In Egypt, too, they employ a very remarkable process for the
colouring of tissues. After pressing the material, which is white
at first, they saturate it, not with colours, but with mordents
that are calculated to absorb colour. This done, the tissues,
still unchanged in appearance, are plunged into a cauldron of
boiling dye, and are removed the next moment fully coloured.
It is a singular fact, too, that although the dye in the pan is of
one uniform colour, the material when taken out of it is of
various colours, according to the nature of the mordents that
have been respectively applied to it: these colours, too, will never
wash out. Thus the dye-pan, which under ordinary circum-