Grappling with the Monster eBook

Timothy Shay Arthur
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 245 pages of information about Grappling with the Monster.

Grappling with the Monster eBook

Timothy Shay Arthur
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 245 pages of information about Grappling with the Monster.
way, without calling in the aid of the higher centres, except something more than ordinary occurs to demand their service, upon which we think before we perform.  Under alcohol, as the spinal centres become influenced, these pure automatic acts cease to be correctly carried on.  That the hand may reach any object, or the foot be correctly planted, the higher intellectual centre must be invoked to make the proceeding secure.  There follows quickly upon this a deficient power of co-ordination of muscular movement.  The nervous control of certain of the muscles is lost, and the nervous stimulus is more or less enfeebled.  The muscles of the lower lip in the human subject usually fail first of all, then the muscles of the lower limbs, and it is worthy of remark that the extensor muscles give way earlier than the flexors.  The muscles themselves, by this time, are also failing in power; they respond more feebly than is natural to the nervous stimulus; they, too, are coming under the depressing influence of the paralyzing agent, their structure is temporarily deranged, and their contractile power reduced.

“This modification of the animal functions under alcohol, marks the second degree of its action.  In young subjects, there is now, usually, vomiting with faintness, followed by gradual relief from the burden of the poison.”

[Illustration:  AN UTTER WRECK.]

EFFECT ON THE BRAIN CENTRES.

“The alcoholic spirit carried yet a further degree, the cerebral or brain centres become influenced; they are reduced in power, and the controlling influences of will and of judgment are lost.  As these centres are unbalanced and thrown into chaos, the rational part of the nature of the man gives way before the emotional, passional or organic part.  The reason is now off duty, or is fooling with duty, and all the mere animal instincts and sentiments are laid atrociously bare.  The coward shows up more craven, the braggart more boastful, the cruel more merciless, the untruthful more false, the carnal more degraded. ’In vino veritas’ expresses, even, indeed, to physiological accuracy, the true condition.  The reason, the emotions, the instincts, are all in a state of carnival, and in chaotic feebleness.

“Finally, the action of the alcohol still extending, the superior brain centres are overpowered; the senses are beclouded, the voluntary muscular prostration is perfected, sensibility is lost, and the body lies a mere log, dead by all but one-fourth, on which alone its life hangs.  The heart still remains true to its duty, and while it just lives it feeds the breathing power.  And so the circulation and the respiration, in the otherwise inert mass, keeps the mass within the bare domain of life until the poison begins to pass away and the nervous centres to revive again.  It is happy for the inebriate that, as a rule, the brain fails so long before the heart that he has neither the power nor the sense to continue his process of destruction up to the act of death of his circulation.  Therefore he lives to die another day.

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Grappling with the Monster from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.