Alberti, Leone Battista, Architecture, 1755

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1tated and drove about by the Winds, which
puſh
on the Waves in great Rows to the Shore,
where
if they meet with Oppoſition, eſpecially
from
any hard rugged Body they beat againſt
them
with their whole Strength, and being
daſhed
back again they break, and falling from
on
high with continual Repetition dig up and
demoliſh
whatever reſiſts their Fury.
A full
Proof
of this is the great Depth of Water
which
we conſtantly find under high Rocks
by
the Sea-ſide.
But when the Shore runs off
with
an eaſy Deſcent, the raging Sea not find­
ing
any Thing to exert its Force againſt, grows
quiet
, and falls back leſs furious upon itſelf;
and
if it has brought any Sand along with it,
leaves
it there; by which Means we ſee ſuch
Shores
growing higher and higher into the Sea
every
Day.
But when the Sea meets with a
Promontory
, and afterwards with a Bay, the
Current
runs impetuouſly along the Shore, and
turns
back again upon itſelf; which is the Rea­
ſon
that in ſuch Places we frequently meet with
deep
Channels cut under the Shore.
Others
maintain
, that the Sea hath a Breath and Reſ­
piration
of its own, and pretend to obſerve,
that
no Man ever dies naturally but when the
Tide
is going off, whence they would infer, that
our
Life has ſome Connection and Relation
with
the Motion and Life of the Sea: but this
is
not worth Dwelling upon.
It is certain, that
the
Tides riſe and fall variouſly in different
Places
.
The Negropont has no leſs than ſix
Tides
every Day.
At Conſtantinople it has no
other
Change but by flowing into the Pontus.
In
the Propontis the Sea naturally throws upon
the
Shore every Thing that is brought down
into
it by the Rivers: becauſe every Thing
which
is put into an unnatural Agitation reſts
of
Courſe where-ever it finds a Place which is
not
diſturbed.
But as upon almoſt all Shores
we
ſee Heaps of Sand or Stones thrown up, it
may
not be a miſs juſt to mention the Conjec­
tures
of the Philoſophers upon this Occaſion.
I have ſaid elſewhere, that Sand is form'd of
Mud
dried by the Sun, and ſeparated by the
Heat
into very minute Particles.
Stones are
ſuppoſed
to be engendered by the Sea-water;
ſor
they tell us, that by Means of the Sun's
Heat
and of Motion, the Water grows warm,
dries
, and its lighter Parts evaporating hardens
into
a Conſiſtence, which grows to have ſo
much
Solidity, that if the Sea is but a little
while
at reſt, it by degrees contracts a ſlimy
Cruſt
, of a bituminous Nature; this Cruſt in
Time
is afterwards broken, and by new Motion
and
Colliſion the new-made Subſtance becomes
globular
, and grows ſomewhat like a Spunge:
Theſe
globular Spunges are carried to the Shore,
where
by their Slimineſs they lick up the
Sand
which is put into Agitation, which again
is
dried and concocted by the Heat of the
Sun
, and by the Salts, till by Length of Time
it
hardens into Stone.
This is the Conjecture
of
the Philoſophers.
We frequently ſee the
Shore
grow higher and higher towards the
Mouth
of Rivers, eſpecially if they flow through
looſe
Grounds, and are much ſubject to Land­
floods
; for ſuch Rivers throw up vaſt Quan­
tities
of Sand and Stones before their Mouths
into
the Sea, and ſo lengthen out the Shore.
This manifeſtly appears from the Danube, the
Phaſis in Colchis, and others, and eſpecially in
the
Nile. The Ancients called Ægypt the
Nile's Houſe, and tell us, that it was formerly
covered
by the Sea quite as far as the Peluſian
Marſhes
.
So it is related, that a great Part of
Cilicia was added to it by the River. Ariſtotle
ſays
, that all Things are in perpetual Motion,
and
that in length of Time the Sea and the
Hills
will change Places with one another.
Hence the Saying of the Poet:

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