"The equilibrium... in the interior of a solid mass, between the repulsive force of heat and the molecular attraction, is stable; [i.e.,] it re-establishes itself when disturbed... If the molecules are arranged at [equilibrium] distances.., and if an external force begins to increase this distance without any change of temperature, the effect of attraction begins by surpassing that of heat, and brings back the molecules to their original position, after a multitude of oscillations... A similar effect is exerted in the opposite sense when a mechanical cause diminishes the primitive distance of the molecules; such is the origin of the vibrations of sonorous or flexible bodies, and of all the effects of their elasticity."
January 1, 1970
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/The_Analytic_Theory_of_Heat