The Ten Books on Architecture, 1.4.3

Vitruvius  translated by Morris Hicky Morgan

« Vitr. 1.4 | Vitr. 1.4 | Vitr. 1.5 | About This Work »

3For heat is a universal solvent, melting out of things their power of resistance, and sucking away and removing their natural strength with its fiery exhalations so that they grow soft, and hence weak, under its glow. We see this in the case of iron which, however hard it may naturally be, yet when heated thoroughly in a furnace fire can be easily worked into any kind of shape, and still, if cooled while it is soft and white hot, it hardens again with a mere dip into cold water and takes on its former quality.

« Vitr. 1.4 | Vitr. 1.4 | Vitr. 1.5 | About This Work »