Alberti, Leone Battista, Architecture, 1755

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1to adorn our Work, I ſhall omit them, and
proceed
to treat of the Method of Building as
addreſſing
myſelf to Artificers approv'd for
Skill
and Experience, with more Freedom
than
perhaps would be allow'd by thoſe who
are
ſor more exact philoſophiſing. Cato adviſes
to
dig the Stone in Summer, to let it lie in the
open
Air, and not to uſe it under two Years:
In
Summer, to the Intent that it may grow
accuſtom
'd by Degrees to Wind, Rain, and
Froſt
, and other Inclemencies of the Weather,
which
it had not felt before.
For if Stone,
immediately
upon its being dug out of the
Quarry
, while it is full of its native Juice and
Humidity
, is expos'd to ſevere Winds and
ſudden
Froſts, it will ſplit and break to Pieces.
It ſhould be kept in the open Air, in order to
prove
the Goodneſs of each particular Stone,
and
how well it is able to reſiſt the Accidents
that
injure it, making Experiment by this ſmall
Trial
, how long they are likely to hold againſt
the
Aſſaults of Time.
They ſhould not be
uſed
under two Years, to the Intent that you
may
have Time to find out ſuch among them
as
are weak in their Nature, and likely to dam­
age
the Work, and to ſeperate them from the
good
ones; for it is certain, in one and the
ſame
Kind of Stones there is a Difference in
Goodneſs
of any Sort of Stone, and its Fit­
neſs
for this or that particular Situation, is beſt
learnt
from Uſe and Experience; and you
may
much ſooner come at their Values and
Properties
from old Buildings, than from the
Writings
and Precepts of Philoſphers.
How­
ever
, to ſay ſomething briefly of Stones in ge­
neral
, we will beg Leave to offer the follow­
ing
Obſervations.
ALL white Stone is ſofter than red, the clear
is
more eaſily wrought than the Cloudy, and
the
more like Salt it looks, the harder it is to
work
.
Stone that looks as if it were ſtrew'd
over
with a bright ſhining Sand, is harſh; if
little
Sparks, as it were, of Gold are intermix'd,
it
will be ſtubborn; if it has a Kind of little
black
Points in it, it will be hard to get out
of
the Quarry: That which is ſpotted with
angular
Drops is ſtronger than that which has
round
ones, and the ſmaller thoſe Drops are,
the
harder it will be; and the finer and clearer
the
Colour is, the longer it will laſt.
The
Stone
that has feweſt Veins, will be moſt
entire
, and when the Veins come neareſt in
Colour
to the adjoining Parts of the Stone, it
will
prove moſt equal throughout: The ſmaller
the
Veins, the handſomer; the more winding
they
run, the more untoward; and the more
knotty
, the worſe, Of theſe Veins that is
moſt
apt to ſplit which has in the Middle a
reddiſh
Streak, or of the Colour of rotten
Oker
.
Much of the ſame Nature is that which
is
ſtain'd here and there with the Colour of
faded
Graſs, but the moſt difficult of all is
ſuch
as looks like a cloudy Piece of Ice.
A
Multitude
of Veins ſhews the Stone to be de­
ceitful
and apt to crack; and the ſtraiter they
are
, the more unſaithful.
Upon breaking a
Stone
, the more fine and poliſh'd the Frag­
ments
appear, the cloſer bodied it is; and that
which
when broken has its Outſide the leaſt
rugged
, will be more manageable than thoſe
which
are rough.
Of the Rough ones, thoſe
which
are whiteſt will be worſt for working;
whereas
, on the Contrary, in brown Stones,
thoſe
of the ſmalleſt and fineſt Grain are leaſt
obedient
to the Tool.
All mean ordinary
Stones
are the Harder for being ſpungy, and
that
which being ſprinkled with Water is long­
eſt
in drying, is the moſt crude.
ALL heavy Stones are more ſolid and eaſier
to
poliſh than light ones, which upon rubbing
is
much more apt to come off in Flakes than
ſuch
as are heavy.
That which upon being
ſtruck
gives the beſt Sound, is cloſer made than
that
which ſounds dull; and that which upon
ſtrong
Friction ſmells of Sulphur, is ſtronger
than
that which yields no Smell at all.
Laſt­
ly
, that which makes the moſt Reſiſtance againſt
the
Chizzel will be moſt firm and rigid againſt
the
Violence of Storms.
They ſay, that thoſe
Stones
which hold together in the largeſt Scant­
lings
at the Mouth of the Quarry, are firmeſt
againſt
the Weather.
All Stone too is ſofter
when
it is juſt dug up, than after it has been
ſome
Time in the Air, and when it is wetted,
or
ſoſtened with Water, is more yielding to the
Tool
than when it is dry.
Alſo ſuch Stones as
are
dug out of the moiſteſt Part of the Quarry,
will
be the cloſeſt when they come to be dry;
and
it is thought that Stones are eaſier wrought
in
a South-wind than in a North, and are more
apt
to ſplit in a North-wind than in a South.
But if you have a Mind to make an Experi­
ment
how your Stone will hold out againſt
Time
, you may judge from hence: If a Piece
of
it, which you ſoak in Water, increaſes much
of
its Weight, it will be apt to be rotted by
Moiſture
; and that which flies to Pieces in
Fire
, will bear neither Sun nor Heat.
Neither
do
I think that we ought to omit here ſome
Things
worthy Memorial, which the Ancients
relate
of ſome Stones.

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