cesspool
(ˈsɛspuːl)
Forms: 7 cest-, 9 sus-, sess-, 8– cesspool.
[Of uncertain derivation.
The form cesperalle has suggested connexion or popular confusion, with suspiral breathing hole, air-hole, ventilator, q.v. The form cestpool, if genuine (compared with the dial. ‘cist, a cesspool’ in Halliwell) has suggested that the initial element may be a contraction of cestern, cistern, or at least that it has at some time been associated by popular etymology with that word. Prof. Skeat compares the form suspool with the dial. words suss ‘hogwash’, soss ‘anything dirty or muddy’ (Halliwell); others have proposed derivation from cess n.1 bog. More suitable is that from It. cesso privy (:—L. secessus place of retirement, privy, drain), esp. as this is also commonly used for cessino the solid contents of the cesso, ‘materie grosse che si cavano dalle cloache delle case, che servano per ingrasso dei terreni’ (La Crusca). The spelling sess-pool taken with the essential meaning of a ‘pool for the retention of sediment’, might indicate connexion with L. sedēre, sess-um in sense ‘to sink, settle down’. But all these are merely suggestions, calling for further evidence.]
1. A small well or excavation made in the bottom of a drain, under a grating, to collect and retain the sand or gravel carried by the stream.
| [1583 in Bacon Annalls of Ipswiche (1884) Cesperalle to be made for stopping of filthe by the brooke.] |
| 1671 Act Common Council Lond. 27 Oct. ¶5. 18 A Fall or Cestpool of convenient bigness shall be made..to every Grate of the Common Sewer..to receive the Sand or Gravel coming to the same, so to prevent the choaking thereof. 1823 P. Nicholson Pract. Build. 592/2 Sesspool, or Cesspool, a deep hole or well, under the mouth of a drain, for the reception of sediment, etc., by which the drain might be choked. |
2. A well sunk to receive the soil from a water-closet, kitchen sink, etc.: properly one which retains the solid matter, and allows the liquid to escape.
It is sometimes built dry, so that the water escapes by percolation through the joints of the stone or brickwork into the surrounding soil, or it is built in mortar, and a drain formed to carry off the surplus water from near the top of it. (Gwilt.)
| 1782 Phil. Trans. LXXII. 364 We estimated the fall of the drain, from the eastern sink..to its termination in the cess-pool..at two feet. 1815 T. Forster Atmospheric Phenom. (ed. 2) 150 The smell of drains and suspools. 1850 Kingsley Alt. Locke (1876) 11 The horrible stench of the cesspools. 1860 Piesse Lab. Chem. Wonders 98 [It will] render harmless the most offensive cesspool or drain. |
b. (See quot.)
| 1871 Daily News 16 Dec., In Yorkshire effluvium-traps are frequently called cess-pools. 1883 Parkes Pract. Hygiene (ed. 6) x. 367 The common Mason's or dip-trap and the notorious D trap both of which are simply cess-pools. |
3. fig. (Cf. sink, common sewer, etc.)
| 1837 Carlyle Fr. Rev. iii. v. i. (L.) The cesspool of agio, now in a time of paper money, works with a vivacity unexampled. 1864 Soc. Sci. Rev. 52 Australia refuses again to be made a moral cesspool for England. 1879 Farrar St. Paul (1883) 235 Seneca..speaks of Rome as a cesspool of iniquity. |
Hence cesspoolage [cf. drainage, sewerage]. rare.
| 1851 Mayhew Lond. Lab. (ed. 2) II. 491 (Hoppe) Two modes of removing the wet refuse of the Metropolis..sewerage and..cesspoolage. By the system of cesspoolage the wet refuse of a household is collected in an adjacent tank, and, when the reservoir is full, the contents are removed to some other part. |