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CHAPTER IX - ARTIFICIAL WARMTH.—RING AND STAPLE.—THE FAN

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 August 2010

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Summary

ARTIFICIAL WARMTH

PASSING from the direct to the indirect comforts of a house-hold, we will take Artificial Warmth.

The savage, as a matter of necessity, makes a fire in the middle of his hut, and lets the smoke have its own way. Sometimes, as is the case with the North American Indians, the top of the conical hut is open, and the whole edifice is a single chimney of large dimensions, something like the “chimney-corner” of past days, which only survives in such places as the New Forest.

Then there are the various Kafir tribes of Southern Africa. They have no aperture in their huts except the tiny doorway, which can only be entered on hands and knees. But they must have their fire. No argument can persuade them that they had better make their fire and cook their food outside the hut. So the wood-smoke fills the hut, coats it with a lining of soot, and gets out as it can through the sticks and withes of which the simple edifice is built.

As a contrast, we have the oil-lamp of Esquimaux-land, where there is no provision for ventilation, where the snow-houses are tightly closed and crammed with inhabitants, and where no one seems to need fresh air.

The next step in civilisation is to construct a tube for the purpose of carrying off the smoke, such as we know by the name of chimney or flue, and to place the fire within it.

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Chapter
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Nature's Teachings
Human Invention Anticipated by Nature
, pp. 412 - 421
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009
First published in: 1877

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