5i6 BOOK XI. 



are so placed on the sole-stones that they project a palm at the sides, and at the 

 front the sole-stones project to the same extent ; if rectangular stones are 

 not available, bricks are laid in their place. The copper plates are four feet 

 two palms and as many digits long, a cubit wide, and a psdm thick ; each 

 edge has a protuberance, one at the front end, the other at the back ; these 

 are a palm and three digits long, and a palm wide and thick. The plates are 

 so laid upon the rectangular stones that their rear ends are three digits from 

 the third long wall ; the stones project beyond the plate the same number 

 of digits in front, and a palm and three digits at the sides. When the plates 

 have been joined, the groove which is between the protuberances is a palm 

 and three digits wide, and four feet long, and through it flows the silver-lead 

 which hquates from the cakes. When the plates are corroded either by the 

 fire or by the silver-lead, which often adheres to them in the form of stalac- 

 tites, and is chipped off, they are exchanged, the right one being placed to the 

 left, and the left one, on the contrary, to the right ; but the left side of the 

 plates, which, when the fusion of the copper took place, came into contact 

 with the copper, must he flat ; so that when the exchange of the plates has 

 been carried out, the protuberances, which are thus on the underside, raise 

 the plate from the stones, and they have to be partially chipped off, lest they 

 should prove an impediment to the work ; and in each of their places is 

 laid a piece of iron, three palms long, a digit thick at both ends, and a palm 

 thick in the centre for the length of a pahn and three digits. 



The passage tmder the plates between the rectangular stones is a foot 

 wide at the back, and a foot and a palm wide at the front, for it gradually 

 widens out. The hearth, which is between the sole-stones, is covered with a 

 bed of hearth-lead, taken from the crucible in which lead is separated from 

 silver. The rear end is the highest, and should be so high that it reaches to 

 within six digits of the plates, from which point it slopes down evenly to the 

 front end, so that the argentiferous lead alloy which liquates from the cakes 

 can flow into the receiving-pit. The wall built against the third long wall 

 in order to protect it from injury by fire, is constructed of bricks joined 

 together with lute, and stands on the copper plates ; this wall is two feet, a 

 palm and two digits high, two palms thick, and three feet, a palm and three 

 digits wide at the bottom, for it reaches across both of them ; at the top it is 

 three feet wide, for it rises up obhquely on each side. At each side of this wall, 

 at a height of a palm and two digits above the top of it, there is inserted in a 

 hole in the third long wall a hooked iron rod, fastened in with molten lead ; 

 the rod projects two palms from the waU, and is two digits wide and one 

 digit thick ; it has two hooks, the one at the side, the other at the end. 

 Both of these hooks open toward the waU, and both are a digit thick, and 

 both are inserted in the last, or the adjacent, links of a short iron chain. This 

 chain consists of four links, each of which is a palm and a digit long and half 

 a digit thick ; the first hnk is engaged in the first hole in a long iron rod, and 

 one or other of the remaining three links engages the hook of the hooked rod. 

 The two long rods are three feet and as many palms and digits long, two 

 digits wide, and one digit thick ; both ends of both of these rods have holes. 



