EFECT OF SENSIBILITY.
_The retina is not so easily excited into action by less irritation
after having been lately subjected to greater._
1. When any one passes from the bright daylight into a darkened room, the
irises of his eyes expand themselves to their utmost extent in a few
seconds of time; but it is very long before the optic nerve, after having
been stimulated by the greater light of the day, becomes sensible of the
less degree of it in the room; and, if the room is not too obscure, the
irises will again contract themselves in some degree, as the sensibility of
the retina returns.
2. Place about half an inch square of white paper on a black hat, and
looking steadily on the center of it for a minute, remove your eyes to a
sheet of white paper; and after a second or two a dark square will be seen
on the white paper, which will continue some time. A similar dark square
will be seen in the closed eye, if light be admitted through the eyelids.
So after looking at any luminous object of a small size, as at the sun, for
a short time, so as not much to fatigue the eyes, this part of the retina
becomes less sensible to smaller quantities of light; hence, when the eyes
are turned on other less luminous parts of the sky, a dark spot is seen
resembling the shape of the sun, or other luminous object which we last
beheld. This is the source of one kind of the dark-coloured _muscae
volitantes_. If this dark spot lies above the center of the eye, we turn
our eyes that way, expecting to bring it into the center of the eye, that
we may view it more distinctly; and in this case the dark spectrum seems to
move upwards. If the dark spectrum is found beneath the centre of the eye,
we pursue it from the same motive, and it seems to move downwards. This has
given rise to various conjectures of something floating in the aqueous
humours of the eyes; but whoever, in attending to these spots, keeps his
eyes unmoved by looking steadily at the corner of a cloud, at the same time
that he observes the dark spectra, will be thoroughly convinced, that they
have no motion but what is given to them by the movement of our eyes in
pursuit of them. Sometimes the form of the spectrum, when it has been
received from a circular luminous body, will become oblong; and sometimes
it will be divided into two circular spectra, which is not owing to our
changing the angle made by the two optic axises, according to the distance
of the clouds or ot
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