CHAP. 30.—THE POINTS THAT ARE DESIRABLE OR OTHERWISE IN
THESE TABLES.
The principal merit of these tables is to have veins
1 arranged
in waving lines, or else forming spirals like so many little
whirlpools. In the former arrangement the lines run in an
oblong direction, for which reason these are called "tiger"
2
tables; while in the latter the marks are circling and spiral,
and hence they are styled "panther"
3 tables. There are
some tables also with wavy, undulating marks, and which are
more particularly esteemed if these resemble the eyes on a
peacock's tail. Next in esteem to these last, as well as those
previously mentioned, is the veined wood,
4 covered, as it were,
with dense masses of grain, for which reason these tables have
received the name of "apiatæ."
5 But the colour of the wood
is the quality that is held in the highest esteem of all: that
of wine mixed with honey
6 being the most prized, the veins being
peculiarly refulgent. Next to the colour, it is the size that is
prized; at the present day whole trunks are greatly admired,
and sometimes several are united in a single table.
The peculiar defects in these kinds of tables are woodiness,
7
such being the name given to the table when the wood is dull,
common-looking, indistinct, or else has mere simple marks
upon it, resembling the leaves of the plane-tree; also, when
it resembles the veins of the holm-oak or the colour of that
tree; and, a fault to which it is peculiarly liable from the
effect of heat or wind, when it has flaws in it or hair-like lines
resembling flaws; when it has a black mark, too, running
through it resembling a murena in appearance, various streaks
that look like crow scratches, or knots like poppy heads, with a
colour all over nearly approaching to black, or blotches of a
sickly hue. The barbarous tribes bury this wood in the
ground while green, first giving it a coating of wax. When
it comes into the workmen's hands, they put it for seven days
beneath a heap of corn, and then take it out for as many
more: it is quite surprising how greatly it loses in weight by
this process. Shipwrecks have recently taught us also that this
wood is dried by the action of sea-water, and that it thereby
acquires a hardness
8 and a degree of density which render it
proof against corruption no other method is equally sure to
produce these results. These tables are kept best, and shine
with the greatest lustre, when rubbed with the dry hand,
more particularly just after bathing. As if this wood had
been created for the behoof of wine, it receives no injury
from it.
(16.) As this tree is one among the elements of more civilized life, I think that it is as well on the present occasion to
dwell a little further upon it. It was known to Homer even,
and in the Greek it is known by the name of "thyon,"
9 or
sometimes "thya." He says that the wood of this tree was
among the unguents that were burnt for their pleasant odour
by Circe,
10 whom he would represent as being a goddess; a
circumstance which shows the great mistake committed by
those who suppose that perfumes are meant under that name,
11
seeing that in the very same line he says that cedar and larch
were burnt along with this wood, a thing that clearly proves
that it is only of different trees that he is speaking. Theophrastus, an author who wrote in the age succeeding that of
Alexander the Great, and about the year of the City of Rome
440, has awarded a very high rank to this tree, stating that it
is related that the raftering of the ancient temples used to be
made of this wood, and that the timber, when employed in
roofs, will last for ever, so to say, being proof against all decay,—quite incorruptible, in fact. He also says that there is
nothing more full of wavy veins
12 than the root of this tree, and
that there is no workmanship in existence more precious than
that made of this material. The finest kind of citrus grows,
he says, in the vicinity of the Temple of Jupiter Hammon;
he states also that it is produced in the lower part of Cyre-
naica. He has made no mention, however, of the tables that
are made of it; indeed, we have no more ancient accounts of
them than those of the time of Cicero, from which it would
appear that they are a comparatively recent invention.