Because the blood coagulates over the cut, and throws out a kind of lymph, which forms an incipient flesh, and excludes the air while the blood-vessels are engaged in repairing the part. "And God said, Let us make man in our own image, after our likeness; and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing."—Gen. i. Because our substance changes in the minutest atoms; and each separate atom has a life of itself, the maintenance of which preserves the unity and permanence of the whole. Because moles are themselves organised formations, and repair themselves just as any other part of the body does. But bruises and wounds are the result of accidental disturbances, which in course of time become removed. If the cut is so deep and serious as to destroy the system of vessels which supply and repair the part, then it is evident that they cannot work so perfectly as when in their sound condition. Their functions are, therefore, interfered with, and instead of having flesh uniform with the other parts of the system; there results a scar, or a wound imperfectly repaired. Because the fluids and vessels of the body are in some degree transparent, and the thin textures of the sides of the fingers allows the light to pass, and shows the beautiful crimson colour of the blood. If the web of a frog's foot be brought in the field of a good microscope, and set against a strong light, the blood may be seen in circulation, with the most wonderful effect. Each vessel, and every globule of blood, can be seen most distinctly, and the junction of the arteries and veins can be clearly traced. The little boats of nutrition may be seen chasing each other in rapid succession, and when the animal exerts itself to escape, the flow of the blood increases; and not unfrequently, under these circumstances of agitation, have we seen two or three blood discs struggling together to enter a vessel that was too small for them. Again and again they have endeavoured to find a passage, until one of them happening to slip forward, got away, followed by the others! "Know ye that the Lord he is God: it is he that hath made us, and not we ourselves: we are his people, and the sheep of his pasture."—Psalm c. Because the transparent texture of the nails enables us to see the colour of the vascular structure that lies underneath the skin. Vascular.—Full of vessels. In this instance, full of capillary blood-vessels. Because they give firmness to the touch, and enable us to apply the extremities of the fingers to many useful purposes for which they would otherwise be unfitted. They enable us to press the tips of the fingers, where the highest degree of sensitiveness prevails, so as to bring the largest amount of nervous perception into the sense of touch. Because the vascular surface underneath is attached to the horny texture of the nail; but by knocks and other causes, the nail sometimes separates in small patches from the membrane below, and becomes dry and opaque. Because there the nail is newly formed by the vascular substance out of which it grows, and has not yet assumed its proper horny and transparent nature. Because the blood-vessels that supply its surface are so very fine that they do not admit the red corpuscles of the blood. Because, under exciting causes of inflammation, the blood-vessels become distended, and the red corpuscles enter, producing a net-work of red blood-vessels across the white surface of the eye. Because the lips are formed of the mucous membrane that lines the body internally, and covers the surface of most of the internal parts. This membrane contains a great number of minute red vessels, which give softness and moisture to the surface. A very beautiful "Hast thou not known, hast thou not heard, that the everlasting God, the Lord, the Creator of the ends of the earth, fainteth not, neither is weary? there is no searching of his understanding"—Isaiah xl. Because, generally from the want of exercise and fresh air, their blood is deficient of the healthy proportion of red corpuscles. Because the redness of the blood is due to the amount of oxygen which it contains, and air and exercise oxygenise the blood, and diffuse it throughout the system. By the very powerful contraction (and alternate dilation) of the thick muscles of the heart, assisted also by the muscular cords of the blood-vessels themselves, and in many instances by the compression of the muscles in which the arteries lie embedded. Because the capillary vessels are so numerous, that though they are infinitely smaller, they are capable of receiving in their minute tubes the whole of the quantity of blood transmitted to them through the larger vessels. Because the pressure upon the muscles of the leg retards the progress of the blood until it forces itself through the compressed vessels, and thereby imparts a pulsation which moves the leg and foot. Because it is through these small vessels alone that the substances of the body are renewed and changed. Even the larger blood-vessels "All my bones shall say, Lord, who is like unto thee, which deliverest the poor from him that is too strong for him, yea, the poor and the needy from him that spoileth him?"—Psalm xxxv. From twenty-five to thirty-five pounds. (See 623.) In addition to the muscular coats of the veins, and the influence of muscular action upon them, there are in the veins numerous semi-circular valves, which are not found in the arteries. These valves extend from the sides of the veins in such a manner that they allow the free passage of the blood upwards, but a backward motion of the blood would expand the cup-like valves and stop the passage; so that the blood can only move in one direction, and that towards the heart. The blood circulates once through the body in about two minutes. If, therefore, we estimate the amount of blood at twenty-four pounds, it follows that no less than twelve pounds of blood pass through the heart every minute; and it is estimated that if the blood moved with equal force in a straight line it would pass through one hundred and fifty feet in a minute. |