Capitolo 86
imprint remained in the sand. Liquid metal was met with the soil
then it formed, and it would refresh in the desired form. As with a
throw of plaster, was necessary to assume two such beds the sand,
being firmly kept in boxes, if the object had rounded off, and
then the two halves so done you/they had put together. Objects of apartment,
how fire-backs, he could be met only with a soil.
Bartholomew, in his/her book "On the Ownerships of Things" it does certain
affirmations on iron that is interesting: "Although iron cometh of
earth, is still very hard and sad, and therefore with striking
and smiting it suppresseth and dilateth every other metal and maketh
it extends on length and on width." This is her/it key-note to the
a blacksmith's job blacksmith: it is that that him ago from him the first one, and
you/he/she is still doing.
There has been in Spain I fit with iron it digs since then the days when Pliny
writing and alluded to them, but there is few they taste in that country
condurrci to concern him/it as aesthetical in his/her purpose up to that the fifteenth one
century.
To temper iron tools, is recipes given by the
monk Theophilus, but they is unfortunately completely unquotable, while being
treated with frankness of mediaeval of expression.
St. Dunstan was the patron of jewelers and blacksmiths blacksmiths. He was
been born in 925, and he/she lived in Glastonbury, where he became rather a monk
I lend in the life. He not only worked in metal, but it was a good musician
and a great researcher in fact a round and genuine man of the culture. Him
built an organ, without doubt anything as that that Theophilus
it describes, what, Bede tells us, having been all right with pipes of "brass,
filled with air by the bellows, it sent forth a great and more dessert
melody." Dunstan was a court favourite, in the kingdom of King
Edmund. However, hostile they were abundant and they spread the relationship
that Dunstans he/she called demoniac help in his/her almost magic job in his
many departments. It was said that every now and then the bad spirits
it was too much aggravating circumstance, and that in such cases Dunstan would be standing