BOOK XII. 



587 



A — Lower chamber of the first furnace. B — Upper chamber. C — Vitreous mass. 



and in the third they cool the glowing glass vessels and other articles. Of 

 these the first furnace must be vaulted and similar to an oven. In the upper 

 chamber, which is six feet long, four feet wide, and two feet high, the 

 mixed materials are heated by a fierce fire of dry wood until they melt 

 and are converted into a vitreous mass. And if the}- are not satisfactorily 

 purified from dross, they are taken out and cooled and broken into pieces ; 

 and the vitreous pieces are heated in pots in the same furnace. 



The second furnace is round, ten feet in diameter and eight feet high, 

 and on the outside, so that it may be stronger, it is encompassed by five 

 arches, one and one half feet thick ; it consists in Uke manner of two 

 chambers, of which the lower one is vaulted and is one and one half feet thick. 

 In front this chamber has a narrow mouth, through which the wood 

 can be put into the hearth, which is on the ground. At the top and in the 

 middle of its vault, there is a large round hole which opens to the upper 

 chamber, so that the flames can penetrate into it. Between the arches in 

 the walls of the upper chamber are eight windows, so large that the big- 

 bellied pots may be placed through them on to the floor of the chamber, 

 around the large hole. The thickness of these pots is about two digits, their 

 height the same number of feet, and the diameter of the belly one and a half 



