Alberti, Leone Battista, Architecture, 1755

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1fore go on to collect thoſe Rules which the
moſt
approved Ancients have left us in many
and
various Places, and to theſe, according to
our
Cuſtom, we ſhall add whatever we our­
ſelves
have deduced from antique Works, or
the
Inſtructions of moſt experienced Artificers,
if
we happen to know any Thing that may be
ſerviceable
to our Purpoſe.
And I believe it
will
be the beſt Method, following Nature
herſelf
, to begin with thoſe Things which were
ſirſt
in Uſe among Men in their Buildings;
which
, if we miſtake not, were Timber Trees
which
they fell'd in the Woods: Though
among
Authors, I find, ſome are divided
upon
this very Subject.
Some will have it,
that
Men at firſt dwelt in Caves, and that
they
and their Cattle were both ſheltered
under
the ſame Roof; and therefore they
believe
what Pliny tells us, that one Gellius
Texius
was the firſt, that, in Imitation of Na­
ture
built himſelf a Houſe of Mud. Diodorus
ſays
that Veſta, the Daughter of Saturn, was
the
firſt that invented Houſes. Euſebius
Pamphilus
, an excellent Searcher into Antiqui­
ty
, tells us from the Teſtimony of the Ancients,
that
the Grandſons of Protogenes firſt taught
Men
the Building of Houſes, which they
patch
'd up of Reeds and Bullruſhes: But to
return
to our Subject.
The Ancients, then,
and
particularly Theophraſtus, inform us, that
moſt
Trees, and eſpecially the Fir, the Pitch­
tree
and the Pine, ought to be cut immediately,
when
they begin to put forth their young
Shoots
, when through their abundance of Sap
you
moſt eaſily ſtrip off the Bark.
But that
there
are ſome Trees, as the Maple, the Elm,
the
Aſh, and the Linden, which are beſt cut
after
Vintage.
The Oak if cut in Summer,
they
obſerve is apt to breed Worms; but if in
Winter
, it will keep ſound and not ſplit.
And it is not foreign to our Purpoſe what they
remark
, that Wood which is cut in Winter, in
a
North Wind, though it be green, will never­
theleſs
burn extremely well, and in a Manner
without
Smoak; which manifeſtly ſhews that
their
Juices are not crude, but well digeſted.
Vitruvius is for cutting Timber from the be­
ginning
of Autumn, till ſuch Time as the ſoft
Weſterly
Winds begin to blow.
And Heſiod
ſays
, that when the Sun darts his burning Rays
directly
upon our Heads, and turns Mens Com­
plections
to brown, then is the Time for Har­
veſt
, but that when the Trees drop their
Leaves
, then is the Seaſon for cutting of Tim­
ber
. Cato moderates the Matter thus; let the
Oak
, ſays he, be felled during the Solſtice, be­
cauſe
in Winter it is always out of Seaſon; other
Woods
that bear Seed may be cut when that
is
mature; thoſe that bear none, when you
pleaſe
.
Thoſe that have their Seeds green and
ripe
at the ſame Time, ſhould be cut when
that
is fallen, but the Elm when the Leaves
drop
.
And they ſay it is of very great Im­
portance
, what Age the Moon is of when you
fell
your Timber: For they are all of Opini­
on
, and eſpecially Varro, that the Influence of
the
Moon is ſo powerful over Things of this
Nature
, that even they who cut their Heir in
the
Wane of the Moon, ſhall ſoon grow bald;
and
for this Reaſon, they tell us, Tiberius ob­
ſerved
certain Days for cutting his Hair.
The
Aſtrologers
affirm, that your Spirits will al­
ways
be oppreſſed with Melancholly, if you
cut
your Nails or Hair while the Moon is op­
preſſed
or ill diſpoſed.
It is to our preſent
Purpoſe
what they ſay, that ſuch Things as
are
deſigned in their Uſes to be moveable,
ought
to be cut and wrought when the Moon
is
in Libra or Cancer; but ſuch as are to be
fixed
and immoveable, when ſhe is in Leo,
Taurus
, or the like.
But that Timber ought
to
be cut in the Wane of the Moon, all the
Learned
are agreed, becauſe they hold that the
flegmatick
Moiſture, ſo very liable to immedi­
ate
Putrefaction, is then almoſt quite dried up,
and
it is certain, that when it is cut in ſuch a
Moon
, it is never apt to breed Worms.
Hence
they
ſay you ought to reap the Corn which
you
intend to ſell, at full Moon; becauſe then
the
Ears are full; but that which you intend
to
keep in the Wane.
It is alſo evident, that
the
Leaves of Trees cropt in the Wane of the
Moon
do not rot. Columella thinks it beſt to
fell
Timber from the twentieth to the thirtieth
Day
of the Moon's Age; Vegetius, from the
fifteenth
to the two and twentieth; and hence
he
ſuppoſes the religious Ceremony to ariſe, of
celebrating
all Myſteries relating to Eternity
only
on thoſe Days, becauſe Wood cut then
laſted
in a Manner for ever.
They add, that
we
ſhould likewiſe obſerve the Setting of the
Moon
.
But Pliny thinks it a proper Time to
fell
Trees when the Dog-ſtar reigns, and when
the
Moon is in Conjunction with the Sun,
which
Day is called an Interlunium, and ſays
it
is good to wait for the Night of that Day
too
, till the Moon is ſet.
The Aſtronomers
ſay
, the Reaſon of this is, becauſe the Action
of
the Moon puts the Fluids of all Bodies into
Motion
; and that therefore when thoſe Fluids

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