Scoriæ: Eulogy On Shakespeare (1864); What We Breathe (1869); the First Christmas-Eve (1874); the Sun That Never Sets (1879)

Cover Scoriæ: Eulogy On Shakespeare (1864); What We Breathe (1869); the First Christmas-Eve (1874); the Sun That Never Sets (1879)
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This system of hairs catches the particles of dust, and allows the air to pass freely. There is no similar protection in the mouth. Hence air respired through the mouth is laden with impurities which can not enter the lungs through the nose. The inference is plain that in exposed situations the mouth should always be kept closed. It is also evident, that, as the air is always more or less loaded with dust, there is continual danger in breathing- through the mouth; and, other things being equal,... those who sleep wdth the mouth open will be the most liable to disease.
There is one important fact which seems to WHAT WE BREATHE. 1 9 have been altogether lost sight of by those engaged in this interesting investigation. It is that the human system, as the systems of all other organized beings, is built upon a plan which exactly adapts it to the circumstances that surround it. Only when some one of the elements of those circumstances is in excess, or deficient, either in mass or force, does evil ensue to the organism.


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