THE GEOLOGIST 
FEBRUARY, 1860. 
GEOLOGICAL L 0 C A L I T I E S. — N O. I. 
FOLKESTONE. 
By S. J. Mackie, F.G.S., F.S.A. 
Time passes away, and we all of us grow older and older. As 
day by day the daylight lengthens or contracts, the air gets warmer 
or chillier, the skies brighter or bleaker, and everything around us 
imperceptably changes, it is only after the lapse of weeks that we 
perceive the change. 
Lign. 1.— Eastwear Bay, from Copt Point. 
Yet Time never stays his rapid course ; and in mid-life it is per 
haps for the first time we stop in our onward path to feel, for the 
first time too, we are not what we were. 
VOL. m. F 
