The influence of compression and dilatation in producing the doubly refracting structure in solids of all kinds, whether crystallised or uncrystallised, which do not possess it, and in modifying that structure in all crystals which do possess it, has been long known; but with this class of phenomena, those which I am about to describe have no connection whatever.In the course of experiments on the double reflexion and polarisation of light which I discovered in the chrysammates of potash and magnesia, murexide, and other crystals, I was surprised to find that these substances could be spread out upon glass by hard pressure, like grease or soft wax, and that in the case of chrysammate of potash and other bodies, when the powder could scarcely be distinguished from snuff, I obtained a transparent film, exhibiting the phenomena of double reflexion and polarisation from its surface, as perfectly as if I had been using a large crystal.