CAROLINE.
But you once said, that after all the volatile parts of a vegetable were evaporated, the substance that remained was charcoal?
MRS. B.
I am surprised that you should still confound the processes of volatilisation and combustion. In order to procure charcoal, we evaporate such parts as can be reduced to vapour by the operation of heat alone; but when we burn the vegetable, we burn the carbon also, and convert it into carbonic acid gas.
CAROLINE.
That is true; I hope I shall make no more mistakes in my favourite theory of combustion.
MRS. B.
Potash derives its name from the pots in which the vegetables, from which it was obtained, used formerly to be burnt; the alkali remained mixed with the ashes at the bottom, and was thence called potash.
EMILY.
The ashes of a wood-fire, then, are potash, since they are vegetable ashes?