ROOK XII. 



579 



A — Pots having spouts. B — Pots without spouts. C — Lids. 



which hold two of these pots, are divided into three parts ; the lowest part is a 

 foot high, and has an opening at the front for the draught ; the top of this is 

 covered with iron plates, which are perforated near the edges, and these 

 support iron rods, upon which the firewood is placed. The middle part of the 

 furnace is one and a half feet high, and has a mouth in front, so that the wood 

 may be inserted ; the top of this has rods, upon which the bottom of the pots 

 stand. The upper part is about two feet high, and the pots are also two feet 

 high and one digit thick ; these have below their mouths a long, slender spout. 

 In order that the mouth of the pot may be covered, an earthenware hd is 

 made which fits into it. For every two of these pots there must be one pot 



like product. The equipment described for pjnrites in the next paragraph would be obviously 

 useful only for coarse material. 



But little can be said on the history of sulphur ; it is mentioned often enough in the Bible 

 and also by Homer (Od. xxii., 481). The Greeks apparently knew how to refine it, although 

 neither Dioscorides nor Pliny specifically describes such an operation. Agricola says (De 

 Nat. Fos., 220) : " Sulphur is of two kinds ; the mineral, which the Latins call vivum, and 

 the Greeks apyron, which means ' not exposed to the fire ' (ignem non expertum) as 

 rightly interpreted by Celsius ; and the artificial, called by the Greeks pepyromcnon, that 

 is, ' exposed to the fire.' " In Book X., the expression sulfur ignem non expertum frequently 

 appears, no doubt in Agricola's mind for native sulphur, although it is quite possible that 

 the Greek distinction was between " flowers " of sulphur and the " wax-like " variety. 



