&c. and is commonly call’d by the name of
Spunk;
but that we meet with to be sold in Shops, is brought
from beyond Seas) I found it to be made of an exceeding
delicate texture: For the substance of it feels,
and looks to the naked eye, and may be stretch’d
any way, exactly like a very fine piece of
Chamois
Leather, or wash’d Leather, but it is of somewhat
a browner hew, and nothing neer so strong; but examining
it with my
Microscope, I found it of somewhat
another make then any kind of Leather; for whereas
both
Chamois, and all other kinds of Leather
I have yet view’d, consist of an infinite company
of filaments, somewhat like bushes interwoven one
within another, that is, of bigger parts or stems,
as it were, and smaller branchings that grow out of
them; or like a heap of Ropes ends, where each of the
larger Ropes by degrees seem to split or untwist,
into many smaller Cords, and each of those Cords into
smaller Lines, and those Lines into Threads, &c. and
these strangely intangled, or interwoven one within
another: The texture of this Touch-wood seems
more like that of a Lock or a Fleece of Wool, for it
consists of an infinite number of small filaments,
all of them, as farr as I could perceive, of the same
bigness like those of a Sponge, but that the
filaments
of this were not a twentieth part of the bigness of
those of a Sponge; and I could not so plainly perceive
their joints, or their manner of interweaving, though,
as farr as I was able to discern with that
Microscope
I had, I suppose it to have some kind of resemblance,
but the joints are nothing neer so thick, nor without
much trouble visible.
The filaments I could plainly enough perceive to be
even, round, cylindrical, transparent bodies, and
to cross each other every way, that is, there were
not more seem’d to lie horizontally then
perpendicularly and thwartway, so that it is
somewhat difficult to conceive how they should grow
in that manner. By tearing off a small piece of
it, and looking on the ragged edge, I could among
several of those fibres perceive small joints,
that is, one of those hairs split into two, each of
the same bigness with the other out of which they
seem’d to grow, but having not lately had an
opportunity of examining their manner of growth, I
cannot positively affirm any thing of them.
But to proceed, The swelling of Sponges upon wetting,
and the rising of the Water in it above the surface
of the Water that it touches, are both from the same
cause, of which an account is already given in the
sixth Observation.
The substance of them indeed, has so many excellent
properties, scarce to be met with in any other body
in the world, that I have often wondered that so little
use is made of it, and those onely vile and sordid;
certainly, if it were well consider’d, it would
afford much greater conveniencies.