<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1>BIRDS AND ALL NATURE.</h1>
<h2>Vol. IV.</h2>
<h2>No. 4.</h2>
<h3>OCTOBER, 1898.</h3>
<h2><SPAN name="EARS" id="EARS"></SPAN>EARS.</h2>
<p class="ac"><span class="sc">By W. E. Watt.</span></p>
<p>THE air is an elastic fluid surrounding
the earth. The
motions of things whether
alive or not, set it in a state
of vibration that rarely ceases. At all
times and in all places it is pulsing
responsively to all that is going on.</p>
<p>Animals are interested in what is
moving about them. It may mean
life or death, pleasure or agony, and
most animals are keen to know which
is for them at any given period. They
are therefore equipped with organs
that respond to these waves of the air.
They are variously equipped, some
hearing certain sounds feebly where
others are acute to them and deeply
moved. Some sounds are full of
moment to one organism arousing it
to nervous activity while another
organism knows nothing of what is so
distinctly heard by the first.</p>
<p>Can a Mule hear more than a
Mouse is a question which has agitated
many young people who have considered
the length of the former's ear
and its versatility. A series of experiments
once conducted in youthful
sport by the writer, seemed to settle
the matter that each can hear sounds
which are unnoticed by the other, and
that the ear of the Mouse is much
better adapted in hearing powers to
the occupation of the Mouse than is
that of his long eared neighbor. Certain
shrill sounds of whatever degree
of loudness, cannot be heard by the
Mule even when oats might be secured
by attending to them, while distant
sounds of a heavy character seem to
fail to affect the ear of the Mouse.</p>
<p>The same is noticeable in the hearing
of people. To some persons a note
one octave higher than the highest
note of a piano, cannot be heard.
Others can hear such a tone, and yet
others are made painfully nervous by
it without knowing quite what the
trouble is. To some the chirp of the
Sparrow is the upper limit of hearing,
others can hear the voice of the Bat,
yet others are able to hear the notes of
insects that range higher in pitch
than the voice of the Bat. Dr. Wollaston
says, "As there is nothing in the
nature of the atmosphere to prevent
the existence of vibrations incomparably
more frequent than any of which
we are conscious, we may imagine
that animals like the Grilli (Grasshoppers)
whose powers appear to
commence nearly where ours terminate,
may have the faculty of hearing
still sharper sounds which we do not
know to exist; and that there may be
other insects, hearing nothing in
common with us, but endowed with a
power of exciting, and a sense which
perceives vibrations of the same nature,
indeed, as those which constitute our
ordinary sounds, but so remote that
the animals who perceive them may be
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</SPAN></span>
said to possess another sense agreeing
with our own solely in the medium by
which it is excited."</p>
<p>The human ear is capable of hearing
musical sounds produced by vibrations
ranging from twenty-four in a
second of time to forty thousand.
This indicates that humanity is confined
in interest to the motions of the
atmosphere within these limits. The
possibilities of higher and lower fields
of music are such that one writer has
said that it may be that the air about
us is constantly resounding to the
music of the heavenly hosts while our
dull ears with their limited powers are
unable to catch the poorest note in
that celestial harmony.</p>
<p>Sound travels about one thousand
ninety feet in a second in the air.
Through other elastic mediums it
varies in speed. The beholder of an
explosion of dynamite in a harbor
receives three shocks, one coming by
way of the air, another by water, and
the third through the earth, all
arriving at different times.</p>
<p>It is a fortunate thing that low
sounds travel as rapidly as high ones
and loud sounds no faster than soft
ones. Thus the playing of a band
upon the water, at a distance, is beautiful,
because all the tones powerful
enough to reach the listener do so at
the right time to preserve harmony.
If it were not for this equality in
traveling power, no music on a grand
scale could be possible, for those sitting
at a distance from the performers would
be in a sea of discord from the late
arrival of tones which should have
blended with those gone before. In spite
of the fact that our highest appreciable
note is but one-third of an inch in
length of wave and the wave of our
lowest note exceeds forty feet in length,
all sounds produced in harmony travel
in harmony till exhausted in space.</p>
<p>The ears of various animals are beautifully
adapted to their respective
habits. The watch of the Dog is most
valuable because distant noises are so
readily detected by his faithful ear.
The Thrush has been observed hopping
along the ground with frequent
stops to listen. So keen is his hearing
that the presence of a Worm below the
surface is detected by the sound of the
Worm's occupation. By judiciously
beating the ground he brings the
Worm toward the surface as if to
escape its enemy, the Mole. At the
proper instant the turf is torn up and
nearly always the Worm secured.</p>
<p>The form of the outer ear is adapted
to the needs of the animal. Most
grass eating animals have ears that
turn readily in all directions to listen
for enemies, but the ears of flesh eating
animals that pursue their prey are set
only to reach forward to hear the
sounds of escaping prey.</p>
<p>Many insects and lower orders of
animals are looked upon by man as
incapable of the pleasures of hearing.
But this is often a mistake. Snails
have been known to enjoy the voice of
their human friends and come forth
when called by familiar voices.</p>
<p>The fondness of the Cobra for music
and the powers of charming this
hideous animal partly by appealing to
his esthetic hearing are well known.
Moths have good hearing as one may
observe while walking in the woods
where the crackling of dry sticks
alarms them so they fly up from their
noonday slumbers in great numbers.
The antennæ of the Butterfly are
supposed to act as hearing organs.
Crabs and Shrimps hear with their
inner antennæ, Clams with their feet,
and some of the crustacea with the
bases of the lobe of the tail.</p>
<p>Many animals seem to enjoy the
voice of man and the sounds of the
various musical instruments which he
uses. Frogs and Toads may be taught
to know their master's voice. Canaries,
Parrots, and Doves enjoy human singing
and instrumental music as well.
A Woodchuck has been known to
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</SPAN></span>
manifest his refinement of soul by
coming forth from his hole at the
sound of a piano and to sit with the
air of a connoisseur criticising the
selections with which he was being
favored.</p>
<p>Not only is the ability to hear different
in different persons, but the
thoroughness with which they hear
varies largely. Few sounds consist of
simple waves of air. As the waves of
the sea are noticed to bear smaller
waves upon them and these in turn to
carry wavelets, so the waves of sound
are rarely smooth, simple waves.
There are many more waves upon
waves in sound production than can
be observed on the surface of the sea.
A note from the piano not only sounds
the note which the key struck represents,
but also a great many tones that
chord with this tone higher up the
scale. These overtones are not so loud
as the fundamental tone and cannot
readily be detected by the uncultivated
ear. But they give character to the
tone. The overtones make the note
of the violin and the cornet differ.
No two voices have the same overtones,
and while we are unable to hear
these overtones by themselves, yet we
are able to distinguish the voices of
our friends instantly by means of them.</p>
<p>As voices differ in the overtones
they carry, so do ears differ in the
number of overtones they are able to
receive. Some people enjoy hearing
high voices only. For them the
soprano or tenor is always in demand.
Others prefer deep voices and admire
altos and basses. I have stood beside
a friend at a concert where a first class
artist was pouring forth a baritone
song with the most delicate and artistic
tone and finish, and had my friend
turn to me and say: "What on earth
do people find in that man's voice to
pay money to hear?" The singer's
voice was full of rich overtones which
made it valuable to the average cultured
listener, but in the ear of my
friend they produced a jarring that
was decidedly unpleasant to him, although
he was fond of the singing of
the untrained voices of the members
of the choir where he attended church.</p>
<p>A large part of the business of the
voice culture expert is the adjustment
of the vocal organs in singing so as to
produce the right sets of overtones to
give the voice a carrying quality and
the richness we enjoy in the finished
artist. One notable example of the
production of too much of a good thing
was instanced in the fate of a soprano
who came to America a few years ago
with an extensive operatic repertoire
and a voice that could not be drowned
by a full orchestra as it soared to the
greatest heights and displayed a flexibility
most remarkable. But she
failed to please us. A neighbor of
mine said to her friend: "Just wait till
you hear Madame Blank begin. She
has a voice that will cut you like a
knife."</p>
<p>Both the inner and outer ear formations
are responsible for the differences
in hearing in different people. Cultivation
does much for any sense, but
for him that has no ear for music
cultivation will not construct an ear.
It is easy to see what a difference in
hearing will be produced by a slight
change in the position of the outer ear.
While listening to a steady sound,
draw the ear forward with one finger,
relax it to its normal position, then
push it back against the head. The
quality of the sound heard and its
intensity will be varied in each
instance.</p>
<p>So we may be lenient with our
friends who do not enjoy the same sort
of music with ourselves. And the
same music will not always be the
very same. A pistol shot upon a
mountain top sounds much like a fire
cracker in a valley, and the condition
of the atmosphere frequently modifies
music almost as much as the shape of
the room in which it is produced.</p>
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