4i8 



BOOK IX. 



If the tin is so impure that it cracks when struck with the hammer, it 

 is not immediately made into lattice-Uke bars, but into the cakes which I have 

 spoken of before, and these are refined by melting again on a hearth. This 

 hearth consists of sandstones, which slope toward the centre and a httle 

 toward a dipping-pot ; at their joints they are covered with lute. Dry 

 logs are arranged on each side, alternately upright and lengthwise, and more 

 closely in the middle ; on this wood are placed five or six cakes of tin which 

 aU together weigh about six centumpondia ; the wood having been kindled, 



A — Hearths. B — Dipping-pots. C — Wood. D — Cakes. E — Ladle. F — Copper 

 PLATE. G — Lattice-shaped bars. H — Iron dies. I — Wooden mallet. K — Mass 



of tin bars. L — Shovel. 



the tin drips down and flows continuously into the dipping-pot which 

 is on the floor. The impure tin sinks to the bottom of this dipping-pot 

 and the pure tin floats on the top ; then both are ladled out by the master, 

 who first takes out the pure tin, and by pouring it over thick plates of copper 

 makes lattice-hke bars. Afterward he takes out the impure tin from which 

 he makes cakes ; he discriminates between them, when he ladles and pours, 

 by the ease or difficulty of the flow. One centumpondium of the lattice-Uke 

 bare sells for more than a centumpondium of cakes, for the price of the former 



