It is soft and smooth to the touch, and, in handling, stains the fingers.
To crayon painters, and other artists, black chalk is a very useful article. Considerable quantities of it are imported from France, Spain, and Italy. The best is brought from Italy. This is more free from gritty particles, more firm and compact in its texture, and in its touch much smoother than the chalk of any other country. It contains somewhat more than one-tenth part of its weight of charcoal. When prepared for use, it is cut into square pieces, which are sometimes enclosed in wooden cases, like black lead pencils. These pencils are said to become dry, hard, and unfit for use, by long keeping. To preserve them in greatest perfection, they should be kept in a moist place. Some artists prefer pencils that are made of the chalk finely ground, mixed with a certain proportion of gum water, and cast in moulds. Care should be taken not to put too much gum, as the pencils will not, in such case, leave any mark on the paper.
Drawing slate is sometimes used as a black colour for painting. For this purpose it is pounded or ground, and then mixed with oil or size, according to the kind of work for which it is required. When black chalk is strongly heated, it loses its colour, and assumes that of a reddish grey.
122. HONE, or WHET SLATE, is a well-known kind of stone, of somewhat slaty texture, and generally of dull white, or greenish grey colour. Its surface is smooth, and feels unctuous to the touch.
These stones, when properly cut and smoothed, are of indispensable utility to carpenters, cutlers, and others, for sharpening their cutting instruments upon. Those of the finest grain are used for lancets, penknives, and razors. For this purpose their surface, when used, is covered with a small quantity of oil; by which, after a while, they are rendered considerably harder than they were at first. They ought to be kept in damp and cool places; for, if much exposed to the sun, they become too hard and dry for many purposes to which they are applied.
There is a vulgar and erroneous notion that hones are holly wood, which by lying in petrifying water, have been thereby converted into stone. The greater number of them have a fine and a coarse side. From the circumstance of their having been originally brought into this country from Turkey and the Levant, they are sometimes called Turkey stones. They are now found in Saxony and Bohemia, in North Wales, and near Drogheda, in Ireland.
The powder of whet slate is sometimes used, instead of emery, for the cutting and polishing of metals.
MICA FAMILY.
123. COMMON MICA, GLIMMER, or MUSCOVY GLASS, is a mineral substance of foliated texture, which is capable of being divided into extremely thin leaves that have a sensible elasticity, and are transparent.
The colour of mica is greenish, sometimes nearly black, reddish, brown, yellow, or silvery white, with, occasionally, a metallic lustre on the surface. Mica is so soft as easily to be scratched; and, when divided across the plates, seems rather to tear than break.