill diſpoſed for the
peration
of the Sun and Winds. Cicero tells
us
, that Syracuſe was ſo placed, that the Inha­
bitants
never miſſed ſeeing the Sun every Day
in
the Year; a Situation very ſeldom to be met

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