Caroline. I remember how obscure and confused the image was, when you enlarged the opening, without putting in the lens.
Mrs. B. Such, or very similar, would be the representation on the retina, unassisted by the refracting humours.
You will now be able to understand the nature of that imperfection of sight, which arises from the eyes being too prominent. In such cases, the crystalline humour, D, ([fig. 5.]) being extremely convex, refracts the rays too much, and collects a pencil, proceeding from the object A B, into a focus, F, before they reach the retina. From this focus, the rays proceed, diverging, and consequently form a very confused image on the retina, at a b. This is the defect in short-sighted people.
Emily. I understand it perfectly. But why is this defect remedied by bringing the object nearer to the eye, as we find to be the case with short-sighted people?
Mrs. B. The nearer you bring an object to your eye, the more divergent the rays fall upon the crystalline humour, and consequently they are not so soon converged to a focus: this focus, therefore, either falls upon the retina, or at least approaches nearer to it, and the object is proportionally distinct, as in [fig. 6.]
Emily. The nearer, then, you bring an object to a lens, the further the image recedes behind it.
Mrs. B. Certainly. But short-sighted persons have another resource, for objects which they can not bring near to their eyes; this is, to place a concave lens, C D, ([fig. 1, plate 22.]) before the eye, in order to increase the divergence of the rays. The effect of a concave lens, is, you know, exactly the reverse of a convex one: it renders parallel rays divergent, and those which are already divergent, still more so. By the assistance of such glasses, therefore, the rays from a distant object, fall on the pupil, as divergent as those from a less distant object; and, with short-sighted people, they throw the image of a distant object, back, as far as the retina.
Caroline. This is an excellent contrivance, indeed.
Mrs. B. And tell me, what remedy would you devise for such persons as have a contrary defect in their sight; that is to say, who are long-sighted, in whom the crystalline humour, being too flat, does not refract the rays sufficiently, so that they reach the retina before they are converged to a point?