The Child's Day by Woods Hutchinson
page 42 of 136 (30%)
page 42 of 136 (30%)
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are there. Now there are, just as truly, waves of air all around us.
We cannot see the waves, because they are too small and roll too quickly. But some of these, when they roll against our ears, make us hear. They make what we call _sound_. You have heard about sending messages through the air, without telegraph wires. Wireless messages are often sent to ships out in the middle of the ocean. This is done by starting tiny electric waves, which travel through the air much as the waves of water are traveling across the ocean beneath. Of course there must be a machine, called a _receiver_, to catch the waves and "hear" the message. Mother Nature has given each of you two very delicate little receivers to catch the sound waves and carry them to your brain. You know what they are--you can name them. But how are these wonderful little machines made? You have never seen the whole of your ear. The part on the outside of the head, of course, you can easily see and feel. Sometimes you notice a deaf person put his hand behind his ear and press it forward so as to catch the sound waves better. These waves roll in at the little hole you can see, and travel along a short passage till they come to a round _drum_, a piece of very thin skin stretched tight like a drumhead. Have you ever beaten a drum with a stick? You felt the drumhead quiver under the blow, did you not? Well, when the sound waves beat against the drum in the ear, it quivers and starts little waves inside the ear. Each little wave in turn beats against a little bone called the _hammer_; the hammer beats against another called the _anvil_, and this against a third called the _stirrup_; and the quiver of the |
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