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University of California Berkeley
The Joseph M. BranstenCoffee and Tea Collection
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A TREATISE ' /OJTADULTERATIONS OF FOOD,ANDUotoonOt
EXHIBITINGFRAUDULENT SOPHISTICATIONSOFBREAD, BEER, WINE, SPIRITUOUS LIQUORS, TEA, COFFEE,
Cream, Confectionery, Vinegar, Mustard, Pepper, Cheese, Olive Oil, Pickles,AND OTHER ARTICLES EMPLOYED IN DOMESTIC ECONOMV.
of tretetting tfjenu
ERE ISDEATHIN THEKin6s C . IVTT.
77/E SECOND EDITION.BY FREDRICK ACCUM,
Operative Chemist, Lecturer on Practical Chemistry, Mineralogy, and on Chemistryapplied to the Arts and Manufactures ; Member of the Royal Irish Academy ;
Fellow of the Linnaean Society; Member of the Royal Academy ofSciences, and of the Royal Society of Arts of Berlin, &c. &c.31outson :
OLD BY LONGMAN, HURST, REES, ORME, AND 'BROWN,PATERNOSTER ROW.
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TO
HIS GRACETHE DUKE OF NORTHUMBERLAND.
MY LORD DUKE,The interest your Grace takes-on
all occasions in promoting the applicationof Chemical Philosophy to the useful pur-poses of life, has emboldened me to laybefore you the present Treatise, which ori-ginated in a suggestion of your Grace,while cultivating the study ofExperimentalChemistry in my Laboratory.,
Be pleased, My Lord Duke, toaccept this public testimony of profound
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11 DEDICATION.
respect and veneration for your Grace'sexalted moral virtues and high intellectualendowments.
That your Grace may retain9through a long and happy life, the ardentattachment to the pursuits ofPhilosophicalChemistry, which has so greatly endearedyour renowned name to the votaries of thatimportant and useful branch ofknowledge^is the sincere wish oj}
MY LORD DUKE,Your Grace's most devoted,
Humble Servant,FREDRICK
Old Compton Street, Soho.January the 19th,
1820.
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prefaceTO THE FIRST EDITION.
Old Compton Street, Sola.THIS Treatise, as its title expresses, is intended
to exhibit easy methods of detecting the fraudu-lent adulterations of food, and of other arti-cles, classed either among the necessaries orluxuries of the table ; and to put the unwary ontheir guard against the use of such commoditiesas are contaminated with substances deleteriousto health.
Every person is aware that bread, beer, wine,
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lr PREFACE.
and other substances employed in domestic econo-my, are frequently met with in an adulteratedstate : and the late convictions of numerous in-dividuals for counterfeiting and adulterating tea,coffee, bread, beer, pepper, and other articles ofdiet, are still fresh in the memory of the public.
To such perfection of ingenuity has the systemof counterfeiting and adulterating various com-modities of life arrived in this country, that spu-rious articles are every where to be found in themarket, made up so skilfully, as to elude the dis-crimination of the most experienced judges.
But of all possible nefarious traffic and decep-tion, practised by mercenary dealers, that of adul-terating the articles intended for human food withingredients deleterious to health, is the most cri-minal, and, in the mind of every honet man,mustexcite feelings of regret and disgust. Numerous
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PREFACE. V
facts are on record, of human food, contaminatedwith poisonous ingredients, having been vendedto the public ; and the annals of medicine recordtragical events ensuing from the use of suchfood.
The eagar and insatiable thirst for gain, is proofagainst prohibitions and penalties ; and the pos-sible sacrifice of a fellow-creature's life, is asecondary consideration among unprincipleddealers.
However invidious the office may appear, andhowever painful the duty may be of exposingthe names of individuals, who have been con-victed of adulterating food ; yet it was necessary,for the verification of my statement, that casesshould be adduced in their support : and I havecarefully avoided citing any, except those whichare authenticated in Parliamentary documentsand other public records.
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Tl PREFACE*
To render this Treatise still more useful, Ihave also animadverted on certain material errors,sometimes unconsciously committed through ac-cident or ignorance, in private families, duringthe preparation of various articles of food, and ofdelicacies for the table.
In stating the experimental proceedings neces-ary for the detection of the frauds which it hasbeen my object to expose, I have confined myselfto the task of pointing out such operations onlyas may be performed by persons unacquaintedwith chemical science; and it has been mypurpose to express all necessary rules and instruc-tions in the plainest language, divested of thoserecondite terms of science, which would be outof place in a work intended for general peru-sal.
The design of the Treatise will be fully an-swered, if the views here given should induce a
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PREFACE. Vll
single reader to pursue the object for which itis published ; or if it should tend to impress onthe mind of the Public the magnitude of an evil,which, in many cases, prevails to an extent soalarming, that we may exclaim, with the sons ofthe Prophet,
TO&m to Heat?) m t&* pot/'For the abolition of such nefarious practices, it
is the interest of all classes of the community toco-operate.
FREDRICK ACCUM.
LONDON,1820.
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ADVERTISEMENTTO
ISttitfoiu
THE sale of one thousand copies of theTreatise on the Adulterations ofFood, withinone month after its publication, has been asufficient inducement to reprint the work.
Several additions have been made tothe edition now presented to the reader;among which will be noticed, the adultera-tion of milk of cinnamon of isinglass ofSpanish liquorice juice, and of several otherarticles employed in housekeeping, with the
A 5
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X ADVERTISEMENT.methods of detecting the frauds. Someanimadversions have also been made on thedisgusting practice of inflating butchers'meat and fish ; and on the frauds committedin the coal trade.
I embrace this opportunity of offering mypublic expression of thanks for the flatteringcompliments which I have received fromnumerous individuals of high rank and dig-nified station, and from other distinguishedpersons, whose opinion and judgment I re-spect. To those who have chosen anony-mously to transmit to me their opinionconcerning this book, together with theirmaledictions, I have little to say ; but theymay rest assured, that their menaces willin no way prevent me from endeavour-ing to put the unwary on their guard againstIhe frauds of dishonest men, wherever they
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ADVERTISEMENT. XI
may originate ; and those assailants in am-bush are hereby informed, that, in everysucceeding edition of the work, I shall con-tinue to hand down to posterity the infamywhich justly attaches to the knaves anddishonest dealers, who have been convictedat the bar of Public Justice of renderinghuman food deleterious to health.
FREDRICK ACCUM,
Compton-streetj Soho,April 1820.
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CONTENTS.
PagePRELIMINARY REMARKS ONTHE ADULTERATIONS OFFOOD 1
ADULTERATIONS OF DRUGSAND MEDICINES, and methodof detecting them 15
Adulteration ofPeruvian Bark .... 16Adulteration of Rhubard Powder,
Ipecacuanha, $c 17Adulteration of Spirit ofHartshorn,and method of detecting it 19
Adulteration of Magnesia, and me*thod ofdetecting it 20
Adulteration of Calcined Magnesia,and method of detecting it 21
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XIV CONTENTS.
Adulteration of Calomel, and methodofdetecting it , 22
Adulteration ofSyrup ofBuckthorn,Worm-Seed, and Arrow Root Pow-der ib.
Adulteration of Essential Oils, andmethods of detecting it 2
ADULTERATION OF PAINTERS'COLOURS, and methods of detect-ing it 26
Adulteration of Ultramarine, andmethod of detecting it 27
Adulteration of Carmine, and methodof detecting it , . ib.
Adulteration ofMadder and CarmineLake, and method of detecting it .. ib.
Adulteration of Antwerp Blue, andmethod of detecting it ib.
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XVI CONTENTS*PageIMPORTANCE OF THE PURITY
OF WATER EMPLOYED INDOMESTIC ECONOMY 43
Characters of Good Water 49Easy method of curing Hard Water 5 2Chemical Constitution of the Watersused in Domestic Econony and theArts 53
Rain Water ib.Snow Water.. 54Spring Water , , 56River Water 60Thames Water 62Substances usually contained in Com-mon Water, and Tests by whichthey are detected 66
Deleterious Effects ofkeeping Waterfor Domestic Economy, in LeadenReservoirs r% ; 74
Method of detecting Lead in Water.. 86
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CONTENTS. XV11PageADULTERATION OF WINE 92
Crusting of Wine Bottles, and othernefarious Artifices committed byfraudulent WineMerchants 96
DangerousAdulteration ofWine withpoisonous Substances 102
Accidental Impregnation of Winewith Lead. 105
Test for detecting the deleteriousAdulterations of Wine 108Method of detecting extraneous Co-
lours in Red Wine.... IllSpecific Differences of various kindsofforeign Wines , 113
ChemicalConstitution and ComponentParts of Wine. 115
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XVJii CONTENTS.PageMethod of ascertaining the Quantity
ofSpirit contained in various sorts
of Wine ,117
Per Centage ofAlcohol contained invarious kinds of Wine, and otherfermented Liquors 120
Chemical Constitution ofHome-madeWines 122ADULTERATION OF BREAD 125Adulteration of Bread with Alum. , 127Adulteration ofBread with Potatoes 133Method of detecting the presence ofAlum in Bread. 139
Method ofjudging of the GoodnessofBreads-Corn and Bread-Flour. . 142ADULTERATION OF BEER 145
Early practice of adulterating Beerwith Substances noxious to Health,tind rapid Progress of this Fraud. 148
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CONTENTS.Page
Druggists and Grocers prosecutedand convictedfor supplying illegalIngredients to Brewersfor adulte-rating Beer 158
Remarks on Porter* 161Strength and Specific Differences of
different kinds ofPorter 166List of Publicans prosecuted andconvicted for adulterating Beerwith illegal Ingredients, and formixing Table Beer with theirStrong Beer 171
Fraudulent Practice of adulteratingBeer with substances not deleteri-ous to health 173
Illegal Ingredients seized at variousBreweries and Brewers' Druggists 9 181
Adulteration of Strong Beer withSmall Beer.. 185
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XX CONTENTS.PagtList of Brewers prosecuted and con-
victedfor adulterating StrongBeerwith Table Beer 189
Remarks with regard to the Origin ofthe Beer catted Porter , 191
Composition of Old or EntireBeer. . 194Fraudulent Practice
of convertingNew Beer into Old or Entire Beer 196Fraudulent Practice of increasing
the intoxicating quality of Beer... 199Brewers prosecuted and convictedfor receiving and using illegal In-gredients in their Brewings 201
Method ofdetecting the Adulterationof Beer 207
Method ofascertaining the QuantityofSpirit contained in Porter, Ale,or other kinds of Malt Liquors.... 209
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CONTENTS. XXi
Per Centage ofAlcohol contained inPorter, Ale, and other kinds ofMalt Liquors 211
COUNTERFEIT TEA-LEAVES ... 213List of Grocers prosecuted and con-
victedfor adulterating Tea 230Method of detecting the Adultera-
tions of Tea-Leaves 231COUNTERFEIT COFFEE 238List of Grocers prosecuted by the
Solicitor of the Excise and con-victedfor adulterating Coffee 241
ADULTERATION OF BRANDY,RUM, AND GIN 249
Method of detecting the Adultera-tions of Brandy, Rum, and MaltSpirit 261
Method of detecting the Presence ofLead in Spirituous Liquors 272
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XXli CONTENTS.PageMethod of ascertaining the Quantity
of Alcohol in different kinds ofSpirituous Liquors 273
Per Centage of Alcohol contained invarious kinds ofSpirituous Liquors 275
POISONOUS CHEESE, and methodof detecting it 276
COUNTERFEIT PEPPER, and me-thod of detecting it 284
White Pepper^ and method of manu-facturing it 290
POISONOUS CAYENNE PEPPER,and method of detecting it 292
POISONOUS PICKLES, and me-thod of detecting them 295
ADULTERATION OF VINEGAR,and method of detecting it.... 299
Distilled Vinegar 300
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CONTENTS. XXlliPageADULTERATION OF CREAM,
and method of detecting it 302
POISONOUS CONFECTIONERY,and method of detecting it 305POISONOUS CATSUP, and methodof detecting it 309
ADULTERATION OF LOZENGES,and method ofdetecting it 314
POISONOUS OLIVE OIL, and me-thod of detecting it 318
ADULTERATION OF LEMONACID, and method of detecting it 321
POISONOUS SODA WATER, andmethod of detecting it..... 324POISONOUS ANCHOVY SAUCE,and method of detecting it 325
POISONOUS CUSTARD.., 328
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xxir CONTENTS.PagePOISONOUS MUSHROOMS 332
Mushroom Catsup 338
ADULTERATION OF MILK, andmethod ofdetecting it 340ADULTERATION OF ISINGLASS,and method of detecting it 342
ADULTERATION OF CINNAMON,and method of detecting it 344
ADULTERATION OF MUSTARD 346ADULTERATION OF SPANISHLIQUORICE 548
FOOD POISONED BY COPPERVESSELS, and method of detect-ing it 350
FOOD POISONED BY LEADENVESSELS,
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A
TREATISEONADULTERATIONS OF FOOD,
AND
PRELIMINARY REMARKSoxTHE ADULTERATIONS OF FOOD.
OF all the frauds practised by mercenarydealers, there is none more reprehensible,and at the same time more prevalent, thanthe sophistication of the various articles offood.
This unprincipled and nefarious practice,increasing in degree as it has been found
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2 PRELIMINARY REMARKS.difficult of detection, is now applied to al-most every commodity which can be classedamong either the necessaries or the luxu-ries of life, and is carried on to a mostalarming extent in every part of the UnitedKingdom.
It has been pursued by men, who, fromthe magnitude and apparent respectabilityof their concerns, would be the least ob-noxious to public suspicion ; and their suc-cessful example has called forth, fromamong the retail dealers, a multitude ofcompetitors in the same iniquitous course.To such perfection of ingenuity has this
system of adulterating food arrived, thatspurious articles of various kinds are everywhere to be found, made up so skilfully asto baffle the discrimination of the most ex-perienced judges
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PRELIMINARY REMARKS. 3
Among the number of substances used indomestic economy which are now very ge-nerally found sophisticated, may be dis-tinguished tea, coffee, bread, beer, wine,spirituous liquors, salad oil, pepper, vine-gar, mustard, cream, comfitures, catsup, andother articles of diet and luxury.
Indeed, it would be difficult to mention asingle article of food which is not to be metwith in an adulterated state ; and there aresome substances which are scarcely ever tobe procured genuine.Some of these spurious compounds are
comparatively harmless when used as food ;and as in these cases merely substances ofinferior value are substituted for more costlyand genuine ingredients, the sophistication,though it may affect our purse, does notinjure our health. Of this kind are the ma-
B 2
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4 PRELIMINARY REMARKS.nufacture of factitious pepper, the adulter-ations of mustard, vinegar, cream, &cOthers, however, are highly deleterious ;and to this class belong the adulterations ofbeer, wines, spirituous liquors, pickles, sa-lad oil, and many others.
There are particular chemists who makeit a regular trade to supply drugs or nefa-rious preparations to the unprincipled brewerof porter and ale ; others perform the sameoffice to the wine and spirit merchant ; andothers again to the grocer and the oilman.The operators carry on their processeschiefly in secrecy, and under some delusivefirm, with the ostensible denotements of afair and lawful establishment.
These illicit pursuits have assumed allthe order and method of a regular trade ;thqy may severally claim to be distinguished
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PRELIMINARY REMARKS. 6
as an art and mystery ; for the workmenemployed in them are often wholly igno-rant of the nature of the substances whichpass through their hands, and of the pur-poses to which they are ultimately applied.To elude the vigilance of the inquisitive,
to defeat the scrutiny ofthe revenue officer,and to ensure the secrecy of these mys-teries, the processes are very ingeniouslydivided and subdivided among individualoperators, and the manufacture is purposelycarried on in separate establishments. Thetask of proportioning the ingredients for useis assigned to one individual, while the com-position
and preparation of them may besaid to form a distinct part of the business,and is entrusted to another workman. Mostof the articles are transmitted to the con-sumer in a disguised state, or in such a form
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O PRELIMINARY REMARKS*that their real nature cannot possibly bedetected by the unwary. Thus the poison-ous extract of cocculus indicus, employedby fraudulent manufacturers of malt-liquorsto impart an intoxicating quality to porteror ale, is known in the market by the nameof black extract; and another poisonoussubstance, technically called multum, com-posed of extract of gentian root, liquoricejuice, and extract of cocculus indicus, isused by fraudulent brewers to economisemalt and hops.The quantities of cocculus indicus berries,
as well as of black extract, imported intothis country for adulterating malt liquors,^re enormous. It forms a considerablebranch of commerce in the hands of a fewbrokers : yet, singular as it may seem, noinquiry appears to have been hitherto made
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8 PRELIMINARY REMARKS.
merous individuals, by whom I have beenprofessionally engaged to examine certainmixtures, said to be perfectly innocent,which are used in very extensive manufac-tories of the above description. Indeed,during the long period devoted to the prac-tice ofmy profession, I have had abundantreason to be convinced that a vast numberof dealers, of the highest respectability,have vended to their customers articlesabsolutely poisonous, which they them-selves considered as harmless, and whichthey would not have offered for sale, hadthey been apprised of the spurious and per-nicious nature of the compounds, and of thepurposes to which they were destined.
For instance, I have known cases in whichbrandy merchants were not aware that thesubstance which
they frequently pur-
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PRELIMINARY REMARKS. 9
chase under the delusie name of jtash, forstrengthening and clarifying spirituous li-quors, and which is held out as consistingof burnt sugar and isinglass only, in theform of an extract, is in reality a compoundof sugar with extract ofcapsicum ; and thatto the acrid and pungent qualities of thecapsicum is to be ascribed the heightenedflavour of brandy and rum, when colouredwith the above-mentioned matter.
In other cases the ale-brewer has beensupplied with ground coriander-seeds, pre-viously mixed with a portion of ground nuxvomica, under the delusive name of Fabaamara, to give a narcotic property to thebeverage.
It is a painful reflection, that the divisionof labour which has been so instrumental inbringing the manufactures of this countryto their present flourishing state, should
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10 PRELIMINARY REMARKS.have also tended to conceal and facilitatethe fraudulent practices in question; andthat from a correspondent ramification ofcommerce into a multitude of distinctbranches, particularly in the metropolis andthe large towns of the empire, the traffic inadulterated commodities should find its waythrough so many circuitous channels, as todefy the most scrutinizing endeavour totrace it to its source.
It is not less lamentable that the exten-sive application of chemistry to the usefulpurposes of life, should have been pervertedinto an auxiliary to this nefarious traffic.But, happily for the science, it may, with-out difficulty, be converted into a means ofdetecting the abuse ; to effect which, verylittle chemical skill is required; and thecourse to be pursued forms the object of thefollowing pages.
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PRELIMINARY REMARKS. 11
The baker asserts that he does not putalum into bread ; but he is well aware that,in purchasing a certain quantity of halfspoiled flour, he must take a sack of sharpivhites (a term given to flour contaminatedwith a quantity of alum), without which itwould be
impossible forhim to produce
light, white, and porous bread, from a half-spoiled material.The wholesale mealman frequently pur-
chases this spurious commodity, (whichforms a separate branch of business in thehands of certain individuals,) in order toenable himself to sell his decayed flour.
Other individuals furnish the baker withalum mixed up with salt, under the obscuredenomination of stuff. There are wholesalemanufacturing chemists, whose sole busi-ness is to crystallise alum, in such a formas will adapt this salt to the purpose of be-B6
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12 PRELIMINARY REMARKS.iug mixed in a crystalline state with thecrystals of common salt, to disguise thecharacter of the compound. The mixturecalled stuffi is composed of one part ofalum, in minute crystals, and three of com-mon salt.
In many other trades a similar mode ofproceeding prevails. The practice of so-phisticating the necessaries of life, beingreduced to systematic regularity, is rankedby public opinion among other mercantilepursuits ; and is not only regarded withless disgust than formerly, but is almostgenerally esteemed as a justifiable way towealth.
It is really astonishing that the penallaw is not more effectually enforced againstpractices so inimical to the public welfare*The man who robs a fellow subject of a fewshillings on the high-way, is sentenced to
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PRELIMINARY REMARKS. 13
death, while he who distributes a slowpoison to a whole community, escapes un-punished.
It has been urged by some, that, underso vast a system of finance as that of GreatBritain, it is expedient that the revenueshould be collected in large amounts ; andtherefore that the severity of the law shouldbe relaxed in favour of all mercantile con-cerns in proportion to their extent : encou-ragement must be given to large capitalists ;and where an extensive brewery or distil-lery yields an important contribution to therevenue, no strict scrutiny need be adoptedin regard to
thequality
of the article fromwhich such contribution is raised, providedthe excise and customs do not suffer by thefraud.
But the principles of the constitution
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14 PRELIMINARY REMARKS.afford no sanction to this preference, and thetrue interests of the country require that itshould be abolished ; for a tax dependantupon deception must be at best precarious,and must be, sooner or later, diminished bythe irresistible diffusion of knowledge.Sound policy requires that the law shouldbe impartially enforced in all cases ; and ifits penalties were extended to abuses ofwhich it does not now take cognizance,there is no doubt that the revenue would beabundantly benefitted.Thus devoted to disease by baker, brewer,
grocer, wine merchant, &c. the physician iscalled to our assistance ; but here again, as Is'hall state presently, the pernicious systemof fraud, as it has given the blow, steps into defeat the remedy.
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ADULTERATIONSOF
And Methods of detecting them.
THE species of fraud to which I shallnow but briefly advert, and which has in-creased to so alarming an extent, that itloudly calls for the interference of Go-vernment, is the adulteration of drugs andmedicines.
Nine tenths of the most potent drugs andchemical preparations used in pharmacy, arevended in a sophisticated state by dealerswho would be the last to be suspected.
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16 ADULTERATION OFADULTERATION OF PERUVIAN BARK.IT is well known, that of the article, of Pe-
ruvian bark there is a variety of species in-ferior to the genuine ; that too little discri-mination is exercised by the collectors ofthis precious medicament ; that it is care-lessly assorted, and is frequently packed ingreen hides; that much of it arrives inSpain in a half-decayed state, mixed withfragments
of other vegetables and variousextraneous substances ; and in this state isdistributed throughout Europe.
But, as if this were not a sufficient dete-rioration, the public are often
served witha spurious compound of mahogany sawdustand oak wood, ground into powder, mixedwith a proportion of good quinquina, andsold as genuine bark powder.
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DRUGS AND MEDICINES. 17
Every chemist knows that there are millsconstantly at work in this metropolis, whichfurnish bark powder at a much cheaper ratethan the substance can be procured for inits natural state. The price of the best ge-nuine bark, upon an average, is not lowerthan twelve shillings the pound; but im-mense quantities of powder bark are sup-plied to the apothecaries at three or fourshillings a pound. There is no ready testfor detecting the fraud.
ADULTERATION OF RHUBARB POWDER,IPECACUANHA, &C.
IT is also notorious that there are ma-nufacturers of spurious rhubarb powder,ipecacuanha powder*, James's powder, and
* Of this root, several varieties are imported. The
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18 ADULTERATION OF
other simple and compound medicines ofgreat potency, who carry on their diabolicaltrade on an amazingly large scale. Indeed,the quantity of medical preparations thussophisticated exceeds belief. Cheapness,and not genuineness and excellence, is thegrand desideratum with the unprincipleddealers in drugs and medicines.Those who are familiar with chemistry
may easily convince themselves of the ex-istence of the fraud, by subjecting to a che-mical examination either spirits ofhartshorn,
white sort, which has no wrinkles, and no perceptiblebitterness in taste, and which, though taken in a largedose, has scarcely any effect at all, after being pul-verised by fraudulent druggists, and mixed with aportion of emetic tartar, is sold at a low price, for thepowder of genuine ipecacuanha root. There is noready method known to detect the fraud.
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DRUGS AND MEDICINES. 19magnesia, calcined magnesia, calomel, orany other chemical preparation in generaldemand.
ADULTERATION OF SPIRIT OFHARTSHORN,
And Method of detecting it.SPIRIT of hartshorn is counterfeited by
mixing liquid caustic ammonia with the dis-tilled spirit of hartshorn, to increase thepungency of its odour, and to enable it tobear an addition of water.The fraud is detected by adding spirit of
wine to the sophisticated spirit ; for, if noconsiderable coagulation ensues, the adul-teration is proved. It may also be disco-vered by the hartshorn spirit not producinga brisk effervescence when mixed with mu-riatic or nitric acid.
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20 ADULTERATION OF
ADULTERATION OF MAGNESIA,AndMethod of detecting it.
MAGNESIA usually contains a portion oflime, originating from hard water being usedinstead of soft, in the preparation of this me-dicine.To ascertain the purity of magnesia, add
to a portion of it a little sulphuric acid, di-luted with ten times its bulk of water. Ifthe magnesia be completely soluble, andthe solution remains transparent, it may bepronounced pure; but not otherwise. Or,dissolve a portion of the magnesia in muri-atic acid, and add a solution of sub-carbo-nate of ammonia. If any lime be present,it will form a precipitate ; whereas puremagnesia will remain in solution.
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DRUGS AND MEDICINES. 21ADULTERATION OF CALCINED
MAGNESIA,And Method of detecting it.
CALCINED magnesia is seldom met within a pure state. It may be assayed by thesame tests as the common magnesia. Itought not to effervesce at all, with dilutesulphuric acid ; and, if the magnesia andacid be put together into one scale of a ba-lance, no diminution of weight should ensueon mixing them together. Calcined mag-nesia, however, is very seldom so pure asto be totally dissolved by diluted sulphuricacid; for a small insoluble residue generallyremains, consisting chiefly of silicious earth,derived from the alkali employed in thepreparation of it. The solution in sulphu-ric acid, when largely diluted, ought not toafford any precipitation by the addition ofoxalate of ammonia.
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22 ADULTERATION OF
ADULTERATION OF CALOMEL,And Method of detecting it.
THE genuineness of calomel may be as-certained by boiling, for a few minutes, onepart with ^ part of muriate of ammonia inten parts of distilled water. When carbo-nate of potash is added to the filtered solu-tion, no precipitation will ensue if the calo-mel be pure.
ADULTERATION OF SYRUP OF BUCK-THORN, WORM-SEED, AND ARROW-ROOT POWDER.SYRXJP of buckthorn, for example, instead
of being prepared from the juice of buck-thorn berries,(Vhamnus catharticns,) ismadefrom the fruit of the blackberry bearing
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DRUGS ANI} MEDICINES. 23
alder, and the dogberry tree, A mixture ofthe berries of the buckthorn and blackberrybearing alder, and of the dogberry tree,may be seen publicly exposed for sale bysome of the venders of medicinal herbs.This abuse may be discovered by openingthe berries : those ofbuckthorn have almostalways four seeds; of the alder, two; andof the dogberry, only one. Buckthorn ber-ries, bruised on white paper, stain it of a
green colour, which the other do not.There is no method of detecting the ge-nuineness of the buckthorn syrup.
Instead of worm-seed [arlemisia san-tonica~\ the seeds of tansey are frequentlyoffered for sale, or a mixture of both.Most of the arrow-root, the fecula of the
maranta arudinacea, sold by druggists, is amixture of potatoe starch and arrow-root.
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24 ADULTERATION OF
ADULTERATION OF ESSENTIAL OILS,And Methods of detecting them.
A GREAT many of the essential oils ob-tained from the more expensive spices, arefrequently so much adulterated, that it isnot easy to meet with such as are at all fitfor use : nor are these adulterations easilydiscoverable. The grosser abuses, indeed,may be readily detected. Thus, if the oilbe adulterated with alcohol, it will turnmilky on the addition of water ; if with ex-pressed oils, alcohol will dissolve the vola-tile, and leave the other behind ; if with oilof turpentine, on dipping a piece of paperin the mixture, and drying it with a gentleheat, the turpentine will be betrayed byits smell. The more subtle artists* bow-
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DRUGS AND MEDICINES. 25
ever, have contrived other methods of so-phistication, which elude all trials. And asall volatile oils agree in their general pro-perties of solubility in spirit of wine, andvolatility in the heat of boiling water, &c.it is plain that they may be variously mixedwith each other, or the dearer sophisticatedwith the cheaper, without any possibility ofdiscovering the abuse by any of the before-mentioned trials. Perfumers assert thatthe smell and taste are the only certaintests of which the nature of the thing willadmit. For example, if a bark should havein every respect the appearance of goodcinnamon, and should be proved indisput-ably to be the genuine bark of the cinna-mon tree ; yet if it want the cinnamon fla-vour, or has it but in a low degree, we rejectit ; and the case is the same with the essen-
c
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26 ADULTERATION OFtial oil of cinnamon. It is only from useand habit, or comparisons with specimensof known quality, that we can judg of thegoodness, either of the drugs themselves, orof their oils.
ADULTERATION OF COLOURSUSED IN PAINTING,Jlnd Methods of detecting them.
PAINTERS' colours, not only those usedby artists, such as ultramarine, carmine,and lake, Antwerp blue, chrome yellow, andIndian ink; but also the coarser colours usedby the common house-painter, are more orless adulterated. Thus, of the latter kind,white lead is mixed with carbonate or sul-phate of barytes ; vermillion with red lead.
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PAINTERS' COLOURS. 27
The following hints may serve to detectthese frauds.
Ultramarine, if genuine, should speedilybecome deprived of its colour when throwninto concentrated nitric acid.
Carmine should be totally soluble inliquid ammonia. It is often mixed withvermillion. This substance is not acted onby liquid.Madder and carmine lakes should be
totally soluble by boiling in concentratedsolution of soda or potash.
Antwerp blue should not become de-prived of its colour when thrown into liquidchlorine.Chrome yellow should not effervesce with
nitric acid.Indian Ink ; the best kind breaks splin-
c2
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28 ADULTERATION OF PAINTERS5 COLOURS.
tery, with a smooth glossy fracture, andfeels soft, and not gritty, when rubbedagainst the teeth.
White lead should be completely solublein nitric acid, and the solution should re-main transparent when mingled with a so-lution of sulphate of soda,
Vermillion should become totally vola-tilized on being exposed to a red heat ; andit should impart a red colour to spirit ofwine, when digested with it.
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OPVARIOUS ARTICLES
USED IN HOUSEKEEPING.
SOAP, POTATOES, BUTTER, PAPER,&C.THE fraud may be detected by pouring
upon one part of the suspected soap, re-duced to thin shavings, six parts, by weight,of rectified spirit of wine; and, sufferingthe mixture to stand in a slightly stoppedbottle in a warm place, the soap, if genuine,
c 3
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30 ADULTERATION OF VARIOUS ARTICLESwill become dissolved : but if adulteratedwith clay, this substance will be left be-hind.
Potatoes are soaked in water to augmenttheir weight.,The inferior sorts of butter are frequently
adulterated with hogs' lard.In the manufacture of printing paper, alarge quantity of plaster of Paris is oftenadded to the paper stuff, to increase theweight of the manufactured article.The selvage of cloth is often dyed with apermanent colour, and artfully stitched tothe edge of cloth dyed with a fugitivedye.The frauds committed in the tanning of
skins, and in the manufacture of cutleryand jewellery, exceed belief,
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USED IN HOUSEKEEPING. 31
FRAUDS PRACTISED IN THE GOAL TRADE,
IN coal sheds the measure as well asthe mixing one kind of coal with another isoften scandalous*; for the Act of Parliamentdoes not take the least notice of the smallmeasures. It is a known fact when a frau-dulent dealer orders in a room of coals, forevery chaldron of 36 bushels, if he does notsend them out at the rate of 42 bushelsagain, he will be dissatisfied with his mea-sure. This is extremely hard upon thelower class of people, who are only able topurchase
apeck,
or half apeck,
at a time :and let the measure be ever so bad, theyhave no means of redress.
*Eddington
on the Coal Trade, p. 94.c 4
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32 FRAUDS PRACTISED With regard to the measure of coal, as
offered in the market, it may be remarkedthat many coal-merchants will promise togive 68 sacks to a room : but here it shouldbe observed, that much depends on the sizeand shape, or, as it is called, the roundnessof the coal, viz. any of the Wall's End,Wellington, Benton,Heaton, Hebron, Percy,Main, Cowper, Blyth, and Hartley, being allput on board of ships in large masses andblocks, round as out of the mine ; it is cer-tain, that, in every room of five chaldronand a half the ingrain, when the round arebroken, every room will measure out from
to 6 chaldron again.Mr. Edington observes, that the differ-
ence is so great between round coals, withregard to absolute quantity, and small dampand dry coals, that
no means can be ob-
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IN THE COAL TRADE. 33
tained to correct and prevent abuse. Thus*if a vat of Wall's End coals be measuredfrom the ship, such measure as the meter
gives,turn over the vat, and break the
round coals to the size the merchant sendsthem out to his customers, then fill up thevat again, and it will be found to over-runa bushel, more or less according to theroundness of the coal. Secondly, a score ismeasured out of Wall's End coals in thepool, into a barge having four rooms, eachcontaining five chaldrons and a half the in-grain ; no sooner does the barge arrive atthe wharf, than the round coals are broken,and, if very dry, the coals being wetted, willincrease in bulk; nor is the coal merchantsatisfied if he does not by this practice sendout from six to six and a quarter, or evensix and a half, chaldron from each room,
c 5
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34 FRAUDS PRACTISED The loss in the use of small coals is more
considerable to the poor, who cannot keeplarge fires. When they want their break-fast or dinner, the time they can spare islimited; and to have their water soonerboiling, or their meals quicker ready, theymust make use of the poker, and lose agreat deal of coal. Hence more bright coalgoes to the dust-hole of the poor man, thanto the dust-hole of a rich family, where, thefire being large, the small coal has morechance of burning.
The loss is still greater to the poor, inconsequence of the inferior sorts of coalwhich are sold to them. If it is the lightsort, it burns too quick, and they consumedouble the quantity ; if the strong sort,it burns too slow, and is nearly as waste-ful ; great quantity of it then goes to
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IN THE COAL TRADE. 35the dust-hole without being lighted atall.
An incorrect opinion is often enter-tained, that the real quantity
of coal con-tained in a sack is lessened by separatingor screening the small from the round coals ;but we must recollect, that any compactbody occupies less space than is required tocontain the same matter, reduced to smallerirregular pieces, or to powder. Now thescreening only takes away the finest dustypart of the coals, and admits more smallpieces of round coals to be filled into thesack.
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36 DISGUSTING PRACTICE OF RENDERINGDISGUSTING PRACTICE OF RENDER-ING BUTCHER'S MEAT, FISH, ANDPOULTRY, UNWHOLESOME.THE abominable custom daily practised of
blowing, as it is technically called, or inflat-ing butchers' meat, especially the joints ofveal and Iamb, with the breath respiredfrom the lungs, to make it appear white andglistening, is a practice which claims the in-terference of the Magistrates.
This detestable custom unquestionablyrenders meat not only unfit for keeping, butlikewise unwholesome for human food. Ihave the authority of a celebrated physiolo-gist* to state, that the meat is capable ofcommunicating the most loathsome diseases ;besides, it is such a dirty trick, that the veryidea of it is sufficient to disgust a person atevery thing which comes from a butchers'
* A. Carlisle, Esq.
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BUTCHERS' MEAT UNWHOLESOME. 37
shop for who can bear the notion of eatingmeat, the cellular substance of which hasbeen filled with air of a dirty fellow, whomay at the same time be perhaps inflictedwith the very worst of diseases.But not only butchers' meat, but sea fish,
especially cod, haddock, and whiting, are ina similar manner often blown, to make themappear large and plump ; a quill, or the stemof a tobacco pipe, being inserted into theorifice at the belly of the fih, and a holebeing made under the fin, which is next thegill, the breath is blown in, to extend thebulk of the fish.
This imposition is detected by placing thethumb on each side of the orifice and press-ing it hard, when the air will be perceivedto escape. Meat that has been inflated may'at once be recognised by the cellular mem-brane being distended.
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38 DISGUSTING PRACTICE OF RENDERING
Another pernicious custom of rendering-meat unwholesome, is, to throw the beast,previous to its being killed, into a state ofdisease, by over-driving it ; for the fever intowhich the furious animal is often thrown, bythe cruelty of the drover, is frequentlyraised to madness. No person would chuseto eat the flesh of an animal which died in ahigh fever ; yet that is actually the case withall over-drove cattle. The flesh of suchanimals is at once distinguished at thebutchers' shambles, by the cellular mem-brane being filled with blood, which makesthe meat appear of a more florid colour, andadds to its weight.Another highly blameable custom to ren-
der meat unwholesome, is, to keep animalswithout food for four or five days together,to save the butcher the trouble of clearingthe stomach and intestines more readily.
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BUTCHERS' MEAT UNWHOLESOME. 39
Oxen are usually kept without food for fouror five days before they are killed ; calves,sheep and pigs, each of them two or threedays. Fasting so long renders the animalsunhealthy, and makes them restless, fever-ish, and diseased.
It is also a common practice in some graz-ing counties to bring to market the carcasesof such animals as die of themselves. Po-verty may, indeed, oblige people to eatsuch meat; but it would be better for themto eat a smaller quantity of what is soundand wholesome ; at least it would afford abetter nourishment, with less danger.The injunction given to the Jews not to
eat of any creature which had died in conse-quence of a disease, seems to have a strictregard to health, and ought to be observed,as a wholesome lesson, by Christians aswell as Jews.
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40 DISGUSTING PRACTICE OF RENDERING
The Editor of The Literary Miscellany,states, that it is a practice among many but-chers to suspend calvesby the hind legs, withthe head downwards, for hours, and to bleedthem to death slowly. Such processes ofcomplicated and lengthened cruelty, toohorrid to relate, are only for the purposeof whitening the flesh. And, with a similarview, two calves are often tied together bytheir hind legs, and thrown across ahorsewhen brought to the butcher's shop, so thatthey are suffered to be suspended for hourstogether, with the head downwards, beforethey are killed.On the frequent cruelties committed by
butchers it is not my business to speak.Every person resident in this town must havenoticed, that in drivinga number ofsheep andoxen, ifany ofthem be untractable, the driveroften breaks one of the legs of the sheep, or
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BUTCHERS' MEAT UNWHOLESOME. 41cuts the large tendon on the foot of the ox.This is a cruelty at which the human mindshudders.
By Heaven's high will the LOWER WORLD is thine But art thou CRUEL TOO BY RIGHT DIVINE ?Admit their lives devoted to thy need ;Take the appointed forfeit let them bleed :Yet add not to the hardships of their state,Nor join to servitude oppression's weight ;By no unmanly rigors swell distress,But, where thou canst, exert thy power to bless,Beyond thy wants 'tis barbarous to annoy,And but from need 'tis baseness to destroy.*
PRATT'S Lower World, B. II.
GENERAL REMARKS ON THE ADULTERA-TION OF FOOD.
THE object of all unprincipled modernmanufacturers seems to be the sparing oftheir time and labour as much as possible,
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abater.
IMPORTANCE OF THE PURITY OF WA-TER EMPLOYED IN DOMESTIC ECO-NOMY AND THE ARTS.IT requires not much reflection to become
convinced that the waters which issue fromthe recesses of the earth, and form springs,wells, rivers, or lakes, often materially differfrom each other in their taste and otherobvious properties. There are few peoplewho have not observed a difference in thewaters used for domestic purposes and inthe arts ; and the distinctions of hard andsoft water are familiar to every body.
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44 EFFECTS OF DIFFERENT WATERS USEDWater perfectly pure is scarcely ever
met with in nature.It must also be obvious, that the health
and comfort of families, and the conve-niences of domestic life, are materiallyaffected by the supply of good and whole-some water. Hence a knowledge of thequality and salubrity of the different kindsof waters employed in the common con-cerns of life, on account of the abundantdaily use we make of them in the prepara-tion of food, is unquestionably an object ofconsiderable importance, and demands ourattention.The effects produced by the foreign mat-
ters which water may contain, are moreconsiderable, and of greater importance,than might at first be imagined. It cannotbe denied, that such waters as are hard, or
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IN DOMESTIC ECONOMY AND THE ARTS. 45
loaded with earthy matter, have a decidedeffect upon some important functions of thehuman body. They increase the distress-ing symptoms under which those personslabour who are afflicted with what is com-monly called gravel complaints ; and manyother ailments might be named, that arealways aggravated by the use of watersabounding in saline and earthy substances.The purity of the waters employed in
some of the arts and manufactures, is anobject of not less consequence. In theprocess of brewing malt liquors, soft wateris preferable to hard. Every brewer knowsthat the largest possible quantity of theextractive matter of the malt is obtained inthe least possible time, and at the smallestcost, by means of soft water.
In the art of the dyer, hard water not
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46 EFFECTS OF DIFFERENT WATERS USI^Donly opposes the solution of several dyestuffs, but it also alters the natural tints ofsome'delicate colours ; whilst in others again,it precipitates the earthy and saline matterswith which it is impregnated, into the deli-cate fibres of the stuff, and thus impedesthe softness and brilliancy of the dye.The bleacher cannot use with advantage
waters impregnated with earthy salts ; anda minute portion of iron imparts to the clotha yellowish hue.To the manufacturer of painters' colours,
water as pure as possible is absolutely es-sential for the successful preparation ofseveral delicate pigments. Carmine, mad-der lake, ultramarine, and Indian yellow,cannot be prepared without perfectly purewater.
For the steeping or raiting of flax, soft
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IN DOMESTIC ECONOMY AND THE ARTS. 47water is absolutely necessary ; in hard waterthe flax may be immersed for months, till itstexture be injured, and still the ligneousmatter will not be decomposed, and thefibres properly separated.
In the culinary art, the effects of watermore or less pure are likewise obvious.Good and pure water softens the fibres ofanimal and vegetable matters more readilythan such as is called hard. Every cookknows that
dry or ripe pease, and otherfarinaceous seeds, cannot readily be boiledsoft in hard water; because the farina ofthe seed is not perfectly soluble in waterloaded with earthy salts.Green esculent vegetable substances aremore tender when boiled in soft water thanin hard water ; although hard water impartsto them a better colour. The effects of hard
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48 ILLUSTRATION.
and soft water may be easily shown in the 'following manner.
Illustration.
Let two separate portions of tea-leaves bemacerated, by precisely the same processes,in circumstances all alike, in similarlyand separate vessels, the one containing hardand the other soft water, either hot or cold,the infusion made with the soft water willhave by far the strongest taste, althoughit possesses less colour than the infusionmade with the hard water. It will strike amore intense black with a solution of sul-phate of iron, and afford a more abundantprecipitate, with a solution of animal jelly,which at once shews that soft water hasextracted more tanning matter, and more
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CHARACTERS OF GOOD WATER. 49
gallic acid, from the tea-leaves, than couldbe obtained from them under like circum-stances by means of hard water.Many animals which are accustomed to
drink soft water, refuse hard water; Horsesin particular prefer the former. Pigeonsrefuse hard water when they have been ac-customed to soft water.
CHARACTERS OF GOOD WATER.A GOOD criterion of the purity of water
fit for domestic purposes, is its softness.This quality is at once obvious by the touch,if we only wash our hands in it with soap.Good water should be beautifully transpa-rent: a slight opacity indicates extraneousmatter. To judge of the perfect transpa-rency of water, a quantity of it should be
D
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50 CHARACTERS OF GOOD WATER.put into a deep glass vessel, the larger thebetter, so that we can look down perpendi-cularly into a considerable mass of the fluid ;we may then readily discover the slightestdegree of muddiness much better than ifthe water be viewed through the glassplaced between the eye and the light. Itshould be perfectly colourless, devoid ofodour, and its taste soft and agreeable. Itshould send out air-bubbles when pouredfrom one vessel into another ; it should boilpulse soft, and form with soap am uniformopaline fluid, which does not separate afterstanding for several hours.
It is to the presence of common air andcarbonic acid gas that common water owesils taste, and many of the good effectswhich it produces on animals and vege-tables. Spring water, which contains more
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CHARACTERS OF GOOD WATER. 51air, has a more lively taste than riverwater.
Hence the insipid and vapid taste ofnewlyboiled water, from which these gases areexpelled: fish cannot live in water deprivedof those elastic fluids.
100 cubic inches of the New River water,with which part of this metropolis is sup*plied, contains 2,25 of carbonic acid, and1,25 of common air. It contains, beside aminute portion of muriate of lime, carbonateof lime, and muriate of soda. The waterof the river Thames contains rather a largerquantity of common air, and a smaller por-tion of carbonic acid.Water is freed from foreign matter by
distillation: and for any chemical processin which accuracy is requisite, distilledwater must be used.
D 2
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CHEMICAL CONSTITUTION OF WATERS. 53
a large surface. Part of the carbonic acidbecomes thus dissipated, and part of thecarbonate of lime falls to the bottom. Mr.Dalton* has observed that the more anyspring is drawn from, the softer the waterbecomes.
CHEMICAL CONSTITUTION OF THEWATERS USED IN DOMESTIC ECO-NOMY AND THE ARTS.
Rain Water,COLLECTED with every precaution as it
descends from the clouds, and at a distancefrom large towns, or any other object ca-pable of impregnating the atmosphere with
* Dalton, Manchester Memoirs, vol. iv. p. 55.
D3
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54 CHEMICAL CONSTITUTION OF WATERSforeign matters, approaches more nearly toa state of purity than perhaps any othernatural water. Even collected under thesecircumstances, however, it invariably con-tains a portion of common air and carbonicacid gas. The specific gravity of rain waterscarcely differs from that of distilled water ;and from the minute portions ofthe foreigningredients which it generally contains, itis very soft, and admirably adapted formany culinary purposes, and various pro-cesses in different manufactures and thearts*
Snow Water.
Fresh-fallen snow, melted without thecontact of air, appears to be nearly freefrom air. Gay-Lussacand Humboldt, how-
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USED FOR DOMESTIC PURPOSES. 55/
ever, affirm, that it contains nearly the usualproportion of air.Water from melted ice does not contain
so much air. Dew has been supposed to besaturated with air.Snow water has long lain under the im-
putation of occasioning those strumousswellings in the neck which deform theinhabitants of many of the .Alpine vallies ;but this opinion is not supported by anywell-authenticated indisputable facts, andis rendered still more improbable, if notentirely overturned, by the frequency ofthe disease in Sumatra*, where ice andsnow are never sefen.
In high northern latitudes, thawed snow
Marsden's History of Sumatra.D4
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56 CHEMICAL CONSTITUTION OF WATERSforms the constant drink of the inhabitantsduring winter; and the vast masses of icewhich float on the polar seas, afford anabundant supply of fresh water to the ma-riner.
Spring Water
Includes well-water and all others thatarise from some depth below the surface ofthe earth, and which are used at the foun-tain-head, or at least before they have runany considerable distance exposed to theair. Indeed, springs may be considered asrain water which has passed through thefissures of the earth, and, having accumu-lated at the bottom of declivities, rises againto the surface, forming springs and wells.
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USED FOR DOMESTIC PURPOSES. 57
As wells take their origin at some depthfrom the surface, and below the influenceof the external atmosphere,, their tempera-ture is in general pretty uniform duringevery vicissitude of season, and always se-veral degrees lower than the atmosphere..They differ from one another according tothe nature of the strata through which theyissue; for though the ingredients usuallyexisting in them are in such minute quan-tities as to impart to the water no strikingproperties, and do not render it unfit forcommon purposes, yet they modify its na-ture very considerably. Hence the waterof some springs is said to be hard, of otherssoft, some sweet, others brackish, accord-,ing to the nature and degree of the impreg-nating ingredients.Common springs are insensibly changedD5
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58 CHEMICAL CONSTITUTION OF WATERSin mineral or medicinal springs, as theirforeign contents become larger or more un-usual ; or, in some instances, they derivemedicinal celebrity from the absence ofthose ingredients usually occurring inspring-water ; as, for example, is the casewith the Malvern spring, which is nearlypure water.
Almost all spring-waters possess the pro-perty termed hardness in a greater or lessdegree ; a property which depends chieflyupon the presence of super-carbonate, orof sulphate of lime, or of both ; and thequantity of these earthy salts varies veryconsiderably in different instances. Mr.Dalton* has shewn that one grain of sul-
* Manchester Memoirs, vol. x. 1819.
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USED FOR DOMESTIC PURPOSES* 59
phate of lime, contained in 2000 grains ofwater, converts it into the hardest springwater that is commonly met with.The waters ofdeep wells are usually much
harder than those springs which overflowthe mouth of the well ; but there are someexceptions to this rule.The purest springs are those which occur
in primitive rocks, or beds of gravel, orfilter through sand or silicious strata. lageneral, large springs are purer than smallones ; and our old wells contain finer waterthan those that are new, as the soluble partsthrough which the water filters in channelsunder ground become gradually washedaway.
D6
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60 CHEMICAL CONSTITUTION OF WATERS
River Water
Is a term applied to every running streamor rivulet exposed to the air, and alwaysflowing in an open channel. It is formed ofspring water, which, by exposure, becomesmore pure, and of running land or surfacewater, which, although turbid from particlesof the aluvial soil suspended in it, is other-wise very pure. It is purest when it runs overa gravelly or rocky bed, and when its courseis swift. It is generally soft, and more freefrom earthy salts than spring water; butit usually contains less common air andcarbonic acid gas ; for, by the agitation of along currant, and exposed to the tempera-ture of the atmosphere, part of its carbonicacid gas is disengaged, and the lime held
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USED FOR DOMESTIC PURPOSES. 6l
in solution by it is in part precipitated,the loss of which contributes to the softnessof the water. Its specific gravity therebybecomes less, the taste not so harsh, but lessfresh and agreeable ; and out of a hardspring is often made a stream of sufficientpurity for most of the purposes where asoft water is required.Some streams, however, that arise from
clean silicious beds, and flow in a sandy orstony channel, are from the outset remarkablypure ; such as the mountain lakes and rivu-lets in the rocky districts of Wales, thesource of the beautiful waters of the Dee,and numberless other rivers that flowthrough the hollow of every valley. Swit-zerland has long been celebrated for thepurity and excellence of its waters, whichpour in copious streams from the mouu-
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62 CHEMICAL CONSTITUTION OF WATERS
tains, and give rise to the finest rivers inEurope.
Thames Water.
Some rivers, however, that do not taketheir rise from a rocky soil, and are indeedat first considerably charged with foreignmatter, during a long course, even over arichly cultivated plain, become remarkablypure as to saline contents ; but often fouledwith mud containing much animal and ve-getable matter, which are rather suspendedthan held in true solution. Such is the waterofthe river Thames, which, taken up at Lon-don at low water mark, is very soft, andgood ; and after rest, it contains but a verysmall portion of any thing that could prove
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USE/) FOR DOMESTIC PURPOSES. 63
pernicious or impede any manufacture.It is also excellently fitted for sea-store;but it then undergoes a remarkable sponta-neous change, when preserved in woodencasks. No water carried to sea becomesputrid sooner than that of the Thames. Butthe mode now adopted in the navy, of sub-stituting1 iron tanks for wooden casks, tendsgreatly to obviate the disadvantage.Whoever will consider the situation of
the Thames, and the immense populationalong its banks for so many miles, must atonce perceive the prodigious accumulationof animal matters of all kinds, which bymeans of the commmon sewers constantlymake their way into it. These matters are,no doubt, in part, the cause of the putrefac-tion which it is well known to undergo atsea; and ofthe carburetted and sulphuretted
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64 CHEMICAL CONSTITUTION OF WATERShydrogen gases which are evolved from it.When a wooden cask is opened, after beingkept a month or two, a quantity ofcarburettedand sulphuretted hydrogen escapes, and thewater is so black and offensive as scarcelyto be borne. Upon racking it off, however,into
largeearthen vessels, and exposing* itto the air, it gradually deposits a quantity
of black slimy mud, becomes clear as crys-tal, and remarkably sweet and palatable.
It might, at first sight, be expected thatthe water of the Thames, after having re-ceived all the contents of the sewers, drains,and water courses of a large town, shouldacquire thereby such impregnation withforeign matters, as to become very impure ;but it appears, from the most accurate ex-periments that have been made, that thosekinds of impurities have no perceptible in-
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USED FOR DOMESTIC PURPOSES. 65
fluence on the salubrious quality of a massof water so immense, and constantly kept inmotion by the action of the tides.Some traces of animal matter may, how-
ever, be detected in the water ofthe Thames ;for if nitrate of lead be dropped into it * ; you will find that it becomes milky, andthat a white powder falls to the bottom,which dissolves without effervescence innitric acid. It is, therefore, (says Dr. Thom-son) a combination of oxide of lead withsome animal matter.
* Observations on the Water with which Tun-bridge Wells is chiefly supplied for Domestic Pur-poses, by Dr. Thomson ; forming an Appendix to anAnalysis of the Mineral Waters of Tunbridge Wells,by Dr. Scudamore.
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66 SUBSTANCES CONTAINED IN WAtER,
SUBSTANCES USUALLY CONTAINED INCOMMON WATER, AND TESTS BYWHICH THEY ARE DETECTED.To acquire a knowledge of the general
nature ofcommon water, it is only necessaryto add to it a few chemical tests, which willquickly indicate the presence or absence ofthe substances that may be expected.Almost the only salts contained in com-
mon waters are the carbonates, sulphates,and muriates of soda, lime, and magnesia:and sometimes a very minute portion of ironmay also be detected in them.
EXPERIMENT I.Fill a wine-glass with distilled water,
and add to it a few drops of the solution of
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ANI> fHE TESTS FOR DETECTING THEM. 67
soap in alcohol, the water will remain tran*sparent.
This test is employed for ascertaining thepresence of earthy salts in waters. Henceit produces no change when mingled withdistilled or perfectly pure water ; but whenadded to water containing earthy salts, awhite flocculent matter becomes separated,which speedily collects on the surface ofthe fluid. Now, from the quantity of floc-culent matter produced, in equal quantitiesof water submitted to the test, a tolerablenotion may be formed of the degrees ofhardness of different kinds of water, atleast 80 far as regards the fitness of thewater for the ordinary purposes of domesticeconomy. This may be rendered obviousin the following manner.
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68 SUBSTANCES CONTAINED IN WATER,EXPERIMENT II.
Fill a number of wine-glasses with dif-ferent kinds of pump or well water, and letfall into each glass a few drops of the solu-tion of soap in alcohol. A turbidness willinstantly ensue, and a flocculent mattercollect on the surface of the fluid, if themixture be left undisturbed. The quantityof flocculent matter will be in the ratio s>fthe
quantity of earthysalts contained in the
water. // -^It is obvious that the action of this test is
not discriminative with regard to the che-mical nature of the earthy salt present inthe water. It serves only to indicate thepresence or absence of those kinds of sub-stances which occasion that quality in waterwhich is usually called hardness, and which
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AND THE TESTS FOR DETECTING THEM. 69
is always owing to salts with an earthybase.
If we wish to know the nature of thedifferent acids and earths contained in thewater, the following tests may be em-ployed.
EXPERIMENT III.Add about twenty drops of a solution of
oxalate of ammonia, to half a wine-glass ofthe water ; if a white precipitate ensues, weconclude that the water contains lime.By means of this test, one grain of lime
may be detected in 24,250 of water.If this test occasion a white precipitate
in water taken fresh from the pump orspring, and not after the water has beenboiled and suffered to grow cold, the limeis dissolved in the water by an excess of
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70 SUBSTANCES CONTAINED IN WATER,carbonic acid ; and if it continues to pro-duce a precipitate in the water which hasbeen concentrated by boiling, we then aresure that the lime is combined with a fixedacid.
EXPERIMENT IV.
To detect the presence of iron, add to awine-glassful of the water a few drops of aninfusion of nut-galls ; or better, suffer a nut-gall to be suspended in it for twenty-fourhours, which will cause the water to acquirea blueish black colour, if iron be present.
EXPERIMENT V.
Add a few grains of muriate of barytes,to half a wine-glass of the water to be ex-amined ; if it produces a turbidness which
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AND THE TESTS FOR DETECTING THEM. 71does not disappear by the admixture of afew drops of muriatic acid, the presence ofsulphuric acid is rendered obvious.
EXPERIMENT VI.
If a few drops of a solution of nitrate ofsilver occasion a milkiness with the water,which vanishes again by the copious ad-dition of liquid ammonia, we have reason tobelieve that the water contains a salt, oneof the constituent parts of which is muriaticacid.
EXPERIMENT VII.If lime water or barytic water occasions a
precipitate which again vanishes by theadmixture of muriatic acid, then carbonicacid is present in the water.
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72 SUBSTANCES CONTAINED IN WATER,
EXPERIMENT VIII.
If a solution of phosphate of soda producea milkiness with the water, after a previousaddition to it of a similar quantity of neutralcarbonate of ammonia, we may then expectmagnesia. The application of this test isbest made in the following manner :
Concentrate a quantity of the water to beexamined to about -fa part of its bulk, anddrop into about half a wine-glassful, aboutfive grains of neutral carbonate of am-monia. No magnesia becomes yet preci-pitated
if this earth bepresent;
but onadding a like quantity ofphosphate of soda,the magnesia falls down, as an insolublesalt. It is essential that the carbonate ofammonia be neutral.
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AND THE TESTS FOR DETECTING THEM. 73The presence of oxygen gas loosely com-
bined in water may readily be discoveredin the following manner.
EXPERIMENT IX.
Fill a vial with water, and add to it asmall quantity of green sulphate of iron.If the water be entirely free of oxygen, andif the vessel be well stopped and completelyfilled, the solution is transparent; but ifotherwise, it soon becomes slightly turbid,from the oxide of iron attracting the oxygen,and a small portion of it, in this more highlyoxidated state, leaving the acid and beingprecipitated.
If we examine the different waters whichare used for the ordinary purposes of life,
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74 DELETERIOUS EFFECTS OF WATERand judge of them by the above tests, weshall find them to differ considerably fromeach other. Some contain a large quantityof saline and earthy matters, whilst othersare nearly pure. The differences are pro-duced by the great solvent power whichwater exercises upon most substances.Hence wells should never be lined withbricks, which render soft water hard ; or, ifbricks be employed, they should be beddedin and covered with cement.
DELETERIOUS EFFECTS OF KEEPINGWATER IN LEADEN RESERVOIRS.THE deleterious effect of lead, when taken
into the stomach, is at present so univer-sally known, that it is quite unnecessary to
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KEPT IN LEADEN RESERVOIRS. 75adduce any argument in proof of its dange-rous tendency.The antients were, upwards of 2000 years
ago, as well aware of the pernicious qualityof this metal as we are at the present day ;and indeed they appeared to have beenmuch more apprehensive of its effects, andscrupulous in the application of it to pur-poses of domestic economy.
Their precautions may have been occasi-onally carried to an unnecessary length.This was the natural consequence of the im-perfect state of experimental knowledge atthat period. When men were unable todetect the poisonous matters to be overscrupulous in the use of such water, was anerror on the right side.The moderns, on the other hand, in part,
perhaps, from an ill-founded confidence, andE2
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76 DELETERIOUS EFFECTS OF WATERinattention to a careful and continued exa-mination of its effects, have , fallen into anopposite error.There can be no doubt that the mode of pre-
serving water intended for food or drink inleaden reservoirs, is exceedingly improper;and although pure water exercises no sen-sible action upon metallic lead, provided airbe excluded, the metal is certainly acted onby the water when air is admitted : this effectis so obvious, that it cannot escape the no-tice of the least attentive observer.The white line which may be seen at the
surface of the water preserved in leadencisterns, where the metal touches the waterand where the air is admitted, is a carbo-nate of lead, formed at the expense of themetal. This substance, when taken into thestomach, is highly deleterious to health.
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KEPT IN LEADEN RESERVOIRS.This was the reason which induced the an-tients to condemn leaden pipes for the con-veyance of water ; it having been remarkedthat persons who swallowed the sediment ofsuch water, became affected with disorders
bowels*.ferent potable waters have unequalt powers on this metal. In somes - ^i
places the use of leaden pumps has beendiscontinued, from the expence entailedupon the proprietors by the constant wantof repair. Dr. Lambf states an instancewhere the proprietor of a well ordered hisplumber to make the lead of a pump ofdouble the thickness of the metal usuallyemployed for pumps, to save the charge of
*Sir G. Baker, Med. Trans, vol. i. p. 280.t Lamb on Spring Water.
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78 DELETERIOUS EFFECTS OF WATER
repairs ; because he had observed that thewater was so hard, as he called it, that itcorroded the lead very soon.The following instance is related by Sir
George Baker*: A gentleman was the father of a nume-
rous offspring, having had one-and-twentychildren, of whom eight died young, andthirteen survived their parents. Duringtheir infancy, and indeed until they hadquitted the place of their usual residence,they were all remarkably unhealthy ; beingparticularly subject to disorders of the sto-mach and bowels. The father, during manyyears, was paralytic ; the mother, for a longtime, was subject to colics and bilious ob-structions*
* Medical Trans, vol. i. p. 420.
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80 DELETERIOUS EFFECTS OF WATERexamine leaden cisterns, which had becomeleaky on account of the action of the waterwhich they contained ; and I could adducean instance of a legal controversy havingtaken place to settle the disputes betweenthe proprietors of an estate and a plumber,originating from a similar cause the plum-ber being accused of having furnished afaulty reservoir; whereas the case wasproved to be owing to the chemical action ofthe water on the lead. Water containing alarge quantity of common air and carbonicacid gas, always acts very sensibly on me-tallic lead.Water which has no sensible action, in
its natural state, upon lead, may acquirethe capability of acting on it by heteroge-neous matter, which it may accidentally re-ceive. Numerous instances have shewn that
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KEPT IN LEADEN RESERVOIRS. 81
vegetable matter, such as leaves, falling intoleaden cisterns filled with water, impartedto the water a considerable solvent powerof action on the lead, which in its naturalstate it did not possess. Hence the neces-sity of keeping leaden cisterns clean ; andthis is the more necessary, as their situationsexpose them to accidental impurities. Thenoted saturnine colic of Amsterdam, des-cribed by Tronchen, originated from such acircumstance; as also the case related byVan Swieten*, of a whole family afflictedwith the same complaint, from such a cis-tern. And it is highly probable that thecase of disease recorded by Dr. Duncanf,
* Van Swieten ad Boerhaave, Aphorisms, 1060,Comment.t Medical Comment. Dec. 2, 1794.
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82 DELETERIOUS EFFECTS OF WATERproceeded more from some foulness in thecistern, than from the solvent power of thewater. In this instance the officers of thepacket boat used water for their drink andcooking out of a leaden cistern, whilst thesailors used the water taken from the samesource, except that theirs was kept inwooden vessels. The consequence was,that all the officers were seized with thecolic, and all the men continued healthy.The carelessness of the bulk of mankind,Dr. Lambe very justly observes, to these
things, is so great, that to repeat themagain and again cannot be wholly useless.Although the great majority of personswho daily use water kept in leaden cisterns
receive no sensible injury, yet the apparentsalubrity must be ascribed to the great slow-
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KEPT IN LEADEN RESERVOIRS. 83
ness of its operation, and the minuteness ofthe dose taken, the effects of which becomemodified by different causes and differentconstitutions, and according to the predis-positions to diseases inherent in differentindividuals. The supposed security of themultitude who use the water with impunityamounts to no more than presumption, infavour of any individual, which may or maynot be confirmed by experience.
Independent of the morbid susceptibilityof impressions which distinguish certain ha-bits, there is, besides, much variety in theoriginal constitution of the human frame, ofwhich we are totally ignorant.
The susceptibility or proneness to dis-ease of each individual, must be esteemedpeculiar to himself. Confiding to the expe-
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84 DELETERIOUS EFFECTS OF WATER.
rience of others is a ground of securitywhich may prove fallacious ; and the dangercan with certainty be obviated only byavoiding its source. And ^considering thevarious and complicated changes of thehuman frame, under different circumstancesand at different ages, it is neither impossiblenor improbable that the substances takeninto the system at one period, and even fora series of years, with apparent impunity,may, notwithstanding, at another period, beeventually the occasion of disease and ofdeath.
The experience of a single person, or ofmany persons, however numerous, is quiteincompetent to the decision of a question ofthis nature.
The pernicious effects ofan intemperateuse of spirituous liquors is not less certain
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KEPT IN LEADEN RESERVOIRS. 85because we often see habitual drunkardsenjoy a good state of health, and arrive at oldage : and the same may be said of individualswho indulge in vices of all kinds, evidentlydestructive to life ; many of whom, in spiteof their bad habits, attain to a vigorous oldage*.
In confirmation of these remarks, we ad-duce the following account of the effect ofwater contaminated by lead, given by SirG. Baker:
The most remarkable case on the sub-ject that now occurs to my memory, is thatof Lord Ashburnham's family, in Sussex;to which spring water was applied, from aconsiderable distance, in leaden pipes. Inconsequence, his Lordship's servants were
* Lambe on Spring Water.
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86 METHOD OF DETECTING
every year tormented with colic, and someof them died. An 'eminent physician, ofBattle, who corresponded with me on thesubject, sent up some gallons of that water,which were analysed by Dr. Higgins, whoreported that the water had contained morethan the common quantity of carbonic acid ;and that he found in it lead in solution,which he attributed to the carbonic acid.In consequence of this, Lord Ashburnhamsubstituted wooden for leaden pipes; andfrom that time his family have had no par-ticular complaints in their bowels,Richmond, Sept. 27, 1802.
METHOD OF DETECTING LEAD INWATER.
ONE of the most delicate tests for detect-ing lead, is water impregnated with sulphu-
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LEAD IN WATER. 87
retted hydrogen gas, which instantly im-parts to the fluid containing the minutestquantity of lead, a brown or blackish tinge.
This test is so delicate that distilled water,when condensed by a leaden pipe in a stilltub, is effected by it. To shew the action ofthis test, the following experiments willserve.
EXPERIMENT T.
Pour into a wine-glass containing distilledwater, an equal quantity of water impreg-nated with sulphuretted hydrogen gas: nochange will take place ; but if a J of a grainof aeetate of lead (sugar of lead of com-merce,) be added, the mixture will instantlyturn brown and dark-coloured.
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88 METHOD OF DETECTINGTo apply this test, one part of the sus-
pected water need merely to be mingled witha like quantity of water impregnated withsulphuretted hydrogen. Or better, a largerquantity, a gallon for example, of the watermay be concentrated by evaporation toabout half a pint, and then submitted to theaction of the test.Another and more efficient mode of ap-
plying this test, is, to pass a current of sul-
phuretted hydrogen gas through thesus-
pected water in the following manner.
EXPERIMENT II.
Take a bottle* (a) or Florence flask,adapt to the mouth of it a cork furnished
* See the Figure, page 89.
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90 METHOD OF DETECTINGthe minutest quantity of lead be present, thewater will acquire a dark-brown or blackishtinge. The extrication of the gas is facili-tated by the application of a gentle heat.The action of the sulphuretted hydrogen
test, when applied in this manner, is asto-nishingly great ; for one part of acetate oflead may be detected by it, in 20,000 partsof water*.
Sulphate of potash, or sulphate of soda, islikewise a very delicate test for detecting1
* See An Analysis of the Mineral Waters of Tun-bridge Wells, by Dr. Scudamore, p. 55.The application of the sulphuretted hydrogen test
requires some precaution in those cases where othermetals besides lead may be expected ; because silver,quicksilver, tin, copper, and several other metals, areeffected by it, as well as lead ; but there is no chanceof these metals being met with in common water. SeeChemical Tests, third edition, p. 207.
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LEAD IN WATER. 91minute portions of lead. Dr. Thomson* dis-covered, by means of it, one part of lead inin 100,000 parts of water ; and this acutePhilosopher considers it as the most une-quivocal test of lead that we possess. Dr.Thomson remarks that no other precipi-tate can well be confounded with it, exceptsulphate of barytes ; and there is no proba-bility of the presence of barytes existing incommon water.
Analysis of Tunbridge Wells Water, by Dr. Scu-damore, p. 5$.
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8totUterattott of
IT is sufficiently obvious, that few ofthosecommodities, which are the objects of com-merce, are adulterated to a greater extentthan wine. All persons moderately conver-sant with the subject, are aware, that a por-tion of alum is added to young and meagrered wines, for the purpose of brighteningtheir colour; that Brazil wood, or the husksofelderberries and bilberries*, are employedto impart a deep rich purple tint to redPort of a pale, faint colour ; that gypsum isused to render cloudy white wines transpa-rent ; that an additional astringency is im-
* Dried bilberries are imported from Germany, underthe fallacious name ofberry'dye.
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ADULTERATION OF WINE. 93parted to immature red wines by means ofoak-wood sawdust*, and the busks of fil-berts; and that a mixture of spoiled foreignand home-made wines is converted into thewretched compound frequently sold in thistown by the name of* genuine old Port.'
Various expedients are resorted to for thepurpose of communicating particular fla-vours to insipid wines. Thus a nutty flavouris produced by bitter almonds ; factitiousPort wine is flavoured with a tincture drawnfrom the seeds of raisins ; and the ingre-dients employed to form the bouquet ofhigh-flavoured wines, are sweet-brier, oris-root, clary, cherry laurel water, and elderflowers.
* Sawdust for this purpose is chiefly supplied by theship-builders, and forms a regular article of commerceof the brewers' druggists.
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94 ADULTERATION OF WINE.The flavouring ingredients used by ma-
nufacturers, may all be purchased by thosedealers in wine who are initiated in themysteries of the trade ; and even a manu-script receipt book for preparing them,and. the whole mystery of managing allsorts of wines, may be obtained on paymentof a considerable fee.The sophistication of wine with substances
not absolutely noxious to health, is carriedto an enormous extent in this metropolis.Many thousand pipes of spoiled cyder areannually brought hither from the country,for the purpose of being converted into fac-titious Port wine. The art of manufacturingspurious wine is a regular trade of greatextent in this metropolis.
There is, in this city, a certain frater-nity of chemical operators, who work under-
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ADULTERATION OF WINE. 95ground in holes, caverns, and dark retire-ments, to conceal their mysteries from the
eyes and observation of mankind. Thesesubterraneous philosophers are daily em-ployed in the transmutation of liquors, andby the power of magical drugs and incan-tations, raising under the streets of Londonthe choicest products of the hills and val-leys of France. They can squeeze Bour-deaux out ofthe sloe, and draw Champagnefrom an apple. Virgil, in that remarkableprophecy,
Incultisque rubens pendebit sentibus uva.Virg. Eel. iv. 29.
The ripening grape shall hang on every thorn.seems to have hinted at this art, which eanturn a plantation of northern hedges into avineyard. These adepts are known amongone another by the name of Wine-brewers ;
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96 ADULTERATION OF WINE*and, I am afraid, do great injury, not onlyto Her Majesty's customs, but to the bodiesof many of her good subjects*.
Recipes for manufacturing spurious winesmay be seen in Dr. Reece's Gazette ofHealth, No. 7, and in the Supplement to thePharmacopoeias, p. 245.
CRUSTING OF WINE BOTTLES, ANDOTHER NEFARIOUS ARTIFICES COM-MITTED BY FRAUDULENT WINEMERCHANTS.THE particular and separate department
in this factitious wine trade, called crusting,consists of lining the interior surface of
* Tatler, vol. viii. p. 110, edit. 1797, 8vo.
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ADULTERATION OF WINE. 97
fempty wine-bottles, in part, with a red crustof super-tartrate of potash , by suffering asaturated hot solution of this salt, colouredred with a decoction ofRrazil-wood, to crys-tallize within them ; and after this simula-tion of maturity is perfected, they are filledwith the compound called Port Wine.
Other artisans are regularly employed instaining the lower extremities ofbottle-corkswith a fine red colour, to appear, on beingdrawn, as if they had been long in contactwith the wine.The preparation of an astringent extract,
to produce, from spoiled home-made andforeign wines, a
genui