Effects of the Thunderbolt
"A
THUNDERBOLT overthrows, breaks, and rends bodies that do
not permit electricity to circulate freely. It shatters
rocks and throws the fragments great distances; it unroofs
our dwellings; it splits the trunks of trees and divides the
wood into little shreds; it overthrows walls, or even
wrenches them from their foundations. In penetrating the
ground, it melts the sand on its way and makes irregular
glass tubes. It reddens, melts, and vaporizes metallic
substances that give free passage to the electric current,
such as metal chains, the iron wire of bells, the gilding of
frames. Its preference, in short, is for objects made of
metal. There are instances of persons left uninjured while
the lightning consumed the various metallic objects worn or
carried by them, such as gold-lace, metal buttons, and
coins. It sets fire to piles of combustible matter like
bundles of straw and stacks of dried fodder.
"A feeble electric spark, like those I taught you how to get
from paper, makes but the slightest perceptible impression
on us. At the very most, we feel a little prick at the point
of communication. But with the help of powerful apparatus at
the disposal of science, the electric shock becomes painful
and can be dangerous, or even mortal. When one
is struck by
a rather strong spark, one feels, particularly in the
joints, a sudden shock that makes one tremble and feel weak
in the knees. With a still stronger spark, the whole body is
seized with a sudden shaking so violent that the joints seem
to be severed and one is knocked down by the stroke. Science
possesses appliances powerful enough to kill an ox with the
electric shock.
"The thunderbolt, a spark incomparably stronger than that of
our electric machines, gives to men and animals an extremely
violent shock; it throws them down, injures them, and even
kills them instantly. Sometimes a person thus struck bears
traces, more or less deep, of burning; sometimes not the
slightest wound is to be seen. Death is not, therefore, as a
rule, due to any wounds inflicted by the thunderbolt, but to
the sudden and violent shock given to the body. Sometimes
death is only apparent: the electric shock simply suspends
the primary vital functions, circulation and respiration.
This state, which would end in death if prolonged, we can
combat by giving the person struck the same care bestowed
upon the drowned; that is to say, by seeking to revive by
friction the respiratory movement of the breast. At other
times the electric shock more or less paralyzes some part of
the body, or perhaps only produces a passing disorder which
wears off of itself."
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