Page:Life in Motion.djvu/66

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been validated.
46
LIFE IN MOTION

by touching it, but instead of the frog we will electrify my assistant standing on an insulated stool. So long as I abstain from touching him he feels nothing, but you see, if I touch his head, or his neck, or the tip of his nose, how the sparks fly out, and he then feels a smart and disagreeable sensation. During electrification we feel nothing, but it is only when we pass from one stage of electrification to another that we have a sensation, and the more rapidly this change takes place, the more irritating the sensation is.

We have now seen how nerves and muscles may be irritated in a definite and precise way, and we have found that the irritation of its nerve causes a contraction of a muscle. In the case of a single twitch, however, the movement is too rapid to be appreciated, and still less analysed, by the unaided eye. We cannot tell, for example, whether the contraction occurs in a shorter time than the relaxation, and still less whether the contraction is at a uniform rate in time, or whether it contracts faster at the beginning and more slowly towards the end, or the reverse. We must not, therefore, trust only to our senses