These two experiments evince that pointed conductors are more proper to secure houses from the effects of lightning that those terminating with a ball or knob, and that if the pointed conductors fairly act on the cloud the security is complete.
CHAP. XVI.
Of animal electricity.
The electric power, observed by the ancients only in amber, and perhaps the tourmaline, was in process of time found to be in glass, rosin, silk, and several other substances. By degrees it was discovered, that very strong signs of electricity were exhibited by a number of animals. The experiment of producing sparks of electrical fire, by rubbing the back of a cat in frosty weather, proved that electricity might exist in a very active state in the bodies of animals, without injuring their functions. From animals of an inferior kind a transition was made to the human species. Some people were observed to have a remarkably bright lustre of their eyes, others were found to be so strongly electrified naturally, that a very sensible electrometer was perceptibly affected, when brought near them.—Others, it is affirmed, were found so sensible to the presence of electricity, as to be affected by a flash of lightning, though so distant that the thunder could not be heard. But what principally claims our attention in regard to this part of our subject is, that there are unquestionably certain animals which can at pleasure give an electric shock, of sufficient force to kill other small animals, and that in fact they often do it. We shall describe only three of the most remarkable of these electric animals—the Gymnotus electricus, the Torpedo, and the Silurus electricus.
The Gymnotus is a genus of fishes, belonging to the order of apodes. They have two tentacula at the upper lip; the eyes are covered with the common skin.—There are five rays in the membrane of the gills; the body is compressed, and carinated on the belly with a fin. There are five species; the most remarkable is the electricus, commonly called the electric eel. This species is peculiar to the Surrinam river, and they inhabit the most rocky parts of it, at a considerable distance from the sea.—The most accurate description of this fish, is in the Philosophical Transactions, for 1775, where Alexander Garden M. D. gives an account of three of them brought to Charleston in South Carolina. The largest was about three feet eight inches long, and from ten to fourteen inches in circumference, about the thickest part of the body. The head was large, broad, flat, and smooth, impressed here and there with holes, as if perforated with a blunt needle, especially towards the sides, where they are more regular. There are two nostrils on each side; one is large, tubular, and elevated above the surface; the other small and level with the skin. The mouth is large, but the jaws have no teeth, so that the animal lives by suction, or by swallowing its food entire.
The eyes are small, flat, and of a blueish colour, placed a little behind the nostrils. The whole body from a few inches below the head, was distinguished into four longitudinal parts, clearly divided from each other by lines. The carina begins a few inches below the head, and widening as it proceeds, reaches as far as the tail, where it is thinnest. The situation of the anus is very remarkable, being an inch more forward than the pectoral fins. Across the body, there are a number of small bands, annular divisions, or rather rugæ of the skin; by means of which the fish seems to partake of the vermicular nature, having the power of lengthening and shortening its body like a worm, and by means of which it can swim backwards as well as forwards.—For an anatomical description of this fish, see the appendix to the 2d. vol. of Mr. Cavallo’s “Complete treatise” page 303.
The Gymnotus has the astonishing property of giving the electric shock to any person or number of persons, either by the immediate touch of the hand or by the mediation of any metallic conductor. The shock is interrupted by the intervention of a non-conducting substance. If the animal be touched only with one hand, a kind of tremor is felt in that hand only. The power of giving shocks depends entirely on the will of the animal.
As nature is ever provident for her creatures, both with regard to their preservation and support, she has endowed the Gymnotus with a peculiar instinctive faculty, so that if it be pursued by an enemy, it never fails to communicate a shock, in consequence of which it eventually makes its escape. In obtaining food it likewise makes use of its electrical property by which it kills small fish, and afterwards devours them.
But the most remarkable instinct of this fish is, that when any substance approaches it, it is sensible whether it be a conductor or non-conductor. In order to exhibit this wonderful phenomenon, a variety of methods were contrived, the easiest and most satisfactory one was the following. The extremities of two wires were dipped into the water of the vessel, in which the animal was kept, after which they were extended to a considerable distance, where they terminated in two separate glasses full of water. These wires being supported by silk at some distance from each other, the circuit was, of course, incomplete. In these circumstances if a person completed the circuit, by placing one hand in one of the glasses and the other in the other, the fish which never went purposely towards the wires, while the circuit was interrupted, would now go immediately towards them and give the shock, and this though the completion of the circuit was made out of his sight.
The next electrical fish we are to mention is the Torpedo; a genus of fishes belonging to the order of Chondropterygia; the species of this genus are remarkable and numerous; but we must content ourselves with the sixth species, called the electrical ray, or cramp fish, or Torpedo. The head and body, which are indistinct, are nearly round, the ventral fins form on each side the quarter of a circle, the two dorsal fins are placed on a trunk of the tail, which is round, the caudal fin is broad and abrupt. The eyes are small, and placed near each other; behind each is a round spiracle with six small cutaneous rags on their inner circumference.—The mouth is small, and the teeth are minute and spicular.
These fish have been taken in Torbay, off Pembroke, near Waterford in Ireland, and many other parts of Europe, with a trawl, and sometimes with a bait; they commonly lie about forty fathoms deep. The food of the Torpedo is fish.—For an anatomical description we refer the curious reader to one given by Mr. Hunter, in the Philosophical Transactions, vol. 63.