Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 January 2013
No quality is more inconsistent with the character of a stone than flexibility. A flexible stone, therefore, presents an idea which naturally strikes us with surprise. For though among mineral bodies, we find flexible substances of the stony kind, such as mica, mountain leather, and amianthus, these minerals owe their flexibility, either to their thinness, or to the fibrous structure of their parts. Therefore, when a stone of any considerable thickness is said to have flexibility, we are led to think that here is something very extraordinary; and we wish to know upon what depends that quality, nowise proper to a stone.
page 86 note * Tom. xxiv. p. 275, 276.