[A Handbook of Health by Woods Hutchinson]@TWC D-Link book
A Handbook of Health

CHAPTER XIX
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This is why children's bones, being softer and more flexible than those of grown-up people, are not so liable to break or snap across when they fall or tumble about; and why, too, they are more easily warped or bent out of shape through lack of proper muscular exercise and proper food.
Bones are strips of soft body-stuff soaked with lime and hardened, like bricklayer's mortar, or concrete.[24] When you know the shape of the body, you know the bones; for they simply form a shell over the head and run like cores, or piths, down the centre of the back, and down each joint of the limbs.
In turning into spongy limestone, or animal concrete, they have become one of the deadest tissues in the body.

They are tools of the muscles, the levers by which the muscles move the limbs and body about; they never do anything of their own accord.

On account of their lifelessness and lack of vitality, they are rather easily attacked by disease, or broken by a blow or fall.

There are such a large number of bones (two hundred and six, all told), and they resist decay and last so much longer after death than any other parts of the body, that they fill our museums and text-books of anatomy, form most of our fossils, and have thus given us rather an exaggerated idea of their importance during life.
[Illustration: THE HUMAN SKELETON] The Frame-Work of the Body.

Just look at any part of the body and imagine that it has a bony core of about the same general shape as itself, and you can reason out all the bones of the skeleton.


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