30 HEAD. 



B. Now we can understand why what always 

 seems to be so dangerous should be attended with no 

 more injury, the falling of boys upon the ice, as if 

 they would sometimes beat their heads in. It is in- 

 deed a beautiful fact, that the part of our head which 

 cannot have the protection of our hands, when we 

 fall, should be particularly guarded by the make of 

 the head itself. 



A. We further observe, in this wonderful combi- 

 nation of precautions, that the temple bones, which 

 are the thinnest part of the box, are placed directly 

 over the shoulders, which secure them in case of a 

 fall; and, besides, are a little flattened in within the 

 general circle of the head, which preserves them still 

 further from any blow : and what is again remarkable, 

 are composed, anatomists say, of the hardest bony 

 matter in the whole body. "Generally it is observ- 

 able," says Dr. Bell, " of the whole structure of the 

 head, that those parts which would be most apt to 

 strike the ground when a man falls are the strongest." 



T. Anatomists speak of a remarkable display of 

 design in regard to preserving the brain from the 

 pressure of the blood. 



B. I can easily conceive of this danger. I have 

 frequently felt a disagreeable sensation after running 

 or stooping, as of a fulness or pressure in the head. 



T. Apoplexy, the most fatal of all disorders in 

 the brain, and which is generally occasioned by the 

 bursting of a blood vessel, or the interruption of the 

 passage of the blood in this delicate organ, has been 

 known to be brought on by persons whose vessels 



