爐
- hearth;
- brazier;
- furnace;
Etymology
A phono-semantic compound:
火 — supplies the semantic field: heat, burning, fire
盧 — provides pronunciation and contributes the idea of an enclosed space
The character thus depicts fire contained within a fixed structure, i.e. a hearth or furnace.
Usage in Korean
火爐 (화로) — brazier
熔爐 (용로) — smelting furnace
香爐 (향로) — incense burner
Additional notes
爐 is not wild, but disciplined fire. It represents:
- control over nature
- transformation through restraint
- warmth within boundaries
This symbolism explains its prominence in:
- Daoist alchemy
- Buddhist ritual
- Poetry and domestic imagery
In classical thought:
Fire destroys; the furnace transforms.
Fire-related characters:
火 — fire
焰 — flame
燃 — to burn
Hearth and cooking:
灶 — stove
廚 — kitchen
鼎 — tripod cauldron
Alchemical / transformation imagery:
丹 — cinnabar, elixir
煉 — to refine
熔 — to melt
Classical citations:
《史記·貨殖列傳》 (Records of the Grand Historian)
「冶爐鼓鑄,日夜不息。」
“Smelting furnaces and casting molds worked day and night without rest.”
Here 爐 refers to industrial furnaces used in metallurgy, highlighting its economic importance.
《抱朴子·內篇》 (The Inner Chapters of Baopuzi)
「丹成於爐,性化於火。」
“The elixir is completed in the furnace; its nature is transformed by fire.”
In Daoist inner and outer alchemy, 爐 is central:
- the external furnace for elixirs
- the internal furnace of the human body (丹爐)
In Buddhist translations, 爐 frequently appears in ritual contexts:
香爐 — incense burner
《法華經》 (The Lotus Sutra) translations describe offerings of incense burned in a 爐, symbolizing:
- purification
- impermanence
- reverence
The hearth becomes a sacred container, not merely a tool.
《白居易·問劉十九》 (Bai Juyi's "Asking Liu Nineteen")
「綠蟻新醅酒,紅泥小火爐。」
“Green-ant new-brewed wine, a small red-clay brazier.”
This famous line uses 火爐 to evoke warmth, intimacy, and quiet companionship, showing the emotional resonance of 爐 in literature.
- 火卜心廿 (FYPT)
- ⿰ 火 盧