HOUSES, among the Jews, Greeks, and Romans, were flat on the top for them to walk upon, and had usually stairs on the outside, by which they might ascend and descend without coming into the house. Each house, in fact, was so laid out, that it enclosed a quadrangular area or court. This court was exposed to the weather, and being open to the sky, gave light to the house. This was the place where company was received, and for that purpose it was strewn with mats or carpets for their better accommodation. It was paved with marble or other materials, according to the owner's ability, and provided with an umbrella of vellum to shelter them from the heat and inclemencies of the weather. This part of their houses, called by the Romans impluvium or cava ædium, was provided with channels to carry off the water into the common sewers. The top of the house was level, and covered with a strong plaster by way of terrace. Hither, especially among the Jews, it was customary to retire for meditation, private converse, devotion, or the enjoyment of the evening breezes.
The Grecian houses were usually divided into two parts, in which the men and women had distinct mansions assigned. The part assigned to the men was towards the gate, and called andronitis; the apartment of the women was the farthest part of the house, and called gynæconitis. Jews, Greeks, and Romans, suppo-
sed their houses to be polluted by dead bodies, and to stand in need of purification.
HOUSE is also used for one of the estates of the kingdom of Britain assembled in parliament. Thus we say, the house of lords, the house of commons, &c. See PEERS, COMMONS, &c.
HOUSE is also used for a noble family, or a race of illustrious persons issued from the same stock. In this sense we say, the house or family of the Stuarts, the Bourbons, the house of Hanover, of Austria, of Lorraine, of Savoy, &c.
Cheap, easy, and expeditious Method of constructing Houses, which have been found to be very useful hospitals for the recovery of the sick, and therefore may probably make very wholesome places of residence for the healthy.—The first thing to be done is to choose a dry and airy situation, on a gravelly or chalky soil if possible; upon this lay down the plan of your building, make one end of it face that quarter from whence the purest and healthiest winds may be expected to blow, of a breadth that can be conveniently roofed. Then, if boarding does not come so cheap, drive stakes, at about six feet distance from each other, into the ground, so as to stand about six feet above it; and, interlacing them with wattles, coat the wattles on the side next the weather with fresh straw; and make the roof in the same manner, but thicker, or of thatch in the usual way, with a hole at the very top of it, to open occasionally. Let the end of the building facing the wholesomest quarter lie open some feet back, so as to form a porch, where the convalescents may take the air without danger of any injury from the weather. A large chimney and kitchen grate may be erected at the other end. If the soil happens to be chalky or gravelly, you may hollow it four or five feet deep, within a foot or eighteen inches of the walls; but let the steps into this hollow lie far enough within the porch, that no water may get into it, and, if of chalk, the steps may not grow slippery in wet weather. From time to time open the vent-hole at the roof; by means of which all the unwholesome infectious air, as being warmer, and consequently lighter, than that which is pure and wholesome, will be driven out by the rushing in of the fresh air; a purpose, which the little openings that may be left in the sides and roofs of such rude and hasty buildings, will, even of themselves, answer so well, as sufficiently to compensate any cold they may let in, even in the coldest months. Let the floor likewise be scraped three or four inches deep every five or six days, and what comes off removed to some distance. Halls of this kind, 50 feet long and 20 broad, cost but a trifle to build; yet, with these precautions (even without the addition of clean straw for every new patient to lie on, inclosed in clean washed sacks fit for the purpose, which come infinitely cheaper than the bare cleaning of flock or even feather-beds, supposing it possible to wash such beds), proved of infinitely more advantage in the recovery of sick soldiers, than the low-roofed rooms of the farm-houses of the Isle of Wight, or even the better accommodations of Carisbrooke castle in the same island, in which there perished four times the number of sick that there did in these temporary receptacles; which were first thought of by Doctor Brocklesby, on occasion
of some terrible infections from confined animal effluvia.
Is it not surprising, that we have not availed ourselves more of the above discovery in natural history, being, perhaps, the most important the moderns can boast of, in the most useful science, viz. the superior lightness of unwholesome and infectious air! The upper sashes in most houses, even of those who pretend to some knowledge in these matters, are generally immovable, by means of which no part of the foul air above the level of the lowest rail of the other sash's greatest rise can escape by the window; and, if it escapes by the doors, it is generally, for want of a vent in the highest part of the roof, merely to accumulate in the upper story of the house, and add to the infection, which the great quantities of old furniture usually stored up there are of themselves but too apt to create, when care is not frequently taken to open the windows of it. Thus, the chief benefit to be expected from lofty rooms is in a great measure lost. Whereas, were the upper sashes contrived to come down, all the air might be easily changed, and that almost insensibly, by letting them down an inch or two. Nay, the upper sash might be often let entirely down with less danger or inconvenience from cold, than the lower thrown up the tenth part of an inch, though the doing of the former would be attended with infinitely more advantage to the health of the inhabitants than the latter. It is, perhaps, on this principle, that we are to account for the good health enjoyed by the poor who live crowded in damp cellars, and often with great numbers of rabbits, poultry, and even swine about them. These cellars are open to the street, with doors reaching from the floor to the very ceiling, but never so close at bottom or at top as to prevent a free circulation of air; in consequence of which, that all-vivifying fluid, as fast as it is spoiled by passing through the lungs of the inhabitants and their stock, or is infected by their insensible perspiration, excrements, &c. is driven out and replaced by the fresh air.