• * # ### §§ ######## # ſº § §§ # a. 3% § § § º : : º: º º … § [- tº: U. | #!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!№lllllllll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!IIIIIIIIaeſt Eò ∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞ -- № !!!!!!!!!!}\S: RR Ř STEZ, №. !!!!! \)]§§; : : Faetº (~) |||||||| * * * *.dº sº dº w tº ſº tº as gº º | |||}|{{f} l º ſ |All THE GIFT OF Mr. Michael Church !№. ģ%ſ,%ſ|\[\[|lmº įjįſiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiĎŇŘÌÌÎÎÏÏĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪݧffffffffffffffff; ¿% ºº: ! Ō ∞ Q €. Ü Q № Ō Ķ] Ō C Gj 0 £ № ∞ Œ Ō © C Çg 0 [] J Q C Đ €. ſ C Ō D C ∞ Œ G № €. [] {} � © ∞ dae №. № |-№ ■ : № C:Tº ∞): u r-, №j |-ą , [−) Œ ſ-№. ∞ ae: ſae Œ №r: U-, ∞∞∞ |-ī. ,。 Œ ∞ Œ [−] ►?: wae TOE Eāſ Œ daerae lae D!!! EË № wae •xº --77 №ž ſae Eº- Fl Eſ=}>}},~ •~• -|\\ $ º ,\ � © . ~~ ~~~~).---- Q_№_**T,$ſ;| ! ! ;-| 4● 7||∞-~~~~);}} ||ſ, ·|{5,ģ№§%ſ.§ |r- -:ķſåſ �§ 5}} |k^2 § €•’, : ||} );ſé ſg | !№ ** …, ſº:e, \ģ|||ģğ]; );„ , , , };|ģā }}} }§ <!} •ſēºſ |3||3||? | }}§§ :? ∞ * £º: º: ºut. º sº N Nº. º E. At ſº º º-ºº: º º º ºffº tae B()Y'S () WN B00 K, IMPROVED EDITION. Nižū 32 @$33. ---- Tºš tº: º #==::===:::::::::: §º.º.º. Psºrºr sººººººººººººº-ºº: §§§ } fºr------sº - - - ſº § ( c. S. FRANCIS AND COMPANY. i % - - agº- § º º r ſ ſ b \ -- - -**** ------- - --> -s; - ---------->|->|-> - - - - -e- --- -º-º: - - - <- - N- -. e º z :-r <-Erz’ * * = . Y. --T - * t f > | r) 22 /..., r f N ſ", , ** *. ... • ( * * * C& tº 0 . ( . . . 92-2:==sº * - \ wº. - …t. ſī; ſ V/ Ş Q ſ & 6 ſ § CŞ ſ | N ſ - ) • | | | \ } { § {}^ U3 (º) (; Ö j \|" () () (; ºft |E X T E N ID) E [D) a C0MPLETE ENCYCLOPEDIA OF ALL ATHLETIC, SciENTIFIC, RECREATIVE, OUTDOOR AND INDOOR, Crºttists in linerginia. INCLUDING * THE BOY'S OWN BOOK, THE BOOK OF GYMNASTICs, AND PARL OR MAGIC. §tº ºth mºstum: C. S. FRANCIS AND COMPANY. 1857. ••• • • • • • • • → **-~~ ~~_x, * ?, ~ ~~~~ a-* ,- * -->, , , ”º “T.);-;~~ .. * * * ~• ►^ ;----* * · · -- . . .__Źº-3#:; +-*|ׄ... ~~~~~ • • • • • •• • • * · * • ‘a ● { } | {! ; { } { -| •ș, { } } } * #|| | ||'\ ſ|| 1: { í• } *«{ 2, º ºff**). 'ſ;ſºſì<> SSR ſae: „(…,-�9 •••• !Sº àſ +> ~<!_) §.|- }€,• • wºrse--" g - .* ſ: , . . . . . . ~/ {-ſ tº ... /* //~ : ; ; ; / (*, * /t. A 2' ºt, , , ºekºa.tx- C# u-4 , *** 4 & ->{{<=33 PRELUDE. 33.3° A popula R EN cycloPEDIA of the Sports and Pastimes of Youth, a companion for all holydays, THE Boy’s own Book, -unmixed with aught that was not highly interesting to himself, had long been a deside- ratum; to supply which, he was usually led to become his own caterer, and purchase publications of an objectionable character, merely because their low price placed them within lais reach. The present Work was an attempt to obviate this inconvenience, by enabling those, who had the guardianship of youth, to present their young protegés, in the form of a Holyday or Birthday Present, with a concentration of all that usually delights them, executed in such a manner as their own judgment would approve, and much more amusing and instructive to the juvenile mind, than the cheap trash on which the hoarded shilling is usually expended. The event has fully justified the expectations of the Publishers; few works have met with so flattering a reception, from the press and the public; the whole of the first edition, which extended to three thousand copies, having been sold without advertisements, in little more than two months. IP R. E L U D E A wider field than we have taken cannot well be imagined. Ou, plan embraces the amusements of all minds, and of all seasons,—in win : zer and in summer, at home and abroad; the robust and the delicate,_ the contemplative and the ingenious, have each their tastes provided $or. The sports and exercises of out-door enjoyment, the pastimes of a winter’s fire-side,-and the recreation of science,—are copiously detail- ed in our pages, which have been printed in a close type, that we might be enabled to compress a whole library of sportful lore in the brief compass - of one little volume. We can homestly say, that no pains have been spared to do justice to our plan. We have attempted to please Seniors and Juniors, no easy task; but our failure can only be partial, for should we be condemned by a few, we are sure that the many will be in our favor; and that a host of advocates, appreciating our industry and our motives, would cheerfully undertake, on our behalf, the task of a pleader. So far the London Preface. The American publishers have omitted a few articles, entirely useless on this side the Atlantic, as the extra expense would have debarred the more useful part from being in the hands of $ hundreds of Youths, who will find everything that will amuse them in our kº- present volume. - Aſºº D Ö | § | |\º M. © } s §§ §º ( f Šº º º º ! |ſh Ǻ: º 4 º W. (T ( |. () {} ſ |N § *- §§. sº ‘.…' - §3. º º . .4.” • *.sº ºššić. § * §§ ---5. ...}} §§ § § Å §§ "& § - * , º ſ º §§§ ... . ºffs % 2k&N ſ ſ till - ſtſ | ſill; • * * * - ğ. w :tº: - §§ § º, ſº § *7. º §: 2. - w ºr -aº £3;" * ...sº --- #3%22%2- e *~~ ..ºzºº §§%22% - MISCEY, LANEOUS. OlúT- O O OR SPORTS. WE heartily trust that our young readers will commence the perusal o our pages with pleasure equal to that which we feel in sitting down to write them, and that we shall go pleasantly together through our work. The description of these Minor Sports, most especially, will, we are convinced, be an agreeable pastime to us, and call up, from time to time, welcome reminiscences of those days of our boyhood, when we were a hero at “Ring- : taw,” and by no means a contemptible adversary even to the most accom- plished youthful players at “Fives.” It will remind us of our happy Boydays and favourite school-fellows;–of feats of agility performed at “ Follow my Leader,” and trophies borne off in triumph at “Peg in the Ring;”—of those merry inornings, when the first glance of the sun awakened us, to Snatch an additional half-hour for the play-ground, without encroaching on the allotted times for study ;—when, during “winter’s surly reign,” we ) joined the active few, who, instead of moping in great coats, or shivering round a fire, sallied forth into the clear, cold, invigorating air, and marking but goals and bounds in the crisp hoar frost that mantled the ground, sought | : º É : MINOR SPORTS. after, and found warmth and high spirits in a game of “Prisoner’s Base,” —or made the brows glow at loſty “Leap-frog,”—or defied the frost by briskly plying the whip-top with eel-skin, and came in with glad hearts, ruddy cheeks, perfect willingness, and the hest of appetites, to our morning repast and subsequent studies. It will bring to our recollection also, those smooth and shady spots, where, when the noontide sum was midway in the heavens, in the sultry month of August, we alternately perused pleasant and instructive books, and played with our class-mates at “Increase- pound,” or set up a pyramid of marbles for them to shoot at, or shot at one erected by one of them. It will carry us back in imagination to the hills and downs, where we flew our kites, the loftiest soarers for miles around; —of mishaps, through breaking of strings, and long races of rivalry after our falling favorites;–to that cheerful parlour, in which, during the win- ter vacation, when mince-pies, plum-puddings, and young parties, were most abundant, on Christmas-eve, or mirthful Twelfth-night, most espe- cially,–we bore a part in the exhilarating and harmless fireside sports of the season;–to that dilapidated ruin, -the court of that mouldering castle, with a tall and stately elm rising from one of its corners, and ivy, apparently ages old, the constant home and nestling-place of innumerable birds, which bedecked and supported the outward side of its walls, the scene of our chief exploits at Fives;–to the garden walk, where our school-swing was erected, between two gigantic sister pear-trees;–and, in brief, to all those places where we played the games which were the delight of our holydays; when a sportive bout at “Saddle my Nag,” was in itself an ample recom- pense for the past two hourt ºf study, employed in working an intricate question in arithmetic—composing a theme on some difficult subject—ren- dering a portion of the Iliad into Latin hexameters, or a passage of Pope into French prose. We conceive that we are bringing no disgrace on our boyhood, by avowing that we deeply enjoyed the sports of the play-ground. The line of a talented writer, “A dunce at Syntax, but a dab at taw,” has, by a thoughtless few, been converted into a proverb, and those who were mºst cminent for their activity and love of the usual amusements of youth out of school, have thus been unjustly stigmatized as imattentive students. 'I'he reverse, we have generally found to be the fact; for, we have often remarked, that the lads who led the sports in the play-ground, stood high in . their classes in the school-room. “There is a time for all things,” is a trite, but, in this case, an applicable observation: the scholastic discipline wisely allots certain hours in the day for recreation; they should be enapioyed in healthful and agreeable pastime, so as to render the boy prepared to return with mental vigour to his books;–study should give a relish to sport, and Fport to study. But while we recoulmend that the school-room should be forgotten on the play-ground, we wish to impress on our young readers the ſecessity of their forgetting the play-ground in the school-room sº -*. | {/~\ * * - - • - —ºrrºr-H, º & . . . . - —z- * T ~ --> - º §º: –2–~2: §3 ** ~! --T_--~~ -- . ‘’?...D. º. a- - - - *::::::::… 2. ( Dºº-ºººº…~\_0\diº **...-- - - : s- S S G AMIES WITH M A R B L E S. THERE were, some years ago, and we believe, there still are, three or four different sorts of marbles: the Dutch, or variegated clay marbles, were reckoned the worst; those of yellow stone, with beautiful spots or circles of black or brown, were next in estimation ; and what were called the real taws, of pink marble, with dark red veins, “blood allies,” were preferred to all others. The games with marbles are not very numerous; the following pages contain descriptions of all that have come to our knowledge. SPANS AND SN OPS. This is the most simple of all games with marbles; one player first shoots his marble, the second them endeavours to strike or smop it, or otherwise, to shoot his own within a span of it. If he miss, or do not fire within the span, the first player, from the spot where his marble rests, in like manner, shoots at that of the second ; and so on, until a smop or span is made, when the marble smopped or spanned is taken, and the game begun anew, by the W 111 Il Cl". e BOST-ABOUT. This game differs from the preceding one only in this respect, namely, that the marbles, instead of being shot with the fore-finger and thumb, are pitched, or to use the technical word, bosted, by the players. * 10 MINOR SPORTS. HOL ES. Three small holes are dug, about a yard and a half asunder; a line is drawn about two yards from the first hole, from which the players begin the game. Chance decides who shall have the first shoot; the object is to drive the marble into the first hole; if this be dome, the player shoots again, at the distance of a span, towards the second. If, however, he miss the hole, the other player begins, and each shoots, alternately, as the other misses. After having shot the marble into a hole, the player is allowed, if his adversary’s marble be near, to drive it with his own as far as he can, and if he strike it, to shoot again. The game is won by the player who gets first into the last hole, in the following order:—first hole, second, third, —second, first,-second, third. The loser places. his knuckles at the first hole, the winner shoots as near to it as he can from the line, and fires three times, from the place where his marble rests, at the loser’s knuckles. ENO CR-OUT, Two or more may play at this game. He who begins, throws a marble gently against a wall, so that it rebounds to a distance not exceeding a yard; a second player throws another marble against the wall, endeavouring to make it rebound, so as to strike or come within a span of the first; if he can do neither, the first player takes up his own marble, and, in turn, strives to smop or span that of the second. The marble that is thus snopped or spammed, is won, and the winner begins again. Where only two play, it is best to knock out two or three marbles each, alternately, before they begin to use those on the ground. In this case, a player may win his own marbles, as they are common stock when down, and take up which he pleases, to play with. * THE CONQUEROR. This is a sport, which we do not much approve of, although we must confess, that in the days of our youth, we were very fond of it. Strong stone marbles of a moderate size must be used. The game is commenced by one boy laying his taw on a piece of smooth and tolerably hard earth, (turf and pavement are both improper,) the other player throws his taw at it, as hard as he can, so as to split it if possible. If he fail to do so, his own taw is thrown at in turn, and thus each player has, alternately, a cast at the taw of the other. A strong marble º frequently break, or conquer, fifty or a hundred others; where this game is much played, a taw that has become a conqueror of a considerable number, is very much prized, and the owner will not play it against any but those which have conquered a respectable quantity. “When Greek meets Greek,” or when two conquerors are engaged, the number of marblos previously broken by IMINOR SPORTS 11 the vanquished is added to those of the victor; thus, if my taw having already cplit twenty marbles, conquers another that has split twenty, my taw them becomes a conqueror of forty-one,—that is, twenty, its previous score; twenty, the vanquished taw’s score, and one for the broken taw itself. In the west of England, the game of “The Conqueror” is also play- ed, with small, hard, variegated shells, which are found in old banks, and from which the snails, their former inhabitants, have disappeared. The shell is held in the forefinger of the right hand, and its beak pushed vigo- rously against that of the adversary’s; the shell which breaks is, of course, conquered. AIR CH-BOARD. This game, in some parts of England, is called “Nine-holes;” it has various names, and is sometimes played with iron bullets instead of marbles. The marbles are bowled at a board set upright, resembling a bridge, with nine small arches, all of them numbered; if the marble strike against the sides of the arches, it becomes the property of the boy to whom the board belongs; but, if it go through any one of them, the bowler claims a num- ber equal to the number upon the arch it passed through. We have seen the boards, in this game, marked above some of the arches with millils, in this order:-5, 0, 1, 2, 0, 3, 0, 4, 0. In some places, where there are no nihils on the board, and the numbers go beyond five, the bowler not only loses his marble, if it strike against the sides of the arches, but also gives the board-keeper a marble each time he bowls. IRIN G-TAW. The rules of Ring-taw vary in different places; the following are the most general –A circle is drawn, into which each party places as many marbles as may be agreed on. . A line, called the offing, is then drawn at some distance, from which each in turn shoots at the ring. Shooting a marble out of the ring, entitles the shooter to go on again, and thus the ring may be sometimes cleared by a good player, before his companion or companions have a chance. After the first fire, the players return no more to the offing, but shoot, when their turn comes, from the place where their marbles rested on the last occasion. Every marble struck out of the ring, is won by the striking party; but if the taw at any time remain in the ring, the player is not only out, but if he have, previously, in the course of the me, struck out any marbles, he must put them in the ring again. And f one player strike with his taw the taw of another, the player whose taw is so struck, is out; and if he have, previously, shot any marbles out of the circle, he must hand them over to the party by whose taw his has been so struck. IMINOR, SPORTS. IN C R EASE-P OU N D. This is superior to any other game with marbles. It differs from “Ring taw” in the following particulars:—If, previously to any marble or sho being struck out of the ring or pound, the taw of one of the players be struck by the taw of another, (except that of his partner,) or in case he shoot his taw within the pound, in either case, he puts a shot in the ring, and before either of the others play, shoots from the offing and continues in the game; but if the first of these events occur after one or more shots have been struck out of the pound, if he have previously, during that game, obtained any shots himself, he hands them over to the party who has struck him, and also puts a shot in as before, previously to his shooting from the offing; but if he have previously obtained no shots during the game, he is put out of the game entirely, or “killed,” by his taw being so struck; and again, if after a shot or shots have been struck out of the pound, his taw get within it, (on the line is nothing,) he puts his shots, if he have obtained amy, with an additional one, into the pound, and shoots from the offing; but if he have not obtained a shot or shots after his taw so remains within the ring, “ or gets fat,” as it is called, he is “killed,” and stands out for the remainder of the game. When there is only one marble left in the ring, the taw may then remain inside it, without being “fat” at this game. The players seldom put more than one marble each in the ring at first. TH E PYP. A M I D. .” A small circle is drawn on the ground, within which, one player builds a pyramid, by placing three marbles triangularly, and a fourth in the centre, on the top of them. Any other player may them shoot at the pyramid, at an agreed distance, by giving, for each time of shooting, to the one who keeps the pyramid, a marble. If the shooter strike the pyramid with his taw, as many of the mar- bles composing the pyra- mid, as may be driven out of the circle, belong to the shooter, and the pyramid is constantly to be kept up complete by its owner. This is a good in-door game; variety and addi tional interest Inay be given to it, by each player taking the office of pyra mid-keeper, at stated intervals. - Yº. - º £ºžº. * § Fº - Sº-3-3, ºº sº *š. > *** * N.N.S.S. xxx xx * §§ º > Sº.…S SSJSSNS&S S. Sº §§ $ $ $3. ` ^ l ---, ºs ſº ---- == w * 3ºE- Sºº. ===sººri. ===s. WHIP-TOP. This is an excellent amusement. The top is easily set up by twirling it with both hands on a smooth surface, and applying the whip with gentleness * at first, increasing the vigour of the blows, as the top gets firm on its peg. There is a local variety of the whip-top, which is too ºs=º singular for us to pass unnoticed. We allude to the º | # Colchester top, of which an engraving is presented un "; the margin. Its construction is most simple, and, for # spinning, it is said considerably to excel the tops *— aſsº t # made in the common form. The only games we have ever seen with whip-tops, are “races” and “encounters;” in the former, the object is to flog the top to a certain distance first; in the latter, the tops are whipped against each other until one is knocked down. The est material for a whip, at this capital sport, is an eel-skin; it far surpasses cord, or leather thongs. MIN OR SPORTS PIE G-TO P. In this favorite game considerable dexterity may be a quired by prac. tice. About London, peg-tops are, in general, only used for the purpose of being spun, and taken up to “sleep,” as it is called, in wooden spoons, which are sold at the toy-shops for that purpose; but elsewhere, regular games at peg-top are played, in which the victors carry off capital steel pegs as trophies of their prowess at the sport. A circle, whose diameter is about a yard, is first drawn on a smooth piece of ground, (pavement is objectional for this game,) and several players surround it. One volunteers to commence; he throws his top inside the circle, and the others are at liberty to cast theirs at it, so long as it remains within the ring; the moment it rolls out, he may take it up, and peg at those which still remain inside. The object of each player being to split the tops of his companions, if he succeed in any case, he keeps the peg of the split top as the spoil of his victory. If either of the players do not cast his top within the ring, or if he attempt to take it out, or if he fail to set it spinning when he throws, or if it do not spin out, or after it ceases spinning, roll out of the circle, it is called “a dead top,” and must be placed in the centre of the ring for the others to peg at. When it is knocked out again without being split, the player to whom it belongs, takes it up, and plays away as before. Sometimes half-a-dozen dead tops are driven out of the ring by one cast, without any of them being damaged, and indeed, if they be made of good box, it is but rarely that they split. A top with a long peg best at this game, as it is more calculated to swerve out of the ring after it is spun ; a top that sleeps after it is cast, runs the greatest dangev, and those that sleep most, are heavy bodied tops with short blunt pegs. It is advisable to wind the cord round nearly three parts of the peg, as well as the top, and to use a button at the end instead of a loop. The Spanish peg-top, of which we give a cut in the margin, is inade of fine mahogamy, and tapered off less abruptly toward the peg than the English tops. The peg is very short, of an uniform, thickness, and rounded, not pointed, at the end. These tops spin nearly up- right, and for thrice the usual time; it is unnecessary to throw them with any degree of force; in fact, they spin best when set up under-handed; so that, for playing, on ſlooring or pavement, they are much superior to those made in the English fashion. although, for the same reason, totally unfit for “Peg in the ring.” The forms of English peg-tops, as well as those of humming-tops, and the common whip-tops, are so well known, that it would be useless for us to offer engravings of them. -ke- *.*.*.* MINOR SPORTS ( ; ; ; M \! I X {, -'ſ () P. H U M M IN G-Tops, of various sizes, are to be b fittle art is necessary to use them. After the st right piece, one end of it is taken in one hand, piece in the other; the string is then to be pull º top is set up ought at the toy-shops: very ring is wound about the up- and the handle of the fork- ed off with force, and the ºr- s:*::: * ' ...º. ºr:” *Sº |; I | | | | | |ºf | º sº º, º º | º º º | ; §§ h £f FTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT º | | j { §§ ſ > * º ºSA. - - ;I,\{{{!!!º - ſ º º t § \\\\º fº 3ºlºš |)'' º §§§% §: º: *s: º ſº Bºº §3. \ $ tº "Sº • Fºx >Yº: - r * **s - º t ||f||lſº § tº tº º r F- i - I * § * -ºt. §§º. {l * 't - #aſſiſſ º ºffiſſiſ| * º 3. iſºll | | i}; } lºt ! IMINOR, SPORTS, - n-st -- ... •j, .º.º. - - gº --- * :=2: ~#=222:::::::::::::::::::::: • * *** --> GAMES WITH BALLS. THE games with Balls are numerous and excellent; Cricket is a sport of such importance, as to claim a separate place in our work, but nearly all the other games with Balls, our young readers will find under the present head. FIVE S. Fives may be played either single-handed or with partners, A good wall must be selected, with a sound flat piece of ground in front of it; a line must be drawn, about three feet from the ground, on the wall; another on the ground, about two yards from the wall; and a third, describing three sides of a square, of which the wall itself will be a fourth, on the ground from the wall, to mark the bounds. The players toss up for innings; the winner begins by dapping his ball on the ground, and striking it against the wall, above the line, and so that it may rebound far enough to fall outside the line on the ground; the other player then strikes it, in the same manner, either before it has touched the ground, or dopped, (i. e.) hopped from the ground, more than once; the first piayer then prepares to receive and strike it at its rebound; and thus the game goes on, until one of the players ſail to strike the ball in his turn, before it has hopped - - wr º Tº *~-sºº is rass: grº revº- MINOR SPORTS more than once, strike it below the mark, or drive it out of bounds. If the party who is in do neither of these, he loses his immings; if the other, then the in-player reckons one, on each occasion, towards the game, which is fifteen. When partners play, the rules are precisely the same; each side keeping up the ball alternately, and the partners taking turns for immings, as one of the other side gets out. After the ball is first played out, on each occasion, it is not necessary to make it rebound beyond the ground line, which is used only to make the player who is in, give out the ball fairly in the first instance: that is, when he first takes his innings, or when he plays out the ball again, after winning a point. NINE-HOLES, OR HAT-BALL. Near a wall where the ground is level, dig mine, or a lesser number of holes, according to the number of players, large enough for a ball to be bowled in without difficulty. Number them, and let each player be allotted a number, by chance or choice, as it inay be agreed. A line is drawn about five yards from the holes, at which one of the players places him- self, and bowls the ball into one of the holes. The player to whom the hole, into which the ball is bowled, belongs, picks it up as quickly as he can, and endeavours to strike one of the others with it; (the latter all run off as soon as they perceive that the ball is not for themselves;) if the thrower miss his aim, he loses a point, and is called “a fifer,” and it is his turn to bowl: if, however, he strike another, he loses nothing; but the party so struck, in case he fail to hit another with the ball, becomes “a fifer,” and it is his turn to bowl. Five or six may be struck in succession, and the ball may be kept up, no matter how long, until a miss be made, when the party so missing loses a point, and bowls. It is also allowed, for one player to accept the ball from another, and run the risk of striking a third : thus, if A stand close behind B, and C have the ball in front of B, A may signify by motions that he will take the ball, which is them thrown toward him by C.; he catches it, and endeavours to strike B before he can run away; if he miss, he loses a point, and bowls. The second bowling is con- ducted precisely as the first; but he who bowls three times without passing the ball into a hole, loses a point, and if he nave lost one before, becomes “a tenner;” he must still go on, until he succeed in putting the ball into a hole; it is his own fault iſ he bowl into that which belongs to himself. A party who misses his aim a second time becomes “a tenner;” he whº loses a third point, “a fifteemer;” and when four points are lost, the party stands out. The game goes on until all the players are out but one; the latter wins the game. One of the others then takes the ball in his left hand, places his face toward the wall, and throws the ball over the right shoulder as far as he can. The player who has won stands at the spot wnere the ball first touches the ground, or, if it be not immediately behind :! MINOR SPORTS ; : # º§ the party who has thrown it, a line is drawn from the place where the bal. daps, to a spot behind the thrower. Thus, suppose the thrower be at a, the ball falls at b, a line is drawn to c. The 6 winner then throws the ball, from c, at the loser’s back, three times, as hard as he pleases. The other losers throw in the same manner, one after another, and the winner has his three balls at each of their backs, from the spot where their balls respectively first touch the ground, or in a lime with it, as above stated, and illustrated by the dia- gram in the margin. n the vicinity of London, this game is called “Hat-ball,” on account of the players using their hats, instead of digging holes, and the ball is tossed into the hats, instead of being bowled into the holes. CATCH-B.A. LL. This is very similar to the preceding game. Instead of bowling the ball into holes, it is thrown in the air, and the name of the player, for whom it is intended, called out by the thrower. If it be caught, before it has twice touched the ground, by the player so called on, he loses no point, but throws it up again, and calls upon whom he pleases to catch it. If it be not caught in due time, he whose name is called must endeavour to strike one of the others with it; if he miss, he loses a point, and has his throw up. The remainder of the game, the number of points, and the losers’ punishment, are all precisely as in Nine-holes; of the two, it is the better game. - FOOT-BAL, Le A match is made between two sets of players of equal numbers; a large ball made of light materials, a blown bladder, cased with leather, is the best,--is placed between them, and the object of each party is to kick the ball across the goal of the other, and to prevent it from passing their own. The party, across whose goal the ball is kicked, loses the game. The game is commenced between the two goals, which are about a hundred yards asunder. Foot-ball was formerly much in vogue in England, though, of late years, it seems to have fallen into disrepute, and is but little practised At what period the game of Foot-ball originated, is uncertain ; it does not, however. a pear among the popular exercises before the reign of Edward the Third, and them it was prohibited by a public edict; not, perhaps, from any par- ticular objection to the sport itself, but because it co-operated, with other łavorite amusements, to impede the progress of Archery. | 8 IMINOR SPORTS. SQ The rustic boys use a blown bladder, without the covering of leather, for a foot-ball, putting peas and horse-beams inside, which occasion a rattling as it is kicked about. GoFF, or BANDY-BALL. In the northen parts of the kingdom, Goff is much practised. It answers to a rustic pastime of the Romans, which they played with a ball of leather, stuffed with feathers, and the Goff-ball is composed of the same materials to this day. Jn the reign of Edward the Third, the Latin mamé “Cambuca,” was applied to this pastime, and it derived the denomination, no doubt, from the crooked club, or bat, with which it was played; the bat was called a “Bandy,” from its being bent, and hence is frequently called, in English, “Bandy-ball ” Goff, according to the present modification of the game, is performed with a bat, the handle of which is straight, and usually made of ash, about ſour feet and a half in length; the curvature is affixed to the bottom, faced with horn, and backed with lead. The ball is a little one, but exceedingly hard, being made with leather, and stuffed with feathers. There are, generally, two players, who have each of them his bat and ball. The game consists in thriving the ball into certain holes made in the ground; he who achieves which the soonest, or in the fewest number of strokes, obtains the victory. The Goff-lengths, or the spaces between the ſirst and last holes, are some- times extended to the distance of two or three miles; the number of inter- vening holes is optional, but the balls must be struck into the holes and not beyond them. When four persons play, two of them are sometimes part- ners, and have but one ball, which they strike alternately, but every one has his own bandy. Goff was a fashionable game among the nobility at the commencement of the seventeenth century, and it was one of the ex- ercises with which Prince Henry, eldest son to James the First; occasionally amused himself. STO () L-BALL. Stool-ball is frequently mentioned by the writers of the three last cem- turies, but without any proper definition of the game. Doctor Jo inson tells us, it is a play where balls are driven from stool to stool, but does not say in what manner, or to what purpose. It consists in simply setting a stool upon lie ground, and one of the players taking his place before it, w ile his an- tagonist, standing at a distance, tosses a ball with the intention of striking the stool; it is the business of the former to prevent this by beat mg it away with the band, reckoning one to the game for every stroke of he ball; if, on the confrary, it should be missed by the hand, and touch the stool, the nlayer's change places; the comqueror at this game is he who st ikes the ball ºº: Tºxº~Tº-ºº: Tºº. * - MINOR SPORTS. most times before it touches the stool. In some parts of the country, a cer- tain number of stools are set up in a circular form, at a distance from each other, and every one of them is occupied by a single player; when the ball is struck, which is done as before, with the hand, they are every one of them obliged to alter his situation, running in succession from stool to stool, and iſ he who threw the ball can regain it in time to strike any one of the players before he reaches the stool to which he is running, he takes his place, and the person touched must throw the ball, until he cam, in like manner, return to the circle. TRAP, BAT, AND BALL. With the form of the trap, our young readers are, doubtless, acquainted; it will be only necessary for us to give the laws of the game. Two bounda- ries are equally placed, at a great dis- tance from the trap, between which, it is necessary for the ball to pass, when struck by the batsman; if it fall outside either of them, he loses his immings. Immings are tossed up for, and the player who wins, places the ball in the spoon of the trap, touches the trigger with the bat, and, as the ball hops from the trap, strikes it as far as he can. One of the other play- ers (who may be from two to half-a- dozen) endeavours to catch it. If he do so before it reaches the ground, * = **ś- or hops more than once, or if the s— T_Jºzzº&NS, striker miss the ball when he aims at = -- ~~~~~~. Sº it, or hits the trigger more than twice without striking the ball, he loses his Annings, and the next in order, which must previously be agreed on, takes his place. Should the ball be fairly struck, and not caught, as we have stated, the out-player, into whose hands it comes, bowls it from the place where he picks it up, at the trap; which, if he hit, the striker is out. If he miss it, the striker counts one toward the game, which may be any number decided on. There is also a practice in some places, when the bowler has sent in the ball, of the striker’s guessing the muniber of bat’s lengths it is from the trap; if he guess within the real number, he reckons that number 'oward his game ; but if he guess more than there really are, he Yoses his *nings It is not necessary to make the game in one inning. * :--> -— — — —--~~~~. --- º $º-A- *:: --~~~~ - * ~~ssº" ** MINOR SPORTS. NORTHE R N-S PIEI, L. Northern-spell is played with a trap, and the ball is stricken with a bat, or stout stick, at the pleasure of the players, but the latter is most com. monly used. The performance of this pastime does not require the atten- dance of either of the parties in the field to catch or stop the ball, for the contest between them is simply, who shall strike it to the greatest distance in a given number of strokes; the length of each stroke is measured, before the ball is returned, by means of a cord made fast at one end, mear the trap, the other end being stretched into the field by a person stationed there for that purpose, who adjusts it to the ball, wherever it may be ; the cord is divided into yards, which are properly numbered in succession, so that the person at the bottom of the ground can easily ascertain the distance of each stroke by the number of yards, which he calls to the players, who place it to their account, and the ball is thrown back. This pastime possesses but lit- tle variety, and is by no means so amusing to the bystanders as Trap-Jºll. ROUND E R.S. In the west of England this is one of the most favorite sports with e bat and ball. In the metropolis, boys play a game very similar to it, cal i Feeder. In rounders, the players divide into two equal parties, and chan decides which shall have first innings. Four ston C or posts are placed from twelve to twenty yards asun- b d der, as a, b, c, d, in the margin; another is put at e, one of the party which is out, who is called the pecker or € feeder, places himself at e. He tosses the ball gently a toward a, on the right of which one of the in-party places himself, and strikes the ball, if possible, with his bat. If he miss three times, or iſ the ball, when struck, fall behind a, or be caught by any of the players, who are all scattered about the field except one who stands behind a, he is out, and another takes his place. If none of these events take place, on striking the ball he drops the bat, and runs to- ward b, or, if he can, to c, d, or even to a again. If, however, the feeder, or any of the out-players who may happen to have the ball, strike him with it in his progress from a to b, b to c, c to d, or d to a, he is out. Supposin he can only get to b, one of his partmers takes the bat, and strikes at the i. in turn; while the ball is passing from the feeder to a, if it be missed, or after it is struck, the first player gets to the next or a further goal, iſ possible, with- out being struck. If he can only get to c, or d, the second runs to b, only or c, as the case may be, and a third player begins; as they get home, that is, to a, they play at the ball in rotation, until they all get out ; then, of course, the out-players take their places. MINOR SPORTS. 21 SPORTS OF A GILITY AND SPEED. MANY of the previous sports with balls and tops, are in part games of agility and speed, and so also are several of those which will be found among the Miscellaneous Minor Sports; but the following pastimes are exclusively games either of speed or agility, for which no implements are necessary. D, E A P-F R O G, This is a most exceilent pastime. It should be played in a spacious place, out of doors if possible, and the more there are engaged in it, provided they be of the same height and agility, the better is the sport. We will suppose a dozen at play :Tiet eleven of thenstandin a row, about six yards apart, with all their faces in one direction, arms folded, or their hands resting on their thighs, their elbows in, and their heads bent for ward, so that the chin of each rests on his breast, the right foot advanced, the back a little-bent, the shoulders rounded, and the body firm. The last begins the sport by taking a short run, placing his hands on the shoulders of the nearest player, and leaping with their assistance (of course, springing with his ſect at the same time) over his head, as represented in the cut. Having cleared the first, he goes on to the second, third, ſourth, fifth, &c. in succession, and as speedily as possible. When he has gone over the last, he goes to the proper distance, and places himself in position for all the players to leap over him in their turn. The first over whom he passed, follows him over the second, third, fourth, &c.; and when he has gone over, the one who begun the game places himself in like manner for the others to jump over him. The third follows the second, and so on until the parties are tired. C —w- Yºr Y__: *-* 22 MINOR SPORTS The manner of playing Leap-Frog about London is different, and as we think, much inferior in safety, appearance, and amusement:—A lad places himself with his hands on his knees, his body nearly doubled, and his side, instead of his back, turned toward the leapers, who, with a short run, take their leap at some distance from the lad who is to be vaulted over; he who takes his leap the farthest off, is reckoned the best player . This, it may be readily imagined, is by no means so lively as the real game of Leap-Frog, which we have above described. The boy, who is to be leaped over, re- ceives the greater shock from the jumpers; and lie is in more danger of be- ing thrown down by, or having a blow on his head from, their knees. PRIson ERs’ BASE. Prisoners’ Base is truly a capital game for cold weather. The best num- ber to play at it is six or eight on each side, but there is no objection to more or fewer players. The choice of partners is decided by chamce; a line, ten or twelve yards in length, is drawn about a dozen yards from a wall; other lines are drawn at each end of the first, reaching thence to the wall, and the third from the middle of the first line to the wall; one party takes possession of the bounds on one side of this middle, and the other set of players takes the bounds on the other side of it. Two prisons are also marked in a line with each other, at from one to two hundred yards (as convenience will per- mit) from the front of the bounds; the prison belonging to one party must be opposite the bounds of the other. The game is now commenced by a player from one side running out mid-way between the bounds and prisons; a player from the other side immediately follows, and he may be pursued by one of his adversaries, who in like manner may be followed by a player from the side which began the game, and so on; both parties being at liberty to send out as many as they think fit. The object of each player is to come up with, or intercept and touch any player of the opposite side, who has left the bounds before him ; he is not at liberty to touch any that have started aſter him, it being their privilege, on the contrary, if they can, to touch him before he can get back within his bounds again. A player is allowed to touch one of the opposite party only each time he quits bounds, and after having touched an adversary, he is exempt from being touched on his return to bounds. Every player who is touched, goes to the prison belonging to his party, where he must remain until one of his own side (who must start from bounds after the prisoner has been within the line of the prison) be able to reach him, without being touched in his run from bounds to prison, by any of the opposite party who may have left their bounds after him. When thus released, neither he nor the player who has relieved him is to touch or be touched in their return to bounds again. The game is won by that side which has all the players of the other in prison at the same time. *-*Y 1.-- ------ºry- ** * - -"...i - - - --- - T - sº. ºf . - - : . - * - - . --~ * ~ *--- •.. - * - *** * MINOR, SPORTS. 23 ] X------. 5-S-)-2 §§§s==<5 & SADD L E MY N A G Two players toss up for choice of partners; six or eight on each side is Jhe best number : after choosing, the two leaders toss up for innings, he who oses then ranges himself and his associates in the following manner:—One player places himself almost upright, with his hands resting against a wal, or tree, a second puts his head against the skirts of the first, the third against the skirt of the second, and so on until they are all ranged. They must either hold by the trowsers of the player who is before them, cross their arms on their breasts, or lean them on their knees. One of the win- ning party now begins by taking a rum, placing his hands upon the back of the outer player on the other side, and leaping as far forward on the range as he possibly can, in order to afford room for his partners behind him, who follow in succession, until all are on the backs of the other party. If they can all remain on without touching the ground with the hand or any other part, while the leader counts twenty, or if any of the other party sink beneath the weight, or touch the ground with their hands or knees to support themselves, the riders keep their innings, and go on again. If on the con- trary, or in case there be not room enough for them to leap on, or they cannot keep on the backs of those who are on before them, they lose, and the other party become riders, and they nags. PUSS IN THE CORN E R. This is a very simple, but at the same time, a very lively and amusing game. It is played by five only ; and the place chosen for the sport should be a square court or yard with four corners, or any place where there are four trees or posts, about equi-distant from each other, and forming the four points of a square. Each of these points or corners is occupied by a play- er; the fifth, who is called Puss, stands in the centre. The game now com- mences; the players exchange corners in all directions: it is the object of the one who stands out, to occupy any of the corners which may remain vacant for an instant during the exchanges. When he succeeds in so doing, that player who is left without a corner becomes the Puss. It is to be obseried that if A and B attempt to exchange corners, and A gets to B's corner, but B fails to reach A’s before the player who stands out gets there, it is B and not A who becomes Puss. WARNING. This may be played by any number, from ten to a hundred. One begins the game by standing within a line, running parallel for a considerable lºngth with, and about three feet from a wall, and repeating the following Words,--"Warming once, warning twice, warming three times over; a bushel of wheat, a bushel of rye, when the cock crows ous ump I?— 24 YIIN OR GAM1ES. me can overtake, who must return to bounds with him. These two the (first crying “Warning” only) join hands, and each of them endeavours to touch another; he also returns to bounds, and at the next sally joins hands with the other two. Every player who is afterward touched by either of the outside ones, does the like, until the whole be thus touched and taken. It is not lawful to touch an out-player after the line is broken, either accident- ally, or by the out-players attacking it, which they are permitted to do. Immediately a player is touched, the line separates, and the out-players endeavour to catch those belonging to it, who are compelled to carry those who capture them, on their backs, to bounds. When three are touched, he who begins the game is entitled to join the out-players. Cock-a-doodle-doo !—Warning !” He then rums out, and touches the first F O LLOW MY LEAD ER. Without a bold and active leader this sport is dull and monotonous; with - one possessing the necessary qualificatious it is quite the contrary. Any number may play at it. A leader is fixed on, and the other players range themselves in a line behind him. He commences the sport, by some feat of agility, such as leaping, hopping, or climbing, and his followers them attempt to perform it in succession. He then goes to another trial of skill; the others, or so many of them as are able to do so, follow his example, and thus the sport proceeds until the parties think fit to cease. The most nim- ble and active should, of course, be chosen for a leader; he should per form feats of such difficulty as to render the sport interesting, at the same time avoiding such as he knows can only be undertaken by himself, or by one or two of his followers. If one boy can perform a feat, which those who are placed before him in rank fail in attempting, he takes precedence of them until he is, in like manner excelled by any of those who are behind him. TOUCH. This is a sport of speed. Six or eight is the best number to play at it. One volunteers to be the player, who is called Touch; it is the object of the other players to run from and avoid him. He pursues them all; or, if he think fit, singles out an individual, and follows until he comes up with and touches him. The player so overtaken becomes Touch, and then endeavours to get near enough to lay his hand upon one of the rest. This is an active and amusing game for boys in cold weather. It is sometimes called Touch-iron or Touch wood; in these cases, the players are safe only while they touch iron or wood, as may be previously agreed. They are liable to be touched only when running from one piece of wood of uron to another SRSºº- .* sº %; \ , tº 2"U2 º 9 Nº X: º ºo-ºº: º º es Şs. N 3 * WA. 6 W AS: º º:- &º" tº º THE POP-G UN. PA- Fº *- 4. § §º. SPORTS W IT H T * rº- sº- The Sports with Toys are very numerous; those which are most usual in the play-ground are with the kite, the hoop, the sucker, the pea-shooter, and two or three others; of each of which we offer our readers a description The Pop-gun is made of a piece of wood, from which the pith has been taken; a rammer must be made, with a handle of a proper length, which should have a shoulder to prevent the slender or ram-rod point going the entire length of the gun; the pellets are made of moistened bow, or brown paper. Put one into one end of the gun, push it with the rod to the other, and then placing a second pellet at the end where the first was inserted, push that toward the opposite end, and it will drive the first pellet out with great force. ... Pop-guns are also made with quills, the pellets for which are cut by the quills out of slices of raw potato. 26 MINOR SPORTS. THE PIE A-SHOOTER. By means of a tube of tin or copper, a pea may be propelled from the mouth, by the mere force of the breath, to a very considerable distance, The natives of Macousie, with a came tube, about twelve feet long, propel arrows with their breath, with such force and dexterity, as to bring down different sorts of feathered game. - j THE KITE. To construct the Kite, you must, in the first place, procure a straight lath of deal for the upright or straighter, and a thin hoop, or a pliant piece of hazel for the bow or bender. Fasten the bender d : by its centre, with string, to the upright, within a < little distance of its top; them notch the two ends of N the bow, and fasten them to the upriglº by a string, ſº which is made fast at each of the ends, and turned once round the upright, as a, b, c : the string must then be carried up to the junction of the bow and straighter, and made fast at d, and thence to a ; f from a, it must pass through a notch at e, up to c ; then down to f, where it must be tied in a notch cut for that purpose, and up to a again. Your skeleton being now complete, your next task is to paste a (2. sufficient quantity of paper together to cover it, and afford a hem to be pasted over the outer edges. Next, bore two holes in the straighter, one about a fifth of the whole length from the top, and the other rather less from the bottom; rum through these, and fasten, by a knot at the two ends, your belly-band string, to which the ball of string, by which the kite is ſlown, is afterward fixed. The wings are made of several sheets of writing paper, half cut in slips, rolled up, and fas- tened at a and c. The tail, which should be from ten to fifteen times the length of the kite, is made by tying bols of writing paper, four times folded, about an inch and a half broad, and three inches long, at intervals of three inches and a quarter, on a string, with a large bob, similar to the wings, at the bottom of it. Your kite is now complete, and fit to be ſlown in the usual manmer. It is well known that the celebrated Doctor Franklin once let up a kite previous to his entering the water to bathe, and then, lying on his back, Suſſered himself to be drawn across a stream by its power. "I'he master of a respectable academy at Bristol, among whose pupils we have enjoyed many pleasant hours in the pastir.e of flying kites, has lately succeeded in travelling along the public roads, (we believe, from Bristol to London,) with 5Ss==<5% MINOR SPORTS. 27 amazing speed, in a carriage drawn by kites, in the most safe and accurate manner possible, notwithstanding the variations of the wind and the crook- edness of the roads. THE THAU MATROPE. This very amusing toy is made and exhibited in the following manner. Cut out a circular piece of card, to which fasten six bits of string, as in the cut. Draw on one side of it a figure with balls, and on the other, two balls only, as represented in the margin; inen taking one of the strings between the forefinger and thumb of each hand, close to the card, twist or twirl it rapidly round, and according to which pair of strings you use, the figure will seem to be tossing two, three, or four balls in different directions. Various cards and devices may be used : for instance, you may draw a bird on one side, and a cage on the other; by only using the centre pieces of string, the bird will seem to be in the cage or aviary ; a horse on one side, and a jockey on the other, as in the cut, (taking care to reverse the figures, or draw them upside down to each other,) and by using the different pairs of strings, you may cause the rider to appear up- on, leaping under, or by the side of the horse, as you please. For other designs, we suggest a tight rope and a dancer; a body and a head; a caudle and a flame; a picture and its frame, &c. BATTLE DO F.E AND SH U TTL ECO C.I. Battledores and Shuttlecocks are to be obtained cheap at all the book- stores. The game is played by two persons, who, with the battledores, strike the shuttlecock to and fro between them. Shuttlecock is a boyish sport of long standing. It appears to have been a fashionable game among grown persons in the reign of James the First, and t is mentioned as such in an old comedy of that time. Among the anecdotes related of Prince Henry, son to James the First, is the following: “His Highness playing at shuttlecock with one far taller than himself, and hitting dini, by chance, with the shuttlecock upon the forehead, ‘This is,’ queth he ‘the encounter of David with Goliah.” * 5s;= º MINOR SPORTS. THE SU CRJ. R. Cut a circular piece out of stout leather; bore a hole through its centre And pass a string, with a knot to prevent the end escaping, through this hole. Soak the leather well in water before you use it; when thoroughly soaked, place the leather on a stone, press it well down with your foot, and then taking the string, you may, by your sucker, raise a considerable weight. - THE HOOP. Every body knows how to trundle the Hoop in the usual way; several pairs of tin squares are sometimes mailed to the inner part of the hoop, which produce, in the opinion of some lads, an agreeable jingle. In some parts of England, boys drive their hoops one against the other, and the player whose hoop falls in these encounters, is conquered. - ) THE WATCH-SPRING G UN. Neatly cut a bit of wood, about four inches long, into the form of the stock of a pistol or gun; scoop a groove in the upper part of it; in this groove | place a large quill, open at both ends, fasten it on with waxed thread, and let it project beyond the point of the stock and reach as far as the middle of it; next, procure an old watch-spring, which may be bought cheap at a | watch-maker’s, cut off a piece of it about as long as the quill, bend it back- ward, and tie one end of it firmly to the upper part or but-end of the stock. Then bore a small hole through the middle of the stock about an inch from the mouth of the quill; cut a pin in two, fasten one half of it, by its head, to a bit of thread, the other end of which fasten to the thread that binds on the spring; this is the trigger, and your gum is complete. To use it, place a little arrow, or a shot, in the groove between the mouth of the quill and the hole in the stock; put the pin through this hole, and bend back the spring so that the pin may catch it; take the toy in your right hand, pull the trigger out with the ſore-finger, and the spring being thus re- leased, will drive the shot, or arrow, through the quill to a considerable dis- tance. If you use arrows, you may shoot at a little butt or target. CAT AND MOUSE. This is a French sport. The toy with which it is played consists of two flat bits of hard wood, the edges of one of which are notched. The game is played by two only; they are both blindfolded, and tied to the ends of a ong string, which is fastened in the centre to a post, by a loose knot, so as to play easily in the evolutions made by the players. The party who plays the mouse occasionally scrapes the toys together, and the other, who plays the pal. attracted by the sound, endeavours to catch bim. §: † >º MINOR SPORTS. MIS CELLAN E O U S SPORTS. Under this head we intend to describe a variety of amusing sports and recreations, which could not, in strictness, be inserted among any of the preceding classes. BLIND-MAN's BUFF. This popular, old-fashioned, and delightful pastime, is so well known, as to render any description of it unnecessary. There is, however, a variation of it called Shadow Buff, which is less known, but equally amusing. A large piece of white linen is suspended smoothly at one end of a room; at a little distance from it, Buffy, with his face toward the linen, is seated on a low stool. Directly in a line, and about a yard behind him, a table is placed with a candle on it; all the other lights must be extinguished. The players then walk one by one, between the table and Buffy, (who must not turn his head,) limping, hopping, and grimacing as they please, so as to distort their shadows on the limen. If Buffy can tell correctly to whom any shadow belongs, (guessing once only for each person,) the player, whom he so dis- covers, takes his place. IBASTIE THE BEAR. Lots are drawn for the first bear, who takes his seat on a stone, with one end of a rope, about three yards long, in his hand, the other end of which is held by the bear’s master. The other players attack the bear with twisted handkerchiefs, and the master endeavours to touch one of them : if he ban * ~ .* ~~ v--~rrºw-rºs --~~~~~~ • * * ---. sºrs--~~~~ss--> ~ * * *-- - * *º: º ... sº. º :... Sºº - ... * . . . . " MINOR, SPORTS. do so without letting the rope go, or pulling the bear from his seat, the play. er so touched takes the place of the bear. Each bear has the privilege of shoosing his own master; being bear once, or even oſtener, does not exone- rate a player, if fairly touched, from becoming so again. DICK, DUCK, AND DRAKE. From this game comes the proverb which is frequently applied to a spend- thrift. “He is making ducks and drakes of his money.” It is played by skimming, or what boys call shying, bits of slate or flat stones along the sur- face of a river or pond. If the thing thrown touches the water and rebounds once, it is a dick; if twice, a duck; if thrice, a drake. He who makes his slate or pebble rebound the greatest number of times, wins the game. SLIDING, Sliding is one of the diversions ascribed to young men of London by Fitzstephen, and, as far as one can judge from his description of the sport, it diſſered not in the performance from the method used by the boys of our own time. He mentions another kind of pastime upon the ice, which is even now practised by boys in several parts of England; his words are to this | effect : “Others make a seat of ice, as large as a mill-stone, and having placed one of their companions upon it, they draw him along, when it some- times happens, that moving on slippery places, they all fall down headlong.” Sledges are, now-a-days, also used, which being extended from a centre by means of a strông rope, those who are seated in them are moved round with great velocity, and form an extensive circle. Sledges of this kind were set upon the Thames in the time of a hard frost at the commencement of the last century, as the following couplet, taken from a song written upon that occasion, plainly proves. “While the rabble in sledges run giddily round, And nought but a circle of foily is found.” SIK ATIN Ge Skating is by no means a modern pastime, and probably the invention roceeded rather from necessity than the desire of amusement. It is a i. of a northern chieftain, that he could traverse the snow upon skates of wood. Strutt states that he cannot by any means ascertain at what time skating made its first appearance in England, but that some traces of such an exercise are found in the thirteenth century; at which period, according to Fitzstephen, it was customary in the winter, when the ice would bear them, for the young citizens of London to fasten the leg bones of animals under the Boles of their feet, by tying them round their ankles, and then taking a pole shod with iron into their hands, they pushed themselves forward by 8triking MIN Oſº. SPORTS. 3 : it against the ice, and moved with celerity, equal, says the author, to a bird Ilying through the air, or an arrow from a cross-bow; but some allowance, we presume, must be made for the poetical figure : he them adds, “at times, two of them thus furnished agree to set opposite one to another at a great dis tance; they meet, elevate their poles, attack and strike each other, when one or both of them fall, and not without some bodily hurt, and even after their fall are carried a great distance from each other by the rapidity of the motion, and whatever part of the head comes upon the ice it is sure to be laid bare.” The wooden skates shod with iron or steel, which are bound about the feet and ankles like the talares of the Greeks and Romans, were, most pro- bably, brought into England from the low countries, where they are said to have originated, and where, it is well known, they are almost universally used by persons of both sexes when the season permits. Some modern writers have asserted that “the metropolis of Scotland has produced more instances of elegant skaters than perhaps any other county whatever; and the institution of a skating club has contributed not a little to the improve- ment of this amusement.” Strutt, in noticing this, observes tha. when the Serpentime river in Hyde Park was frozen over, he saw four gentlemer there dance, if the expression may be allowed, a double minuet, in skates with as much ease and perhaps more elegance, than in a ball-room; others again, by turning and winding with much adroitness, have readily in suc- cession described upon the ice the form of all the letters in the alphabet. - SW 1 N G IN G. - - The construction of the swing is simple: two ropes of equal lengths, are to be suspended from any branch or cross piece of timber, of adequate strength; at the bottom of these ropes a seat is to be securely fastened, and the party who takes the seat must be propelled by another on the ground; a rope for this purpose must be fastened to the back part of the seat- FIRE N C H AND E N G L IS H. This game is played by two parties, whose numbers are equal; they all take hold of a rope, and the object of each party is to pull those belonging to the other across a chalk line on the ground, by means of the rope. When all the players on one side are thus pulled over or made prisoners, the other jarty wins the game. This is a very lively sport, any number may join in it, and it affords capital exercise and much amusement. TIP-CA. T. Tip-cat, or, permaps, more properly, the game of cat, is a rustic pastime well known in many parts of the kingdom. Its denomination is derived from a piece of wood, called a cat, with which it is played ; the cat is about six inclues in length, and an inch and a lialſ or two inches in diameter, and L.A. .” - * ~!!/ Q =Q 32 IMINOR SPORTS diminished from the middle to both the ends, in the shape of a double cone; by this curious contrivance, the places of the trap and ball are at once sup plied, for when the cat is laid upon the ground, the player, with his cudgel, strikes it smartly, it matters not at which end, and it will rise with a rotatory motion, high enough for him to beat it away as it falls, in the same man mer as he would a ball. There are various methods of playing the game of cat, but we shall only notice the two that follow. The first is exceedingly simple, and consists in making a large ring upon the ground, in the middle of which the striker takes his station; his business is to beat the cat over the ring. If he ſail in so doing he is out, and another player takes his place : if he be successful, he judges with his eye the distance the cat is driven from the centre of th ring, and calls for a number, at pleasure, to be scored toward his game; iſ the number demanded be found, upon measurement, to exceed the same number of lengths of the cudgel, he is out; on the contrary, if he do not, he obtains his caſ. The second method is to make four, six, or eight holes in the ground, in a circular direction, and as nearly as possible, at equal dis- tances from each other, and at every hole is placed a player with his cudgel; one of the opposite party, who stand in the field, tosses the cat to the batsman who is nearest him, and every time the cat is struck, the players are obliged º to change their situations, and run once from one hole to another in succes- sion ; if the cat be driven to any great distance, they continue to run in the same order, and claim a score toward their game, every time they quit one hole and run to another; but if the cat be stopped by their opponents, and thrown across between any two of the holes before the player who has quitted one of them can reach the other, he is out. HOP-SC OTC H., In some parts of England this game is called Pottle. It is played with an oyster-shell, in the following manner:—Draw, with chalk, on the ground, a figure similar to the cut in the margin. Toss up for innings. He who wins stands at the * and throws the shell into No. 1, which is called the first bed; he then steps with his right ſoot into that bed, and “scuffles,” that is, jerks, with his right foot, the shell out towará the *. He now throws the shell into No. 2; steps, with his left foot into No. 1, and then, placing his right foot in No. 2, scuffles the shell out as before, and steps with one foot back to No. 1, and thence out. He must now throw the shell into No. 3, and step into 1, 2, and 3, scuffle the shell out, and step back through the beds alternately. He must then go to 4, 5, and 6, in succession, and, at each throw, step into every previous bed with one foot only, and the like when : MIN OR SPORTS. 33 coming back, reversing the numbers. After this, the player puts the shell into No. 1, hops into that bed, scuffles the shell into 2, and so on to 6, and back again in the same manner, bed by bed, to the *. Lastly, he places the shell into No. 1, puts his right foot in the bed, and scuffles the shel, through ail the beds, beyond the further line of 6 at one jerk. If the player who gets the innings do all this correctly, he wins the game. If, however, he put himself out, as hereafter described, the second player takes the innings ; if the latter put limself out, without going through the game, the first takes up his own game, where it was when he went out; the secogd also does the like with his, if the first gets out a second time. When there are more than one innings, the first who goes through the game, as above stated, wins. A player loses his immings in either of the following cases:— If he throw the shell into the wrong bed, or on the line, or put two feet into one bed, or a foot upon the lines, or do not scuffle the shell out of the bed in which it lies at the first attempt, or put his hands to the ground, or throw or scuffle the shell beyond line c, (except in the last, or what is called “the long scuffle,”) or outside the lines a b , or if, in going forward, he put his leg into 3 before 2, or the contrary when coming back; or if, when scuffling the shell through on the hop, he drive it beyond the next bed in which it lies; or if, in any part of the game, when he has stepped into a bed, he take more than one hop in order to get near the shell; or if he hop after he has scuſtled it; or, lastly, if, in the long scuffle, he do not, at one effort, send it with his foot from beyond the line of c. But observe, that when he has cast the shell into No. 2, or any bed beyond it, he is not compelled to scuffle it out, that is, beyond the line d, at one effort. KING OF THE CAS I Lº This is a very unexceptionable and simple, but nevertheless, lively sport. One player places himself on the top of a little mound or hillock; he is the King of the Castle, and he endeavours to retain possession of his post, as long as possible, against the attacks of his playmates, who endeavour, one at a time, to push him off. If he be driven off the mound or hillock, the player who dethromes him takes his place. SEE-SAW A plank is placed across a felled tree, a low wall, or anything simula, and a player seats himself at each end; by a slight exertion, if the plank bá properly balanced, each end rises and sinks alternately. It must be observ- ed, that if the players be of unequal weight, he who is the heavier must, to preserve the due equilibrium, make his end of the plank shorter Dº Nºrt }º MINOR, SPORTS. WHO OP. This game is played as follows:—All the players but one, collect at . place called “home,” while one goes off to hide himself. When ready, he shouts “Whoop oh!” the others then sally out to find him ; he who discovers the hidden player, calls out “Whoop oh!” the hidden player then breaks from his concealment, and if he can catch one of the others, the one so caught must carry him on his back to “home.” It is then the boy’s turn who has made the discovery to go and hide himself, and the others endeavour to dis- cover his lurking place, as before. HIDE AND SE E R. This is very like the preceding game; a handkerchief, or some other trifle, is concealed by one player, and the rest attempt to find it; the discoverer takes the mext turn to hide the article. It is a custom, in this game, for the boy who has hid the article to encourage those who approach it, by telling them that they burn, and to warn them of their departure from it by saying they freeze. EHIP PAS. The Greeks had a pastime called hippas, which, we are told, was one person riding upon the shoulders of another, as upon a horse: a sport of this kind was in practice with us at the commencement of the fourteenth century, and is still occasionally seen in some parts of the country; it is performed Öy two competitors, who struggle one with the other, and he who pulls his opponent from the shoulders of his carrier is the victor A soft piece of turf is usually chosen for this sport. TH READ THE N E EDLE. Thread the needle may be played by a considerable number of boys, who all join hands, and the game commences with the following dialogue be- tween the two outside players at each end of the line: “How many miles to Babylon " , “Threescore and ten.” “Can I get thereby candlelight?” * Yes and back again.” “Then open the gates without more ado, and let I\lſ NO R SPORTS. f : the k mgaad his men pass through.” In obedience to this mandate, the play- er who stands at the opposite end of the line and the one next him, liſt their joined hands as high as possible; the other outside player then approaches, runs under the hands thus clevated, and the whole line follows him, if possi- ble, without disuniting. This is threading the needle. The same dialogue is repeated, the respondent now becoming the inquirer, and running be- tween the two players at the other end, with the whole line after him. The first them has his turn again. DU C R. Duck should be played by a number exceeding three, but not more than six or eight. A large stone with a smooth top is placed on or fixed into the ground, and an oſſing marked at eight or ten yards distance. Each of the players being previously provided with a large pebble, or stone, double the size of a cricket ball, or thereabout, one of them, by chance or choice, be- comes duck; that is, he places the pell,le or stone with which he is going to play, on the large stone, and stands a little on one side. The others them cast their pebbles or ducks at it, in turn, from the offing, each endeavouring to knock it off its place. Each player, as soon as he has cast his duck, watches for an opportunity of carrying it back to the offing, so as to cast again. If the player who is duck, can touch him after he has taken up his pebble, and before he reaches the offing, provided his own pebble remain on the large stone, then the player so touched becomes duck. It sometimes happens that three or four of the out-players’ ducks lie so close together, that the player who is duck can stand in a situation to be within reach of all of them; in this case, they cannot, without running the risk of being touched, pick up, antil one of those who are at the offing is lucky enough to strike the duck of the large stone; then, before its owner can replace it, which he must do before he can touch a player, they all take up their ducks and run to the offing, where, of course, they are safe. H U N T T H E SLI I* P F. R. This is usually an in-door game, although there is no other objection to its being played on a dry piece of turf than that the slipper cannot be heard when struck by its momentary possessor, when passing round the joyous ring. Several young persons sit on the ground in a circle, a slipper is given to them, and one, who generally volunteers to accept the office in order to begin the game, stands in the centre, and whose business it is to “chase the slipper by its sound.” The parties who are seated, pass it round so as to wrevent, if possible, its being found in the possession of any individual. In order that the player in the centre may know where the slipper is, it is occa- sionally tapped on the ground, and then suddenly handed on to the right or left. When the slipper is found in the possession of any one in the circle, by the player who is hunting it, the party on whom it is so foºd, takes the latter player’s place. MIN OR SPORTS. PAL L MALI, , Pall-mal is a game wherein a round piece of box is struck, with a ſmallet, through a high arch of iron, which he that can do at the fewest blows, or at the number agreed upon, wins. It is to be observed, that there are two o these arches, that is, one at either end of the alley. The game of Mall was a fashionable amusement in the reign of Charles II., and the walk in St. James’s Park, now called the Mall, received its name from having been ap- propriated to the purpose of playing at Mall, where Charles himself, and his } courtiers, frequently exercised themselves in the practice of this pastime. The denomination of “Mall,” given to this game, is evidently derived from the mallet or wooden hammer used by the players to strike the ball. It will be perceived that this game is rather similar to Goff; we have been told that it still exists in some parts of England; but we must confess that it never fell under our personal observation. HoP, STEP, AND JUMP. This is a sport of emulation; the object is to ascertain which of the play- ers concerned can, eventually, go over the greatest portion of ground in a hop, a step, and a jump, performed in succession, and which may be taken either standing or with a run, as may be agreed, at the outset, between the players. - D R A WIN G T H E OVE N. Several players seat themselves on the ground, in a line, and in such a manner that each may be clasped round the body by the player who is seat- ed behind him. When all are thus united, two others take the one who is at the extremity of the line by the two hands and pull until they separate him from the grasp of the one who is behind him. They then take the second in | the same manner, and so on until they have thus drawn the whole line. TH E L A MIE LA M P L I G ! ITI, R.S. Two boys kneel, each on one knee only, holding the other leg off the ground, one opposite the other; a lighted candle is given to one, and another candle, not lighted, to the other; they then attempt to illumine the latter; but, being in equilibrium on one knee, and liable to be thrown off their balance by the least motion, they will find this so difficu.; a matter as to cause great diversion to the spectators. sº º T H E J U M P J N G R O PIE. A long rope is swang round by a player at each end of it; when it moves tolerably regular, one, two, or even more boys, step in between those who hold the rope, suffering it to pass over their heads as it rises, and leaping up so that it goes under their feet when it touches the ground, precisely as in the case of a common skipping-rope. The principal difficulty in this sport is, to run between the players at the proper moment of time, that is, just as w- 5s==< *:::: sº * gº tº º w R “$º §§. re. * ***. - **** A. e.exº~~ i \lſ [N OR SPORTS. 3 7 the rope is at highest elevation, so as to be ready to jump over when, in its circuit, it comes toward the feet. Care must be taken that due time be kept in the leaps, so that they may perfectly accord with the motion of the rope. There is another mode of playing with the long skipping-rope, namely, by the player at one end of it, advancing a step or two toward the other, keeping the hand which holds the rope on the outside, and then, with the assistance of the player at the other end, turning the rope round, and skipping over it in its circuit. - THE WOOD EN BOTTLE. This is a sport similar to “The Lame Lamplighters,” frequently played by the parlour fire-side, in holyday time:–an individual seats himself on a wooden bottle which is placed sideways upon the floor, and endeavours, with a.burming candle, which he holds in his right hand, to light another in his left DROPPING THE *KERCHIEF. A number of players join hands so as to make a circle; one only stands out; he walks round the outside of the circle, and drops a handkerchief be- hind which player in the circle he thinks fit. The party behind whom the handkerchief is thus dropped immediately follows the one who dropped it: those who stood on each side complete the circle by joining hands, and the chace commences. The pursuer is bound to follow precisely the course of the pursued, who winds in and out under the arms of the other players, who elevate them for his accommodation, and endeavours, by all the means in his power, to puzzle and elude him. If he succeed in so doing, that is, if the pursuer make a blunder in his course, he returns to his place in the circle, and the first player prepares to drop the handkerchieſ behind one of the play- ers again. When he is fairly overtaken by the player behind whom he has last dropped the handkerchief, the latter takes his place, and he joins hands in the circle. - BU CIK. This is a miniature resemblance of “Saddle my Nag;” but it neither requires speed, nor even agility. It is a sport for two boys only, who should be nearly equal in size amd strength. A third, who does not join in the game, stands by as an umpire. The game commences by one of the players giving a back; that is, placing his arms across his breast, or resting them on his knees, stooping forward so as to bring his back nearly horizontal with his head, which he supports against a post, wall, tree or whatever may be convenient for the purpose. It is usual, but we think quite ummecessary, for the player who gives the back to be blindfolded; we say unnecessary, be- cause the only object for doing this is to prevent him seeing what is going on behind, or, rather, above his back, which he cannot possibly do, if he keep His head in a fair and proper position; and the umpire should see that he MIN OR SPORTS. H does so. The ſirst player having thus taken his position, the second leaps, or vaults, astride on his back, holds up as many of the fingers of one hand as he pleases, and says, “Buck, buck, how many horns do I hold up 3’’ The player who gives the back makes a guess; if he name the right number the other player becomes Buck, and gives him a back. If, however, his guess be an incorrect one, the rider gets off, vaults on again, holds up the same or a different number of fingers, and asks the same question as before; this is repea.ed until the Buck name the true number. It is the business of the umpire to see that there is no foul play on the part of the rider. We should suggest that it would be an improvement on this quiet, simple game, for the umpire to be made a third player; so that when the Buck’s guess is cor- rect, the rider should give a back, the umpire become rider, and the Buck umpire: thus, instead of the place of umpire being a mere idle vocation, the game would be productive of amusement and exercise to all three of the boys engaged in it. - T H E S N () W STA TU E. In those days, when winter clothes the surface of the earth with a mantle of snow, and many of the amusements of the play-ground are thereby sus- pended, it is a custom with boys, as some of our young readers, doubtless, very well know, to make that which is an impediment to their old recrea- tions, a material for new ones. Then do snow-balis, harmless if lightly com- pressed, but otherwise iſ strongly kneaded, fly about in abundance. Caves and even pigmy fortresses, are constructed; the rolling ball, which is first rounded by the little hands of a child, becomes, in a few liours, by driving it over the snow, too big for a man to move. When the joyous tenants of the play-ground have become fatigued with rolling the ball, or it has acquired a size and weight superior to their united powers, it is a common practice with them to cut a rude resemblance of a man out of the mass, adding to its height and diminishing its breadth. This is called the Snow Statue; and when complete, the young sculptors retire to a convenient distance, and, with the aid of snow-balls, eagh tries his utmost to demolish that which they have JJst taken such pains to construct. We are well aware that there are other Minor Sports and Pastimes plac- tised in play-grounds in different parts of the country, besides those we have flescribed; it would be impossible for us “to press the endless throng” with- in our limits. We give a selection of the best, and of those which most re- quired explanation. We are also aware, that the rules of some of the Sports vary in different places;–where this is the case, we have given those which are most generally adopted. Many games and amusements which might have been inserted in this part of the work, will be ſound placed with great ur propriety, under other heads. | ; MINOR SPORTS, THE SLIN G. Cut-out an oval piece of leather, about two inches wide at the broadest part; at each of the ends, fastem a leathern thong, or piece of cord, one of these cords, or thongs, should be longer than the other; place a stone in the broadest part of the leather, twist the longest thong twice or thrice round our hand, hold the other lightly between your thumb and fore-finger, whirl à round several times, let go the shorter thong, and the stone will be shot to a great distance. Small lumps of clay kneaded to the point of a pliant switch, may be jerked to a height scarcely credible. 6- sº sº-º. º.º. - * * :-Eº * am- - a tº . gº --- *_*: º *>. . . . . . . sms- TSE-se ºr. . zz *** gºe” — — ºf s=22&E~s-222, 5 --~~~~ r | *-gs āşşe | This cut represents, it is said, the Maze at Woodstock, in which King Henry placed Fair Rosamond. It certainly is a most ingenious puzzle, and consists in getting from one of the numerous outlets, to the Bower in the centre, without crossing any of the lines. ſ º To save his own and Albert's life, Tell is to shoot an apple from the head Of his own child WILLIAM TELL In this island, Archery was greatly encouraged in former times, and many statutes were made for its regulation. The Artillery Company of London, though they have long disused the weapon, are the remains of the ancient fraternity of Bowmen or Archers. As to the time when shooting with the long bow first began amongst the English, there appears no certain account. Richard I, was killed by an arrow, in 1199; after this time, we wead nothing of Archery, till that of Edward III. when aa order was issued 44 AIR CHERY. to the sheriffs of most of the English counties, to provide five hundred white bows, and five hundred bundles of arrows, for the then intended war against France. The famous battle of Cressy was fought four years afterward, in which, it is stated, that we had about two thousand archers, opposed to about the same mumber of French. In the fifth year of the reign of Edward IV. an act was passed, that every Englishman, and leishman dwelling with Englishmen, should have an English bow of his own height, which is directed to be made of yew, wych, hazel, ash or awburne, or any other reasonable tree, according to their power. The mext chapter also directed, that butts should be made in every township, which the inhabitants were obliged to shoot at, every feast day, under the penalty of one half-penny when they should omit this exercise. During the reign of Henry VIII. several statutes were made for the promotion of Archery. An act of parliament, in Eliza- beth’s reign, regulated the price of bows. Charles I. is said to have been an Archer; and, in the eighth year of his reign, he issued a commission to prevent the fields near London being so enclosed as “to interrupt the neces- sary and profitable exercise of shooting.” So lately as the year 1753, tar- gets were erected in the Finsbury fields, during the Easter and Whitsuntide holydays, when the best shooter was styled “Captain '' for the ensuing year, and the second, “Lieutenant.” Edward VI, in his journal, says, that one hundred Archers of his guard shot, before him, two arrows each, and after- ward, altogether; and that they shot at an inch board, which some picrged quite through with the heads of their arrows, the board being well seasoned timber. The distance of the mark is not momtiened. As a pastinie there is none, perhaps, superior to this ; it is now, and for years past has been, highly popular in this country; in fact, judging from the past and the present, we may venture to predict that - The Archer’s sport will never be extinct, Until the memory of Robin Hood, Oſ Cressy’s well-ſought ficli, and Chevy-Chase, Be blotted ſrom the tablet of our minds. THE BOYV. The young archer should, in the first place, select a bow, that is fit and proper for his own size and strength. It is not probable that, let him be ever so skilful, he will be able to achieve such am exploit, as the construc- tion of a good bow himself; bow-making being a trade which requires many years’ practice and much attention; in fact, there are few persons, now-a- days, although there are many bowyers, who can manufacture bows of a superior description. The back of the bow is the flat outside, and the belly the round inside part of it. The round inside part is bent inward; if the bow be pulled the reverse way, it will break; thcreſore, however a bow may be bent when unstrung it is invariably to be strung with the round part inward ºr º, º ARCHERY. ARROWS. Arrows should be delicately proportioned in length and weight to the bow for which they are intended. They are used blunt or sharp, and varying in their thickness according to the fancy of the Archer. Some are made so as to taper gradually from the feathers to the pile, and some viceversa ; others again are thickest in the centre. All arrows should have their mocks or notches cased with horn, and the mocks should be of such a size as to ſit the string with exactness, and be neither too tight nor too loose. Three goose or turkey feathers are affixed to arrows; one of these, denominated the cock feather, is of a different color from the other two, and this is al ways to be placed uppermost. THE STRING. That part of the string which receives the mock of the arrow is whipped with sewing silk, to prevent the string being rubbed and weakened. If the silk should come off the string, it ought to be re-whipped without delay; otherwise, it will be in danger of breaking; and this is not the only mis- chief, for ſtom the breaking of a string oftentimes ensues the snapping of the bow. It is also advisable to whip. the moose and eye of the string, although many archers do not trouble themselves to do so. At one end of the bow- string an eye is made; it is left for the archer himself, bows being of differ- ent lengths, to make the other : this, to a young archer, will be found rather difficult; his best plan will be to inspect the mode of making the moose on an old string. The young archer will do well, if any of the threads of his string break, to throw it by and use another. He should never, if possible, permit the string to become twisted or ravelled; should such an occurrence take place, before it is put on again it ought to be re-twisted and waxed. A bow, five ſeet long when braced, should never have the string more than five inches from its centre. This rule will be a guide to the young archer in stringing his bow ; whatever be its length he will of course adjust the distance in the same proportion, according to the admeasurement. THE TASSIEL, This is very necessary to the archer for the purpose of cleaning the arrow from such dirt as generally adheres to it if it enter the ground. This dirt, if suffered to remain, will impede the arrow in its flight, and also render its course untrue. The tassel is suspended on the left side of the archer, and is thus always at hand for use. T H E G L OV E. The glove consists of places for three ſingers, a back thong and a wrist strap to fasten it. The finger-stalls should neither project far over the AR CHERY. tops, nor be drawn back to cover the first joint. The glove is used for the purpose of protecting the fingers from being hurt by the string. THE BRA C E J The brace is worn on the bow arm to save it from being injured by the String, which, without this protection, would, in all probability, incapaci- tate the archer from shooting long at a time. It is made of stout leather, with a very smooth surface, so that the string may glide over it without impediment. THE QUIVE R. The quiver is for the reception of the arrows, but is never constantly worn except in roving ; it is now usually made of tin, although it is occa- sionally constructed, as was indeed universally the case formelly, of wood or leather. THE BELT, POUAC.H., AND GREASE-Box. The belt is buckled round the waist; the grease-box is suspended from the middle, and the pouch or bucket on the right side of it. A composition for greasing the finger of the shooting-glove, and the smooth side of the brace, when occasion may require, is kept in the box : the pouch holds the arrows for immediate use in target shooting. T H E A S CHA M, This is a large case fitted up with the negessary drawers and compart- ments for the reception of the bow, stock of 'arrows, strings, and all the necessary accoutrements of the archer. BUTTS, The butt is rather pyramidical in shape, generally speaking, but it may be fashioned according to the fancy of the archer; for grown up persons, they are seven or eight feet wide, three or four feet thick at the base, and nearly seven feet in height at the middle. Butts are made of long plats of turf which are to be closely pressed down; a round piece of pasteboard is placed in the centre of the butt for a mark, which must be increased or decreased in size according to the distance at which the archer shoots: for thirty yards, it should be four inches in diameter; for sixty yards, six inches; and so in proportion for a greater distance. The mark is fixed to the butt by a peg driven through its centre. Shots that take place outside the mark are not reckoned, and he who places most shots in the pasteboard during the play is accounted the winmer. Butts are frequently placed at different distances (rom each other; a set of butts is four, which ale so contrived as not to pre- vent the players seeing them all at once. . Wha is called a single end is shooting at one mark only; a double end is shooting to a mark, and back again from that malk to the one first shot from. ARCHERY. T º 47 TAR G ETS. Targets should be proportioned to the size and skill of the juvenile archer, and to the distance at which he stands from them. The facing is usually made of canvass which is sewn on the bass; the bass is made of straw, worked as a bee-hive. The facing has a gold centre and four circles; namely, the outer white edged with green, the black inner, white and red. Where it is not convenient to keep the targets fixed, it is better to use another kind, made of pasteboard, these being more portable, although by no means so durable, as targets made of the other materials we have mentioned. If one target only be shot at, a great deal of time is wasted in going to fetch the arrows, and again returning to the spot for shooting from : two targets are, therefore, generally used, and the archers shoot from one to the other. In Archery matches, there are generally two prizes; one for the greatest number of arrows shot into the target, the other for the shot nearest the gold centre. Hits in the target are sometimes reckoned all alike ; but there is usually a distinction made. The gold centre is the mark, and the circle which approaches nearest to it, being less in size, and consequently, more difficult to hit, and mearer the main mark itself, an arrow shot in that circle is deemed of more value, in reckoning for the prize, than if it were to take place in any of those outside it, and so in proportion with the others. A celebrated society of Archery allows the following numbels for each cir- cle. For the gold, mime; for the red, seven ; for the inner white, five; for the black, three; and for thé outer white, one. A writer on this subject, however, seems to think, that the outer circles are overrated, and if mime be allowed for the centre, only three should be scored for the red; two for the immer white; and less, in proportion for the two outer circles. When the sport terminates, the value of the number of hits, and not the hits then- selves, should be reckoned; and he whose score is the largest, is, of course, the victor. * As mk is by no means a convenient thing to carry into made with the black-lead pencil are liable to be rubbe. to have a pin suspended from a card, properly dividé, geore, and to prick down the hits with it. it is advisable #ch archer’s ºl, and marks STRING IN G THE BOW. . * ºr. The bow is to be taken in the right hand, by the handle, with the flat part toward the person who is about to string it; his right arm should rest against his side; the lower end of the bow, which has always the shortest bone, should be placed against the inside of the right foot, which should be turned a little inward to prevent the bow from slipping; the left foot should at the same time be brought forward; the centre of the left hand wrist must be placed on the upper limb of the bow below the eye of the string the IE is:==º 48 ARCHERY forefinger knuckle upon one edge of the bow, and the top of the thumb on the other. The bow is now to be pulled up vigorously, and the upper limb of it pressed down by the right hand, and the wrist of the left which should at the same time slide upward until the eye of the bowstring is safely placed in the mock. The middle, the ring and the little fingers, should all three be stretched out, as they are not wanted in this operation of stringing the bow; moreover, if this be not dome, they are liable to be caught be- tween the string and the bow, and thus become severely punished. The foung archer should take care that the eye is well placed in the mock before i. removes his left hand. He should not become impatient in the action of stringing the bow, but perform it systematically as directed; if he do not succeed, let him lay it by for a few minutes, and when he is cool make a second attempt. To unstring the bow, the short horn is to be placed on the ground; the palm of the left hand receiving the flat side of the upper limb ; the string should be upward; the handle is then to be pressed with the right arm so as to slacken the string; when the latter becomes loose enough, the eye is to be brought out of the mock, by the thumb of the left hand. POSITION. The face is to be turned toward the mark, but no part of the body, which, if the mark be north, sliould be turned toward the east; the head should be rather inclined ; the left hand, with the bow in it in a perpen- dicular position, is to be held out straight toward the mark; the arrow is to be brought well toward the ear and not the eye, on the left side of the bow and under the string; the fore- finger of the left hand passes over it; by the other hand the mock is placed in the string at the proper place, with the cock feather uppermost; when this is dome, the foreſinger of the left hand is removed and placed round the bow. While the left hand is raising the bow, the right should be drawing the string with two or three fingers only and not the thumb; as soon as it reaches the head it should be let loose, for fear of its breaking. Great care should be taken to ac- quire a proper position, as represented in the marginal cut, for bad attitudes in Archely appear extremely ridiculous. *Y - º - rºw.v., - *- ... • - - - "rº :* - Q===Cºg ARCHERY. ' 49 j FLIGHT-SHOOTIN G, Flight-shooting was at one time much more frequently practised with the long bow than it is at present The object in flight-shooting is simply to ascertain which of a party can shoot to the greatest distance; this must of course, be very detrimental to bows, which are more frequently snapped in flight-shooting than at any other pastime with the long bow. No skill in aiming is requisite in flight-shooting; it is, therefore, by no means improving to the young Archer, who wishes to excel as a marksman. The longest and lightest arrows that the bow will bear are used in flight-shooting; the game is generally seven. CL OUT-SHOOTIN G, Clout-shooting is mostly practised by those who cannot conveniently set up butts or targets near home. The clout, which is quite portable, is made of a round piece of pasteboard, thirty-six inches in circumference, fastened to a stick; or it may be made of white cloth, so contrived as to roll up on a stick which is run through it. In clout-shooting, seven is the game, and all arrows tell that fall within three bows’ length of the clout. ROVIN G This is a very pleasant pastime with the long bow ; and is, indeed, by §ome, preferred even to target-shooting. The parties are not restricted to any particular place, but rove about from field to field for miles around, if they think fit. The mark is any clear and conspicuous object, such as a tree for a bush. The number of the game is, in general, as in flight and clout-shooting, seven ; but it may be increased or decreased, according to the inclination of the parties. If there be more than six persons in a roving party, they should divide themselves into companies; and when the first company have shot to, and walked some distance from, the first mark, the second should shoot at it: and so on with those that follow. Arrows that reach within five bows’ length of the mark tell; but those which reach nearest cut the others out. In measuring the distance, the Archer does so with his own bow, from a spot in the mark which is one foot from the ground; and the first arrow is the one that is nearest, not to the mark, but to that point or spot of the mark. The Archer may neasure to what part of his arrow he pleases. He who shoots nearest has’ the privilege of indicating the next mark. It is better to use blunt-headed arrows in Roving than sharp ones; as it mot unfrequently happens that the latter are ūriven so firmly into the mark as to make it a matter of difficulty to ex- tract them : should this occur, it is advisable to cut away the wood around the arrow, rather than endeavour to tug it out by violence. Every Rover should carry at least a dozen arrow8 with him, in order to be prepared against accidents. | s== 2:::sg. *— *-i-º- 50 ARCHERY. * CONCLUDING RE MARKS. We strongly recommend the young Archer never to shoot with another person’s bow ; he may, very probably, break it; and in that case, a loss might ensue to the owner, which money could not remedy. When the grass is above the ankle, shoot only at a considerable elevation. After two or three arrows are shot, the Archer should cease awhile, otherwise his aim will get unsteady. If he shoot point-blank at a mark, the arrow, if it miss, will strike along, and so bury itself in the grass, as to deſy the keenest eye, in many instances, for a very considerable time, to discover it. This in. convenience may be remedied by shooting at a proper elevation, for then the arrow will descend in such a manner as to leave the feathers visible; they will also be saved, from that injury which frequently occurs to them, by the moisture of the grass, or ground, when shot point-blank. Arrows should not be used of different lengths, nor should the young Archer shoot alone; for in solitary shooting, he falls into habits of negligence and indif. ſerence; if he practice with others, he will strive to emulate his companions; and, instead of a careless, unskilful marksman, soon become an adept in the pleasant pastime of ARCHERY. - - assº C. * , ºf 2 ######E. Tº - º ...sº sº ºº::5; Sºº--- Sºº-º-º: & ºr - Fºº-º-º-º-º: -TJºsºsº, 53.3-> …sº 2: 3:y:zºº #º: to:34-3-º:= - - *** ; :--~ *-jºº. *>†Nº.4: 2 teatºr º.ºx- --- -º-, * >Sºssºsº:2:: -*= ***A*/22:… : **-_ Cº- —--~~~5: "Sº **:: * sº gºº. The youthful Yeomanry are in the field,— Their tents are pitched, and every heart beats high To join the friendly strife;—their stoutest forts rº. § zºº Are slender wickets;–all their entrenchroents, º *R_º A popping and a bowling-crease; their weapons, Bats;–their ammunition, a brace of balls. THIS truly English pastime, although long a favorite with the people of this country, never reached to a greater degree of popularity than it possesses at this time. It is a favorite with the peer and the peasant, the Socior Societatis Artium and the school-boy. Royalty has, heretofore, stood bat in hand at the popping-crease, surrounded by those youthful buds of mobility of which our nation has since been proud; and, strange though it may seem, yet it is no less strange than true, young matrons have played matches of Cricket against maidens, without impeachment to their usual reputation, and having husbands, brothers, and sweethearts for their spectators. “In many counties, Cricket is the universal pastime of the peo- ple; in others, it is rarely played, and in many, scarcely mentioned. The man of Devon, who deems all sports inferior to wrestling, and the inhabitant of Somerset, who doats upon the manly game of back-sword, seldom bestow a thought upon Cricket ; it is, nevertheless, esteemed and enjoyed by the oeople of other countics, especially those about the metropolis, as a sport \ .* § §2=sº 9=:E===Fºº-ºº: - = ------- 㺠=2###############3% 3% § ==##############É. 2. § ########### §N £:##### _s=–=_--— ( ſº- **:2.8 Sº->- :=2#22 - ------ =–. º” > --- - **E: 2–3 ſº _--------------- Enroll'd among our Gymnasts, the pale youth Whose limbs, erewhile, weak and of muscle void, Totter’d beneath their puny load, soon gains The bloom of health ; and issues forth, at last, Robust and hardy as the mountaineer. GYMNA stic Exercises have lately attained considerable popularity, not only in this country, but also in l’russia, and other parts of the Continent. 'hey may be said to be a series of regular and systematic exercises, adapted to bring into play, and consequently improve, the strength and activity of the various muscles in the human frame: imparting a knowledge of the proper, use of each, and teaching the pupil the means of disposing of his natural powers to the best advantage, They are also calculated to inspire him with conſidence in a moment of danger, and to enable him to extricate himself, as well as others, from peril, by his increased bodily agility, and the experience, he has acquired, as to the most advantageous mode of its application. A cotemporary writer on this subject makes the following ob- servations in support of the assertion that Gymnastic Exercises confer courage and presence of mind. “Courage is generated by conſidence, and confidence is acquired by practice. A hazardous undertaking which we *º a- =:Rººf 2 Q * º:=º Is * º 68 GYIVINASTICS. have often achieved, ceases to be considered as any further dangerous than affording us an occasion to call forth all our energies. The well-taught Gymnast would, in a case of necessity, take a leap which few could per- ºr form, if any would venture. Leaps of great distances and heights he has ; often attempted with success. By him the length, the height, and the inter. … reming obstacles could be measured in a moment. Rehearsals of such situations and circumstances have been his daily amusement. He cannot be dismayed at danger who has often played with it, and the principles of his art have supplied him with means to disarm it of half its power. To illustrate the foregoing remarks, we shall here relate what we consider an instance of the coolness, accuracy, and presence of mind to be acquired by daily practice. Walking out one day near the city of Edinburgh, our at- tention was attracted to a field where the Royal Company of Archers were practising. A man, hired for the purpose, and trained to the duty, was stationed at the target, with a small flag in his hand to mark the spot where the arrows fell, the distance being very considerable. It is incredible with what accurate perception this man followed the arrow in its rapid passage along the arch it made in the sky; and with what accuracy he seemed to conjecture how near the target, or on what side it would fall. He stood close to the target, almost touching it with his right arm; one arrow flew through the air; he marrowly observed the ſeathered messenger advancing rapidly in its course—he stepped one step to the left, and the arrow stuck firmly in the ground a few inches to his right, betwixt him and the target. He waved his flag to the spot, and a second arrow was sent; from this he escaped by darting a little to the right. To save himself ſrom the third, he had no occasion to move from his station, as he coolly saw it deposited in the lower part of the target. It is needless to detail the rest. The arrows stuck beſore, behind, and on each side of him. The exercise at last con- cluded; and it seemed no less surprising to us, the insensibility of danger which this man, for the sake of a little gain, exhibited, than the confidence which his employers doubtless had in the acuteness of his perception.” The saine writer elsewhere observes that “the ancients, particularly the free states of Greece, cultivated the study of Gymnastics as an important oranch of the education of youth. Having frequently to defend their lib- erties, either against the encroachments of kindred states, or the ambition of powerful foreign enemies, they considered it highly necessary to inure their youth to hardy and even violent exercise, that their minds might not We daunted in the hour of danger, mor their bodies sink under the necessary fatigues of warfare.” - GY MINASTICS. 59 -— --— — —- z:===ºsFº: -- - - ~72.É2:. •- --ºſ-ºsº -...., 2 ºz. . .”. -*** - ... * - - - G Y MIN ASTIC EXERCISES. THE necessary fittings-up of a Gymnastic ground are as follows:–An morizontal bar, a vaulting-horse, a leaping-stand, parallel bars, a climbing- stand, and ladders of rope and wood. The best time for performing Gymnastics is early in the morning Boys - should proceed gradually from the more easy to the more difficult exercises; and it is most advisable to practise these sports under the eye of an expe. rienced person. Where there is a number of boys, they should be divided into classes, according to their strength. It is advisable to carry no toys in the pockets when practising; extra clothes should be put on when the exercises are finished; and the usual precautions adopted to prevent taking cold, The following observations, which are principally from Salzmann, may be perused with advantage. No person in health is injured by being over- heated; but drinking when extremely hot, or being cooled too quickly, in whatever manner it happens may prove highly pernicious. It is proper, therefore to take off whatever clothing can be decently spared, before begin. ning to exercise, and put it on again immediately after. Lying down wpol, the cold ground, too, must not be alloved. On commencing any ! - -. ~…~ –, - SS == zaj * GYIVIN A.S.T I C S. exercise, begin, not with its more violent degrees, but with the more gentle, and leave off in the same manner; sudden transitions are always danger ous. Never let bodily exertion, or your attempts to harden the frame, be carried to excess: let your object be to strengthen the feelle body, not to exhaust and render it languid. In all exercises, attention should be paid to such a position of all the parts of the body, that mone may be exposed tº injury: for example, the tongue must never be suffered to remain be. tween the teeth. The left hand and arm are commonly weaker than the right; let them be frequently exercised, therefore, by liſting, carrying, and supporting the weight of the body by suspension, till they become as strong as the others. Although walking, rumming, dancing, balancing, vaulting, climbing, jumping, wrestling, riding, swimming, and all other muscular exercises, may be included in the term Gymnastics, the common course adopted at the schools includes only walking, running, jumping, vaulting, balancing, and climbino. W.A.L. KIN G. af In walking, the arms should move freely by the side, the head be kept up, the stomach im, the shoulders back, the feet parallel with the ground, and the body resting neither on the toe nor heel, but on the ball of the foot. On starting, the pupil should rise one foot, keep the knee and instep straight, the toe bent downward. When this ſoot reaches the ground, the same should be repeated with the other. This should be practised until the pupil walks firmly and gracefully. R.U.N N IN G, In running, the legs should not be raised too nigh; the arms should be nearly still, so that no tºnnecessary opposition be given to the air by useless motions. Running in a circle is excellent exercise, but the direc- tion should be occasionally changed, so that both sides may be equally workod. J U M PIN G, The first rule in jumping is, to fall on the toes and never on the heels. Bend the knees, that the calves of the legs may touch the thighs. Swing the arms forward when taking a spring, break the fall with the hands, i necessary; hold the breath, keep the body forward, come to the ground with both fect together, and in taking the run, let your steps be short, and in- crease in quickness as you approach the leap. Begin with a mouerate àeight or breadth, and increase both as you improve. j p GYMNASTICs. | : Begin by raising the body by the hands, and then moving the hands alternately backward and forward, until you go along the bars each way & - by means only of your hands. Then move or jump with both hands at once. The swing is performed by supporting the body by the arms, with the stomach up- ward, until the toes are in a straight line - with the head; when the pupil can do this with ease, he should throw his body from this position over the bar to the right or left. The movement of lowering the body by bending the elbows is dome by drawing up the feet toward the hams, and sinking gradually until the elbows are even with the head; rise again by straightening the arms, and repeat the exercise sev- ==== eral times. Many other exercises may be performed on these bars, which will occur to the pupil in the course of lis practice. . - HORIZONTAL BAR. The first position is taking hold of the bar with both hands, and raising the body until the chin, is on a line with the knuckles. When you can ook over the bar in this manner with ease, place the hands on the further side of the bar from you, and raise the body as before. In the next ex- ercise, the body is raised from the ground by both hands on each side of the bar, and the pupil passes, springs, or moves the hands alter- mately along the bar. Reep the legs close, lift the feet so as to touch the bar and sink them down again; repeat this several times, and when in this position, pass along the bar by alternately moving the hands; the body may then be supported by the right arm and left leg, and afterward by the left arm and right leg; you may then place yourself in a riding posi- tion on the bar You may also swing with the head downward, take the bar with both hands, and pass the feet between them, until they haug down, -* . . GYIVIN ASTICS. ward; you may either return them the same way, or drop upon jour toes to the ground. • T H E L ON G L TE A P. Make a trench, which widens gradually from one end to the other, so that the breadth of the leap may be increased daily. Reep the feet close together, and take your spring from the toes of one foot, which should be quickly drawn up to the other, and they should descend at the same instant; throw the arms and body forward, especially in descending. Take a rum of about twenty paces. THE DIE EP LEAP This is performed from a flight of steps, increasing the depth according to the progress of the pupil. The body should be bent forward, the feet close together, and the hands ready to touch the ground at the same time with or rather before the feet. We do not, however, much approve of this exercise. THE HIG H L E A P. Get a stand made of two upright posts, bored through with holes, through which you may pass a string at what length you please, with sand bags of sufficient weight to keep it straight, and yet not so heavy as to pre- vent your carrying it away with your foot, in case you touch it while leaping; or you may have holes bored to admit movable pegs to support the string, as in the cut. You must take this leap both standing and with a run; for the former, the legs should be kept together, and the feet and knees raised in a straight direction; for the lat. ter, we recommend a short run, and a light tripping step, gradually quickened as the leaper approaches the string. You should be particularly careful not to alight on your heels, but rather on the toes and balls c the fect. THE HIGH L E A P WITH THIS POLE. Take the pole with the right hand about the height of ‘’le head, and with the left about the height of the hips; when put to the ground, spring with the right foot, and pass by the leſ, of the pole, over whatever you nave to clear, turning roºid as you alight, so as to front the place you leap from. - s wº * .. + - —h-e -*- - - GY MINASTICS. THE DEEP LEAP WITH THE PULE. This requires strength in the arms and hands. Place the pole the depth you have to leap, lower the body forward, cast off your feet and swing round the pole so as to alight with your face fronting the point you leaped from Come to the ground, if possible, on the balls of your ſeet. THE LONG LEAP W ITH THE Pol E. This is performed precisely as the last, only that you spring forward, rather than high; it may be practised across the trench. §: VAULTING. The horse for vaulting is made of a wooden cylinder with rounded ends; two ridges are placed across it, the space between which is called the sad. dle, and should be wide enough apart for a person to sit between them with ease. The horse may be wadded or mot, according to ſancy. Leaping on the horse is performed by springing by the hands astride upon it. The body is raised in the same manner, until the feet reach high enough to stand on the horse; the hands are them to be placed on the further ridge, and the body thrown forward into the saddle. Vaulting into the saddle may be performed with or without a run; place .* the hands on one of the ridges, take a spring, and turn the body on one side, so that one leg may pass over the horse, and the performer descend astride into the saddle. To vault sideways over the horse, the hands must be placed as above, and a spring made sufficient to throw the feet over the horse - one hand then leaves its hold, and you descend on the other side. To vault on or over the saddle forward, take hold of each ridge with the hands, and spring between them, so as to res or to go over the saddle. TO CLIMB THIE ROPE. In climbing the rope the hands are to be moved alternately, one above the other, the feet drawn up between every movement of the hands, and the rope grasped firmly between them ; in descending, move one hand after the other, as the friction, iſ you slide, would blister them. The best metho;' to climb the slant rope is to lay the sole of one foot flat on the rope, and the other leg over the instep of that foot | *S***ś, º - s 6 4. GYMNASTICS. : |A H THE PI, AN K. The breadth of the plank should be about two feet; its thickness, twu inches ; to climb it, the hands are to be placed on each side, and the feet on its surface; ascend by moving them al. ternately. Elevate the plank by degrees as you improve in the exercise. The progress that may be made in the ascension of the plank is astonishing. We know several Gymnasts who can ascend a plank in a per- pendicular position, without difficulty. ' To do this, the body and feet are in a different position to that represented in the marginal cut, where the figure in merely travelling up an inclined plane; to ascend a perpendicu- lar plank, the body is curved inward more from the shoulders downward, and the legs thrust up so that the higher one is meativ even with the hand. ASCENDING THE L ADD ER. Take hold of each side of the ladder, and ascend by moving the hands alternately. To climb the ladder by rundels, the learner must bring the elbow of the arm which happens to be the lowest, down to the ribs, before he pulls himself up by the other. To climb the ladder by one side, take hold of one side of the ladder with both hands, the palms toward the outer part § the side; move the hands alternately, and keep the legs close and steady. TO CLIMB THE PE RPENDI cul AR OR SLANT Pol, E. Move the legs and hands alternately, taking care, however, not to place the hands over each other, as in climbing the rope. In descending the pole, the hands are held ready to be used, if necessary, on each side of it; the legs being then a little slackened, you will descend with great ease. ** FLYJ N G STEPS. This is a very beneficial exercise. Fix a beam firmly in the ground, with a strong iron cap, that moves in a circular horizontal position, at the top of it; four rºpes are to be fixed to the cap, and bars of wood fastenja'ſ, Dottom of the ropes, which are to be taken hold of, and the pupils vault round, bearing the weight on the rope, and continually increasing in speed until they touch the ground only at intervals with their toes. (Wide cut at the commencement of Gymnastic Exercises.) • * • * - -—z--- *-ºſ: - .-- T --z-zº:=- * ~~~~~~- - , Tº r > z-2. ^* . - ... ?--- * ... • -** -- . . ." --- * ------------, -— --- GY MIN ASTIC RE CREATION S. Ta E following Recreations of skill and agility, will, we have no doubt, prove highly attractive to our youthful readers; they are, with two or three exceptions, entirely distinct from the usual Gymnastic Exercises; and will | be ſound, on account of their being less formal, more amusing, perhaps. - than the preceding ones. -- STEP PIN G TH ROUGH YOUR OWN FIN G E R.S. Get a hit of wood, or half of a tobacco-pipe, hold it between the two fore- fingers of each hand, and, without letting it go, after a little practice, you may leap over it, forward and backward, without diſticulty: when perſect in this, you may, as the writer of this has frequently done, place the tops of the two middle fingers together, and leap over them lºoth ways, without either separating or touching them with the feet. It is impossible to per- form this trick with high-heeled shoes; and, in fact, the great difficulty consists in clearing the heels. T H E T R i U M P H. Place the palms of the hands together, behind you, with the fingers down- k 'ard, and the thumbs mearest the back; then, still keeping as much as pos- sible of the palmis together, and, at least, the fingers of one hand touching hose of the other, turn the hands, by keeping the tops of the fingers close to the back, until the ends are between the shoulders, with the palms together, the thumbs outwald, and the tops of the fingers toward the head. This is a very difficult feat, and well deserves its title. *A*-****rr * GYMNASTICS TH E J A V E LIN. This is a capital Gymnastic Recreation. Get a heavy pole, shod at ong end wih iron, or a spike, if you think proper; elevate it with the other hand to the height of the ear, and cast it at a target. At some of the Gymnastic schools, the pupils are taught to cast the pole with their fingers, as they would a reed; this is a bad practice,——the spear slotill be grasped witn the whole han. 1, the but-end of it coming out he- tween the fore-ſinger and thunib, and the front or shod part prºjecting from the little finger, which ought to encircle it as much as its thickness will permit; poise it accurately, and take your aim deliberately before you cast it. When you cast, thrºw your arm back as ſar as possible, and deliver the pole with all your force. L) OT A N D C A R R Y TWO. The person who is to perform this exploit, (whom we shall designate as No. 1,) stands between two others, (whom we shall call Nos. 2 &nd 3;) he then stoops down and passes his right hand behind the left thigh of No. 2, whose hand he grasps; and his left hand behind the right thigh of No. 3, whose left hand he grasps. Nos. 2 and 3 then pass each one arm round the neck and shoulders of No. 1, and when in this position, No. 1, by raising himself gradually from his stooping position, lifts the others ſrom the ground. PR () S'I' It A T E A N D P E R PIEN DIC U L.A. R. Hold your arms on your breast, lie on your back and get up again, with- out making use of either your elbows or hands. THE FLY I N G B O Ol. Place a book, or other convenient thing, between the two feet, tº such a way that it is held between the ancles and the inner side of the feet; thun kick up, backwards, with both feet, and throw the book over your heird. KNU cK L E Dow N, An exercise of some difficulty, is performed by putting the toes against a chalk line, kneeling down and rising up again, without any assistance of the hands, or moving the toes from the chalk line. GYININ ASTICS. 6? T H E L ON G. R. F. A CH. A line is to be marked on the floor, to which both feet, or rather, the toes of both your feet are to be brought, and beyond which they must not pass. One hand, either right or leſt, at option, is then to be thrown forward (without touching the floor in its pas- sage) so far and no farther than you can spring back again from the horizontal position to the original up right position of the body, without disturbing the stated osture of the feet, or scraping the floor with the hand in the back-spring. The distance, at which different persons can thus spring back from the hand, will, of course, differ according to their length of arm, or their strength and activity. When you have ascertained the distance at which you can recover with- out scraping the hand, or changing the original position of your feet, you must stretch forward as far as possible; and whilst your body is supported by the hand on the floor, chalk as far as possible with the other; after this, rise up from your hand and recover your original position, without touching the ground again with either hand. There is great scope for skill and ac- tivity in this ſeat, and there are persons mot exceeding five feet, or five feet and a few inches, who will chalk considerably further than others six feet migh. The great art is, to bring your body as near to the floor as possible; 'or which purpose, it is recommended, (and allowable,) to move the feet Backward from the line of demarcation, as far as you can, which will bring he body much lower than it is in the figure, and enable you to chalk, at east, the full length of yourselſ, which is considered pretty good chalking, although there are persons who will exceed the distance very considerably. Those who perform this trick the best, contrive, when on the stretch, that Jhe body may rest upon the elbow. CHAIR IN G T H E L E G. Place the left foot on the lower back rail of a chair, then pass your right leg over the back of the chair, and bring it to the floor between the chair and your left leg. This is to be dome without touching the chair with your hand. In doing this trick, the chair should not stand upon a slippery floor, as it may move from under you, and cause a fall; a heavy chair should also be selected, and great care taken while performing it. GYIVINASTICS. THE TURN-OVER. In performing this feat, it is necessary to take a run of half-a-dozel. paces The trick is to place the toe of the right foot against the wall, about the height of the knee from the ground, and to throw the left leg over it, making an entire revolution, so that when your left leg reaches the ground, your back will be to the wall. The toe of the right foot is the point upon which you must turn ; and it must not quit the wall during the performance of the exploit. To per form the turn-over appears to be a matter of considerable diſticulty, at the first glance of the description; but it may be attempted by a lad of tolerable activity, who has made him- self master of the instructions, without danger, and, in a short time, accomplished with facility. Ordinary care must, of course, be taken during the early attempts. $ TRIAL or THE THUM B. This feat is very simple. Place the inside of the thumb against the edge of a table, and then move your feet backward as far as yott can from the table, so as to be able to re- cover your upright position by the spring of your thumb without noving your feet. You may accomplish this feat with much greater case, iſ, pre- viously to springing from the thumb, you make two or three benis to and fro with your body. Neither the ſin- gers, nor any part of the hand, except the thumb, should touch the table. It is advisable to begin by making the spring with your fect at a short dis- ** = tance only from the table at first, and ** to draw them further from it gradual- ly as you improve in the performance of the feat. The table from which you spring ought to be a heavy one ºr the opposite end of it placed close against a wall, otherwise you may push it back when making your spring; in which case, a fall on the hands and Knees would be almost inevitable. GYIVINASTICS. x * * * * * * THE PAI, M-SPRIN Ge A feat, which affords excellent exercise, something similar to the Thumb-trick, is performed by standing with your face toward a wa). and throwing yourself forward, until you support yourself from falling, by the palm of one of the hands being placed, with the fingers upward, against the wall; when in this position, you must recover your former erect station by springing from your hand, without bringing your feet forward. Accord- ing to the greater or less distance you stand from the wall, the more or less difficult the feat will be. As in the feat of the Trial of the Thumb, it is better to begin the performance of the Palm-spring at a short distance only from the wall, at first; by practica, if you are active and resolute, you may, at last, rise with ease with your feet placed full two-thirds of your own height distant from the wall. THE STO O PIN G STRIETCH, This ſeat, in which considerable agility may be acquired by practice, is performed in the following manner: draw a lime on the floor, against two fore-fingers, touches the floor. outer side of it. which place the outer edge of the right foot; at a moderate distance behind the right heel, place the left heel against the line. Take a piece of chalk in the right hand, stoop a little forward, pass the right hand between the legs immediately under the right knee, and chalk the floor as far beyond the line as you can, so that you can re- cover yourself without moving the toes of the feet, or touching the ground with either of your hands, in this case there is no spring from the hand, as the chalk only, which is held between the Your knee and body may project over the chalk line, iſ vour feet keep their proper place, as above directed, on the Q=Q . ºl-5. Re . - 70 GYMNASTICS. TU M B I, E-DOWN DICK. This feat must be performed with a long-backed chair; place the knees on the extremity of the feet of the chair, in the position indicated by the cut, and, with your two hands, take ... • hold about the seat rail; bring *S. - ~~~. `ss & º º your face down to touch the back }*\{ §§ of the chair, upon which, at the Şs, § extremity, or as near as you can 2 Miš, e ; ºr Pºss........ - * >7 §§ come without falling forward, or WS ºr- sº §WS$º suffering the top f the chi . Mºs g the top of the chair to touch the floor, a piece of money, or &c. is placed, which is to be removed with the mouth. Much of the management in this trick depends upon properly regulating * - r- - the position of the hands, which may be shifted as you find neces sary, up or down the upright pieces which form the back of the chair. strong, old-fashioned kitchen chair is the best for this purpose. T H E FIN G E R-F ]: A T. Your arms must be horizontally placed across the breast, and close to it; the fore-fingers of each hand must then be brought into contact. In this position another person must endeavour to separate your ſingers by pulling at each arm. However much stronger he may be than you, he will not be able to detach your ſingers, iſ you hold them properly. It must be agreed, previously, that the person who attempts to separate the fingers of the other shall not use a sudden jerk, but a regular force - TWO TO O N E. With the skipping-rope, several excellent exercises may be performed; the best, perhaps, is the following. Skip in the common way for a few seconds, cºnstantly increasing your velocity of movement, and, at length, leap tolerably high, and whirl the rope round so fast that it may pass twice under your feet before they touch the ground; continue this until you can repeat it several times in succession, and, at last, pass the rope three times, instead of twice, under your feet during the leap. LIFTING AT ARM’s LENGTH. Elevating a pole at arm’s length has long been accounted a superior feat; to do this, the arm must be stretched out at full length, the pole (the poker will do to begin with) grasped with the nails upward, and elevated n a right line with the arm. - - GYIVIN ASTICS. 71 LEAP B E FOR E YOU LOO K. Much care must be taken in this, as well as in “The Tumble-down Dick” feat, lest you hurt yourself. Procure a chair that is strong, and, at the same time, so narrow in the back that you can bestride it with Áº ease ; stand on the seat, push with tº your hands against the top rail, and your knees against the middle one, until you get it tilted on its back legs; but before you lose your foot- ing, leap from the seat, so as to alight on the ground, still holding the top rail in your hand, and the *=~ º:" is: back of the chair between your #sº legs. We repeat that great caution ‘ºlº tº - £º N is necessary at first, but after a lit- SºśWººs: tle practice, the feat is very easy. ... --> sº Without conſidence in your own powers, it can uever be performed ; to give you this necessary confidence, be assured that hundreds have suc- ceeded in achieving it. * T H E G R E AT WOOD EN BALL. Casting the wooden ball is a very good recreation. A large wooden bowler, in which several holes are bored, is used for this purpose. Place your thumb in one of these holes, and your middle, or fore-finger, in anoth- er, and cast it, under-handed, either at a mark or for a distance. The com- mon bowl used in skittle-alleys, (we do not mean those used for nine-pins,) will afford a patterm ; the maker must, however, remember that its dimen- sions are to be decreased, it being too heavy, and the finger-holes too far apart ſor the use of boys. It ought to be adapted in size, to the age of those persons for whose use it is intended. T H E TANT A LU S T R i C.K., An amusing scene may be produced by requesting a person to stand with his back close against the wall, and, when in this position, placing a piece of money on the ground, a short distance before him, and offering it to him if he can pick it up without moving his heels from the wall. This, be will find, is impossible, as, on stooping forward, a part of the body goes back beyond the heels, which, in this case, the wall will, of course prevent. * G. *Sº ,2-º: GYMNASTICS. To TAKE A CHAIR FROM UNDER You witHout FALLING. The figure represents a youth with the back part of his head resting on one stout chair, and his heels upon another, and a third chair, which - ought to be of rather a lighter make, is placed under him. lie must stiffen his body and limbs,throw up the chest, keep the shoulders down, and a disengage the middle chair, which he must - carry round over his oody until he deposit it again under him on the opposite side. This is an- other of those ſeats which seem very difficult, but which are, in ſact, easy of execution. Be assured that if you do not succeed in it, provided the mid- dle chair be not too heavy for your strength, it is because you have not suf- ficiently attended to the instructions. THE POI& E R PU ZZL E. This feat is to be performed with a common fire- poker, which you must hold near the top, between the , fingers and thumb, as shown in the annexed cut. You must then, by the mere motion of the fingers and thumb, work or screw the poker upward, until the slender part is . moved up to the hand, whilst the poker remains perpen- dicular during the whole process. For the first few times that this is attempted to be dome, considerable difficulty will be met with, as it not only requires strength in the fingers, proportionate to the weight of the poker, but also a certain knack, which is only to be acquired by prac- tice. We have seen some persons perform the poker puzzle, apparently without the least exertion, while others of equal strength have tried their utmost, and failed in the execution of it at last. . . . . sº - THE PULL EY. - * Fasten a common pulley to a horizontal piece of wood, or the branch of a tree; run a cord through it, with a cross picce of wood at each ond ; two boys take hold of these cross pieces, one lies on, is lºck, and the other pulls him up, sinking himself as he raises his companion ; he, in turm, is elevated in the same manner, and thus each sinks and is raised alternately. - § ~x. * *** —f | -* GYMNAST1cs. 73 E REAST TO MOUTH. Many persons find much difficulty in performing this feat. Measure the distance between the outside of the elbow and the extremity of the longest finger: mark that distance on a walking-stick or ruler, as shown by Fig. 2. This stick must be held horizontally before you, as in the annexed sketch, Fig. 1; the middle finger being placed exactly over the mark; the fingers must be kept at right angles with the stick, and the thumb placed over them, as shown by the fist grasping the stick. (Fig. 2.) . Holding the stick in this position you must, without changing the place of your fingers, lowering your head, or re- moving your elbow from your side, endeavour to raise the left end of the stick from your breast to your mouth. * - - THE CATCH-P E N NY. This is a trick with which many of our young friends are, doubtless, well acquainted; there are others of them who never heard of it, and we therefore give a sufficiently minute description of the manner of doing it, for the benefit of those who are in the latter case. Place two, three, or even four pemy pieces, in a heap, on your elbow, as in cut; drop your elbow suddenly, and bring your hand to a little below where your elbow was, and you may catch them all. It is impossible, however, to ac- complish this, unless you bring - your hand exactly beneath the place of your elbow, and perform the motion with quickness.> STILTS, Walking on stilts is practised by the shepherds of the Landes, or desert, in the South of France. The habit is acquired early, and the smaller the 4. *V] J. - 74 GYMNAST CŞ. * C assºsºs - * & boy is, the longer it is necessary to have his sults. By means of these odd additions to the natural leg, the feet are kept out of the water, which lies deep during winter on the sands, and from the heated sand during the sun- mer; in addition to which, the sphere of vision over so perfect a flat is ma. terially increased by the elevation, and the shepherd can see his sheep much further on stilts than he could from the ground. Stilts are easily construct- ed: two poles are procured, and at some distance from their ends, a loop of leather or rope is securely fastened; in these the ſect are placed, the poles are kept in a proper position by the hands, and put forward by the action of the legs. A superior mode of making stilts is by substituting a piece of wood, flat on the upper surface, for the leather loop; the foot rests on and is fas- tened by a strap to it; a piece of leather or rope is also nailed to the stilt, and passed round the leg just below the knee; stilts made in this manner do not reach to the hands, but ale managed entirely by the feet and legs In many parts of England, boys and youth frequently anause themselves by gºſiaſting Jit Sétiſts. gº \ Ös=-U. . “º º º Nº. wº- § ſ: &; sº § sº º º ºxº ºw § * º # º º º º º Đ - º: Sºhº § § §§§ §§. &GS< , $ W IMIMIN (G, * 3 Swim- ming has now become an art, and certam rules may be given for its at- tainment, by the aid of which, and a little practice, the most timid may eventually acquire the delightful power of “sporting in the silver flood.” “In addition to its advantages as a healthy and bracing exercise, humanity alone, the pleasure of being not only able to preserve our own lives, but whose of others, ought certainly to be sufficient inducement to acquire a des- terity in this most useſúl art. When it is considered that ours is a country having the ocean for its frontier, and that in the interior there is none in the world more abounding in rivers, brooks, lakes, and artificial canals; and when it is recollected that England is the first maritime nation in the world, it may seen surprising that such a proportionatoly small number of its inliabitants can swim. It might have been much more maturally in- 76 SWV IN1 N] IN G. ferred, that every innabitant of our island felt almost as much at ease in the water as on dry ground. The upsetting of the slender boats of the natives of Otaheite, is to them a subject of merriment; they swim about, take hold of the light vessel, right her again, and paddle away, never consider- ing they have been in any danger. Were the practice of swimming uni- versal in this country, and it might be so, we should hardly ever read of deaths by drowning.” It would be useless to enlarge further upon the ad- vantages to be derived from acquiring this art; they must be evident to the * most inexperienced. Before we proceed to those rules by which our youthful readers may be enabled to attain proficiency, we conceive that we shall be conferring a benefit on them by offering to their notice some extracts from Doctor Buchan’s reinarks, and the excellent advice of the celebrated philosopher, Doctor Franklin, on this subject. j DOCTOR BU CHAN’s RIE MARKs. “Immersion in cold water is a custom which lays claim to the most re- mote antiquity; indeed, it must be coeval with man himself. The necessity of water for the purpose of cleanliness, and the pleasure arising from its ap- plication to the body in hot countries, must have very early recommended it to the human species. Even the example of other animals was sufficient to give the hint to man; by instinct many of them are led to apply cold water in this manner; and some, when deprived of its use, have been known to languish, and even to die. “The cold bath recommends itselſ in a variety of cases, and is peculiarly beneficial to the inhabitants of populous cities, who indulge in idleness, and lead sedentary lives. It accelerates the motion of the blood, promotes the different secretions, and gives permanent vigor to the solids. But all these important purposes will be more essentially answered by the appli- cation of salt water. This ought not only to be preferred on account of its superior gravity, but likewise for its greater power of stimulating the skin, which promotes the perspiration, and prevents the patient from catch- ing cold. “It is necessary, however, to observe, that cold bathing is more likely to prevent than to remove obstructions of the glandular or lymphatic system; indeed, when these have arrived at a certain height, they aré not to be re. moved by any means. In this case, the cold bath will only aggravate the symptoms, and lurry the unhappy patient into an untimely grave; it is, therefore, of the utmost importance, previously to the patient’s entering upon the use of the cold bath, to determine whether or not he labors under any obstimate obstruction of the lungs or other viscera; and, where this is tha vase, cold bathing ought strictly to be prohibited. | 5$=~5 Tse; SWIMIMING. 77 “In what is called a plethoric state, or too great fulness of the body, it is likewise dangerous to use the cold bath, without due preparation. In this case, there is great danger of bursting a blood-vessel, or occasioning an inflammation. . “The ancient Greeks and Romans, we are told, when covered with sweat and dust, used to plunge into rivers without receiving the smallest injury. Though they might escape danger from this imprudent conduct, yet it was certainly contrary to sound reason. Many robust men have thrown away their lives by such an attempt. We would not, however, advise patients to go in the cold water when the body is chilled; as much exercise, at least, ought to be taken, as may excite a gentle glow all over the body, but by no means so as to overheat it. “To young people, and particularly to children, cold bathing is of the ut- most importance; it promotes their growth, increases their strength, and prevents a variety of diseases incidental to childhood. “It is, however, necessary here, to caution young men against too fre- quent bathing; as imany fatal consequences have resulted from the daily practice of plunging into rivers, and continuing there too long. “The most proper timea.of the day for using the cold bath, is, no doubt, the morning, or, at least, before dinner; and the best mode, that of quick immersion. As cold bathing has a constant tendency to propel the blood, and other humors, towards the head, it ought to be a rule always to wet that part as soon as possible. By due attention to this circumstance, there is reason to believe, that violent headaches, and other complaints which fre- quently proceed from cold bathing, might be often prevented. “The cold bath, when too long continued in, not only occasions an ex- cessive flux of humors toward the head, but chills the blood, cramps the muscles, relaxes the nerves, and wholly defeats the intention ºf lathing. Hence, by not adverting to this circumstance, expert swimmers are often in- jured, and sometimes, even lose their lives. All the beneficial purposes of cold bathing are answered by one immersion at a time; and the patient olight to be rubbed dry the moment he comes out of the water, and should continue to take exercise for sometime after.” DOCTOR FRANK LIN’s A DVI C E to sw I M M E Rs. “The only obstacle to improvement, in this necessary and life-preserving art, is fear; and it is only by overcoming this timidity, that you can expect to become a master of the following acquirements. It is very common for novices in the art of swimming to make use of corks or bladders to assist in keeping the body allove water; some have utterly condemned the use of them; however, they may be of service for supporting the body, while one is learning what is called (lie stroke, or that manner of drawing in and strik- ing out the hands and feet, that is necessary to produce progressive unotion | ÖS$= º 78 SWW I Yi YII N G. Put you wiſ! be mo swimmer till you can pace confidence in the power o, the water to support you ; I would, therefore, advise the acquiring that com ſidence in the first place ; especially as I have known several, who, by a little practice necessary for that purpose, have insensibly acquired the st coke, taught as if it were by mature. The practice I mean is this : choos ing a place where the water deepens gradually, walk coolly into it till it is tip to your breast ; then turn round your ſace to the shore, and throw an egg into the water between you and the shore; it will sink to the bottom, and be easily seem there if the water be clean. It must lie in the water so deep that you cannot reach to take it up but by diving for it. To encourage yourself, in order to do this, reflect that your progress will be from deep to siallow water, and that at any time you may, by bringing your legs under yºu, and standing on the bottom, raise your head far above the water; then plunge under it with your eyes open, which must be kept open before going untier, as you cannot open the eyelids for the weight of water above you; throwing yourself toward the egg, and endeavouring, by the action of your hºuds and ſect against the water, to get forward, till within reach of it. In t! is attempt you will ſind that the water buoys you Jup against your inclina- tion; that it is not so easy to sink as you imagine, and that you cannot, but by active force get down to the egg. Thus you feel the power of water to support you, and learn to conſide in that power, while your endeavours to overcome it, and reach the cgg, teach you the manner of acting on the water with your feet and hands, which action is aſterward used in swimming to stºpport your head ligher above the water, or to go forward through it. “I would the more earnestly press you to the trial of this method, he- cause, though I think I shall satisfy you that your body is lighter than water, and that you might float in it a long time with your mouth free for breathing, if you would put yourself into a proper posturc, and would be still, and for- bear struggling ; yet, till you have obtained this experimental conſidence in the water, I cannot depend upon your having the necessary presence of mind to recollect the posture and the directions I gave you relating to it. The surprise may put all out of your mind. “Though the legs, alºns, and head of a human body being solid parts, are, specifically, somewhat heavicr than fresh water, yet the trunk, particu- larly the upper part, for its hollowness, is so much lighter than water, as that he whole of the body, taken altogether, is too light to sink wholly under wa- ter, but some part will remain above, until the lungs become filled with water, which happens from drawing water to them instead of air, when a person, in the fright, attempts breathing, while the Inouth and nostrils are under water. “The legs and arms are specifically lightcr than salt water, and will be supported by it, so that a human body cannot sink in salt water, though the lungs were ſilled as above, but from the greater speciſic gravity of the head, º y SWW IIYINRING Therefore, a person throwing himself on his back in salt water, and extentl. ing his arms, may easily lay so as to keep his mouth and nostrils free for breathing; and, by a small motion of his hand, may prevent turning, if he should perceive any tendency to it. “In fresh water, if a man throw himselſ on his back, near the surface, he cannot long continue in that situation but by proper action of his hands on the water; if he use no such action, the legs and lower part of the body will gradually sink till he come into an upright position, in which he will con- tinue suspended, the hollow of his breast keeping the licąd uppermost. “But if, in this erect position, the head be kept upright above the shoul- ders, as when we stand on the ground, the immersion will, by the weight of that part of the head that is out of the water, reach albove the mouth an nostrils, perhaps a little above the eyes, so that a man cannot long remain suspended in water, with his head in that position. * “The body continuing suspended as before, and upright, if the head be leaned quite #. so that the face look upward, all the back part of the head being under water, and its weight, consequently, in a great measure supported by it, the face will remain above water quite free for breathing, will rise an inch higher every inspiration, and sink as much every expira- tion, but never so low as that the water may come over the mouth. “If, therefore, a person unacquainted with swimming, and falling acci- dentally into the water, could have presence of mind sufficient to avoid strug- gling and plunging, and to let the body take this natural position, he might continue long safe from drowning, till, perhaps, help should come ; for, as to the clothes, their additional weight when immersed is very inconsiderable, the water supporting it; though, when he comes out of the water, he would find them very heavy indeed. - “But, as I said before, I would not advise you, or any one, to depend on having this presence of mind on such an occasion, but learn fairly to swin, as I wish all men were taught to do in their youth; they would, on many Sceasions, be the safer for having that skill ; and, on many more, the hap- vier, as free from painful apprehensions of danger, to say nothing of the en- joyment in so delightful and wholesome an exercise. Soldiers particularly should, methinks, all be taught to swim ; it might be of frequent use, either in surprising an enemy or saving themselves; and if J had now boys to ed- ucate, I should prefer those schools (other things being cqual) where an op- Yortunity was afforded for acquiring so advantageous an art, which, once learned, is never forgotten. - “I know by experience, that it is a great comfort to a swimmer, who has a considerable distance to go, to turn himself sometimes on his back, and to vary, in other respects, the means of procuring a progressive motion “When he is seized with the cramp in the leg, the method of driving i. * ſ:- resºrºr-º-º-º-ºrs- , -c. R-----Fºr--ºw-u S- - - ---> ºf * - º-º-º-º: * 80 SYY INIMH iiN G. away is, to give the parts affected a sudden, vigorous, and violent shock which he may do in the air as he swims on his back. “During the great heats in summer there is no danger in bathing, how- sver warm we may be, in rivers which have been thoroughly warmed by the sun. But to throw one’s self into cold spring water, when the body has been heated by exercise in the stin, is an imprudence which inºy prove fatal. I once knew an instance of four young men, who, having worked at harves in the heat of the day, with a view of refreshing themselves, plunged into a spring of cold water; two died upon the spot, a third next morning, and the fourth recovered with great difficulty. A copious draught of cold water, in similar circumstances, is frequently attended with the same effect, in North America. “The exercise of swimming is one of the most healthy and agreeable in the world. After having swam for an hour or two in the evening, one sleeps coolly the whole might, even during the most ardent heats of summer. Per- haps the porcs being cleansed, the insensible perspiration increases and occasions this coolness. It is certain that much swimming is the means of stopping a diarrhoea, and even of producing a constipation. With respect to those who do not know how to swim, or who are affected with a diarrhoea at a season which does not permit them to use that exercise, a warm bath, by cleansing and purifying the skin, is found very salutary, and often effects a radical cure. I speak from my own experience, frequently repeated, and that of others to whom I have recommended this. “When I was a boy, I amused myself one day with flying a paper kite, and approaching the banks of a lake, which was near a mile broad, 1 ticq the string to a stake, and the kite ascended to a very considerable height above the pond, while I was swimming. In a little time, being desirous of amusing myself with my kite, and enjoying at the same time the pleasure of swimming, I returned, and loosing from the stake the string with the little stick which was fastened to it, went again into the water, where I found that, lying on my back, and holding the stick in my hand, I was drawn along the surface of the water in a very agreeable manner. Having then engaged another boy to carry my clothes round the pond, to a place which I pointed out to him, on the other side, I began to cross the pond with my kite, which carried me quite over without the least fatigue, and with the greatest plea- sure imaginable. I was only obliged occasionally to halt a little in my course, and resist its progress, when it appeared that, by following too quick, Y lowered the kite too much ; by doing which occasionally I made it rise again. I have never since that time practised this singular mode of swim- ming, though I think it not impossible to cross, in this manner, from Dover o Calais. The packet-boat, however, is still preferable.” - |- * … • . S., T ~~~ -” w ... w *- SWIMIMING. 81 .e. sº------"* * * * -—T-— N-> sº. ** * * * ** - - º- ºrs §ºſºs issº š:=>º: *…** ... → 2-. §º sº --- - *::::::::-- --- * “ --~~~~~ :- --Frise: --- PR A CT I C A L INS T R U CT I O N S. WE will now suppose one of our young friends by the side of a stream, Bnd anxious to take his first lesson in the art of swimming. If he have any friend or companion with him, who is at once competent and willing to give him the necessary directions, he will do well to follow them ; as example in this, and similar cases, is much better than precept. But if he should not be so fortunate, he can either adopt the excellent method mentioned by Docto, Franklin, as stated in a preceding page, or follow the instructions which we are about to give him on the subject. ENT I. R IN G T H E \Y AT E. R. Qur yºung pupil must not, at first, venture into the water in the bold and ſlashing manner of experienced swimmers. Iie must wait patiently until he ºn do so without danger. Let him remember that there has bºº, a time when the best swimmer alive, tottered, step by step, into the water, and sounded the depth with one foot before he lified the other from the iot. tom of the stream. Leander himself, with whose history and fate our juve- mile, readers who are tolerably advanced in the classics are, doubtless, ac !ºinted,—Leander himself, we repeat, who so often swam across the Hellespont, once paddled in a pond; and those who, under our directions, make their first attempt to buoy themselves up by their own natural powers, in a shallow brook, may, hereafter, become lusty swimmers enough to per. form the same ſeat of which Lord iłyron was so proud, namely, rossing the Hellespont, as Leander did in the days of “ hoar autiquity.” We recom- mend our young friend to be patient, as well as persevering, during his biobation in the art of swiuuuing. He must not feel disguisted and disheart- ened, because he seems to make “omparatively but little progress: let him | A 82 SW IMMING. remember that he is gradually acquiring a new and most important power; he is, by degrees, obtaining a mastery over the waters. It was well ob. served by a writer of great discernment, that nothing which is worth learn. ing is compassed without some difficulty and application ; that it is well worth some pains and trouble to render one’s self fearless of falling into a river, in which two out of three of our ſellow-countrymen would, in a similar situation, without assistance, be drowned, must be admitted ;-let not that trouble, therefore, be grudged. Previously to entering the water, the head and neck should be well wetted ; the pupil should then advance, by a clear shelving bank, in some stream, the depth of which he has ascertained by plumbing or otherwise, until he is breast high ; then let him face about toward the bank, and prepare to make his first essay in this art, as directed in the next paragraph. STRIKING OUT. . With his face turned toward the bank, as above directed, let the pupil lie down gently on his breast, keep his head and neck upright, his breast advanced, and his back bent inward ºA ‘. . . Then, let him with . . . . . . . . . draw his legs ſtom - the bottom, and in- * mediately strike them out, not downward, but behind him: strike out the arms forward, with the palms closed, and the backs upper- most, a little below the surface of the water; draw them back again, while he is gathering up his legs for a second attempt, and thus push forward, making use of his hands and feet ſ alternately. It will, perhaps, happen, that he will swallow water in his first efforts, but this should not discourage him : neither should he fancy that, \ because he nakes but little advances, he is not as capable of learning to swim as others; the same little mishaps occur to all young beginners. COR IS A N D B L A DI) Tº R.S. * The use of corks and bladders, for those who are learning to swim, is as 'º-u-lº\ -- J Sºjº &\\ gº-- . . . * . Ş. 2.2% ºf strongly recominended by some persons, as it is deprecated by others. . That the necessary action with the arms and legs may be acquired more easily with thar without them, is clear enough ; nevertheless, we are con. w – - (Q==Q - sº- *x Fº SWW INIMIING. 8:* vınced by experience, that it is better to learn how to keep one’s self afloat And to be able to swim ten or a dozen yards, at least, no matter how clumsily, without them. We have seen several young persons who, aſte, naving attained the necessary aqtion, in a very superior manner, by the use of corks or bladders, were totally unable to keep their heads above the water when they relinquished their aid, and were thus leſt precisely in the same situation in which they would have been, had they not made a single attempt in the art of swimming. We have, it is true, known some triſling exceptions, but they have been rare indeed. Corks and bladders, we think, may be useful, but they should not be commenced with. After the learner has made some progress, and is able to cross a narrow stream, corks and bladders may be occasionally adopted, for a short time, in order that the pupil, by means of their support, may, at his case, perfect himself in the action necessary for superior swimming, especially with the arms and hands. The action of the legs may be much better acquired by means of the plank, as hereaſter directed. The best swimmers we have ever met never made use of corks for this purpose, but still they may be considered of advan- tage in the manner we have stated. If therefore, our reader should think ſit to use corks or bladders, let’ him attend to the ſol- ~ *S* - - 1- --- ºr. * Nºzº. - .*~~ # - ** - MS. Jr. - º §= Sºxº~. §§ j}º º: - jś \ ---> -- - e - I:=== - lowing hints. ===== T:==º Swimming corks -) == =# - are made thus: three or four round slices - of cork, mcreasing progressively in circumference, are run, by a hole made in their centres, on each end of a piece of stout rope, which is long enough to reach across the breast, and beyond the arm-pits; the same number of corks is placed at each side of the rope, and they are kept from slipping off by knots at the two extremities. When bladders are used, they are blown full of air, tied at the necks, and fastened by strings to the ends of the rope, in- stead of corks. The manner of using corks or bladders is as follows:—the pupil places his breast across the rope between the corks or bladders as they float; he raises his logs from the ground, and rests his whole weight on the rope, so that the corks or bladders swim between his arms and his sides. In this Mosition he strikes out, and propels himself forward with his legs and feet. The action of the hands and arms supports a swimmer only, so that he SW IMINI ING would advance almost as much when using corks if he kept them stil as it he moved them; nevertheless, their action may be perfected, while the body is supported by the corks, and the young swimmer may acquire that grace. ſul, steady, and powerful manner of striking out, which he may, subsequent- ly, by degrees, bring into practice, when he has thrown the corks aside The writer of these pages has buffeted the billows at a mile or two from land, where the waters have been moved by, what an angler calls, a curling breeze, with a pleasure which those, and those alone, who have reveiled in the strong bosom of the sea, can imagine; and what is more difficult, he has swam the still torpid deeps of an inland lake, in a dead calm ; and although, perhaps, not an excellent, has been a very tolerable, swimmer in his time, and this is the manner which he has always followed, and which he recom- mends his young friends to adopt, of striking out with the arms. The fingers are to be closed, and the thumbs kept close to the hand, which should be straightened, or rather, a little hollowed in the palm ; the hands are then to be brought together, the two thumbs touching, or palm to palm, it is little matter which, and raised just under the chin ; they are then to be struck vigorously forward, and when the arms are at their full stretch, parted, and carried slowly and regularly, a little below the surface of the water, at the full stretch of the arms, backward, as far as convenience will permit; they should then sink toward the hips; by a slight pressure on the water, as they descend, the body will be raised, the head may be thrown back, and the breath drawn in for the next stroke. When the hands are at, or near, the hips, they should be raised, with the thumbs or edges, but by no means the backs, upward, to the first position; while doing this, the legs are to be drawn up as near the body as possible, and the soles of the feet struck out against the water with reasonable force, at the same moment the hands are thrust forward again. This is, in fact, the whole principle of swimming — the arms are first thrust forward, and the body propelled by the force of the soles of the feet, striking against the water; the air in the lungs is expired or breatined forth during this action; the hands are them stretched out and carried round so as to liſt the body (which wants mo support during the time it is propelled by the legs, and the lungs are nearly full of air,) while the legs are drawn up, and the lungs filled with air for a second effort. These very simple motions will seem difficult and complicated to the young swim- mer at first, but by degrees he will learn to perform them with facility. Above all things, let him endeavour to do them deliberately and without being flurricq. It is a fact, that a swimmer, who is apparently slow in his action, makes more progress by halſ than one who is quick. The former is deliberate and vigorous; the latter hurried, less effectual, and soon becomes fatigued. A tyro in the art will make ten eſorts during the time occupied by an adept in performing one, and at the same time will scarcely make 9me half the progress. - SW INIMING. e ; We seriously recommend our young readers mever to venture out of their depths with corks, if they cannot swim without them. We once knew a very promising youth who was uéarly drowned, when in deep water, by the corks slipping from his breast to below his waist, so that his loins, and, at last, his legs, were above water, while his head was beneath ; he was ex- tricated from this perilous situation by a youth of his own age, who had be- gun to learn the art of swimming, but without corks, on plecisely the same tlay as the lad who was thus in danger of being drowned. It would be well, if a string were tied by its middle to each end of the rope, close to the largest cork, and one end of it brought over the shoulder at the back, the other in front, and fastened securely together; this woulil, at least, prevent the corks from getting out of their proper places. Y T H E PLAN R. The plank is useſul in a bath, to perfect the young swimmer in the manner of properly throwing out his legs and feet. A piece of plank, about - ten or twelve feet in length, two inches thick, and a foot and a half, or two feet broad, is the best size. It is to -----→ === be thrown into the wa- FTTºllTºllTiltillº - - *## ter, and the pupil, after =# he has acquired the art ###### #= of supporting himself ->e:#== == # = for a short time, with- out any artificial aids, should take hold of one of its ends with both hands; his body will thus be supported, and he should strike out with his legs in the manner before directed, and endeavour to drive the plank before him, taking care to hold fast and follow it closely, otherwise he may suffer rather an unpleasant feeling by the plank darting forward, and leaving him to sink, unexpectedly, over head and ears in the water. Of the utility of the plank for the purpose above mentioned, we have frequently been witness, and can, therefore, most conſidently recom- mend it to those of our young readers who have an inelination to learn the art of swimming by occasional or preliminary artificial aids. THE ROPE, AND OTHER AIDS. The rope for swimmers is usually fastened to the end of a stout piece of wood, which is fixed into a wall or elsewhere, so as to project over the water; the rope descends to its surface, or it may be long enough for a 'oot or sixteen inches of its extremity to sink. The use of the rope ’s to SW IMMING, support the learner while practising the action with the legs; but it is very inferior for his purpose to the plank; as, while the pupil keeps himself up, by holding the rope, his body remains in too perpendicular a position, so that he strikes downward rather than backward. The pupil should ac- custom himself, as much as possible, to keep his legs mear the surface; for thosc who swim with the lower extremities deep in the water never make such rapid way as others who adopt the proper position, which should be within a few degrees of horizontal. The plank has another advantage over the rope; it is more steady in the water, and offers sufficient resistance to induce, and even to assist, the young beginner, as a point d'appui, to strike out vigorously with his legs. The rope is, in fact, of more utility to those who go into the water to bathe, than those who are learnino o Bwim ; for by means of the support which it affords, the bather may raise his legs from the bottom, and exercise himselſ most beneficially by tossing, stretching, and turning to and fro in the watcr; he may thus luxuriate in a manner which would be en- tirely out of his power with- out the aid of the rope. The aid of the ham, i is chiefly applied to very young learners, who have the advantage of bathing with a grown-up swimmer. It is by far superior as am aid, to corks or bladders; because it can be with. drawn gradually, and a last, altogether, so that the learner may feel almost insensible of its departure, and restered in an instant if exertion renders him too weak to support himself. A tall, strong youth. or a grown-up person, takes the little learner in his arms, and goes into the water breast-high with him ; he then places the pupil nearly flat upon the water, supporting him by one hand under the breast, and encouraging and directing him to strike out boldly, and, at the same time, correctly. After two or three lossoms, on different days, the support of the hand may occa- sionally be, in some degree, withdrawn; and, in the course of a week or ten days, the little swimmer will, in all probability, have no further need of its service. Oh! what a happy, triumphant moment is that, when a boy first floats upon the water, independent of all other aids but those which Nature *iſ; * ºnlinus;& º º < * * * p- A } . $ jº %ft =! miniº & ſºft º - r:--> * 5s=º ‘. 2=sº SW IMINIl N G. 8') has provided in his own person. He soon becomes exhaſisted but, from that time, he feels a conſidence in himselſ, and his progress is generally Inost rapid. - The aid of the rope and hand we do not so much approve as that of the hand alone. A rope is fastened about the learner’s body, a grown person holds the other end of it, and supports the pupil while he acquires the mode t of striking out. The aid, in this case, cannot be applied with such precision to the proper part, nor aſſorded and withdrawn with such micety as where the hand alone is used. SWIM MIN G OUT OF DEPTH. We will now suppose our pupil to have made some progress in swimming, and to feel anxious to go into deep water. If he feel quite conscious of his own powers, he may venture a few strokes out of his depth, across a stream, for instance, which is overhead only for a few feet in the centre, with shelv. ing banks on each side. Young swimmers sometimes feel alarmed when they are aware that they have ventured where they can no longer put their legs on the ground ; this . . “ — . . . T-> -, feeling flurries them, they sess & - strike quick, their hurry ===#º:#E== increases, trepidation en- *- #FF sues, and they have great difficulty in returning to the shore. We carmestly cau- tion our pupil against giv- ing way to anything of this sort. Before he ventures out of his depth, let him calculate his own powers, and attempt such a dis- tance only as is in proportion with them. Is he able to swim half-a-dozen yards without dropping his feet to the ground 3 If so, he may confidently cross a decp place which is only half that breadth. Let him not imagine |- that he is not quite as capable of swimming in deep as in shallow water; the contrary is the fact, for the deeper the water, the better he can swim, Above all things, let him not hurry himself, but strike slowly and evenly, and keep good time with the motions of his arms, his legs, and his lungs. Boys frequently fall. into an error, which is invariably attended with un- leasant consequences, when first attempting to swim, as well as when they º to venture out of depth, by losing their presence of mind, aid breath- ing at the wrong time. . They draw breath at the moment when they are striking out with their legs, instead of at the time their body is elevated by the hands, when at the full stretch of the arm backward, or in descending toward the hips. During this action of the legs, the head partially sinks, the face is driven against the water, and the mouth thus becomes filled -4- *———i -----------wVFY-H, I, Tºzzi-- :*ś SWIMMING. # w! ich creates a very unpleasant nausea and momentaly suffocation. Wher. the hands are in the position above mentioned, the progress of the body for- ward ceases, the face is no longer driven against the water, but is elevated above the surface; them is the time to draw in the breath, which should be expired while the body at the next stroke is sent forward by the action of the legs. During this time, if your mouth be even with or partly under the sur- face, no water can enter it, the air which you are driving between your lips effectually preventing it. “Keep time,” is one of the swimmer’s golden rules. Unless the pupil pay attention to it, he will make but little progress, and must inevitably, now and then, take in a mouthful of the stream in which he is swimming. To those who have never swam “ in the silver flood,” a circumstance of this sort will be thought very lightly of indeed ; but we speak the general feelings of swimmers, when we say, that the same person who would relish a draught from a stream, when sitting dressed upon its bank, would feel the greatest disgust at taking a mouthful of the same water, when swimming in it. After the pupil has ventured out of his depth, and feels satisfied with the success of his attempt, he grows emboldened, and increases his dis- tances daily. to TREAD w ATER. All that is necessary for treading water, is to let your legs, drop in the water until you are upright; then kcep yourself afloat in that position by treading downward with your feet, alternately ; and, if necessary, paddling with your palms at your hips. TO S W 1 M O N T H E SI I) E. Lower your left side, and at the same time elevate your right; strike forward with your left hand, and sideway with your right; the back of the latter being in front instead of upward, the thumb side of the hand down- ward, so as to serve precisely as an oar. You will thus, by giving your body an additional impetus, advance much more speedily than in the com- mon way; it will also relieve you considerably when you feel tired of striking out forward. You may also turn on the right side, strike out with the right hand, and use the left as an oar. In either case, the action of the legs is the same as usual. TO SWIM LIH E A DOG. Strike with each hand and foot alternately; that is, begin with the right hand and foot, draw the hand toward the chin, and the foot toward the body at the same time ; and then simultaneously kick backward with the foot and strike out in a right line with the hand; then do the like with the left thand and foot, and so on. The hands are not to be carried backward as in the ordinary way of swimming, but merely thrust out with the palms down- f : •º: - m- 3. - lººt. Q-Fs - - SW IMIMING. 88 wand, a little way below the surface, in front only; as they are brought back to the breast again, they should be rather hollowed, and the water grasped or pulled toward the swimmer. Much progress cannot be made by swim- ming in this manner, but still it is worth learning, as every change of method, in going a distance, recruits the swimmer’s strength THE PORPOISE, This is a very pleasant and most advantageous change of action. The ight arm is lifted entirely out of the water, the shoulder thrust forward, and the swimmer, while striking out with his legs, reaches forward with his hand, as far as possible. At the utmost stretch of the arm the hand falls, a little hollowed, into the water, which it grasps or pulls toward the d swimmer in its return to the body, in a transverse direction, toward the other armpit. While it is passing through the water in this manner, the legs are drawn up for another effort, and the left arm and shoulder elevated and thrust forward as above directed for the right. This is the greatest . advancing relief in swimming, except swimming on the back; floating on - the Back rests the whole of the body as well as the limbs, but while float- ! ing, no progress is made ; whereas, during the time a person swims in the { manner above directed, he will not only relieve himself considerably, but also make as great an advance in the water, as if he were proceeding in the ordinary way. - TO SWIM A N D F LOAT ON THE BAC I. To do this, you must turn yourself on your back as gently as possible, º elevate your breast above the surface, put your head back, so that your i w eyes, mose, mouth and chim only º ; Nº. are above water. By keeping • -- ~~~~ \ \s:#2 s- in this position with the legs A: --->|->> # =sº -- x - ~ - s pos b e ===== and arms extended, and pad- ** * $ • - - # dling the hands gently by the - ; side of the hips, you will float. § If you wish to swim, you must § § st ike out with the legs, taking s f -- – Tºrº----> --> -- - - ----------- care not to lift your knees too | high, nor sink your hips and sides too low ; but keeping in as straight a line as possible. You may lay the arms across the breast; keep them motionless at the sides; or, if you wish, strike out with them to help you on. To swun with your feet forward, while on your back, liſt up your legs one after another, let them fall into the water, and draw them back with all the ; force you can, toward your hams; thus you will swim feet forward, and re- § \urn to the placc whence you came. º t #. º -- SWW IMINIl N. G. To turn ſcom your breast to your back, raise your legs forward, and throw your head backward, until your body is in a right position: to change from the back to the breast, drop your legs, and throw, your body forward on vour breast. To TURN WHEN swi M. MIN G. If you wish to turn while on your back, keep one leg still, and embrace the water beside you with the other; thus, you will find yourself turn to that side on which your leg by its motion embraces the water, and you will turn either to the right or left, according to which leg you use in this manner. To turn while swimming in the ordinary way requires no further effor than to incline your head and body to the side you would turn to ; and, at the same time, move and turn your legs, in the same manner as you would do, to turn the same way on land. To SH 9 w THE FEET. While on your back, bend the small of it downward; support yourself y 2 5 * by moving your hands to and fro just above your breast, and stretch your ſeet above the water. - To B E AT THE WATER, &c. When swimming n your back, liſt your legs out of the water one aſter another, and strike the water with them alternately. Those who are most expert at this, bring their chins toward their breasts at each stroke of the legs. - • . - There is a variety of similar ſeats performed by expert swimmers, such as treading water with both hands raised over the head; floating on the back with the arms above the surface; taking the left leg in the right hand, out of the water, when swimming on the back; pulling the right heel by the right hand, toward the back, when swimming in the common way; throwing somersets in the water, backward and forward, &c. &c., for which no particular directions are necessary, as the pupil, when he has grown expert in the various modes of swimming which we have described, will be able to do these things, and any tricks which his fancy may suggest, without difficulty. - - L) IVIN G. - Diving, by practice, may be carried to astonishing perfection. Pearls are brought up from the bottom of the sea by divers who are trained to remain a considerable time under water. In ancient times, divers were employed it war to destroy the ships of the enemy; and many instances are related, by respectable authors, of men diving after, and fetching up nails and pieces o & SW IMIMIN G. : º | money thrown mto the sea, and even overtaking the nail or coin before it has reached the bottom. Diving may be performed from the surface of the water when swim ining, by merely turning the head downward, and striking upward with the legs. It is, howev- er, much better to leap in, with the hands closed above the head, and 3&s 2- ſ2 2. & head foremost, from a «.2c-sº a. ... " - - º =<== pier, boat or laised ----- bank. By merely strik- ing with the feet, and keeping his head toward the bottom, the diver may drive himself a con- siderable distance be- neath the sul face. If he reach the bottom, he has only to turn his head upward, spling fiom the ground with his feet, and he will soon arrive at the surface. If desilous of making a more rapid ascent, he should strike downward with his feet, pull- ing the water above him toward his head with one hand, and striking it downward by his side with the other. In diving, the eyes should be open; you must, therefore, take care that you do not close them, as they leach the surface, when you commence your descent. It is almost needless to add, that the breath should be held, the whole time that you are under water. SW IMIMING "JN DER WATER. Swimming between top and bottom may be accomplished by the ordinary stroke, if you take care to keep your head a little downward, and strike a little higher with your feet than when swimming on the surface; or, you may turn your thumbs downward, and perform the stroke with the hands in that position, instead of keeping them flat. THE CRAMIP, Our practical directions in the art of swimming would be incomplete were we to omit saying a few words as to the cramp. Those who are at all liable to it, ought, perhaps, to abandon all idea of swimming; men of the greatest skill, as swimmers, and of presence of mind in danger, having fal- len victims to this, which has been well enough called, “the bathers’ bane.” The cramp may, however, seize a person for the first time in his life, when at a distance fion) land; we have fiequently known this to occur; and in every case that has come within our personal knowledge, with one excep SWI MIMIN G. tion, the sufferer has saved himself by acting as we are about to advise out {.."; reader, if ever he should be seized with this terrible contraction e assured that there is no danger, if you are only a tolerable swiniumer and do not flurry yourself. The moment you feel the cramp in your leg or foot, strike out the limb with all your strength, thrusting the heel out, and drawing the toes upward as forcibly as possible, totally regardless of the mo- mentary pain it may occasion. If two or three efforts of this nature do not succeed, throw yourself on your back, and cndeavour to keep yourseif afloat with your hands until assistance reach you; or, if there be no hope of that, try to paddie ashore with your palms. Should you be unable to float on your back, put yourself in the position directed for treading water, an “u may keep your head above the surface by merely striking the water down- ward with your hands at your hips, without any assistance from your At'g's . In case you have the cramp in both legs, you may also endeavour to make some progress in this manmer, should no help be at hand. If you have one leg only attacked, you may drive yourself forward with the other. In order to endow you with conſidence in a moment of danger from an attack of the cramp, occasionally try to swim with one leg, or a leg and a hand, or the two hands only, and you will ſind that it is by no means difficult. We feel rather astonished that none of the treatises on swimming, which have fallen into our hands, recommend the practice of boys attempt. - ing to carry one another in the water; when both can swim, this is an excel- lent and safe mictiº of learning how to support another who is in tianger on account of cramp weakness, ignorance of swimming, or other caus- es. In the amnexcd sketch, the foremost ſig- ure is in the act of swim- ming, and carrying w it!" him another persºn, win, is borne up, sini):ly by applying one h;thiſ to - each hip of his compan ion. A person, it is said, had the pleasure of saving a friend from drown- Ing, by these ineans: it is attended, however, with considerable risk, espr £ially if the person you venture to rescue should lose his presence of init. . which is too often the case with those who are in danger of being drowned \t will surprise any swimmer, who first trics the experiment, to ſind with SWIIMIMING. . what ease he can support a person attached to him in this manner. The person, who rests upon tie hips of his companion, is represented as passive, as he is supposed to be unable to swim ; but two swimmers, performing this experiment, may strike out together with their legs. Tl M ES AND PLACES FOR SW IMMING. Óf all places to swim in, the sea is best, running waters next, and ponds the worst. The best time for swimming is in the months of May, June, July, and August. There are, however, some years, wherein it is not healthy to go into the water during these months; as when the weather, and conse- quently the water, is colder than ordinary for the season. One ought not to go into the water when it rains; for the rain, if it last any time, chills the water, and endangers catching cold, by wetting one’s clothes. The night is also improper for this exercise. Beware of weeds, as although you have company with you, yet, you may be lost beyond the possibility of help, if your feet get entangled among them. The bottom ought to be of gravel, or smooth stones, so that you may stand thereon as firmly as on the earth, and be neither in danger of sinking in the mud, nor wounding the feet : care ought also to be taken that it be even, and without holes; and, above all, that you know the depth, cSpecially when you begin to learn ; for as it is then easy to tire one’s self when struggling and making the first efforts, you should, therefore, be sure that the bottom is not out of your depth, when you have occasion to rest, and take breath. It is impossible to be too cautious when you are alone, or have no one in company that knows the pond or stream. When you have found out a place fit to learn in, do not venture any- where else till you are considerably advanced in the art; and, till then, it will be the best way to excrcise with some one who is already expert in SW l l l l llll 119, CON CLUIDIN G. R. F. M. A R K S. In entering the water, the head should be wetted first, either by plunging in head foremost, or pouring water on it. Before you adopt the first method, ascertain if the water be sufficiently deep to allow you to dive without touching the bottom, otherwise you may injure yourself against it. Do not remain in the water too long, but come out as soon as you feel tired, chilly or mumbed. It is a good plan to make a plunge, so as to wet the body all over, to return to shore immediately, and an instant afterward enter the water at your ease, and take your lesson or your swim. You do not feel so chilly if you do this, as if you dash in and swim off at once. Never be alarm- ed at having a few mouthfuls of water, when learning to swim ; be not dis- couraged at difficulties, but bear in mind, that millions have done what you are attempting to do. Beware of banks which have holes in them, and ven. ture out of your depth only by degrees. 34 SW IIMIMIN G. If one of your companions be in danger of drowning, be sure that, in en deavouring to save him, you make your approaches in such a manner, as will prevent him from grappling with you ; if he once get a hold of your limbs, you both will almost inevitably be lost. Although it has been said, that the weight of one’s clothes will make but little difference in the water, yet we strongly advise the young swimmer, when he has become-expert in the art, and confident of his own prowess, to swim occasionally with his clothes.on; for this purpose, of course he need only use an old worn-outsuit: by so doing, he will be satisfied that dress does not make so much difference as he might imagine, and thus he will have more courage and presence of mind if he should at any time afterward fall into the water, or leap in to save another. §§ R N \ NYºğ | * § N S. š §§§ Nº. #* º § § “This is the purest exercise of health, The kind refresher of the summer heats.” TH O MS O Ne sG →* *-* * • sº-ºº: A-> —z- ~ · · ·,≤) }|-�* : ·*%W●§§§ zj|×ș\Ğ}}} ¿ ��± „…ſº v \,\! % aeºº:źžºg *…*... … ** * · * * * * * · * • • • • • • •• • §. , , , , -:- …,,,.,:.,,,,,,,,。、、、、、、、、、、、、、、 、 (; : *¿¿.*¿.**** ?şaşłºwºſº), ºººº :) ~~ ~~~~· · · · * , † ?) - * * * ... •... •. . . . .;...»<;,&&&&&&&&ae*** *x*) ≤ ≤ £;\.){3*;¿??¿? - \ ,‘. .-*-~ \șț¢§ 3º .»- *ſººººººººº...“.,,.,,. . ., .-•••! r.*----- ~ ~~~~ ~~ºr sº s lſº Y Çiğ se | t ! Q9N 0. Siſ - % i. ſ % Éiº,6\\{{! T. WillM Jiyū . É). Alſº §§ sº © (Q. rº |} | b amſ) ÇThis 4. n {l} § tly All | § - & ! ,” ==x-x-x--- :* - . . :** *** , ; ; A RITH MIETICAL AMIU SEMENTS Cocker and Dilworth, Walsingame and Vyse, In their own sphere, by BIDDER were outshone: They, or with pen or pencil, problems solved,— He, with no aid but wond’rous memory; They, when of years mature, acquired their fame, He, “lisped in numbers, for the numbers came.” THE delightful and valuable science of Arithmetic first arrived at any degree of perfection in Europe, among the Greeks, who made use of he letters of the alphabet to express their numbers. A similar mode was followed by the Romans, who, besides characters for each rank of classes, introduced others for five, fitty, and five hundred, which are still used for chapters of books, and some other purposes. The common arithmetic, in which the ten Arabic figures, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 0, are used, was un- known to the Greeks and Romans, and came into Europe, by way of Spain, ſrom the Arabians, who are said to have received it from the Indians It is supposed to have taken its origin from the ten fingers of the hand, which were made use of in computations, before arithmetic was brought into an art. The Indians are very expert at computing without pen or ink; and, the 36 ARITHMIETICAL AMUSEMENTS. of maize, excel the European, with the aid of all his rules and implements for writing. But the dexterity of those people cannot for a moment be com- pared with the ſeats of mental arithmetic exhibited by GEORGE BIDDER, the youth, whose portrait stands at the head of this article. This astonish- ing boy, at a very early age, and without education, was capable of solving very intricate questions in arithmetic, without the use of pen, pencil, or writing implements of any sort, but entirely in his own mind, as correctly and quickly as the most expert person could in the common way. We have, personally, witnessed his ability in this respect, and among lºany other complicated questions, which were put to him, we recollect the following:— Supposing the sum to be 95 millions of miles from the earth, and that it were possible for an insect, whose pace should be 7% inchº per minute, to travel that pace how long would it take to reach the sun” This he mentally solved in a very short time. several other mental arithmeticians have appeared within these few years; among the rest, JEDIDIA H BUXTON, an illiterate peasant, who was never taught to read or write, appears to have been eminent. Several of the questions answered by this man have been recorded; among others, we recollect the following –How many times will a coach-wheel, whose circumference is 6 yards, turn in going 204 miles" In thirteen minutes, Buxton answered—59,840 times. Then he was asked:—Alºl, supposing sound travels at the rate of 1142 feet per second, how long will it be before ºi. the report of a cammon is heard 5 miles off” His answer was, 23 seconds, - 7thirds, and 46 remain. On being required to multiply 456 by 378, he gºve - the product in a very short time; and, when requested to work the question audibly, so that his method might be known, he multiplied 456 first by 5, which produced 2280; this he again multiplied by 29, and found the product } 45,600, which was the multiplicand multiplied by 100; this product he again multipled by 3, which produced 136,800, the product of the multiplicand by 360; it remained, therefore, to multiply this by 78, which he effected by multiplying 2280, (or the product of the multiplicand multiplied by 5,) by 15, as 5 times 15 are 75. This product, being 34,200, he added to 136,800, which was the multiplicand multiplied by 300, and this produced 171,000 which was 375 times 456. To complete his operation, therefore, he multiplied 456 by 3, which produced 1368, and having added this muluber to 171,000, he found the product of 456 multiplied by 378, to be 172,368. By this it appears, that he was so little acquainted with the common rules, as to | multiply 456 first by 5, and the product by 20, to find...what Šum it would produce, multiplied by 100; whereas, had he added two ciphers to the figures, he would have obtained the product at once. natives of Peru, in South America, who do all by the arrangement of graine Ös=-U. tº * ... is ARITHMIETICAL AMUSEMENTS TO TE L L A N Y NUM B E R THOUGHT ‘ī- Desire any person to think of a number, say a certs number of shillings; tell him to borrow that sum of some one in the company, and add the number borrowed to the amount thought of. It will here be pro- per to name the person who lends him the shillings, and to beg the one, who makes the calculation, to do it with great care, as he may readily fall into an error, especially the first time. Then, say to the person, ‘I do not lend you, but give you 10, add them to the former sum.” Continue in this manner:—‘Give the half to the poor, and retain in your memory the other half.” Then add:—‘Return to the gentleman, or lady, what you borrowed, and remember that the sum lent you, was exactly equal to the number thought of.” Ask the person if he knows exactly what remains; he will answer ‘Yes.’ You must then say, “And I know also the number that remains; it is equal to what I am going to conceal in my hand.” Put into one of your hands 5 pieces of money, and desire the person to tell how many you have got He will answer 5; upon which, open your hand, and show him the 5 pieces. You may then say,+* I well knew that your result was 5; but if you had thought of a very large number, for example, two or three millions, the result would have been much greater, but my hand would not have held a number of pieces equal to the remainder.” The person then supposing that the result of the cal- culation must be diſſerent, according to the difference of the number thought of, will imagine that it is necessary to know the last number in order to guess the result: but this idea is false; for, in the case which we have here sup- osed, whatever be the number thought of, the remainder must always be 5. he reason of this is as follows:—The sum, the half of which is given to the poor, is nothing else than twice the number thought of, plus 10; and when the poor have received their part, there remains only the number thought of, plus 5; but the number thought of is cut off when the sum bor- rowed is returned, and, consequently, there remain only 5. It may be hence seem, that the result may be easily known, since it will be the half of the number given in the third part of the operation; for example, whatever be the number thought of, the remainder will be 36, or 25 according as 72 or 50 have been given. If this trick be per- formed several times successively, the number given in the third part of the operation must be always different; for iſ the result were several times the same, the deception might be discovered. When the five ſirst parts of the calculation for obtaining a result are finished, it will be best not to name it at first, but to continue the operation, to render it more complex, by say- ing, for example:—“Double the remainder, deduct two, add three, take the fourth part,’ &c.; and the diſſerent steps of the calculation may be kept in 98 ARITHMETIC AI, ATIUSEIMIENTS. mind, in order to know how much the first result has been increased or diminished. This irregular process never fails to confound those who at- tempt to follow it. j A SE CON D M ETHOD, Bid the person take 1 from the number thought of, and then double the remainder ; desire him to take 1 from this double, and to add to it the mom- ber thought of; in the last place, ask him the number arising from this ad- dition, and, if you add 3 to it, the third of the sum will be the mumber thought of . The application of this rule is so easy, that it is needless to illustrate it by an example. A THIRT) M ETHOD, Desire the person to add 1 to the triple of the number thought of, and to multiply the sun by 3; them bid him add to this product the mumber thought of, and the result will be a sum, from which if 3 be subtracted, the remainder will be ten times of the number required; and if the cipher on the right be cut off from the remainder, the other figure will indicate the number sought. - Example:—Let tue number thought of be 6, the triple of which is 18; and if I be added, it makes 19; the triple of this last mumber is 57, and if 6 be added, it makes 63, from which if 3 be subtracted, the remainder will be 60: now, if the cipher on the right be cut off, the remaining figure, 6, be the number required. A FOURTH METHOD, Bid the person multiply the number thought of by itself; them desire him to add 1 to the number thought of, and to multiply it also by itself; in the last place, ask him to tell the diſference of these two products, which will certainly be an odd number, and the least half of it will be the number required. Let the number thought of, for example, be 10; which, multiplied by itself, gives 100; in the mext place, 10 increased by 1 is 11, which, multi- plied by itself, makes 121 ; and the difference of these two squares is 21, the least half of which, being 10, is the number thought of. This operation might be varied by desiring the person to multiply the Second mumber by itselſ, after it has been diminished by 1. In this case, the number thought of will be equal to the greater half of the difference of the two squares. Thus, in the preceding example, the square of the number thought of is 100, and that of the same number, less 1, is SI ; the difference of these is !9; the greater half of which, or 10, is the number thought of. ARITHIMIETICAL AIMIUSEIMIENTS 99 TO TEI, L TWO OR MORE NUMBERS THOUGHT OF. If one or more of the numbers thought of be greater than 9, we must dis- tinguish two cases; that in which the number of the numbers thought of is odd, and that in which it is even. In the first case, ask the sum of the first and second ; of the second and third; the third and fourth ; and so on to the last ; and then the sum of the first and the last. Having written down all these sums in order, add to- gether all those, the places of which are odd, as the first, the third, the fifth, &c.; make another sum of all those, the places of which are even, as the second, the fourth, the sixth, &c.; subtract this sum from the former, and the remainder will be the double of the first number. Let us suppose, for example, that the five following numbers are thought of, 3, 7, 13, 17, 20, which when added two and two as above, give 10, 20, 30, 37, 23: the sum of the first, third, and fifth is 63, and that of the second and fourth is 57; if 57 be subtracted from 63, the remainder, 6, will be the double of the first number, 3. Now, if 3 be taken from 10, the first of the sums, the remainder, 7, will be the second number; and by proceeding in this manner, we may find all the rest. In the second case, that is to say, if the number of the rumbers thought of be even, you must ask and write down, as above, the sum of the first and the second ; that of the second and third ; and so on, as before : but instead of the sum of the first and the last, you must take that of the second and last; then add together those which stand in the even places, and form them into a new sum apart; add also those in the odd places, the first excepted, and subtract this sum from the former, the remainder will be the double of the second number ; and if the second number, thus found, be subtracted from the sum of the first and second, you will have the first number; if it be taken from that of the second and third, it will give the third ; and so of the rest. Let the numbers thought of be, for example, 3, 7, 13, 17: the sums formed as above age 10, 20, 30, 24; the sum of time second and fourth is 44, from which if 30, the third, be subtracted, the remainder will be 14, the double of 7, the second number. The first, therefore, is 3, the third 13, and the fourth 17. When each of the numbers thought of does not exceed 9, they may he easily found in the following manner:— - - Having made the person add 1 to the double of the first number thought of, desire him to multiply the whole by 5, and to add to the product the second number. If there be a third, make him double this first sum, and add 1 to it, after which, desire him to multiply the new sum by 5, and to add to it the third number. If there be a fourth, proceed in the same manner, desiring him to double the preceding sum; to add to it l; to multiply by 5; to add the fourth number ; and so on. * Öss=_º ARITHMIETICAL AMIUSEMENTS," Then, ask the number arising from the addition of the last numbel thought of, and if there were two numbers, subtract 5 from it; if there were three, 55; if there were ſour, 555; and so on ; for the remainder will be composed of figurcs, of which the first on the left will be the first number thought of, the next the second, and so on. Suppose the number thought of to be 3, 4, 6; by adding 1 to 6, the double of the first, we shall have 7, which, being multiplied by 5, will give 35; iſ 4, the second number thought of, be them added, we shall have 39, which doubled, gives 78; and, iſ we add 1, and multiply 79, the sum, by 5, the result will he 395. In the last place, iſ we add 6, the number thought of, the sum will be 401 ; and if 55 be deducted froma it, we shall have, for remain- tler, 346, the figures of which, 3, 4, 6, indicate in order the three numbers thought of. THE MONEY GAM E. A person having in one hand a piece of gold, and in the other a piece of silver, you may tell in which hand he has the gold, and in which the silver, by the following method :—Some value, represented by an even mumber, such as 8, must be assigned to the gold, and a value represented by an odd number, such as 3, must be assigned to the silver; after, which, desire the person to multiply the number in the right hand by any even number what- ever, such as 2; and that in the left by an odd number, as 3; then bid him add together the two products, and iſ the whole sum be odd, the gold will be in the right hand, and the silver in the left; if the sum be even, the contrary will be the case. To conceal the artifice better, it will be sufficient to ask whether the sum of the two products can be halved without a remainder ; for in that case the total will be even, and in the contrary case odd. It may be readily seen, that the pieces, instead of being in the two hands of the same person, may be supposed to be in the hands of two persons, one of whom has the even number, or piece of gold, and the other the odd number, or piece of silver. The same operations may then be performed in regard to these two persons, as are performed in regard to the two hands of the same person, calling the one privately the right and the othel the left. THE GAME of THE RING. This game is an application of one of the methods employed to tell several numbers thought of, and ought to be performed in a company not exceeding nine, in order that it may be less complex. Desire any one of the company to take a ring, and put it on any joint of whatever finger he may think pro- er. The question then is, to tell what person has the ring, and on what land, what finger, and ou what joint. L_*: -º-º-º- * -- ~. •--... ſ - --º-º: X-re:-" • . J- ~ttº- ARITHMETICAL AMUSEMENTS. For this purpose, you must call the first person 1, the second 2, the third 3, and so on. You must also denote the ten ſingers of the two hands, by the following numbers of the natural progression, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 &c. beginning at the thumb of the right hand, and ending at that of the left, that by this order of the number of the finger may, at the same time indicate the hand. In the last place, the joints must be denoted by 1, 2 3, beginning at the points of the fingers. To render the solution of this problem more explicit, let us suppose that the fourth person in the company has the ring on the sixth finger, that is to say, on the little finger of the left hand, and on the second joint of that finger. Desire some one to double the number expressing the person, which, in this case, will give 8; bid him add 5 to this double, and multiply the sum by 5, which will make 65; then tell him to add to this product the number denoting the finger, that is to say, 6, by which means you will have 71; and, in the last place, desire him to multiply the last number by « 10, and to add to the product the number of the joint, 2.; the last result will be 712; if from this number you deduct 250, the remainder will be 462; the first figure of which, on the left, will denote the person; the next, the finger, and consequently, the hand; and the last, the joint. H It must here be observed, that when the last result contains a cipher, which would have happened in the present example, had the number of the ſinger been 10, you must privately subtract from the figure preceding the cipher, and assign the value of 10 to the cipher itself. TH E G A ME OF THE B A G. To let a person select several numbers out of a bag, and to tell him the number which shall exactly divide the sum of those he has chosen —Pro- vide a small bag, divided into two parts into one of which put several tickets, numbered 6, 9, 15, 36,63, 120, 213,309, &c.; and in the other part put as many other tickets, marked No. 3 only, Draw a handful of tickets from the first part, and, after showing them to the company, put them into the bag again, and, having opened it a second time, desire any one to take out as many tickets as he thinks proper; when he has dome that, you open privately the other part of the bag, and teli him to take out of it one ticket only. You may safely pronounce that the ticket shall contain the number by which the amount of the other numbers is divisible; for, as eact, of these numbers can be multiplied by 3, their sum total must, evidently, be divisible by that number. An ingenious mind may easily diversify this exercise, by marking the tickets in one part of the bag, with any numbers that are divisible by 9 only, the properties of both 9 and 3 being the same ; and º should never be exhibited to the same company twice without being Warle : ARITEIMETICAL AMUSEMENTs. 6=1+8+19 6 6=z-+-Zºzz. 8 6=g+9"89 A. 6=ț-+-g“†g 9 6=g-+-Þºrgſ g 6=9+8*(98 † || 6=1+zºtz 8 6=8-+-I“81 !=×=======* Z 6°° (ººod ºgysoddo aºs ) a Ny N \raraſtant ster). A RITHMETICAL AMUSEMENTS. 103 THE NUMBER NINE. (See opposite page.) The following discovery of remarkable properties of the number 9 was accidentally made, more than forty years since, though, we believe, it is not generally known :— The component figures of the product made by the multiplication of every digit into the number 9, when added together, make N IN E. The order of these component figures is reversed, after the said number has been multiplied by 5. The component figures of the amount of the multipliers, (viz. 45) when added together, make NINE. The amount of the several products, or multiples of 9, (viz. 405) whea divided by 9, gives, ſor a quotient, 45; that is, 4–H5=N INE. The amount of the first product, (viz. 9) when added to the other product, whose respective component figures make 9, is 81; which is the square of NIN E. The said number 81, when added to the above-mentiomed amount of the several products, or multiples of 9 (viz. 405) makes 486; which, if divided by 9, gives, for a quotient, 54: that is, 5–H4=NINE. It is also observable, that the number of changes that may be rung on nine bells, is 362,880; which figures, added together, make 27; that is, 2–H7=NINE. And the quotient of 362,880, divided by 9, will be 40,320; that is 4–H0–H3+2+0=N INE. To add a figure to any given number, which shall render it divisible by Nine:—Add the figures together in your mind, which compose the number named ; and the figure which must be added to the sum produced, in order to render it divisible by 9, is the one required. Thus— Suppose the given number to be 7521 :- Add those together, and 15 will be produced; now 15 requires 3 to ren- der it divisible by 9; and that number, 3, being added to 7521, causes the same divisibility:— - 7521 3 9)7524(836 This exercise may be diversified by your specifying, before the sum is named, the particular place where the figure shall be inserted, to make the number divisible by 9; for it is exactly the same thing, whether the figure be put at the head of the number, or between any two of its digits. ~4-3 * > {}<:2t a’ Q-Esg 104 A R UTHMIETICAL AMUSEMENTS THE CERTAIN GAME. Two persons agree to take, alternately, numbers less than a given nium per, for example, 11, and to add them together till one of them has reached a certain sum, such as 100. By what means can one of them infallibly attain to that number before the other ? The whole artifice in this, consists in immediately making choice of the numbers, 1, 12, 23, 34, and so on, or of a series which continually increases game, makes choice of 1 ; it is evident that his adversary, as he must count less than 11, can, at most, reach 11, by adding 10 to it. The first will then take 1, which will make 12: and whatever number the second may add, the first will certainly win, provided he continually add the number which forms the complement of that of his adversary, to 11; that is to say, if the latter take 8, he must take 3; if 9, he must take 2; and so on. By following this method, he will infallibly attain to 89; and it will then be impossible for the second to prevent him from getting first to 100; for whatever number the second takes, he can attain only to 99; after which the first may say— “ and J makes 100.” If the second take 1 after 89, it would make 90, and his adversary would finish by saying—“ and 10 make 100.” Between two persons who are equally acquainted with the game, he who begins must necessarily win. MAGICAL CENTURY. If the number 11 be multiplied by any one of the nine digits, the two figures of the product will always be alike, as appears in the following example:– 11 11 11 II 11 11 11 11 11 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 In 22 33 44 55 66 7 ss 99 - smºmsºe ºw sºmsºmº - as amº - Now, if another person and yourself have fiſty counters apiece, and agree never to stake more than ten at a time, you may tell him, that if he permit you to stake first, you will always complete the even century before him. In order to succeed, you must first stake 1, and remembering the order of the above series, constantly add to what he stakes as many as will make one more than, the numbers 11, 22, 33, &c. of which it is composed, till you come to 89; after which your opponent cannot possibly reach the even century himself, or prevent you from reaching it. by 11, up to 100. Let us suppose, that the first person, who knows the ~~~~~~ xx,’ & -T- ... ----- . **riº ARITH MIETIC A. L. A Milj SEMENTS. I ().5 If your opponent have no knowledge of numbers, you may stake any pther number first, under 10, provided you subsequently take care to secure one of the last terms, 56, 67, 78, &c.; or you may even let him stake first, if \ you take care afterward to secure one of these numbers. This exercise may be performed with other mumbers; but, in order to sacceed, you must divide the number to be attained, by a number which is a unit greater than what you can stake each time; and the remainder will then be the number you must first stake. Suppose, for example, the number to be attained be 52, (making use of a pack of cards instead of counters,) and that you are never to add more than 6; them, dividing 52 by 7, the remainder, which is 3, will be the number which you must first stake; and whatever your opponent stakes, you must add as much to it | as will make it equal to 7, the number by which you divided, and so in COntlnuatl On. THE CAN C E L L E O FIG U R E GUESS EID, To tell the figure a person has struck out of the sum of two given numbers:—Arbitrarily command those numbers only, that are divisible by 9; such, for instance, as 36, 63, S1, 117, 126, 162, 261, 360, 315, and 432. - Then let a person choose any two of these numbers; and, after adding , them together in his mind, strike out from the sum any one of the figures he pleases. After he has so dome, desire him to tell you the sum of the remaining figures; and it follows, that the number which you are obliged to add to this amount, in order to make it 9 or 18, is the one he struck out. Thus:– Suppose he chooses the numbers 162 and 261, making altogether 423, and that he strike out the centre figure, the two other figures will, added together, make 7, which, to make 9, requires 2, the number struck out THE DIC E GUESSED UN SE EN. A pair of dice being thrown, to find the number of points on each die without seeing them :-Tell the person, who cast the dice, to double the number of points upon one of them, and add 5 to it; then, to multiply the sum produced by 5, and to add to the product the number of points upon the other die. This being done, desire him to tell you the amount, and, having thrown out 25, the remainder will be a number consisting of two figures, the first of which, to the left, is the number of points on the first die, and the second figure to the right, the number on the other, . Thus :— Suppose the number of points of the ſirst die which comes up, to be 2, and that of the other 8; then, if to 4, the double of the points of the first, *º: -T- **** s==<5 * ** - ARITIIMET1c AL AMUSENIENTS. there be added 5, and the sum produced, 9, be multiplied by 5, the product will be 45; to which, if 3, the mumber of points on the other die, be added, 48 will be produced, from which, if 25 be subtracted, 23 will remain; the first figure of which is 2, the number of points on the first die, and the second figure 3, the number on the other. - THE SOVE REIGN AND THE SA G. E. A sovereign being desirous to confer a liberal reward on one of his courtiers, who had performed some very important service, desired him to ask whatever he thought proper, assuring him it should be granted. The courtier, who was well acquainted with the science of numbers, only re- quested that the monarch would give him a quantity of wheat equal to that which would arise from one grain doubled sixty-three times successively The value of the reward was immense; for it will be found, by calcu- lation, that the sixty-fourth term of the double progression divided by I : 2:4: 8: 16: 32: &c., is 922337203685.4775808. But the sum of all the terms of a double progression, beginning with 1, may be obtained by doubling the last term, and subtracting from it 1. The number of the grains of wheat, therefore, in the present case, will be 18446744073709551615. Now, if a pint contain 92.16 grains of wheat, a gallon will contain 73728; and, as eight gallons make one bushel, if we divide the above result by eight times 73728, we shall have 31274997411295 for the number of the bushels of wheat equal to the above number of grains:, a quantity greater than what the whole surface of the earth could produce in several years, and which, in value, would exceed all the riches, perhaps, on the globe. THE HORSE-DE ALER’s BAR GAIN. A gentleman, taking a fancy to a horse, which a horse-dealer wished to dispose of at as high a priee as he could ; the latter, to induce the gentleman to become a purchaser, offered to let him have the horse for the value of the twenty-fourth nail im'his shoes, reckoning one farthing for the first nail, two for the second, four for the third, and so on to the twenty-fourth. The gen- tleman, thinking he should have a good bargain, accepted the offer; the price of the horse was, therefore, necessarily great. By calculating as before, the twenty-fourth term of the progression, 1: 2: 4; 8: &c., will be found to be 8388608, equal to the number of farthings the purchaser gave for the horse; the price, therefore amounted to £8738. 2s. 8d. THE DIN NER PARTY. A club of seven persons agreed to dine together every day successively as long as they could sit down to table diſſerently arranged. I ſow many * Sºº 2: ... ,- - - Sºº ARITH METI UAL AMUSEMENTS. dinners would be necessary for that purpose 4 It may be easily found, by the rules already given, that the club must dine together 5040 times, belore they would exhaust all the arrangements possible, which would require above thirteen years. COM BINATIONS OF AN AN AG RAM. If any word be proposed, for instance, AMOR, and it be required to know how many different words could be formed of these four letters, which will give all the possible anagrams of that word, we shall find by multiply- ing together 1, 2, 3, and 4, that they are in number, 24, as represented in # the following table — • AMOR MORA ORAM RAMO AMRO MOAR ORMA RAOM f AOMIR. MROA OARM RMAO AORM MIRAO OAMR RMOA * ARMO MAOR OMRA ROAM AROM MARO OMAR ROMA THE BASIKET AND THE STONES. If a hundred stones be placed in a straight line, at the distance of a yard | .ſrom each other, the first being at the same distance from a basket, how imamy yards must the person walk who engages to pick them up, one by one, and put them into the basket # It is evident that, to pick up the first stone, and put it into the basket, the person must walk two yards; for the second, * he must walk four ; for the third, six; and so on, increasing by two, to the : hundredth. The number of yards, therefore, which the person must walk, will be equal to the sum of the progression, 2, 4, 6, &c. the last term of whicli is 200, (22.) But the sum of the progression is equal to 202, the sum of the l t two extremes, multiplied by 50, or half the number of terms: that is to say, 10,100 yards, which makes more than 5% miles. i THI E A RITH M ETICAE, M OU SETR A. P. One of the best, and most simple mousetraps in use, may be con- structed in the following mammer :—Get a slip of smooth board, about the " eighth of an inch thick, a quarter of an inch broad, and of a sufficient length to cut out the following parts of the trap. First, an upright piece, three or four inches high, which must be square at the botton, and a small piece be cut off the top to fit the notch in No. 2, (see No. 1 in the onargin.) The second piece must be of the same length as the first, with a ARITHMIETY CAL AMIUSENIENTS. notch cut across mearly at the top of it, to fit the top of No. 1, and the other end of it trimmed to catch the notch in No. 3, (see No. 2.) The third piece should be twice as long as either of the others; a motch, similar to that in No. 2, must be cut in one end of it, to catch the lower end of No. 2. Having proceeded thus far, you must put the pieces together, in order to finish it, by 2 1. adding another notch in No. 3, the ex- act situation of which you will discover as follows:—Place No. 1, as it is in the cut, then put the notch of No. 2 on [12 Lºv the thinned top of No. 1; keep it in the 3. —-mm- same inclination as in the cut; them get a flat piece of wood, or slate, one end of which must rest on the ground, and the centre of the edge of the other on the top of No. 2. You will now find the thimed end of No. 2 ele- vated by the weight of the flat piece of wood or slate; then put the thinned end of it in the notch of No. 3, and draw No. 2 down by it, until the whole forms a resemblance of a figure 4: at the exact place where No. 3 touches the upright, cut a notch, which, by catching the end of No. 1, will keep the trap together. You may now bait the end of No. 3 wid, a piece of cheese; a mouse, by nibbling the bait, will pull down No. 3, the other pieces immediately separate, and the slate or board falls upon the mouse. We have seen numbers of mice, rats, and birds, caught by this jFigure of 4 &trap. O PTIC A. L. A. M U S E M E N T S #W -, * * – Arº- .* What wonders may be brought to pass, By the optician’s magic glass : A barley-corn of painted paper, Illumin’d by a farthing taper, Into a spacious plain extendeth, Whereon Dan Sol his hot glance bendeth The leech’s paltry, dark green potion Is magnified into an ocean : His little, crabb’d, perspective scrawl, Into th’ hand-writing on the wall: Ilook one way, and a blow-fly’s nose To elephant’s proboscis grows : sº Turn tºother end, hippopotamus Becomes a gnat compared with a mouse. THE science of optics affords an infinite variety of amusements, which cannot fail to instruct the mind as well as delight the eye. By the aid of optical instruments we are enabled to lessen the distance to our visual organs between the globe we inhabit and “the wonders of the heavens above us;” to observe the exquisite finish, and propriety of construction, which are to be found in the most minute productions of the earth;-to trace the path of the planet in its course round the magnificent orb of day, and to detect the pulsation of the blood, as it flows through the veins of an insect Thºse 110 OPTICAL AMUSEMENTS. º are out a small port,bn of the powers which this science offers to man; to enumerate them all would require a space equal to the body of our work: neither do we propose to motice, in the following pages, the various instru- iments and experiments which are devoted solely, or rather, chiefly, to pur- poses merely scientific ; it being our intention merely to call the attention of our juvenile readers to such things as combine a vast deal of amusement with much instruction ; to inform them as to the construction of the various popular instrumcuts ; to show the manner of using them, and to explain some of the most attractive experiments which the science affords. By doing thus much, we hope to offer a sufficient inducement to push inquiry much further than the information which a work of this nature will enable us to afford. - THE CAM ID R A J B SCU R A. We give our young ſriends a brief description of this optical invention; though very common, it is extremely amusing; almost every one has seen it, but few persons know how to construct it. A C represents a box of about a foot and a half square, shut on every side ex- cept at D C ; O P is a smaller box, placed on the top of the greater; M N is a double con- vex lens, whose axis makes an angle of forty-ſive degrees with B L, a plane mirror, fixed in the box, O P; the focal length of the lens is nearly equal to C S-H-S T, i. e., to the sum of the distances of the lens from the middle of the mirror, and of the middle of the mirror from the bottom of the large box. The lens being turned toward the prospect, would form a pic- ture of it, nearly at its focus; but the rays, being intercepted by the mirror, will form the picture as far before the surface as the focus is behind it, that is, at the bottom of the larger box; a communication being made between the boxes by the vacant space, Q O. This instrument is frequently used for the delingation of landscapes: for which purpose, the draughtsman, putting his head and hand into the box through the open side § OPTICAL AMU SEMENTS. 1 11 -:sº D.C., and drawing a curtain round to prevent the admission of the ſight, which would disturb the operation, can trace a distinct outline of the picture 1hat appears at the bottom of the box. There is another kind of camera obscura, for the purposes of drawing, constructed thus: in the extremity of the arm, P Q, that extends from the side of a small square box, B L, is placed a double convex lems, whose axis is inclined in an angle offorty-five degrees, to a plane mirror, B O ; the focal length of the lens is equal to its distance from the side of the box, OT; there- fore, when the lens is turned toward the illuminated prospect, it would pro- ject the image on the side, O T, if the mirror were removed; but this will reflect the image to the side, M L, which is as far distant from the middle of the mir- ror as this is from the side, O T. It is there received on a piece of glass, rough at the upper side, and smooth at the lower, and appears in its proper colors on the upper side of the plate. It is evi- dent that in each of these in- struments the image is invert- ed with respect to the object. M S is a lid to prevent the admission of light during the delineation of the picture; and others, for the same pur- pose, are applied to ille sides, M. R. and N L. You may also construct the camera obscura in a room, thus —you first darken the room, by closing the shutters, and every place where the exter. mal light can be admitted. You then cut a circular hole in the shutter, or A board placed against the window, in which you place a lens, or convex- glass, the focus of which is at the distance of not less than four, nor p re than fifteen or twenty feet: from six to twelve feet is the best distance At this distance, also, place a pasteboard, covered with the whitest paper, ith a black border, to prevent any of the side rays from disturbing the pic re; let it be two feet and a half long, and eighteen or twenty inches high; end the length of it inward, to the form of part of a circle, the diameter of dich is equal to double the focal distance of the glass: then ſix it on a frame ſthe same figure, and place it upon a movable foot, that it may be easil, ixed at that exact distance from the glass where the objects paint themselves to the greatest perfection. When it is thus placed, all the objects which are in the R º * - - -ºxº 3ºxwºr | 12 OPTICAL AMUSEMENTS. ſront of the window will be painted upon the paper, in an inverted position with the greatest regularity, and in the most natural colors. There is another method of making the camera obscura, by a scioptric ball; that is, a ball of wood, through which a hole is made, in which hole a lens is fixed: this ball is placed in a wooden frame, in which it turns freely round; tıse frame is fixed to the hole in the shutter, and the ball, by turning about, answers, in great part, the use of the mirror on the outside of the window. If the hole in the window be not bigger than a pea, the objects will be represented without any lens. If you place a movable mirror without the window, by turning it more or less, you will have upon the paper all the objects which are on each side of the window. - The inverted position of the images may be deemed an imperfection, but It is easily remedied; for, if you stand above the board, on which they are received, and look down upon it, they will appear in their natural position: or, iſ you stand before it, and, placing a common mirror against your breasu, in an oblique direction, look down in it, you will there see the images erect, and they will receive an additional lustre from the reflection of the glass; or, place two ſenses in a tube that draws out; or, lastly, if you place a large concave mirror at a proper distance before the picture, it will appear before the mirror in the air, and in an erect position. Iſ, instead of putting the mirror without the window, you place it in the room, and above the hole, (which must then be made near the top of the shutter,) you may receive the representation on a paper placed horizontally on a table, and draw all the objects that there appear painted. T H E M A G N liſ' Y IN G CAM ERA. O ſº SCU R. As Let the rays of light that pass through the lens in the shutter be thrown on a large concave mirror, properly fixed in a frame. Then take a slip or thin plate of glass, and sticking any small object to it, hold it in the incident rays, at a little more than the focal distance from the mirror, and you will see, on the opposite wall, amidst the reflected rays, the image of that Gh- ject, very large, and extremely clear and bright. THE PRISMATIC CAM ERA. OBSCU H. As Make two holes, F, f, (Fig. 1,) in the shutter of a dark chamber, near to each other ; and against each hole, a prism, A B C, and a b c, in a perpen- dicular direction, that their spectrums, M. N., may be cast on the paper in a horizontal line, and coincide with each other ; the red and violet of the one seing in the same part with those of the other. The paper should be sº - *º-sººr - * --> -w ** * i OPTICAL AIVIUSEMENTS. 1 13 : placed at such a distance from the prisms that the spectrum may be suffi- ciently dilated. Provide several papers nearly of the same dimensions with the spectrum, cross these papers, and draw lines parallel to the divisions of the colors: in these divisions cut out such figures as you may find will have an agreeable effect, as flowers, trees, animals, &c. When you have placed one of these papers in its proper position, hang a black cloth or paper be- hind it, that none of the rays that pass through may be reflected, and confuse the phenomenon : the figure cut on the paper will then appear strongly illuminated with all the original colors of nature. Jºžg. 2. ſºft zz č c If, while one of the prisms remains at rest, the other be revolved on its axis, the continual alteration of the colors will afford a pleasing variety; which may be further increased, by turning the prism round in different di- rections. When the prisms are so placed that the two spectrums become coincident in an inverted order of their colours, the red end of one falling on the violet end of the other, if they be then viewed through a third prism, DH, held parallel to their length, they will no longer appear coincident, but in the form of two distinct spectrums, p t and n m, (fig. 2,) crossing one another in the middle, like the letter X. The red of one spectrum, and the violet of the other, which were coincident at N M, being parted from each other by a greater refraction of the violet to p and m, than that of tho red to m and t. This recreation may be farther diversified by adding two other prisms, that shall form a spectrum in the same line, and contiguous to the other; by which not only the variety of figures, but the vicissitude of colors, will be considerably augmented. OPTICAL AMUSEMENTS. CAM ERA LU CIDA, Opposite to the place or wall where the appearance is to be, make a hole of at least a foot in diameter; or, if there be a high window with a casement of that dimension in it, this will do much better, without such hole or case- ment opened. At a convenient distance, to prevent its being perceived by the company in the room, place the object or picture intended to be repre- sented, but in an inverted situation. If the picture be transparent, reflect the sun’s rays by means of a looking-glass, so that they may pass through it toward the place of representation; and, to prevent any rays from passing aside it, let the picture be encompassed with some board or cloth. Iſ the object be a statue, or a living creature, it must be enlightened by casting the sun’s rays on it, either by reſlection, refraction, or both. Between this ob- ject and the place of representation put a broad convex glass, ground to such a convexity as that it may represent the object distinctly in such place. The nearer this is situated to the object, the more will the image be magni- fied upon the wall, and the further, the less; such diversity depending on the difference of the splieres of the glasses. If the olject cannot be conve- niently inverted, there must be two large glasses of proper spheres, situated at suitable distances, easily ſound, by trial, to make the representation cor- rect. This whole apparatus of object, glasses, &c. with "le persons employ- ed in the management of them, are to be placed without une window or hole, so that they may not be perceived by the spectators in the room, and the operation itself will be easily performed. T H E POLIEMI ſys COP E. By a polemoscope you may see what passes in another place without peing seen from thence yourself: it may be made by ſixing, in a common opera-glass, a small mirror, inclined to an angle of ſorty-five degrees, and adjusting 4 proper object-glass; by this, while appearing to look straight forward, you may see what passes on one side of you. This instrument may also be so constructed that the tube may turn round, and the mirror be elevated or depressed, that you may sce successively, and at pleasure, all the objects that you would perceive, if you were at the top of the wall against which the instrument is placed. - THE KALE II) OS COPE, To construct this instrument procure a tube of tin, brass, pasteboard, or Any other matcrial, eight or ten inches long, and one and a half or two incljeg in diameter; place a cap upon one end, with a small hole in the ~/ OPTICAL AMUSEMENTS. centre, at the circumference of the circle, d, in the annexed figure, which is a view of the right end of the instrument, from which the cap has been removed. The circle is the edge of the tube, the lines, a c and b c, are the edges of the two reflecting surfaces, which are nearly of the same length as the tube : they may be made of two pieces of looking-glass, or of plate- glass or crown-glass, which have been blackened on one side at e e, the surfaces jf, being well polished. The blackening may be effected with the smoke of a lamp simply, or upon varnish, or with any other black matter which effectually resists the rays of light; and the two reflectors must be kept apart at g, by means of a piece of cork, or any other substance, placed at each end of the tube. At c, where the reflectors join, they should be straight, and adapted to each other; or they may be laced differently, or even parallel, as in the figure following. At the other end of the tube, (the object end,) where the two reflecting surfaces, a c 5 c, terminate, a circular piece of ground glass is to be fitteſ ºnto the tube, and retained there by means of a piece of wire, which is to be bent to a circle, and placed upon the glass to keep it steady. Over this end let another tube be fitted, an inch or two in length - at least, capable of being turned round; and, at its end, let another circular piece of glass, smooth, be fitted in, similarly to the preceding. Into this outer cap, or tube, put the objects to be viewed, which may consist of any semi-transparent col- ored substances, as glass, beads, shells, or pearls, and the like, but not too many at a time. Place the cap on, and then, advancing the tube to the eye, still keep- ing the side, a b, upward, look through at d, and you will have a brilliant symmet- rical repetition of the objects which are placed between the two glasses and visible through the angular aperture, a b c. 'Turn round the cap, more or less, in which the objects are so placed, and you will perceive a change in the combinations of the images; new forms will present themselves, entirely different from the former, sometimes arising out of the centre, at ºther's vanishing there, and occasionally playing round £º, TV. .* * ** - . . . . ---, *, * * * - - -- ** ~ *-*. - *23:... v. a x -ºº: - *-i-e- I 16 OPTICAL AIMUSEMENTS. it in double and opposite oscillations. Standing still, however, the draughts man may copy off upon paper the shapes that present themselves, if he cannot hope to equal the varied tints, which are developed in succession; each new one delighting the eye by the perfection of its forms and the brilliancy of its coloring, both of which depend upon previously managing the objects to be viewed, and the angle at which the two reflectors, d c, and b c, are fixed. - Instead of two reflectors, this instrument may be constructed with three or more such planes, which may be arranged differently as regards each other: but the perſection of the kaleidoscope is to be found in procuring the reflection of distant natural objects, and in reducing them to the size proper for pictorial representation. This may be accomplished by fixing upon the object end a convex lens, fastened to the slider tube, which must them benear- ly as long as the inner one, in order that the right focus may be found, which is adapted to the particular object; so two or three lenses may be kept, of several focal lengths, which should be always less than its greatest distance from the sight-hole, and will be found, generally, at from one-fourth to a third of that distance. A further variation, however, may be obtained, by introducing two lenses; one fixed to the immer tube, the other to the slider; and approaching to or receding from these, by means of the slider, the fo- cus will be found. - As a matter of economy to those who may possess a telescope, it is sug- gested, that the size of the kaleidoscope may be made to correspond with that instrument, so that its glasses may be occasionally borrowed. A con- cave glass, placed at the sight-hole, (d, fig. 2,) will throw the objects off, and reduce their size by taking care that the focal length be equal to the length of the reflectors. Supposing the instrument to contain twenty small pieces of glass, &c. and that you make ten changes in each minute, it will take the inconceivable space of 462,880,899,576 years and 360 days, to go through the immense variety of changes it is capable of producing, amounting (according to our ſrail idea of the nature of things) to an etermity. Or, if you take only twelve small pieces, and make ten changes in each minute, it will then require 33,264 days, or 91 years and 49 days, to exhaust its variations. TH E M A GIC LANTERN. * The object of this mgenious instrument is to represent, in a dark room, on a white wall or cloth, a succession of enlarged figures, of remarkable, natural, or grotesque objects. The figure in the next page is a representa- tion of one. It consists of a tin box, with a funnel on the top, represented by e, and a door on one side of it. This funnel, by being bent, as shown in the figure, serves the double purpose of letting out the smoke, and keeping in OPTICAL AIMUSEMENTS. 117 i> f s the light. In the middle of the bottom of the box is placed a movable tin 'amp, a, which must have two or three good lights, at the height of the centre of the polished tin reflector, c. In the front of the box, opposite the leflector, is fixed a tin tube, m, in which there slides another tube, n. The sliding tube has, at its outer extremity,a convex lems, of about two inches diameter; the tube, m, also has a convex lems ſix- ed in it, as shown in the figure, of three inches di- aimeter. The focus of the smaller of these lenses may be about five inches Between the tube, m, and the lamp, there must be a slit or opening, (as at ii) to admit of the passage of glass sliders, mounted in paper or wooden frames, such as are represented below ; upon which slid- ers it is that the miniature figures are painted, which are intended to be shown upon the wall. The distinctness of the enlarged figures depends not only upon the goodness of the magnifying glass, but upon the clearness of the light yielded by the lamp, a. It may be purchased ready made of any optician. - To paint the glasses. Draw on a paper the subject you desire to paint. Lay it on a table or any flat surface, and place the glass over it: then draw the outlines, with a very fine pencil, in varnish mixed with black paint, and, when dry, fill up the other parts in their proper colors. Transparent colors must be used for this purpose, such as carmine, lake, Prussian blue, verdigris, sulphate of iron, tincture of Brazil wood, gamboge, &c.; and these must be tempered with a strong white yarnish, to prevent their peeling off. Then shade them with black, or with bistre, mixed with the same varnish. To eachibit the Magic Lantern. The lamp being lighted, and the room darkened, place the machine on the table, at some distance from the white L 118 OPTICAL AMUSEMENTS. wall or suspended, sheet, and introduce into the slit, ; i, one of the sliders represented above, with the figures inverted. If the movable tube, n, be then pushed in or drawn out, till the proper focus be ob- tained, the figures on the slider will be reflected on the wall, in their disting colors and proportions, with the appearance of life itself, and of any size, from six inches to seven feet, according to the dis- tange of the lantern from the wall. Movements of the figures are easily made by painting the subject on two glasses, and passing the . Same through the groove. To represent a tempest. Provide two plates of glass, whose frames are so thin, that they may both pass freely through the groove of the common magic lanterm at the same time. On one of thºse paint the appearance ºf the sea, from the slightest agitation to the most vio. lent commotion; representing first, a calin; afterward a smail agita- tion, with some clouds; and so on to the end, which should exhibit a furious storm. These representations are not to be distinct, but run into each other, that they may form a natural gradation; and great part of the effect depends on the perſection of the painting, and the pictu- resque appearance of the design. - On the other glass, paint vessels of different forms and dimensions, and in different directions, together with the appearance of clouds in the tempestuous parts. *. ==::::::::: º: ==º *:::::::::::: #########:#$$#: Both glasses being done, pass the first slowly through the groove; and when you come to that part where the storm begins, move it gen. tly up and down, which will produce the appearance of a sea that be- gins to be agitated, and so increase the motion till you come to the height of the storm. At the same time introduce the other glass with the ships, and, moving that in like manner, they will exhibit a matural tº. representation of the sea, and of ships in a calm and in a storm. As the glasses are drawn slowly back, the tempest will seem to subside, the sky grow clear, and the ships glide gently over the waves. § * * * ºr ::::::::::: - - -, * : * J . * . ------------- . . . * * §2.3a*Ess rº. gº-ººsgºg *Tº ** * OPTICAL AMUSEMENTS. { 19 By means of two glasses, disposed in the before-mentioned manner, num- berless other subjects may be represented. THE AP PARITION. Inclose a small magic lantern in a box large enough to contain a small swing dressing-glass, which will reflect the light thrown on it by the lan- tern in such a way, that it will pass out at the aperture made at the top of the box, which aperture should be / ? ...< S oval, and of a size adapted to the &#sº cone of light to pass through it. Šºš,) There should be a flap with hi & š. here should be a flap with hinges, ºfº to cover the opening, that the inside iTºº ;Hº of the box may not be seen. There * g w must be holes in that part of the box which is over the lantern, to | let the smoke out ; and over this % | AZiº must be placed a chafing-dish, of an * i Sº ; : º- §s...}=#| 3 º Nº. º º *_l; | oblong figure, large enough to hold *||. several lighted coals. This chafing- º-º-º: dish, for the better carrying on the ^ deception, may be inclosed in a painted tin box, about a foot high, with a hole at top, and should stand on four feet, to let the smoke of the lanterm escape. There must also be a glass planned to move up and down in the groove, a b, and so managed by a cold and pulley, c def, that it may be raised up and let down by the cord coming through the outside of the box. On this glass, the spectre (or any other figure you please) must be painted, in a contracted or squat form, as the figure will reſlect a greater º than it is drawn. When you have lighted the lamp in the lantern, and placed the mirror in a propel direction, put the box on a table, and, setting the chafing-dish in it, throw some incense in powder on the coals. You then open the trap door and let down the glass in the groove slowly, and when you perceive the smoke diminish, draw up the glass that the figure may disappear, and shut the trap door. This exhibition will afford a deal of wonder: but observe, that all the lights in the room must be extinguished; and the box should be placed on a high table, that the aperture through which the light comes out may not be seen TH E N EBU LOUS MAGIC LANTERN. The ight of the magic lantern, and the color of images, may not only be painted on a cloth, but also reflected by a cloud of smoke. Provide a g- §§§ E= -3 190 OPTICAL AMUSEMENTS. box of wood or pasteboard, about four feet high, and seven or eight inches square at bottom, put diminishing as it ascends, so that its aperture at top je but six inches long, and lialſ an inch wide. At the bottom of this box there must be a door that shuts quite close, by which you are to place in the box a chafing-dish with hot coals, on which is to be thrown incense, whose smoke goes out in a cloud at the top of the box: on this cloud, you are to throw the light that comes out of the lantern, and which you bring into a smaller compass by drawing out the movable tube. The common figure will here serve. . It is remarkable in this representation, that the motion of the smoke does not at all change the figures; which appear so conspicuous that the spectator thinks he can grasp them with his hand. In the experiment, some of the rays passing through the smoke, the representation will be much less vivid than on the cloth; and if care be not taken to reduce the light to its smallest focus, it will be still more imperſect. THE PHANTA SMA G O RIA- In the exhibition of the common magic lantern, the spectators see a round circle of light with the figures in the middle of it; but, in the Phantas- magoria, they see the figures only, without any circle of light. The exhi- bition is produced by a magic lanterm, placed on that side of a half-trans- parent screen which is opposite to that on which the spectators are, instead of being on the same side, as in the ordinary exhibition of the magic lanterm. To favor the deception, the sliders are made perfectly opaque, except in those places that contain the figures to be exhibited, and in these light parts the glass is covered with a more or less transparent tint, accord- ing to the effect required. The easiest way is to draw the figures with water colors on thin paper, and afterward varnish them. To imitate the matural motions of the objects represented, several pieces of glass, placed behind each other, are occasionally employed. By removing the lantern to different distances, and, at the same time, altering, more or less, the position of the lens, the images are made to increase and diminish, and to become more or less distinct at the pleasure of the exhibitor; so that, to a person unacquainted with the effect of optical instruments, these figures appear actually to advance and recede. To make transparent screens for the Phantasmagoria. Transparent screens are prepared by spreading white wax, dissolved in spirits of wine or oil of turpentine, over thin muslim : a screen so prepared may be rolled º up without injury. A clearer screen may be produced, by having the \ muslim always strained upon a rectangular frame, and preparing it with º turpentine, instead of wax : but such a screen is not always convenient, \ and cannot be rolled without cracking, and becoming, in a short time, nseless; therefore, nothing can be better for the purpose than the former. Öss=~\ , º: OPTIC AI, AIM USEMENTS. SOI. A R MIC IRO SCOP E. * The solar microscope is constructed in the following manner. In the in- side of a tube is placed a convex lens, A B, and at a distance a little greater than its focal length, but less than double of it, is fixed some transparent colored object, Q. P, at the focus conjugate to the place of the object . A C Pi— Q | ses -" t P A broad lens, CD, is placed before the object, to collect the solar rays, for the purpose of illuminating it more strongly, and, consequently, making the image more distinct and vivid. TO CONSTRUCT A LAN TE R N W H ICH W II, J., E N A B L E A P E RSO N To H E A D B Y NIGHT A T A G R E AT DIST A N C E. Make a lantern of a cylindric form, or shaped like a small cask placed lengthwise, so that its axis may be horizontal, and fix in one end of it a para- bolic or spheric mirror, so that its focus may fall about the middle of the axis of the cylinder. If a small lamp or taper be placed in this focus, the light passing through the other end will be reflected to a great distance, and will be so bright that the very small letters on a remote object may be read, by looking at them with a good telescope. Those who see this light, if they be in the direction of the axis of the lantern, will think they see a large fire. THE CHINESE SHA Dows, (om BREs chINois Es.) Make an aperture in a partition wall, of any size; for example, foun feet in length and two in breadth, so that the lower edge may be about five feet from the floor, and cover it with white Italian gauze, varmished with gum- copal. Provide several frames of the same size as the aperture, covered with the same kind of gauze, and delineate upon the gauze different figures, such as landscapes and buildings, analogous to the scenes which you intend to exhibit by means of small figures representing men and animals. These figures are formed of pastelboard, and their different parts are made movable, according to the effect intended to be produced by their shadows, when moved backward and forward behind the frames, and at a small dis- tance from them. To make them act with more facility, small wires, fixed to their movable parts, are bent backward, and made to terminate in rings, through which the fingers of the hand are put, while the figure is supported by the left, by means of another iron wire. In this manner they ulay be : * § J S-T. 122 OPTIC AI, A MUSE]VIENTS. made to advance or recede, and to gesticulate, without the spectators ob Serving the mechanism by which they are moved; and, as the shadow of these figures is not observed on the paintings till they are opposite those parts which are not strongly shaded, they may thus be concealed, and made to appear at the proper moments, and others may be occasionally substituted in their stead. It is necessary, when the figures are made to act, to keep up a sort of dialogue, suited to their gestures, and even to imitate the noise occasioned by different circumstances. The paintings must be illuminated from behind, by means of a reverberating lamp, placed opposite to the centre of the painting, and distant from it about four or five feet. Various amusing scenes may be represented in this manner, by employing small figures of men and animals, and making them move in as natural a way as possible, which will depend on the address and practice of the person who exhibits them. j TH E M A R V E L L OU S M I R. R. O. R. In the wainscot of a room make two openings, of a foot high, and ten inches wide, and about a foot distant from each other: let them be at the common height of a man’s head; and, in each of them, place a transparent glass, surrounded with a frame, like a common mirror. Behind this partition place two mirrors, one on the outward side of each opening, inclined to the wainscot in an angle of ſorty-five degrees; let them be both eighteen unches square; let all the space between them be enclosed by boards or pasteboard, painted black, and well closed, that no light may enter; let there be also two curtains to cover them, which may be drawn aside at pleasure. When a person looks into one of these supposed mirrors, instead of seeing his own ſace he will perceive the object that is j the front of the other; so that, if two persons present themselves at the same time before these mirrors, instead of each one seeing himself they will reciprocally see each other. . There should be a sconce with a candle or lamp placed on each side of the two glasses in the wainscot, to enlighter, the faces of the persons who look in them, otherwise this experiment will have no remarkable effect. This recreation may be considerably improved by placing the two glasses in the wainscot, in adjoining rooms, and a number of persons being pre- viously placed in one room, when a stranger enters the other, you may tell him his face is dirty, and desire him to look in the glass, which he will natur- ally do; and on seeing a strange face he will draw back; but returning to it, and seeing another, another, and another, like the phantom kings in Macbeth, what his surprise will be is more easy to conceive than express. After this, a real mirror may be privately let down on the back of the glass, and if he can be prevailed on to look in it once more, he will them, to his farther astonishment, see his own-ſace; and may be told, perhaps persuaded, that all he thought he saw before was mere imagination OPTICAL AMUSEMENTS. 123 When a man looks in a mirror that is placed perpendicularly to another, nis face will appear entirely deformed. If the mirror be a little inclined, so as to make an angle of eighty degrees, (that is, one-ninth part from the perpendicular,) he will then see all the parts of his face, except the nose and forehead : if it be inclined to sixty degrees, (that is, one-third part,) he will appear with three noses and six eyes: in short, the apparent deformity will vary at each degree of inclimation ; and when the glass comes to forty-five degrees, (that is, half-way down,) the face will vanish. If, instead of placing the two mirrors in this situation, they are so disposed that their junction may be vertical, their different inclinations will produce other effects; as the situation of the object relative to these mirrors is quite different. I N G E NY O U S A N A M OF PHOSIS, This recreation shows how to draw, on a flat surface, an irregular figure, which shall appear, when seen from a proper point of view, not only regu. lar, but elevated. Provide a thin board, about two feet long and one foot wide, as A B C D, and place thereon a circular piece of card or stiff drawing paper, on which a distorted figure is to be drawn, that, being viewed from the point, H, shall appear regular, and exactly resembling that which is placed at M F. Fix, at the end of the board, an upright piece, I, of thin wood or tin, at the top of which is a sight-hole, H., of two-tenths of an inch in diameter, Prepare a lamp, or candlestick, the light of which may be raised or low- ered at pleasure, and to which is fixed a brass arm, bearing a sort of coni- cal ſummel, D, and whose opening at the end next the light is not more than three or four tenths of an incli in diameter. Draw the subject you would represent on a piece of glass of equal height with the space, M F, with a very light stroke, and with any color that is Tuite opaque. Then remove the upright piece, I, and place the lamp, sc »repared, in such a manner that the light may be exactly where the sight- . H, was. Its rays then passing through the glass at M. F., will en- Öss=_º 124 OPTICAL AMUSENIENTS. lighten the surface of your paper, and there show, in a distorted form, the subject that is painted on the glass. Then draw, with a pencii, all the strokes - of the shadow as they appear, and, taking away the light, replace the upright side-piece, I, and see if what you have drawn correspond with the subject on the glass, correcting what imperſec- tions there may happen to be. In the last place, color the subject, so traced, with the utmost at- tention, inspecting your work, from time to time, from the point of view, before you give it the finishing stroke. When the figure, that is drawn and painted on your paper, is viewed from the sight, H, it appears to be at the same point where the glass, M. F., was placed, and in the same form that it was painted on the glass. It appears to the eye even elevated above the surface of the board on which the drawing is placed, and there- by legeives a remarkable and pleasing illusion. SINGULAR illusion. Affix to a dark wall a round piece of paper an inch or two in diaineter; and, a little lower, at the distance of two feet on each side, make two marks; then place yourself directly opposite to the paper, and hold the end of your finger before your face in such a manner, that when the right eye is open, it shall conceal the mark on the left, and, when the left eye is open, the mark on the right; if you then look with both eyes to the end of your fin- ger, the paper, which is not at all concealed by it from either of your eyes, will, nevertheless, disappear. - A N OTHER, Fix, at the height of the eye, on a dark ground, a small round piece of white paper, and a little lower, at the distance of two feet to the right, fix up another, of about three inches in diameter; them place yourself opposite to the first piece of paper, and, having shut the left eye, retire backward, keeping your eye still fixed on the first object: when you are at the distance of nine or ten feet, the second will entirely disappear from your sight. THE MULTIPLIE D M O N E Y. Take a large drinking-glass, of a comical form, that is, small at bottom, and wide at tºp, and, having put into it a shilling, let it be half ſilled with water; then place a plate upon the top of the glass, and turn it quickly 2ver, that the water may not get out: a picce of silver as large as half-a, Growm, will immediately appear on the plate, and, somewhat higher up anothér piece of the size of a shilling. ~-e-A, xºa rak *– º A & -*|&º Ş-§ |§ -º : § Yºšs fº wº & Sºss Šč sºs § º §§ §ºl fº §s *S S Ş. §§ºlºssº: º Nº.3 ~ [… Sºs-e-Tºº *s- § º * § º ºw jš Nū; ----> - sy º §§§ šš *** º 3. :Sº EcºS. - § š -> * - - - ===T-T 2: ; §§§ •, _x==<&- ---, =3-# - They play such merry pranks, that some would think They entertained an imp to conjure for them. Yet 'tis not so 3–their few hours of pastime, These young disciples of the Alchymist Adorn with feats, which, to the unlearned eye, Show oft like magic:-but grandam Wisdom Knows them as recreations of young Science, In sportive mood, upon a holyday. CHEMISTRY has been called, by its votaries, a fascinating science, and with some truth, for it certainly affords more recreation than any other that it is the most useful of all sciences cannot be denied, nor can thers be a doubt that it has a tendency almost to enchant those who devote their attention to it. Its powers are almost infinite, and, in some instances, pro- duce effects which appear magical : a great number of those conjuring tricks, which have astonished our cotemporaries as much as our forefathers, have been effected solely by its agency. It is not, of course, our intention to teach our readers chemistry in all its branches, but merely to direct the i CHEM (CA1, AMUSEMENTS. - 4. inquiring mind of you'.h to skim lightly and agreeably over its curface: fo this purpose, we have selected a series of experiments for their amusement, not doubting but that they will consider the time profitably spent in perusing them, and we flatter ourselves that they will be an inducement to carry Aheir inquiries much further than our limits will afford. For those who wish to be instructed as well as amused, we have added some explanations of the flecompositions, or chemical changes, which take place, in order to show that, although almost magical in appearance, they are dependent upon some fixed and uncrring law of nature. Without any further prefatory observa- tions, we shall now commence our Chemical Recreations. CRYSTAL I, IZATION OF SALT S. 1. Dissolve one ounce of sulphate of soda (Glauber’s salts) m two ounces of boiling water; pour it while hot, into a phial, and cork it close. In this state it will not crystallize when cold ; but if the cork be removed, the crystal- lization will commence and proceed rapidly. The presence of atmospheric air is necessary in the process of crystal- lization; the experiment will occasionally ſail when under unſavorable cir- cumstances: should this be the case, drop into the fluid a crystal of Glauber’s salt, and the whole will immediately commence shooting into beautiful crystals. 2. Repeat the above experiment with a small thermometer immersed in the solution, and corked up with it. When cold, remove the cork, and the thermometer will be seem to rise. This experiment shows that heat is given out in the act of crystallization. º - 3. Take half an ounce of caustic soda, (common soda,) and dissolve it in ab ut its own weight of water; then pour into the solution half an ounce of sulphuric acid (oil of vitriol :) when the mixture is cold, crystals of sulphate of soda will be found in the liquor. 4. Take caustic soda, and pour upon it muriatic acid : this will produce mitriate of soda, our common table salt. 5. "I'ake of carbonate of ammonia, (the common volatile smelling salts.) and pour upon it muriatic acid until the eſſervescence cease. The produce will be a solid salt, viz. muriate of ammonia, or crude salammoniac of the shops. Caustic substances corrode matter in consequence of thei tendency to unite with it; they continue to act upon it until they are saturated by the combinatiºn. 6. Mix two ounces of semi-vitrified oxyd of lead (litharge) with three Jrachms of muriate of ammonia, and submit the whole to a strong heat in a crucible. The heat will drive off tire amn:onia, and the muriatic acid -z-rº-Gº-----. . . ...sº _------ ~2.4 -": * **3, . -e---------" W ...yº - --—----- - - > - > --~~~----, ---~~~~ jº 3 2-1- ? Ú----~~~), Jö * CHEMICAL AIMIU SEMENTS. 197 ;i * &- will combine with the lead, forming a muriate of lead. When the operation is compete, pour the ingredients into a metallic vessel to cool and crystal- lize. This is the patent yellow used by painters. In this experiment, the lead is dissolved by the muriatic acid, which has been disengaged by the heat driving off the ammonia with which it was previously combined. SYMPATHETIC IN R.S. 1. Write with a diluted solution of muriate or nitrate of cobalt, and the waiting will be invisible; but, upon being held to the fire, it will appear perfectly distinct, and of a blue color: if the cobalt should be adulterated with iron, the writing will appear of a green color. When taken from the fire, the writing will again disappear. If a landscape be drawn and all finished with common colors, except the leaves of the trees, the grass and the sky, and the latter be finished with this sympathetic ink, and the two former with the adulterated solution just mentioned, the drawing will seem to be unfinished, and have a wintry appearance; but, upon being held to the fire, the grass and the trees will become green, the sky blue, and the whole assume a rich and beautiful appearance. 2. Write with a diluted solution of muriate of copper, and the writing will be invisible when cold; but, on being held to the fire, it will appear of a yellow color. A landscape may be drawn and finished, as in the last ex- periment, and, in addition to the sympathetic inks there used, corn fields may be painted or finished with this sympathetic ink. The whole will have a very drear and bleak aspect till held before a fire, when it will in- stantly assume a cheerful and lively appearance, as if by magic. If lutman beings be drawn in common colors, as if in the act of reaping, the whole will appear more curious and intel esting. These landscapes will, at any time, exhibit the same appearance. 3. Write with a weak solution of alum in lemon-juice, and the charac- ters will remain invisible until wetted with water, which renders them of a grayish color, and quite transparent. A letter written with a solution of rock-alum alone, being dried, and having a small quantity of water poured over it, will appear of a whiter color than the paper. 4. Write with a weak solution of sulphate of iron, (green vitriol ;) when dry it will appear invisible; but if wetted over with a brush, dipped in tincture of galls, or a strong decoction of oak bark, the writing will be vestored, and appear black. 5. Write with the above solution ; when dry, wash it over with a so. ution of prussiate of potash, and the writing will be restored to a beauti full,lue 23 - --- - rºſ. r. º. +---> * * * -Y- Xºrºrº , - ~~ -->~~~ *}}*.*.* - . A -----...-->{ - ~~- --~~ ºs-3-ºxºr: T. {j-sº: z w T-º-º: * | {W X 128 CHEMICAL AIMUSEMENTS. - In all secret or sympathetic writing, as it is called, there is a chemica decomposition ; this is more particularly striking in the two last experi- ments; in the former of which, the gallic acid unites with the iron, forming a black; and in the latter, the prussic acid unites with the iron, forming a blue, or prussiate of iron. HEAT AND COL D. 1. Take one ounce of muriate of ammonia, the same quantity of mitrate of potash, (saltpetre,) and two omces of sulphate of soda : reduce these salts separately into powder, and mix them gradually with four ounces of water ; the result will be, that as the salts dissolve, cold will be produced. A thermometer, immersed in the mixture, will sink at or below the frcez- ing point. If a test tube be filled with water, and immersed in the mix- ture, the water will soon he frozen. The above mixture is frequently used at the tables of the great, to cool wine when Ice cannot be procured. 2. Put a small quantity of sulphuric acid (oil of vitriol) into a glass or cup, and pour upon it about half its quantity of cold water; upon stirring it, the temperature will rise to many degrees above boiling water In mix- ing sulphuric acid with water, great care should be taken not to do it too suddenly, as the vessel Inay break from the increased heat, and the acid be spilled on the hands, clothes, &c ; the greatest caution is necessary in using it, as it will burn almost anything it touches. 3. Dissolve a little lime in muriatic or nitric acid, then pour some of the liquid into a glass, and add to it a few drops of sulphuric acid; the whole will become nearly a solid mass, and, at the same time, give out a strong heat. 4. Set a quart pot upon a stool, on which a little water has been pre- viously thrown, before the fire; put a handful of snow into the pot, and also a handful of common salt. Hold the pot fast with one hand, and with a short stick stir the contents with the other, as if you were churning butter; in a few minutes the pot will freeze so hard to the stool, that with both hands you can scarcely disengage it. 5. The most powerful of all freezing mixtures is a mixture of muriate of lime and snow : to produce the greatest effect by this mixture, equal weights of the salt, ſinely powdered, and newly-fallen snow, must be quickly imixed together. This is the mixture that is employed to ſreeze quicksilver. Whenever substances become more condensed by mixture, heat is given out; when they expand, cold is produced : or perhaps, it would be more proper to say, the compound has more or less capacity for leat ‘han the separate ingredients CHEIVIICAL AMUSE IMIENTS 129 6. Fill a common thermometer tube with cold water, and suspend it in the air by a string : if the tube be continually sprinkled with ether, the water will presently become ice. All liquids require a great portion of heat to convert them into vapour, an i all evapotation produces cold. The quick evaporation of ether, in the above experiment, carries away the heat from the water, and converts it into ice, An animal might be frozen to death in the midst of summer, by being re- peatedly sprinkled with ether. COMIB USTION AND EXPLOSION. 1. Bruise, and slightly moisten with water, a few crystals of nitrate of copper; then roll them up quickly in a piece of tin-ſoil: in about a minute the tin-ſoil will begin to smoke, and soon after, take fire and explode with a slight crackling moise. º 2. Throw a few grains of chlorate of potash, (oxmuriate of potash,) and § a very small bit or two of phosphorus, into a cup containing a little sulphuric § acid, the phosphorus will instantly burst into flame. 3. Take five parts of nitrate of potash, (saltpetre,) three of sub-carbonate of potash, (salt of tartar,) and one of sulphur, all quite dry, and mix them to- gether in a warm mortar : if a little of this powder be placed upon a shovel, $ over a hot fire, it first begins to blacken, and, at last, melts and explodes with a loud report. A small quantity only should be used ; for although there is no danger in the mixture, yet some mervous persons may be alarmed at the loudness of the report. 4. Put a small quantity of calcined or pure magnesia into a cup, and y b 5 pour over it a sufficient quantity of sulphuric acid to cover it : almost imme- diately combustion will commence, and sparks will be thrown out in all * 3. directions. 5. Put a little dry pulverized charcoal into a warm tea-cup, and pour over it some mitric acid, when combustion will take place, as in the prece- ding experiment. 6. Pour a table-spoonful of oil of turpentine into a cup, and place it in the open air; then put about half the quantity of nitric acid, mixed with a few drops of sulphuric, into a phial, fastened to the end of a long stick; pour it upon the oil, and it will immediately burst into flames, and continue to give out much light and heat. | 7. Rub a few grains of chlorate of potash, and about half the quantity of sulphur, together in a mortar, and a crackling detonation will be pro- duced, accompanied with ſlashes of light. If a small quantity of the same CHE MIC A. L. A NIU SENIENTS. g * mixture be wrapped in paper, laid upon an anvil, and smartly struck with a hammer, a report will be produced, which will be loud in proportion to the quantity used. h 8. Take a little of the composition mentioned in the last experiment, on the point of a knife, and drop it into a wine glass containing sulphuric acids; a beautiful column of flame will be the consequence immediately it comes in contact with the acid. 9. Mix a few grains of chlorate of potash with twice their quantity of loaf sugar reduced to powder; place this mixture upon a plate, dip a piece of wire in sulphuric acid, and let a single drop fall from its end upon the mix- ture; it will immediately burst into flame, and continue to burn till the whole is consumed. 10. Take a metal button, and rub it for a short time against a piece of wood or stone, then touch a small piece of phosphorus with it, the latter will immediately take fire and burn. 11. Hold the end of a rod of glass to a grindstone while it is revolving ; in a very short time it will become so hot, that phosphorus, gunpowder, and other combustible bodies, may be inflamed by it. Wood rubbed against wood will also produce great heat. The natives of New Holland light their fires by these means. 12. Put a small piece of German tinder into the lower end of a syringe, them draw up the piston and force it suddenly down by giving it a smart blow against a wall or table, when the tinder will be ignited, either from the sudden condensation of the air, or the friction occasioned by the move- ment cſ the piston. Syringes for this purpose are sold in London at about half-a-guinea each 13. Take two pieces of common bonnet came and rub them strongly against each other in the dark, and a considerable quantity of light will be produced. Two pieces of borax have the same property in a more emi- ment degree. In this, and the three preceding experiments, the effects de- scribed being produced by ſriction, they ought, in strict propriety, perhaps, to be called electrical rather than chemical experiments. 14. Combustion by concentrating the sun’s rays. Hold a double convex glass, of about two inches diameter, to the sun, about mid-day when shining very bright, at its focal distance from a piece of coin, which will soon become so hot that it cannot be touched with the finger. The inten- sity of the heat produced will depend upon the size and convexity of the glass, and also on the season of the year. Gunpowder, phosphorus, &c may be set ou fire in this manner; and, with a very powerful glass, inos' of the metals may be melted. % h => t_* º rººf —t- -- CII EMII C A L A NIU SEA1 ENTS. 131 *. - - - * * c # 15. Put a small quantity of spirits of wine into a glass-with a halfpenny by a shilling, then direct the rays of the sun, by means of a glass, upon the coin, und, in a short time, it will become so hot as to inflame the spirits. COM BU S"TION ... IN AND UN DE R W ATF. R. 1. Mix one grain of phosphorus with three or four grains of chlorata of potash, and put this mixture into a glass with a narrow bottom; then put the small end of a funnel into the glass, in contact with the mixture, and fill the glass nearly full of water, but not by means of the funnel; then pour i a few drops of sulphuric acid down the funnel, and the combustion of the - H rºº will immediately commence, and continue till the whole is con- SUli (16(le - 2. The Well of Fire. Add, gradually, one ounce, by measure, oſsul- e º * e 2 y y e 2. 3. 6 phuric acid to five or six ounces of water, contained in an earthenware basin; throw in an ounce of granulated zinc, and a small bit or two of hosphorus, when phosphuretted hydrogen gas will be produced, which s” “ , ” -º s ; : “J “*s-“ .8 * * 2 - takes ſire immediately it comes in contact with atmospheric air; so that, in a short time, the whole surface will become luminous, and continue so long as gas is generated, which may be seen darting from the bottom through the fluid with great rapidity. 3. Fill a saucer with water, and let fall into it a grain or two of potas- |- sium ; the potassium will instantly burst into flame with a slight explosion, and burn vividly on the surface of the water, darting, at the same time, from one side of the vessel to the other, with great violence, in the form of a beautiſul red-hot fire ball. 4. PPill-o'-the-wisp. Take a glass tumbler three parts filled with water, and drop into it two or three lumps of phosphuret of lime; a decomposition will take place, and phosphuretted hydrogen gas be produced, bubbles of which will rise through the water, and take fire immediately they burst through the surface, terminating in beautiful ringlets of smoke, which will continue until the phosphuret of lime is exhausted. This sas is generated at the bottom of stagnant shallow pools, in marshes and boggy places, and is frequently seen hovering over the surface of burial grounds; it is what we call the ignis fatwus or Will-o'-the-wisp. ‘. . 5. Green Fire winder Water. Put into a glass tumbler two ounces of water, and add, first, a piece or two of phosphorus about the size of a pea, then thirty or forty grains of chlorate of potash; then pour upon the mass, by means of a ſummel with a long neck reaching to the bottom of the glass, five or six drachms of sulphuric acid As soon as the acid coules in con- tact with the incredients, flashes of fire begin to dart from under the surface ..I.)]. CHEMICAL AMUSEMENTs. of the fluid. When this takes place, drop into the mixture a few pieces of phosphuret of lime; this will immediately illumine the bottom of the vessel, and cause a stream of fire, of an emerald green color, to pass through the fluid. - The effects produced in the foregoing experiments, are occasioned by the sudden chemical decomposition which takes place; and here it may be me- cessary to caution our young friends not to exceed the quantities we have directed to be used; for although we have avoided everything that is dan- gerous, yet an excess of quantity, in some cases, might be attended with in- convenience, and create alarm from the sudden effects that are produced. When phosphorus is used, it should be handled with great care, lest any portion of it get under the finger nails, a small bit of which would occasion considerable pain for sometime. - LUMINO US WRITING IN THE DA RIK, Fix a small piece of solid phosphorus in a quill, and write with it upon paper; if the paper be then removed to a dark room, the writing will ap- pear beautifully luminous. G RE EN FIR. E. Put a small quantity of highly-rectified spirits of wine, mixed with a little boracic acid, into an earthenware vessel, and set them on fire, when a very beautiful green flame will be produced. 2. RED FIRE, Proceed as in the last experiment, using nitrate or muriate of stromtites, instead of boracic acid, and a beautiful red flame will be produced. YELLOW F I R. E. Proceed as above, mixing nitrate or muriate of barytes with the spirits, and a brilliant yellow flame will be produced. The above methods have been used in our theatres to heiglitcn the effect of some of those horrifying spectacles with which the city has been treated, such as Der Freyschutz, &c. IM ETA L LIC I) ISSO I, W E NTS. Gold. Pour a small quantity of nitro-muriatic acid upon a small piece of gold, or gold leaf, and, in a short time, it will completely disappear, and the solution will have a beautiful yellow color. - Silver. Pour a little mitric acid upon a small piece of pure silver, on silver leaf, and it will be dissolved in a few minutes. *º-T - SE=º CHE VI 1 C A L A VL’U SEVIENTS. . 133 * e \ Copper. Pour a little diluted nitric acid upon a small piece of copper, and, in a short time, the copper will be dissolved, and the solution will have a beautiful blue color. . Lead. Pour a little diluted nitric acid upon a small piece or two of lcad, which will ſirst convert it into a white powder, and then dissolve it Iron. Pour some sulphuric acid, diluted with about ſour times its bulk of water, upon a few iron filings; a violent effervescence will ensue, and, in a little time, the filings will be dissolved. These experiments are intended to show how easily we can dissolve metals when we submit them to a proper menstruum. METAL LIC VIE GETATION. Mix together equal parts of saturated solutions of silver and mercury, di- luted with distilled water: in this mixture suspend five or six drachms of pure mercury in a piece of fine limen rag doubled. The metallic solutions will soon shoot into beautiful needle-shaped crystals, and attach themselves, and adhere strongly, to the bag containing the mercury. When the arbori- zation ceases to increase, the bag, loaded with beautiful crystals, may be taken out of the vessel where it was formed, by means of the thread by which it is suspended, and hung under a glass jar, where it may be preserv- ed as long as may be thought proper. - T H E L E A D TRE E. Put into a common wine decanter about half an ounce of super-acetate of lead, (sugar of lead,) and fill it to the bottom of the neck with distilled or rain water; then suspend, by a bit of silk, or thread, fastened also to the cork or stopper, a piece of zinc wire, two or three inches long, so that it may hang as nearly in the centre as possible ; then place the decanter where it may not be disturbed. The zinc will very soon be covered with beautiful crystals of icad which are precipitated from the solution, and this will continue until the whole becomes attached to the zinc, assuming the form of a tree or bush, whose leaves or branches are laminal, or in plates of metallic lustre. THE TIN TRI, E. Into the same, or a similar vessel, to that used for the lead tree, pour distilled or rain water, as before, and put in three drachms of muriate of tin, and about ten drops of mitric acid. When the salt is dissolved, suspend a piece of zinc wire, as in the last experiment, and set the whole aside to precipitate without disturbance. In a few hours the effect will be similar to that produced by the lead, only that the tree of tin will have more lustre In these experiments it is wonderful to see the lamina, or thin plates, shoo! ont, as it were, from nothing. f ºr-rr-e &W. S. *- r * S$=2:3: ` 5ss=3.3 * 'N, - º CHEMIſ CA I, AMUSEMENTS. E. º T H E SIL W E R T R E E. Put into a decanter four drachms of nitrate of silver, and fill up the de wanter will distilled or rain water; then drop in about an ounce of mercury, and place the vessel where it may not be disturbed : in a short time the silver will be precipi- tated in the most beautiful arbo- Yescent form, resembling real vegetation. The above experiments show the precipitation of one metal by another, owing to the affinity § § § Nº. * w º | D Ss that exists between them. The | j |; º º J N sº | \ \\ metal in solution having a § sº greater aſſinity for the pure §§§ - sº metal suspended in it, precipi- iſſº tates itself from the solution, ... Tºš. and becomes firmly attached `s-s=s===s* thereto. The Silver Tree, pro- duced as above described, is fi equently called Arbor Dianae, or the Tree of Diana. TRAN SMUTATION OF COLOR.S. To produce a blue by miſcing two colorless fluids. Pour a little of the solution of sulphate of iron into a glass, then add to it a few drops of a solution of prussiate of potash, and the whole will assume a beautiful blue color. g In this experiment a decomposition takes place; the sulphuric acid leav- ing the iron to unite with the potash, and the prussic acid leaving the pot- ash to unite with the iron, forming prussiate of iron, and sulphate of potash; the sulphate of potash remaining in solution, while the prussiate of iron is slowly precipitated, falling to the bottom in the state of a fine powder. This is the prussian blue of the shops. To produce a yellow from two colorless fluids. Pour a little of the solution of nitrate of bismuth into a glass, then add to it a small quantity of solution of prussiate of potash, and a yellow color will be immediately produced. In this experiment, as in the last, we have a decomposition ; nitrate of potash and prussiate of Lismuth are formed, the prussiate of bismuth giving it the yellow color. - To produce a brown from two colorless fluids. Pour a little of the CHEMICAL AMUSEMENTs. ſ35 - solution of sulphate of copper into a glass, then add to it a small quantity of a solution of prussiate of potash, and a reddish brown will be produced. In this expel iment we have a sulphate of potash and a prussiate of cop- per, which gives the brown color, according to the principle just laid down. To make black ink from two colorless fluids. Put into a glass a quantity of water, and add to it some tincture of galls ; then put in a small quantity of a solution of sulphate of iron, and the whole will immediately become black. - Here, as in the preceding experiments, a decomposition is effected; the gallic acid uniting with the iron, forms our common writing ink. A blue color produced from two colorless fluids. Put into a glass a quantity of water, and dissolve therein a few crystals of sulphate of copper, then pour in a small quantity of liquid ammonia, and the whole will imme- diately be changed to a beautiful blue. In this experiment the ammonia unites to the copper, forming ammoniate of copper, which is of a beautiful blue, approaching to violet. Another way. Take any chalybeate water, (that is, water containing iron in solution,) and add to it a little of the solution of prussiate of potash, which will change it to a blue color, as in a previous experiment. Prussiate of potash is one of the best tests for iron that we are acquainted with, and will detect its pressure, however minute the quality. To change a blue liquid to a red. Pour a little of the infusion of lit- mus, or blue cabbage, into a wine glass, and add to it a drop or two of ni- tric or sulphuric acid, which will immediately change it to a red color. One of the characteristics of acid is that it changes most of the vegetable eolors to red. This experiment is an instance. To change a blue liquid to green. Pour a little of the inſusion of vi- olets into a wine glass, and add to it a few drops of a solution of potash or soda, when it will be changed to a beautiful green; to which, indeed, al- kalies change most of the vegetable colors. To change a red liquid into various colors. Put a little of the inſu- sion of red cabbage into three different glasses; to the first, add a little mu- riatic or mitric acid; to the second, a little of the solution of potash; and to the third, a little of the solution of sulphate of alumin and potash, (alum.) The liquid in the first glass will be converted to a fine crimson, that in the second to a beautiful green, and that in the third to a purple. In this experiment the changes take place as in the preceding ones, and may be explained on the same principles of decomposition. § 136 CHEMI CAL AMIU SEMENTS. T H E M A G H C S H R U B. . . Place a sprig of rosemary, or any other garden herb, in a glassjar, so that when it is inverted, the stem may be downward, and supported by the sides of the vessel; then put some benzoin acid upon a piece of hot iron, so hot that the acid may be sublimed, which will rise in form of a thick white vapour. Invert the jar over the iron, and leave the whole untouched until the sprig be covered by the sublimed acid in the form of a beautiful hoar frost. Sublination is the same as distillation, only we call it sublimation when the product is collected in a solid form ; the term distillation is applied to liquids, ſm the above experiment we have a beautiful instance of sublima- . the fumes of the acid rise and are condensed on the cold leaves of the plant. A L A M P W ITH OUT F L AM E. Procure six or eight inches of platinum wire, about the hundredth part of an inch in thickness; coil it round a small cylinder ten or twelve times, them drop it on the flame of a spirit lamp, so that part may touch the wick and part remain above it. Light the lamp, and when it has burned a minute or two, put it out; the wire will then be ignited, and continue so long as any spirit remains in the lamp. Lamps manufactured on this principle are sold by some of the chemists in London T H E EXPLO DIN G T A P E R. If the light of a taper be blown out, and the taper be let down into a jar of oxygen gas while the snuff (which should be a thick one) remains red hot, it reiçindles instantly with an explosion. When the taper is relighted, it con- tinues to burn with a rapidity, a brilliancy of flame, and an evolution of light truly wonderful. THE GLOW - WO RM IN G AS Place a glow-worm within a jar of oxygen gas, in a dark room; the insect will become more active, and shime with greater brilliancy, than it does in common air. Oxygen gas communicates a stimulus to the animal system; and it is, probably, owing to this, that the glow-worm becomes more beauti- ſul in consequence of its being more active, as its luminous appearance is supposed to depend entirely on the will of the animal. THE CAN DI, E IN VISIBILY EXT IN C UISH F, ſ). Place a lighted candle in the bottom of a jar which has its open part upper most, (the jar being filled with atmospheric or common air,) then take ajar CHEMICAL AMUSEMENTS. 137 filled with carbonic acid gas, and invert it over the jar in which the can- dle is placed; th’ effect is very striking; the invisible fluid, being heavier. than atmospheric air, descends like water, and extinguishes the flane. The whole, to spectators who have no idea of substance without sensible matter, having the appearance of magic. TO MAK E WATE R BOIL BY COLL) AND CE A SE TO BOIL BY HIE A.T Half fill a Florence flask with water, place it over a lamp, and let it boil for a few minutes, then cork the mouth of the flask as expeditiously as pos- sible, and tie a slip of moist bladder over the cork to exclude the air. The water being now removed from the lamp, the ebullition will cease, but may . be renewed by pouring cold water gradually upon the upper part of the º ſlask; but, if hot water be applied, the boiling instantly ceases. In this manner the ebullition may be renewed, and again made to cease, alternate- ly, by the mere application of hot and cold water. We shall, in this place, be more elaborate than usual, and give our young friends the theory of what causes the above phenomenon. Be it known, then, to all who are not previously acquainted with the fact, that water boils at 212 degrees under the common pressure of our atmosphere : now, if the atmos- phere, or a part of it, were removed, the pressure on the surface would be less, and the consequence would be that water would boil at a much lower temperature; and this leads us to an explanation of what takes place in the foregoing experiment. We fill a flask half full of water, and boil it for a few minutes over a lamp, the steam which rises forces out the atmospheric air, and occupies its place; we then remove the lamp, and secure the ſlask so ) as to prevent the readmission of atmospheric air. If cold water be now poured over that part of the flask occupied by the steam, the cold will con- dense the steam, which will trickle down the sides of the flask, and mix with the liquor below ; the steam being thus condensed, a vacuum is formed above the surface. The water, having then no pressure of atmospheric air or steam, commences boiling afresh ; but if hot water be now poured upon it, the steam again occupies the surface, and the boiling ceases. s d A LIQUID PRODUCED FROM TWO SOLIDS. Mix equal portions of sulphate of soda and acetate of lead, both in fine º powder: let them be well rubbed together in a mortar, when the two solids w will operate upon each other, and a fluid will be produced. A SOLID PRODUCED FROM TWO LIQUIDS. If a saturated solution of muriate of lime be mixed with a saturated solu. son of carbonate of potash, (both transparent liquids,) the result is the forma CHEMICAI. AMUSEMENTS. ion of an opaque and almost solid mass. If a little nitric acid be added to the product, the solid mass will be changed to a transparent fluid. These two last experiments were ſormerly called chemical miracles, but the present scientific age no longer consider them so, it being now well ascertained that the changes which take place are occasioned by chemica. decomposition, or the action of one salt upon another. T H E L ITTL F. G AS-F A CTO ſt. Put a lºtle coal into the bowl of a common tobacco-pipe, stop the mouth of it up with clay, and place the bowl in a fire; as soon as the coal becomes heated, a small stream of gas will issue from the top of the pipe. If he put a candle to it, the gas will light and burn for sometime, sufficiently brilliant to illuminate the study of (ICi]t little (£ag=fattor. * N2.É º 1% Wii - -. - - 5: XN - { | }{I ||| º - s! ºšē ; Fiº: §ºšāºš - §zzº s * t; 2. &{TIL-2 : #: >ks zºº. g S.A. | ºf ; *: º § º : Ü : : i ; ; § #. w # * : s: #2 wº- º ~ - - º º, Q'º. Y. SNE!!! ſº º ׺TE::= (SE: º ſº ſºlº JNG) ºf §); #º Ayº #); as #CŞs º Sºrºs. º; . º -- “O'er the ice as o'er pleasure, you lightly should glide, .** , . . ! *:: *. !, Both have gulfs, which their flattering surfaces hide,” SKATING is by no means a modern pastime, and probably the in- Vention proceeded rather from necessity than the desire for amuse- ment. It was the boast of a northern ãº. that he could traverse ...the snow upon skates of wood. Some traces of Skating are found in the thirteenth century, at which period it was customary in the winter, When the 1ce would bear them, for the young citizens of London to fasten the leg bones of animals under the soles of their feet, by tying them to their ankles, and then taking a pole shod with iron into their hands, they pushed themselves forward by striking it against the ice, and moved with celerity, equal, says an old author, “to a bird flying through the air, or an arrow from a cross-bow”; but some allowance, we presume, must be made for the poetical figure. :...g. ºr ºs -- * : Sãº. Tº § --...---------. sº Ösº =º e * * * - **.. - N----------, s t **-lº. -- 140 SKATING. 9. Y. - - asse- 2:#ss --~ 92+=s The wooden Skates, shod with iron or steel, which are bound about the feet and ankles like the talares of the Greeks and Romans, were most probably brought into England from Holland, where they are said to have originated, and where, it is well known, they are almost uni- versally used by persons of both sexes, when the season permits. In the Encyclopedia Britannica, it is asserted that Edinboro’ has produced more instances of elegant skaters than perhaps any other country whatever ; and the institution of a Skating Club there has contributed not a little to the improvement of this amusement. Strut, in noticing this, observes, that when the Serpentine river in Hyde park was frozen over, he saw ſour gentlemen there dance, if the expression may be al- lowed, a double minuet, in skates, with as much ease, and perhaps more elegance, than in a ball-room ; others again, by turning and win- ding with much adroitness, have readily in succession described upon the ice all the letters of the alphabet. THE SIXATE, Skates are of various forms, and differ in their make, according to the several countries in which they are used. In England, where they are intended for amusement only, a much lighter description is made than in Holland or Russia, where, in the winter, they form one of the principal modes of travelling, even for great distances. The shape of the Iron gives the peculiar feature to the skate. . In the northern coun- tries it is made to project six or eight, inches beyond the wood, and curl upwards at the extremity, to nearly the height of the knee. In Lapland the iron projects nearly two feet. The reason for this is very clear, it enables dº skater to glide easily over the hillocks of ice or snow, which invariably collect on the rivers in those climates ; were the irons not made so, the inhabitants could not travel on the ice with safety to themselves, or to the various artieles which they sometimes carry : it being a common oceurrence for women to skate to market, carrying on their heads a basket full of eggs. Skates are made fluted or plain. For young beginners the former are preferable, as regards safety ; but with the latter only can velocity and elegance of movement be acquired. The blade of the skate should not project much beyond the wood, or, when the skater bears forward, the ; part of the foot will be raised too much from the ice, the back of the leg liable to become cramped, and the power of striking out greatly decreased. A quarter of an inch in thickness, and about three- quarters of an inch in height, are proportionate dimensions for the blades of skates. High bladed skates are dangerous for beginners, and re- quire considerable exertion of the muscles to keep the ankle stiff, while the nearer the feet are brought to the ice, without risking their contact, the less will be that strain, and the greater the facility of mov- sRATING. 141 ing in all directions. The blades should be slightly curved at the bot- tom, as this form assists the skater in turning either heel or toe out- wards or inwards with rapidity. Previously to going on the ice, the ſearner should practise, both walking about witb his skates on, and balancing himself on either feet. - Fºsrººg Tºe SKATEs. The old-fashioned broad ankle strap, with two large rings, is now but little used. It pressed, so much on the back part of the ankle, as to prevent the play of the foot, and fre- quently gave much pain. Haying bored a hole in the heel of each boot just largé enough to receive the pegs, fold your bandlterchief up into a pad, on which kneel with your right knee, and put on the left skate first.” Then kneel on the left knee while adjusting the right skate.- - The long single strap, passed twice through the skate and crossed on the foot is found to be sufficient, provided the skate be well fastened } into the heel of the boot ; a back-strap however may be used by bº. ginners. The best mode is to have the skate well screwed to the sole of a lace-up boot-this is the method adopted by the members of the Skating Club in London. The spring skate, in which there is no wood, is preferred by some to all others. ! How To start of F, AND To stop. } When your skates are strapt, rise up, stand on your heels, and stamp them on the ice to fix the foot firmly : then strike out, at first slowly, with the right foot, leaning on the inside edge of the skate, and bend- Fig. i. Sºś #s ºS y SKATING. ing sº forward. When you have slid about two yards on that foot, put the other on the ice, and gently throw your weight upon it, striking out in the same manner upon the inside edge, and so on with each foot alternately. Fig. 1 represents the attitude of a learner at first starting off. . When you wish to stop, raise the toes from the ice, and rest on your heels as in Fig. 2. Bend the body forwards gradually, and do not attempt to lean backwards, the certain consequence of which would be a severe fall. A stick is used by some beginners to steady themselves, but we do not advise it. It is better, at first, to have the support of a companion who can skate, (Fig. 3.) and by degrees he may leave you to your own exertions ; above all things, do not be dis- heartened by a few falls. | HOW TO PIER FORIM THE VARIOUS EVOLUTIONS. Before the skater attempts to cut figures and other devices, he must be able to skate on the outside edge of the skate, to skate backwards, and to turn round. The ‘outside edge ' implies what it is by its name ; when acquired, it sends you exactly in opposite directions, on both sides, to what the ‘inside edge” does. In explanation :-Suppose that you are skating on the right foot, it is easy to turn to the left, but not so to the right, to effect which you must use the outside edge, by striking out upon it either foot, inclining at the same time the skate, the leg, the body, and the head, toward which ever side you are skating, holding the other foot ſº behind, and rounding the arms. The right hand should be raised towards the head in skating on the leſt outside edge, and the left hand when skaking on the right outside edge, as in Fig. 4. The most difficult forward movement is the cross outside edge, which is done by passing one leg - across the other, and striking out with the foot as it comes down on the ice. As the foot on which you — first rested disengages itself (which it will do as you proceed) from the crossed-leg po- * * * n F. .# - - 4 - SKATING. 143 sition, throw that leg over the other, and, by continuing this, you will soon learn to sweep round on either side with ease. Fig. 5. This is called the Mercury Figure. { The salute in a right line is not easy of execution. Having first struck out, you must place the feet in a horizontal line, elevating and rounding the arms. Continue the movement as long as you can, or think fit to do so. This attitude, though difficult, is frequently practi- sed by gºbd skaters. The salute ºn a curved line is much, easier. Having started, you * put your fººt ºn the position you would adopt to describe the salute : in a right ºne, ...(see Fig. 6.) only less horizontally. The head and . . Fig. $.". body must be upright, the arms rounded, the - s- hands placed on the haunches ; in this posi- tion you describe a circle. You then draw # *- yourself up, the knees having become slightly ; bent, and, raising the right or left foot, pre- § - pare for another evolution ; as either striking out straight forward, or towards one side. . To describe circles and curves will be found , º the most graceful and useful of evolutions. § To describe a curve on the outside edge for- 3 wards, fix on some point as a centre, and take a run proportioned to the number of curves you propose describing, Strike out on the outward edge, turning in a curve round the centre fixed up- - º on. Your eyes ..must look towards the shoulder opposite that which directs the general move- ment of the side on which you turn ; your arms, must be extended ; the one Vºf directing the movement should be rais- - ed above the head, and the other held downwards, in the direction of the leg describing the curve. (Fig. 7.) The hips must be kept in, and the leg on which you are propelled bent slightly at the knee-joint. The opposite leg must : also be bent, and thrown backwards, to § modify º its weight and position the :#. impulse forward, and to insure your e- § tºº quilibrium. #. - To describe a curve or circle on the inside edge forwards, you must select a 3. * f $35s==<5 144 SKATING, small piece of cork, or any other light body, as a centre, take a suf. ficient run, and strike out on the inward edge. Your head and body must be in the position described for outward curves, only the leg on which you skate must not be bent. The opposite leg should be almost stiff, and the foot about 18 inches from the one you rest upon. Fig. 8. Curves on the inside edge are ter- minated by stopping in the usual manner ; but if you desire to pi- rouette, or turn round, you throw the foot on which you do not skate over that on which you do, and, from the impulse given to your bo- dy in order to describe the curve, you spin round on the middle of the skate as on a pivot. After hav- ing done this a few times, you bring down the foot you are not revolv- ing on, and proceed to other evolutions. To skate backwards, you must incline the head and body slightly for- ward, in order not to lose the centre of gravity. Strike out behind on each foot alternately, and raise the heel of the skate slightly up from the ice (Fig. 9.) . By this operation each foot will describe an arc or segment of a circle. Should you feel to be losing your equilibrium, bring both skates together on the ice. This evolution is performed sometimes on one foot, sometimes on the other, and occa- sionally on both together, by the help of a slight motion of the hips. Retrograde or backward curves differ from ordinary curves by their direction only ; and at first sight appear difficult, because a per- son cannot move backwards with the same facility that he can go forward. When how- ever you are nsed to this manner of skating, it will appear natural and tolerably easy of execution. The backward curve is of equal importance with the ordinary, curve on the outside edge, and constitutes the base of all retrograde or backward figures. In this ev- olution the position of the arms and head is SKATING. next page. not the same as for the ordinary curve on the outside edge. When executing the outward re- trograde curve, your face must be turned towards the left shoulder, and the right hand raised towards the head. Fig. 10. . The reverse takes place for the movement to the left, and the inverse generally when the motion is forward instead of backward. The backward curve may be extended to circles, spiral rings, as shown by Figs. 11 and 12, and be finally concluded by the pirouette. The oblique stop is the most proper to adopt when you are skating backwards. In order to perform it, when engaged in a retrograde move- ment, you bring down on the ice in an oblique and transverse position the skate on which you are not resting, stiffening at the same time the the leg you thus bring down. See Fig. 13 on the The effect of this manoeuvre is prompt and certain, and y the only variation it admits of is, that it can be performed on either foot. To turn round, bring either heel behind the other, and you turn as a matter of course. By carefully attending to the above directions, with will be able to cut ractice, you the numerical figures, or any device that you may wish. The Figure 8 is the best practice, and is described by com- Fig.11. Fig. 13. ºr 146 SKATING. pleting the ...is on the outside edge for- ward. This is performed by crossing the legs, and striking from the outside instead of the inside edge. To cross the legs, the skater, as he draws to the close of the stroke on his right leg, must throw the left quite across it, which will cause him to press hard on the outside of the right skate, from which he must immediately strike, throwing back the left arm, and looking simultane- ously over the left shoulder, so as to bring him well upon the outside edge of the left skate. The 8 is formed by completing a perfect circle, in the manner described, on each leg, before changing the foot. The fig- ure 3, which is performed on the inside edge backwards, may next be practised. CONCLUDING onservatiºns. The young skater should avoid both very rough and very smooth ice. He must be fearless, but not too violent in his motions, and should never be in a hurry. He must avoid looking downwards to See how his feet act, and should recover his balance between each stroke. For safety his body may be bent slightly forward during his first es- says, but when he has acquired sufficient confidence, he should bear himself erect, carry his head well up, and always turn his face in the direction of the line he purposes describing. - He should wear flannel next his chest to absorb the perspiration caused by the exercise, and avoid skating against the Wind, if of a del- icate constitution. When unexpected danger arises, he should strive to be perfectly collected. If surrounded by rotten ice he must crawl, on his hands and knees, that the support of his weight may be distribu- ted. If he fall upon rotten ice at full length, he must roll away from it towards firmer ice ; and should he be so unlucky as to get into a hole, he must extend both arms outwards in opposite directions upon the surface of the ice, and tread water until assistance come. A plank or ladder offer the best means of extrication, either being easily pushed along the ice ; or a rope may be thrown to the person immersed ; but we hope our young readers by prudence and caution will avoid the ne: tessity of their application. \ �ș\\\ §}\\ §§}\}\\}}}}} ¿??¿?§§ l ….!? º. "¡ ¿№ĒĒĒĒ {\$№= №ſí º 、sm.№ NZÝ,},{s})§§š, º.:sýry,}' ºs {§§§ ©~* ſ; ,∞ºè: º §§§ la A\ **-- - .*. --- • * ~ :-t a :S& s § º º; # º f # J ~ t # % §§ N º, º §§§ º LEFºes - We cannot, if our life depended on it, remember where we first saw the greatest author of the day-nor when, within three or four years, we first shook the “great saptain of the age” by the hand; but the memory of that moment, which revealed to our delighted young gaze the mountebank in all his glory of grimace, is as fresh within us, may, more so, than if it were only a fruition of the last past hour, . The recollection of an event, one of the most weighty and influential, perhaps, of our whole life, which took place some ten years ago, or thereabout, has almost departed from us; we cannot, mentally, and without a blunder, con it over fact by fact in regular order, as we often do the first exhibition of Legerdemain that we ever witnessed;—we see only disjointed portions of it huddled confusedly together—the shadow of the event, vague and indistinct as the morning vapor, ſlits occasionally before is * ...A -Yº º - *, r*.* *****...* - "et -j-4 -e-...- ** *N--- `--j ** * - *-*. ~ cº, ºf I.EGER DEMAIN. our mind’s eye, but the substance itself is almost buried in oblivion ;-while every feature of that seeming magician, who swallowed ſire—kept it alive and brilliant below the surface of water, enacted other ſeats of apparent dominion over the e.ements, caused dumb ſigures to give proper answers to all sorts of questions,—padlocked an urchin’s cheek, -and in a humdred ways cheated our eyes, before we had well worn out our second suit of boy’s clothes, is as well remembered, as though we had never ceased to look upon him. He has long since been dead —his body is no more; but in an instant we can conjure up his image, as he stood before us, smiling contem- tedly, while bathing his hands in molten lead | The very order of the wom- ders he performed has not yet escaped us, and we doubt not, but that should we live to be gray-headed, we shall ever be able to tell the color of his eyes, —the precise position of a mole which he had on his face,—the first, second, third, fourth, and so on, up to the twentieth feat which he exhibited. He was an itimerant quack doctor’s Jack Pudding, a mountebank, as we after- wards ascertained; but, at that time, we had not the least idea of who or what he could be. It was evident, to our unpractised eye, that he was not a mere mortal; for, no man, as we thought, innocent as we were, could by any possibility conjure a shilling, which we held fast in our hand, into one of our little school-ſellows’ pockets, or make a haberdasher’s shop of his mouth, and draw from it dozens upon dozens of yards of ribbons of all colors, and at the option of those around him; we could not conceive that human flesh could withstand red-hot iron, or that any power short of witchcraft could re- move a thing from before our eyes, which were all the time earnestly fixed on it, without our seeing its motion. What virtue was there, we reasoned thus, in “Hiccus doctius !” when uttered by the lips of another ? But no sooner did he pronounce those mysterious words, than money danced about as if it possessed life. Would “Crimkum Bovis, Domine Jovis ‘’’ restore a chicken to life after its head was cut off, were the phrase to come from any but him " It was clearly impossible. What could he be then Certainly not a mere mortal; and if not—what was he " Here we were as much involved and puzzled in conjecture, as a grave philosopher upon some learn- ed and abstruse problem. The feat which mystified us most was this:— He apparently devoured a piece of raw meat, and then actually, as it seemed to us, swallowed a quantity of fire, as he said, to dress it—thus making his stomach its own cook, and his inside, a kitchen Remembering, as we do, the delight we felt at this, our first glance at Legerdemain, and the pleasure which we afterwards derived on sundry occasions during the youthful period of our life, from similar, but still more astonishing and scientific exhibitions, as well as the gratification it frequently afforded us, when a boy, to play off certain feats of conjuring, which we had 'earned from a highly-talented professor ; and knowing, as we well do, that the youthful mind is, as ours once was, fond of this sort of recreations, we LEGER DEMAIN. shall bestow even more than our usual pains in making this article as rich and complete as can be consistent with the nature of our work. We thmk that it would be by no means rash in us to pledge ourselves, that there is no superior treatise on Legerdemain to be obtained; it is true, that there are a few more bulky ones, but they contain so much useless matter, and accounts of tricks which it is impossible to perform at all, or, at any rate, by the rude, antiquated instructions which they afford, that one half of them is useless. The following pages will, we trust, be found to contain everything that is valuable in this art, unencumbered with dross. We have brought a tolerable share of knowledge on this matter, to the preparation of “Feats of Legerdemain;” we have also gleaned the cream of several old and scarce works, and translated many choice recreations from foreign publications on this subject. Several friendly contributions have been afforded to us; and what is of the greatest value, we have been favored with the assistance of some eminent and highly popular professors of the art; so that, we are cm- abled to present to our young readers a collection of conjuring tricks, which is at once copious and select. Our object has been, not only to facilitate the acquisition of such a variety of amusing feats, as will render him, who is enabled to exhibit them, a parlor magician, but also to instruct our young readers in the mode of performing several master-pieces of Legerdemain, which require considerable agility, and expensive apparatus, so that they may understand the means of effecting the apparent wonders displayed by the public professors of the art. In addition to the Feats of Legerdemain, we have devoted several of our pages to descriptions of various Autoniata and Androides, which have been exhibited to the public. The Marion- mettes, or figures, whose motions are governed by strings, are too simple for a lengthened notice : it is true, that, among the ancients, they were deemed of importance sufficient to be exhibited in their public shows, but they are now mere toys, of which every lad knows the construction; for there are few who have not at one time or other possessed, played with, and dissected a pasteboard harlequin, or a bleeding nun. An improvement has lately been made on these juvenile Marionettes, which, while we are on this subject, is perhaps deserving of notice. The limbs, body, and head of a comic figure, are drawn and colored on a piece of paper, cut out, and gummed separately to a piece of card of similar dimensions; they are then united by bits of thread, which, acting as hinges, suffer them to play loosely, and in various directions, when the body is moved. A piece of dark twine is fastened, by its middle, to the back of the body; the ends are tied, by a boy, just below his two knees; he sits, on a low stool, in a dark place, with a light on the ground, a little in front of him—the spectators standing at Some distance from the light. By moving his knees quickly to and from each other, a variety of grotesque motions is given to the Marionnette, which dances, apparently, without assistance. 152 - LEGERDEMAIN. We doubt not but that this part of the work will be a favorite amuse ment with our readers, and that it will afford much innocent amusement during the long evenings of winter, around the comfortable parlor fire, to many a little social circle. Such is our end and intent; and we assure those who amuse themselves, whether alone or in society, with these Feats of Legerdemain, that they are indulging only in what is often instructive, generally agreeable, and always innocent. We must detain our readers from the practical instructions, to make a few more observations, which are necessary, as well on our own behalf as for their benefit. We wish it to be remembered, that in addition to the matter contained under this title, many excellent scientific recreations, which will be accounted capital conjuring tricks, are to be found in the preceding pages, among the Chemical, Arithmetical, and Optical Amusements, and elsewhere in the work; where they are more properly placed than they would be here; and to these we take leave to refer those who have an in- climation to become “Magiciens de Societe.” THE POIS EID PEN NY. Place a smooth card on the tip of the middle finger of your left hand, and on it, nicely balanced, and with its centre exactly over your finger’s point, a penny-piece. Then, by a smart fillip with the middle finger of your right hand, you may strike away the card from under the penny, leaving the lat- ter poised on the tip of your finger. A very little practice will enable you to do this trick without ever failing. The card must be carefully struck, so as to drive it straight off the finger; if you fillip it upward, it will, of course, take the penny with it. (Vide cut at head.) wATER BEw ITCHED. Pour some water into a plate, light a bit of loosely-crumpled paper, and throw it into a glass; then turn the glass upside down, with the burning paper in it, in the plate, and the water will gradually rise from the plate into the glass, until the latter becomes half full, so that the surface of the water it contains is much higher than that of what is left in the plate FIRE UN DER WATER, Fasten a small bit of wood across the mouth of a glass, stick therein a piece of candle lighted, and, with a steady hand, convey the mouth to the surface of the water; then push it carefully down, and the candle will burn under the water; you may even bring the candle up again lighted. In the same manner, you may put a handkerchief, rolled tightly together, and it will not be wet. LE GERD. EMAIN 153 The principal art in performing this trick, consists in the nicety of bringing the mouth of the glass exactly level with the surface of the water; for, if you put it in the least on one side, the water will rush in, and con- sequently put out the candle, or, in the other case, wet the handkerchief; so that a nice eye and steady hand are necessarily requisite for this per- formance. THE SENTINE L E G G , Lay a looking-glass upon an even table; take a fresh egg, and shake it for sometime, so that the yolk may be broken and mixed up with the white. You may then, with a steady hand, balance it on its point, and make it stand on the glass. This it would be impossible to do while the egg was in its natural state. TH E B RIDGE OF KNIVE S. To erect the bridge of knives, you must first place three glasses, or small cups at the corners of a supposed triangle, and about the length of one of the knives you use distant from each other, upon a table, the floor, or any even surface. Then take three knives, and arrange them upon the glasses in the manner represented by the cut. The blade of No. 1 (as you may perceive by inspecting the engrav- ing) goes over that of No. 2, and the łade of No.2 passes across that of No. 3, which rests on that of No. 1. The knives being placed in this position, their blades will support each other. EATA BLE CAND LE-ENDS. Peel some large apples that are rather of a yellow tint; cut several |. out of them in the shape of a candle-end, round, of course, at the jottom, and square at the top; in fact, as much as possible, like a candle that has burnt down within an inch or so. Then, cut some slips out of the insides of sweet almonds, fashion them as much in the shape of sperma- ceti wicks as you can, stick them into your mock candles, light them for ar instant, so as to make their tops black, blow them out again, and they are ready for use. When you produce them, light them, (the almond will readily take fire, and flame for a few moments,) put them into your mouth, shew and swallow them one after another. This may well be called the juggler’s dessert. (ſ LEGERDEMAIN. THE, LITTL E FLOATING B E A CON. Fasten a piece of lead to the end of a candle which has keen half burnt ; place it very gently in the water, so that it may find its proper equilibrium; them light it, and it will burn to the end without sinking. THE RINGS AND RIB bons. Take two pieces of ribbon, precisely alike in length, breadth, and color; double each of them, separately, so that their ends meet; then tie them to- gether very neatly, with a bit of silk of their own color, by the middle, or crease made in doubling them. This must all be dome beforehand. When you are going to exhibit this trick, pass some rings on the doubled ribbous, and give the two ends of one ribbon to one person to hold, and the two ends of the other to another. Do not let them pull hard, or the silk will break, and your trick be discovered by the rings falling on the ground, on account of the separation of the ribbons. Request the two persons to approach each other, and take one end from each of them, and without their perceiving it, return to each of them the end which the other had previously held. By now giving the rings, which appeared strung on the ribbon, a slight pull, you may break the silk, and they will fall into your hand. THE THUM B-STRING . This is a very simple trick, but by performing it quickly, you may surprise and puzzle a spectator very considerably. Wind a piece of string round your thumb, thus:—Let one end of it (a) drop between the thumb and fore-finger of your left hand; then wind the other part, which you retain in your right hand, two or three times round your thumb; next, make a little loop (b) with the same end, which hold between your finger and thumb. Now let go the end, (c) and take hold of the end, (a) which you must have left about six or eight inches long, and you may make a spectator fancy you pass it through the loop, and take hold of it again, when so passed through, in the twinkling of an eye. To increase the surprise, you may make the loop as small as possible. This apparent piece of manual dex- terity is performed by passing that end of the string marked a, as quickly as possible round the top of the thumb, so as to come between the fore-finger and thumb : it will thus get into the loop, and you will seem to have passed the end through it. LEGERDEMAIN. 155 WIN E U L ON WATER. Half fil I glass with water, throw a bit of the crumb of a loaf into it, about the size of a nut, pour some wine lightly on the bread, and you will see the water at the bottom of the glass, and the wine floating at the top of it. THE CONJUROR’s JOKE. Take a ball m each hand, and stretch your hands as far as you can, one from the other; then state that you will contrive to make both the balls come into either hand, without bringing the hands near each other. If an one dispute your power of doing this, you have no more to do, than to lay one ball down upon the table, turn yourself, and take it up with your other hand. Thus both the balls will be in one of your hands, without their ap- proaching each other. THE PERILous Go BLET. To fill a glass with water, so that no one may touch it without spilling all the Water: Fill a common wine-glass or goblet with water, and place upon it a bit of paper, so as to cover the water and edge of the glass; put the palm of your hand on the paper, and taking hold of the glass with the other, suddenly invert it on a very smooth table, and gently draw out the paper; the water will remain suspended in the glass, and it will be impossible to move the glass, without spilling all the water. THE EN CHANTED COCK. Bring a cock into a room with both your hands close to his wings, and . hold them tight; put him on a table, and point his beak down as straight as possible; then let any one draw a line, with a piece of chalk, directly from its beak, and all the noise you can possibly make will not disturb him, for some time, from the seeming lethargy, which that position you have laid him in has effected. TO LIGHT A CAN DLE BY SM OK. E. When a candle is burnt so long as to leave a tolerably large wick, blow it out; a lense smoke, which is composed of hydrogen and carbon, will immediately arise. Then, if another candle, or lighted taper, be applied to the utmost verge of this smoke, a very strange phenomenon will take place; the flame of the lighted candle will be conveyed to that just blown out, as if it were borne on a cloud, or, rather, it will seem like a mimic flash ct light wing proceeding at a slow rate. ºlº LEGERD EMAIN. THE WONDERFUL RE-ILLUMINATION. After having exhibited the trick of lighting a candle by smoke, privately put a bit of paper between your fingers, and retire to one corner of the room with a single candle, and pass the hand, in which you hold the paper, several times slowly over the candle, until the paper takes fire; then imme- diately blow the candle out, and pre- sently, pass your hand over the snuff, and relight it with the paper You may then crumple the paper, at the same time extinguishing the flame, by squeezing it suddenly, without burning yourself. If this trick be performed dexterously, it is a very good ome. It is not necessary for the performance of this trick that all the other lights In the room should be extinguished; in fact, the trick is more liable to a discovery in a dark room, than in one where the candles are burning, on account of the light thrown-out by the paper while it is burning, previous to the re-illumination. * TO SUSPEND A RING BY A BURNT TH R E A D. The thread having been previously soaked two or three times in common salt and water, tie it to a ring, not larger than a wedding ring. When you apply the flame of a candle to it, though the thread burn to ashes, it will yet sustain the ring. THE ANIMATED SIX PEN CE, To make a sixpence leap out of a pot. This is done by means of a long black horse-hair, fastened to the rim of a sixpence, by a small hole driven through it. This feat should be done by night, with a candle placed be: tween the spectators and the operator, their eyes being thereby hindered . from discerning the deception. THE FASCR N ATE O B J R D, Take any bird, and lay it on a table; then wave a small feather over its eyes, and it will appear as dead, but taking the feather away, it will re. vive again. Let it lay hold of the stem part of the feather, and it will twist and turn like a parrot; you may likewise roll it about, on the table, just as you please LEGERD ENIA (N 'TO LIFT A BOTTLE WITH A STRAYW. Take a straw, and having bent the thicker end of it in a sharp angle, as the figure subjoined, put this curved end into a bottle, so that the bent part may rest against its side; you may then take the other end and lift up the bot- tle by it, without breaking the straw, and this will be the more readily accomplished as the angular part of the straw approaches nearer to that which comes out of the bottle. It is necessary, in order to succeed in this feat to be particularly careful in choosing a * stout straw, which is neither broken nor | bruised; if it have been previously bent or ,-r]: - | T- damaged, it is unfit for the purpose 3-e=?f====- of performing this trick, as it will be too weak in the part so bent, or damaged, to support the bottle. THE MOVING PYRA MID. Roll up a piece of paper, or other light substance, and privately put into it any small insect, such as a lady-bird, or beetle; them, as the creature will naturally endeavour to free itself from captivity, it will move its covering towards the edge of the table, and when it comes there, will immediately return, for fear of falling; and thus, by moving backward and forward, will excite much diversion to those who are ignorant of the cause. THE PAPER FURN A C E. Enclose a bullet in paper, as smoothly as possible, and suspend it above the flame of a lamp or candle; you will soon see it begin to melt and fall, drop by drop, through a hole which it will make in the paper; but the pa- per, except the hole mentioned, will not be burnt. The art of performing this trick consists in using a smooth round bullet, and enclosing it in the paper with but few folds or uneven places. THE BOTTL E E J E CTMENT. Fill a small white glass bottle, with a very narrow neck, full of wine; place it in a glass vase, which must previously have sufficient water in it to rise above the mouth of the bottle. Immediately, you will perceive the wine rise, in the form of a little column, toward the surface of the water, and the water will, in the meantime, begin to take the place of the wine at the bot- Iom of the bottle. The cause of this is, that the water is heavier than the wine, which it displaces, and forces to rise toward the surface. l:". A ..º's twº ºr *s * - A *.*.*, *, LEGER DEMAIN. : |:H ; THE BALAN CEI) STICR, Procure a piece of wood about the length of your hand, half an inch hick, and twice as broad; within a short distance of one end of this piece, thrust in the points of the blades of two penknives of equal weight, in such a manmer, that one of them may incline to one side, the second to the other, as represented by the cut in the margin. If its other ex- tremity be placed on the tip of the finger, the stick will keep itself up- right without falling; and if it be made to incline, it will raise itself again and recover its former situ- ation. This is a very pretty per- formance, and, if properly man- aged, cannot fail to excite some surprise in the minds of those who behold it for the first time, as the knives, instead of appearing to balance the stick, which they in fact do, will rather appear to increase the difficulty of the feat. STORM AND CAL M. Pour water into a glass until it is nearly three parts full; then almost fill it up with oil; but, be sure to leave a little space between the oil and the top of the glass. Tie a bit of string round the glass, and fastem the two ends of another piece of string to it, one on each side, so that, when you take hold of the middle of it to liſt up the glass, it may be about a foot from your hand. Now swing the glass to and fro, and the oil will be smooth and unruffled, while the surface of the water beneath it will be violently agitated. THE TRAVE LLING E G G. Take a goose’s egg, and, after opening and cleansing it, put a bat into the shell; glue it fast on the top, and the bat will cause the egg to move about in a manner that will excite much astonishment. THE DO U BL, ED COIN. Half fill a glass of water, and put a shilling or a sixpence into it; cover the glass with a plate, upon which, place one hand, while you hold the glass with the other; turn the glass upside down, so that none of the water may escape; place it on a table, and you will see the coin, at the bottom, larger than it is in reality, and another will appear, of the matural size, a ittle above it. º i. LEGERD ENIAIN. - 1.59 THE TOPER’s TRIPOD. A trick similar to the Bridge of Knives may be performed by three tobacco-pipes, in the following manner:—Procure three common tobacco- pipes; place the hollow part of the bowl of one of them on the table, as No. 1, and let its stem be supported by another, placed at No. 2; then put the other pipe across Nos. 1 and 2, (as No. 3,) so that its bowl end may ſ support the stem of No. 2, and its own stem rest on the bowl end of No. 3. This little tripod, although constructed of such brittlematerials, will, if careſul- ly put together, support a jug of foaming October. When used to show that it will support a weight, the three bowls should be brought considerably closer together than as represented in the marginal cut, so that the bottom of the jug may rest upon all three of the stems. T H E KN OTT ED THRE AD. Considerable amusement, not unmixed with wonder, may be occasioned among a party of ladies, by a clever performance of this trick. It is most frequently performed by a female, but the effect of it is considerably increas- ed when it is displayed by a boy. A piece of calico, muslim, or linen, is taken in the left hand, a needle is threaded in the presence of the spectators, ſ and the usual, or even a double or treble knot made at the extremity of one of the ends of it. The operator commences his work by drawing the needle and the thread in it quite through the linem, notwithstanding the knot, and continues to make several stitches in like mammer successively. i The mode of performing this seeming wonder, is as follows: a bit of thread, about a quarter of a yard long, is turned once round the top of the middle finger of the right hand, upon which a thmble is them placed to keep It secure. This must be done privately and the thread kept concealed, while a needle is threaded with a bit of thread of a similar length. The thread in the needle must have one of its ends drawn up nearly close, and be concealed between the fore-finger and thumb; the other should hang down nearly as long as, and by the side of the thread, which is fastened under the thimble, so that these two may appear to be the two ends of the thread The end of the piece that is ſastened under the thimble is then knotted, and the performer begins to sew, by moving his hand quickly after he has ta- ken up the stitch. It will appear as though he actually passed the knotted thread through the cloth. || | LEGERDEMAIN. THE BOTTLE IMPS. | --- #E ‘Set three little hollow figures of glass, an inch and a half high, representing imps, or IIarlequin, Co- Żſº lumbine, and Pantaloon, %2% % % 3 %ft Fº which may be obtained at iſfift | & ». Vº the glass-blowers, with a #||||||||||É7* & sº small hole in each of their }}}}\; § : legs. Immerge them into --- º water contained in a glass bottle, which should be º-E s about fifteen inches high, š. and covered with a blad. -> der tied fast over the top. A small quantity of air must be left between the bladder and the surface of the water. When you think fit to command the figures to go down, press your hand hard upon the top, and they will imme- jº diately sink; when you would have them rise to the top, take your hand away, and they will float up. By these means, you may make them dance in the middle of the glass at your pleasure. T H E E IRD IN THE BOX. Get a box made with a false lid, on which glue some bird-seed; privately put a bird into it, under the false lid; then show it, and it will seem to be full of seed. Put on the true lid, and say,+“I will command all the seed out of this box, and order a living bird to appear.” Then, take off the covers together, and the bird will be seen. THE MULTIPLYING MIRROR, This feat must be performed with a looking-glass made on purpose ; the manner of making it is this:–First, make a hoop, or fillet of wood or horn, about the size of a halſ-crown piece in circumference, and about a quarter of an inch in thickness. In the middle, fasten a bottom of wood or brass, and bore in it several small holes, about the size of peas; then open one side of this bottom, set in a piece of crystal-glass, and fasten it in the hoop close to LEGER. DEMAIN. 16] deceive the spectators. Take a hollow bodkin, (or, if you prefer it, a dag may slip into the handle as soon as the point is held upward. Seem to thrust it into your forehead, (or, if a dagger, into your bosom,) then, after showing some appearance of pain, pull away your hand suddenly, holding the point downward, and it will fall out, and appear mot to have been thrust into the haſt; but, immediately afterward, throw the bodkin, or dagger, into your lap or pocket, and pull out another plain one like it, which will completely the bottom. Take a quantity of quicksilver, and put as much into the hoop as will cover the bottom; then let into it another piece of crystal-glass, fitted to it; cement the sides, that the quicksilver may not run out, and the appa- ratus is complete. One side will reflect the beholder’s face as a common looking-glass; in the other it will be multiplied according to the number of holes in the wood or brass. THE BOGLE BOD KIN. ger,) so that the blade THE PRAN CING D R A G O ON. Cut out the figure of a Dragoon, mounted, in wood; let the horse be m a prancing position : put the hind- legs on the edge of a table, and it will, of course, fall off; but you can prevent it from so doing, by adding to its weight. For this purpose, you must have a little hole made in the centre of its belly, into which run one end of a piece of wire, so bent backward, that the other end of it, to which a weight is fixed, may be under the table . The Dragoon will not only stand sate, but you may put him in motion, and he will prance up and down, without there being the least dam- ger of his falling. . The wire should be considerably longer in propor- tion to the size of the horse than is represented in the engraving in the margin, if you wish the figure to come much below the edge of the table when prancing. If it be no longer than that shown in the cut, the horse’s fore-legs can only descend to a distance equal to that between the weight at the end of the wire. and the * =r-sº. ſ, EGER DEMA IN. bottom of the table on which the figure is set. In fact, the Dragoon nay be made to descend lower, and rise higher, in proportion to the length of the wire, if it be properly curved and fixed in the figure. THE MYSTERIOUS BOTTL E. Pierce a few holes, with a glazier’s diamond, in a common black bottle; place it in a vase or jug of water, so that the neck only is above the surface. Then, with a funnel, fill the bottle, and cork it well, while it is in the jug or vase. Take it out, and notwithstanding the holes in the bottom, it will not leak; wipe it dry, and give it to some person to uncork. The moment the cork is drawn, to the party’s astonishment, the water will begin to run out of the bottom of the bottle. THE HALF-6Rown UPHELD. Privately cut the rim of the edge which is raised to protect the face of a half-crown, so that a little bit of the silver may stick up; take the coin in your right hand, and by pressing it with your thumb against a door or wainscot, the bit that sticks up will enter the wood, and thus support the half-crown. THE E O WIN G B E A U , Make a figure, resembling a man, of any substance, exceedingly light, such as the pith of the alder tree, which is soft, and can easily be cut into any form : then provide for it an hemispherical base, of some very heavy substance, such as the half of a leaden bullet, made very smooth on the convex part. Cement the figure to the plane part of the henisphere; and, in whatevel position it is placed, when leſt to itself, it will rise upright. In this manner were construct- ed those small figures, called Prussians, sold at Paris: they were formed into battalions, and being made to fall down, by drawing a rod over them, they immediately started up again as soon as it was removed. We think, that the figure of a beau, or master of the ceremonies, is much more appropriate for this trick, than that of a soldier; as the latte: seldom bows, while, by the former, the most profound inclimations are often performed By moving it once downward a succession of bows may be produced. LEGERD ENIAIN. THE WONDERFUI, WAFERs. On each side of a table-knife, place, in the presence of your company, three wafers. Take the knife by the handle, and turn it over two or three times, to show that the waſers are all on. Desire some person to take off one wafer from one side of the blade; turn the knife two or three times again, and there will appear only two wafers on each side; remove another wafer, turn the knife as before, and there will appear only one wafer on k. each side; take the third wafer away, turn the knife as before twice or thrice, and there will appear to be no wafer on either side. After a mo- mentary pause, turn the knife again two or three times, and three wafers will appear on each side. The secret of this capital trick consists in using waſers of the same size and color, and turning the knife, so that the same side is constantly pre- sented to the view, and the waſers are taken off that side, one by one. The three waſers will thus remain untouched on the other side, so that when you have first made it appear that there are no waſers on either side, you may, apparently, show three on each, by the same means. The way to turn the knife is as follows; when you liſt it up, turn it in your hand, with your finger and thumb, completely round, until the side that was uppermost when you lifted it, comes uppermost again. This is done in an instant, and is not perceptible, if adroitly managed. THIE COUNT E R C H A N G E D. Take two papers, three inches square each, divided into two folds, of three equal parts on each side, so as each folded paper remain one inch square; then glue the back part of the two together, as they are folded, and not as they are opened, so that both papers seem to be but one, and which side soever you open, it may appear to be the same ; if you have a sixpence in one hand, and a counter in the other, show one, and you may, by turn. ing the paper, seem to change it. THE CLJT L.A. CIE JOIN ED, Concoal a piece of lace in your hand; then produce another piece of the same pattern; double the latter, and put the fold between your fore-finger and thumb, with the piece which you have previously concealed, doubled in the same manner; pull out a little of the latter, so as to make a loop, and desire one of the company to cut it asunder. If you have conveyed the con. cealed piece of lace so dexterously as to be undetected, with the outer be- tween your Jhumb and fore-finger, the spectators wiłł, naturally enough, think you have really cut the latter; which you unay seem to make whole 164 f, E GER DEMAIN again, while repeating some conjuring words, and putting away the two snds of the piece that is actually cut. THE WIZARD’s chARIOT. This trick will call your mechanical abilities into play. First, get a piece of board, planed quite smooth; fasten a cross-piece under it, to support it in - the position indicated by * the cut. At the upper edge of theslanted piece, fix two little pulleys, the use of which may, at a glance, be seen by the engraving. Next, con- struct two little coaches, carts, or classical trium- phal chariots; let the wheels of one of them be considerably larger than those of the other; they must, however, be pre- cisely the same weight, or, if not, you must load one with shot to make it equal, in this respect, to the other. Do your work so neatly, that the wheels of each may run equally well on their respec- tive axles. Next provide two lumps of lead, which must tally with each other to a scruple, and be sufficiently heavy to pull the chariots up the plane. Fix a piece of thread to the front of each of the chariots; pass these threads through the pulleys, and fastem one of your weights to each of them. The threads, be it reimarked, should be long enough only to reach from the chariots, when placed at the foot of the inclined board, through the pulleys to the leads; and the board should be so inclined, that the distance from the ulleys to the ground be precisely the same as that of the chariots to the pul- I. Your apparatus being thus ready, weigh the chariots together, and afterwards the leads in the presence of the spectators, that they may be satisfied they are equal, and let them inspect your apparatus, to see that all is fair : then start your chariots, and, notwithstanding the equality of their weights, and the equality of those of the leads, one of them will considerably outstrip the other; the chariot with the highest wheels will always be the winner of the race. This mechanical truth is unknown to many, and may if properly managed, produce much surprise. § #% -: flº §§§ ſº #lſº º: §le - Słę w E--> --- :-- Tºw THE SIMPLE DECEPTION. Stick a little wax upon your thumb, take a by-stander by the fingers, show Rim a sixpence, and tell him you will put the same into his hand; then wring it down hard with your waxed thumb, and, using many words, look him in the face; suddenly take away your thumb, and the coin will adhere to it; then close nis hand it will seem to him that the sixpence remains; now tell him to open his hand, and, if you perform the feat cleverly, to his great astonishment, he will find nothing in it. PHILOSOPHY CH E A TEI). This feat is really an excellent one, and has astonished crowds of specta- tors in London, and different parts of the United Kingdom. It was one of the favorites of a late popular professor, and is now first promulgated. Beſore you perform it in public, you must practice it, until you are quite perfect, in private, for it would be a pity to spoil its effect by making a blum- der in it. Begin by stating very seriously, what is a well-known fact, that if a bucket full of water be hurled round his head by a man, who is sufficiently strong, none of the water will fall out. If this be at all discredited, be pre- pared not only to support your assertion, but to carry the point still further, by placing a tumbler full of any liquid in the inside of a broad hoop, which you hold in your hand by a small piece of string fixed to it, and twirling it round at your side. If you do this with velocity, although the tumbler, in the circles made by the hoop, is frequently quite bottom upward, it will neither fall from the hoop, nor will any of the water be spilt. To do this, however, requires even more practice than the trick which it prefaces; as, although there is no difficulty in it while the hoop is in rapid motion, yet there is some danger until you are rendered expert by practice, of the tumbler’s falling, when you begin to put the hoop in motion, and when you wish to stop it. If, therefore, you are not perſectly capable P 166 LEGERD ENIAIN. w of doing it, state the fact only, which some or other of your auditors will most probably support, as it is pretty generally known. You now go on to say, that the air, under the water in the glass, when it is topsy-turvy, keeps it in ; and that, upon the same principle, if you can turn your hand, upon which you place a piece of thin wood, (about one inch broad, and six inches long,) sufficiently quick, although the back be uppermost, the air will actually keep the wood up against the palm of your hand, without any support. This they will be readily inclined to believe; the more philosophical the party is, the more easy may you lead them to credit your assertion. They will, however, doubt your being pos- sessed of sufficient manual dexterity to perform it quick enough. We must now tell you how it is to be done :—Lay the piece of wood across the palm of your left hand, which keep wide open, with the thumb and all the fingers far apart, lest you be suspected of supporting the wood with them. Next, take your left wrist in your right hand, and grasp it tightly, for the pur- pose, as you state, of giving the hand more steadiness. Now, suddenly turn the back of your left hand uppermost, and, as your wrist moves in your right nand, stretch out the fore-finger of your right hand, and as soon as the wood comes undermost, support it with such fore-finger. You may now shake the hand, and, after a moment or two, suffer the wood to drop. It is two to one but the spectators will admit it to be produced by the action of the air, as you had previously stated, and try to do it themselves; but, of course, they must, umless you have performed the feat so awkwardly as to be discovered, fail in its performance. If you have no objection to reveal the secret, you can do it again, and, while they are gravely philosophi- zing upon it suddenly liſt up your hand, (vide cut,) and expose the trick. This will, doubtless, create much amusement. Observe that in doing this feat, you must keep your ſingers so low, that no one can see the palm of your left hand; and LEGERDIEMAIN. 167 move your finge, so carefully, that its action may not be detected; and if it be not, you may rest satisfied that its absence from round the wrist of the left hand will not be discovered, some of the fingers being naturally sup- posed to be under the coat; so that, if the spectators only see two or ever one, they will imagine the others are beneath the cuff. There is one other observation necessary before we conclude; it is this, when you have turned your hand over, do not keep the stick too long upheld, lest the spectatols should take hold of your hands, and discover the trick; before their aston- ishment has ceased, adroitly remove your fore-finger, and suffer the stick to fall to the ground. THE LOCKED J AW, A lock is made for the purpose, similar to the cut ; that side of its bow marked A, must be fix- ed; the other, B, must be pinned to the body of the lock, at E; so that it may play to and fro with A. ease. This side of the bow should have a leg, with two notches filed on the inner side, which § must be so contrived, |= that one may lock or , hold the two sides of the §7 bow as close together §7 as possible, and the oth- er notch hold them a proportionable distance asunder, so that when locked upon the cheek they may neither pinch too hard nor yet hold it so slightly that it may be drawn off. Let there be a key, D, to it; and, lastly, let the bow have several notches filed in it, so that the place of the partition, when the lock is shut, may not be suspected. You must get a person to hold a shilling between his teeth; then take another, and, with your left hand, offer to set it edge-wise between a 168 LEGERDEMAIN. second person’s teeth, pretending that your intent is to turn both into which of their mouths they please. This will afford you a fair opportunity of put- ting on your lock. THE RESTORED THREAD, Take two pieces of thread, one foot in length each; roll one of them round, like a small pea, which put between your left fore-finger and thumb. Now, hold the other out at length, between the fore-finger and thumb of each hand; then let some one cut the same asunder in the middle; when that is done, put the tops of your two thumbs together, so that you may, with less suspicion, receive the thread which you hold in your right hand into your left, without opening your left finger and thumb. Then, holding these two pieces as you did before, let them be cut asunder in the middle also, and conveyed again as before, until they be very short; then roll all the ends together, and keep that ball of thread before the other in the left hand, and with a knife, thrust the same into a candle, where you may hold it until it be burnt to ashes; pull back the knife with your right hand, and leave the ashes, with the other ball, between your fore-finger and thumb of your left hand, and with the two thumbs and fore-fingers together, rub the ashes, and at length, draw out that thread which has been all this time between your fore-finger and thumb. THE LONG PUDIOING, . The following is a famous feat among those mountebanks who travel the country with quack doctors. This pudding must be made of twelve or thir- teen little tin hoops, so as to fall one through another, and little holes should be made at the biggest end, so that it may not hurt your mouth : hold it privately in your =l left hand, with the whole end upper- most, and, with your right hand, take a ball out of your pocket, and say, “if there be any old lady that is out of conceit with herself, because her neighbours deem her not so young as she would be thought, let her come to me, for this ball is a certain remedy; then seem to put the ball into your left hand, but let it slip into your lap, and clap your pudding into your mouth, which will be thought to be the ball that you showed them; then decline your head, open your mouth, and the pudding will slip down at its full length, with your right hand, you may strike it into your mouth again : after having done this three or four times, you may discharge it into your hand, and put § LEGERD ENIAIN. i # into your pocket without any suspicion, by making three or four wry faces after it, as though it had been too large for your throat. THE E G G-BOX, The egg-box is made in the shape of two bee-hives, placed together, as A : the immer shell B, is covered with half the shell of a real egg; the upper shell C, is of the same shape, but larger, being, in fact, the lid or upper part of the box, of which D is the lower. Place C, which is the outward shell, upon B, and both upon D, which arrangement puts all in readiness for the performance of the trick. Now call for an egg, and bid all the oystanders look at it, to see that it is a real one. Then take off the upper part, B C, with your fore- finger and thumb, and placing the egg in the box, say, “Ladies and gentlemen, you see it fairly, in the box;” and, uncovering it again, say, “You shall see me fairly take it out;” putting it into your pocket in their sight. Now open your box again, and say, “There's nothing;” close your hand about the middle of the box, and taking C off without B, say, “ There is the egg again;” which will appear to the spectators to be the same that you put in your pocket; then, put C on again, and taking C, together with the immer shell, B, off again, say, “It is gone again;” and such will appear to be the fact. THE OBEDIENT WATCH. Borrow a watch from any person in company, and request the whºle to stand round you. Hold the watch up to the ear of the first in the circle, and command it to go; then demand his testimony to the fact. Remºve it to the ear of the next, and enjoin it to stop; make the same request to that person, and so on throughout the entire party. Explanation. You must take care, in borrowing the watch, that it be a good ome, and goes well. Conceal in your hand a piece of loadstone, which, so soon as you apply it to the watch, will occasion a suspension of the movements, which a subsequent shaking and withdrawing of the magnet will restore. For this purpose, keep the magnet in one hand, and shift the watch alternately from one |and to the other. .*.*.*&.x. : ******* ***º-> x = x: >†y-S- g-Esſ . 170 LEGERD. EMAIN. THE FLIGHT OF THE RIN G. You may cause a ring to shift from one hand to another, and make it go on any finger required U.S the outer hand, while somebody holds both your ! arms, in order to prevent comricanication between them, by attending to these instructions:–Desire some lady in company to lend you a gold ring, recommending her, at the same time, to make a mark on it, that she may know it again. Have a gold ring of your own, which fastell by a small piece of catgut-string to a watch-barrel, and sew it to the left sleeve of your coat. Take the ring that is given you in your right hand; then putting, with dexterity, the other ring fastened to the watch-barrel, near the entrance of your sleeve, draw it privately to the fingers’ ends of your left hand. During this operation, hide the ring that has been lent to you between the fingers of your right hand, and fasten it dexterously on a little hook, sewed for the purpose, on your waistcoat, and hidden by your coat. After that, show your ring, which hold in your left hand; then ask the company on - which finger of the other hand they wish it to pass. During this interval, and as soon as the answer has been given, put the before-mentioned finger on the little hook, in order to slip the ring on it; at that moment let go the other ring, by opening your fingers. The spring which is in the watch- barrel, being confined no longer, will contract, and make the ring slip under the sleeve, without anybody perceiving it, not even those who hold your arms; as their attention will be occupied to prevent your hands from com- municating. After this operation, show the assembly that the ring is come on the other hand; and make them remark that it is the same that had been lent to you, or that the mark is right. Much dexterity m stbe made use of to succeed in this entertaining trick, that the deception m not be suspected i THE DEMI-AM PUTATION, Provide yourself with two knives, a true and false one, (vide cut,) and when you show this ſeat, put the true knife into , your pocket, and, taking out the false one, place it on your wrist undiscovered; then exhibit it, and you will appear to have nearly severed your arm. THE MUTIILATED HANDYKER CHIEF RESTORED. - This feat, strange as it appears, is very simple; the performer must have a confederate who has two handkerchiefs of the same quality, and with the } º $E=~5 sees LEGERD EMAIN. same mark, one of which he throws upon the table, to perform the feat with. The performer takes care to put this handkerchief uppermost in making a bundle, though he affects to mix them together promiscuously. The person, whom he desires to draw one of the handkerchiefs, naturally takes that which comes first to hand. The performer then desires to shake them again, to embellish the operation; but in so doing, takes care to bring the right handkerchief uppermost, and carefully fixes upon some sim- pleton to draw ; and if he find the person is not likely to take the first that comes to hand, he prevents him from drawing by fixing upon another, under pretence of his having a more sagacious look. When the hand- kerchief is torm, and carefully folded up, it is put under a glass upon a | table placed near a partition. On that part of the table on which the hand- kerchief is deposited, is a little trap, which opens and lets it fall into a drawer. The confederate, concealed behind the curtain, passes his hand under the table, opens the trap, and substitutes the second handkerchief for the first. He then shuts the trap, which so exactly fits the hole it closes, as to deceive the eyes of the most incredulous. If the performer be not possessed of such a table, he must have a second handkerchief in his pocket, and change it by slight of hand. THE DO U B L E FUN N E L. Get two funnels soldered one within the other, so as to appear like one ; pour a little wine into the smaller end of the outside funnel, turn it up, and keep the wine in by placing your thumb at the bottom of the funnel; this must be done privately. Then pour some more wine ** into the broad part of the machine, š drink it off completely ; turn the broad # . end of the fummel downward, to show cº \# that all is gone ; and instantly turning yourself about, pronounce some mystic terms; them withdraw your finger from the narrow end, so as to let the wine between the funnels run out. \! | THE FIRE AND WIN E BOTTLE, Get a tin bottle made with a tube nearly as big as its neck, passing from the bottom of the neck to the bottom of the bottle, in which there must be a hole of a size to correspond with it. Between the tube and the neck of the | LE GERD ENIAIN. Öottle, let there be sufficient space to allow you to pour in some wine which will remain in the bottle outside the tube. Begin the trick by pouring a glass of wine out of the bottle; then place it on the table, over a concealed hole, through which the confederate will thrust a burning fusee into the tube, so that, at your command, fire is emitted from the mouth of the bottle. . As soon as the fire is extinguished, or withdrawn, you can take up the bottle again, and pour out more wine. THE G L O B E BOX. This trick is not inſerior to the best that is shown with boxes. It is done with a box made of four pieces, and a ball as big as may conveniently be contained therein; the ball serves, as the egg does in the egg-box, only to deceive the hand and eye of the spec- tators. This ball, made of wood, or ivory, is thrown out of the box upon the table, for every one to see that it is substantial ; then put the ball into the box, which close up with all the #º: pieces one within another; remove the : --~~~ upper shell with your fore-finger and thumb, and there will appear another of a different color, red, blue, yellow, or any other color you may fancy; this will seem to be another ball, though, in fact, it is no more than a shell of wood, ingeniously turned, and fitted to the box, as you may perceive by the cuts in the margin. L is the outer shell of the globe, taken off the figure M, the top of which represents the ball; N, is an immer shell; Q, the cover of the same ; P, another immer shell; Q, the cover of the same ; R, a third shell; S, that which covers it. These globes may be made with more or less varieties, according to the desire of the practitioner. THIE HATCH E D B LRD. Separate an egg in the middle, as neatly as possible; empty it, and then with a fine piece of paper and a little glue, join the two halves together, Having first put a live canary bird inside it, which will continue unhurt in it for sometime, provided you make a small pin-hole in the shell to supply * 33 - … *. *4 a-1 -º-º-º: ~e?: *P*L*— . . i*-a-a- a a --> * -º-rºse - - & -º- air-wa-->+ yxºs :*~~ ...” **---. A -- * - - " . * * e--" " :* --~~ '• J ~~~~~ *-** * - LEGERDEMAIN. the bird with air : have, also, a whole egg in readiness. Present the two eggs for one to be chosen; put the egg, which contains the bird, next to the person who is to choose, and, for this purpose, be sure to select a lady: she naturally chooses the nearest to her, because, having no idea of the trick to be performed, there is no apparent reason to take the further one : at any rate, if the wrong one be taken, you do not fail in the trick, for you break the egg, and say—“You see that this egg is fair and fresh, madam; so you would have found the other, if you had chosen it. Now, do you choosé to find in it a mouse, or a canary-bird 7 ° She maturally declares for the bird; nevertheless, if she ask for the mouse, there are means to escape : you ask the same question of several ladies, and gather the majority of votes, which, in all probability, will be in favor of the bird, which you then produce. THE PIEN ETRATIVE SHILLIN G. Provide a round tin box, of the size of a large snuff-box, and likewise eight other boxes, which will go easily into each other, and let the least of them be of a size to hold a shilling. Each of these boxes should shut with a hinge, and to the least of them there must be a small lock, fastened with a spring, but which cannot be opened without a key; and observe, that all these boxes must shut so freely, that they may all be closed at once. Place these boxes in each other, with their tops open, in your pocket: then ask a person for a shilling, and desire him to mark it, that it may not be changed: take this piece in one hand, and in the other have another of the same ap- pearance, and, putting your hand in your pocket, you slip the piece that is marked into the leastbox, and, shutting them all at once, you take them out : then, showing the piece you have in your hand, and which the company sup- pose to be the same that was marked, you pretend to make it pass through the box, but dexterously convey it away. You then present the box, for the spectators do not know yet that there are more than one, to any person in company, who, when he opens it, finds another, and another, till he come to the last, but that he cannot open without the key, which you then give him; and, retiring to a distant part of the room, you tell him to take out the shilling himself and see if it be the one marked. This trick may be made more sur- prising by putting the key into the snuff-box of one of the company; which 'ou may do by asking for a pinch of snuff; the key, being very small, will #. concealed among the snuff : when the person, who opens the boxes, asks for the key, tell him that one of his friends has it in his snuff-box. THE MONEY ROX, A piece of money, or a ring, is put into a box, m the presence of a person who holds it; the operator stands at a distance, and bids him shake the box gently, and the piece is heard to rattle inside ; he is desired again to shaké Q. [74 LEGERDEMAIN. it, and then it is not heard to rattle; the third time, it is again heard, but the fourth time it is gone, and is found in the shoe of one of the company. The box must be made on purpose, in such a manner that, in shaking in gently up and down, the piece within is heard; on the contrary, shaking it hard, horizontally, a little spring, which falls on the piece, prevents it from being heard, which makes you imagine it is not within. He who performs the trick, then touches the box, under pretence of showing how to shake it, and, although it is locked, he easily gets out the piece by means of a secret opening, availing himself of that minute to put in a false piece, and to leave the box with the same person, whom he causes to believe that the piece is or is not within, according to the manner the box is shaken : at length, the original piece is found in the shoe of one of the company, either by means of the person being in confederacy, and having a similar piece, or by send- ing another to slip it on the floor: in this last case, it is found on the floor, and the person fixed on is persuaded that it fell from his shoe as he was taking it off. THE SA LAMIAN DE R. An experiment to ascertain the degree of heat it is possible for a man to bear, was made in the month of July, 1828, at the New Tivoli, at Paris, in the presence of a company of about two hundred persons, amongst whom were many professors, savans, and physiologists, who had been especially invited to attend, by the physician Robertson, director of that establishment The man on whom this experiment was made was a Spaniard of Andalusia, named Martemez, aged forty-three. A cylindrical oven, constructed in the shape of a dome, had been heated, for four hours, by a very powerful ſire. At ten minutes past eight, the Spaniard, having on large pantaloons of red flannel, a thick cloak, also of flannel, and a large felt, after the fashion of a straw hat, went into the oven, where he remained, seated on a foot-stool, during fourteen minutes, exposed to a heat of from forty-five to fifty degrees of a metallic thermometer, the gradation of which did not go higher than fifty. He sang a Spanish song while a fowl was roasted by his side. At his coming out of the oven, the physicians found that his pulse beat one hun- dred and thirty-four pulsations a minute, though it was but seventy-two at his going in. The oven being heated anew for a second experiment, the Spaniard re-entered and seated himself in the same attitude, at three- quarters past eight, eat the fowl and drank a bottle of wine to the health of the spectators. At coming out his pulse was a hundred and seventy-six, and indicated a heat of one hundred and ten degrees of Reaumur. Finally, for the third and last experiment, which almost immediately followed the second, he was stretched on a plank, surrounded with lighted candles, and thus put into the oven, the mouth of which was this time closed : he was there nearly five minutes, when all the spectators cried out “Enough, enough 1” and t" **Tºº Tº -.' * * *---- - *-- e. e ~-º-º-º: - | 88 I.E GERD ENIAIN . - … º. - - - +2-s-cº. ..~~ * * faculties than is sufficient to accomplish matters of greater importance. Tha. such a machine really was made, the public had ocular demonstration. The inventor came over to Britain in 1785, and exhibited his automaton to public inspection for more than a year. On his death, it was purchased by M. Maelzel, who paid this country a visit in 1827, when the invention created as much wonder as ever, notwithstanding the vast progress made in mechanical science. The room where it was exhibited had an inner apartment, within which appeared the figure of a 'l'urk, as large as life, dressed after the Turkish fashion, sitting behind a chest of three feet and a half in length, two feet in breadill, and two feet and a half in height, to which it was attached by the wooden seat on which it sat. The chest was placed upon four castors, which, together with the figure, might be moved to any part of the room. On the plain surface formed by the top of the chest, in the centre, was raised an immovable chess-board, of handsome dimensions, upon which the figure had its eyes fixed, its right arm and hand being extended on the chest, and its left arm somewhat raised, as if in the attitude of holding a Turkish pipe, which was originally placed in its right hand. The exhibitor proceeded by wheeling the chest to the entrance of the apartment within which it stood, in front of the spectators. He then opened certain doors contrived in the chest, two in the front and two in the back, at the same time pulling out a long shallow drawer, made to contain the Chess- men, a cushion for the arm of the figure to rest upon, and some counters; two lesser drawers and a green cloth screen, contrived in the body of the figure and its lower parts, were likewise opened, and the Turkish robe which covered them was raised; so that the construction, both of the figure and chest, intentionally was displayed, and the exhibitor introduced a lighted candle into the body of the chest and figure, by which the interior of each was, in a great measure, rendered transparent. The chest was divided by a partition into two equal chambers; that to the right of the figure was the narrowest, and occupied scarcely one third of the body of the chest; it was filled with little wheels, levers, cylinders, and other machinery used in clock-work : that to the left contained two wheels, some small barrels with springs, and two quarters of a circle, placed horizontally. The body and lower parts of the figure contained certain tubes, which appeared to be conductors to the machinery. Aſter a sufficient time, during which each spectator satisfied his scruples and curiosity, the ex- hibitor closed the doors, made some arrangement in the body of the figure, wound up the works with a key inserted into a small opening in the body of the chest, and placed the cushion under the left arm of the figure, which then rested upon it. In playing a game, the automaton made choice of the white men; it like wise gave the first move. It played with the left hand instead of the right, LE GERD. EMAIN. 189 the right hand being constantly fixed on the chest. This slight incongruity proceeded from inadvertence of the inventor, who did not discover his mis- take until the machinery was too far completed to remedy the defect. At à the commencement of a game, the automaton made a motion of the head, as if taking a view of the board; the same motion occurred at the close of the game. In making a move it slowly raised its leſt arm from the cushion - placed under it, and directed it toward the square of the piece to be moved. The arm then returned to its position on the cushion. Its hand and fingers . opened on touching the piece, which it took up and conveyed to any pro- posed square. The motions were performed with perfect correctness, and the anxiety with which the arm acted, especially in the delicate operation of castling, seemed to be the result of spontaneous feeling; bending at the shoulder, elbow, and knuckles, and cautiously avoiding to touch any other ) piece than that which had been moved. On giving check to the king, it moved its head as a signal. When a false move was made by its antagonist, which frequently occurred through curi- Osity to observe in what manner the automaton would act, as for instance, if a knight had been moved like a castle, the automaton smote impa- tiently on the chest with its right hand, replaced the knight in its former square, and would not permit its antagonist to recover his move, but pro- ceeded immediately to move one of its own pieces, thus appearing to pun- ish him for his imattention. It was considered of importance that the person matched against the automaton should be attentive in moving a piece exactly in the centre of a square ; otherwise, the figure, in attempting to lay hold of the piece, might even “ustain some injury in the delicate mechanism of the fingers. If its antagonist hesitated for a considerable time to move a piece, it tapped Smartly on the chest with its right hand, as if testifying impatience at the delay. During the time the automaton was in motion, a low sound of clock work was heard, as if running down, which ceased soon after the arm was reclin- ed on the cushion. The works were wound up at intervals of ten or twelve moves by the exhibitor, who was usually employed pacing up and down the room ; approaching the chest, however, from time to time, on its right side. It was understood that the automaton could not play, unless M. De Kempe- len, or his substitute, was near to direct its moves; but it is very certain that the whole mystery lay in the chest, and that there could be no commex- ion with the ſloor, as the inventor advertised his willingness to exhibit at private houses. To avoid the obstructions frequently occasioned by the inattention of strange antagonists, in moving the pieces required exactly to the centre of squares, a new arrangement was subsequently inade, by which the adversary did not play at the same board with the automaton, but had a chess-board to R. 190 LEGER DEMAIN. º Q-aºss nimself, on which he copied the automaton’s moves, and made his own; while a person who attended at the automaton's board, copied, with due precision, for the automaton, the adversary’s moves. In concluding our account of this extraordinary machine, we must ob- serve that it has been asserted, without contradiction, that, although it beat numerous skilful chess players, in different countries, its moves were directed by a boy concealed within the machinery; so that, in fact, whoever the boy could beat at the game, was sure to be conquered by the automaton. This will show that it is in the power of youth to attain such a mastery over chess, as to render them capable of competing with capital players of a mature age. THE FLUTE PLAYER. The celebrated Vauconson invented an Automaton Flute-player, of which there is a minute description in the Memoirs of the Royal Academy of Sciences at Paris, by which it appears that the figure was about five feet and a half high, and was placed upon a square pedestal, which concealed a portion of the machinery. The air entered the body by three separate pipes, into which it was conveyed by mine pairs of bellows, which expanded and contracted in regular succession, by means of a steel axis turned by clock-work. These bellows performed their functions without any noise, which might have discovered the means of conveying the air into the ma- chine. The three tubes that received the air from the bellows passed into three small reservoirs in the trunk of the figure, where they united, and ascending towards the throat, formed the cavity of the mouth, which ter- minated in two small lips. Within this cavity was a small movable tongue, which, by its motion, at proper intervals, admitted the air or intercepted it in its passage to the flute. The fingers, lips, and tongue, derived their appropriate movements from a steel cylinder, also turned by clock-work. It was divided into fifteen equal parts, which, by means of pegs pressing upon the ends of fifteen different levers, caused the other extremities to ascend. Seven of these levers directed the ſingers, having wires and chains fixed to their ascending extremities, which being attached to the fingers, caused them to ascend in proportion as the other extremity was pressed down by the motion of the cylinder, and vice versa ; thus the ascent or descent of one end of a lever produced a similar ascent or descent in the corresponding fingers, by which one of the holes of the flute was occasionally opened or stopped, as it might have been by a living performer. Three of the levers served to regulate the ingress of the air, being so contrived as to open and shut the three reservoirs above mentioned, by means of valves, so that more or less strength might be given, and a higher or lower note produced. The lips were directed by four levers, one of which opened them to give the air a freer passage; the other contracted them; the third drew them backward; ~ \ ..., LEGER DEMAIN. 19 | mnd the fourth pushed them forward : the lips were projected upon that part of the flute which received the air, and by the different motions already mentioned, properly modified the tune. The remaining lever was employed in the direction of the tongue, which it easily moved, so as to open or shut the mouth of the flute The just succession of the several motions performed by the various parts of the machine, was regulated by the following simple contrivance :—the extremity of the axis of the cylinder terminated, on the right side, by an endless screw, consisting of twelve threads, each placed at tle distance of an eighth of an inch from the other. Above the screw was fixed a piece of copper, and in it a steel pivot, which falling in between the threads of the screw, obliged the cylinder to follow those threads; and thus, instead of turning directly round, it was continually pushed on one side. Hence, if a lever were moved by a peg placed on the cylinder, in any one revolution, it could not be moved by the same peg in the succeeding revolu- tion because the peg would be an eighth of an inch beyond it, by the lateral motion of the cylinder. Thus, by an artificial disposition of these pegs in different parts of the cylinder, the statue was made, by the successive elevation of the proper levers, to exhibit all the different motions of a flute-player. - THE IN VISIBILE GIRL. The operators have a communication, from the exhibition room to another where the confederate is concealed, by tin pipes, which end in a clear horm trumpet, inserted in an isolated glass chest or barrel, attached to the ceiling by colored ribbons, twined round a small gilt chain. In the inside of these pipes, at right angles, are placed small mirrors, which reflect and contract every object in the exhibition room, so that the confederate, who answers the questions put, can not only hear all that is said, but see even the objects that are held in the hands of the visiters, such as watches, money, miniatures, letters in a book, and every other thing that is un- covered. The following curious dialogue took place between a traveller from this country, and the Invisible Girl, at Siccard’s Diversion Room, in Paris –“What age are you ? Fourteen years of age. Where were you born ? At Marseilles. What is your name 4 Francoise. Are you pretty" No. Are you good 3 Yes, though sometimes ill-natured. What is your position " I am reclining. Do not all the questions that are put to you disgust you ? Never; but I am sometimes very much vexed. How is it that you see everything that is presented to you; that you hear everything that is said to you; and that no person can discover you ? That is a secret of those to whom I belong,” &c. It is a matter of much complication, and cannot be performed without a good confederate and considerable scientific knowledge. We trust, however, we have said sufficient to render the Invisible Girl no wonder. 2 vºsiº 192 LEGERDEMAIN. THE M A HOMIETAN MIA GICIAN. The following description of the mechanical conjuring figure, so called, as well as that of “The wise little Turk,” will, doubtless, remind out readers of the Automaton Chess-player. The Mahometan Magician is a figure of sixteen or eighteen inches high and holds a little hammer in its hand. When exhibited, it is first taken of the table on which it stands, and shown to the company, to convince them that it is perſectly detached, and stands by itself: the exhibitor then having replaced it on the table, asks if he will compliment his master'ſ The little Turk, by turning his head, expresses “No,” He then asks if he will pay his respects to the company He bows his head to express “Yes.” A pack of cards is then presented to the spectators, who draw out one by chance; without seeing the card, or approaching the automaton, his mastel orders him to strike the number of strokes, necessary to describe the card, with his hammer, on a bell:—the little Turk instantly obeys. He is them asked if the card drawn be a heart, a diamond, club, or spade 3 And, as the suits are mentioned, he moves his head, to give approbation or disap- probation, and an answer conformably to truth. He then tells the number thrown on dice; and also, beſore-hand, the number which a second throw will produce. One of the company having hid a little figure in a box, divided into several compartments, he tells in which of them, and at what number, the little figure is to be found;-and, to give a humorous termina- tion to this trick, when he is asked which of the company is the most amorous he points out some old gentleman with spectacles. The table on which the little Turk is placed, is covered with a green cloth, concealing three levers, which are put in motion by the aid of three brass wires, passing through the feet of the table, and conducted bellind the partition: the person who is hid, and acts as the confederate, draws these brass wires as he has occasion to act on the cranks concealed in the pedestal of the automaton, which cranks terminate in the base. By these means, the different motions are communicated to the machine the moment they are required, in the same manner as a repeating watch is made to strike by pushing the button of the case. The performer then holds in his hand a pack of cards, arranged in such a manner that he understands their sequence ; that the spectators may not suspect this arrangement of the cards, he apparently mixes them, but, in reality, he only cuts them, which does not change the combination of the game; when he has had a card drawn, he cuts them the last time in the place where the card has been chosen, by (K, which means, he passes to the bottom the card which was immediately over \ the one drawn : them, looking adroitly at the bottom, he knows, without * seeing, the card which the spectator had drawn by cliance. He then in. terrogates the little Turk by a question, which is so composed, that eithel Ös=~ - **** I, E GERD ENIAIN. the words, syllables, or vowels, communicate to the confederate the color and denomination of the card. By a similar stratagem, knowledge is con- veyed to the confederate of the first number thrown on dice; the automa ton can then very easily tell what number will come up on the second throw of the dice, because fresh dice are introduced, and such are substituted as have the same numbers on all their faces. As the person, to whom the dice are given, might, by looking at them, perceive the imposition, to escape detection, peculiar care is taken not only to recommend to him to hold the dice carefully hidden in his hand until he throws them, but also to prevent them being too long exposed to the sight; loaded dice might also be em- ployed, which are so contrived, that the centre of gravity operates invariably. As the person who has already thrown the dice may wish to throw again, either accidentally or through suspicion, and as the return of the same points might occasion the honesty of the dice to be suspected, all these incon- veniences are removed by getting rid of them as soon as possible. The box where the little figure has been concealed has a bottom of soft leatlier, by which means, in handling beneath the compartment where the little figure is, may be discovered by the hand of the operator; and the figure is constructed of such dimensions as to press on the bottom of the box when it is shut. THE CAN ARY, A Canary bird is shown, perched on a bottle, which sings any air re- quired. He also sings equally well when changed to different bottles, and on different tables: the breath from his bill blows out a candle, and lights it aſterward. The machinery and manner of working we shall now procced to describe. Behind the curtain which covers part of the partition are placed two hol- low comes of metal. These cones, which are unequal in size, serve as a speaking trumpet to the confederate, and act as echoes, which conduct the voice to different parts, as two mirrors, of different concavities, operate in the reflection of objects at different distances. The confederate, imitating the notes of a bird, executes the required air. The confederate employs the two different echoes to convey the voice to different points, according to the position of the table and the bottle on which the bird is perched. The bird has in its body a little double bellows, and between its legs, a little moving peg, which puts the bellows in motion; this peg, entering the neck of the bottle, leans on a piece of wood which cannot be seen, as the bottle is opaque. This piece of wood, being placed vertically on the movable bottom of the bottle, easily moves the bellows, and is readily moved by the levers which are under the cloth, when the confederate draws the brass wire which is hidden in the feet of the table : by the same means, the bellows are moved to blow out the candle, and it apparently proves to the spectators r— j 194 LEGERDEMAIN that the notes are really formed in the throat of the bird, because the air comes through the bill. When the operator takes the bird in his hand he puts the bellows in motion with his thumb, and the wind in the same manner extinguishes the candle, and he persuades the company that the bird sings without the aid of any machinery hidden in the table; the candle being only a moment extinguished, and the wick still warm, is lighted instantly, by the air through the bill of the bird, which, for that purpose, has been ſurnished with a little flour of brimstone, and operates as a match. Besides the curious Automata we have already described, various others have been produced by ingenious persons of different countries. Albertus Magnus is said to have devoted thirty years of his life to the construction of a head that not only moved, but spoke : Thomas Aquinas was, it is related, so terriſied at its powers, under the impression that it was the work of magic, that he broke it to pieces. A locksmith of Nuremberg, in the sixteenth century, constructed figures that beat drums, while others played on lutes : and the emperor Charles the Fifth amused himself, in his retire ment, by making similar Automata, or rather, Androides, for so such figures are called by the learne l. The celebrated John Muller, it is reported, made a wooden eagle, in 1470, which, on the emperor Maximilian’s approach to Nuremberg, flew to meet him. Vauconson made an Automatic duck, and, as Labat tells us, General de Gennes, (who, in 1688, defended St. Christo- pher against the English,) an Automatic peacock; both of these were of a size and plumage perfectly natural : they eat, dramk, walked about, and ut- tered the same sounds as the birds themselves. The machinery, in both cases, was similar to that of a watch. However astonishing these more complicated pieces of machinery may have been to our forefathers, in mod- ei iſ times, enlightened persons regard Vauconson and his Flute-player, and De Kempelen and his Turk, with much less wonder than that with which the rustics of the present day gaze upon the Jack-pudding Jugglers, who amuse them on a Cart-stage 3ºE E. º - \ \sº ºº:: § § §§ & sº § § SN *S-S$: § § 2 º' \º º . 㺠º § SN --- |TS. § 3: < * :* : ===.º 5-º:33 &º------ TRIC K S WITH C A R D S. Among the most amusing ſeats of Legerdemain are the tººks with cards, of which, in the ensuing pages, we present our reader with an excellent series. Whatever may be the objections, and whether they be well founded or not, against card-playing among youth, it is neither our duty nºr inclina- tion mºre to discuss; it must be admitted, by every liberal mind, that for the mere purpose of performing a few amusing ſeats of dexterity, to wile away a winter evening, and relax the mind, for a time, from scholastic studies, the introduction of a pack of cards is unexceptiºnable. Cards have beeu, for many centuries, in use, having, ºs it is generally believed, been invented about the year 1390, to amuse Charles the Sixth, king of France, of whose wisdom, it must be confessed, historians do not speak very highly. Upon this circumstance the ingenious Mr. Malkin has observed, that the universal adoption of an amusement which was invented for a fool, is no very favorable specimen of the wisdom of mankind. Thº .." . º. º --- Öss=- * w 4. *** -ºx as *ś'; . -: *-*:: * 196 TRICKS witH CARDs. Honorable Daines Barrington, however, in his “Observations on the An. tiquity of Card-playing in England,” asserts. that they came originally from Spain; while other authors attribute their invention to a more classic and ancient era, and give the honor, if it be any, of their first production to the Romans. Having given this slight sketch of the listory of cards, we shall proceed to furnish the necessary instructions for the perſormance of the following ſeats. FO R C IN G, Forcing is making a person take such a card as you think fit, while he supposes he is taking one at hazard, or according to his own inclination. It is almost impossible to describe how this is done; we must, however, attempt it. First, ascertain what the card you intend to force is; this must be done privately, or while you are playing with the cards; then place it, to al appearance, carelessly in the pack, but still keep your eye, or the little finger of your left hand, in which you hold the pack, upon it. Now, request a person to take a card from the pack; open them nimbly from your left to your right hand, spreading them backward and forward, so as to puzzle the person in making his choice: the moment you see him putting out his hand to take a card, spread on the cards till you come to the one you wish to ſorce ; let its corner be most invitingly put forward in front of the other cards, and let it make its appearance only the moment his fingers reach the pack. This mode of operation seems so fair, that unless he knows the secret of forcing, you may put what card you please into his hand, while he thinks he is making a choice himself. Having thus forced your card, you may tell him to look at it, give him the pack to shuffle as much as he pleases, for, in fact, do what he will, you, of course, can always tell what it was. A method of doing this cleverly is the first thing to be acquired ; for without it, few of the master-ſeats can be performed. * T() 'I H. L. L A C A R D TH O U GHT OF R L J N D F O L D, Take twenty-one cards, and lay them down in threo rows, with their faces upward; (i. e.) when you have laid out three, begin again at the left hand, and lay one card upon the first, and so on to the right land; them begin on the left hand again, and so go on until you have laid out the twenty-ºne cards in three heaps, at the same time requesting any one to think of a tº d. When you have laid them out, ask him which heap his card is in : then lay that heap in the middle between the other two. This done, lay them out agáin in three heaps as before, and again request him to notice where his nº.14 card goes, and put that heap in the middle, as before. Then taking up the c.tr is with their backs toward you, take off the uppermost card, and 1 tº kºn it one ; take off another, which reckon two ; and thus proceed till you coine to the eleventh, which will invariably prove to be the card thought of TRICIXS WITH CARDS. 197 You must never lay out your cards less than three times, but as often above ...hat number as you please. This trick may be done without your seeing the cards at all, if you handle and count them carefully. To diversify the trick, you may use a different number of cards, but the number chosen must - be divisible by three, and the middle card, after they have been thrice dealt | as directed, will always be the one thought of; for instance, if done with fifteen cards, it must be the eighth, and so on; when the number is even, it i must be the exact half; as, if it be twenty-four, the card thought of will be the twelfth, &c. THIE SHUFFLED SEVEN. Desire a person to remember a card and its place in the pack; then, in a dexterous manner, convey a certain number of the cards from the top to : the bottom, and subtract them, in your mind, from the number of the pack: | for example, the pack consists of fifty-two cards, and you have conveyed seven to the bottom; tell the person the card he has thought of will be the | forty-fifth, reckoning from the number of the card, the place of which he t has to mame: thus, if he say it is the ninth, you go on counting nine, ten, eleven, &c. and the card he thought of will be exactly the forty-fifth, as you announced. THE PIQUET PACK Desire some person to choose three cards out of a piquet pack, observing that the ace is to be counted eleven points, the court cards ten, and the other lº cards according to the counts they mark. When he has made his choice, desire him to lay on the table his three cards, separately, and to put upon each parcel as many cards as are wanted to make up fifteen points; that is to say, if the first card should be mime, he must place six cards; if the second a ten, five cards; and if the third a knave, five cards upon it, this will make nineteen cards employed; consequently, there will remain thirteen cards in the pack, which you are to ask for, and while pretending to examine, count them, in order to be certain of the number left; add sixteen to the remaining number and you will have twenty-nine, the number of points that the three chosen cards contain. THE DOUBLE TO OZEN, Present a pack of cards to one of the company, desire hirn to shuffle them well, and to get them shuffled by whomsoever he pleases; then make several persons cut them: after which, you will propose to one of the - company to take the pack and think of a card, and remember it, and hke- wise its order in the pack, by counting one, two, three, four, &c. till he S * - - *. *::::::::::::stº R->;- wºrx sy- - $º ;:e §§§§ -", - - - * * - - º º- *::::- -ºš: | 98 *TRICKS WITH CARDS. tomes, inclusively, to the card thought of; offer to go into another room, c, to be blindfolded, while he is doing this. Now declare in what order the card shalſ be in the pack : say, for instance, the twenty-fourth; and, by attending to the following instructions, it will prove to be so : suppose the person, who thinks of the card, stops at thirteen, and that the thirteenth card was the queen of hearts; the number you have stated it shalfbe in the pack, being twenty-four : you return to the room, in case you had left it, or desire the handkerchief to be removed, if you have been blindfolded; and, without asking any question of the person who has thought of the card, ask only for the pack, and apply it to your nose, as if to smell it; then passing it behind your back, or under the table, take, fiom the bottom of the pack, twenty-three cards; that is to say, one less than the number you have stated the card thought of shall be ; place these twenty-three cards on the top, This being dome, return the pack to the person who had thought of the card, requesting him to reckon the cards from the top of the pack, beginning by the number of the card he thought of His card being the thirteenth, he will be compelled to count fourteen, and you are to stop him when he comes to twenty-three, reminding him that the number you have mentiomed is twenty-four, and that, consequently, the twenty-fourth card, which he is going to take up, will be the card thought of; and so it will most certainly be. THE IN OTE D C A RD NAMIED. Take any number of cards, ten or twelve for instance, bear in mmd how many there are, and holding them with their backs toward you, open four or five of the uppermost, and, as you hold them out to view, let any one note a card, and tell you whether it be the first, second, or third, from the top. Now shut up your cards in your hands, and place the rest of the pack upon them; knock their cnds and sides upon the table, so that it will seem impossible to find the noted card; yet it may be easily done,—thus: sub- tract the number of cards you held in your hand from fiſty-two, the whole number in the pack, and to the remainder add the number of the noted card, which will give you the number of the noted card from the top. G AT H E RING OF THE CLA. N.S. Have in readiness a pack, all the cards of which are well arranged in successive order: that is to say, if it consist of fiſty-two cards, every thirteen must be regularly arranged, without a duplicate of any one of them. After they have been cut (but do not suffer them to be shuffled,) as many times as a person may choose, form them into thirteen heaps of four cards each, with the colored faces downward, and put them carefully together again When this is done, the four kings, the four queens, the four knaves, and so wn, must necessarily be together. TRICKS WITH CARDS 199 THE MAGIC TWELVE I,et any one take the pack of cards, shuffle, take of the upper card, and, naving noticed it, lay it on the table, with its face do winward, and put so many cards upon it as will make up twelve with the number of spots on the noted card. For instance: if the card which the person drew was a king, queen, knave, or ten, bid him lay that card with its face downward, calling it ten; upon that card let him lay another, calling it eleven, and upon that, another, calling it twelve; them bid him take off the next uppermost card : suppose it be a nine, let him lay it down on another part of the table, call- ing it mine; upon it let him lay another, calling it ten; upon the latter an- other, calling it eleven; and upon that another, calling it twelve: then let him go to the next uppermost card, and so proceed to lay out in heaps, as before, till he has gone through the whole pack. If there be any cards at the last, that is, if there be not enough to make up the last noted card the number twelve, bid him give them to you; then, in urder to tell him the number of all the spots contained in all the bottom curds of the heaps, do thus—from the number of heaps subtract four, multiply the remainder by fifteen, and, to the product, add the number of remaining cards, which he gave you; but if there were but four heaps, them those remaining cards alone will show the number of spots on the four bottom cards. You need not see the cards laid out, nor know the number of cards in each heap, it being sufficient to know the number of heaps, and the number of remaining cards, if there be any, and therefore you may perform this ſeat as well standing in another room, as if you were present TO TU RN A CARD INTO A RIRID, Take a card in your hand, and show it fairly to the company, bidding then seriously observe it;-having a live bird in your sleeve—turning our hand suddenly, draw the card into your sleeve with your thumb and ittle finger, and, giving a shake, the bird will come out of your sleeve into your hand; you may then produce it and let it fly. TO MIAIKE A C A RID J U M P OUT OF THE PAC K. Let any person draw a card, and afterward put it into the pack, but take care that you know where to find it at pleasure. This you may do by hav- ing forced it. Then put a piece of wax under the thumb-mail of your right hand, and ſasten a hair by it to your thumb, and the other end of the hair by the same means, to the card chosen; spread the pack upon the table, and, making use of any words you think fit, make it jump from the pack ubout the table. *ssºs. § 200 TRICKS WITH CARDS Q =Q. THE CONFEDERATE WATI, R-IDROP, Put on your hat, and privately drop a little water, about the size of a crown-piece, upon the table at which you sit; rest your elbows upon the table, so that the cºffs of your sleeves may meet, and your hands stick up to the brim of your hat; in this posture your arms will hide the drop of water from the company; then let any one shuffle the cards, put them into your hands, and set a candle before you, for this trick is only done by candlelight: —then, holding the cards in your left hand, above the brim of your hat, close up to your head, so that the light of the candle may shine upon them, and holding your head down, you will see in the drop of water, as in a look- ing-glass, all the cards in your hands. Draw the finger of your right hand along each card, as if you were feeling it before you name and lay it down. Thus you may lay down all the cards in the pack, and name them, one by one, without once turning your eyes toward them. THE FOU R A CCOMPLIC E S. Let a person draw four cards from the pack, and tell him to think of one of them. When he returns you the four cards, dexterously place two of them under the pack, and two on the top. Under those at the bottom you place four cards of any sort, and then, taking eight or ten from the bottom cards, you spread them on the table, and ask the person if the card he fixed on be among them. If he say no, you are sure it is one of the two cards on, the top. You then pass those two cards to the bottom, and drawing off the lowest of them, yºu ask if that be not his card. If he again say no, you? take that card up, and bid him draw his card from the bottom of the pack. If the person say his card is among those you first drew from the bottom, you must dexterously take up the four cards that you put under them, and pla- cing those on the top, let the other two be the bottom cards of the pack, which draw in the manner before described. TH E N E R V E TRIC R. Force a card, and when the person who has taken it puts it in the pack, let him shuffle the cards; then look at them again yourself, find the card, and place it at the bottom; cut them in half; give the party that half which contains his card at the bottom, and desire him to hold it between his finger and thumb just at the corner; bid him pinch them as tight as he can ; them strike them sharply, and they will all fall to the ground, except the bottom one, which is the card he has chosen. This is a very curious trick, and, if well dome, is really astomishing. It is a º improvement of this trick tº put the chosen card at the top of the pack, and turn the cards face upward so that when you strike, the choosing party’s card will remain in his hand actually staring him in the face. w-ry tº - rº - sº- TRICKS WITH CARDS 201 THE CHOSEN CARD RE WE AL ED BY A PIN CH OF SNU FF. Force a card, suppose, for instance, the five of clubs, having previously written the words, or drawn the spots, on a clean sheet of paper, with a tallow candle : them hand the pack to the person on whom the card is forced, bid him place it where, and shuffle the pack how, he pleases; ask for a pinch of snuff, strew it over the sheet of paper, blow the loose grains off, and the remainder will stick to those places which the tallow has touched; thus telling the person what card he has chosen. The paper, be it observed, if done lightly with the candle, will not appear to have any marks on it. For this trick we are indebted to a celebrated performer of Legerdemain, and it is really a most excellent one. TH E D R A WN CARD NAILED TO THE WALL, Drive a flat-headed and sharp-pointed nail through a card, force a similar one on any person present, receive it into the pack,-dexterously drop it, and pick up, unseen, the nailed card; place the latter at the bottom of the pack, which take in your right hand, and throw it, with the bottom ſorward, against a wainscoat or door; the mailed card will be fixed, and the rest, of course, fall to the ground. Take care to place your nail so that the front of the card, when fixed to the door, may be exposed: to effect this, you must also remember to put the back of the card outward, placing it face to face with the others, when you put it at the bottom of the pack. U P S AND DOWNS. This is one of the most simple ways, but by no means the less excellent, of ascertaining what card a person chooses. When you are playing with the pack, drop out the diamonds, from the ace to the ten, and contrive, with- * out being perceived, to get all the other cards with their heads in the same direction; then request a person to choose a card ; do not force one, but let him choose whichever he pleases: while he has it in his hand, and is looking at it, carelessly turn the pack in your hand, so that the position of the cards may be reversed; then bid him put the card he has chosen into the centre of the pack; shuffle and cut them, and you may to a certainty know the card chosen, by its head being upside down, or in a different direction from the rest of the pack. THE CARD UN DER THE HAT. When you have discovered a drawn card by the last or any other trick. contrive to get the card to the top of the pack, which place on a table under a hat; put your hand beneath it, take off the top card, and, after seeming to search among the cards for some time, draw it out. -º-a - --E ~f **Tzº swº-s-ſ TRICKS WITH CARDS. THE TURN-OVER. When you have found a card chosen, which you have previously forced, on any card that has been drawn, and which you have discovered by the means before described, in order to finish your trick cleverly, convey the card, privately, in the top of the pack; get all the other cards even with each other, but let the edge of your top card project a little over the rest; hold them between your finger and thumb, about two feet from the table, let them drop, and the top card (which must be, as we have said, the one drawn,) will fall with its face uppermost, and all the rest with their faces toward the table. TH E R E G AL A-LLIAN CE. Take four kings, and place between the third and fourth any two common cards whatever, which must be neatly concealed; then show the four kings, and place the six cards at the bottom of the pack; take one of the kings, and lay it on the top, and put one of the common cards into the pack nearly about the middle; do the same with the other, then show that there is one king at the bottom ; desire any one to cut the pack, and as three of the kings were left at the bottom, the four will, therefore, be found together in the middle of the pack. - THE ODI) SCORE, Take a pack of cards, and let any gentleman draw one; then let him put it in the pack again, but contrive so as you may be sure to find it at pleasure, which you will be enabled with ease to do, by some of the preceding tricks; then shuffle the cards, and let another gentleman draw a card, but be sure you let him draw no other than the one before drawn, which you must force upon him ; go on in this way until twenty persons have each drawn the same card; shuffle the cards together, and show your forced card, which will, of course, be every man’s card who has drawn. THE CARD IN THE E G G, To do this wonderful feat you must have two sticks exactly resembling each other in appearance one of these sticks must be made so as to con- ceal a card in the middle of it; for this purpose it must be hollow from end to end, and have a spring to throw the card into the egg at pleasure. The operation is this :—peel a card, roll it up, put it into the false stick, and there let it lie until you have occasion to make use of it. Take a pack of cards, and let any person draw one ; but be sure to let it be a similar card to the one which you have in the hollow stick. This must be done by TRICKS WITH CARDS. i forging. The person who has chosen it will put it into the pack again, and, while you are shuffling, let it fall into your lap. Then, calling for some eggs, desire the person who drew the card, or any other person in the com- pany; tº choose any one of the eggs. When they have dome so, ask the per- son if there be anything in it? He will answer there is not. Take the egg in your left hand, and the hollow stick in your right;-break the egg with the stick, let the spring go, and the card will be driven into the egg. You may then show it the spectators, but be sure to conceal the hollow stick, and produce the solid one, which place upon the table for examination. THE PAINTED PACK, Take a pack of cards, and paint the backs of one half of the pack with what figures you think fit, as men, women, birds, flowers, &c. Also paint the faces of the other half of the cards in the same manner; thus you will have a complete pack of odd pictures, and may, by showing the faces, of that part of the pack whose backs only have been painted, and them, by a momentary shuffle, appa- rently transforming them into a set of grotesque figures, produce much amusement. There is another man- ner of making the pack; it is as follows:—Take a dozen cards, or ë more, and draw a line from the right- hand upper corner to the left-hand lower corner of the face of each of them; they will thus be all equally divided. Then paint part of some odd figure on the right division of each card, leaving the left untouched, By a little dexterity, you may now seem to transform a set of common cards into a painted pack. - St. # - º Wºº Nºë TO CONVEY A CARD INTO A CHERRY-STONE. Burn a hole through the shell of a nut or cherry-stone, and also through the kernel, with a hot bodkin, or bore it with an awl, and with a needle pick out the kernel, so that the hole in it may be as wide as the hole of the shell; then write the name of a card on a piece of fine paper, roll it up i : : TRICKS WITH CARDS. | hard, put it into the nut or cherry-stone, stop the hole up with some bees wax, and rub it over with a little dust, and it will not be perceived; them while some by-stander draws a card, observe, “It is no matter what card you draw ;” and, if you use the cards well, you will offer him, and he will receive, a similar card to that you have rolled up in the mut. Give him the nut and a pair of crackers, and he will find the name of the card he drew rolled up in its kernel. THE CARD IN THE MIRROR, Provide a circular mirror, the frame of which must be, at least, as wide as a card. The glass in the centre must be made to move in two grooves, and so much of the silvering must be scraped off as is equal to the size of a common card. Observe that the glass be likewise wider than the card. Then paste over the part where the quicksilver is rubbed off, a card that exactly fits the space. The mirror must be placed against a partition, through which two strings pass to an assistant in the adjoin- ing room, who can easily move the glass in the grooves, and consequently, make the card appear or disappear at pleasure. Matters being thus pre- pared, contrive to make a person draw the same sort of card with that fixed to the mirror, and place it in the middle of the pack; them make the pass, and bring it to the bottom ; direct the person to look for his card in the mirror, when the confederate, behind the partition, is to draw it slowly forward, and it will appear as if placed between the glass and quick- silver. While the glass is being drawn forward, you slide off the card ſrom the bottom of the pack, and convey it away. The card fixed to the mirror may easily be changed each time the experiment is performed This recreation may also be made with a print that has a glass before it, and a frame of sufficient width, by making a slit in the frame, through which the card is to pass; but the effect will not be so striking as in the IIll]"TO]", THE MOUSE IN THE PA C K, Have a pack of cards fastened together at the edges, but open in the middle like a box, a whole card being glued on as a cover, and many loose ones plac ed above it, which require to be dexterously shuffled, so that the entire may seem a real pack of cards. The bottom must likewise be a whole card glued to the box on one side only, yielding immediately to exterior pressure, and serving as a door by which you convey the mouse into the box. Being thus prepared, and holding the bottom tight with your hand, require one of the company to place his open hands together, and tell him you mean to produce something very marvellous from this pack of cards; place the cards ; * T * ...&lº-º-º-º: * *—- *Far-r- ºx--ºr-es- a--e. i | | TRICKS WITH CARDS. then in his hands, and while you engage his attention in conversation, take the box in the middle, throw the pack aside, and the mouse will remain in the hands of the person who held the cards. THE MARCHIN G. C.A.R.D. One of the company is desired to draw a card, which is afterward mixed with the pack, and commanded to appear on the wall: it accordingly obeys, advancing as it is ordered, and describes an inclined line from the right to the left : it disappears at the top of the room, and appears an instant after- ward, moving in a horizontal direction :-to do this, first force a card; aſter having shuffled the pack, withdraw the forced card, privately, and show the com any the pack again, that they may see it is no longer there: when you order it to appear on the wall, a confederate adroitly draws a thread, at the end of which is previously fastened a similar card, which comes from behind a glass; it is fastened by very minute loops of silk to Jother thread fully stretched, along which it runs, and performs its route as directed. ... • THE BU RIE D HEART A curious deception may be practised, by cutting out neatly, and thinly shaving, the back of a club, which is them to be pasted slightly over an ace of hearts. After showing a person the card, let him hold one end of it, and you hold the other, and, while you amuse him with discourse, slide off the club ; then, laying the card on the table, bid him cover it with his hands, knock under the table, and command the club to turn into the ace of hearts. CONFEDERATE SIGN AI.S. This amusement is to be performed by confederacy; you previously agree with your confederate on certain signs, by which he is to denote the suite, and the particular card of each suite, as thus: if he touch the first button of his coat it signifies an ace, if the second, a king, &c. and then again if he take out his handkerchief, it denotes the suite to be hearts; if he take snuff, diamonds, &c. These preliminaries being settled, you give the pack to a person who is your confederate, and tell him to separate any one card ſrom the rest while you are absent, and draw his finger once over it. He is then to return you the pack, and while you are shuffling the cards, you carefully note the signals made by your confederate; them turning the cards over one by one, you fix on the card he touched. *-* egºr ~~~ Yºğuş == : t| TRICRS WITH CARDS THE CARD IN THE POCKET-BOOK. A confederate is previously to know the card you have taken from the pack, and put into your pocket-book; you then present the pack to him, and desire him to fix on a card, (which we will suppose to be the queen of diamonds) and place the pack on the table; you them ask him the name of the card, and when he says the queen of diamonds, you ask him if he is not mistaken, and if he be sure that the card is in the pack" When he replies in the affirmative, you say, “It might be there when you looked over the cards, but I believe it is now in my pocket; then desire a third person to put his hand in your pocket, and take out your book, and when it is opened he card will appear. The assistant in this, and, in fact, in all similar tricks, must be dexterous; he ought to understand what you wish him to do by the slightest hint, a cough, a motion of the finger, or conjuring stick—or he will never answer for the confederate of a Conjuror Wºś º Fº ~. \º The King of Conjurors at Cards His glib discourse oſt interlards With crabbed Greek, and Latin lame:— By sleight of hand, performing feats, Which even magic put to shame. But when he works his master-cheats, This mighty King is forced to crave The aid of some confederate Knave i P A R AD OXES AND PU ZZLES. { * Come hither all ye youthful Sages, - § Come and peruse our sequent pages; We care not whence the good wind blows you. For sure we are that we shall poze you. PARADox Es and Puzzles, although by many persons looked upon as mere - trifles, have, in numerous instances, cost their inventors considerable time, ſ and exhibit a great degree of ingenuity. We can readily imagine that some | of the complicated puzzles in the ensuing pages may have been originally constructed by captives, to pass away the hours of a long and dreary impris- º e § onment; thus does the misery of a few, frequently conduce to the amusement º of many. We look upon a Paradox as a sort of superior riddle, and a º ſ tolerable Puzzle, in our opinion, takes precedence of a first-rate rebus. p There is often considerable thought, calculation, patience, and management, required to solve some of these strange enigmas; and we have, ere now, followed the mazes of a Puzzle so ardently, as to be entirely absorbed in de- vising means to extricate ourself from its bewildering difficulties; and felt almost as much pleasure in eventually achieving a victory over it, as we w have in conquering an adversary at some superior game of skill. It is, “in good sooth, a right dainty and pleasant pastime,” to watch the stray wanderings of another person attempting to elucidate a Paradox, or perform a Puzzle, with which one is previously acquainted. It is laughable to see him elated with hope at the apparent speedy end of his trouble, when you know that, at that moment, he is actually farther from his object than he was when he began : and it is no less amusing to watch his increasing despair, as he conceives himself to be getting more and more involved, when you are * sº---- wºr-a º * -gº- - : 3. ea § wº- w } . . fº = Gºe: Kº-s-sES Q# =- º º,8. PARADOXES AND Plj ZZLES well aware that he is within a single turn of a happy termination of his toils; but what a mirthful moment is that, when, there being only two ways to turn, the one right and the other wrong, as is usually the case, he takes the latter, and becomes more than ever “Pozed, puzzled, and perplexed.” º A Paradox or a Puzzle ought, perhaps, never to be explained; the party to whom it is proposed should rather be left in ignorance of its solution, unless he succeed in discovering it himself; if he fail after two or three efforts, and ou disclose it, his vanity will be hurt, on account of his having been foiled i. a question that, after its solution, appears so simple, or in some instances, he will call it silly and ridiculous; whereas, if he discover it without assistance, he will praise it for its excellence, and be pleased at his own Cleverness. We now proceed to open our budget:-Our first article is— * TRO U BLE-WIT. Take a sheet of stiff paper, fold it down the middle of the sheet, long- ways; them turn down the edge of each fold outward, the breadth a penny; measure it as it is folded, into three equal parts, with compasses, which make six divisions in the sheet; let each third part be turned outward, and the other, of course, will fall right; then pinch it a quarter of an inch deep, in plaits, like a ruff; so that, when the paper lies pinched in its form, it is in the fashion represented by A; when closed together, it will be like B; unclose k . . tº again, shuffle it with each hand, and it will resemble the shuffling of a pack º of ºrds; close it, and turm each corner inward with your fore-finger and | E LEI PARADOXES AND PUZZLES. thumb, it will appear as a rosette for a lady’s shoe, as C; stretch it forth, C SJ’ ^ and it will resemble a cover for an Italian couch, as D; let go your fore. T) & ãº" *IN ſinger at the lower end, and it will resemble a wicket, E.; close it again, * ...*.*.*.*. *-*.* 210 PARADOXES AND PUZZ LES. and pinch it at the bottom, spreading the top, and it will represent a ſan, as F; pinch it half-way, and open the top, and it will appear in the form shown by G 3 hold it in that form, and with the thumb of your left hand, turn out the next fold, and it will be as H. In fact, by a little ingenuity and practice, Trouble-wit may be made to assume an infinite variety of forms, and be productive of very considerable all USCInent, THE SI, IG HTED LADY. We shall suppose there are 13 ladies in company, one of whom you wish to mortify; you, therefore, provide 12 nosegays, and, without showing any appearance of partiality, announce that you mean to let chance decide which of them is to go without one. For this purpose, make the 13 ladies sland up in a ring, allowing them to place themselves as they please; and distribute to then the 12 nosegays, counting them from 1 to 3, and making the ninth retire from the ring, and carry with her a nosegay. It will be EPARADOXES AND PUZZLES. found, that the eleventh, reckoning from the one by whom you began, will remain the last; and, consequently, will have no share in the distribution; you, of course, will begin counting with the one who stands second in the ring from the party to be excluded. The following table will show the person, before her whom you wish to exclude, with whom you must begin to count 9; supposing, always, that the number of the nosegays is less by one than that of the persons. For # persons, the 11th before. 11 . . . . . . 5th. | 10 . . . . . . 7th. 9 . . . . . . 8th. . Suh. . 7th. . 5th. . 3d. e 3d. . 2d. • 1st : º e º THE WINE MERCHANT AND HIS C.L.E. R.K. A wine-merchant caused 32 casks of choice wine to be deposited in his cellar, giving orders to his clerk to arrange them, as in the annexed figure, so that each external row should contain mine. The clerk, however, took away 12 of them, at three differ- 1 || 7 || 1 ent times; that is, four each time; yet, when the mer- -- chant went into the cellar, after each theft had been 7 7 committed, the clerk always made him count mine in - each row. How was this possible'? 1 || 7 || 1 This problem may be easily solved by inspecting the following figures:— 2d Order. 3d Order. 4th Order. 2 || 5 || 2 3 || 3 || 3 4 || 1 || 4 • *- : *m-. I am sºme- 5 5 3 3 I TM. - - smºs ' - • * : Ny • g --- ** * * * - - - ... --~~~~~ - - ~f~s - ºf “. º , º, - _*, *-º lºane. - S- - E º, -º - i. , Tº 212 Tº ARADOXES AND PUZZLES PROFIT AND LOSS, A man bought ninety-six apples at three a penny, and the same number at two a penny; he sold them again at the rate of five for two-pence. Que ry. Did he gain or lose 4 Answer. He lost. The ninety-six apples, at three a penny, cost him 2s. 8d., and the ninety-six, at two a penny, 4s., making together, 6s. 8d. He had one hundred and ninety-two apples, and sold thirty-eight two- penny-worths; for which he received, of course, 6s. 4d. When he had done this, he had only two apples left; he, consequently, lost a fraction above 3%d. Draw on pasteboard the following rectangle, whose side, A C, is three inches, and A B, ten inches. divide the longest side into ten equal parts, and the shortest into three equal | THE G E O METRICAL MO N E Y. | { t | C: D parts, and draw the perpendicular E} L-T lines, as in the figure, which will LPTG divide it into thirty equal squares. | TFI IEI From A to D draw the diagonal A*- B line, and cut the figure, by that line, into two equal triangles, and cut those triangles into two equal parts, in the direction of the lines, E. F and G. H. You will then have two triangles, and two four-sided irregular t figures, which you are to place together, in the | manner they stood at first, and in each square : you are to draw the figure of a piece of money; ; observing to make those in the squares through which the line, A D, passes, somewhat imperſect. % As the pieces stand together in the foregoing CŞ figure, you will count thirty pieces of money only; but if the two triangles and the two irreg- ular figures be joined together, as in the two last annexed figures, there will be thirty-two pieces. QUAINT QUERY. What is the difference between six dozen dozen, and a half-a-dozen dozen 7 Answer 792:—Six dozen dozen being 864, and halſ-a-dozen dozen,72, THE SHEEP-Fold. A farmer had a pen made of 50 hurdles, capable of holding 100 sheen PARADOXES AND PUZZLES. 9:13 only: supposing he wanted to make it sufficiently large to hold double that number, how many additional hurdles would he have occasion for 4 Answer. Two. There were 48 hurdles on each side of the pen; a hur- dle at the top, and another at the bottom; so that, by moving one of the sides a little back, and placing an additional hurdle at the top and bottom, the size of the pen would be exactly doubled. THE IM POSSIBILITY MADE POSSIBI, E. Place three pieces of money on the table, and desire some person to take away the piece from the centre without touching it. If the manner of executing it be not discovered, remove one of the end pieces to the other side, and thus you take away the piece from the cen- tre without touching it. THE C U RIO U S CROSS. Compose a cross, with thirteen sixpences, shillings, or any other coins, as No. 1, in which it will be perceived you may reckon nine in three No. 1. No. 2. different ways; that is to say, in the entire per- C O pendicular line, up the perpendicular line to the O O O O cross line, and including the cross line, first on O O O O O the right, then on the left. These are the quali- ties of the cross. The puzzle is to take two of the pieces away, and still to leave the same qualitics in the cross. This is done by taking away the two outside pieces of the cross line, and liſting the two which remain one piece higher. The figure will them be as No. 2 : : S E W E N IN TWO. Cut a piece of bread, or paper, in the form of a house-shoc, (vide Fig. 1,) and desire some person, by two cuts, to divide it into seven pieces. The manner of doing this is as follows:—Cut across from a to b : this will divide the shoe into three pieces: then place the two ends by the side of the all---Hé upper part, as Fig. 2, and cut across from c to d. I'he shoe will then be cut into seven pieces Jºž.9 2. There is a figure puzzle somewhat similar to this, by which five may be made seven in one cut. A cº- “{*}”gſ piece of paper is cut out in the shape of a Roman numeral five (V); it is then, with a knife or scis- sors, cut across, and the two points placed on the right of the lower part; thus it becomes seven, (VII.) T PARADOXES AND PUZZLES. THE PARTIAL RE PRIEW E. * To arrange 30 criminals in such a manner that, by counting them in suc- cession, always beginning again at the first, and rejecting every ninth per- son, 15 of them may be saved :—Arrange the criminals according to the order of the vowels in the following Latin verse: 4 5 2 1 3 I 1 2 2 3 1 2 2 1 Populeam virgam mater regina ferebat. Because o is the fourth in the order of the vowels, you must begin by four of those whom you wish to save; next to these place five of those whom you wish to punish; and so on alternately, according to the figures which stand over the vowels of the above verse. FAMOUS IFORTY-FIVE. How can number 45 be divided into four such parts that, iſ to the first part you add two, from the second part you subtract two, to the third part you multiply by two, and the fourth part you divide by two, the sum of the ad- dition, the remainder of the subtraction, the product of the multiplication and the quotient of the division, be all equal % - Answer. The 1st is 8, to which add 2, the sum is . . . . . . . 10 The 2d is 12, subtract . . . 2, the remainder is . . . . 10 The 3d is 5, multiplied by 2, the product is . . . . . 10 The 4th is 20, divided by 2, the quotient is . . . . . 10 45 THE WOLF, THE GOAT, AND THE CABBA GES. Suppose a man have a wolf, a goat, and a basket of cabbages, on the bank of a river, that he wishes to cross with them ; and that his boat is only big enough to carry one of the three besides himself. He must, therefore, take them over one by one, in such a manner, that the wolf shall have no opportunity of devouring the goat, or the goat of devouring the cabbages. How is he to do this " h Answer. First, he takes over the goat; he then returns, and takes the wolf; he leaves the wolf on the other side, and brings back the goat; he now takes over the cabbages, and comes back once more, to ſetch the goat. Thus, the wolf will never be left with the goat, nor the goat with the cabbages. PARADOXES AND PUZZLES. 215 THE CHE R. R.Y CHIEAT. Cut two longitadinal slips out of a card, as a b c d (Fig. 1 ;) also, cut out an oval above these slips, as e. Take the part (f) between the two lon- gitudinal apertures, with your finger and thumb, 62 . sº it ... you, Leº until the card be bent in- &G c º to a half-circle; pass part off through the oval, e, …A and then, through the part of f so passed through f e, introduce one of two | dº Ä cherries, whose stems grow together. Let the stems, and also f, pass back through the oval; put your card as much in the original position as possible again, and it will appear as Fig. 2. The puzzle is to get the cherries off without breaking their stems, or damaging the card. It is only to be done in the manner described for putting them on. THE TRIPI, E A C COMMODATION To form a regular geometrical solid, which shall fill up a circle, a square, and a triangle. Take a round piece of wood; let its height be the same as its diameter; mark a lime diamet- rically through its centre, at one end (Fig. 1;) then cut away the wood, right and left, from the line at the top, regularly, toward each edge, at the bottom. You will then have Fig. 2. Then, in a piece of card, or thin board, cut a circle of the same di- ameter, as the base of the figure you have formed, and a square, each side of which is the same as the di- ameter of the circle: also, a triangle, whose base and height are the same *s the square; and the figure you have cut out will exactly fit all three. This may be performed, for the sake of expedition, with a cork, a piece of apple, or anything easy to cut, and a piece of stiff paper. THE POOR-HOUSE PROBLE M. There is a square piece of land, containing twenty-five acres, designed for the reception of twenty-four poor men and their governor, who are each * 2 [6 PARADOXES AND PUZZLES. to have a house situated in his own ground, with the governor’s in the centre. How many people’s land must the governor pass through before he gets to the outside of the whole º Answer. Two ; for the ground being a square, it will consist of five rows, each five acres. EIGHTEEN WORDS IN TWENTY-THREE LETTERS. What do the following letters signify in the French language, pronounced in the order in which they stand 4 l n n e o p y l i a v q l i a t t l i e d c d Answer. Hélène est mée au pays grec, elle y a vécu, elle y a tété, elle y est décédée. - THE PU ZZLIN G RING S. This perplexing invention is of great antiquity, and was treated on by Cardan, the mathematician, at the beginning of the sixteenth century. It consists of a flat piece of thin metal or bone, with ten holes in it; in each hole a wire is loosely fixed, beaten out into a head at one end, to prevent its slipping through, and the other fastened to a ring, also loose. Each wire has been passed through the ring of the next wire, previously to its own ring being fastened on ; and through the whole of the rings, rums a wire loop or bow, which also contains, within its oblong space, all the wires to which the rings are fastened ; the whole presenting so complicated an appearance, as to make the releasing the rings from the bow appear an impossibility. The construction of it would be found rather troublesome to the amateur, but it may be purchased at most of the toy-shops, very lightly and elegantly made. It also exists in various parts of the country, forged in iron, perhaps, by some ingenious village mechanic, and aptly named “The Tiring Irons.” The following instructions will show the principle on which the puzzle is constructed, and will prove a key to its solution. Take the loop in your left hand, holding it at the end B, and consider the rings as being numbered 1st to 10th. The 1st will be the extreme ring to the right, and the 10th the nearest to your left hand. It will be seen that the difficulty arises from each ring passing round the wire of its right-hand neighbour. The extreme ring at the right hand, of course, being unconnected with any other wire than its own, may, at any time, be drawn off the end of the bow at A, raised up, dropped through the bow, and finally released. After you have done this, try to pass the 2d ring in the same way, and you will not succeed, as it is obstructed by the wire of the 1st ring ; but if you bring the 1st ring on Ös=-U. ****ść 2. PARADOXES AND PUZZLES. again, by reversing the process by which you took it off, viz. by putting it up through the bow, and on to the end of it, you will then find, that by taking the 1st and 2d rings together, they will both draw off, lift up, and drop through the bow. Having done this, try to pass the 3d ring off, and 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 rfºrſºſºſºft-ſº- ſº º ; Sºyū A. <2% % º ºr a you will not be able; because it is fastened on one side to its own wire, which is within the bow, and on the other side, to the 2d ring, which is without the bow. Therefore, leaving the 3d ring for the present, try the 4th ring, which is now at the end all but one, and both of the wires which affect it being within the bow, you will draw it off without obstruction; and, in doing this, you will have to slip the 3d ring off, which will not drop through, for the reasons before given; so, having dropped the 4th ring through, you cal, only slip the 3d ring on again. You will now comprehend, that (with the exception of the 1st ring) the only ring, which can at any time be re- leased, is that which happens to be 2d on the bow, at the right-hand end; because both the wires which affect it, being within the bow, there will be no impediment to its dropping through. You have now the 1st and 2d rings released, and the 4th also, the 3d still fixed; to release which, we must make it last but one on the bow, and to effect which, pass the 1st and 2d rings together through the bow, and on to it; then release the 1st ring again by slipping it off, and dropping it through, and the 3d ring will stand as 2d on the bow, in its proper position for releasing, by drawing the 2d and 3d off together, dropping the 3d through, and slipping the 2d on again... Now to release the 2d, put the 1st up, through and on the bow ; them slip the two together off, raise them up, and drop them through. The 6th will now stand 2d, consequently, in its proper place for releasing; therefore, draw it toward the end, A, slip the 5th off, then the 6th, and drop it through; after which replace the 5th, as you cannot release it until it stand in the position of a 2d ring; in order to effect this, you must bring the 1st and 2d rings together, through and on to the bow; then, in older to get the 3d on * & 218 PARADOXES AND PUZZLES. slip the first off, and down through the bow; then bring the 3d ap, through and on to the bow; them bring the 1st ring up and on again, and, releasing the 1st and 2d together, bring the 4th through, and on to the bow, replacing the 3d : then bring the 1st and 2d together on, drop the 1st off and through, them the 3d the same, replace the 1st on the bow, take off the 1st and 2d together, and the 5th will then stand 2d, as you desired; draw it toward the end, slip it off and through, replace the 4th, bring the 1st and 2d together up and on again, release the 1st, bring on the 3d, passing the 2d ring on to the bow again, replace the 1st in order to release the 1st and 2d together; them bring the 4th toward the end, slipping it off and through, replace the 3d, bring the 1st and 2d together up and on again, release the 1st, then the 3d, replacing the 2d, bring the 1st up and on, in order to release the 1st and 2d together, which having done, your 8th ring will then stand 2d, consequently you can release it, slipping the 7th on again. Then to release the 7th, you must begin by putting the 1st and 2d up and on to- gether, and, going through the movements in the same succession as be- fore, until you find you have only the 10th and 9th on the bow; then slip the 10th off and through the bow, and replace the 9th. This dropping of the 10th ring is the first effectual movement toward getting the rings off, as all the changes you have gone through, were only to enable you to get at the 10th ring. You will them find that you have only the 9th left on the bow, and you must not be discouraged on learning, that in order to get that ring off, all the others to the right hand must be put on again, begin- ning by putting the 1st and 2d together, and working as before, until you find that the 9th stands as 2d on the bow, at which time you can release it. You will then have only the 8th leſt on the bow ; you must again put on all the rings to the right hand, beginning by putting up the 1st and 2d together, till you find the 8th standing as 2d on the bow, or in its proper position for releasing; and so you proceed, until you find all the rings finally released. As you commence your operations with all the rings ready fixed on the bow, you will release the 10th ring in 170 moves: but as you then have only the 9th on, and as it is necessary to bring on again all the rings up to the 9th, in order to release the 9th, and which requires 15 moves more, you will consequently, release the 9th ring in 256 moves; and, ſor your encouragement, your labor will diminish, by one half, with each following ring which is ſinally released. The 8th comes off in 128 moves, the 7th in 64 moves, and so on, until you arrive at the 2d and Ist rings, which come off together, making 681 moves, which are necessary to take off all the rings. With the experience you will, by this time, have ac- juired, it is only necessary to say, that to replace the rings, vou begin by putting up the 1st and 2d together, and follow preciscly the same syster : As before. i ÖS$=~5 PARADOXES AND PUZZLES. THE CARD PU ZZLE, One of the best puzzles hitherto made, is represented in the annexed cut A, is a piece of card; b b, a narrow slip divided from its bottom edge, the whole breadth of the card, except just sufficient to hold it on at each side; c c, is another small slip of card, with two -A- large square ends, e e i d, is a bit of a to- bacco-pipe, through which c c is passed, and which is kept on by the two ends, e e. The puzzle consists in getting the pipe off without breaking it, or injuring any other part of the puzzle. This, which appears to be impossible, is dome in the most simple manner. On a moment’s con- sideration, it will appear plainly, that there must be as much difficulty in getting the pipe in its present situation, as there can be in taking it away. The way to put the puzzle together, is as follows:—The slip, c c, ee, is cut out of a piece of card, in the shape delineated in Fig. 3. The card in the first figure, must then be gently bent at A, so as to allow of the slip at the bot- tom of it being also bent sufficiently to pass double through the pipe, as in Fig. 2. The TZT detached slip with the square ends, (Fig. 3,) © is then to be passed half way through the loop, f, at the bottom of the pipe; it is next to be doubled in the centre, at a, and pulled through the pipe, double, by means of the loop of the slip to the card. Upon unbending the card, the puzzle will be complete, and appear as represented in Fig. 1. In order to take the pipe off, the |al card must be doubled, as (Fig. 2,) the slip passed through it, until there is sufficient of the loop below the pipe to allow of one of the square ends of the slip (Fig. 3) being passed through it. Fig. 3 is then to be taken away, and the pipe slipped off. The card for this puzzle must be cut very neatly, the puzzle handled gently, and great care taken, that in doubling the card, to put on the pipe, no creases are made in it, as they would, in all probability, spoil your puzzle, by betraying, to an acute spectator, the mode of operation. ÖS$=-º 220 PARADOXES AND PUZZLES. & lº THE SQUARE HOLE AND ROUND STOPPER. How can a mechanic file a square hole with a round file, and fill up an pval hole with a round stopper ? Answer. A piece of pliable metal being doubled, by applying a round file to the double edge, and filing a half square gap, on opening the metal, a square will appear. Again, if two corners and an edge, at the end of a miser’s iron chest, be filed away with a round, or any other file, there will be an exact square hole left. And further, if a cylindrical body be cut obliquely, the plane of the section will be an oval ; and, consequently, a round body, situated obliquely in an oval hole, will completely fill it. TH E H E A RT AND BALL PUZZL E. To make this puzzle, it is only necessary to cut a thin piece of wood into the shape of a heart, to make six holes in it, as represented in the annexed cut, and provide a thin silken cord, which is to be doubled, and the two ends fastened into a small wooden ball. To play the ball on, pass the loop through the hole 6, from face to back, up to 2, through which bring it, and then through 3, 5, 4, and 1, in succession : then through 2 again, and down the back to 6; bring it through 6 to the face, and pass it over the ball; then draw the loop back again through 6 and 2, and the puzzle (which is to take the ball and string off after being thus fixed) is set. To play the ball off, place the heart before you in the position described by the cut: slacken the string by drawing, at the back, the ball toward the hole 6; then loosen the rest of the string by pulling it toward you, and draw up the loop as far as you can : then pass the loop through hole 2, down the other side of the heart, to 6; through which bring it to the face, and pass it over the ball ; then draw the loop Uack again through the same hole, and the ball and the string will come off. Ca, 9 should be taken to avoid twisting or entangling the string. The length ºf the string should be proportioned to the size of the heart; if you make the ſheart two inches and a half high, the string, when doubled, should be about nine inches long. T H E SCA L E A N D RIN G PU ZZ L E. vide a thin piece of wood of about two inches and a half square, it...i.e. a round hole at each corner, sufficiently large to admit three or four PARADO2KES AND PTZZLES. 221 times the thickness of the cord you will afterward use, and, in the middle cf the board, make four smaller round holes, in the form of a square, and about half an inch between each. Then take four pieces of thin silken cord, each about six inches long, pass one through each of the four corner holes, tying a knot undermeath at the end, or affixing a little ball or bead to prevent its drawing through ; take an- other cord, which, when doubled, will be about seven inches long, and pass the two ends through the middle holes, a a, from the front to the back of the board, (one cord through each hole,) and again from back to front through the other holes, b bº tie the six ends together in a knot, so as to form a small scale, and proportioning the length of the cords, so that when you hold the scale suspended, the middle cord, besides passing through the four centre holes, will admit of being drawn up into a loop of about half an inch from the surface of the scale : provide a ring of metal, or bone, of about three quarters of an inch in diameter, and place it on the scale, bringing the loop through its middle : then draw- mg the loop a little through the scale toward you, pass it, double as it is, through the hole at the corner, A, over the knot underneath, and draw it back: then pass it in the same way through the hole at corner B, over the knot, and draw it back : then drawing up the loop a little more, pass it over the knot at top, and, afterward, through the holes C and D, in succession, like the others, and the ring will be fixed. The puzzle consists in releasing the ring ; to effect which, you have only to reverse the former process, by passing the loop through the holes, D, C, B, and A, in the manner before described. THE O YSTER WA G E R. Two men eat oysters together for a wager, who should eat most... One eat ninety-nine only, the other eat a hundred and won. How many did the winner eat? Answer. One hundred. Hodge AND HIS HAY. A truss of hay, weighing but half a hundred weight in a scale, weighed two hundred weight stuck upon the end of a fork, carried upon Hodge’s shoulder : how could that be 3 Answer. The fork was as the steel-yard; Hodge’s shoulder as the ſul- erum sustaining the burden between the two powers, acting at both ends of the fork. : *racº. -º- * PARADOXES AND PUZZLES. THE SQUARES OF TRIA N G L ES. Cut twenty triangles out of a square bit of wood, as marked in the en graving, mix them up together, and bid any person make an exact square of them. The key to this puzzle may be acquir- *** * ed by remembering the black lines in the cut; by `--, which it will be seen, that four triangles are to be A : placed at the corners, and a small square made in { }/*:::--> : the centre; when this is done, the remainder is ! - i ) easy of execution. A piece of card will do in- : A stead of wood; it is much easier to cut out; but, N jº' on account of its warping, wood is to be preferred J to it. Great care must be taken that all the edges are smooth and regular; for if any of them are notched, or wavy, so as to tally with each other, they may, of course, with .ittle difficulty, be put together. f Many other Puzzles, similar to the Square of Triangles, may, with a lit- \le ingenuity, be constructed, in such a manner as to afford their young inventor the means of much amusement. j. $º §§§ §§ w -*. Bluff Æolus, who roars across the deep And howls among the mountain pines to-day,+ To-morrow, on the harp or lyre, will breathe Such melting music, as from Memnon’s head, When first Apollo’s gleam ſell on his brow, Was heard to issue in the days of yore THE HE OLIAN HARP THE instrument consists of a long narrow box of very thin deal. about five or six inches deep, with a circle in the middle of the upper side, of an inch and a half in diameter, in which are to be drilled small holes. On this side, seven, ten, or more strings, of very fine gut, are stretched over bridges at each end, like the bridge of a fiddle, and screwed up, or relaxed with screw-pins. The strings must be all tuned to one and the same note, and the instrument be placed in some current of air, where the wind can pass over its strings with freedom. A window, of which the width is exactly equal to the length of the harp, with the sash just raised to give the air ad- mission, is a proper situation. When the air blows upon these strings, with different degress of force, it will excite different tones of sound ; sometimes, the blast brings out all the tones in full concert, and sometimes, it sinks them to the softest murmurs. See engraving at the head of th s article. ------ º **—-tric-—t ºr.º.º.º. º. 224 VARIETIES. Q =S TO MAKE FRUIT AND FLOWERS GROW IN WINTER. Take up the trees, on which the fruit grows, by the roots, in the spring, just as they put forth their buds, taking care to preserve some of their own earth about the roots. Set them, standing upright, in a cellar, till the middle of September, and put them into vessels with an addition of earth; then bring them into a stove, taking care to moisten the earth around them every morning with rain water, in a quart of which, dissolve the size of a walnut of sal-ammoniac, and about the middle of March the fruit will appear. TO CONVERT PAPER INTO FRAMES FOR PICTURES. For this purpose, a convenient quantity of the best sort of white paper must be steeped for two or three days in water, till it becomes very soft; then, being reduced by the mortar and hot water into a thin pulp, it is to be laid upon a sieve to draw off its superfluous moisture; after which, it is to be put into warm water, wherein a considerable quantity of fresh glue, or common size, has been dissolved; it may then be placed in moulds, to acquire the desired figure, and when taken out, may be strengthemed as occasion requires, with plaster or moistened chalk, and when dry, painted or overlaid. TO TAIK E THE IMPRIESSION OF BUTTE R.FLIES ON PAP E. R. Clip the wings of the butterflies; lay them upon clean paper in the form of the insect when flying. Spread some pure thick gum-water on another piece of paper, press it on the wings, and it will take them up ; lay a piece of white paper over it, and rub it gently with your finger, or the smooth handle of a knife. The bodies are to be drawn in the space which you leave between the wings. THE DEAF MADE TO HEAR. Procure a stringed instrument, with a neck of some length, as a lute, a guitar, or the like ; and, before you begin to play, you must, by signs, direct the deaf man to take hold, with his teeth, of the end of the neck of the instru- ment; then, if you strike the strings with the bow one after another, the sound will enter the deaf man’s mouth, and be conveyed to the organ of hearing through the hole in the palate; and thus the deaf man will hear, with a great deal of pleasure, the sound of the instrument, as has been severa times experienced; nay, those who are not deaf may make the experiment upon themselves, by stopping their ears, so as not to hear the instrument in the usual way, and then holding the end of the instrument in their teeth while another touches the strings. VARIETIES. 225 THE HYDRO METER. The hydrometer is an instrument to measure the degrees of dryness or moisture of the atmosphere. There are various kinds of hydrometers; for whatever body either swells or shrinks by dryness or moisture, is ca- pable of being formed into an hydrom- eter; such are woods of most kinds, particularly ash, deal, poplar, &c. The following is the most lasting and con- venient mode of constructing an instru- ment of this description :-Take a very mice balance, and place in it a sponge, or other body which easily im- bibes moisture, and let it be in equilib- rio with a weight hung at the other end of the beam. If the air become moist, the sponge, becoming heavier, will preponderate ; if dry, the sponge will be raised up. This balance may be contrived two ways, by either hav- ing the pin in the middle of the beam, with a slender tongue, a foot and a half long, pointing to the divisions of an arched plate, fitted to it; or the other extremity of the beam may be so long, as to describe a large arch on a board placed for the purpose. To prepare the sponge, it may be necessary to wash it in water, and, when dry, in water or vinegar, in which sal-ammoniac, or salt of tartar, has been dissolved, and let it dry again; then it is fit to be used. The instru- ment can be hung against a wall; and, in that case, a bit of steel, as at A, should be placed before the needle, to keep it straight. A. THE AW N OF BA R L E Y HYD ROM ETE IR, The awm of barley is furnished with stiff points, which, like the teeth of a saw, are all turned toward the lesser end of it; as it lies upon the ground, it extends itself in the moist night air, and pushes forward the barley-corn, which it adheres to in the day; it shortens as it dries; and as these points revent it from receding, it draws up its pointed end ; and thus, creeping ike a worm, will travel many feet from the parent stem. That very inge- nious mechanic philosopher, Mr. Edgeworth, once made, on this principle, a wooden automaton ; its back consisted of soft fir-wood, about an inch square, and four feet long, made of pieces cut the cross-way in respect to the fibres of the wood, and glued together; it had two feet before, and two behind, which supported the back horizontally; but were placed with their extremi. ties, which were armed with sharp points of iron, bending backward. Hence, in moist weather the back lengthened, and the two foremost feet were Sisavº … ºr-- - ~rº VARIETIES pushed forward; in dry weather, the hinder feet were drawn after, as the obliquity of the points of the feet prevented it from receding. SUBSTITUTE FOR A COPYING MACHINE, Write with common ink, in which lump sugar has been dissolved—ſoul scruples, or one and a half drachm of sugar to one ounce of ink. Moisten copying paper, by passing a soft wet brush over it; then press it gently be. tween soft cap paper, so as to absorb the superabundant moisture. Put this moistened paper upon the writing, and both betweet, some smooth soft paper, placing the whole within the ſolds of a carpet, when by pressure, a correct copy will be obtained. TO PRESERVE ROSE S TILL CHRISTMAS. When roses are budding and blooming is the time to lay by a treat for Christmas. Select from your rose-trees such buds as are just ready to blow ; tie a piece of thin thread round the stalk of each ; do not handle the bud or the staik; cut it from the tree with the stalk two or three inches in length; melt sealing-wax, and quickly apply it to the end of the stall: ; the wax should be only so warm as to be ductile; form a piece of paper into a come- like shape, wherein place the rose ; screw it up so as to exclude the air; do so by each ; put them into a box, and the box into a drawer ; all which is mtended to keep them free from air. On Christmas-day, or on any other day in winter, take them out, cut off the ends of the stalks, place them in a flower-pot or bottle, with lukewarm water, or, if in a heated room, the water may be cold ; in two or three hours, they will blow, retaining all their fragrance as in the meridian of summer. M A G NIFICENT CRYSTALS, A solution of the salt to be crystallized is to be slowly evaporated to such a consistency that it shall crystallize upon cooling, which may be known by letting a drop of it fall on a plate of glass. When it is in this state, set it by; and pour into a flat-bottomed vessel the liquid part of the solution, when cold, from off the mass of crystals which will be formed at the bottom of it. After a ſew days, solitary crystals will be formed, which will gradually in- crease in size. Pick out the most regular of these, put them into another flat-bottomed vessel, and pour over them a fresh solution of the salt evapo- rated, till it crystallize on cooling. After this, alter the position of every crystal, once a day, with a glass rod, so that all the faces of it may be alter- nately exposed to the liquid, as the face on which the crystal rests never receives any increment. By this process, the crystals will gradually in- crease in size. When they are so large, that their forms can be easily dis. ‘inguished, take the best of them, and put each into a vessel separately; VARIETIES. 227 add a fresh solution of the salt, as before directed, and turn every crystal several times a-day. By this treatment, you may obtain them almost of any size desired. It is necessary to pour off the liquid from the crystals, and add fresh liquid in its place, very frequently; as the solution, after depositing a tertain portion of its salts, becomes weakened, and then attacks the crystals, rounding off their angles, in the first place, as an attentive observer may perceive, and infallibly destroying them, unless renewed. By a little dex- terity, a regular crystal of alum may be thus obtained. CRYSTAL LIZATION UPON CIND E R.S. Saturate water, kept boiling with alum; then set the solution in a cool place, suspending in it by a hair or fine silk thread, a cinder; as the solu- tion cools, a beautiful crystallization will take place upon the ciuder, which will resemble a specimen of mineralogical spar. TO PRODU C E V ARIOUS FLO W E RS FROM ONE ST E Mſ. Scoop the pith from a small twig of elder; split it lengthways, and fill each of the parts with seeds that produce flowers of different colors. Sur- round them with earth, and then tying the two bits of wood, plant the whole in a pot filled with earth. The stems of the different flowers will thus be so incorporated, as to exhibit to the eye only one stem, throwing out branches covered with ſlowers analogous to the seed which produced them. By se- lecting the seeds of plants which germinate at the same period, and which are nearly similar in regard to the texture of their stems, an intelligent per- son may obtain artificial plants exceedingly curious. HARLEQUIN INRS. Inks, of various colors, may be made in the modes following: they are rery beautiful, and frequently of considerable utility. For red ink, boil an ounce of fine chips of Brazil-wood, in half a pint of water, for a quarter of an hour; add to the decoction, three drachms of gum-arabic, and as much alum as it will dissolve. For blue, diffuse Prussian blue or indigo through strong gum-water. For scarlet, dissolve vermilion in gum-water. Inks of other colors may be made from a decoction of the materials used in dying, mixed with a little alum and gum-arabic. - TO BRONZE PLASTER BUSTs, &c. Apply isinglass size, until no part of the surface become dry or spotted, then, with a brush, go over the whole, observing carefully to remove any of the size, while it is yet soft, that may lodge on the delicate or sharp places, and set the bust aside to dry. Then take a little very thin oil gold-size, and, with as much of it as will just damp the brush, go over the figure, allowing VARIETIES. no more of this size to remain, than what causes it to shine. Set it in a dry place, free from smoke; and after it has remained there forty-eight hours the figure is prepared for bronzing. The bronze powder may be had at the color shops, of all metallic colors; it should be dabbed on with a little cot- ton wool. After having touched the extremities of the whole figure, let it t stand another day; then, with a soft dry brush, rub off all the loose powder, and the figure will resemble the metal which it is intended to represent, and * possess the quality of resisting the weather. k TO CUT GLASS, * Make a small motch, by means of a file, on the edge of a piece of glass; º, then, make the end of a tobacco-pipe, or of a rod of iron of the same size, § red-hot in the fire; apply the hot iron, or pipe, to the notch, and draw it i slowly along the surface of the glass in any direction you please; a crack ; will be made in the glass, and will follow the direction of the iron. Cylin- : drical glass vessels, such as flasks, may be cut in the middle, by wrapping * round them a worsted thread dipped in spirit of turpentine, and setting it on fire when fastened on the glass. THE E CLIPS E G LASS i Take a burning glass, or a spectacle-glass that magnifies very much ; hold r it before a book or pasteboard, twice the distance of its focus, and you will 'see the round body of the sun, and the manner in which the moon passes between the glass and the sun, during the whole eclipse. i. TO CALM A GITATIE D WATE H. Drop a small quantity of oil into water agitated by the wind; it will imme- diately spread itself with surprising swiftness upon the surface, and the oil, though scarcely more than a tea-spoonful, will produce an instant calm over a space several yards square. It should be done on the windward side of a pond or river, and you will observe it extend to the size of nearly half an acre, making it appear as smooth as a looking-glass. One remarkable cir- cumstance in this experiment is, the sudden wide and forcible spreading of a drop of oil on the surface of the water; for, if a drop of oil be put upon a highly polished marble table, or a looking-glass, laid horizontally, the drop - remains in its place, spreading very little; but when dropped on water, it ~ spreads instantly many feet round, becoming so thin, as to produce the pris. #: matic colors for a considerable space, and beyond them so much thinner, as # to be invisible, except in its effect of smoothing the waves at a much greater ag distance. It seems as if a repulsion of its particles takes place as soon as it touches the water, and so strong as to act on other bodies swimming on the water, as straw, leaves, chips, &c. forcing them to recede every way from the drop, as from a centre, º a large clear space. -- •s *** * *-i- ***** *----------4---- • * * * * * i VARIETIES. EN GRAVIN G O N E G G-SH E L L S. Design on the shells any figure or ornament you please, with melted tal. low, or any other fat oily substance; then immerse the eggs in very strong vinegar, and let them remain until the acid has corroded that part of the shell which is not covered with the greasy matter, those parts will then ap- pear in relief, exactly as you have drawn them. LAU G H IN G. G.A.S. A few lines on the mode of preparing and administering nitrous oxide gas, or, as it is termed, Laughing Gas, will, we doubt not, prove acceptable and interesting. Although not fitted to support life, yet it may be respired for a short time, and the effects, produced by it upon the animal frame, are its most extraordinary properties. The manner of breathing it is this: the nitrous oxide gas, having been previously purified by standing over water, is put into a large bladder, or varnished silk bag, having a wide glass tube, or a stop-cock with a large bore, affixed to its neck. The bladder is them held by the tube in the right hand, the mouth of it being closed by applying the thumb, and the nostrils are closed with the leſt hand; the air contained in the lungs is expelled by a long respiration; and the tube of the bladder being instantly applied to the mouth, the gas is breathed from and into the bladder as long as possible, which, perhaps, will be about two or three minutes. The effects differ greatly, according to the constitutions of the persons by whom it is respired. In general, however, they are highly agreeable. Exquisite sensations of pleasure, an irresistible propensity to laughter, a rapid flow of vivid ideas, singular thrilling in the toes, fingers and ears, a strong incitement to muscular motions,—are the ordi- nary feelings produced by it. We have read of one gentleman, who, after breathing the gas some time, threw the bag from him, and kept breathing on laboriously with an open mouth, holding his nose with his fingers, without the power to remove them, though perfectly aware of his ludicrous situation; he had a violent inclimation to jump over the chairs and tables, and seemed so light that he thought he was going to fly. What is exceedingly remark- able, is, that the intoxication thus produced, instead of being succeeded by the debility subsequent to intoxication by fermented liquors, does, on the contrary, generally render the person who takes it cheerful and high-spirited for the remainder of the day. THE COMICAL CARDS, The juvenile artist may treat his friends with an hour’s merriment by this humorous little device, which is eſfected by drawing, on a number of cards all of one size, a series of grotesque-looking faces, some male, others female. with droll head-dresses, night-caps, hats, wigs, and helmets, which he may VARIETIES select from any of the prints or caricatures that fall in his way; but the general compass of the face part should be within about the same space in all of them. Then divide each card into three pieces, cutting it across in a line just below the eye, and again, across the upper lip; the middle piece will be narrower than the upper or lower piece. A box should be provided with partitions in it, so as to keep all the parts in their respective classes. The cards should be cut straight, so that the pieces of each will fit all the others, and all the tops should be of the same width; all the middles of one width, but narrower than the tops, and all the bottoms about the same size as the tops. An almost endless variety of changes may be obtained, by placing the forehead of one card in contact with the nose on a second, and the chim on a third. Thus, a laughable effect is produced by putting the red carbun- cled nose of a City Alderman under the helmet of a Roman warrior, and finishing him below with the kerchiefed neck and shoulders of an old wo- man; or the cap, eyes, and nose of Moll Flaggon over the flowing wig and robes of a Judge on a court day. T H E R ID D L ER A riddle is not solved, impatient sirs, By peeping at its answers in a trice ;- - When Gordius, the plough-boy King of Phrygia Tied up his implements of husbandry In the far-fam'd knot, rash Alexander Did not undo, by cutting it in twain. RIDDLEs are by no means of modern origin; the Sphynx puzzled the crains of some of the heroes of antiquity, and even Alexander the Great, as it is written, made several essays to untie the knot (a practical riddle) with which Gordius, the Phrygian king, who had been raised from the plough to the throne, tied up his implements of husbandry in the temple, in so intricate a manner, that universal monarchy was promised to the man who could undo it: after having been repeatedly baffled, he, at length, drew his sword, considering that he was entitled to the fulfilment of the promise, by cutting the Gordian knot. Charades, Rebusses, Comundrums, &c. are, with many persons, favorite occasional fire-side recreations. In the construction of several of them, con siderable ingenuity is displayed; they are not, in all cases, the production of mere witlings and holyday rhymesters; for more than one author of celeb- rity, doubtless, in some of those sportive moments when the mind relaxes from graver pursuits to toy and dally with comparative trifles, has contributed bis mite toward the great ſumd of riddles now in circulation. One of the most clever and best-written among the following collection has been ascrib ed to the pen of the late Lord Byron :-we allude to the limes on the letter [H (Enigma 1. page 241.) Comundrums, it must be admitted, are a set of CHARADES. verbal distortions; but still, these distortions are often so droll as to excite mirth. Anagrams, or the letters of a name resolved into any apt phrase, were, at one time, considered of great importance; many of them by RC means lack humor. A work of thrice this bulk would scarcely contain all the Enigmas, Charades, &c. now current: we have, therefore, endeavoured to make a judicious selection from the mass. CHARADES. 1. My first is a part of the day, %. second at feasts overflows; In the cottage my whole is oft seen, To measure old Time as he goes. A cat does my first, and men drink at my second; My whole is the drift of an argument reckon’d 3. My first gave us early support, My next is a virtuous lass; To the fields if at eve you resort, My whole you will probably pass. 4. My first, a native of the ground, #. English countries much prevails; My next’s in every county found, My whole was never out of Wales. By candle-light, ladies, my first will appear, And the less light the larger it grows ; My second few like when applied to the ear, Though many my third to the nose. My first nor book nor.volume nam’d, Contains more leaves than most ; My next, when certain crops are claim’d. Still stalks a numerous host : CIHARADES. My whole—a creeping flower so fair, Regales the eye, and scents the air. 7. - My first is to ramble; my next to retreat: My whole oft enrages in summer’s fierce heat. 8. * My first do all nurses possess, And dandle my second upon it; My whole is a part of the dress Attached to the cap or the bonnet. i 9. My first oft preys upon my second: My whole a bitter shrub is reckon'd. 10. My first in fruit is seldom rare; My second all relations are: My whole is only earthen-ware. II. My first dreads my second, for my second destroys my first, while many .. delight in my whole. e - 12. In every hedge my second is, As well as every tree; And when poor school-boys act amiss, It often is their fee. My first, likewise, is always wicked, º Yet ne'er committed sin : My total for my first is fitted, Compos’d of brass or tin. 13. My first gives protection when robbers invade, * Dear sir, this brown jug,” of my second is made: My total will show a pedestrian, whose name, Unrivalled will stand in the annals of fame; And also a brewer, whose mighty renown Has been spread, by his beer, all over the town. 14. Without my first, my second would be undone: My whole's a village near Hyde Park and London - 15. - My first’s a prop, my second’s a prop, and my whole’s a prop. 16. My first is in most shops; In every window my second : My whole is used for the bed, And, in winter, a comfort is reckon'd. 17. My whole is under my second, and surrounds my first. 18. My first assuages the appetite of a horse, and agonizes the foot of a man my second, if made of brick, is good; when of stone, better; and, as the seaman would say, when wooden, is best of all : my whole is famous for its—(but hold ! we must make a charade upon a charade here)—take the principal produce of China, a part of the body that is often black, and as frequently gray or blue, and a useful domestic bird, or, rather, the three letters which, in pronunciation, resemble these things, and they will show for what my whole is famous. 19. My first, if you do, you won’t hit; My next, if you do, you won’t leave it: My whole, if you do, you won’t guess it. 20. ... My first we oft lend to each other in turn, * To borrow it would be excessively droll; My next, near my first you may often discern; In my first, too, alas ! you’ll perhaps find my whole 21. My first is appropriate; my second ’tis nine to one if you guess it; my whole elevates the sole above the earth. 22. My first is always; My second durable; My whole without end. 23. My first marks time; my second spends it; and my whole tells it … . . * - º ºr r *Sº Yº §sº § . . Yº-sº […-y Nº.2& 2 * 2 * . . . . . º CHARADE.S. And if this charade is not easily said, My whole you deserve to have thrown at your head. 25. My first is a tree which with cedars will vie, My second’s the tenderest part of the eye. My whole is a fruit which to none will give place, For delicate flavour, and exquisite taste. 26 | Of my first there is but one in the year:-of my second, but two in the world:—and my whole has every quality of a vegetable, except vegetation. 27. Drink deep of my first: admit me to your second : and let me play >} upon my whole. 24. * My first makes all nature appear with one face; At my second is music and beauty and grace; 28. My first troubles you in summer: my next is a most careful mother: my whole is no Christian. 29. If you are able to do my first as well as my second can, you will soon be a good player at my whole. 30. My first is an important part of the human frame; a constituent of all bodies, regular or irregular; it is sometimes in sometimes out, sometimes this and sometimes that, sometimes one and sometimes the other. My second is a common action,-sometimes induced by the hurry of business, scnetimes by the mere love of pleasure; it offers economy the cheapest medicine, and taste the most picturesque scenery; it is what English ladies like best, and Turks like least; and it may well be said to be fashionable, for it is the go throughout the world. My whole is indispensable in every city, yet val- uable as it is, it is trampled on by all classes; all who use it are raised above the common track,-yet high and low, rich and poor, great and small, unite to destroy it. 31. My first is nothing but a name; My second is more small; My whole is of so little ſame, It has no ſame at all 236 CONUNIDRUMIS. 32. \ My first on foreign churches you may greet: At home it’s seldom found in church, or street; My second oft is used by household care, * To make old garments fit for folks to wear; My whole may well describe ill-humored folks, Who knit their brows at puns, charades, and jokes. C O N U N D R U M S. 1. What does a seventy-four gun ship weigh, with all her crew on boaid, just before she sets sail ® 2. Why is a short negro like a white man 3. Why is the statute book like the Grecian army before Troy'ſ 4. Why is your nose like V in civility ? 5. Why is Virgil’s greatest work like a baker 6. What is most like a horse’s shoe 3 7. Who is that lady, whose visits nobody wishes, though her mother is welcomed by all parties" k 8. what is that which few like to give away, and yet nobody wishes to - Keep : 9. What word is that in the English language, of one syllable, which, by taking away the two first letters, becomes a word of two syllables? 49. Which is the left side of a plum-pudding 3 11. Why are children at the breast like soldiers on a campaign 3 Hº-Jºhat thing is that which is lengthened by being cut at both ends? 13. Why is a horse in a stable like a tortured criminal 14. What word of five syllables is that, from which, if you take one syl- lable away, no syllable remains 4 +5: What burns to keep a secret? 16. Why is a stormy, windy day, like a child with a cold in its head'ſ 17. What word is that, to which, if you add a syllable, it will make i shorter " * 18. Why should boiled peas of a bad color be sent to Knightsbridge" 19. Where did Noah strike the first nail in the ark'ſ - 20. Why is a tailor like a woodcock? 21. Why is a pack of cards like a garden 22. Why do we all go to bed" 23. Why is a lottery-office-keeper like Lord Lyndhurst 4 24. Why was Titian’s fat daughter, Mary, like William Cobbett'ſ r" -r-ºr -ºs-y- 24 º * * * * †. Tº sº. ** *re. Ç * --! conundruMs. 237 26. In which month do ladies talk least 2. * 27. Why is a man who is making cent. per cent. by trade like Ireland? . 28. Why is a town in Essex like a noisy dog" - 29. Why is Paris like the letter Fº , - . 25. If you give a kiss and take a kiss, what does it make t 80: What town in Devonshire will denote a woman making a wry || face 3 . . . . || | 81: Why is a man sailing up the Tigris, like one putting his father into | a sack? - . - | 32. Why does the eye resemble a schoolmaster in the act of flogging? 33: Why is a room full of married folks like an empty room 3 34. Why is an angry person like a loaf'ſ • 35. Why is a placeman like a cobler 7 - || 36. Why is a peach-stone like a regiment 7 || || 37. Why is a dwarf's whole suite like pair of breeches 7 - 38.3%hy is a dancing master like a cook? 39. Why is money like a whip 2 - '40. Why is a man, who runs in debt, like a clock" 41. What question is that to which you must answer “Yes?” 42. If you throw a man out of a window, what does he first fall against" 43. Why is an island like the letter Tº - . . 44. When is a door not a door " | 45. Why is a bee-hive like a spectato, . . . . . . . . 46. Why is a tale-bearer like a brick-layer'ſ 47. Why is a Welshman, on St. David’s day, like a foundering vessel ? 48. What is that which a coach cannot move without, and yet is not of the least use to it? - - 49. Why is a man in love like a lobster 3 50. When is a man over head and ears in debt? . . . 51, What is smaller than a mite’s mouth || 52. Why is the soul like a thing of no consequence? ; : 53. Why is a handsome woman like bread 2 * - . . . . 54. What snuff is that, the more of which is taken, the fuller the box is ||. 55. Why is the wick of a candle like Athens 3 : ... . 56. Why is a ſender like Westminster Abbey" 57. Why is Richmond like the letter R.? 58. Why is a blind beggar often like a wig 3 59. What fruit is that whose name answers to a busy-body? 60. Why is a cat on her hind legs like a waterfall 2 . 6i. Why is a poor man like a seamstress 3 - '', , 62. Why is that which never fails, like a strong knot? 63. Why are false wings like mushrooms 7 64. Why is swearing like a ragged coat CON UNIDRUMS. | ,” - “º ‘s ğs==<5 - *-*. ass=235 - \ • *- * --> - • * , - . - 65. Why is sealing-wax like a soldier * 66. If I buy four books for a penny, and give one of them away, why am I like a telescope 3 67. Why is a man led astray like one govermed by a girl 68. Why is a clergyman’s horse like a king 3 69. What is that which makes every one sick but those who swallow it'ſ 70. What kin is that child to its own father who is not its father’s own son? 71. What is that which is often brought to table, always cut, and never eaten ? 72. Why is a dejected man like one thrown from a precipice? 73. Why is a Jew in a ſever like a diamond? 74. Why are fixed stars like pens, ink, and paper ? 75. Why is a jest like a fowl 76. Why is a man in a garret committing murder like a good man 3 77. What relation is your uncle’s brother to you who is not your uncle 3 78. Why should ladies wringing wet linen remind us of going to church 3 79. What is that which lives in winter, dies in summer, and grows with its root upward" 80. Why is an avaricious man like one with a short memory " 81. Why is a man walking to a town like one endeavouring to prevent a blow 7 - 82. Why is the sun like a man of fashion ? 83. Which is the heaviest, a bargeman or a lighterman 84. Why is a blacksmith’s apron like a duenna 3 85. Why is a lady embraced like a pocket-book 3 86. What step must I take to remove the letter A from the alphabet” 87. Why are there three objections to a glass of spirits? - S8. Why do cats see best in the dark 3 89. A man would drink a glass of wine, and not let it go down his throat —llow could he do it? 90. Why is a man beating a boy for telling a falsehood, like another playing on a certain musical instrument 4 91. Why is a cook like a barber? 92. Why is a man opening oysters like Captain Cook firing on thesavages? 93. A farmer meeting Jack Ketch, asked him the diſſerence between their occupations, which he gave in one word :—what is that word 7 94. What is that which is always invisible, yet never out of sight? 95. Why is Alderman B's belly like the street he lives in 3 96. Why is the devil riding on a mouse like one and the same thing 3 97. Why is a pair of trowsers, too big every way, like two populous towns in France { 98. What word in the English language expresses the following question —“Are you a reserved man º’’ CON UNIDRUMS. - 239 99. Why is a waiter like a race-horse 100. Why is a dandy like a haunch of venison 4 101. Tom went out, and his dog with him, he went not before, behind, nor on one side of him :—them where did he go? 102. Why is a madman like two men? 103. What is a man like that is in the midst of a river and can’t swim? 104. Why is a lady curling her hair like a housebreaker : 105. Why is a lady in her shift like Amsterdam 4 106. Why is a fish-hook like a badger ? 107. Why is a man in a fever like a burning candle ; 108. Why is your hat, when it is on your head, like a giblet-pie? 109. A carpenter made a door, but it was too large ; he cut it, and cut it too little; he cut it again, and made it just fit. 110. Why is a good story like a parish bell ? 111. Why is Chancery Lane like your eye" 112. What most resembles a cat in a hole 7 113. If a man sham hanging himself, why does he resemble a conjuror" l 114. In what place did the cock crow, when all the world could hear him 7 115. Why does a brunette’s face resemble a wet day ? 116. You are requested to ask the following question in one word:— “Are you the person º’’ 117. Why is a man moping from morning till night like a favorite clown 3 118. What animal is that, who, in the morning, goes upon four legs; in the aftermoon, upon two; and in the evening upon three ? 119. Why is a comundrum like a monkey 4 120. Why is Mr. McAdam like one of the seven wonders of the world? . 121. What smells most in a doctor’s shop 3 122. What do we all do when we first get into bed ” 123. What is the weight of the moon'; 124. Why is St. Paul’s like a bird’s nest ? 125. Why do pioneers march at the head of regiments 3 126. What river is that which runs between two seasº 127. What sea would make the best bed-room 'ſ 128. What words are those which we often see in a pastry-cook’s shop window, which a person afflicted with hydrophobia would use in describing his malady ? 129. When is the river Thames good for the eyes" 130. Why has a glass-blower more command over the alphabet than any other man " I31. What is that which you would say to a short boy, and which names h trade '. zº 240 CON UNIDR UNIS. 132. Why is a speech delivered on the deck of a man-of-war like a ady’s necklace 3 & 133. Why is a lady in a sedan like the equator 3 134. Why is a tallow-chandler the most vicious and unfortunate of men 3 135. Why is Ireland likely to become very rich 3 136. Why is a Chinese city like a man looking through a key hole : 137. Why is Liverpool like benevolence 3 138. What two letters make a county in Massachusetts 3 139. Why is the Prince of Wales like a cloudy day ! 140. Did you ever see the elegy on a Turkey 3 141. The figures representing my age, are what you ought to do in all -hings. How.old am I ? 142. What foreign letter makes the title of a noble lady ? 143. Why is London like the letter E * 144. Why is a good tavern like a bad one 3 145. Why is an angry man like a lady in full dress % 146. Why is a thread-bare coat and a person too soon awakened, similar to each other 7 147. Why are deep sighs like long stockings 3 148. What occupation is the sum 3 149. Why are your eyes like stage-horses 7 150. Why are your teeth like verbs? 151. Why is a tattler unlike a mirror 152. Why is an andiron like a yard stick? 153. What word makes you sick, if you leave out one of its letters 4 154. Why is A like a honeysuckle 3 155. Why is gooseberry pie like counterfeit money : 156. What word of ten letters can be spelled with five 4 157. What class of people have a name, which means “I can’t improve º’” 158, Why is a man who walks over Charlestown bridge, like one who says, “Yes?” 159. What plant is the name of a fop and a wild beast 3 160. Why should red-haired inen be chosen for soldiers ? 161. What is higher and handsomer when the head is off? 162. Why is the letter D like a sailor" 163. If the alphabet were invited out to dine, what time would U, V, W, X, Y, and Z go º 164. Why is the letter G like the sun ? 165. Why is Mr. Tuſt’s brewery like a Jewish tavern" 166. Why is a theological student like a merchant? 167. Why is a palm-tree like a chronologer ? 168. Why is a man on horse-back like diſticulties overcome" 169. Why is a person aſſiicted with the elieuulatisin, like a glass window" s-º a º $-s: - ... --~. 5s=~ S- <-s: *:::3: sº ENIGIMIAS 171. 172. 173. 174. 175. 176. 177. 178. 179. 180. ISI. 182. Imam ". 183. 184. 185. a painter’s pocket 7 186. Decline Ice cream. From what motive does a fisherman blow his horn in the market? How can you take one from nineteen, and leave twenty 4 Which side of a pitcher is the handle 7 >< Why is a furnace for powder like the letter S : ~: Spell Elder-blow tea, with four letters. - Why is a little green musk-melon like a horse" *- Why is an industrious girl like a very aged woman 7 Why are Protestants like flies 3 Why was the Irish riot, at South Boston, like General Washington? Why is a tailor like one who resides in the suburbs of a city ? Spell the Archipelago in three letters ? If the letter D were never used more, why would it be like a dead Why is grass like a mouse? Why do white sheep furnish more wool than black ones : According to the laws of retaliation, what right have you to pick What two species of falsehood are in the last novel by the author of Redwood'; 187. Why has Mr. Timothy More, since he lost his hair, become like one of our southern cities " ISS, 189. 190. 191. 192. 193. I94. 195. 196. Why is an avaricious man like one with a short memory " A backgammon table contains the garden of Eden; does it not ? Describe a cat’s clothing botanically 3 Why are the eye-brows like mistakes Why should there be a marine law against whispering 3 What kind of portrait can you spell with three letters? What river in England is what maughty girls do 4 Why is an Irishman turning over in the snow like a watchman 3 How can a man live eighty years, and see only twenty birth days 3 E NIGM AS. 1. *Twas whispered in heaven, 'twas mutter’d in hell, And echo caught faintly the sound as it ſell; On the confines of earth 'twas permitted to rest, And the depths of the ocean its presence confess'd ; Twill be ſound in the sphere, when 'tis riven asunder: 'Tis seen in the lightning, and heard in the thunder; Øg F- 242 ENI GMAS. *Twas allotted to man from his earliest breath, It assists at his birth, and attends him in death; Presides o'er his happiness, honor, and health, Is the prop of his house, and the end of his wealth; In the heap of the miser 'tis hoarded with care, But is sure to be lost in his prodigal heir ; It begins every hope, every wish it must bound; It prays with the hermit, with monarchs is crown'd; Without it the soldier and seaman may roam, ut wo to the wretch that expels it from home; In the whispers of conscience ’tis sure to be ſound, Nor e'en in the whirlwind of passion is drown’d; *Twill soften the heart, though deaſ to the ear, *Twill make it acutely and constantly hear; But, in short, let it rest; like a beautiful flower, (Oh! breathe on it softly,) it dies in an hour In a garden there strayed A beautiful maid, As fair as the flowers in the morn The first hour of her life She was made a wife, And she died before she was born 3. Without a bridle or a saddle, Across a thing I ride a-straddle, And those I ride, by help of me, } Though almost blind, are made to see , * 4. I’ve seen you where you never were, And where you ne'er will be; And yet within that very place, You shall be seen by me. - 5. A shining wit pronounced, of late, That every acting magistrate Is water in a freezing state. 6. Form'd long ago, yet made to-day, Employ'd while others sleep; What few would ever give away, Or any wish to keep. ICNIGMAS. 243 J 7 A word of four syllables seek till you find, That has in it the twenty-four letters combin’d 8. Form'd half beneath and half above the earth, sº We, sisters, owe to art a second birth; } The smith’s and carpenter’s adopted daughters, - Made on the earth to travel o’er the waters. Swifter we move, as tighter we are bound, Yet neither touch the water, air, nor ground. We serve the poor for use, the rich for whim, Sink when it rains, and when it freezes, swim. - 9. I’m rough, I’m smooth, I’m wet, I’m dry; My station low, my title high; The king my lawful master is; 5 y * º I’m us’d by all, though only his. I0. There is a thing was three weeks old, When Adam was no more; This thing it was but four weeks old, When Adam was fourscore. ll. - We are two brothers, born together, who seldom touch the earth, though we often go to the ground; although we never eat fodder, buy, sell, or bar ter, we may be said to be interested in the corn laws. 12. Never still for a month, but seen mostly at night. 13. In spring, I am gay in my attire ; in summer, I wear more clothing than n spri.ºg; in winter, I am naked. 14. In camps about the centre I appear: In smiling meadows seen throughout the year; The silent angler views me in the streams, And all must trace me in their morning dreams; First in each mob conspicuous I stand, Proud of the lead, and ever in command; * <-4. 244 ENIGMAS. Without my power no mercy can be shown, Or soft compassion to their hearts be known; Each sees me in himself, yet all agree º: ; Their hearts and persons have no charm for me; The chemist proves my virtue upon ore, For, touch’d by me, he changes it to more. 15. I am a character well known in England; and there are few, either high or low, rich or poor, but know my name and qualifications. As I confess myself a stranger to beauty and innocence, in the fair sex I can never ap- pear. I avoid towns and cities, and commonly take my abode towards the extremity of a village. In respectable society I am never admitted, but in a gang of gypsies or beggars make a principal figure; and without me sinuggling would be nothing. I cannot well show my face in day-time, but late in the evening, or middle of might I appear, and always in disguise. I am fond of gaming, though must own, whatever company I am in, never fail to end in cheating and plundering. It is the opinion of Burn and Black- stone, that I should always be put in jail : but, be that as it may, my fate is certainly not to be there at present. From the character I have given of myself, and the company I keep, you may suppose me some thief or pick- pocket; but, as a proof that I am neither, I delight not in a crowd; and, as a further hint, I no sooner appear before one, than it is instantly gone. 16. I am rough, smooth, hard, soft, long, short, round, ſlat, oval, square, or oblong Am now honored with the grasp of a monarch, and now in the nand of him who executcs the meanest office. I possess the art of pleasing in a very eminent degree. Am now the delight of the idle beau, and now assist the skilful artist. My station is ever varying: I am now thrown care- lessly in a corner, now put into the mouth, now in the pocket, and now under the grate. I will only add, that every room is indebted to me for its chief Ol'Ilann(2nt. 17. & I am no monarch, but am superior to all of them, except the Pope; I have no noble blood in my veins, yet the meanest of my family has precedence over the heads of others; I wear no sword, but in my evening walks often meet and beat those that do; indeed, I have fought more battles, and gained more victories, than all the conquerors and heroes recorded in history, from the leginning of the world. Sometimes my army has been defeated; yet, in that part of the action where I fought myself, the enemy has always sub- ! tºlitted, when I carry off my prisoners under an armed band, dressed in ‘ine t’, t-nch tuliſorm, and sometimes adorned with gold and precious stones, tº ap ENIG MAS. 245 apartment where no eye was ever suffered to intrude. Perhaps you will think me a ghost, or at least a conjuror, if I tell you, that to-day I am in a thousand places at once, and to-morrow (as far as you know) I am nowhere; now I am in a room, soon after I am not there; again I appear, yet the doors and windows are all shut. With all this dignity, valor, and address, 'tis no wonder, if, like other military beaux, I am a great favorite with the ladies ; as soon as they see me, they embrace me with delight, but are very cautious of keeping our commexion a profound secret; yet such is the ca- § priciousness of the sex, that in a little time they discover it themselves, and part from me with as much pleasure as they met me. However, this sepa- ration is no disgrace; for they hope to have me again, and count me their highest honor; should I decline visiting them for a whole might, even the proudest heart would be discomposed; and the more violent and indiscreet would utter their displeasure in complaints to their neighbours: but this at- tachment is no wonder, for, like themselves, my countenance is sometimes a lively mixture of the lily and the rose; like them, too, I am changeable, and, in the space of a few minutes, grow black in the face; yet my conse- {. quence is mot lessened, but sometimes increased; and, in a little time, I * . generally resume my former complexion. - It may be of some advantage to me with the ladies, that I sometimes re- semble that part of their dress, of which they are most vain; and, at other times, that part, the obtaining of which is the end for which they dress, and the object of their wishes. Let these ladies look to their own bosoms to discover me, but in an open mammer; for no trick opposed to me ever succeeded, and I believe nome ever will. IS. He that in music takes delight, : And he that sleeps secure by might, And he who sails too mear the land, And he that’s caught by law's strong hand; - He who his time in taverns spends, : And he that courts of law attends; He that explains heraldic signs, And he that works in silver mines, Are all acquainted well with me: My name you surely now must see, • 19. In Sir Walter Scott’s celebrated poem, called “Marmion,” are the fol- kwing lines: - * - “Charge, Chester, charge ' On, Stanley, on 1 Were the last words of Alarmion.” : REBUSSE3 These lines have occasioned the following enigma. Were I in noble Stanley’s place, When Marmion urged him to the chase, The word you then might all descry, Would bring a tear to every eye. 20. A lady in prison received an animal as a present from her niece, which signified to her “Make your escape ;” in reply she sent back a fruit which imported “It is impossible to escape.” What was the animal, and what was the fruit? REB USSES. To three-fourths of a cross, add a circle complete; Then, let two semi-circles a perpendicular meet; Next add a triangle that stands on two feet; \ Then, two semi-circles, and a circle complete. 2. A hundred and fifty, if rightly applied, To a place where the living did once all reside, Or a consonant joined to a sweet singing bird, Will give you a name that you’ve oftentimes heard; Which 'mong your friends, at least, one person owns, It’s the rival of Sinith, and as common as Jones. : - 3. : A numeral, a pronoun, and a syllable that, in sound, resembles the neigh- ing of a horse, will compound that, without which, even a palace would prove an uncomfortable habitation. The following are Rebusses on the Names of London Performers What Roman Catholics reverence. The head of a monastery. * * One of the tallest productions of mature, A color and a vowel. A king of England and a consºnant. A word synonymous with shal What we all stand upon, and a vowel. IREBUSSES. 11. A famous French dancer. 12. One-fourth of what a lover gives his mistress, a measure, and a vowel. 13. A measure, a vowel, and four-fiſths of a weight used in Smithfield. 14. A numeral, the French for A, and the refuge of a wild beast. 15. The usual distinction of a Scotch mame, and what we should always be to do a good action. - 16. The fourth of a sovereign, and five-sevenths of an age of terror. 17. A female Christian name, and three-fourth of the reverse to soft. 18. A trade. 19. A word implying distance, and three-fourths of a small bird 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. A preparer of eatables and a vowel. An exclamation of the ghost in Hamlet, and a preposition A vowel, and four-fifths of the safe-guards of a prison. A consonant, and a portion of the earth. A production of the pastry-cook. Four-sixths of traffic, and a liquid made with pearl-ash. A Hebrew measure. - A tool used to take off coach-wheels. A famous river on the continent, and what we all wish to be. What most young ladies try to obtain, preceded by a consonant. An abbreviation for Harry, part of the earth, and a vowel. An Irishnan’s mick-name, and the reverse to off. Two thirds of a lively color, and the mother of mankind. An English city: or, a box, and two-thirds of to do wrong. What we rub our feet on, and what the woodimam does when he cuts down a tree. One of the points of the compass. A fruit, and what your father is, and your mother is not. The initials of his majesty, two-thirds of what the inhabitants of Bed- am are, and a Spanish title. e 38. Four-fifths of the earth in a dead language, and the penultimate let- ſer of the alphabet. Part of a ship, and two-thirds of an eye. What the ambitious wish to possess. Part of a lock, and a vowel. Half of a foreign country, and what shopkeepers buy for. A measure, and the middle of a hare. A city that was mistress of the world, and a rough consonant. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. Take a word that’s composed of three letters alone, The initial then change thirteen times, all but one; §§ > "J. y tºº.T.--> Kºsº) if x * > *ś Q_r=Esg 248 REBUSSEs. Thirteen words will appear, though all ending the same, As various in sense, as they can be in mame. First a place must be found, where brave tars oft retreat, When the wind, in a storm, makes the waves o'er them beat; The first letter exchange, as a song 'twill appear; Then exchange it again, 'tis a part of the year; º Now it’s lively and brisk, the next place to possess ; • Then gives name to a pole, in its holyday dress; Next the produce of earth, when ſor food 'tis prepared ; Them a chattering thing, to a magpie compared ; For brightness and glory, now sce it far famed ; Whatsoe’er I allege, the next word will be named ; A denial, alas ! too, it sometimes must be ; May it never be so, when the next’s due to me; A famed Scottish river, its assistance must lend; Last, a road's to be found, bringing us to the end. 46. Since, gentle reader, in this our RIDDLER, thou hast often seen represented various characters, the grave and gay, the lively and severe, Llo now we lead thee to a gallery, where poets and pliilosophers, high ſamed in clas- sic page, stand ranged before thy admiring view. Full ſifteen hundred years have now elapsed, since on the world these luminaries shone. Survey them closely; scan their history; avoid their faults, and emulate their VII’ttleS. Behold that figure, reeling like a Bacchamal –See how his swollen eyes and bloated cheeks bespeak the temper of his body. Hark!—he recites an otle: the honied strains drop from his pen, while reason holds possession of his mind —How sweet, how elegant the poetry!—But, alas ! his subject and his state too well agree. Ah! shame to see such talents so abused. Next view the Samian Sage : observe his stature :—every joint and every limb denotes the strength that he possesses:–but could his mind be seen by mortal eye, 'twould seem still more gigantiq., Observe his dress; how simple !—Humility his garb, and modesty his chief adornment' Although his friends would willingly have called him “the Wise Man,”— that title herefused ; and chose the appellation of “the Friend of Wisdom.” But, great as was this teacher, a little child, in this most happy and en lightened land, might teach him wisdom that he me’er could reach. But, lo the Theban General appears, laden with spoils, his brows full crowned with laurel, and his garments red with the slaughter of the van- quished foe. What ſield has witnessed this great conquest, and who are the REIB USSES. 249 sufferers ? Leuctra beheld the fate of Sparta’s sons, and streams of blood defiled her pleasant plains. Behold Eunomus' son, the Sage of Lacedaemon. His lowering aspect and contracted brows seem indications of the sanguinary disposition of his mind. His laws forbade the use of gold and silver, and substituted iron :- so far ’twas good, to stop the progress of voluptuousness, and obviate tempta- tions to dishonesty;-but Nature shrinks, and Cruelty herself draws back with horror, when she beholds infants, unstained with any actual crimes, doomed by umbending policy to premature destruction. Next view the Spartan Sculptor. The rumor of his skill had reached the ears of “Philip's warlike son :” the conqueror of the world forbade any other hand to carve his martial ſeatures on the stone. In the great Augustan age, his statues’ worth was rated at their weight in gold. But see the Poet of Salamis; whose natal day was ushered in with shouts of victory, and with songs of triumph :—when Xerxes and his numerous host sustained a dire defeat, and felt the punishment so justly due to pride and to ambition. No warrior he, yet did his magic verse obtain the freedom of those Greeks, who groaned beneath the Syracusan bondage. Now, to complete this “motley group,” see, tripping “on the light fantas- tic toe,” a sprightly Damsel. Famed Lesbos gave her birth; but she, more famed for beauty and for wit, has far excelled her sex in poetry. The happy verse in which her numbers flowed, still bears her name. But, alas ! her breast became the seat of every passion: and thence flowed the poison that tainted all her compositions:—else were that judgment just, that ranked her among the Muses. Here, reader, pause ; and call to mind these names; of each then take the initials, and in due order range them. Them will appear the Ephesian Artist; whose excelling skill has far surpassed the united brilliancy and majesty of Rubens and of Raphael. 47. Find the thing by Pandora entail'd on mankind, When, on opening her box, only Hope staid behind: Let this word stand entire, and before it prefix Initials fifteen, but no letter e'er mix : Thus by changing the head, as the principal part, You may render it various as mature and art: First I find it form part of a bird in the air; Then examine a fish, and as sure find it there; As an eminence now it will rear up i's head; Then the last deed of man, as is commonly said; º * * - ºw.” • - -- * ... * * - . . - • .” * * , - - • . . , " : " ": , • *. § 3. . * * - t- - * - * * * * - -> - *-*- --- - *** -*...*-** - - - -- - - -- - } ; ... -- 4. p * -- ***. $º: -º-º: ** as ... * ** **ś REJB USSES As a farmer’s employment it mext will appear; And a thing to your door you will find very near; What the doctors oft give, to relieve us from pain; And a plant we now look for in gardens, in vain; What I bid my friend do when I give him a toast; And a place much frequented by knights of the Post; A short name that’s well known in a nursery song; And what runs through a country for many miles long; What’s the aim of a sportsman, pursuing his game; What we style a meat box, or a township’s short name; And then all your labor will nearly be over, And a double head’s all you have left to discover, For one, being mute, a companion and friend, Must forever stand by, its assistance to lend; In revealing what’s common to birds and a beast, And whose use to us scribblers is none of the least. 48. Reverse a smug apartment, and you’ll find A dreary marsh presented to your mind. 49. Now to your enigmatic eyes, Behold six worthies shall arise, From their initials to compound A modern poet, much renowned First in the list we enter thee, Father of English poetry: Next thee, of Scotia’s bards the first ; Thy muse from darkest ages burst Next thee, philosopher divine, And poet,_all the praise is thine; *Twas thine the sweetest notes to raise From David’s harp, in British lays: Thee, Theban bard, whose rapid fire Succeeding ages still admire; While a vain modern, grasping fame, Profanes thy venerable name : Thee next, hypocrisy’s great foe, An agent in Rome’s overthrow, When Luther’s zeal o'er Europe spread, And shook the Antichristian head; Batavia boasts thy worthy name, “The priesthood’s glory, and its shame:” IłEBUSSES. With thee, at last, the verse shall shine, The prince of painters, styled “ divine;” A sovereign pontiff knew thy worth, And old Urbino claims thy birth. 50. Two letters, expressing profiision and waste, Transposed, show a county to most people’s taste. 51. A modern bard of universal ſame; A classic river’s oſt-repeated name;. | A naval hero dear to ev'ry heart; i A ruthless tyrant with a murd’rous dart; - An English author, famous for his style f A poet who our leisure may beguile; ſ Th’ initials join, an ancient bard you’ll find, § Who to his verse has left his name behind. e 3. The following are Rebusses on the Names of Birds 52 A child’s plaything. | 53. What we all do at every meal op of a house. 57. Equality and decay. 58. A celebrated English architect. 59. A tailor’s implement. - • 60. A lever.’ %: An instrument for raising weights. %. Three-eights of a monthly publication, with a baked dish 93 A valuable species of corn, and a very necessary part of it 64. A cheated person. 65. A distant country. 66. Spoil half a score. ſº 67. The defence of a bridge. 68. An instrument of diversion for men and boys. 69. A piece of wood, and a fashionable name for a.Street. 70. To cut off, and a vowel. 7]: A piece of land, and a good thing which it produces. 72. What we say a person has got when he falls into the water. An Animal which a Jew must not eat, a vowel, and a preposition É ſ 34. A disorder incident to man and horse. : § 55. Nothing, twice yourself, and fifty. .# | 56. What we should always be ready to do to persons fighting, and the º : ANAGRAMIS, 74. I am found in a jail; I belong to a fire; And am seen in a gutter abounding in mire : Put my last letter third, and then 'twill be found I belong to a king, without changing my sound. 75 Ye rebus wits, Which sailors dread Now mind your hits; Too mear their lead, For your’s the task But when embay’d, My name to unmask: Enjoy its shade: A fruit we eat, One more letter As sauce to meat; Then unſetter, And with fish too, The thing that’s left, That wants a gowt 3 When thus bereſt, One letter, pray, Is worn by all, Take quite away; Both great and small, A point of land From king and queen You’ll understand, To beggar mean. A N A G R. A. M. S. 1. Ten tea pots. 2. Sly Ware. It’s in charity. . Golden land. Great helps. Rare mad frolic. Honor est a Nilo. Hard case. . Claims Arthur’s seat. 10. No, appear not at Elba. 11. No more stars. 12. O poison Pitt. 13. I hire parsons. 14. Got as a clue. 15. To love ruin. 16. Best in prayer. 17. Nay, I repent it. 18. Veto. Un corse la finira. 19. Comical trade. i 20. Spare him not 21. Real fun. 22. In Magic tale 23. Evil fast. . 24. Yes Milton. 25. "Tis ye govern. 26. See a pug dog. 27. A just master. 28. Made in pint pots 29. A hot pen. 30. I call many sot. 31. A nice Pet. 32. The bar. 33. The law. $4. Truly he’ll see war. 35. I send into Siam. 36. True, I am in. $ 37. Hire a prison. 38. There we sat —-r Öss=º ~ º LoGo GRIPHs. 253 L O G O G. R. I. P. H. S. 1. - A creature was formerly seen in England, which has lately been expelled from it, and which has some very peculiar properties appertaining to it. It stands upon one leg, on which, without any body, is seen a great square º head. It has three eyes, of which the centre is by far the largest ; indeed, so much so, that it has before now contained two more. The head is of a i very peculiar construction, but exactly suited to its design : whenever it is about to be used, it is separated in halves, and, when recomnected, is held up to the gaze of an insolent rabble. All the notice, however, which it gene- rally attracts, results from its being the effectual means of exhibiting an- other to the gaze of a hostile crowd. Such is this when entire ; but when º divided, and cut to pieces, a curious and careful observer may collect all that follows, by a selection and appropriate arrangement of its fragments. à A dose of medicine conveyed in a very agreeable manner, as, however nauseous its ingredients may have originally been, it is quite tasteless. Such a state of the physical powers as requires such a dose. A part of the face, of a color quite different from the rest, and the more handsome, the greater the diſſerence. A public record on which many are very anxious to get their names entered ; or, to descend from great things to small, a substance that is devoured every morning for breakfast. A river which ſlows through a very delightful and agreeable part of Europe. What curious people are very fond of doing. What a candidate, for your vote at the next general election, if he should think it worth his while, will demand. A very poetical portion of the watery element, which murmurs and meanders in the descrip- tion of many a poetaster. A quality of resinous substances. A female nick- name. What is very necessary to be done occasionally in your shrubbery An exclamation of surprise. A flower displaying more to admire than Solomon in all his glory. To tear. The expressed juice of olives, and its adjective. A conjunction. And two initial letters, whose reiterated sounds have drowned the voices of strutting monarchs and ephemeral heroes. | Ye who in mystic limes delight, Unveil and bring me forth to light, Nor deem me tiresome, if my song Should, like myself, prove wondrous long It may perhaps excite your mirth, That animals to me give birth; Yet vegetables oftener claim The honor to produce the same • LOGO GRIPHS. º: One time as white as snow I’m seen, Another, red, blue, yellow, green; The friendly brown I also wear, Or in a sable garb appear: The rhetorician owns my power, For though well dressed with many a flower, His florid speech would gain no praise, But, losing me, contempt would raise. But now my name you surely know, Dissected in the lines below. That power to which we all must bend; And what we call a valued friend; A goddess of revengeful fame; And Abram’s near relation’s name; Two articles in common use; And what we oft complain of news; A weed which grew upon the plain, Suffer'd till harvest to remain; Two quadrupeds will next appear, Which both conduce to sport and cheer; A third, a noxious little creature; And what adds charms to simple mature : A fruit; a color; and a date A firm support of Britain’s state; What high, yet low, we wish to be; A term for one who goes to sea; One thing another off put over; Two things by this you may discover, To make my hint somewhat more plain, One keeps the other from the rain; The vital spring of every wo; And every pleasure that we know ; What’s always done whene'er we walk; And what we do when others talk; With what we’ve done when they give o'er - Two notes in music next explore; What, join’d to home, is sent about, As invitation to a rout; What oft we see upon the plain ; Two little words denoting pain, Or quick surprise, or laughter vain A sign of sorrow ; mark of spirit; What envy bears superior merit; ... --rº" º:º4 LOGO GRIF HIS. A fragrant shrub we oft infuse: Two pronouns in most frequent use; A passion which the envious feel; A weapon pointed oft with steel; One of the properties of stone; A term for misanthrope well known; What oft in summer months we feel; What aids when secrets you reveal; What sinful deeds should ever be ; What’s daily done by you and me. If all these meanings you expound, Just five and forty will be found. I was before the world begun, Before God made the rising sun; Before He made the lesser lights To drive the darkness from the nights I’m at the bottom of the sea, And I am in immensity; The daily motion of the earth Dispels me, and to me gives birth; You cannot see me if you try, Although I’m oft before your eye. Such is my whole. But for ome part You’ll find in taste I’m rather tart ;- Now I become th’ abode of men,_ And now for meaner things, a pen; I am a man who lives by drinking, Anon I keep a weight from sinking; To take me, folks go far and near, I am what children like to hear; I am a shining star on high, And I’m its pathway through the sky; I take the strength from iron and steels- Am sometimes left behind a wheel; I am a term of due respect, Am used in English to connect; I’m made to represent a head, Am ſound on every loaf of bread. Such are the many forms I take, All these, and many more I make; Yet, after all, so strange am I, Soon as you know me, then I die. LOGO GRIPHS. 4. The man of letters finds me in his books; The angler by the side of babbling brooks; The sportsman seeks me with his dog and gun , In foreign lands the traveller thinks I’m won; The spendthriſt hopes to buy me with his gold; And childhood has me when a tale is told ; The love of ille decoys the giddy youth, From useful studies, till he learns this truth, “All those who seek me only, most I fly;” Lastly, when you my hidden sense descry, You’ll own that for my sake you pondered long The countless changes, that to me belong. Such an I as a whole—but for one part, The youth invokes me when he feels love’s dart; The Swiss, when exiled from his native vales, Hears me with anguish, and his fate bewails; New Zest I add to scandal’s busy hour; And adverse winds and tides confess my power I am the dazzling source whence colors flow; The sluggard’s teacher; and your equal now ; Without me sails were useless; then a word Expressing like; and now meek woman’s lord; To measure mext; anon to add ; to vex; The gentle office of the weaker sex; I’m flesh, not fish—1’m silent ever; Sought by all ranks, on earth found never; Your near relation, and the squirrel’s food; What you would keep when in a lazy mood; Neptune’s abode ; the forest monarch’s pride; A term to the departed souls applied; What you possess, but others oftener use: Your coat must have me, spite of what you choose; Now the soft clime of “the cedar and vine;” And last, a short word importing new wine. More could I tell, but I bid you adieu, Lest by prating I cause my own loss to you . *F- ******** *****Alsº wº-rºr> ºr re-wºr- q # t t { } 1 Hour-glass. 2 Pur-port. 3 Milk-maid. 4 Flint-shire. 5 Snuff-box. 6 Wood-bine. 7 Gad-fly. 8 Lap-pet. 9 Worm-wood. 10 Pip-kin 11 Fox-chase. 12 Candle-stick. : 13 Bar-clay. 14 Hammer-Smith. ſ 15 Foot-stool. 16 Counter-pane. 17 Waist-coat. 1 She weighs anchor. 2 He’s not at all (tall black) black. 3. It has many laws (Menelaus)in it 4 It’s placed between two I’s (eyes) 5 It is AEmeid (in-kneed.) 6 A mare's. 7 Misfortune (lyſiss-fortune.) 8 A bed. 9 Plague—Ague. -- 10 That which is not eaten. 11 They are in arms. 12 A ditch. 㺠13 He is tied to the rack. 14 Monosyllable—no syllable. lº-Sealing-wax. it; It blows, it snows—(it blows its 720S6, 17 Short—shorter. - 18 it is the way to Turnham-Gree —(turn 'em green ) solutions. SOL UTIONS CHARADES, ! 18 Corn-wall, famous for its T IN (tea-eye-hen.) 19 JMis-take. 20 Ear-wig. 21 Pat-tem. 22 Ever-lasting. 23 Watch-man. 24 Snow-ball. 25 Pine-apple. 26 May-pole. 27 Draught-board. 28 Heat-hen. 29 Leap-frog. 30 Side-Walk. 31 Name-less. 32 Cross-patch CONUN DRUMS, 19 On the head. 20 He has a long bill 21 There are spades in it. 22 The bed will not come to us. 23 He is a chance-seller—(Chan- cellor.) 24 She was a great Polly Titiam— (politician.) 25 A re-bus. 26 In February, because it is the shortest. 27 His capital is doubling(Dublin.) 28 It is Barking. 29 It is the capital of France. 30 Cockermouth (cock her mouth.) 31 He is going to Bag-dad. 32 It has a pupil under the lash. 33 There is not a single person in it 34 He is crusty. 35 He sticks to the last Caº * º #:g & §§ 258 74 They are stationary—(station. ery.) 3. 75 It contains a merry thought. 76 He is above committing a bad act. * 77 Your father. 78 The belles are wringing (ring- ing.) 79 An icicle. 80 He is always forgetting—(for getting.) 81 He is going toward it—(to ward it.) 82 It turns might into day. 83 A bargeman. 84 It keeps off the sparks. 85 She is clasped. 86 By Bheading it—(beheading it) 87 Because there are three scruples to a drain. 88 They eat lights. 89 By standing on his head and let- ting it go wip his throat. 90 He is striking a liar—(lyre.) 91. He dresses hare—(hair.) 92 He’s astonishing the natives. 93 Utility—(you till, I tie.) 94 The letter I, which is always in visible. 95 It’s widened at the expense of the corporation. 96 He is sin-on-a-mouse—(synon- $/mous.) 97 Because they are too long and too loose—(Toulon and Tow- louse.) - 98 R-u-shy(are you shy? R Ushy.) 99 He often runs for a plate or a Cup. 100 He’s a bit of a buck, 101 On the other side. 102 He’s one beside himself. 103 Like to be drowned 104 She is turning locks. Mº- *::::::: §ss=º 36 It has a kernel—(colonel.) , 37 They are small clothes. * 38 He cuts capers. 39 It makes the mare to go. 40 He goes on tick. 41 What does Y, E, S spell ? 42 Against his inclination. 43 It is in the midst of water— (wa-t-er.) 44 When it is a-jar-(a jar.) 45 It is a bee-holder—(beholder.) 46 He raises stories. 47. He carries a leak—(leek.) 48 Noise. 49 He has a lady in his head. 50 When he has a hat on that is not paid for. 51 His tongue. l 52 It is immaterial. 53 She is often toasted. 54 The snuff of a candle. 55 It is in the midst of grease— (Greece.) 56 It contains the ashes of the grate —(great.) 57 It is next to Kew—(Q.) 58. He is cur-led—(curled.) 59 A medlar—(meddler.) 60 She is a cat erect—(cataract.) 61 He makes shifts. 62. It is a certainty—(certain tie.) 63 They are sham pinions— (champignons.) 64 It is a bad habit. 65 It oſten bears arms. 66 I make a farthing present—(a far thing present.) t;7. He is misled—(miss-led.) 68 He is guided by a minister €9 Flattery. 70 His daughter. 71 A pack of cards. 72 He is down cast. 73 He is a Jew, ill—( jewel.) SOLUTIONS. * §º :*:::- "J ** * * w à *** sºn- • . . * * -º- *š * I05 She’s in Holland. 106 It is often baited. * 107 He’s light-headed. 108 There’s a goose’s head in it. 109 He cut it too little, i. e. he did not cut enough of it. 110 It often tolled—(told.) 111 It is near the Temple. 112 A cat out of a hole. 113 He is a neck-romancer— (necromancer.) 114 In Noah’s ark. 115 It is not fair. 116 R, U, E—(Are you he 7) 117 He’s grim all day (Grimaldi.) * 118 Man: viz. In the morning of his life, on all fours; in the afternoon, on two; and in the evening, wifh a stick, 119 It is far-fetched and full of In O)1S62]].SC. 120 He is the colossus of roads— (Rhodes.) 121. The nose. 122 Make an impression. 123 Four quarters. 124 It was built by a Wren. 125 To aſce the way. 126 The Thames, which flows be- tween Chelsea and Battersea. 127 Adriatic—(a dry attic.) 128 Water-ices and ice-creams— (water I sees, and I screams.) 129 When it is eye-water—(high- water.) 130 Because he can make a D can- ter—(decanter.) 131 Grow, sir!—(Grocer.) l32. It is a deck oration—(deco- ration.) 133 She is between the poles. $34 All his works are wicked, and all his wicked works are lwoug!!! io ng ºf SOLUTIONS 135 Because its capital is always Dublin (Doubling.) * 136 It is Pekin (Peeking.) 137 It is founded on Mersey (Mercy) 138 S. X. (Essea..) 139 He is likely to reign (Rain.) 140 Did you ever see the l-e-g on a Turkey" (Leg.) 141 I am XL. (Eaccel.) 142 Dutch S (Dutchess.) 143 It is the capital of England. 144 Both inn convenient. 145 He is ruffled. 146 They have lost their nap. 147 Heigh-hos (high hose.) 148 A Tanner. 149 They are always under lashes. 150 Regular, irregular, and deſcC- tl Ve. 151 One speaks without reflecting, the other reflects without speaking. 152 It has three feet. 153 Music. 154. A bee follows it. 155 It is not currant (current.) 156 Expediency (X P DN C E.) 157 Mendicants (Mend I can’t.) 158 He gives a cent (assent.) 159 Dandelion (dandy, lion.) 160 They carry firelocks. 161 A pillow. 162 It follows the sea (C.) 163 They would go after tea (T.) 164 It is the centre of light. 165 Hebrews drink there (He brews.) 166 Both study the profits (prophets.) 167 It furnishes dates. 16S He is Sir mounted (Surmount- ed.) 169 He is full of pains (Panes.) 170 I scream, thou screamest, he SK!! (2:1)]?S –––f4:--a- ----- - - - - - - - ------- - - - - - ! ! | $ ' § - ><-Očki º ºr * ~ * * * gº=== ... º. ...--tº _-s. ---> * z-z-Tº-> ſº-, a 260 171 From a selfish motive (Sellfish) 172 XIX—XX. 173 The out-side. 274 It makes hot shot (Hot s-hot.) 175 L O O T. 176 It makes a mango (Man go.) 177 They are both notable (notable) 178 They are in sects (insects.) 179 It was a Patriot (Patriot.) 180 He lives on the skirts of the town. 181 E G and C (AEgean Sea.) 182 It would be D-ceased (De- ceased.) 183 The cat'll eat it (The cattle eat it.) 184 There are more of them. 185 He has pictures (Picked yours.) SOLUTIONS. 186 A hopeless lie and a faithless lie (Hope Leslie, and Faith Leslie.) 187 He is bald Tim Moore (Bal. timore.) 188 They are always forgetting (For getting.) 189 Paradise is in it (Pair o' dice.) 190 Her suit is hairy (In botany the word hirsute means hairy.) 191 They are over sights (over. sights.) 192. It is privateering (private €6/7°27'3". 193 Effigy (FE G.) 194 The Tees (tease.) 195 He is Pat-rolling (Patroling.) 196 He was born 29th February. E NIG MAS. 1 The letter H. Eve. 3 Spectacles. 4 In a looking-glass. 5 Justice—(just-ice.) 6 A bed. 7 Alphabet. 8 A pair oſskaits. 9 Highway. 10 The moon. 11 The feet. 12 The moon. RETB USSES. 1 TOBAcco. 5 C-L-ark; or C-lark, (Clark.) 3 C-him-ney, (Chimney.) 4 Pope. 13 A tree. 14 Letter M. 15 Letter G. 16 Brush. 17 Ace of Trumps. 18 Bar. 19 On-I-on, (onion.) 20 The animal sent was an ante- lope (4wnt elope.) The fruit returned was a cante- lope (Can’t elope.) 5 Abbot. 6 Tree. 7 Browne. 8 Stephens 9 Kean. 10 Foote. Il Vestris. 12 Kelley. .13 Elliston. 14 Munden. 15 Macready. 16 Kemble. 17 Blanchard. 18 Cooper. -wºrsº- §s=-jū; SOLUTIONS. 261 I9 Farren. 20 Cooke. 21 Listom. 22 Yates. 23 Bland. *. 24 Bunn. 25 Bartley. 26 Cubitt. 27 Wrench. 28 Powell. 29 Glover. 30 Hallande. 31 Paton. 32 Reeve. 33 Chester. 34 Matthews, 35 West. 36 Pearman, 37 Graddon 38 Terry. 39 Keetley. 40 Power. 4l Warde. 42 Russell. 43 Ellar. 44 Romer. 45 Bay; lay; day; gay; May; hay ; jay; ray; say; nay ; pay; Tay; way. 46 Anacreon; Pythagoras; Ep- aminondas; Lycurgus; Ly- sippus; Euripides; Sap- pho; Apelles. 47 Ill; bill; gill; hill; will; till ; sill; pill; dill; fill; M A N A G 1 Potentates. - 2 Lawyers. 3 Christianity. 4 Old England. 5 Telegraphs. 6 Radical reform. 7 Horatio Nelson. mill; jill; rill; kill; vill; quill. 48 Room; moor. 49 Cowper; Chaucer; Ossian; Watts; Pindar; Erasmus; Raphael. 50 X. S : S X. 51 Pope; Plissus; Nelson; Death ; Addison; Rogers; Pindar. 52 Kite. 53 Swallow 54 Thrush. 55 OWL. 56 Partridge. 57 Parrot. 58 Wren. 59 Goose. 60 Crow. 61 Crane. 62 Magpie. 3 Wheatear. 64 Gull. 65 Turkey. 66 Marten. 67 Starling. 68 Bat. 69 Sparrow. 70 Snipe. 71 Fieldfare. 72 Duck. 73 Pigeon. 74 Grate; great. 75 Caper; cape; cap. RAMS. S Charades. 9 Charles James Stuart. 10 Napoleon Bonaparte. 11, Astronomers. 12 The opposition. 13 Parishioners 14 Catalogues 5s=º 262 SOLUTIONS. Q-FQ --~~~ 15 Revolution I6 Presbyterian. 17 Penitentiary. 18 La Revolution Francaise. 19 Democratical. 20 Misanthrope. 21 Funeral. 22 Enigmatical. 23 Festival. 24 Solemnity. 25 Sovereignty. 26 Pedagogues. 27 James Stuart 28 Disappointment. 29 Phaeton. 30 Monastically. 31 Patience. 32 Breath. 33 Wealth. 34 Arthur Wellesley. 35 Dissemination. 36 Miniature. 37 Parishioner. 38 Sweetheart. I, O GO GR II*HS. 1 Pillory: in which may be found pill; ill; lip; roll; Po; pry; poll ; rill; ropy; Polly ; lop; lo; lily; rip ; oil; oily; or ; 2 Thread: in which may be found, death; dear; Até; Terah ; the ; dearth; tare ; hare; hart; rat; art; a ; date ; red ; era; trade ; rated; tar; hat; head; heart; tread; hear; heard ; re; da; at ; herd; all ; ha ; hater; heat; ear; hatred; €at, 3 Obscurity: in which may be found, sour; city; sty; sot; buoy ; tour; story; orb ; orbit; rust; rut; sir; or ; bust; crust. 4 Amusement: in which may be found, Muse; tea; stream ; Sun ; ant; mate ; mast; as ; man ; mete; sum ; tease ; amuse; meat; mute; ease ; aunt ; nut; seat; sea ; tear ; dare; hate ; tea; her; mame 3 mames; name; elh; hated; dart; hard ; Seam ; east ; strum. Thus ends our Key to the Riddler; our young readers, we doubt not, have very frequently referred to it, in perusing the various questions and puzzles which precede it, in order to save themselves the trouble of tasking their in- genuity to discover the solutions. They ought not, however, to have re- course to the Answers, until they have made frequent attempts to solve the Riddles. Some persons cannot, without considerable diſficulty, find the proper answer to an Enigma or a Rebus; while others, of no greater general acuteness, do so with ease. It is no proof, therefore, of inſeriority, not to be able to reply to a quaint Conundrum, so quickly as another. Many young people have displayed much ingenuity in the construction of different sorts of Riddles in rhyme, they are, in general, the most happy in solving those of others. The admirers of these frequently amusing trifles, consider oppo- sition in their component parts, or curious combinations, o be mos, essen. ial in the construction of good Riddles. * • , ~. . * T. - . - + .# \ Š §§ sº-sº §:S.Tº 㺠>> $! - Šºš $º - §§ & SS –- § --- º º *Nº º - :* - *** Śºse= §NS Bºğll - Pºss&S* - * * ãº: º - - $SERS. !:Nºs WS--> <--- =º:º º >SE - * \\ s—--- G- - - SS-N - =====#Es §: š=>~~ --" :*S*Iſrººrºº's ºzsºº--ET* ----- Embower'd upon the pleasant banks of Thames • Or, by the silver stream of Isis, Cam, Or yellow Avon, roaming, the Angler, Joyous, pursues from m \rn till eve his sport ANGLING has long held a high rank among the sports of the people of England; poets have written in its praise, and philosophers have delighted in its practice; it is not confined to particular places, ages, or grades of so- ciety; wherever the brook wanders “through hazy shaw or broomy glen,” —wherever the willow-branch laves in the streamlet, —wherever the Trout leaps at the May-ſly, or the Pike lurks in the bulrushes, or the Salmon springs up the waterfall,—there also are Anglers. To enjoy this fine pastime, the mountaineer descends to the valley-stream, the Magister Artium quits his ſearned halls and collegiate ease for the banks of the deeps, the weirs, and the tumbling bays of Cam; the citizen his shop and beloved leger for a hickory rod and a creek in the Roding; and the courtier his rich Turkey carpet, ottoman and lustre, for “nature’s grassy foot-cloth,” the rough bark of a ſelled river-side tree, and the sparkling surface of a rippled stream. The boy, who was but “breeched a Wednesday,” often spends his holyda; hour on the bank of a brook, with a crooked pim for his hook, a needleful of thread for his line, and an alder switch for his rod; and the grây-headed statesman,—may, even Royalty itself-occasionally relaxes from the grave * * ~ * * * 264 THE ANGLER. duties attendant on such superior station, from weighing the balance of power, and determining the ſate of nations, “to wield the rod, and cast the mimic fly.” ROIDS, The first care of the Angler should be to procure good rods, limes, hooks, and floats. A great variety of rods may be had at the shops, of bamboo, vine, hazel, and hickory : for general fishing, those made of bamboo, having several tops of various strengths, are best; but came rods are much superior for fine fishing. The rod should be perſectly straight when put together, . and gradually taper from the butt to the top. If you be desirous of making the rods yourself, the following directions must be observed:—The stocks should be cut in the winter; hazel and yew switches are the best for tops, and crab-tree for stocks. Do not use them till ſully seasoned, which will be in about sixteen months after they are cut; but the longer they are kept the better. The rod should consist of five or six pieces, fitted so nicely, titat the whole rod may appear as if it consisted of one piece only. The best rods are those that are brass ferruled; but if they are bound together, it must be with thread, strongly waxed, the pieces being cut with a slope or slant, that they may join with the greater exactness. Six or eight inches must be taken from the top, and in its place a smooth round taper piece of whalebone sub- stituted, on which a strong loop of horse-hair must be previously whipt. Fly-rods are made more taper than others. Rods for trolling must be ſur- nished with brass rings, whipt all the way up, about ten or twelve inches distance, for the trolling lines to go through ; the tops for trolls must be strong, and have rings whipt on, with pieces of quill, to prevent the lines being cut. The tops of rods for Carp, Tench, Dace and Roach fishing, should be finer, and more elastic. The rod must neither be kept too dry, nor too moist; for the one will make it brittle, the other rotten. In very warm weather, always wet the joints, to make them adhere better ; iſ, liowever, by being too wet, they should stick, so that you cannot easily get them asunder, never use force, lest you should strain your rod, but rather wait till it be dry, or turn the ſerrule of the joint which is ſast, a few times over the flame of a candle, and it will separate. LINES For the lime, horse-hair is to be preferred; it should be round, twisted even, and of equal thickness. The best colors are white and gray for clear waters, and sorrel for muddy rivers. The most easy method of mak ing lines, is by a little machine, which may be bought at most of the shops where also, you purchase your lines, if you think fit. © | t y 5: <- -- Aº - lºš: ; - * THE AN G.I.E.R. 265 § HOOKS, § Hooks are numbered, and made suitable in size to the fish they are inten ded to take. For Barbel-fishing, Nos. 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9, are used ; for Gudgeons, Nos, 10 and 11; for Roach, Dace, and Bleak, Nos. 10, 11, or 12; for Tench, Carp, and Perch, Nos. 7, 8, and 9; for Trout, No. 6; for Chub, Nos. 8 or 9; for Eels, No. 8 ; for Grayling, No. 10; for Ruff, No. 9; for Minnows, &c. No. 13, &c. The above sizes are such as the best Anglers of the present day preſer, and are much smaller than those used formerly; but he who expects success at this sport must adopt the modern tackle, or he will be disappointed. Fol arming the hook, use fine, small, strong silk, well waxed, and lay the hair on the inside of the hook, otherwise the silk will fret and cut it asunder. - FLOATS. Floats made of Muscovy-duck quills, are best for slow waters; sound cork, without flaws or holes, bored through with a hot iron, into which is put a quill of fit proportion, is preferable for strong streams: the cork should be pared to a pyramidical form, ground small with a pumice-stone, and colored according to fancy. Floats must be so poised with shot, when on the line, as to make them stand perpendicularly in the water, that the least nibble may be apparent. BAITS, - The lob-worm, garden-worm, and dew-worm, or trechet, are found in gardens and church-yards at might; those with red heads, broad tails, and streaked down the back, are the best. These worms are excellent bait for Barbel, or Eels, and are found towards the latter end of the summer. Gilt-tails, brandlings, and red worms are found in old dung-hills, hog's dung, cow’s dung, and tammer’s bark. The brandlim and gilt-tail are ex- cellent bait for Pelch, Tench, Bream and Gudgeon. The red worms, well scoured, are taken by Tench, Perch, and Bream, in muddy waters. The meadow, or marsh-worm, is of a lightish blue color, and a good bait for Perch; it is found in marshy ground, or in the banks of rivers in the months of August and September. The tag-tail is ſound in meadows, or chalky ground after rain, in March and April; and esteemed a good bait for Trout, in cloudy weather. The palmer-worm, woolbed, or canker, is found on herbs, plants, and trees; and takes the name of woolbed, from its rough and woolly coat. This is an excellent bait for Trout, Chub, Grayling, Roach, or Dace. The oak-worm, caterpillar, cabbage-worm, crab-tree-worm colewort- worm or grub, may be gathered on the leaves of colewort and cabbage, or on the hawthorn, oak, or crab-tree; and may be long preserved with the leaves of those trees or plants, in boxes bored with holes to admit the air They are good baits for Chub, Dace, Roach, or Trout §º** Fºss. *= r— 266 THE ANGLE.R. The bark-worm, or ash-grub, is found under the bark of a ſelled oak, ash, elder, or beach, or in the hollow of those trees where rotten. This bait may be used all the year for Grayling, Dace, Roach, or Chub. They are kept well in wheat-bram. The cod-bait, caddis-worm, or case-worm, of which there are three sorts, is found in pits, ponds, or ditches; they are excellent baits for Bream, Tench, Bleaks, Chub, Trout, Grayling, and Dace. Gentles, or maggots, are easily bred by putrefaction; they may be kep with flesh, and scoured with wheat-bran. They are good baits for Tench, Bream, Barbel, Dace, Gudgeon, Chub, Bleak, and Carp. sº Cow-dung-bob is found under cow-dung, and somewhat resembles a gem- tle. It is best kept in earth; and is a good bait for Trout, Chub, Carp, . Tench, Bream, Dace, and Roach. The white-grub, or white-bait, is much larger than a maggot; it is found in sandy and mellow ground; and is an excellent bait from the middle of . April till November, for Tench, Roach, Bream, Trout, Chub, Dace, and , Carp. These baits should be kept in an earthen vessel, with the earth abou them, and covered very close. Flag or dock-worms are ſound among the small fibres of flag-roots, and iſ old pits or ponds. They may be kept in bran ; and are good-baits for Bream, Tench, Roach, Carp, Bleak, Dace, and Perch. Boiled salmon-spawn is a very good bait for Chub, and in some rivers, for Trout. Dace, minnows, roach, smelt, gudgeon, bleak, and miller’s-thumb, are proper bait for Pike. * Grasshoppers, in June, July, and August, their legs and wings taken off, are good for Roach, Chub, Trout, and Grayling. - Cheese, or oat-cake, is reckoned killing for Chub, Barbel, Roach, and Dace ; the cheese you may moistem with honey and water. The water-cricket, water-louse or creeper, which is ſound in stony rivers, will often take Trout in March, April, and May. White snails are good bait for Chub, early in the morning, and for Trout and Eels on night hooks. House-crickets are also good, to dib with, for Chub. TROUT. In angling for Trout at the bottom, in the early part of the morning, and lace at night, also during the day, if the water be much colored, use a strong rod, running tackle, an:d No. 6 book. Angle with a float, putting sufficient shot on the line, placed about nine inclies above the hook, to sink the bait, which should be one large lob-worm, or two marsh or dew-worms, well scoured, and very lively. Let your baii drag the bottom; do not strike the first time you feel a tug, but rather slacken you'r line, and when you feel ~\ *-* - * > .. ** * J. J." -- _/ THE ANGLE.R. º 267 two or three sharp pulls, strike smartly; if a heavy fish, give him line, and and him at leisure, as a Trout is very strong, and struggles most violently, leaping out of the water, and flying in all directions, as soon as he feels the hook. The Minnow is a good killing bait for Trout. In fishing with a Minnow, hook it by the lips, or beneath the back fin; use a small cork float, No. 6 hook, and let your bait swim below mid-water in deep dark holes, which are free from eddies. Trout begin to feed in March, and continue in season till June. The first two or three inonths are best for bottom-fishing, they are then found in shallows; in summer time, the large Trout lie in deep holes, or eddies. As they seldom feed in the day, unless in dark weather, you must fish for Trout betimes in the morning, and late in the evening, or you will not be likely to be successful in your sport. PE H. C. H. The perch generally takes a bait immediately it is offered. Perch angling continues from April to October. Strong tackle must be used in angling fol them, a cork float, gut line, or a twisted hair, and hook No. 7. Bait with two red worms, well scoured, or a live Minnow hooked by the lips or back fin, shrimps, or large gray maggots taken from potato or turnip plants; give them a few minutes to pouch the bait; use running tackle or you will cer- tainly lose your fish. During the hot months, Perch ſeed very little; dark, windy weather, if not too cold, is best; they lie about bridges, mill-bools, near locks in rivers and canals, in deep, dark, still holes and eddies, ponds about flood gates, on the gravel or sandy parts, and near rushes. If there be any Perch about, and they are inclined to ſeed, they will soon take the bait, so that you need not delay long in one place. E E L S. Eels are taken with the rod and line, might lines, dead limes, and by boh- oing and smiggling. When fishing with a rod, use gut, or twisted hair limes, with a float, and No. 8 hook; bait with a worm, fish at the bottom, and let the float remain a mounent under water before you strike. The dead line should be made of whipcord; on which you may put five or six hooks, about nine inches apart. The might line must be strong, and baited with small fish, or loll-worms. Bobbing is practised from a boat; you must procure a harge quantity of worms for this, pass a meedle through them, from head to tail, and string them on worsted, until you have as many strung as will form a bunch as large as a good-sized turnip : then fasten them on the line, so that all the ends may hang level. Place a picce of lead of a comical form in the middle, cast the baits into the water, sink them to the bottom, raise theiu a few inches, and them drop them again until you have a bite; be as expert 7| - - - | 268 * THE AN GLER. and ste...dy in raising your lines as possible, so that your fish may drop off into the boat. Immense numbers may be taken by this method. NATURAL FLY-FISHING, For Natural Fly-fishing, the rods should be long and slender, the lines fine, but not so long as those used for Artificial Fly-fishing; the tackle run- ning; and the hooks short in their shanks, and well proportioned in size to the baits. By fishing with the wind at one’s back, the line is wafted through the air just above the surface of the water. In streams, begin by fishing just under the banks or near the shore, and proceed by degrees, until at length you may throw your line the whole breadth of the water. In rivers, which, during the summer months, produce an abundance of weeds, you should fish between those places where the current is strongest, taking care so to manage your line as not to get it entangled. When fishing with natural ) flies, all the Cther haunts of the different fish which we have elsewhere men- tioned should be frequented. Let the ſly just reach the surface of the wa- ter, and go gently down the stream; the top of your rod should be a little raised, and the bait kept in motion upon the surface, by gently raising, low- ering, and drawing it to and fro. When a fish takes your bait, after a mo- ment strike smartly; and, if he be not so large as to break your tackle, liſt him out, immediately; for by playing with him you may, probably, scare away others. There is an immense variety of Natural Fly-fishing baits; we shall describe those only which are in most general use. NATURAL BAITS. Hormets, wasps, and humble-bees, are good baits for Roach, Dace, Eels, Flounders, Bream and Chub; some boil them, but it is best to dry them in an oven, or over a fire; and, if not over done, they will keep a long time. The stone-fly is found at the sides of rivers, under hollow stones; it is of a curious brown color, the body is pretty thick, and streaked with yellow on the back and belly. The green drake is taken from May to July; it is a long, slender fly, with wings like those of a butterfly; its body is yellow, ribbed with green; it turns its tail on its back. These are good baits for Roach, Dace, Perch, Bleak, and Flounders. The gray drake, in size and shape, resembles the green drake, but has black shining wings, and its body is a pale yellow, striped with black and green. The time for taking this fly immediately succeeds that of taking the green drake, and it is used for the same fish. Ant-flies ture ſound in their hills from June till September; two or three of them ſixed on a small hook are certain baits for Roach, Dace, and Chub, if you do not angle above six inches from the bottom. They may be kept in glass bottles, with some of the earth, from which they have been taſ; 2n, gº=s. – - 9::= is \-f " THE ANGLE.R. 269 about them. The fern-fly, or fern bob, is found among fern, from May to the end of August. It has a short, thick body, and two pair of wings, the uppermost reddish and hard, which may be taken off. The Chub never re- t fuses it, and the Trout will take it very freely at the latter end of Mav. - | The hawthorn-fly is found on hawthorn-trees, when the leaves are just shooting ; it is of a black color, and is used to dib in a river for Trout. The great moth is to be found, in the summer evenings, in gardens, trees, or plants; it is used as a bait in dibbing for Roach; it has a very large head and whitish wings. The bonnet-fly is an excellent bait for Dace, Chub, &c.; it is to be found f in the summer months, among standing grass. i The ash-fly, woodcock-fly, or oak-fly, is usually found, from May till $ September, in the body of an oak or ash-tree, with its head downward, toward the root; it is of a brownish color. This fly is a good bait for : Trout. The red copper-colored beetle is a good bait for Trout, if the hard wings be clipped off, and the fly hung with its feet toward the water. The best mode of keeping matural flies is as follows: Procure a horn bottle 3. • | made in the shape of a cone, with a wooden bottom, in which several holes y must be pierced ; these should be suſliciently numerous to aſſord the flies air, but none of them large enough to suffer your smallest bait to escape ; a cork | must be obtained to fit the upper or smaller end, so that you may take your ; baits out, one by one, without losing any. If the flies be kept in a common box, there is a great chance of half a dozen flying out every time you liſt the cover. ARTIFICIAL FLY-FISHIN G, The most elegant, clean, gentlemanly, and pleasant mode of fishing is, unquestionably, with the Artificial Fly. It has many advantages over bot- * tom-fishing;--the Artificial fly-fisher is never under the necessity of making ground-bait, digging clay, &c.—he has not even the trouble of baiting his { hook; he may ramble along the banks of a pleasant stream, with no bur- den (excepting a little book of flies and a light rod) but the fish which he may have the good fortune to take ;—enjoying his sport, and luxuriating in : gentle exercise, without scarcely soiling his fingers. But though Artificial Fly-fishing possesses these advantages, it must be confessed that, in some points, the superiority is to be given to bottom- ſ fishing. There are many fishes that will never rise at a fly; while all the “tenants, of the stream” may be taken, at some time or other, by a bottom bait; and during the cold or wet weather, when the Fly-fisher cannot follow his sport, the staunch Angler, who uses bottom-baits, may still resort to the “grassy margin of the stream,” and indulge in his piscatory pastime; for here are few days in the year when fish will not take a proper bait. Artificial fly-fishing is, by far, the most difficult part of Angling ; much Z. 270 THE ANGLE.R. time and practice are required to make the tyro an adept in it; by theory it can never be attained ; a few months’ instruction, under an experienced person, will be more beneficial toward its acquirement than the perusal of all the works extant on the subject. With the preliminary part, or rudiments of the science, (for so it may with propriety be called,) the young Angler may, however, make himself acquainted, by reading the following pages; and iſ he will carefully attend to the hints and instructions hereinafter given on the subject, he may, with good practice, even attain considerable proficiency in Artificial Fly-ſishing; but it cannot be learned so soon, or so well, from any book as from an experienced instructer. CASTING THE LINES, &c. Your rod for fly-fishing must be light and flexible, and of a length propor- tioned to your power of casting; when you have properly fixed the winch, and brought your line from it through the links, fix your fly on, and let out your line about the length of the rod, or something less; take the rod in vour right hand, and the lime, near the ſly, in your left; when you move the rod backward to cast the line, let the latter go from your left hand. Practice several throws at this length, and increase it occasionally, as you improve, Intil you are able to throw almost any moderate length, with ease, to within an inch of any spot you desire. Draw the fly lightly toward the shore, and look sharply at it, so as to be able to strike instantly if a fish should rise at it; if you do not, you will most probably lose him, for he quickly discovers the nature of your bait. In raising your line for the second and subsequent throws, wave your rod round your head, instead of bringing it directly back- ward. You should not return the line before it has gone its full length be- hind you, lest von whip off your fly. In order to show your flies naturally to the fish, when you have thrown, raise your hand by degrees, with a slight qūivering motion; and, as you thus draw the bait toward you, let it go down the stream, (for you must never bring your fly against it,) and before it comes too mear you, prepare to cast again. If you see a fish rise at a natural fly, throw your line a little above him, so that the bait may come gently and naturally down toward him; fish every yard of water likely to aſſord sport, and never despair of success; for, sometimes it so happens, that, after lilany frnitless hours spent without a fish ever rising at your fly, you will fill your bag or basket during the last hour. The lighter your ſly descends on the water, the greater chance you have of a bite; the way to throw with the requisite perfection in this respect, is only to be acquired by practice and love for the art. Use only one hook at a time, till you can throw to any given distance with certainty. You may acquire such a mas- tery, by dint of observation and practice, as to be able to cast your fly under banks, into holes, among bushes, & '... where the best fish are frequently ſound. Endeavour to keep the wind at your back, and when fishing in a ~. wº - -- * *º-ſºº..." Lººt-º-º-º-º- g yº ſº: * > sº-J. à ** - sº-r:2 - Üß2C - *...*** - *~~ & ºr * -- * * THE ANGLE.R. small stream, where the middle is shallow, and the water ripples, cast your bait to the opposite side, slowly draw it to the rippling, and let it float down some distance. You must recollect to keep yourself out of sight, and your fly in motion, that it may appear to the fish as if alive. If you do not find the fish rise toward the top, sink your fly, by degrees, even to middle water. Before flies are naturally in season, the fish very rarely rise at them ; there- fore, in order that you may not be mistaken in your baiting, observe what flies are about the water, or on the bushes or trees near the ponds or rivers; and that fly which swarms there most, being chiefly in season, is to be used. If the wind be pretty high, the fish will rise in the plain deep; but when little wind is stirring, it is best to angle in the stream. We need scarcely remind you of the propriety of taking your basket, landing-net, book of ſlies, and, if you are able to construct an artificial fly yourself, a few materials for fly-making; so that, if the fish, which are often whimsical, will not take any of the baits with which you are provided, and you observe them rising at matural flies, (and they will sometimes feed on such insignificant ones as, at other times, they will scarcely look at,) catch one of such flies, and make one for your bait as nearly like it as possible. This, certainly, is a great advan- tage, and every Angler ought, therefore, perhaps, to acquire sufficient knowledge in fly-making to be able to produce such a tolerable imitation, that the fish may not easily detect the difference between the natural and the artificial fly. G F N E R AL RUI, ES FOR ALL AN G L F. R. S. In bottom-fishing, plumb the depth truly, and with as little disturbance as may be ; let your line, with the plummet to it, remain in the water while you cast in the ground-bait, by which time the line will be softened and stretched; keep as far from the water as you can. Use fine tackle, and you will the sooner become skilful: if you break your tackle, do not lose our temper, but sit down, and diligently repair it. If hail fall, or the day §. cold, and the wind blow strong, the Angler must not expect much sport. n soft rain, or foggy, close weather, most fish will bite. Never drink water out of rivers or ponds while in a perspiration; keep your feet dry, by wear- ing strong boots and shoes. It is supposed that the best winds for Angling are the south, west, and south east. In hot weather, the cooler the wind blows the better; but in the early part of the season, and also in autumn, a warm wind is more advantageous. When the wind comes from a cold quarter, such places as are most protected from its influence should be re- sorted to. A cloudy day, with light showers, after a bright night, in general proves most favorable to the Angler, who may also expect good sport even on those days when heavy rains descend during the intervals between the showers. When a calm bright morning is succeeded by a gloomy day with \ a brisk win d, without any fall of rain, the fish,_at least, the larger sorts, – l t are almcst sure to feed. Weather-wisdoun is of the greatest benefit to the ~ >er; ----- sº * - $ºrs ** ~k ---------> e-º 2--- *~$—- jSºº & J--> ºf * 272 THE ANGLER. Angler:-our young friends should therefore pay attentlym to, and remem ber the state of the wind, the clouds, &c., on those days when they find the fish bite, and when they refuse to take a bait. They may thus not only be enabled to say when there is a prospect of sport, but also save themselves much trouble and disappointment, by staying at home to improve their tackle, or amising themselves in some other manner, instead of following “the devious windings of the stream,” when the weather is umpromising. When the wind blows right across the water, fish with your back toward it; not merely because you can throw your line with more facility, but because the fish will certainly be on that side, watching for the flies, &c. that may be blown from the bank into the water. Throw as near the bank on which yon stand as the wind, if it be high, will suffer you. In the summer time, when the sum is out in all his splendor, and there is scarcely a breath of wind stirring, you may often see the fish basking in clear low water, with their fins and a part of their backs above the surface. On these occasions, they will rise greedily at a hackle, if your foot length be fine, and you fish at a sufficient distance to be unperceived, under banks or straight down the sides of streams. Your line, for this purpose, must be long; and if, when you hook a fish, the others should become alarmed and shoot off, retire for a short time and in all probability they will return again ; if not, you must try elsewhere. Artificial Bait, and Apparatus for all kinds of Angling, may be had at Bradlee's near the Old South Church, in Boston. - § º § Š ~. § Ž $ ; º § § 2% %ł & Š. & sº § 2. 2: * See where a motley litter sports around The captive doe, whose native symmetry Has so improved 'neath man’s dominion, That her grandsire’s progeny, sporting wide O'er hill and dale, in their plain russet coats, Seem of no kin to her. RABBIT-K EE PING was never, perhaps, so much practised in England as it is at the present day. Not only do a multitude of young persons keep common rabbits for their amusement, and poulterers and others for the table, but of late, many gentlemen have become rabbit-breeders to a con- siderable extent; and though the varieties are so much less numerous, it promises to become, ere long, as popular a fancy as that in pigeons. A writer on this subject'states, that there are, or were, two great feeders in the counties of Oxford and Bucks, the former of whom kept a sufficient number to produce three dozen rabbits for the market per week; the latter, it is said, kept white rabbits only, on account of the superior value of their skins for the purpose of trimming. These persons, however, must be con- sidered rabbit feeders rather than fanciers. Fancy rabbits are rarely to be met with in the hands of the common deal. ers, good ones being of too high a price to come within their means. There are, however, several private individuals of great respectability in the city, from whom excellent specimens inay be obtained, by those who wish to lay the foundation for a fancy stock. A rabbit, of whatever color it may be, is certainly a beautiful little animal; bº: the common breed are $ º: *s- * * * - - - *ese § - Y 3--~~~. ..."? "...”. “...º, £ºº::’ss.º.º. ººl...sº sº º **** ***…* :"... " -- " "... ** º: *.' … . -- X- 274 RAB BITS. º º §: 4. & - . •,• gº :3. t- g very inferipr in beauty of appearance to the fine lop-eared creatures We feel convinced that any person who sees a well-ordered rabbitry, con taining some good specimens of fancy rabbits, will be so struck with thei superior beauty of appearance, that he will not think of keeping merely common rabbits. The first is the only extra expense; for the fine lopped- eared animals do not require more or superior food than what ought to be afforded to the common ones. They are, we confess, rather more delicate in constitution; but their fine appearance will certainly compensate their keeper for the care he may take in keeping them in order; there is also a greater pleasure in breeding valuable animals, than rabbits, that, at best, will never be worth, when reared, above half a dozen shillings. And here let us impress upon our young readers the propriety of feeding their rabbits regularly. Poor creatures 1 they are caged, confined, and wholly depen- dent upon us—it would be the extreme of barbarity to neglect them. If we keep any living creature in a confined state, we enjoin a duty on our- § { selves of providing for their wants. . Depend upon it, that the boy will rue ſ the day, unless he have decidedly a bad heart, who sits down to a comfort- able meal, while his rabbit or his bird—heretofore his idol and his toy, but now, in caprice, neglected—pines, in its prison, for his appearance with its usual daily food. If he be tired of that, which, when it was a novelty, he took so much delight in, he had better sell, give, or even humamely kill it, than suffer it to languish its solitary hours away in hunger and in thirst. It is a creature dependent on his care, it is helpless and imprisoned—is he not cruel in the extreme if he omit to furnish it with its daily pittance 3 THE WILD HAB BIT, Wild rabbits are considerably less than those which are kept in a domes- tic state; they are, for the most part, of a gray color; but a few black, black and white, and even fawn-colored rabbits are to be seen in some warrens The flesh of wild rabbits is, in general, preferred to that of tame ones; but the latter may be much improved in flavor by judicious feeding, and af. ſording the animals good air and sufficient room to exercise themselves. It is said that the wild rabbit will breed eleven times a year, and bring ſorth, generally, eight young ones each time; at this rate, in four years, a couple of rabbits would produce a progeny of almost a million and a half THE COMMON DOMIESTJ C R A B B IT, One of the chief objects in keeping common rabbits is, for the purpose of occasionally furnishing a dish for the table ; and, therefore, those persons, by whom they are kept, attend as particularly to the sort of rabbits whose flesh is said to be the best, as to their colors or shape. The short-legged stout rabbits are generally supposed to be the most - - xis =ºr-r ºr *-*….Tº. £-----. - - - ------ * RA B BITS. 27.5 nealthy, and also the best breeders. The large hare-colored variety is much esteemed by some people; but the white, or white mottled with back or yellow, are more delicate in flesh. The gray and some of the blacks, approach nearer to the flavour of the wild rabbit than any others. LOP-ICA RED, OR FAN cy. RAB BITs. Formerly, a fine rabbit of any two colors, however short its ears, was accounted a fancy animal : it is now very different. . In the eye of a fancier of the present day, the long lopped ear is an indispensable requisite. The first things that are looked at are the length and fall of the ears ; the dewlap, if the animal be in its prime, is next noticed ; the colors and markings are then inspected; and, lastly, the shape and general appearance. Rabbits, whose ears do not extend to fourteen inches from tip to tip, measured across the skull, would be reluctantly admitted into a fancier; stock, if they fell ever so finely; or, in case they exceeded that length, (and they sometimes are sixteen inches, and even upward,) if they did not lop or fall downward, in what is deemed a graceful and becoming manner. The dewlap, which is only seen in ſančy rabbits, sometime after they have attained their full M growth, adds materially to the beauty of their appearance : it commences immediately under the jaw, goes down the throat, and between the fore-legs: it is so broad, that when the head reposes upon it, it projects beneath the chin, and on each side beyond the jaws; it is usually parted in the centre in ſ * front, and is equal in size to a couple of good-sized eggs: when the fur on 3 - it is of a beautiful color, it produces a very fine effect. The annexed cut is a portrait of Wo WSKI, a first-rate fancy lop rabbit, | in the possession of the writer. At the time of making the drawing for this cut, Wowski was just ten weeks old; her ears matching perfectly with each other, and meas- uring, from tip to tip, nearly thirteen inches. | The difference in the back, and general ap- pearance, to say moth- §:==T ing of the ears, between the ſancy and the com. mon rabbit, cannot fail to strike the reader who will take the trouble of coin- Paring the annexed engraving with the cut of the common domestic rabbit, inserted on page 273. Fancy rabbits fetch high prices compared with those of the common ones 3 five, ten, and even as much as twenty guineas, have been given for a first- rate doe: Very good fancy rabbits may, however, be bought for less sums Z | ---> *- tº . *S*:::::tº : * 276 RABBITs. than these ; the foundation, of a fancy stock, provided young rabbits only be bought, may be made for even much less. We know a youth who began to keep fancy rabbits but two years ago, and has now a very brilliant little stock. He purchased three rabbits, each about two months old, of excellent breed; but being all deficient, in some respect, with regard to properties, they cost him between twenty and thirty shillings only. These three rabbits, being of the true fancy strain, have occasionally thrown very excellent speci- mens, which he has selected and reared: the first he has disposed of again, and his hutches did not, at the time we saw them, which was about three : t e º º - - : months since, contain an animal that would not pass muster in the rabbitry : of a first-rate fancier. k : THE RABBITRY AND HUTCHES, The rabbit house should be dry and well ventilated; too much humidity, whether externally or internally, will cause the rabbits to rot. Where con- f siderable numbers are kept, fresh air is absolutely necessary to preserve them in a state of health; still they should not be exposed to draughts, which, on many occasions, have brought on a disease called the smuſſles—a dangerous, and frequently fatal malady. If economy be an object, or the young fancier be desirous of employing his mechanical abilities, he may construct hutches sufficiently good for common purposes himself. k A tolerably good doe’s hutch may be made out of an old egg-chest, and places for bucks and weaned rabbits, of tea-chests; the former are to be - bought at a cheesemonger’s, the latter at a grocer’s shop. If our reader k should become his own carpenter in this case, we recommend him to follow, as much as his abilities will admit, the directions which are given for mak- ing hutches in the following page. Young persons should begin by keeping common rabbits, ſor which common hutches, such as they can construct themselves, if so inclined, will be quite good enough. When they have - acquired experience in the management of the Rabbitry, and not before, they may, by degrees, introduce superior animals to their stock, and dispose of the common ones. They should then also obtain superior hutches; for a fine lop-eared rabbit loses half the beauty of its appearance in a clumsy and ſ ill-fashioned hutch. The hutch ſor does should have a partition with a hole in it, to let them pass from one part to the other, and a slide to close this hole when necessary, For weaned rabbits, a hutch without this partition is preferable, and it is unnecessary to make any partition in the bucks' hutches. The breeding hutches should be about three feet long, two feet and a half in depth, and eighteen inches high; the breeding place may be fron, mine to welve inches in breadth; it should have a door to ſit the whole front of it, fastened by a separate latch or buckle to that used for the door of the feeding pſace. The latter door should extend the whole distance from the partition to the opposite | & ! RAF3B ITS. 277 k. part of the hutch, and in depth from the top to within two or three inches of the bottom ; it must be made of a frame of wood tinned on the inside, with stout wire or slender iron rods mailed or driven into the top and bottom parts of the frame, from three quarters to an inch apart. Hang i on a pair of small hinges to that side of the hutch which is opposite the partition, and fasten it by a latch or buckle. Under this door, a drawer for food, well tinned round the cdges, is to run in ; it should be fastened by d a buckle fixed to the lower part of the large door, or it imay be so contrived : that the door will keep it close without any fastening. Nail tim round the hole in the partition, (which ought to be circular,) and, in fact, to every other part of the interior of the hutch which the rabbits can take hold of with their teeth; as they are very destructive animals, and would actually gnaw themselves out of a mere wooden hutch. The bottom must be planed quite smooth, and a slip be taken off the lower part of the back of the hutch to let the urine rum off: for this purpose, hutches should also be set a little on the slant backward. # The buck’s hutch is made different in every respect from the breeding hutch; instead of being square, it is almost semicircular; the back and sides being gradually rounded off from the front. The wires are placed wider apart, and are thicker and stronger than those used for doe’s hutches: it has no partition, and the drawer, instead of running the whole breadth of the cage, as there is never more than one rabbit at a time to feed out of it, is placed in the centre, to a cross piece which goes from side to side, as the front piece of the drawer in other hutches. There must be an aperture at the back close to the floor, for the purpose we have before mentioned, and the door, which, excepting the drawer, constitutes the entire front of the cage, should be well hinged and fastened with a stout button. The buck’s hutch should not be less than twenty inches high, two feet and a half broad, and twenty inches at its deepest part. The hutches may be stacked one above another, or set in a row, as choice or convenience may direct. They should, however, never be placed upon the ground, but elevated on wooden stools, or horses, a foot or two above it; neither ought the back parts of them to be put close against the wall, but sufficient room should be left for the dung to have a passage from the aper tures made in the lower part of the back to the ſloor. F E D DIN G, This is a most important subject. On his skill, as a feeder, mainly de- pends the young Fancier’s chance of prosperity with his stock. Iſ too much food be given at once, the animals will get disgusted with and refuse it, so that a rabbit may be nearly starved by affording it too great a quantity of -- i food. Most persons ſeed their rabbits twice, but, for our own part, we ſeed ours thrice a day. To a full-grown doe, without a litter, in the morning. C. RAIBIBITS. ſ } we give a little hay, or dry clover, and a few of such vegetables as are in season; in the afternoon, we put two handfuls of good corn into her trough; and, at night, we give her a boiled potato or two, more vegetables, and if her hutch be clear of what we gave her in the morning, but by no means otherwise, a little more hay or clover. If you give rabbits more hay than they can eat in a few hours, except it be to a doe just about to litter, they will tread it under foot, and waste it; if you give them but a moderate quan- tity at a time, they will eat and enjoy it. Generally speaking, rabbits preſer green or moist food to corn: but it is mecessary to make them eat a suffi- cient proportion of solid food to keep them in health; occasionally, instead of corn, we give our rabbits a few split or whole gray peas. When a doe has a litter by her side, and also for rabbits recently weaned, we soak the peas for a few hours previously to putting then in the trough. If a rabbit will not eat a proper quantity of corn, we mix a small quantity of squeezed tea-leaves with her portion, and stint her proportionately in green meat. Barley-meal, dry as well as scalded, we occasionally use, to fatten for the table, or to bring a poor rabbit into good condition; and in winter, when greens are scarce, but not otherwise, we feed with fresh grains mixed with oats, peas, meal, or pollard. Tea-leaves, in small quantities, well Squeezed, may at all times be given, by way of a treat; but it is highly improper to make them a daily substitute for green meat. Almost all the vegetables and roots used for the table may be given to rabbits; in preſerence to all others, we choose celery, parsley and the roots } and tops of carrots; and in this choice the animals themselves heartily agree with us; lettuce, the leaves, and, what are much better, the stumps of cab- bages and cauliflowers, they eat with avidity, but they must be given to them with a sparing hand; turnips, parsneps and even potatoes in a raw state we occasionally afford our stock, on an emergency, when better roots or good greens are scarce. In the spring time no soft meat is better for them than tares, so that they be not wet : in fact, no green ought to be given to rabbits when there is much moisture on its surface. We have heard of some country persons feeding their rabbits on marshmallows, but we never did so ourselves. Dandelions, milk thistles, we know, by long experience, they take in preference to all other food, except celery, parsley, and carrots; and nothing, we are convinced, as green meat, can be better for them. It must be remembered that a doe will eat mearly twice as much when suckling as at other times; and, when her litter begin to eat, the allowance of food must be gradually increased. In our own Rabbitry we never admit chaff, and grains only, in a dearth of green food. If we can obtain neither greens, roots, nor grains, at feeding time, we make it a practice to moisten the corn with water, milk, or, as we before stated, with tea-leaves. Though h rabbit must be restricted from rioting in green or soft meat according to is own appetite, for its own sake, yet it is cruel to afford it only such food as sa ~~~~ * º f 2 -: -º-º-º-º-º: | RABBITS 279 * - *A , avº." Q-arºs will increase rather than appease its thirst; for this reason, in such a case as we have mentioned, we moisten the grain; and some rabbits will even do well with an occasional table-spoonful of water, beer, or milk; but it is a dangerous experiment to try the effect of a liquid on their stomachs. BIRE EIDIN G. The doe will breed at the age of six months; her period of gestation is Jhirty days. The rabbits are not to be left together above ten minutes. Some days before kindling, hay is to be given to the doe, with which, and the flue which nature has instructed her to tear from her body, she will make her nest. Biting the hay into short pieces, and carrying it about in her mouth, are almost certain signs of her being with young. The number produced varies from three to eleven. Destroy the weak and sickly ones, as soon as their defects can be perceived, until the litter is reduced to five or six. If you leave more to be suckled, some will, perhaps, die, others be sickly, and nome of them fine. The old rabbits are not to be put together till the expiration of six weeks: the young may be separated from the doe and weaned a fortnight after. If more than five or six litters are obtained in a º year, the doe will be soon worn out, and the young ones not worth much. The doe should not be disturbed by any other rabbit, while with young Should she be weak after kindling, give her a malt mash, scalded fine pol- lard, or barley-meal, in which may be mixed a small quantity of cordial horse-ball. In this case, and, in fact, whenever a doe is weak, bread— soaked in milk, and squeezed rather dry again, if she will take it, will | considerably strengthen her. If well ſed, and kept warm, does will breed all the vear; but most fanciers are contented with five litters a year, and let them rest during the winter. Mowbray states, that the produce of rabbits is so multitudimous, that one might be well satisfied with this practice; for that even ſour litters in the # year would be equal to two thousand young rabbits annually, from a stock of 9me hundred does. If does devour their young, or do not breed ſor any con- siderable time, rabbit fanciers dispose of them as useless incumbrances to : their stock. It is advisable so to manage, that two or three does should kin- dle about the same time; you may then take from the doe that has the great- : est number, and put the excess under her that has the least; taking care not to leave more than six young ones to each. It is advisable to obtain rabbits for breeding from a litter of two, three, or four only, as they are generally stronger and finer than those which come from a more numerous one. ... It is a disadvantage, rather than otherwise, to have above six produced in a litter, as the young ral,bits, when that is the case, are almost invariably weak and puny; and even if they be reduced to a moderate quantity, by removing some of them to another doe, or otherwise, they rarely become remarkable for their size or beauty. RABBITS. DIS E A SES. - Diseases may, in a great measure, be prevented, by regularity in feed- ing, good food, and cleanliness. The refuse of vegetables shuuld always be scrupulously rejected. For the liver complaint, to which rabbits are subject, there is no cure : when they are attacked by it, fatten them, if pos- sible, for the table. - The smuſfles are occasioned by damp or cold. If there be any cure for this disorder, it must be dryness in their hutches and food. Squeezed tea-leaves generally restore a doe to health, if weak, or other- wise affected after kindling, if the food which we have directed to be given at that time, under the head of Breeding, should fail. When old rabbits are attacked by a looseness, dry food will, in general, restore them ; but do what you will, it is very difficult, and, in most cases, impossible, to save young ones from sinking under it; dry food for them, as well as for the old S. • ones, is the only remedy. G E N E RAI, O.B.S.F. R V ATION S. Be careful to keep your rabbit-hutches particularly clean; a short hoe, ºr a trowel, and a hand-brush, will be necessary for this purpose. Do not handle your rabbits, particularly the young ones, too much ; when you lift them, take them with one hand by the ears, and place the other under the lower part of their backs. Never slacken in attention; a neglect of a day will do your stock much injury ; while by constant care you may breed to great perfection. Those who are fanciful in colors should not only look at those of the rabbits they buy for breeding, but also ascertain, if possible, the colors of the does they come from ; for rabbits frequently throw litters, in which not a single young one of their own color can be found. If there hap- pen, for instance, to have been a single cross of gray in your stock for three or four generations back, it will frequently appear in stock, although every breeding rabbit in your hutches be of a different color. Gray is the most difficult of all colors to eradicate; but even gray rabbits do not always have young ones of their own color. The more you vary the food, the fatter your rabbits will be; but observe, that when they are once full fat, (to use a term of breeders,) they frequently (all off and pine away to bad condition. It is impossible to lay down rules for the precise quantity of each sort of food to be allowed; a lºttle ex perience alone can teach the youthful ſancier this secret. *77 - w w sºccans Fº s' wºrs- * wrvºº-w - rº- ~ * ~ \ \, … ----- * - < *. -----> *Sº sºsºs.....&T =ººls. º: 3% - ɺ •S «s --- s* * -- . - - “. §§§ ** ** A rat without a tail.” MAC BETH. THESE little animals were originally natives of Brazil, but they have long been introduced to this and other European countries. They propagate in temperate, and even cold climates; and would be exceedingly numerous, had they not, like most other animals whose produce is abundant, a great number of enemies. The males frequently devour their own offspring, which also suffer much from cats, &c. It is said, however, that rats will carefully avoid them ; and under this idea, they are frequently bred by rabbit-ſan- ciers, for a protection to their young stock against those destructive vermin In a rabbit-house they are by no means troublesome, as they may be suffered to run loose under the lower tier of hutches, and will feed on the waste food, which is spilled about the floor. If kept up, through choice or necessity, they will do best in hutches similar to those made for rabbits; they need not, of course, be of such large dimensions. They will eat bread, grain, and, in fact, whatever is commonly given to rabbits; tea-leaves, however, they seem to prefer to all other food, but they ought not to be kept constantly ºn them. They breed, according to some naturalists, at two months old, and, it is sail, have from ſour to twelve young ones at a time: for our own part, we h. e ſrequently known them to have two, and never more than six, in a lit- ºr. In size they are considerably less tian a rabbit; the upper lip is only —5 282 GUINEA Pl G.S. half divided; they have two cutting teeth in each jaw, and their ears are broad and erect. They are of varied colors, white, black, and ſawn ; the tortoise-shell, (i. e.) a mixture of the three colors, is generally preferred. Some of the white ones have red eyes, similar to ferrets and white rabbits Their flesh is eatable, but by no means good; in this country they are never used for the table, and have been tasted only, it is presumed, from motives of curiosity. They are perfectly harmless and, unless it be true that they keep rats away from rabbit-hutches, altogether useless. They may be bought at the shops of the rabbit or pigeon dealers, at from sixpence upward, according to their age, shape, and color. Nature, which has so abundantly provided the Cape of Good Hope sheep with, tails, that the farmers, it is said, are frequently obliged to provide small wagons to support them, has left the little Guinea pig totally destitute of this usual ornament to the hind quarters of animals. Were it not for their color, they might, indeed, be properly compared to “A rat without a tail.” - # = <=== º 'º. §.6% #º £º: &::::::::::: §§§ E sº ɺ ** #::=#ºs - ora:-igiºs=== =zz J. : 2 Aloft in air the rapid pigeon soars, The messenger, by turns, of joy and wo; But heedless ever of her high envoy, Even while cleaving yonder distant cloud, Her heart is fixed on home, and her loved young ; Thus does brute instinct in mam’s hand become A mighty engine. … * THE life of this beautiful and useful bird is said to extend to about eight years; but it is useless for the purpose of breeding after it has attained half that age, and ought then to be destroyed, or it will molest those which are in their prime. The pigeon lays two white eggs, and sits fifteen days after the second egg is laid. The female keeps to the nest from four or five o'clock in the evening until nine the next morning ; she them goes off to feed, and the cock takes her place during the day. If the hen delay, the cock leaves the nest at the usual time, seeks her out, and drives her to her duty; the hem does the same in case of negligence in this respect on the wart of the cock. &la, * *-- -------- - - - - **** ---a-e-º-º-º: ,-- - - J ~...~" - r * ; * º x-r —- e. -z- 4 ſº assrº- ºsmºs a - - - - - - - w "...r.º. ** - - ºr. * - - lsº *** $s * * * * ** º sº | Q =Q. # , º \- 284 PIGEONS The young ones are usually of different sexes. For the first three days after they are hatched, the female seldom leaves them ; after that time, the cock and hen attend to ſeed them indiscriminately. The way in which the old supply the young with food is singular: the parent birds collect a quan- tity of grain and water in their crops, which are very capacious, and after it has lain there until soft and macerated, they cast it up into the throats of the young ones. As the young birds acquire strength, the old ones give the food less preparation, and at last drive them out to provide in part for them- selves; but they are often seen feeding their young ones even when the latter are able to fly, and they themselves are going to nest again. The young ones, while fed by the cock and hen, are called squabs, under six months old squeakers, and after that age they are denominated pigeons, being in a fit state to mate and breed. - THE DOVE-COTE, OR PIGEON-Hous E. As many young people will take a pleasure in breeding a little flock of birds from a common box, fitted up against a wall or elsewhere, we shall give them a few words of advice on the subject. The form ÉA of the box is immaterial ; à the triangular is, perhaps, £=s=7 the best, because it allows 5:57/ſſſſſſſſſſſſ:= 5 º 2= Aº % | §º the wet to run off quickest; *=A=#| § 1. Hº! º *###; Fº 㺠ººë number of holes, which ###### | | - | w Kº: \ in them with ease. Shelves the front, to keep the couples apart, and afford them good resting-places. according to the convenience or fancy of the individual fitting it up. It it may be made with any º: =-º-º: * should be sufficiently large • 2. 3: §, iſit ſtilliuºlilºttistill liſtillſº #º for the pigeons to turn round # # Tº \* *> Sº and partitions of six or eight inches deep should run along It will be an advantage, if you can allow two holes between each partition ſor each couple of birds. The box may also be made square ; or in fact, should be fixed where it will be secure from rats and cats, and ought always to face a warm quarter; cold winds being very permicious to the birds. PIGEON LOFTS. We shall now proceed to give the young Fancier proper instructions for building pigeon lofts, which are used for breeding and keeping the more curious sort of birds, or what are commonly denominated Fancy pigeons §§ * * : 2. a = <--vi - -- * P1 GEONS. 285 º, Many persons convert the spaces between the garrets and the roofs of their houses into lofts, by making an aperture in the tiling, which opens on a platform, fixed on the outside. It is necessary in this, as in all other cases to erect proper fences to keep out the cats. If possible, for the sake of warmth, your loft sliould face the south or southwest ; but as it rarely hap- pens that convenience will allow of a room being occupied entirely by pigeons, it is seldom that the birds are indulged with this advantage. Amy place, in fact, that is dry, light, airy, and sufficiently commodious, may be converted into a good loft. - The shelves for the breeding place should be fourteen inches, or a little more, in breadth; and if you breed Pouters, there ought to be twenty inches between the upper and lower shelves, or otherwise the pigeons will acquire a trick of stooping, which will spoil their deportment. Partitions should be made in these shelves, about three feet apart, and a slip of board run along the front of the lower shelves about four inches high, to keep in the nests. This slip should run in a groove, or be otherwise managed so that it may be easily removed, in order to clean out the nests when expedient. A simi- lar slip must also be fixed in the middle of each three feet division, which is thus adapted for a double nest, in one of which, the old ben may lay in quietness without being disturbed by her young ones in the other, as she often leaves them when about three weeks old to the care of the cock, and goes to nest again. Some Fanciers darken the nest by sctting up a board a few inches within the edge of the shelves, having an entrance hole cut through it; thus dividing the partition into an outer shelf or landing place, and an immer room or nest : in this case, of course, the slip is unnecessary. A good contrivance to keep the birds private when setting is, perhaps, worth attention, as they are sometimes shy, and set uneasy, or even fly off their eggs, in alarm, on any person’s entering the loſt. Some tame pigeons will not make their nests; to such it will be right to afford a little hay. Straw buckets and pans of earthen-ware are used by many Fanciers for nests. When the latter are adopted, it is usual to place a brick between them (there being two pans in every partition) for the convenience of the birds, as well as more effectually to divide and support the nest. The pans should vary in size according to the pigeons for which they are intended. The straw baskets are in general preferred, as the egg is liable to be broken m the pam, unless it be strowed with hay, straw, or frail, of which the latter, for many reasons, is the best for the purpose. FEEDING, MATING, &c. Gravel should be strowed on the shelves and floor, the birds being fond of picking it; besides, it gives the loſt a much cleaner appearance. Clean- liness is indispensable; if you suffer the loſt to be filthy, the dirt will produce effects which will be equally annoying to yourself and your birds. Do not Aa - PIGEONS. handle your squabs or young birds too much, lest you bring an illness on them which may prove fatal. The common pigeon will, during a great part of the year, seek the princi- pal part of its own food, and live upon almost any grain; the fancy birds require delicate food and much attention. Of all grain, old tares prove to be the best suited to the mature of these birds; new tares should be given very sparingly, especially to young pigeons, as they are very liable to do them much injury. Horse beans are esteemed the next best food to tares the smallest of these are preferred, especially small ticks. Wheat, barley, oats, and peas, ought only to be given now and then for a change of diet, as they sometimes hurt them. Rape, canary, and hemp-seed, pigeons are immoderately fond of; but these must not by any means be made a constant diet. Mating or coupling of pigeons is often attended with much difficulty. In order to effect it, let two coops be built close together with a partition of lath between them, so that the birds may see each other, and they should feed out of the same vessels; by supplying them well with hemp-seed, you may soon make them fit for mating, and when you perceive the hem to sweep her tail, you may remove her to the cock’s pen, and they will soon agree. When this convenience is wanting, and you are compelled to put them both into the coop at first, put the cock in three or four days before the hen, that he may get master of the coop, particularly if the hen be a ter- magant, or else they will quariel so much, that their bickerings will end in an irreconcilable hatred. When the pigeons are matched, you can give them the run of the loft to choose a nest for themselves, or fix them to one, by inclosing them within it, by a lath railing, giving then food and water in plenty for eight or mine days. DISE AS fº, S A. N. L. R. E ME DIES. For the wet roup, give them three or four pepper-corns once in three or four days, and steep a handful of green rue in their water, which you may let all the pigeons drink of. The dry roup is known by a dry husky cough, it proceeds from a cold; to cure it, give them three or four cloves of garlic every day. The canker arises from the cocks pecking each other: for this, rub the affected part every day with burnt alum and honey. When the flesn round the eyes is torn or pecked, bathe it with salt water for several days; if this do not prove successful, wash the aggrieved part with two drachms of alum dissolved in an ounce and a half of water When pigeons are infested with insects, smoke their feathers well with tobacco. Pigeons are apt to gorge themselves when they have ſasted rather longer than usual. When this happens, put the bird into a tight stocking with its PIGEONS 28 g-assºs feet downward, smoothing up the crop, that the over-loaded bag of meat may not hang down; then hitch up the stocking on a mail, and keep it in this posture, supplying it with a little water now and then, till the food is digest- ed. When taken out of the stocking, put the bird in an open coop or basket, and feed it but very moderately for some time. \ The megrims is a disease, in which the pigeon flutters about at random with its head reverted in such a manner that its beak rests upon its back. This malady is pronounced incurable. When pigeons do not moult freely, put them into some warm place, and mix a good quantity of hemp-seed in their common food, and a little saffron in their water. If they be lame, or the palls of their feet become swelled, either from cold, being cut with glass, or any other accident, spread some Venice turpentine on a piece of brown paper, and put it to the part affected. FE N C IN G. Wouldst have thy son acquire a graceful port, A manly bearing ;-make his eye acute As that of the hawk, and his young limbs vie With those of roe-bucks in agility 3– The noble art of Fencing let him learn. 1N those days, when a small sword was an indispensable ornament to the person of a gentleman, objections were sometimes raised to the cultivation of the art of Fencing, as tending to lead young persons into broils and duels; but nothing can now be said against it on this score; the wearing of swords, except among military men, has long ceased, and duels being inva- riably decided in this country by pistols. The art of Fencing is acquired, therefore, as the means of affording excellent exercise, elegant amusement, and imparting an easy deportment and graceful action, as well as extraordi- nary acuteness of eye, and agility of body. That it has these merits, there can be no doubt; and it is, therefore, confidently recommended to youth, as being not only perfectly unexceptionable, but even superior, in most respects, to all other exercises. FOI ſ.s., MASKs, &c. The ſoils should be proportioned to the size of those who use them. Thirty-one inches is the medium for men; it is advisable to use a glove on the right hand, padded on the back and the outsides of the fingers; the masks must have wire fronts, stout enough to resist an accidental thrust at the face. An easy dress should be worn, and it is usual, in academies, to have a spot, or heart, on the left side of the breast of the waistcoat. HOW TO HOLD THE FOII., The hilt must be flat in your hand; so that the two edges are nearly hori- contal when you throw yourself upon guard; your thumb should be stretch- ed along the upper flat part of the hilt, within half an inch of the shell, and the pommel should rest under your wrist. r— ~-r-y—s 2, s -* $290 FENCIN G. COMMON GUARDS OF CARTE AND TIERC E. Stand in the first position, which is similar to the first position in dancing, that is, your right foot forward, with the heel advanced; then throw your- Felf upon the common guard or carte, by advancing your right foot about half a yard from the left. The two heels should be in the same line. Turn our wrist so that the nails may appear upward. Let your hand be on a É. with the lower part of your breast; the arm not stretched, but a little bent, and the elbow inclined a little to the outside. The point of your foil should be about fifteen de- grees elevated, and nearly fixed on a line with the upper part of your adversary’s breast. The left arm (which is necessary to balance the body in its different movements) must be raised in a semi-circular manner, on a line with the forehead, the hand kept open in an easy manner, the thumb and first finger nearly meeting. Your body should be sideways, and your head turned toward the right, so as to keep sight of your point. Let the balance of your body rest upon the left leg, keep the left knee bent, and flex- ible, so that you may incline a little backward; the right knee should also be rather bent, and perpendicular to the point where your right heel rests. The position of the guard in tierce is similar to that of carte, only the hand must be a little reversed, so that the mails may be half turned down ward. The arm should be a little stretched outward, in order to secure on cover the outside, and the point should be as in carte. ENGAGING AND DISENGAGING. Fngaging in carte, or in tierce, is opposing your adversary’s blade, either inside or outside, when you first join or cross blades on guard. Disengaging is performed by dexterously shifting the point of your foil from one side of your adversary’s blade to the other; that is, from carte to tierce, or viceversa. THE ADVANCE AND RETR F. A.T. In order to advance, move the right foot easily forward to the distance of more than a foot, and let the left foot instantly follow to the same distance; these two movements must be performed in the same moment. Keep your body firm and steady while you repeat this five or six times; and let there be a short pause between every advance. After making five or six ad- ** ..— . ~ * * 5s-a-vij \. ** s=<5 FENCING. 29] vances, chserve if the distance and pcsition of your guard be exactly the same as your distance and position were when you commenced. In the retreat, your left foot makes the first movement backward, and your right follows at the same moment. THE SIMPLE PARAD ES OF CARTE AND TIER CE. These are distinguished from all the others, on account of their securing the breast, as upper parades. To perform that of carte, place yourself on the common guard, and throw your hand toward the left, or inward, about six inches from guard, making a gradual turn upward with the wrist, in order to throw off your adversary’s blade with the greater ease; at the same time draw your hand a little toward your body, that the opposition may be more powerful. The simple parade of tierce is also performed from the common guard by throwing and stretching your arm obliquely downward to the right, (or out- wardly,) the mails being reversed by the gradual turn of the wrist, in forming the parade. It parries the simple thrust of carte over the arm and seconde. The distance of the hand ſtom the common guard should be six inches. The point of your foil, your body and legs, should not deviate ſrom the line of direction in performing either of these parades. T H E PARA DES OF OCTA V E AND SE MI-CIRCL E. To perform the octave parade, raise the hand as high as your chin, the mails must not be turned up so much as in semi-circle; your arm should be well stretched and thrown outward, the distance of six inches; the wrist should be bent as much as possible, in order that the point may fall on a * * * *.. - - line with your adversary’s flank, making mearly the same angle from guard-point as semi-circle. Semi-circle parade is useful against thrusts of low carte, seconde, and the disengage and thrust of carte over the arm. Let your body be steadily in- clined upon the left side; drop your point, with the mails up- ward, so as to form an angle of nearly forty-five degrees with the guard-point. At the same time, stretch your arm well out, raise the hand as high as your mouth, and throw your arm mward, the distance of six inches, from the line of direction in your common guard, that your point may appear to the eye in looking to vour arm. (Wide cut.) - - * Öss== º * - -- ºff vº-ºr- - * y Lºry-gº - - - 292 THE SIMPL E PARADEs OF SE CONDE AND PRIME. These two parades are not used so frequently as the preceding four, Seconde is very powerful against the simple thrusts of low carte and the same manner as semi-circle. seconde. To perform it from carte to tierce, the nails and wrist should be turned down- ward, the point be dropped, and the hand opposed outward, as in the parade of octave. The point’s tract from guard is also nearly the same with the parade in octave, and the inclination of the blade should form the angle offorty-five degrees.(Wide cut) Prime is performed with the nails turned downward, the hand raised higher than the mouth, and opposed inward, in The arm should be drawn well in toward the-body, and the wrist bent downward, that the point may fall more than in other low parade. THE EXTENSION, LONGE, THRUSTs of CARTE, CARTE over THE ARM, AND THER CE. Thrusts are, for the most part, executed with the longe, except thrusts of the wrist, and thrusts of the extension. They may be performed either after disengaging the point or not. To perform the straight thrust of carte inside, your point must be directed to your adver- sary’s breast, the arm well raised, and opposed in- side, the nails upward, your body projecting for- ward, and an extension performed of the right’ arm and left leg. ( Vide cut, which represents the position of extension.) Then push home the thrust in carte by longeing out to a distance proportionate with your height. Your |,- FENCING. • 293 * * left arm should be stretched down by the flank, at the distance of two or three inches, and always raised as you recover upon guard, by way of grace -- and balance to your move- - ments. Your bodyshould incline a little forward ; the head be raised up- right, looking outward over the shoulders, so as to have a full view of the point. As you approach your adversary’s breast, make a gradual resistance against his foil inward, by way of cover to your longe. Keep the right knee bent, and in a per- pendicular posture with your heel; the left knee and ham stretched, with the foot firmly fixed to the ground. To recover yourself with the requisite ease, lean with some degree of force on the heels of both feet; the greatest force is first upon the right, then it falls on the left; by bending the left knee at the same time, and inclining the body backward, you come to guard. The thrust of carte over the arm is performed in the same manner as carte inside, by disengaging to tierce, with this difference, that the head is raised upright on the inside, and the hand well opposed outward, in order to be well covered. The thrust of tierce differs only from carte over the arm, by reversing the wrist, the hand being well raised and opposed outward. * Low CARTE, OCTAVE, SE con DE, AND PRIME THRUSTs. Low carte, sometimes called semi-circle thrust, is delivered after forming the parade of semi-circle, in the same manner as simple carte thrust; only the hand and point must be fixed lower. It is an excellent thrust, if your adversary have frequent recourse to his high parades. Octave thrust is delivered after the parade of octave, on the flank or belly; she arm being well opposed outward. If you parry your adversary’s thrust by octave, your return will naturally be the thrust of octave, which may, at the same time, touch him with the extension only, without the longe. The thrust in seconde is delivered aſter the parade of the tierce, or when 2ngaged by tierce, by dropping your point under your adversary’s wrist with the mails downward; longe and deliver the thrust on the flank. Prime is the matural thrust in return, after having parried your adversary’s I3b : wº --~~---- wººl:ºx º ** * - a V------ Fry --~~ wºrw-Tººrs : : F--- ºr-----. * , 294 FEN C IN G. º force, when advanced considerably within his measure, and pressmg vig. orously upon you. It is only an extension of the arm from the opposition of the parade to your adversary’s body, the mails being kept downward. The - arm should be well raised, aud opposed inward. VARIATIONS AND LESSON ON EN GA G IN G AND DISENGAG IN G, AIM- VAN cin G AND RETRIEATIN G, SIMPLE PARADES, AND THRUST's OF CARTE AND TIE R C E Suppose you are engaged in carte with an adversary, he retreats, you advance, well covered in carte ; he retreats again, you advance with a dis- engagement to tierce, and so forth, alternately ; taking care that sou are properly covered on each engagement; his retreat and your advance should be comprehended in the same moment of time; in the same manner, you may retreat while he advances. On the engagement of carte, your adver- sary delivers a thrust in carte; oppose it by forming your parade in carte, then return the straight thrust thereof. He again thrusts straight in the same manner; also throw it off by forming your parade in carte, deliver in return the thrust of carte over the arm, by disengaging to tierce. On the engage- ment in tierce, he disengages and thrusts carte inside; throw it off by your parade in carte, disengage, and thrust carte over the arm; he parries, and returns in tierce, which you parry by a parade in tierce, and longe home with a straight thrust in tierce. º LEsso NS AND WARIATIONS IN SEMICIRCLE, Low CARTE, AND ocTAve. On the engagement of carte, drop your point and deliver the thrust of } low carte. On the same engagement, your adversary thrusts straight - home; throw it off by pa- rade in carte, then deliver a return of the thrust in low carte. On the same engagement, disengage to tierce, and thrust carte over the arm; he opposes it with his parade, and re- turns a disengaged thrust in carte; which throw oſſ with the parade of carte; = then, with vivacity, drop your point, and deliver a thrust in low carte. On the engagement of tierce, your adversary, by disengaging, attempts to de- liver a thrust in low carte; throw it off by performing the parade of octave (Vide cut ;) then make a quick return of the thrust in octave. On the engagement of carte, he thrusts low carte, parry it by octave: -> :S-3–. * -------~~~~ Ös::::::::2-C ~ * * *-r FENCIN G. . 295 instantly form your extension, fix your point well to his body, and you may: almost make sure of touching him. (Wide cut.) *ś. gº †Wſ) ſºlº lº {\% | & \S. ſº W Wº & 4. * : *-ºs - ..., - On the engagement of carte, he disengages to tierce, and thrusts; throw it off by your parade of tierce ; then reverse your nails upward, and return a thrust in octave. On the same engagement, he thrusts low carte, oppose it by forming your parade in semi-circle; then deliver a thrust in octave, by disengaging over his arm, commonly called a counter disengagement. LESS ON AND WARIATIONS IN PRIME AND SE con D.E. On the engagement of tierce, your adversary advances within his meas- ure, and delivers a thrust in tierce or carte over the arm; oppose his blade by the parade of prime, and return a thrust in prime. (Wide cut.) cº § sº § |y TN * ſº... N Q =Q_ _ºrº 296 FENG IN G. On the same engagement, he advances, disengages, and forcibly thrusts carte; drop your point, and parry it with prime; them disengage over his arm, and return a thrust in seconde. On the engagement of carte, he disengages, and thrusts carte over the arm; parry it with simple tierce, and return a thrust in tierce; he advances, as you recover, within his measure, forcing upon your blade; form your parade in prime, and deliver a quick return of the thrust thereof. On the same engagement, he again disengages, and thrusts carte over the arm, which parry with tierce, and return the thrust thereof; he forces a thrust without advancing, parry it with prime, then disengage over the arm, and return your thrust in seconde. THE SALUTE. Place yourself on guard, engage your adversary’s blade on the outside; by way of compliment, desire him to thrust first at you; then drop your point, by reversing the mails downward, with a circular motion; draw your right foot close behind the left, stretching both hams; raise your right arm, and, with your left hand, take off your hat gracefully; then make a circular motion with your wrist, with the nails upward, while you advance your right foot forward, forming your proper extension. Your adversary makes the same motions, keeping equal time with you; but, instead of forming the ex- tension, he makes a full longe, as if going to thrust carte inside, in order to take his measure, presenting his point at a little distance from your body while you remain uncovered on the extension. - £º §§ºs # º (Vide cut.) When your adversary recovers his position, after having taken his mea- * sure, you also recover by drawing the right foot, or heel close to the hee of the left; the right hand well stretched and raised, the nails upward, and the point dropped; the left hand raised in a semi-circular form, as if on guard, your hat held therein with ease and gracefulness; the head upright, and the hams stretched. In this attitude, salute first in carte, by forming that parade; them, salute in tierce, by ſorming the parade of tierce; lastly, make a circular motion with the wrist, by dropping your point in tierce, at that moment putting on your hat, and throwing yourself upon the guard of carte. When it is your turn to push, the salute only differs in one particular from the above; that is, instead of forming the extension, and uncovering the body, you make a full longe from the first position of the right foot behind the left in carte; them, recover to the second position, by placing the right foot or heel close to the heel of the left; and conclude with the other move- ments. All these motions should be performed with ease, grace, and with- out precipitation. After performing the salute, and being engaged in carte, .." adversary, agreeably to the compliment offered, pushes at your breast y disengaging nimbly to tierce, and thrusting carte over the arm. Ob- serve, that the wrist is never reversed when he disengages; oppose it by performing the parade of tierce, then drop the point, by way of accustoming yourself to make the return in seconde, which may be termed the grace on the parade of tierce. Remain on this grace till your adversary recovers to guard; then join his blade in tierce; he disengages, by thrust.ng carte in- side; throw it off by forming the parade of carte. The grace or ornament to be used after forming this parade, while your adversary is upon the longe, is by allowing the foil to remain flexible in your hand, with the point downward, keeping your hand in the same direction as iſ covered upon the parade. Your adversary, after pushing tierce and carte alternately, commences the salute; and while he is on the extension, you take the measure by longe- ing in carte. IHaving joined blades in carte, disengage, and thrust carte over the arm. Again, he joins your blade in tierce, disengage mimbly, and Jhrust carte inside. (Wide cut.) § * W #. x-f .# ! *... . . £. : ; ) * ºs- ** !!...: FEN CING He opposes in carte; them let the blade and point fly loosely over the hand naving hold of your foil between the thumb and two first fingers, by which ou will have a view of your adversary through the angle made thereby his is the grace upon the longe of carte inside. THE COUNTER, OR ROUND PARADES, IN CARTE AND TIERCE. The counter-parade in carte, is esteemed one of the most essential, as it baffles-a variety of thrusts, throws off the disengagements over the arm, &c. In order to perform it when your adversary disengages, follow his blade closely, with a small circle, entirely from the motion of the wrist, by which you join his blade always in carte. If he make a thrust with the dis- engagement, oppose it, by gradually covering yourself with the parade of carte, after having followed his blade round. The counter, or round parade in tierce, is performed in a similar manner to the counter-parade of carte, only that the course of the point is reversed. For example; your adversary disengages to carte, with a view to thrust carte inside; follow his blade closely, with a small circle, made by the mo- tion of the wrist reversed in tierce, stretching your arm, and giving his blade a smart and abrupt throw-off, as you overtake or meet it in tierce. The course of the point in forming the counter in carte is inward, from left to right; and in the counter-parade of tierce, the contrary. COUNTER DISEN GA GEMENTS IN OCTAW E AND SE MI-CIRCLE. The counter-disengagement in octave may be performed after your ad- versary has thrust in seconde, and you have parried by semi-circle; as he recovers, counter-disengage, and thrust in octave. (Pide cut.) FEN C IN G. 299 To give a further exemplification of the counter-disengagement in octave: t is also performed by first making a feint, as if you intended to thrust oc- tave; lie naturally opposes it, by forming his parade in octave; then nimbly disengage over his arm to carte inside, and deliver either that thrust, or the hrust of low carte. The counter-disengagement in semi-circle is performed on the engage- ment of carte, when your adversary accustoms himself to take the parade of semi-circle, by first making a feint, as if you meant to thrust low carte, which he attempts to parry with semi-circle, then nimbly disengaging over his arm, and delivering your thrust in octave. THE COUNTER-DISE N G A G E MENTS IN PRIME AND SE CONIDE. The counter-disengagement in prime is seldom used in attacks; but being so nearly related to prime parade and thrust, we shall here describe it. It f is performed from the engagement of tierce, by forcing on your adversary’s - blade, if he betake himself to the parade of prime, then nimbly disengaging over his arm, and delivering your thrust in seconde. The counter-disengagement of seconde may be more frequently used; it is performed from the engagement of carte, by dropping your point, or making a feint, as if you intended to thrust prime; your adversary opposes it, by performing the parade of seconde; them disengage over his arm, and - deliver your thrust by longeing in prime. y- * LEssons AND WARIATIo NS on THE cou NTER-PARADES IN CARTE AND TIERCE, Y AND THE cog NTER DISENGAGEMENTS IN OCTAVE, &c. f On the engagement of carte, disengage and thrust carte over the arm; your adversary opposes it, by forming the counter-parade of carte. Upon recovering, he, in return, disengages and thrusts carte over the arm; oppose it by counter-parade in carte, &c.; disengaging and parrying alternately, always making complete longes with the thrusts, and moving well to guard, while forming the counter-parades. Make your movements very slow and exact in the beginning, and gradually quicken them. Exercise on the en- gagement of tierce in the same manner: first, by disengaging and thrusting carte inside, which he opposes, by forming the counter-parade in tierce; in return, he disengages and thrusts carte inside, which parry with the counter-parade in tierce, &c. : thrusting and parrying as above, until you quicken your movements with all possible exactness. On the engagement of tierce, iſ your adversary thrust octave in low carte, you may parry it with octave; then counter-disengage, and deliver a thrust in low carte. On the same engagement, he counter-disengages, and thrusts low carte, whicli oppose ºy your counter-parade in octave, and re- turn the thrust thereof. On the same engagement, he again counter-disen. FENCING gages, and thrusts low carte, which you may baffle by first forming the parade of octave, then forming the parade of semi-circle quickly after the other; and, as he recovers, counter-disengage, and thrust octave. On the engagement of tierce, advance within measure, forcing upon your adversary’s blade; he betakes himself to the simple parade of prime; º counter-disengage, and thrust seconde. On the same engagement, he ad- vances, forces, and counter disengages as above; but baffle his thrust in ; seconde, by the counter-parade in prime, and return the thrust thereof. On : the same engagement, he counter-disengages; follow his blade by the counter-parade in prime; if he attempt to double or disengage again, stop him, by forming your simple parade of seconde. On the engagement of carte, counter-disengage, when your adversary } drops in seconde, and thrusts prime. On the same engagement, he counter- * disengages, when you drop to seconde; oppose it, by your parade of : seconde; then return a straight thrust in seconde. Or if, on the same en- : gagement, he make a straight thrust in seconde, you may parry it with semi- §§ circle, and return low carte thrust. On the same engagement, he counter- disengages, answer his movements by forming the simple parades of seconde ; and prime; then counter-disengage as he recovers, and deliver a thrust in seconde : F EINTS, i Feints are used to oblige your adversary to give you openings. The - simple feint, une, deux, (or one, two,) is performed by two separate disen- gagements, either on the engagement of carte or tierce, when your adver- sary throws his simple parades. If engaged in carte, disengage closely to tierce, then quickly disengage back to carte, and deliver the thrust thereof On the engagement of tierce, disengage first to carte, then disengage back to tierce, delivering the thrust of carte over the arm. r Feint seconde, carte over the arm, is performed when engaged in tierce, - by dropping your point, and reversing the nails, as if you meant to thrust seconde; then quickly turn them upward, and deliver the thrust of carte . over the arm. On the same engagement, you may mark feint seconde, and º, thrust carte inside, if there be an opening. Feints une, deux, trois, (or one, two, three,) are performed by three sepa. * } rate disengagements, either from the engagement of carte or tierce. Ox º the engagement of carte, mark feint, one, two, as above; if your adversary º form his simple parade of carte, nimbly mark your third disengagement, by *::::if thrusting carte over the arm. On the engagement of tieroe, disengage : three times, and deliver your thrust in carte inside. CUT OVER THE POINT. This is performed when you perceive your adversary hold his hand low, and his point is raised upon guard. To perform it from carte to tierce FE N C IN G. 30: raise your point quickly, with the upward motion of your wrist, airly over your adversary’s point, without moving your arm from the line of direction, at the same time forming your extension, and deliver your thrust of carte over the arm. In the same inanner you may execute cuts over the point, from the en- gagement of tierce, when your adversary holds his point high. TH H U ST OF THE W RIST. This is performed when you perceive your adversary slow in making a return, after you have longed with a thrust; is on the engagement of carte, suppose you thrust carte over the arm, which your adversary naturally par- ries with simple tierce, lean with some degree of force upon his blade, and, as you recover to guard, deliver him a thrust with the wrist in seconde. i ; RETURN ON THE EXTENSION. This is performed after your adversary makes a full longe with a thrust, which you may parry so powerfully, as to throw his arm out of the line of direction; them, with all possible quickness, extend your arm, and deliver him a straight thrust in return, before he has time to recover. If the exten- sion of the arm be not within reach, from your complete extension of the leg and arm. APPELS, BEATS ON THE BLADE, AND G LIZADEs. Appels, beats, and glizades, tend to plant you firm upon your guard, to embarrass your adversary, and cause him to give you openings; they may be perſormed previously to simple thrust, feints, or counter-disengagements, &c. An appel, or beat with the foot is performed either on the engagement of carte or tierce, by suddenly raising and letting fall the right foot, with a beat on the same spot; taking care to balance the body, and keep a good position or guard. The beat on the blade, is abruptly touching your adversary’s blade, so as to startle him, and get openings to thrust. If he resist the beat, instantane- ously disengage, and thrust home. If he use a simple parade, mark feint one, two ; or, if he use a counter-parade, counter-disengage, or double. º Glizades are slightly gliding your blade along your adversary’s, at the same time" forming the extension, of the arm, or the complete extension, managing and restraining your body, so as to be aware of his thrust, and to make sure of your own. If you be engaged in carte, out of measure, a quick advance, with a glizade, must infallibly give you some openings, either to mark ſeints or otherwise. t THE TIME-THRUST. This thrust is performed when your adversary is dilatory. On attempting to deliver this thrust, cover yourself well, by forming a gradual and strong º “. —- sº *º-º" "aw - - ss==<5 \\} \ FENCING. §---t * opposition to your adversary’s blade; you can be in no danger of exposing yourself to an interchanged thrust, that is, a thrust at the same moment. L Esso NS AND VARIATIONS TO FE INTs, APPELs, &c. On the engagement of carte, mark feint one, two, and thrust carte inside. On the engagement of tierce, feint one, two, and thrust carte over the arm. On the engagement of carte, mark a feint over the arm, and thrust low carte, On the same engagement, mark feint over the arm, reverse the wrist, and thrust seconde. On the engagement of tiere 2, mark feint seconde, reverse the wrist, and thrust carte over the arm. On the same engagement, mark feint seconde, and thrust carte inside. On the engageinent of carte, in attempting the feints one, two, if he baffle it by his counter-parade in carte, counter-disen- gage, and deliver the thrust of carte over the arm. On the engagement of carte, suppose your adversary hold his guard low, and his point high, make a cut over the point, forming your extension, and thrust carte over the arm. On the engagement of carte, cut over the point; if he use a simple parade, disengage, and thrust carte inside. On the en- gagement of tierce, if your adversary hold his hand low, and point high, make a cut over the point, and thrust carte inside. On the same engagement, cut over the point twice, and deliver the thrust of carte over the arm. On the same engagement, cut over the point twice, then disengage, and thrust carte inside. On the same engagement, cut over the point, then mark feints one, two, and thrust carte inside. On the engagement of carte, disengage to tierce, and thrust carte over the arm ; if your adversary form his simple parade in tierce, and be slow in making a return, deliver him a thrust with the wrist in seconde, as you re- cover. On the engagement of tierce, disengage and thrust carte inside, or low carte ; if he parry it with octave, disengage over his arm as you recover and deliver him a thrust in low carte. On the engagement of carte, disen- gage and thrust seconde; if he parry it with seconde, counter disengage as ou recover, and thrust prime. On the engagement of tierce, force upon § blade, disengage and thrust low carte : he parries it with prime, and if slow in making a return, deliver the thrust in seconde with the wrist, as you l'eCOVéI’. On the engagement of carte, give him some openings; if he mark the ſoints one, two, and thrust, form your counter parade in carte; them deliver him a quick return with the wrist in low carte, by forming the complete ex- tension. On the engagement of tierce, in like manner, give him some openings; if he mark feints one, two, and thrust, forin your counter parade untierce; and, on the extension, deliver him a thrust in seconde. On the engagement of carte, if le execute low feints and thrusts, use the circle pa rade, and return a straight thrust on the extension, before he recovers. FENCING. | On the engagement of carte, make an appel, or beat with the right foot, At the same time beating abruptly on your adversary’s blade, which will give you an opening to thrust carte straight home. On the same engage- wnent, make an appel, beat his blade, then disengage, and thrust carte over the arm. On the engagement of tierce, make an appel, beat his blade, and thrust tierce ºr carte over the arm. On the same engagement, make an appel, beat l is blade, then disengage, and deliver a thrust in carte inside. On the engagement of tierce, make your appel, disengage to carte, by beating his blade, and thrust carte inside. On the engagement of tierce, perform a glizade along his blade, with the extension; if he do not cover himself, deliver a straight thrust in carte over the arm. On the engagement of carte, make a glizade, drop your point, and deliver a thrust in low carte. On the engagement of tierce, perform a glizade, drop your point under his wrist, and deliver a thrust in octave. On the engagement of tierce, he disengages to carte, then disengage con- trarily, and thrust home carte over the arm. On the engagement of carte, when you find that your adversary holds his hand too low upon guard, and deviates from the guard rules, seize the opening, by pushing carte straight home. On the engagement of tierce, having the like opportunity, deliver the thrust of carte over the arm, straight home. * On the engagement of carte, your adversary disengages to tierce; that in- stant disengage contrarily, (that is, to carte,) and push home. (Wide cut.) - Nº. 6% * & Lº-T ==ºše Ş §s *º-s *: &= º O \º *S. sº . § sº § §§ AIl these lessons should be performed repeatedly, and the pupil should oſten exercise with another who has had equal practice, executing all thrusts, ſeints, counter-disengagements, &c. while the other remains upon guard, making use of the necessary parades, &c.; he should them, in turn, perform the practical movements, in order that both may make mutual progress m the art. - FENCING. THE SAI, UTE PREVIOUTS TO AS AU [..T.S. On the engagement of tierce, make two quick appels, or beats, with the right foot; bring it close behind the left, near the shoe-tie, raising and stretching your right arm with the mails upward, and the point of your foil dropped; at the same time, take off your hat gracefully, and hold it in your left hand, stretched down near the flank; then, with a circular motion of the wrist, as if forming the counter in tierce, throw your left ſoot backwards, to the distance of your common guard, and raising your left hand, make two other appels; bring your left foot forward to the former position, that is, be- fore the right, near the shoe-tie ; at the same time, stretching your aru, with the nails upward as before, and in that position, form gracefully the parades of carte and tierce; make a circular motion with the wrist, and advance your right foot, with vivacity, to your original guard, at the same time covering your head. All the movements in this salute should be performed in a more lively manner than those described in the salute previously to thrusting carte and tierce: observe, also, that these movements should keep exactly the same time with those of your adversary. DISA. R. MIN G. After parrying your adversary’s thrust by simple carte, or the counter in carte, without quitting his blade, lean abruptly thereon, and binding it with yours, reverse your wrist, with the nails downward, as if in seconde, and with the motion thereof, give his blade an abrupt twirl. (Wide cut.) If this do not disarm him, it will throw his hand and blade out of no line of direction, so that you may effectually fix your point, and delivoj him a thrust in seconde * *.*.*.* FENCING. 4 Also, after parrying by simple tierce, cross his blade before he recovers; make a strong and abrupt circular movement with your wrist in seconde without quitting his blade, and it will either disarm, or give you an opening to deliver him a thrust. PRACTICAL OR SERVATIONS. Assume a bold air and steady position; fix your eyes firmly on those of your adversary, so that he may not penetrate into your designs; and keep your proper distance and measure. It is a most essential point in assaults, exactly to know these : for this purpose, observe the height of your adver- sary, the length of his foil, &c., and make the necessary allowances ac- cordingly. fiemake ſrequent practice of disengaging, beating your blade, and otherwise embarrassing you, with a view to get openings, you may seize the occasion to deliver a time-thrust, taking care to cover yourself well, by forming a good opposition against his blade. When on the en- gagement of carte, by way of snare, hold your point higher than usual; if he attempt to make a cut over the point, that instant disengage contrarily, and thrust carte inside; or you may, in preference to this, deliver a straight thrusu in carte over the arm. (Wide cut.) Be not too eager in making your thrusts in return; as, by an over eager- ness, learners contract a habit of returning their thrust by crooking the arm which is quite erroneous. Form your parades justly, and accustom yourself, at first, to make straight returns without disengaging. If you intend to re- turn a thrust by disengaging, you should perform it the moment your adver- sºry is recovering; it must proceed from the motion of the wrist, and not by crooking the arm. The distance of your guard should be moderate, two ''et is the distance for men: by a wide guard, you keep your adversarv at | § -. * *w. " -º-º/*; ºre--, -º * * * * 2:7- ...º.º. 3. “y.'s º: * –—- - ---—--** FEN C IN G. too great a distance, and have not that necessary command of throwing your body back far enough, when he advances and makes a full longe; neither can you retreat, or make returns with the necessary quickness; the lower part of the body is also more exposed than it would be on a proper medium guard. - Never extend yourself too far on the longe, as it impedes your recovering to guard with the necessary quickness. Always endeavour to recover quick- ly, and with as much ease as possible, fixing your point to your adversary’s body, and forming the most matural parade, in case he should make a quick return. If engaged with an adversary of a shorter stature, attack him on the engagement of tierce, as being more advantageous for a number of feints and thrusts than the engagement of carte, particularly for feint seconde over the arm, &c. - If your adversary advance within his measure, and force in a straight thrust, carte over the arm, or in tierce, then raise and bend your arm, forming the parade of prime, and quickly return a straight thrust in prime, before he recovers ; or, if you have not opening sufficient, disengage over his arm, and deliver a thrust in seconde. When you first enter upon the assault, you may engage your adversary’s blade out of measure in carte, as being easier than the other engagements for executing your different movements. (Vide cut.) § ºrs wº & ºs º ſº ºn w º º Tift WºS sº ſº º - SA sº; ſº %-46% &\S& y- When you engage your adversary’s blade, act on the defensive for some time, in order to discover what feints or turusts he prefers. Vary your parades as much as possible so that he may not, in turn, ascertain vour own favorites; for, iſ a good fencer be found to use one parade in preference to another, he may be deceived with much less difficulty than might be imagin- à ſº * #Y FEN CING ed, and, eventually, be touched, by a person far less skilful than himself. A learner, therefore, should practice all the parades, and change them continu- ally, or, at least, as often as opportunities occur. He should endeavour to go from the high to the low parades, and ſron the latter to the former, with Jhe utmost possible agility, until, by practice, he is enabled to parry almost every thrust. If you engage the blade in carte, cover your inside a little, and if in tierce, cover your outside, to present straight thrusts on those engagements, When attacking, it is well to disengage dexterously, outside and inside, forming your extension as if you intended to thrust; if this plan do not af. ford you some openings, it will, at least, in all probability, be the means of discovering your adversary’s choice parades. If he use simple parades only, ou may easily deceive him by making feints one, two, or one, two, three. # on the contrary, he be a skilful fencer, and use various counter-parades, you must endeavour to embarrass him, by appels, beats on the blade, ex tensions, glizades, counter-disengagements, &c. CC №ła=ÐSS) īſ º. ||,}} §Ķ////j ſºſ (№ſſºſ ſae ¿S, |Ø}| | A…�>· -Ñ-�ſ-« ſºsŅ!•;33 &\ \ F|-Š!\!^%Z± ---- •*|-·|-} + ·! 1��----:-£Łae )(Q) ſae5–7,ț¢;{º.-º-: ∞-ae ?}}•* ·«-» (z_3-z)}{};::::… ----|- ſae! /Ģ~~); - - * -- ~ * x * xº. tº 'Q TV- | - -i -= on o | 2 3 - ·„Æ 3 ºffſ • > 5 :5 £ 60'); ،- º -3 -;---: o . -№ : ( ) º ſº º á5 \§ 2 = ž |%ſ. ! ſo „Q --★ → ،„º …N- '.Dī…№ň| * ģ = />■2Sł) :: -bſ)¡ |-Ź). ¿№ 5 = €| ·±Q.)} ~2: ) (/) è5 Glº• →ké 3 ğ # 2 || <-» ,) –## #5} ~2 ~ 3 = - № . ± 5 E 5 © 5 3 > a T -5 3 •§JO N \~3. S go --& W),;-} ); → § ºx, º §º § { .*. § { } -º - **r. { 3. * ~~ * -- ~~~. * * * * * **, * * x. “S. .. №{}u S-¿((((%)+ % (№), ! Ē§§\\� \\ÈÈȧ§§ №ae, � §% ſąº\ ? & \\ Î\,}}}} g, '$%%ſae „zſº§§ſ\\· ~§§~ • “/2$~ ~,| |@%$&- ſº→ ſae żrae (ž7%}} §§§ğ% §§§ğ%%} §¶ ¡ ¿ §$%%ſºſ¿ \\ № }ſº | }¿№ |*: ■· |y ķ |-} \{\\N$ ~ * *ty • * * – T-- 't } ..…" -- ---~~~~~~ :- - ºrinºs --> -- —---~~~~ *: >~~ ( J- | T.} | }} ili/ • * \, -, º ×*~, • • a : * ; -, * e-º-'dº--- Tº • * Yºs: & 2% ſ 2: … 2= | / ! | i \ º | % à %. º: Ż | -** - Š sº lºf- A. º | ſ |f º T- W ! - NYSE. šŠº =jº \º * * §= N § s § §§ º §§ \ § § § § N § wº- W | t - º º º || || Hºlºg(@#C#. THE game of Draughts is said to be of great antiquity, but we cannot discover that it was much known in Europe until the middle of the 16th century. In 166S an elaborate treatise on the game was ublished by a Parisian pro- }. of mathematics, maln- ed Mallet. Mr. Payne, a cel- ebrated writer on the subject, is said to have copied many of Mallet's games; but both Payne and Mallet have been much improved upon by a later writer, Sturges. The present treatise, we trust, will render any § ºš Āš º >. Nº $º \#; •.radiº-T- § Šºš :º-> W Nº º - C - == Tº §y)\\ 㺠Nygº 3.F. - \ §: \\ - * >{º º &ft # =s § #= W §§º.º. šº. Williš - §ſº \lsº amWW | §|E | : § == [- º # | * 3.3% §§ §º § º º º ; §I=5 SS-Brzºza- DRAUGHTS. reference to the above, or any other writers upon Draughts, superfluous except to the most curious and finished adepts in the game. R U L E S FOR PLAYING. In playing Draughts, the table must be placed with an upper white corner . toward the right hand; and for the sake of playing the following games and preliminary practice, the num- bers may be written upon the board itself, near a corner of each square; or a table may be drawn upon a card, and the squares numbered, as in the fig- ure: such a table will be a ready guide to any move directed. The game is played by two persons, each of whom takes a set of twelve men of different col- ors, generally white and black, but they may be of any colors, according to the fancy. One player, of course, takes all the men of one color, and the other all those of the other color. The black pieces are to be placed on the first twelve white squares, and the white : on the last twelve white squares, or viceversa. When the pieces are thus placed, each player alternately moves one of his f men forward, angularly, to the next white square; and when move.; to a square adjoining to an enemy, and another square next angularly l.chind the man so moved is unoccupied at that time, or afterward becomes so, then the man so placed or leſt unguarded must be captured by the enemy, whose man leaps over to the vacant square, and the prisoner is taken off the board. The same practice is immediately to be repeated in case the man effecting a capture thereby gets situated angularly fronting an enemy, and is unguarded behind. When any man gets onward to the last row opposite to that from whence his color started, then he becomes a king, and is crowned by his adversary placing another man, previously taken prisoner, upon him; he may then move and take either backward or forward. In order that the moves may be more perfectly understood, we request attention to the following directions: the men should be placed on the board precisely as they appear in the cut in the next page, with this diſſerence only, that the white pieces may be placed where the black stand, and the black where the white are, according to the fancy of the players. The mem being thus posted, we will suppose that white has the first move. As only DRAUGHTS. 323 ** º * § *…**: * one of the front rank can be moved, he must either move the man on 21, to 17; that on 22, to 17 or 18; that on 23, to 18 or 19; or, that on 24, to 19 or 20. From 22 to 18 is supposed to be the best first move; we will, therefore, imagine that white makes it. It is black’s turn to move a piece; he, like his adversary, can only advance one of his front rank men; he may move the man on 9, to 13 or 14; that on 10, to 14 or 15; that on II, to 15 or 16; and that on 12, to 16 only. The white having moved from 22 to 18, the black then may move, if he please, from 11 to 15. In the next move, the white man on 18, will take the man so placed by black on 15, by leaping over his head into 11. It is now black’s turn to move, and he, in return, can take white’s man which stands in 11, by either of the men standing on 7 or 8. In case he makes the capture with 7, he jumps over the head of the man to be taken, into 16; if he prefer taking him with 8, the move, for that pur- pose, is from 8 to 15. An op- portunity, here occurs, of giving a practical explanation of the huff. Supposing, when black had moved from 11 to 15, white had omitted to take him, in the manner we have just explained, and made some other move, white, in this case, would have “stood the huff:” that is, black might have taken away the white man that stood on 18, or compelled white to have taken him, which he pleased. This is “standing the huſ;” and, be it recollected, that so taking off the man from 18, is not to be con- sidered as a move, black having his move after having so done, before white can move again. In case the game were in a more advanced state, and that the black man, which, at the beginning, stood on 4, had been removed, the white man on 18, instead of taking only the black man on 15, would have taken the black man on 8, in addition, by leaping over 15 into 11, and over 8 into 4, which would be reckoned as one move. In this case, the man in 4, having reached one of the back squares of the enemy, (1, 2, 3, and 4,) he becomes a king, and black crowns him, by placing one of white's captured men on his head. The piece can now move, and take either backward or forward, and is of great importance. As many of the black men as, in their turn, reach either of the squares, 29, 30, 31, 32, immediately become kings, as in the case of the white men reaching 1, 2, 3, or 4, and, of course, have equal powers. & § 324 D R AUGHTS. We will now give a practical example or two of the “kingly powers ” of these “crowned heads.” Supposing a black king stood on 29, a white king on 25, a white man on 18, another white king on 19, and a third white king, or a white man, on 27,--if it were black’s move, and the board was clear, except only of the pieces that are mentioned, he would take them all thus: from 29 to 22, taking 25; from 22 to 15, taking 18; from 15 to 24, taking 19; and ſrom 24 to 31, taking 27. If, however, the black king only take the first, secund, or third of these pieces, he would stand the huſ!, (i. e.) the adversary might remove the black king off the board, or compel him to take the piece or pieces in his power, at his, the adversary’s, pleasure. To show the difference between the moves of a man and a king more clearly, suppose, instead of a king, black had only a man on 29, in that case, the man might go to 22, taking 25, and from 22 to 15, taking 18; but here his exploits would end, as he could not move backward from 15 to take 19, but, on the contrary, he must rest on 15; and, at the next move, would himselſ be taken, by the white king, on 19, jumping over his head into 10. When all the men, on one side, are taken, or so hemmed in by the opposite color, that they cannot move, the person who has played them is beaten Iſ, at the latter end of the game, one, two, or three, more or less, of each color, be left on the board, and neither can prevail on the other to risk, or if one who is weaker than, or has not the move of the other, be determined to go to and fro in safe squares, where he can mever be taken, the game is called drawn, and given up, neither party winning. The way to give the finishing stroke to a game, where one color has two kings, and the other but one, or where one is, in any respect, a littie stronger than the other, will be found in the following pages; as also hints for a weak color making a drawn game, when the stronger adversary is in such a situation, as to be unable to get out his pieces to make an attack on the weaker party. LA WS OF D R A U G HTS. The following are a set of laws for the game, which have been sanctioned by the first players of Draughts in the kingdom. 1. Each player takes the first move alternately, whether the last game be won or drawn. 2 Any action which prevents the adversary from having a full view of the men is not allowed. 3. The player who touches a man must play him. 4. In case of standing the huſſ, which means omitting to take a man when an opportunity, for so doing, occurred, the other party may either take the man, or insist upon his inau, which has been so omitted by his 9t'. versary being taken. i -N *a*-a- - 2. * ——” ** * D-> •--> -- *. * º - ID TAU GPHTS. 3.25 5. If either party, when it is his turn to move, hesitate above three minutes, the other may call upon him to play; and iſ, after that, he delay albove five minutes longer, then he loses the game. 6. In the losing game, the player can insist upon his adversary taking all the men, in case opportunities should present themselves for their being h. so taken. 7. Persons not playing are not to advise, or in any manner interfere with the game of either party. 8. To prevent unnecessary delay, if one color have no pieces but two kings on the board, and the other no piece but one king, the latter can call upon the former to win the game in twenty moves : if he do not finish it within that number of moves, the game is to be relinquished as drawn. 9. If there be three kings to two on the board, the subsequent moves are not to exceed forty. G AM ES FOR P RACTICE. It is now time for us to lead our pupil from theory to practice; for this purpose we shall proceed to lay before him a few games and situations, which he can either play alone, or with another, on a marked board, such as we have previously described. And here we feel it necessary to remark, that it will not be sufficient merely to go over the moves indicated in the following pages; by so doing, much time will be lost, and little learned : it is indispensable, if the learner be desirous of obtaining any benefit from these games, that he should carefully look to each series of moves, and, if possible, improve upon them as he goes on. The position of a single piece may totally defeat the best attacks, and it is not to be supposed that any two players will ever, except by some extraordinary accident, make all the identical moves, set down in the ensuing games. Still, however, much may be done by a few schemes of moves; especially, as toward the end, the positions of the men are very frequently similar, and we feel convinced, that by playing the following few games, (provided proper attention is given to them) an insight into the game may be acquired sooner than by tho longest essay on the subject. We strongly recommend the young l)raught- player, iſ he be desirous of speedily acquiring some proficiency in the game, to make himself a perfect master of the ends of, as well as any nice situations that occur in, the following games, so as to be able to play them, as it were, whenever an opportunity may occur. It is the advice of many experienced Draught-players, that learners should provide themselves with a common- place book for roting down any particular situations that may happen in their progress, or such masterly moves, by older hands, as they may have !'le good fortune to witness. Books for this purpose, containing represen- - sº- KT , -> Tºº---- . - - --> . ~ * ºr " *-***- --~~~~ * Jº-tº- º *~e - 2-tº-se * * lºº -ºr- •S - 326 DRAUGHTS. | tations of the board, so that the men placed in the proper positions for the moves can be marked in, may be had, reasonably, at the ivory turners. A book of this sort, containing charts of games, and memoranda of moves, by experienced persons, would be invaluable to the young Draught-player. We shall reserve any further remarks on Draughts for our concluding ob- servations, and now proceed at once to the tables and games. The letters, N. C. F. T. at the head of each of the games, stand for number, color, from, to. GAME 1, in which White loses by the twelfth move. N C F T N C F T ) 1 || B 11 || 15 || 28 2 W 22 18 || 29 3 B | 15 22 || 30 W 4 W 25 | 18 || 31 B 5 B 8 II 32 W 6 || W 29 || 25 || 33 || B 7 | B 4 8 || 34 || W 8 W 25 || 22 || 35 B 9 | B | 12 16 || 36 || W 10 W 24 20 || 37 B 11 || B 10 || 15 || 3S | W I2 W 27 | 24 || 39 B 13 B | 16 || 19 || 40 || W 14 W 23 16 || 41 B 15 B | 15 19 || 42 W I6 || W 24 15 || 43 B 17 | B 9 || 14 || 44. W 18 || W 18 9 || 45 B 19 B | 11 || 25 || 46 || W 20 || W | 32 || 27 || 47 | B 21 B 5 | 1.4 || 48 || W 22 W 27 || 23 || 49 | B B 6 10 50 W W 16 || 12 || 51 B B 8 II 62 W W 28 24 || 53 B B 25 | 29 || &c. W . * DRAU GEITS. GAME 2, a drawn game. N F T N C F | T I B I1 15 28 W 30 25 2 W 22 18 29 B 6 9 3 B 15 22 30 W 13 6 4 W 25 18 31 B I 10 5 B 8 11 32 W 22 13 6 W 29 25 33 B 14 18 7 B 4 8. 34 W 23 14 8 || -W 25 22 35 B 16 30 9 B 12 16 36 W 25 21 10 W 24 || 20 37 B 10 17 11 B 10 15 38 W 21 14 12 W 21 17 39 B 30 25 13 B 7 10 40 W 14 9 14 W 27 24 41 B 11 15 15 B 8 12 42 W 9 6 16 W 17 13 43 B 2 9 17 B 9 4 44 W 13 18 18 W. 18 9 45 R 15 15 19 B 5 14 46 W 6 2 20 W 24 19 47 B 7 10 21 B 15 24 48 W 2 6 22 W 28 19 49 B I0 14 23 B 14 17 50 W 6 9 24 W 32 27 51 B 25 21 25 B I6) 14 52 W 31 26 26 W 27 24 53 B 14 17 27 B 3 7 &c W drawn GAME 3, which is lost by 30th move. iC D R AUGHTS. GAME 3, continued. C F T N C F T 9 B 15 24 25 B 16 20 10 W 28 19 26 || W | 31 27 II B II. 16 27 B 13 17 | I2 W 25 21 28 W 30 26 13 B 6 9 29 B I 6 14 W 29 25 30 W 18 15 15 B 9 18 31 B 20 14 | I6 W 23 14 32 W 27 20 17 B I6 23 33 B 7 10 18 W 26 19 34 W 14 7 | 19 B 4 8 35 | B 2 27 20 W 25 22 36 || W 21 14 ! . . 21 | B 8 11 || 37 B 6 9 22 W 22 18 38 W 32 23 23 B II. 16 39 B 9 27 | 24 W 27 23 40 W loses GAME 4, which is lost by 12th move. N C F T N C F T º I W 22 18 19 W 2I 17 2 R II. 16 20 B 1 6 , 3 W 25 22 2I W 17 13 4 R 10 14 22 B 3 7 5 W 29 25 23 W 28 24 | 6 B 16 20 24 B 12 16 7 W 24 19 25 W 26 23 8 B 8 || 11 || 26 || B 8 || 12 9 W 19 I5 || 27 | W 3 19 B 4 S || 28 || B | 16 || 23 W 22 I7 29 W 31 26 B 7 10 || 30 B 7 10 | W 25 22 31 W 26 19 B 10 I9 32 B 11 16 W 7 10 33 W 18 11 B 6 15 34 B 16 23 W 23 7 35 W 27 | 18 | | B 2 11 36 B loses DRAUGHTS. CON CLU DIN G. R.E.M.A. R. K.S. Even those who have some knowledge of the game of Draughts will, we have no doubt, derive much benefit from a perusal of the foregoing pages, and become enabled to defeat those by whom they have previously been beaten. A person who has never acquired any insight into the game may, we flatter ourselves, from the care which we have taken in preparing the treatise, acquire considerable proficiency, by a proper attention to our rules and instructions. The few remarks which we are about to make, as to one circumstance in Draughts, could not, we conceive, be so aptly introduced anywhere else as here; we allude to the importance of having the move upon an antago- nist. The value of this whil, no doubt, have frequently occurred to the reader, in the course of the preceding games; but there are situations, when it is not only useless, but detrimental. To have the move when your men ... are in a proper position, upon an open board, will often, in a short time, give you the power of forcing your adversary into such a situation as will render his defeat certain; but, having the move, when your men are hud- dled in confusion together, and you are unprepared to point an attack from * any quarter, that is to say, when you are strong in number, but powerless in position, will, not unfrequently, cause you to lose the game. In order to know whether any one of your men have the move over one of your adversary’s, you must carefully notice their respective positions, and, if your opponent have a black square on your right angle under his man, you have the move upon him. This is a general rule, and will apply to any number of pieces. To illustrate it with an instance: if white have a man on 22, it being his turn to play, and black’s man be on 11, white has the move. A modern writer on this subject, gives another method of ascertain- ing whether a party, whose turn it is to play, has the move; namely, by counting the squares and the men; and if the squares be odd, and the men even, or the men odd, and the squares even, then the party whose turn it is to play has possession of the move : thus, if there be a black man on 19, on 26 a white king, on 28 a black king, and on 32 a white man, and white have to play, he has ºne move, and may certainly win the game, if he act judiciously; the opposite party’s men being even, and the white squares, be- tween them and his own, odd; there are three white squares from the black king on 28 to the white king on 26, (viz. 24, 27, and 31,) and between the black man on 19 and the white man on 32, two white squares, 23 and 27, making together, five. White begins by moving his man to 27, the black \ing goes to 32, the white man proceeds to 24, and is taken by the black man on 19; the white king now goes to 23; the black king must next step to 27, having no other move, (his man being on 28,) and is taken by the white king, who thus gets into 32, and wins the game, as black cannot move his mau. Q==Q 9:#5; 330 DRAUGHTS. Persons who know but little of this game are sometimes found talking lightly of it, as a trifle undeserving of attention; to such speakers we quots the following passage from Dr. Johnson’s dedication of Payne’s Book on Draughts.-" Triflers may think or make anything a trifle ; but since it is the great characteristic of a wise man to see events in their causes, to obviate consequences, and ascertain contingencies, your lordship will think nothing a trifle by which the mind is inured to caution, foresight, and cir- cumspection.” In conclusion, we beg to assure our young readers, that, simple as it may appear, they will never be able to attain any proficiency in this game, without some study, and much caution. #5- # #. 3. # & & zz:239: §" CHESS, or all sedentary games, is undoubtedly the rº- most eminent. It is played #####) in every civilized nation in º the world, from Siberia to =% Rome—from Iceland to the És wilds of Africa ; and has been the delight of emper- % ors, kings, warriors, philoso- phers, and mankind in gen- eral, for ages past. Various accounts have been given of its origin. Some say, it was first played at the siege of / Troy, being invented by Pa- lamedes to amuse the Gre. * cian chiefs, disgusted with the tediousness of the siege. 9thers again, imagine it to be the Roman Ludus La- trunculorum ; but the most w probable conjecture is that Öğ of Bochartus, who makes it .* a a of oriental extraction, and =# -3 R º a' El-ć: ‘. zººn" CHESS. to come to us from Persia, through Arabia; as most of the terms em. ployed in the game are either corruptions or translations from the Per- sic or Arabic words. Thus, check is plainly derived from the Persian schach, or king ; and mat, in the same language, signifies dead ; hence check-mate, or, the king is dead. Although Chess can be traced back to the most remote antiquity, we have no satisfactory proofs of the place where, or the person by whom it was invented. But, whoever he was, it is certain that he must have been a man of profound thought. It has been without a rival for cen- turies, and is as much admired in our day as it was a thousand years ago. It may be called a representation of war in miniature ; two lit- tle armies, of different colors, are drawn up opposite each other in the order of battle, with their castles, their kings and queens, their knights, bishops, and common soldiers, prepared for mutual attack, and to take prisoner the king of the opposite party. Chess is highly beneficiaſ to the improvement of the mind ; nothing in it is governed by chance—judgment is every thing. A player there- fore cannot lay the blame of his losing on fortune, but must ascribe his miscarriages to deficiency of judgment, or inattention ; and for this reason it is the most interesting of games. It acts strongly too on the sense of honor ; irascible persons should therefore avoid it, unless they have learnt to acknowledge that the acutest minds may be guilty of an oversight. Chess has one splendid advantage over almost all other sedentary games : that its lovers do not play at it for wagers, the hon- or cf the victory being the only reward of the conqueror. T H E V A. R. I O U S PIE C E S. *- **. e= -- > **-sº Knight. Pawn. Bishop. Rook or Castle. King. We now proceed to give a description of the various characters which constitute i. little armies on the chess-board. Each party has a king queen, two rooks or castles, two bishops, two knights, and eight com. mon men, or pawns. The above are their representatives. CHESS. * > -ºº -ºr-sºº 3s * * * * * *. --- º_*.*.*.*.*.*.*.*.*.* THE KING. The klng is the most important piece at Chess ; the sole object of \be game is to hem him in, so that he cannot move without going into such a situation as would render him liable to be taken if he were not a king. He is then check-mated, and must surrender. He steps only . from one square to the next at a time, but in any direction whatever, either forward, backward, sideways, or diagonally. He can also take any of the º men in any square adjoining to him, so that he does not place himself in check ; that is, in such a situation as, if he were not a king, he could be taken by the enemy. The king however is ne- | wer actually taken ; but, if he be checked by one piece, and can neither - # take the hostile man, interpose any of his own, nor move into any oth- er square without being in check from another, he loses the game. Whenever the king is in check, the adversary must say “check,” to * him, which is a warning either to defend himself by his other pieces, to take the man who assaults him, or to move into a place of safety. THE QUEEN. The queen is, in point of power, the best piece on the board. She moves, like the king, in all directions, and as far as she pleases, but at j one move, and provided the squares be unoccupied in her ſine of motion. THE ROOR, OR CASTLE. : The rooks, or castles, are next in importance to the queen. Their | | motion is backward, forward, and sideways. And they may move as far as the field is open. l THE BISHOP. #; The bishop moves diagonally, as far as the squares are open, in any i .direction. The bishop therefore always keeps the sºme colored squares * as that on which he is placed at the beginning of the game. THE KNIGHT. The knight is particularly useful at the beginning of the game, and should be one of the first pieces brought into play. . The knight moves in a peculiar way, leaping from the square on which he stands into ei- ther of the next that has a corner in contact with one of the farther cor- ners of the square over which he leaps. He always moves therefore from white to black, or the contrary. As, for an example, from B 1 to A 3, C 3, or D 2. The move of the knight is one of the most difficult points of chess to explain in writing ; and we therefore recommend our young friends to take an opportunity of looking over a game of chess while playing, and fix the whole of the moves in their minds CHESS. A knight may be placed on any one square of the board, and conveyed hence into every one of the other squares in sixty-three moves. We subjoin an example of this curious problem at the end of the article. THE PAWN's. The pawns are of great consequence in defending the king ; and are very useful in attacking and repelling the pieces, under the manage- c ment of a Fº player. If a pawn can proceed across the field to the rear line of the enemy, that is from 2 to 8, or from 7 to 1, he is exchan. *. ged for a queen, or any other piece of his color that he chooses to de- mand. Thus, you may have a second queen, even though you should : have lost none of your pieces. The pawn moves strait forward, and : only a single square at a time ; except on its being first moved, when ; the player may advance it either one square or two, as from 2 to 3 or to 4, and from 7 to 6 or to 5 ; or when one takes a man from the enemy, which is always done diagonally, or across the corners of the squares. But a pawn cannot move two squares forward, when the square over which he leaps is so viewed by an enemy’s pawn, that the latter could take him in that square. For example, the pawn G 2 cannot be mov- ed to G 4, if there be an enemy's pawn on H 4 or F 4, without that pawn's having option of taking him on G 3, as he passes. THE CHESS BOARD, E F G H The common draughts-board, §: . º, gºgº 8 containing sixty-four squares,one sº Pº. ,º § half white and one half black, is also a chess-board. It is so | placed that each player has a white square at his right-hand corner. There are eight rows of squares, which, in the cut, are marked A to H ; and eight rows in the cross direction, 1 to 8. Thus, any square may be readily pointed out ; for instance, the square a on the figure will be in- dicated by D 5 ; and if a man were to be moved from a to y, this would be expressed by the f w w - - - - - lºº" " " words ‘from D 5 to F 3.” The #|{ Jetters and figures should be written on the margin of the board, or a pasteboard, for practising the games and situations, hereafter described. There is sº mode of indicating the squares, by the pieces that occupy them at the commencement ; this it may be as well to insert. diss=º CHESS. The square in the corner, at the right hand of the player who has the white men, is the white king's rook's square ; that beſore it, the white king's rook’s second square ; the next, his third square ; and the ſol- lowing, his fourth square. This meets the black king's rook's fourth square ; and thus the row proceeds, through the black king's rook's third and second squares, to the black king's rook's square, at the left- hand corner of the player with black. The same mode is adopted by all the rest ; the pieces on the queen's side of the board being distin- guished as the queen’s rook, knight, and bishop. PLACING THE MEN ON THE BOARD. The rooks occupy the four corners of the board ; the knights stand next to these ; the bishops next to the knights ; the queens on D 1 and D 8; and the kings on F 1 and E 8. Thus, the pieces or officers, stand opposite each other respectively, at different sides of the board : the queens being on the squares of their own color, and the kings the con- trary. The row immediately in front of the officers is occupied by the pawns. The value of the men has been estimated as in the following proportion to each other —the queen, 95 ; a rook, 60 ; a bishop, 39 ; a knight, the same as a bishop ; the king º as a fighting piece), 26; a pawn, 8, or rather more, from its chance of promotion, by being moved to a square that entitles its player to exchange it for a queen, or any other piece he chooses to demand. LAWS OF THE GAME. 1. Each player marches his men forward, gradually, against those of the enemy, or retreats when the game is open behind them, except only as regards the pawns, which can only move forward. Each party moves alternately, one man at a time. 2. In each game, the players have the first move alternately, except where one gives the other the advantage of a piece or a pawn ; in which case, the party by whom such piece or pawn is given is entitled to the first move. 3. If you misplace your men at the beginning, and play four moves, . adversary may permit you to begin the game afresh, or not as e pleases. 4. If you touch a man, you must play it, except it would discover check on your king ; in which case you can only move the king, if it be practicable. , When you have taken your hand from your man, he must remain where he is ; but as long as you keep hold of him, you are at liberty to place him where you please, though you may have set him down upon a square. CHESS, 5. If you touch one of your adversary's men, he may insist upon your taking it, if you can ; if not, you must move your king, if that be possible, without putting him in check. 6. You cannot castle after moving the rook or king ; if you attempt to do so, your adversary may insist on your moving one of those pieces, at his option. 7. If you make a false move, such as moving one of your oppo- nent's men in in stake for one of your own, taking off one of your own pieces instead of his, &c. your opponent can oblige you to replace such move, and move your king, if you can do so without placing him in check ; but if he have played before he notices your #: move, nei- ther of you can, afterwards, recall it. 8. If your opponent challenge you with a check, without, in fact, your king being in check, and you, in consequence, move your king, or any other man, you may retract such move, if you discover it before he has made his next move. • 9. If your adversary give you check without warning, or saying “check,” you are not obliged to notice it till he does ; but if, on his next move, he warn you, each party must retract his last move, and the check be provided for as if just given. , 10. , You must not check the opposite king with any piece by mov- ing which to do so you expose your own king to a check. 11. If the king be not in check, but cannot move without going into check, and have no piece or pawn left, or even none that can be moved, he is stale-mated, and the game is drawn. PLAYING, CHECKING, CASTLING, &c. It is usual to begin with advancing the king’s pawn two squares ; that is, from E 2 to E 4, or from E 7 to E 5; because this opens the way for the king's bishop and the queen. It is however perfectly op- tional ; this, as well as all the rest of his moves, being regulated either by some plan which the player has formed for attacking his enemy, or as he may find a necessity of defending himself from his enemy's at- tack. The object of the game, which is to give the enemy check-mate, can scarcely be effected without some settled plan. The player must look forward through a considerable number of moves, º; will be requisite to bring his men into a given position, and also to provide, from time to time, against his antagonist’s attempts to frustrate his de- sign, or attack him in turn. He must seek to penetrate his adversary's plots from the moves he makes. . He is not obliged to take a man when it is in his power ; but, when he does, the man, with which he takes it, must be placed on the square occupied by the man taken. CHESS, When the king is in such a situation that another move could take him, were he not king, he is in check. The modes of extricating the king from check are as follow :-If the man that checks him be in an adjacent square, the king may take such man if he be not guarded ; that is, if another man of his own color have it not in his power to move into the square in which the man is placed if he be removed from it ; since, in this case, the king would place himself in check again. For example, suppose the king in E 1, and an enemy’s pawn, advanced to D 2, give him check ; the king cannot take the pawn, if the enemy have another pawn, or a bishop in C 3 or E 3, or a rook or queen any- where in the open row D D, &c. The man that checks may also be taken by some other man, to whose attack he is open ; or a man may be placed between the king and the checking man (unless it be the knight) if there be a vacant square between them. Lastly, the king may be moved into another square which is not commanded by the adversary's pieces. The king is check-mated, and the game is lost, if he cannot extricate himself by either of these moves. A king can- not go into a square next the opposite king ; he cannot therefore give check ; because, in doing this, he would go into check himself. Castling is allowed once in a game. It consists in moving the king two squares to the right or left, and bringing the rook on that side to the square adjoining the king on the other. Thus the king may be moved from E 1 to G 1, and the rook brought from H 1 to F 1 ; or the king may be moved to C 1, and the rook from A 1 to D 1. For cast- ling, that side is preferable on which the king will be most secure from attack ; for this purpose the three pawns on F, G, H 2, are kept in re- serve, in order that he may retreat behind them ; it being generally stronger play to castle with the king's rook than the queen's. Castling is not allowable when the king, or the rook, with which you would cas- tle, has been moved ; when the king is in check, or when the king must pass over a square in which he would be checked. Suppose the king would move from E 1 to G 1, he must pass over F 1. But, if there be a queen or rook of the enemy anywhere on the row F, as far as it is open ; or, in short, if F 1 be commanded by any one of the en- emy’s men, the king cannot castle on that side, neither can he do so when there is a man between bimself and the rook. GENERAL INSTRUCTIONS. If the king's pawn be advanced two squares, and the queen's one square, an opening is made both for the queen and the queen's bishop to the king's side of the board ; and the king's pawn cannot be taken, withog* queen's pawn taking the adversary's man in turn, and sup- CHESS, plying his place. If two pawns be advanced side by side, neither de fends the other ; this is sometimes done to further a plan of attack 3 the pawn sacrificed on these occasions is called the gambit pawn. Af- 1er the pawns are advanced a certain way, the knights may be brought forward, either to support them, or act upon the offensive. The plan of attack should be gradually formed from the commence- ment of the game, and each step taken should have a tendency to ſor- ward it, unless when it is necessary to thwart the platt of the adver- sary. The player must not suffer himself to be diverted from a well- concerted project by any collateral advantage ; for the taking of a pawn or piece may prove injurious when it leads to a deviation from the principal object. If your plan be discovered and frustrated, it is better to º a new one than to persevere in the old. Your plan should not only be concealed from your adversary, but you must also discover, if possible, what your adversary can do to counteract your moves. A plan may be most effectually concealed by excluding the queens and rooks, or by executing it through the agency of inferior pieces or pawns, or by masking the pieces intended to effect it behind men which are apparently indifferent. The skilful player, if his moves be calculated with precision, will sacrifice his most important pieces without hesita- tion, to mislead his antagonist, or, when necessary to the accomplish- ment of his plan ; nay, he will often do this intentionally, to lead his opponent into the hope of winning, and give his antagonist check-mate, when he ſancies he has the game in his hands. It is far more com- mon for a player to conceal his purpose till it is out of his opponent's power to Hº it, and then to pursue it openly. To give check without having it in your power to follow it up, is, in general, bad play. If your checking piece can immediately be repulsed, you lose a move ; never proceed to an attack therefore without good preparation ; and if your attack proceed well, do not suffer yourself to be drawn a- side after any bait that your antagonist may throw in your way. The object in chess is, to give check-mate, and not to take pieces. Sacri- fice your own willingly, when the loss of them will open the line of defence adopted by your opponent. If a man of the enemy he exposed, examine whether it were left so from necessity, oversight, or design. You do not always gain by tak- ing a piece, you may be check-mated in consequence of taking even a queen. Be not eager to take a pawn in front of your queen 5 for, as your antagonist cannot take him, he is frequently a better protection than a man of your own. If you cannot save a piece, endeavor to take one of the enemy's ; or, by improving your situatic.m, obtain a compen- sation for the loss. Examine which will be the best, when you can take a piece two or more ways. If your antagonist can take the man Yag CHESS, in return, take it with that man which is of the least value. To ex- change man for man, occasionally, is good play, or even to exchange a queen for a pawn, when this pawn would prevent you from giving mate ; or to exchange man for man, when the enemy's man thus taken is one particularly in action. Guard your men sufficiently ; and if one doubly guarded of the ene- my’s be exposed to a guarded man of yours, let yours be trebly guard- ed. The more valuable men should be guarded by those of inferior worth ; for, if your opponent guard his inferior piece by another inſe- rior piece, you cannot employ your better piece to take your enemy’s, as it would be lost. A far advanced pawn should be well guarded, for it is often indispensable to a check-mate, and may make a queen. Castling is not always advantageous, as from the confined situation in which it places the king, it sometimes (particularly when the ad- versary has his knights in play) prevents his escaping out of check. It is, however, possible to retain the power of doing so, and keep the re- quisite pawns in their places. For as long as you have it in your pow- er to castle, your opponent will be at a loss on which side to direct his attack ; when he has decided, and brought his main strength to bear on one side, you can frustrate his design by castling on the other. It is not always good play not to stir the three pawns in front of the king that has castled ; for liberty of moving may be necessary to get the king out of check. Crowd not your men too much together, as this restrains their movements. A man that cannot move is often worse than lost, by standing in the way. Endeavor to crowd your antago- mist's game, in which you may succeed, if he bring out his pieces too early, by driving them back with your pawns. Endeavor to open your game by exchanging men in those parts where you want room, if you get unintentionally crowded. Never make a move without examining whether you be endangered by the last move of your antagonist ; nor without calculating whether it will allow your enemy to harm you by his next. Beware of your en- emy’s knights, as they command different squares at once in a peculiar way. . If a knight command the square of a queen or rook, at the same time that he gives check, the piece must be lost unless the knight can le taken ; to avoid this, which is called forking, when a knight is near, a good piece should never be kept on a square of the same color as that ccupied by your king. Do not let an enemy's pawn attack two of our pieces at once. Beware of two, and still more of three pieces, at manifest a design on the same square. Block up the way to rch square by one of your pawns or a guarded piece. Your queen si.ould never stand before your king, as, in such a situation, she may ! e lost, by a guarded rook being brought in her front. CHESS, GAMES FOR PRACTICE. At the moves to which a * given ; f means check-mate. is set, a piece is taken ; at t check is Fool’s MATE. BLACK E 7 to E 6 1 D S to H 4+ Move. 1 SCHOLAR’s MATE. G 4 F 3 WHITE. to G 2 F 2 • 4 SNR Move. \ſ) mae) (c) ſèl O Q O S S 3 N. CO N- [×] prº Q +-+ CN, co <}} <++ \ſ) №. § © ®IĘ ſa S S S 3 ON! --★ → Aſ2 ĶīļE, QËI •+ CN- ()) <$1 GAME 3. 3* ■ «c» № № <ſ> № pຠ(5 ſq ſr Q ſrſ •–4 QN CQ ), <ſ> (< CO CO \f> • • • • • • • • • • •• • № ſº N oo ^ ^~ ~ ~o ~ so do so oo do co Œ Œ Ù5 º QO ŘEŘI; Ö G Q & C5 ſă ſă – cº co sº ſo so º co º sº – 98 co sº ſe +-+ +- w-º ), •}- 3€.3€.± ++ <º<; • <= <- co <***ð vo vo? ¿o šiš, Š pſ. Er ſr. O Qoſrſ (5țIĘG|I||G||G||G. № º půſº (5 £), º paſſſſſſſſſ!! QQ ſă ſă o ſa w-, CN Gº <^ xſ) so № CO op o w-, CNR & № * % šËŹ.} # {ș!4* ; *©� ö ]!}} ſă ia „ … • • • • ŘŘ, e soț ſă • • • • • • • Ř5$55të ļ • • • • Ř ĚŠŤ=# ğ , Fāſ), o ſąoaſă caſaſſo à paſſa oo að Höſſö №ſſa № ſāſraeodºrſº ºº UÐ EЕ • • • • • • •• • • C5• • •• • • • • • • • • ?• • • • • • * * # 8 ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; º ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;§ 8 ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; £ º co co ğ Co * * (º to so o co cocs -- cº ſą cº – sº co - º * º *CN & -1 -- Co — no № 1º} ſą (5 £). O ſr. O Q !!! O ſa Q (5)padb ſzočQO (5 ſa paſſoſiłapāſ), (5 ſa ſa aſri ſº º · → CN Gº <ſ, ao «o ſº do co o ~ CNR ºſº) © ço <% no co º OO œ œ •=. CN Gº <ſ•ä ºn © |<º <ºs *2. (*, * by Euler, and which ..y’t L’ \' | . we subjoin. º 2 C.” (? Our young Chess- \ 2/ player's instructor in the game will show him that as this is a re-entering series of numbers,or intermin- able route, it does not matter on which of the squares theknight is placed at starting , as, hy acquiring the jlan by heart, which is soon done, he can play him over all the squares from any giv- en point, his last <> square being at the distance of a knight's move from his first. EU LER’s METHOD, It is obvious that this route may be varied many ways, and we have often amused ourselves by trying to work it on a slate. /2 \ 2’ º : A : Vº \ > Y13. «. º +:- º Q-9 Though now grown old, she had a golden Joy; Her dim eye brightened oft, to see her boy— Albeit by Heaven deprived of speech and hearing— Throw by his homely toy, - And tellhis iove in manner so endearing Upon his nimble firgers, that she thought Him more endowed than those bereft of nought. THE art of teaching those who are Deaf and Dumb a mode of com- prehendling whatever it may be desirous to convey to their minds, and of expressing their own wants and ideas to their more favored fellow creatures, is one of the greatest triumphs that humanity can boast. It has the great advantage of being remarkably simple ; so that a mother, brother, sister, or school-fellow, by a little perseverance, may give the deaf and dumb youth the means of communicating his wishes on all occasions. Our limits will not allow us to enter into any de- tails, beyond the acquirement of the Alphabet, to which we add aii en- graving, showing º position of the hands to express each letter. º-ºº: - ièº. #$$$3 ÉÉ := #E ń-> . º #: j-e- º §§§ f Š §§ § Exºº.º. arº % §§ § ś N *ſº - - ſº # §º º W § yº §§§ º § Tº: §§§ N º § É º §§ Nº. Éſ º WWY º *º º §º & º - .."< x . . . s .* \ *-** - ¥a - A * ~~~~< º:- THE DEAF AND DUMB ALPHABET. THE AL PHA. B. ET. 4, E., I, O, U. The vowels a, e, , o, and w, are expressed by touching. with the fore-finger of the right hand, the thumb, or one of the fingers of the left, according to the letter required to be expressed. A is made by touching the top of the thumb; e, by touching that of the fore-finger; i, by touching that of the middle finger; o, by touching that of the ring, or fourth finger; and u, by touching that of the little finger. B. Join the fore-finger and thumb of each hand, and place the backs of the two fore-finger nails together. C. Curve the fingers and thumb toward each other, so as to resemble as much as possible the shape of the letter. D. Curve the fingers and thumb of the right hand, but not quite so much as for C, and place the tops of the fore-finger and thumb against the side of the fore-finger of the left hand, which is to be kept straight. F. Place the fore-finger of one hand across the back of the two first fingers of the other. G and J. Clench the hands, and place one fist upon the other. H. Draw the palm of one hand across the palm and fingers of the other, beginning near the ball of the thumb, and going along the hands to the tips of the fingers, precisely as if you were brushing something off the palm of one hand with the other. K. Curve the fore-finger toward the thumb, and place the second joint of the fore-ſinger so curved, against the back of the second joint of the fore- finger of the other hand. L. Lay the fore-finger of the right hand straight upon the palm of the leſi. M. Lay the three first fingers of the right hand upon the palm of the left. IV Lay the two first fingers of the right hand upon the palm of the leſt. IP. Bend the thumb and fore-finger as for D, only make a lesser curve, and place the tops of the thumb and fore-finger to the two first joints of the fore-finger of the other hand. Q. Place the tops of the fore-finger and thumb together; curve the fore- finger of the other hand, and place it on the inside of the ſore-finger and thumb, precisely where they touch etch other. ſºarºº ". N :-ºr- --> zº.º. º -ºr +- .J. 354 THE DEAF AND DUIMB AHLPHABET. R. Curve the fore-finger of the right hand, and place it on the palm of the left. S. Curve the little fingers of each hand, and hitch them together. T. Place the top of the ſore-finger of the right hand against the lower edge of the left hand, between the little finger and the wrist. V. This letter is made nearly as N, with this difference only, that for V, the two fore-fingers of the right hand are placed apart, upon the palm of the left, instead of close together, as is the case for N. W. Join the hands, with the fingers of one between those of the other. X. Cross the two fore-fingers at the second joint. Y. Place the ſore-finger of the right hand between the thumb and fore- finger of the left, which must both be extended. Z. Raise one hapd toward the face, and place the palm of the other under the elbow of the arm which is so eievated. It is usual to mark the conclusion of each word by snapping the middle finger and thumb of the right hand : this, it may readily be imagined, ren- ders the dumb language much more intelligible. Numbers are counted by the fingers in the most simple way; one finger held up, signifies 1; two fingers, 2.; the open hand, 5; the two hands, 10, &c. 33 éº's bº toº. 5)(~ ſº ſº ÖIS º 2. /* TN §§º CN &226RS QX3733NS)(22&3NS (22& (Z \\ \ sº § § N. sº lº sº sº -- I ND EX. 333- Accommodation, the triple, 215 Accomplices, the four, 200 Advance and Retreat, 290 Æolian Harp, 223 Alphabet, Deaf and Dumb, 353 Amalgamation and Separation, 177 Amusements, Arithmetical, 95 Amusements, Optical, 109 Amusements, Chemical, 125 Anagram, Combinations of am, 107 Anagrams, 252 Anamorphosis, 123 Angler, 263 Anglers, Rules for, 271 Apparition, 119 Appels, (in fencing,) 302 Arch-board, game of, ll Archer’s Position, 48 Archery, 43 Arithmetical Amusements, 95 Arithmetical Mousetrap, 108 Arrows, construction of, described, 5 Ascham, (in Archery,) 46 Automata, 187 Automaton Canary, 198 Awn of Barley Hydrometer, 225 Back, to swim and float on the, 69 Baits, 265 (3aits, Natural, 268 Balanced Stick, 158 Ball, the great wooden, 71 Balls, games with, 15 Bandy Ball, 18 Basket and stones, 107 Baste the Bear, 29 Battledore and Shuttlecock, 27 Batsman, 52 Bats and Balls, 52 Beats on the blade, (in fencing,) 301 Belt, Archer’s, 46 Bird in the Box, 160 Blindman’s Buff, 29 Blue Bottle, 180 Bogle Bodkin, 161 Book, the Flying, 66 Bost-about, 9 Bottle lifted by a straw, 157 Bottle ejectment, 157 Bottle Imps, 160 Bottle, mysterious, 162 Bow, construction of, described 44 Bow, to string, 47 - Bowing Beau, 162 Bowler, 52 Bow-string described, 45 Brace, (in Archery,) 46 Breast to Mouth, 73 Bridge of Knives, 153 Buchan, Dr. his remarks on Bath- img, 76 INDEX. Buck, game of, 37 Butterflies, to take Impression of, on paper, 224- Butts, (in Archery,) 46 Camera Lucida, 114 Camera Obscura, 110 Camera Obscura, Magnifying, 112 Camera Obscura, Prismatic, 112 Canary, Automaton, 193 Cancelled figure, guessed, 105 Candle ends, eatable, 153 Candle invisibly extinguished, 136 Candle of Ice, 180 - Candle lighted by smoke, 155 cº lighted by a glass of water, 1S7 Card in a Cherry-stone, 203 Card in the Mirror, 204 Card in the Pocket-book, 206 Card in the Egg, 202 Card made to jump out of the pack, 199 Card, marching, 205 Card, noted, named, 198 Card nailed to the wall, 201 Card Puzzle, 219 Card thought of, to tell blindfold, 196 Cards, Tricks with, 195 Card turned into a bird, 199 Card revealed by a pinch of snuff, 201 Card under the Hat, 201 Carte and Tierce, simple Parades of 291 Carte, low, 293 Carte, Thrusts of, 292 Carte over the arm, 292 Casting the line, 270 Cat and Mouse, 28 Catch Ball, 17 Catch-Penny, 73 Century, Magical, 104 Certain Game, 104 Chair, to take from under you with- out falling, 72 Chairing the leg, 67 Chameleon, Mineral, 182 Charades, 232 Chemical Samson, 187 Cherry Cheat, 215 Chess, 321 Chinese Shadows, 121 Clout Shooting; 49 Coin, doubled, 158 Colors, transmutation of, 134 Combinations of an Anagram, 107 Combustion and Explosion, 129 Combustion in and under Water, 131 Combustion by concentration of the Sun's rays, 130 Cornical Cards, 229 Confederate Signals, 205 Coafederate Water-drop, 200 Conflagration, mimic, 179 Conjuror’s Joke, 155 Conqueror, Game of, 10 Conundrums, 236 Copying Machine, substitute for, 226 Corks and Bladders, 82 Counter changed, 163 Cramp, when swimming, how to re- lieve, 91 Cricket, Game of, described, 5l Cricket Balls, 52 Cricket Bats, 52 Cricket, Laws of, 54 Cross, curious, 213 rystallization upon Cinders, 227 Crystallization of Salts, 126 Crystals, magnificent, 226 Cut Lace joined, 163 Cut over the point, 300 * …" - ~. --~~~~ Deaf and Dumb Alphabet, 353 Deaſ made to hear, 224 Deception, simple, 165 Demi-amputation, 170 Dice guessed unseen, 105 Dick, Duck, and Drake, 30 Dinner party, 106 Disarming, 304 Iłisengaging, (in Fencing,) 294 Disengagements in Octave and Semi-circle, 299 Disengagements in Prime and Seconde, 299 Diving, 90 Dot and carry two, 66 Double Dozen, 197 Double Funnel, 171 Dove-cote, 284 Dragoon, prancing, 161 Draughts, 321 Draughts, Games for practice in, 25 Draughts, Laws of 324 Draughts, Rules for playing, 322 Drawing the Oven, Game of, 36 Dropping the 'Kerchief, 37 I}uck, Game of, 35 1)ye, Wonderful, 178 Eclipse Glass, 223 Eels, 267 | S Egg, travelling, 15 ; Box, 169 Egg, sentinel, 153 Fºgg, dancing, 180 Egg in the Phial, 280 Egg-shells, engraving on, 229 Elements, the four, 182 Enchanted Cock, I55 Engaging, (in Fencing,) 290 Engraving on Egg-shells, 229 Enigmas, 241 \, Exploding Taper, 136 - ff IN DFX. Extension, (in Fencing,) 292 Faded Rose restored, 179 Fascinated Bi, d, 156 Feet to show, the, in swimming, 90 Feints, 300 Fencing, 289 Finger-ſeat, 70 Fingers, to step through your own, 65 Fire, Green, 132 Fire, Green, under Water, 131 Fire, Red, 132 Fire, Yellow, 132 Fire under Water, 152 Fire and Wine Bottle, 171 ; Fishing Rods, 264 Fishing Lines, 264 Fishing Hooks, 265 Fives, Game of, 15 Flight Shooting, 49 Flight of the Ring, 170 Floating Beacon, 154 Floats, 265 Flowers, various, to produce from one stem, 227 Flute Player, 190 Fly-fishing, matural, 268 Fly-fishing, artificial, 269 Flying Steps, 64 Flying Book, 66 Foils, 289 Foil, how to hold the, 289 Follow my Leader, 24 Foot-Ball, 17 Forcing a Card, I96 Forty-five, the famous, 214 Franklin’s Advice to Swimmers, 77 French and English, 31 Fruit and Flowers made to grow in Winter, 224 INDEX. Game of the Bag, 101 Horizontal Bar, 61 Game of the Ring, 100 Horse-dealer’s bargain, 106 Game, the certain, 104 Humming-Top, 13 Games with Marbles, 9 Hunt the Slipper, 35 Games with Balls, 15 Hydrometer, 225 Gas-factor, 138 Hydrometer, the awa of Barley | Gas, Laughing, 229 22 r Gathering of the Clans, 198 - tº e Geometrical Money, 212 Ignition by compression, 186 Glass, to cut, 228 Ignition by percussion, 186 Glizades, 301 Illuminator and Extinguisher, 187 Globe Box, 172 Illusions, singular, 124 Glove, Archer’s, 45 Impossibility made possible, 213 Glow-worm in Gas, 136 Increase Pound, Game of, 12 Goblet, perilous, 155 Inks, Harlequin, 227 Goff, Game of, 18 Inks, Sympathetic, 127 Grease-box Archer’s, 46 Invisible Girl, 191 Guards of Carte and Tierce, 290 Guinea Pigs, 281 Javelin, 66 Gymnastic Exercises, 59 Jumping, 60 Gymnastic Recreations, 65 Jumping Rope, 36 Gymnastics, 57 Kaleidoscope, 141 Half-crown upheld, 162 King of the Castle, 33 Hand, to dip in water without wet- ; Kite, 26 ting, 181 Knock Qut, Game of, 10 Handkerchief Hearth, 176 Knuckle down, 66 Handkerchief, mutilated, restored, 170 - Ladder to ascend, 64 Harlequin Inks, 227 Lady, the slighted, 210 Hat Ball, 16 Lame Lamplighters, Game of, 38 Hatched Bird, 172 Lamp without flame, 136 - Heart and Ball Puzzle, 220 Laughing Gas, 229 Heart, the buried, 205 Lantern to read by at night, 121 Heat and Cold, 128 Lead Tree, 133 Hide and Seek, 34 Leap before you Jook, 7 Hippas, 34 Leap, deep, 62 Hodge and his Hay, 221 Leap, deep, with the Pole, 63 Holes, (at Marbles,) 10 Leap, high, 62 Hooks, I'ishing, 265 Leap, high, with the pole, 62 Hoop, 28 Leap, long, 62 Hop Scotch, 32 Leap, long, with the Pole, 6% Hop, Step, and Jump, 36 Leap Frog, 21 §§==º 5s=º º Leg, chairing the, 67 Leg or Slip, (in Cricket,) 53 Legerdemain, 149 Lifting at Arm’s length, 70 Lines, fishing, 264 Little Gas-factor, 138 Liquid produced from two Solids, 137 Liquid, colorless, made of various colors without touching, 182 Locked Jaw, 167 Logogriphs, 253 Long Field, off-side, (in Cricket,) 54 Long Field, on-side, (in Cricket,) 54 Long Leap, 62 Long Pudding, 168 Long Reach, 67 Long Stop, (in Cricket.) 53 Long Slip, (in Cricket,) 53 Lop-eared Rabbit, 275 Luminous Writing in the dark, 132 Magic Lantern, 116 Magic Lantern, to paint the glasses for, 117 Magic Lantern, to exhibit 117 Magic Lantern, nebulous, 1.19 Magic Shrub, 136 Magic Spoon, 178 Magic Twelve, 199 - Magician Mahometan, 192 Magnificent Crystals, 226 Marbles, Games with, 9 Marvellous Mirror, 122 Mask of Flame, 186 Mating Pigeons, 285 Metal melted on paper over a Can- dle, 178 Metallic dissolvents, 132 Metallic mixtures, melted by fric- tion, 176 INDEX ; Middle Wicket to cover 53 Metallic vegetation, 133 Metamorphosis, hideous, 177 Microscope, solar, 121 Milk rendered luminous, 183 Mineral Chameleon, 182 Minor Sports, 7 Mirror Marvellous, 122 Mirror, Multiplying, 160 Miscellaneous Sports, 29 Money Box, 173 Money Game, 100 Money Geometrical, 212 Mousé in the pack of Cards, 204 Moving Pyramid, 157 Multiplied Money, 124 Nerve trick, 200 Nine Holes, Game of, 16 Northern Spell, 20 Number thought of, to tell, 97, 98 Number Nine, remarkable proper ties of, 102, 103 Numbers, two or more thought ot, to tell, 99 Obedient Watch, 169 Odd Score, 202 Oil, to separate from water, 181 Ombres Chinoises, 121 - Optical Amusements, 109 Oyster Wager, 221 Pack, the painted, 203 Pall Mall, 36 Palm-Spring, 69 Paper Furnace, 157 Paper, incombustible, 179 Paper Oracle, 181 Paper, brown, to burn by phospho- rus and friction, 187 Parades of Carte and Tierce, 291 Parades of Secoude and Printe, 292 FK) INDEX Parades of Octave and Semi-circle, 291 Paradoxes and Puzzles, 207 Parallel Bars, 61 Pea-shooter, 26 - Peg Top, 14 Perch, 267 Perpetual Motion, 179 Plantasmagoria, 120 Phantasunagoria, to make transpa- rent screens for, 120 Philosophy cheated, 165 Phosphoric Fish, &c. 183 Phosphoric Oyster Shells, 185 Phosphoric Plants, 185 Phosphorus Steam Bath, 187 Phosphorescent Spar, 186 Phosphoric Wood, 184 Picture frames, made of paper, 224 Pigeon Lofts, 284 Pigeons 283 Pigeons, ſeeding of, 285 Pigeons, diseases and remedies of, 2S6 Piquet pack, 197 Plank, to climb, 64 Plank for swimming, 85 Plaster Busts, &c., to bronze, 227 Point, (in Cricket) 53 Point, to cover, 53 Poised Penny, 152 Poker Puzzle, 72 Pole, perpendicular or slant, to as- cend, 64 . Polemoscope, 114 Poor-house Problem, 215 Pop-gun, 25 Porpoise, (in swimming) 89 Portraits, visible and invisible, 170 Pouch, Archer’s 46 Prisoner’s Base, 22 Profit and Loss, 212 Prostrate and Perpendicular, 66 Protean Liquid, 179 Pulley, 72 Puss in the Corner, 23 Puzzle the Card, 219 Puzzle, Scale and Ring, 220 Puzzling Rings, 216 Pyramid, 12 Pyrainid, moving, 157 Quaint Query, 212 Quiver, construction of, describ ed, 46 • Rabbitry and Hutches, 276 Rabbits, 273 Rabblts, Wild, 274 Rabbits, Domestic, 274 Rabbits, Lop-eared, 275 Rabbits, on feeding, 277 Rabbits, on breeding, 279 Itabbits, diseases of, 280 Rebusses, 246 Recreations, Gymnastic, 65 Regal Alliance, 202 Re-illumination, Wonderful, I56 Reprieve, partial, 214 Return on the Extension, 301 Ribbon, color of, removed and restored, 181 Riddler, 231 Ring Taw, Game of, 11 Ring suspended by a burnt thread 156 Rings and Ribbons, 154 Rings, the Puzzling, 216 River on fire, in miniature, 186 Rods, fishing, 264 Rope, to climb the, 63 Rope for swimming, 85 Rose, faded, restored, 179 Roses, to preserve till Christmas, 22b Rounders, Game of 20 dº." Sa- INDEX. Roving, 49 Stone, wet, made to produce fire, Running, 60 Stooping Stretch, 69 Saddle my Nag, 23 Storm and Calm, 158 Salamander, 174 Striker, (Cricket,) 52 Salts, crystallization of, 126 Striking out, (in swimming,) 82 Salute, (in Fencing,) 296, 304 Sucker, 28 Samson, chemical, 178 Swimming, 75 Seconde Thrust, (in Fencing,) 293 : Swimming like a Dog, 88 See-saw, 33 Swimming on the side, 88 Sentinel Fgg, 153 Swimming out of depth, 87 Seven in Two, 213 Swimming, to turn in, 90 Sheep-fold, 212 Swimming, times and places for, 93 Shilling, penetrative, 173 - Swimming under water, 91 Short Slip, (in Cricket,) 53 Swinging, 31 Shrub, magic, 136 Sympathetic Inks, 127 Shuffled Seven, 197 Sibyl's Cave, 181 .# Tantalus trick, 71 Signals, confederate, 205 Taper, exploding. 136 Silver Tree, 134 Targets, 47 Sixpence, animated, 156 g Tassel, (in Archery,) 45 Skating, 139 Tempest, to represent, 118 } Sliding, 30 Thaumatrope, 27 Slighted Lady, 210 Thread the Needle, 34 | Sling, 25 Thread, knotted, 159 Snow Statue, 38 Thread, restored, 168 Solar Microscope, 121 Thread, incombustible, 177 Solid produced from two Liquids, Thrust of the Wrist, 301 Fº 37 Thrust, Time, 301 Solutions to Enigmas, &c. 257 Thumb String, 154 Sovereign and Sage, 106 Thumb, trial of the, 63 Spans and Snops, 9 Tierce, 293 Spoon, Magic, 178 Tin Tree, 133 Sports of Agility and Speed, 21 Tip-cat, Game of, 31 Sports with Toys, 25 Toper’s Tripod, 159 Square hole and round stopper, 220 : Tops, Games with, 13 Square of Triangles, 222 Touch, Game of, 24 Steam Bath, 187 Transmutation of Colors, 134 Stepping through your own fingers, 3 Transmutation, metallic, 178 65 Trap, Bat, and Ball, 19 Steps, flying, 64 Tricks with Cards, 195 Stilts, 73 Triumph, 65 Stool Ball, 18 Trouble-wit, 208 INDEX. Frout, 266 Tumble-down Dick, 70 Turn-over, (Gymnastics) 68 Turn over, (cards,) 202 Two to ome, 70. Ups and Downs, 201 Varieties, 223 Vaulting, 63 Volcano, sub-aqueous, 178 Wafers, wonderful, 63 Walking, 60 Warning, Game of 23 Watch, obedient, 169 Watch-spring Gun, 28 Water, agitated, to calm, 228 Water bewitched, 152 Water, entering the, 81 Water, to tread, 88 Water, to beat, 90 Water made to boil by cold, and cease to boil by heat, 137 Well of Fire, 131. Whip Top, 13 Whoop, 34 Wicket, single, 55 Wicket-keeper, 53 Wickets, 52 Will o' the Wisp, 131 Wine Merchant and Clerk, 211 Wine upon Water, 155 Wizardº's Chariot, 164 Wolf, Goat, and Cabbages, 214 Wooden Ball, the Great, 71 Wooden Bottle, Game of, 37 Words, eighteen, in twenty-three Letters, 216 Wowski, a fancy Rabbit, 275 g -- • *i-º-º::*… 3--~~ * - º' Sº - *. C º - $º. f* : * : ****º ºxer. - • rºa º º * * - tº: • * - ºr sº -- º * * r *i; g º * - s * * !" te * g -- & *...*.*.sºs. Lºº. . . .ii.2-º-º:ºx—iº- Fº gº Rºº.º.º. ºº Eºº tº Fºº. Sºº'Tºº * * * * * * The Spectral Lamp . . . Curious Change of Colours . The Protean Light º The Chameleon Flowers . To change the Colours of Flower Changes of the Poppy . To change the C Light changing While into Black The visibly growing Acorn . Changes in Sap-Green. To revive apparently dead Plants Singular effect of Tºars . Beauties of Crystallization . To crystallize Camplior - Crystallized Tin º e Crystals in hard Water * Varieties of Crystals * Heat from Crystallization . Splendid Sublimation . . Artificial Ice . . ſº º Magic links . . . . . . Chameleon Liquids . . The Magic Dyes . . . º ***ºrº !olour of a Rose . * º w * , … ºf Fºs § NTENTS: Fºº - smºs--". 3. % = . * \'ſſu § gº &y - Transmutations, Page . 17 | Wine changed into Water : - . 18 || Two colourless transparent Liquids e 18 become black and opaque º - 19 Two colourless Fluids make a co- 19 loured ontº . º e - - 19 | Change of Colour by colourless 20 Fluids º º * - º 20 To change Blue Liquid to White 20 | Veritable “Black” Tea . º 21 | Restoration of Colour by Water . 21 The Magic Writing . e & e 21 | "I'wo Liquids make a Solid . º . 21 | Two Solids make a Liquid . e 2. A solid º Mass made a trans- 23 parent Liquid . g º e . 23 Two cold Liquids make a hot one . 23 | Quadruple Transmutation . º . 24 | Quintuple Transmutation . . & 24 | (Dombination of Colours º © . 24 || Union of two Metals without Hea . 24 Magic Breath • * ~ * º ; Two Bitters make a Sweet . . Visible and Invisible . e 9. 10 - CONTENTS Sight and Sound. Pag e Artificial Mirage . . . . 33 || Apparatus for Writing in the Dark. Motion of the Eye . . . 34 | Portable Microscope . . . . Single Wision with two Eyes . 35 | The Phenaltisticope or Stoboscope Two Objects seen as one . . 35 To look at the Sun without injury Only one Object can be seen at Brilliant Water Mirror time : e º e - a . 36 | Optical Illusion under Water . Straight Objects seen crooked . 36 The Magic. Wheels . . . Optical Illusion . . . . 37 Acoustic Rainbow e 9 e Pin-hole Focus . . . . 37 | Transmission of Sound tº º Optical Deceptions . . . 38 Progress of Sound • * r * Accuracy of Sight º º, & 38 Sound turning Corners Visual Deception . 39 To tell the Distance of Thunder. Handwriting upon the Wall . . 39 Hearing by the Touch . . . 56 Imitative Haloes . . . , 39 Conversation for the Deaf . , 56 To read a Coin in the Dark. . 40 || Glass broken by the Voice . e 57 To make a Prism . . 40 Figures produced by Sound . . 57 Optical Augmentation . . . 41 | Transmitted Vibration . 58 Gold Fish in a glass Globe . . . . 42 | Double Vibration . . . 58 Colours produced by the unequal Champagne and Sound . . , 58 Action of Light upon the Eyes 42 | Music from Palisades . . . 59 Optical Deception . . . 43 Theory of the Jew’s Harp . . 59 Coloured Shadows . . . 43 Music of the Snail * - , 60 Colours of Scratches . . . 43 : To tune a Guitar without the as- Ocular Spectra . . . . 44 sistance of the Ear . . . . 0 Beautiful Colours of Mother of Pearl 44 || Music ſrom Glass or Metal Rods. 60 White Letters seen ſurther than The Tuning-ſork a Flute-player . 61 Black e - . . . 45 Musical Bottles . . . . . 62 Artificial Rainbow & . . 45 || Theory of Whispering . . . 62 Fringe about a Candle. sº . 45 Theory of the Voice . . . 62 The Double Coloured Reflection 46 | Sound along a Wall . . . ; . 63 Luminous Cross . º - º 46 | Sounds more audible by Night than Ring of Colours round a Candle . 46 by Day . . . . . . 63 Simple and cheap Opera-glass . 47 || Musical Echo . . . . 63 Multiplying Theatres . . . . 47 | Wentriloquism . . . . 64 Light and Heat. * Flashes of Light upon revolving To colour the Flame of a Candle Wheels . . . . . . . . 69 || To divide the Flame of a Candle 73 Decomposition of Light . . 70 Cane Wick Lamp e - e. Solar Reſraction . * - . 70 | Camphor and Platinum Lamp . 74 73 § --: > >s § Incantations . . . . . . . . 71 || Platinium and Ether Lamp . . 74 To imitate the I.ight of the Sea . 7| | Floating Light _. * º & 75 .nstantaneous Lights . . 72 | Substitute for a Wax Taper . "5 i ar | S.XI * CONTIENTS. I 1 Page Page Phosphorescent Fish . . . 75 Shadows made darker by increased The Luminous Spectre º 75 Light . . . . . . . tº º £ight, a Painter . . . ... 76 Miniature Thunder and Lightning 82 Effect of Light upon Crystalliza- The Burning Glass . . 82 tion . . . . . . . . . 76 || Magic of Heat . . . . 82 Effect of Light on Plants 76 | Repulsion by Heat . . . - . 83 Instantaneous Light upon Ice 77 | Heat passing through Glass . . S4 White Light from Zinc . . 77 || Metals unequally influenced by Heat 84 Brilliant Light from two Metals 77 Spontaneous Combustion , 85 Brilliant Light from Steel . 77 Inequality of Heat in Fire Irons . 85 Lighted Tin . . . . . 78 || Expansion of Metal by Heat . , 85 Light from Gilt Buttons . . 78 Evaporation of a Metal . . . 85 Light from a Flower . . . 78 A Floating Metal on Fire . 86 Light from Sugar . . . . 78 Heat and Cold from Flannel . 86 Light from the Potato . . 79 Ice melted by Air . . . . 86 Light from the Oyster . * tº 79 || To hold a hot Tea-kettle on the Light from Derbyshire Spar ... 79 Hand . . . . . . 86 Light from Oyster-shells . 80 | Incombustible Linen . . . 87 Rings of Light in Crystal e 80 The Burning Circle . º º 87 To strike Light with Cane 80 Water of different Temperatures in Cause of Transparency †- e SO the same Wessel e • . 87 Transparency of Gold . - e 81 Warmth of different Colours , -87 Tint changed by Thickness . 81 i Substitute for Fire . . . 88 Gas and Steam. Laughing Gas . . . . . . 91 | Flame from Cold Metals . 99 The Luminous Wand . . . 92 Phosphorus in Chlorine . . 99 To make Carbonic Acid Gas . 92 : Caoutchouc Balloons . - . 100 Carbonic Acid Gas in Wine or Beer To increase the Light of Coal Gas 100 Wessels . . . • 92 || Gas from Indian Rubber . . 100 To extinguish Flame with Gas 93 Ether Gas . - † © . 101 Effect of Hydrogen on the Voice. 93 Magic Vapour . . . . . 101 Magic Taper - e . . 94 | Gas from the union of Metals . 101 The Gas Candle . . . . 94 | Invisible Gases made Visible 1ſ)2 Gas Bubbles . º & - 94 Light under Water . . ... 102 Gas-light in the Day-time . 95 || Gaseous Evanescence . 102 Miniature Balloons . . 95 Violet-coloured Gas . . . 102 Miniature Gas-lighting . . 95 || To collect Gases . . . . 103 Musical Gas . - . . . . 96 || The Deflagrating Spoon . . 103 Miniature Will-o'-the-wisp , 97 | What is Steam 7 e p . It)3 Phosphoric Illumination . 97 The Steam Engine simplified . 104 Qombustion of Iron in Oxygen Gas 97 To boil.Water by Steam ... 104 Glow-worm in Oxygen Gas . . 98 || Distillation in Miniature ... 105 Luminous Charcoal . . 98 || Candle or Fire Crackers , 105 Brilliant Combustion in Oxygen. 98 || Steam from the Kettle. ... 105 CONTENTS. , ºr Page Pagé Coloured Flames . . . ; 109 || Pyramid of Alum . . . . 120 Yellow Flame . . . 110 | Visible Vibration . . . . 121 Qrange-coloured Flame . . 110 | Charcoal in Sugar . . . 122 Emerald Green Flame . 110 | Floating Needles . . . . 122 Instantaneous Flame . . . 110 || Water in a Sling . o . . 122 The Cup of Flame g g Ill | Attraction in a Glass of Water . 122 To cool Flame by Metal . . 111 || To prevent Cork floating in Water 123 Proof that Flame is Hollow . . 111 || Instantaneous Freezing . 123 Qamphor sublimed by Flame . 111 || To freeze Water with Éther . 123 Green Fire . . . . . . . 112 | Production of Nitre . . . 124 Brilliant Red Fire o e 112 | Curious Transposition . . . 124 Purple Fire . . . . . 112 || Animal Barometer . . . 124 Silver Fire . . . . 113 Magic Soap tº gº º 124 The Fiery Fountain . wº 113 | Equal Pressure of Water . . 125 The Artificial Conflagration . . I13 || To empty a Glass under Water . 125 Inflammable Powder . . . 113 || To empty a Glass of Water with- Combustion without Flame . . 114 out touching it g ſº , 125 Combustion of three Metals . 114 || Decomposition of Water . . 126 To make Paper Incombustible 114 || Water heavier than Wine . . . . 126 Singular Experiments with Glas To inflate a Bladder without Air 126 Tubes . . . . . . . 114 | Air and Water Balloon . . 126 Aquatic Bomb o e iº . 115 | Heated Air Balloon e . 127 Heat not to be estimated by Touch 115 | The Pneumatic Tinderbox. . 127 Flame upon Water . . . 116 || The Bacchus Experiment . 127 Rose-coloured Flame on Water . 116 || The Mysterious Circles . . 128 To set a Mixture on Fire with Prince Rupert’s Drops . . . 130 Water . . . . . . 116 || Vegetable Hygrometer . . . 130 Waves of Fire on Water . . II6 | Thé Pneumatic Dancer . .- 131 Explosion in Water . © . 117 | The Ascending Snake . g . 132 Water ſrom the Flame of a Can- The Pneumatic Phial . . . 132 dle . . º * & 117 | Resin Bubbles . . . . 133 Formation of Water by Fire 117 | Moisture of the Atmosphere . . 133 Boiling upon Cold Water . . 117 | Climates of a Room . . . 133 Currents in Boiling Water . 118 Bubbles in Champagne . . 134 Hot Water lighter than cold . 118 Proofs that Air is a heavy Fluid . 134 Expansion of Water by Cold . 118 || To support a Fea on Air . . 135 The Cup of Tantalus . . . 119 || Pyrophorus, or Air-tinder . . 135 Imitative Diving Bell . . . 119 || Beauty of a Soap-bubble . . 136 The Water-proof Sieve . . 120 | Why a Guinea falls more quickly More than full . . . . 120 than a Feather through the Air 137 To cause Wine and Water to Solidity of Air . . ſº . . 138 change Places . . . . 120 | Breathing and Smelling . . 138 *** * ~~~~ Fire, Water, and Air. * * * * * - r * * * * *...* ‘ī; ºr * ---º-º-º- ~ * ~ Xºr CONTENTS. 13 The Ring and the Handkerchief The Knotted Handkerchief. . The Invisible Springs . e The Miraculous Apple. The Self-balanced Pail The Phantom at command The Miraculous Shilling The Locomotive Shilling The Penetrative Sixpence . The Wanishing Sixpence e To make a Sixpence balance and spin on its Edge on the Point of a Needle . s © tº The Mº Coin . . . The Magic Rat Trap - g The Welocity of Motion e tº The Exploding Bubble e The Magic Picture . . Artificial Lightning . & * Three Objects discernible only with both Eyes : - º e To tell by a Watch , Dial, the Hour when a Person intends to T1S6 . . . * * * To make a Ring suspend by a Thread, after the Thread has been burned . º • * To melt a Piece of Money in a Illusions of Touch º º e Illusion of the Taste . e e The General Bleacher. e º Influence of coloured Glass o bulbous Roots . e te te The Spinning-top “asleep” tº To judge of Weights . . . . . Quicksilver and Oil united . e To dissolve the Soda in Glass . Waterproof Paper • * @ To dissolve Gold or Platinum . Sleights and Subtleties. Page Page 143 Walnut-shell without injuring 144 the Shell . . . . . 157 146 | The Magical Mirrors . . . 158 147 | The Enchanted Bottle . . . 159 148 || The Armed Apparition . . . . . . . 159 148 || To extract the Silver out of a Ring. 150 that is thickly gilded, so that the 151 Gold may remain entire . . . . 160 152 Curious Experiment with a Glass 152 of Water . . . . 160 - A Luminous Bottle, which will show the Hour on a Watch in 153 the Dark . . . . . 160 153 | The Wonderful Hat . . . 161 153 || To bring a Person down upon a 154 Feather . . . . . 161 155 | The Apparent Impossibilit . 162 155 An Omelet cooked in a Hat over 156 the Flame of a Candle . 162 The Impossible Omelet . . 163 156 | Go if you can . . 163 The Figure Puzzle . . 163 The Visible Invisible . . . 163 I56 The Double Meaning . . . . 164 Quite tired out . . & © . 164 Something out of the Common , 164 157 To rub one Sixpence into two 165 Magic Circle . . . . 165 Melange. 169 Colder than Ice . . . . 173 170 Contra-crystallization . . . 173 170 | One and one do not make two . 174 To cony Writing instantly . . 174 171 | The Rival Dials . . . . . 174 171 To spin lndian Rubber º . 174 I72 || Indelible Writing . . . . 175 172 Vegetable Anatomy . . . ; . 17 172 || To tell what o'clock it is by the 173 Moon * * -- & e {} 7 173 | The Physiognotype . • , 177 i4 CONTENTS. Page Pagº Infinite Divisibility of Matter . 177 || To break a Stone with a Blow of Holding the Breath . . . 178 the Fist . . . . , 185 Sand in the Hour-glass • . 178 || Mimic Frost-work º º . 185 r Resistance of Sand , . . . 179 || To melt Lead in a Piece of Paper 186 * Glass broken hy Sand . . . 180 | Hydrostatic Balance . º . 186 2^ To bleach l vory . • . . 180 etallic Reduction . - . 187 Vanishing Shells . . . . 180 | Electrical Attraction and Repul- The Magic # . . . . 180 Sion . . . . . . 187 The Magic Whirlpool . . . 181 Alchemical Electricity. . . 18.8 Magic Porcelain . . . . 183 The Electric Balls . . . 189 A Galyanic Tongue . . . . 184 || The Electric Dance . . . 189 Prinking Porter out of Pewter . 184 Electric Light . . . . . iś3 Electric or Galvanic Preserva- Electric Light from Brown Paper 190 |tion. . . . . . . . . , 184 Sudden Production of Light. " . 190 #| Light from the Diamond . . 185 | Electricity of the Cat "...”. 190 T. R. /\ JNT STMEU Tº ſº. Tº T' (0) INſ $2 ~&13>>~~ THE SPECTRAL LAMP. xº~\ity,ºn A ñº. some common salt with spirit of wine in a w º platinum or metallic cup; Set the cup upon §§ £3. a wire frame over a spirit-lamp, which should A#: 5) be enclosed on each side, or in a dark lantern; §º § when the cup becomes heated, and the spirit º ignited, it will burn with a strong yellow flame; if, however, it should not be perfectly yellow, throw more salt into the cup. The lamp being thus prepared, all other lights should be extinguished, and the yellow lamp intro- duced, when an appalling change will be exhibited; all the objects in the room will be but of one colour; and the complex- ions of the several persons, whether old or young, fair or brunette, will be metamorphosed to a ghastly, death-like yellow; whilst the gayest dresses, as the brightest crimson, the choicest lilac, the most vivid blue or green—all will be changed into one monotony of yellow : each person will be inclined to laugh 2 17 r l{ YNſ f AV" -* º g sº ! º--- . $2::=S. r"--, 18 TRANSMUTATIONS. at his neighbour, himself insensible of being one of the spectral company. Their astonishment may be heightened by removing the yellow light to one end of the room, and restoring the usual or white light at the other; when one side of each person’s dress will resume its original colour, while the other will remain yellow; one cheek may bear the bloom of health, and the other the yellow of jaundice. Or if, when the yellow light only is burning, the white light be introduced within a wire sieve, the company and the objects in the apartment will appear yellow, mottled with white. j Red light may be produced by mixing with the spirit in the cup over the lamp, salt of stromtian instead of common salt; and the effect of the white or yellow lights, if introduced through a sieve upon the red light, will be even more striking than the ** white upon the yellow light. - CURIOUS CHANGE of UOLOURS. Let there be no other light than a taper in the room; then put on a pair of dark-green spectacles, and having closed one eye, view the taper with the other. Suddenly remove the spectacles, and the taper will assume a bright-red appearance; but, if the spectacles be instantly replaced, the eye will be unable to distin- guish any thing for a second or two. The order of colours will, therefore, be as follows:—green, red, green, black. THE PROTEAN I,IGHT. Soak a cotton wick in a strong solution of salt and water, dry it, place it in a spirit lamp, and, when lit, it will give a bright yellow light for a long time. If you look through a piece of blue s=5: 4. ====<5 TRANSIMITUTATIONS. 19 glass at the flame, it will lose all its yellow light, and you will only perceive feeble violet rays. If, before the blue glass, you place a pale yellow glass, the lamp will be absolutely invisible, though a candle may be distinctly seen through the same glasses. THE CHAMELEON FLOWERS. Trim a spirit-lamp, add a little salt to the wick, and light it. Set near it a scarlet geranium, and the flower will appear yellow. Purple colours, in the same light, appear blue. TO CHANGE THE COLOURS OF FILOWERS. Hold over a lighted match, a purple columbine, or a blue larkspur, and it will change first to pink, and them to black. The yellow of other flowers, held as above, will continue unchanged. Thus, the purple tint will instantly disappear from a heart's-ease, but the yellow will remain; and the yellow of a wall-flower will continue the same, though the brown streak will be discharged. If a scarlet, crimsom, or maroom dahlia be tried, the colour will change to yellow; a fact known to gardeners, who by this mode variegate their growing dahlias. CHANGES OF THE POPPY. Some flowers which are red, become blue by merely bruising them. Thus, if the petals of the common corn-poppy be rubbed upon white paper, they will stain it purple, which may be made green by washing it over with a strong solution of potash in water. Put poppy petals into very dilute muriatic acid, and the infusion will be of a florid red colour; by adding a little chalk, it will become the colour of port wine; and this tint, by the addition of potash, may be changed to green or yellow. 3. .------~~~ -- ==~----------——-> - ~…~~~~", *— — r Fºr tº: ~~~~~" ". . * § 3. . . ~.S. -->. h * - - - §2::=s_ Q-F=g - iº - - ty- 20 TRANSMUTATIONS. TO CHANGE THE COLOUR OF A ROSE • Hold a red rose over the blue flame of a common match, and the colour will be discharged wherever the fume touches the leaves of the flower, so as to render it beautifully variegated, or entirely white. If it be then dipped into water, the redness, after a time, will be restored. LIGHT CHANGING WIHITE INTO BLACK. Write upon linen with permanent ink, (which is a strong solution of mitrate of silver,) and the characters will be scarcely visible; remove the linen into a dark room, and they will not change; but expose them to a strong light, and they will be im- delibly black. THE VISIBLY GROWING ACORN. | Cut a circular piece of card to fit the top of a hyacinth glass, so as to rest upon the ledge, and exclude the air. Pierce a hole -- % through the centre of the card, and pass % through it a strong thread, having a small § piece of wood tied to one end, which resting transversely on the card, pre- vents its being drawn through. To the other end of the thread attach an acorn ; and, having half filled the glass with water, suspend the acorn at a short dis- tance from the surface. The glass must be kept in a warm room; and, in a few days, the steam which has generated in the glass will hang from the acorn in a large drop. Shortly afterwards, the acorn will burst, the root will protrude and thrust itself .." \ *R. S. > #ijiā. {x}, {||4 ºil, 3"|| | i , , ... } illº. jº |\ | * - - -, * ... .--- -, *...*: a-re-º- ºx---------- r - Al-As it *—- - --- gº --- --- e º: - • * - - *~~~&3.Y. – * - - - ,Tº-ºº: - J- *** . 4. - - * sº ~" * TRANSIMUTATIONS. into the water; and, in a few days more, a stem will shoot out at the other end, and, rising upwards, will press against the card, in which an orifice must be made to allow it to pass through. From this stem, small leaves will soon be observed to sprout; and, in the course of a few weeks, you will have a handsome oak plant, several inches in height. CIHANGES IN SAP GREEN. Sap green is the inspissated juice of the buckthorn berries: if a little carbonate of soda be dropped into it, the colour will be changed from green to yellow ; it may be reddened by acids, and its green colour restored by chalk. TO REVIVE APPARENTLY DEAD PLANTS, Make a strong dilution of camphor in spirit of wine, which add to soft water, in the proportion of a drachm to a pint. If withered or apparently dead plants be put into this liquid, and allowed to remain therein from two to three hours, they will reWIWes SINGULAR EFFECT OF TEARS, If tears are dropped on a dry piece of paper, stained with the juice of the petals of mallows or violets, they will change the paper to a permanently green colour. BEAUTIES OF CRYSTALLIZATION, Dissolve alum in hot water until no more can be dissolved in it; place in it a smooth glass rod and a stick of the same size; next day, the stick will be found covered with crystals, but the glass rod will be free from them: in this case, the crystals cling to the rough surface of the stick, but have no hold upon the k- * * *- : sºlº 22 TRANSMUTATIONS. §92-Esg smooth surface of the glass rod. But if the rod be roughened with a file at certain intervals, and then placed in the alum and water, the crystals will adhere to the rough surfaces, and leave the smooth bright and clear. Tie some threads of lamp-cottom irregularly around a copper wire or glass rod; place it in a hot solution of blue vitriol, strong as above, and the threads will be covered with beautiful blue crystals, while the glass rod will be bare. Bore a hole through a piece of coke, and suspend it by a string from a stick placed across a hot solution of alum; it will float; but, as it becomes loaded with crystals, it will sink in the solution according to the length of the string. Gas-coke has mostly a smooth, shining, and almost metallic surface, which the crystals will avoid, while they will cling only to the most ir- regular and porous parts. } If powdered turmeric be added to the hot solution of alum, the crystals will be of a bright yellow; litmus will cause them to be of a bright red; logwood will yield purple; and common writing ink, black; and the more muddy the solution, the finer will be the crystals. To keep coloured alum crystals from breaking, or losing their colour, place them under a glass shade with a saucer of water; this will preserve the atmosphere moist, and prevent the crystals getting too dry. If crystals be formed on wire, they will be liable to break off, from the expansion and contraction of the wire by changes of temperature. ... r 3-º-º-º: => S. º.º. --~ :: * > \ }^--- **ś- TRANSMUTATIONS. 23 TO CRYSTALLIZE CAMPHOR, Dissolve camphor in spirit of wine, moderately heated, until he spirit will not dissolve any more; pour some of the solution into a cold glass, and the camphor will instantly crystallize in beautiful tree-like forms, such as we see in the show-glasses of camphor in druggists’ windows CRYSTALLIZED TIN, Mix half an ounce of mitric acid, six drachms of muriatic acid, and two ounces of water; pour the mixture upon a piece of tin plate previously made hot, and, after washing it in the mixture, it will bear a beautiful crystalline surface, in feathery forms. This is the celebrated moirée metallique, and, when varnished, is made into ornamental boxes, &c. The figures will vary ac- cording to the degree of heat previously given to the metal. CRYSTALS IN HARD WATER, Hold in a wine-glass of hard water, a crystal of oxalic acid, and white threads will instantly descend through the liquid, suspended from the crystal. VARIETIES OF CRYSTALS, Make distinct solutions of common salt, nitre, and alum; set them in three saucers in any warm place, and let part of the water dry away or evaporate; then remove them to a warm room. The particles of the salt in each saucer will begin to attract each other, and form crystals, but not all of the same figure: the common salt will yield crystals with six square and equal faces, or sides; the nitre, six-sided crystals; and the alum, eight-sided crystals; and if these crystals be dissolved over and over again, they will always appear in the same forms. O 24 - TRANSIMUTATIONS, HEAT FROM CRYSTALLIZATION, Make a strong solution of Epsom salts in hot water, and while warm, bottle it, cork it closely, and it will remain liquid : draw out the cork, when the salts will immediately crystallize, and, in the process, the remaining liquid and the bottle will become very War Iſle SPLENDID SUBLIMIATION. Put into a flask a small portion of iodime; hold the flask over . the flame of a spirit-lamp, and, from the state of rich ruby crystals, the iodine, on being heated, will become a ruby-coloured trans- parent gas; but, in cooling, will resume its crystalline form ARTIFICIAL ICE, Mix four ounces of mitrate of ammonia, and four ounces of subcarbonate of soda with four ounces of water, in a tin vessel, and in three hours the mixture will produce ten ounces of ice MAGIC INKS, Dissolve oxide of cobalt in acetic acid, to which add a little nitre; write with this solution; hold the writing to the fire, and it will be of a pale rose colour, which will disappear on cooling. Dissolve equal parts of sulphate of copper and muriate of ammonia in water; write with the solution, and it will give a yellow colour when hēated, which will disappear when cold. Dissolve mitrate of bismuth in water; write with the solution, and the characters will be invisible when dry, but will become egible on immersion in water 3-º-K- __2: ~~~~~~ TRANSMUTATIONS. 25 Dissolve in water muriate of cobalt, which is of a bluish-green colour, and the solution will be pink; write with it, and the characters will be scarcely visible; but, if gently heated, they wil appear in brilliant green, which will disappear as the paper cools. CHAMELEON LIQUIDS. Put a small portion of the compound called mineral chameleon into several glasses, pour upon each water at different tempera- tures, and the contents of each glass will exhibit a different shade of colour. A very hot solution will be of a beautiful green colour; a cold one, a deep purple. Make a colourless solution of sulphate of copper; add to it a little ammonia, equally colourless, and the mixture will be of an intense blue colour; add to it a little sulphuric acid, and the blue colour will disappear; pour in a little solution of caustic am- monia, and the blue colour will be restored. Thus may the liquid be thrice changed at pleasure. THE MAGIC DIES. Dissolve indigo in diluted sulphuric acid, and add to it an equal quantity of solution of carbonate of potass. If a piece of white cloth be dipped in the mixture, it will be changed to blue; yellow cloth, in the same mixture, may be changed to green; red to purple, and blue litmus paper to red. Nearly fill a wine-glass with the juice of beet-root, which is of a deep red colour; add a little lime water, and the mixture will be colourless; dip into it a piece of white cloth, dry it rapidly, and in a few hours the cloth will become red. } | | º • Tº Yºr r wº-w-r-rºw-r- w-us - w -- SS: - - *- ----- **--- * :*.** † --~~. : ... -- ". ~ * *: *.: . . . . . . ;-- * - Jº .: * >> * > * ... ." * . º f \t.: “. $: ; *- 26 TRANSMUTATIONs. WINE CHANGED INTO WATER. Mix a little solution of subacetate of lead with port wine; filter the mixture through blotting paper, and a colourless liquid will pass through ; to this add a small quantity of dry salt of tartar, when a spirit will rise, which may be inflamed on the surface of the water. TWO COLOURLESS TRANSPARENT LIQUIDS BECOME BLACK AND OPAQUE. Have in one vessel some sulphuric acid, and in another an infusion of mut-galls; they are both colourless and transparent; mix them, and they will become black and opaque. TWO COLOURLESS FLUIDS MAKE A COLOURED ONE. Put into a wine-glass of water, a few drops of prussiate of potash; and into a second glass of water, a little weak solution of sulphate of iron in water: pour the colourless mixtures together into a tumbler, and they will be immediately changed to a bright deep blue colour. Or, mix the solution of prussiate of potash with that of mitrate of bismuth, and a yellow will be the product. & Or, mix the solution of prussiate of potash with that of sulphate of copper, and the mixture will be of a reddish brown colour. CHANGE of colour. By colourLESS FLUIDs. Three different colours may be produced from the same in- fusion, merely by the addition of three colourless fluids. Slice a little red cabbage, pour boiling water upon it, and when cold, decant the clear infusion, wi.ich divide into three wine-glasses: to one, add a small quantity of solution of alum in water; to the second, a little solution of potash in water; and to the third, a few TRANSMUTATIONS. 27 drops of muriatic acid. The liquor in the first glass will assume a purple colour, the second a bright green, and the third a rich crimson. Put a drachm of powdered nitrate of cobalt into a phial contain- ing an ounce of the solution of caustic potass; cork the phial, and the liquid will assume a blue colour, next a lilac, afterwards a peach colour, and lastly a light red. TO CHANGE A BLUE LIQUID TO WHITE. Dissolve a small lump of indigo in sulphuric acid, by the aid of moderate heat, and you will obtain an intense blue colour: add a drop of this to half a pint of water, so as to dilute the blue; | then pour some of it into strong chloride of lime, and the blue will be bleached with almost magical velocity. * VERITABLE “BEACR” TEA. Make a cup of strong green tea; dissolve a little green cop- peras in water, which add to the tea, and its colour will be black RESTORATION OF COLOUR BY WATER, Water being a colourless fluid, ought, one would imagine, when mixed with other substances of mo decided colour, to pro- duce a colourless compound. Nevertheless, it is to water only that blue vitriol, or sulphate of copper, owes its vivid blueness; as will be plainly evinced by the following simple experiment. Heat a few crystals of the vitriol in a fire shovel, pulverize them, and the powder will be of a dull and dirty white appearance. Pour a little water upon this, when a slight hissing noise will be heard, and at the same moment the blue colour will instantly reappear. Under the microscope, the beauty of this experiment will be increased, for the instant that a drop of water is placed in contact TRANSMUTATIONs. with the vitriol, the powder may be seem to shoot into blue prisms, If a crystal of prussiate of potash be similarly heated, its yellow coloux will vanish, but reappear on being dropped into water. THE MAGIC WRITING, i Dissolve a small portion of green copperas in water, and soak º in it sheets of writing paper, so as to allow them to be taken out - whole, and then dried; then, cover the paper with very finely t powdered galls, and write on it with a pen dipped in water; when dry, brush off the galls, and the writing will appear. TWO LIQUIDS MAKE A SOLID. Dissolve muriate of lime in water until it will dissolve no more; make also a similar solution of carbonate of potash; both will be transparent fluids; but if equal quantities of each be mixed and stirred together, they will become a solid mass. Two solids MAKE A LIQUID. Rub together, in a mortar, equal quantities of the crystals of !º Glauber's salts and mitrate of ammonia, and the two salts will i slowly become a liquid. A SOLID OPAQUE MASS MADE A TRANSPARENT LIQUID. i Take the solid mixture of the solutions of muriate of lime and carbonate of potash, pour upon it a very little mitric acid, and the solid opaque mass will be changed to a transparent liquid. Two COLD LIQUIDS MAKE A HOT ONE. Mix four drachms of sulphuric acid (oil of vitriol) with one drachm of cold water, suddenly, in a cup, and the mixture will be nearly half as hot again as boiling water. | agº. | -* *---> *-e--- \,-) TRANSMUTATIONS. i QUADRUPLE TRANSMUTATION. Dissolve a small piece of nickel in nitric acid, and it will appear of a fine grass-green colour; add to it a little ammonia, and a blue precipitate will be formed; this will change to a purple-red in a few hours, and the addition of any acid will conve. *t to an apple-greem. QUINTUPLE TRANSMUTATION. Heat potassium over the flame of a spirit-lamp, and the colour will change from white to a bright azure, thence to a bright blue, green, and olive. COMBINATION OF COLOURS. Cut out a disc or circle of pasteboard, and cover it with paper half green and half black; cause the dise to be rapidly turned round, (like the shafts of a toy windmill,) and the colours will combine and produce white. UNION OF Two METALS WITHOUT HEAT. Cut a circular piece of gold-leaf, called “dentist's gold,” about half an inch in diameter; drop upon it a globule of mercury about the size of a small pea, and if they be left for a short time, the gold will lose its solidity and yellow colour, and the mercury its liquid form, making a soft mass of the colour of mercury. MAGIC BREATH, Half fill a glass tumbler with lime-water; breathe into it fre- quently, at the same time stirring it with a piece of glass. The fluid, which before was perfectly transparent, will presently become quite white, and, if allowed to remain at rest, real chalk will be deposited. - § º > f Y 30 TRANSIM UTATIONS. TWO BITTERS MAKE A SWEET. It has been discovered, that a mixture of mitrate of silver with hypo-sulphate of soda, both of which are remarkably bitter, will produce the sweetest known substance. WISIBLE AND INVISIBILE, Write with French chalk on a looking-glass; wipe it with a handkerchief, and the lines will disappear; breathe on it, and they will reappear. This alteration will take place for a great number of times, and after the lapse of a considerable period. t . § jì (; Jä. Tº ſº. JNſ JD S (O U JNſ IDs ~c£1%--> ARTIFICIAL MIRAGE. §§§º HE mirage is an optical phenomenon, produced \º º by the refractive power of the atmosphere. a sa ‘'Y'S, The appearance presented is that of the double image of an object in the air; one of the imageg being in the natural position, and the othel º ... " inverted, so as to resemble a matural object and its image in the water. The mirage is commonly vertical, or upright, that is, presenting the appearance, above described, of one object over another, like a ship above its shadow in the water. Sometimes, however, the image is horizontal, or upon the water; and at other times, it is seem on the right or left hand of the real object, or on both sides. All the effects of the mirage may be represented artificially to the eye. For this purpose, provide a glass tumbler two-thirds full of water, and pour spirit of wine upon it; or pour into a *w tumbler some syrup, and fill it up with water: as the water and 33 SIGHT AND SOUND. spirit or the syrup and water incorporate, they will produce a refractive power; then, by looking through the mixed or inter- mediate liquids at any object held behind the tumblers, its Inverted image may be seen. The same effect, Dr. Wollaston has shown, may be produced by looking along the side of a red-hot poker at a word or object ten or twelve feet distant. At a distance less than three-eighths of an inch from the line of the poker, an inverted image was seen; and within and without that, an erect image. * The above phenomena may likewise be illustrated by holding a heated iron above a tumbler of water until the whole becomes changed; then withdraw the iron, and, through the water, the phenomena of the mirage may be seen in the finest manner. Or, look directly above the flame of a candle, or over the glass of a lighted lamp, and a tremulous motion may be observed; because the warm air rises, and its refracting power being less than that of the colder air, the currents are rendered visible by the distortion of objects viewed through them. The same effect is observable over chimney pots, and slated roofs which have been heated by the sum. MoTION OF THE EYE. On entering a room, we imagine that we see the whole side of it at once, as the cornice, the pattern of the paper-hanging, pictures, chairs, &c., but we are deceived; for each object is rapidly, but singly presented to the eye by its constant motion. If the eye were steady, vision would be lost. For example, fix the eye on one point, and you will find the whole scene become more and more obscure till it vanishes. Then, if you change the direction of the eye ever so little, at once the whole scene will be again perfect before you. SIGHT AND SOUND. 35 SINGLE VISION WITH TWO EYES, As we have two eyes, and a separate image of every external object is formed in each, it may be asked, Why do we not see double The answer is, It is a matter of habit. Habit alone teaches us that the sensations of sight correspond to any thing extermal, and shows to what they correspond. Thus, place a wafer on a table before you; direct your eyes to it, that is, bring its image on both retinae to those parts which habit has ascer- tained to be the most sensible and best situated for seeing dis- tinctly, and you will see only the single wafer. But, while looking at the wafer, squeeze the upper part of one eye down- wards by pressing on the eyelid with the finger, and thereby forcibly throw the image on another part of the retina of that eye, and double vision will be immediately produced; that is, two wafers will be distinctly seen, which will appear to recede from each other as the pressure is stronger, and approach, and finally blend into ome, as it is relieved. The same effect may be produced without pressure, by directing the eyes to a point nearer to or farther from them than the wafer; the optic axes, in this case, being both directed away from the object seen. TWO OBJECTS SEEN AS ONE. On a sheet of black paper, or other dark ground, place two white wafers, having their centres three inches distant. Verti- cally above the paper, and to the left, look with the right eye, at twelve inches from it, and so that, when looking down on it, the line joining the two eyes shall be parallel to that joining the centre of the wafers. In this situation close the left eye, and look full with the right perpendicularly at the wafer below it, when this wafer only will be seem, the other being completely invisible. But if it be removed ever so little from its place, evº > * º-º-º- jº, º ſº, % | 36 SIGHT AND SOUND. iſ t either to the right or left, above or below, it will become imme- º diately visible, and start, as it were, into existence. The dis- | * \\ * -> e * tances here set down may, perhaps, vary slightly in different eyes. Upon this curious effect Sir John Herschel observes, “It will cease to be thought singular, that this fact of the absolute invisi- bility of objects in a certain point of the field of view of each eye, should be one of which not one person in ten thousand is apprized, when we learn that it is not extremely uncommon to find persons who have for some time been totally blind with one eye without being aware of the fact.” ONLY ONE OBJECT CAN BE SEEN AT A TIME. Look at the pattern of the paper-hanging of a room, a picture, or almost any other object in it; them, without altering your position, call to mind the magnificent dome of St. Paul’s Cathe- dral; the pattern of the paper-hanging, or the subject of the picture, though actually impressed on the retina of the eye, will be momentarily lost sight of by the mind; and, during the instant, the recollected image of the dome rising from the dingy roofs of London will be distinctly seen, but in indistinct colouring and outline. When the object of the recollection is answered, the dome will quickly disappear, and the paper-hanging patterm or the picture again resume the ascendency. STRAIGHT OBJECTS SEEN CROORED, Look through a series of vertical bars, as those of a palisade, or of a Venetian window-blind, at the wheel of a carriage passing along the street, and the spokes of the wheel, instead of appearing straight, as they naturally would do if no bars intervened, seem to *\ \ K22:=ss) \§ º SIGHT AND SOUND. 37 rye of a curved form. The velocity of the wheel must not be sc great as to prevent the eye from following the spokes as they revolve. Again, when the disk of the wheel, instead of being marked by a number of radiant lines, has only one radius marked upon it, it presents the appearance, when rolled behind the bars, of a number of radii, each having the curvature corresponding to its situation, their mumber being the same as that of the bars through which you look at the wheel. It is, therefore, evident that the several portions of one and the same line, seem through the intervals of the bars, form on the retina of the eye so many different radii. OPTICAL, ILLUSION, Shut one eye; direct the other to any fixed point, as the head of a pin, and you will indistinctly see all other objects. Suppose one of these to be a strip of white paper, or a pen lying upon a table covered with a green cloth : either of them will disappear altogether, as if taken off the table; for the impression of the green cloth will entirely extend itself over that part of the retina which the image of the pen occupied. The vanished pen will, however, shortly reappear, and again vanish; and the same effect will take place when both eyes are open, though not so readily as with one eye. PIN-HOLE FOCUS, Make a pin-hole in a card, which hold between a candle and a piece of white paper, in a dark room, when an exact representation of the flame, but inverted, will be seen depicted upon the paper, and be enlarged as the paner is drawn from the hole; and if, in a SIGHT AND SOUND. i dark room, a white screen or sheet of paper be extended at a few feet from a small round hole, an exact picture of all external objects, of their matural colours and forms, will be seen traced on the screen; moving objects being represented in motion, and stationary ones at rest. OPTICAL DECEPTIONS. Prick a hole in a card with a needle; place the same needle near the eye, in a line with the card-hole, look by daylight at the end of the needle, and it will appear to be behind the card, and reversed. º Prick a hole with a pin in a black card, place it very near the eye, look through it at any small object, and it will appear larger as it is nearer the eye; while, if we observe it without the card, it will appear sensibly of the same magnitude at all parts of the TOOIſle ACCURACY OF SIGHT. Rule a short lime upon a slate, and upon another slate rule another line, one-eleventh longer than the first: a person pos- sessing what is called “a true eye,” may perceive the difference in length, even though fifty or sixty seconds elapse between looking at the first and the second limes. If they differ only one-twentieth, then an interval of thirty-five seconds may elapse without destroying the judgment; but if it be longer the estimate will be incorrect. When the difference between the lines amounts only to one-fiftieth, an interval of three seconds between the examination of each, is the longest that can be allowed without interfering with the correctness of the comparison. SIGHT AND SOUND. 39 WISUAL DECEPTION. Let a room be only lit by the feeble gleam of a fire, almost extinguished, and the eye will see with difficulty the objects in the apartment, from the small degree of light with which they happen to be illuminated. The more exertion is made to ascer- tain what these objects are, as by fixing the eye more steadily upon them, the greater will be the difficulty in accomplishing it. The eye will be painfully agitated, the object will swell and contract, and partly disappear, but will again become visible when the eye has recovered from its delirium. HANDVWRITING UPON THE WALL• Cut the word or words to be shown, out of a thick card or pasteboard, place it before a lighted lamp, and the writing will be distinctly seen upon the wall of the apartment. IMITATIVE HALOES. Look at a candle, or any other luminous body, through a plate of glass, covered with vapour, or dust in a finely divided state, and it will be surrounded with a ring of colours, like a halo round the sum or moon. These rings increase with the size of the particles which produce them; and their brilliancy and number depend on the uniform size of these particles. Or, haloes may be imitated by crystallizing various salts upon thin plates of glass, and looking through the plate at a candle or the Sun. For example, spread a few drops of a strong solution of alum over a plate of glass, so as to crystallize quickly and co-er it with a crust scarcely visible to the eye. Then place | **.*.*.* *—-s-s #0 SIGHT AND SOUND. the eye close behind the smooth side of the glass plate, look through it at a candle, and you will perceive three-fine haloes at different distances, encircling the flame. TO READ A. COIN IN THE DARK, By the following simple method, the legend or inscription upon a coin may be read in absolute darkness. Polish the surface of any silver coin as highly as possible; touch the raised parts with aqua-fortis, so as to make them rough, taking care that the parts not raised retain their polish. Place the coin thus prepared upon red-hot iron, remove it into a dark room, and the figure and in- scription will become more luminous than the rest, and may be distinctly seen and read by the spectator. If the lower parts of the coin be roughened with the acid, and the raised parts be polished, the effect will be reversed, and the figure and inscrip tion will appear dark, or black upon a light or white ground. This experiment will be more surprising if made with an old coin, from which the figure and inscription have been obliterated; for, when the coin is placed upon the red-hot iron, the figure and inscription may be distinctly read upon a surface which had hitherto appeared blank. • S This experiment may be made with small coins upon a heated poker, a flat-iron, or a salamander. The effect will be more per- fect if the red-hot iron be concealed from the eye of the spectator: this may be done by placing upon the iron a piece of blackened tin, with a hole cut out the size of the coin to be heated. TO MAKE A PRISM. Provide two small pieces of window-glass and a lump of wax Soften and mould the wax, stick the two pieces of glass upon it, so that they meet, as in the cut, where w is the wax, g and g | ---, *. fºr * - g)==Cºg Ox=sº - ~ * ~~. } | SIGHT AND SOUND. 4l the glasses stuck to it, (Fig. 1.) The end view (Fig. 2) will Fig. 1. Fig. 2, show the angle, a, at which the º: pieces of glass meet; into which angle put a drop of water. To use the instrument thus made, make a small hole, or a narrow horizontal slit, so that you can see the sky through it, when you stand at some distance from it in the room. Or a piece of paste- board placed in the upper part of the window-sash, with a slit cut in it, will serve the purpose of the hole in the shutter. The slit should be about one tenth of an inch wide, and an inch or two long, with even edges. Then hold the prism in your hand, place it close to your eye, and look through the drop of water, when you will see a beautiful train of colours, called a spectrum; at one end red, at the other violet, and in the middle yellowish green. The annexed figure will better explain the direction in which Fig. 3. to look: here, e, is the eye of the spectator; p, is the prism; h, the hole in the shutter or pasteboard; s, the spectrum. By a little prac- tice, you will soon become S accustomed to look in the right direction, and will see the colours very bright and distinct. By means of this simple contrivance, white light may be analyzed and proved to consist of coloured rays, and several of its properties be beautifully illustrated. h. OPTICAL AUGMIENTATION, Take a glass rummer that iºnow at bottom and wide at top, l * SS-Fra-2a- * 2 §§22a+s_ - Q_x=sº —A— 42 SIGHT AND SOUND. into which put a half-sovereign, and fill the glass three-fourths with water; place on it a piece of paper, and then a plate, and turn the glass upside down quickly, that the water may not escape: by looking sideways at the glass you will perceive a sovereign at the bottom, and higher up the half-sovereign, floating near the surface. Fill the glass with water, and the large piece only will be visible. . GOLD FISH IN A GIASS GLOBE, A single gold fish in a globe vase is often mistaken for two fishes, because it is seen as well by the light bent through the upper surface of the water, as by straight rays passing through the side of the vase. COLOURS PRODUCED BY THE UNEQUAL ACTION OF LIGHT UPON THE EYES, If we hold a slip of white paper vertically, about a foot from the eye, and direct both eyes to an object at some distance beyond it, so as to see the slip of paper double, them, when a candle is brought near the right eye, so as to act strongly upon it, while the left eye is protected from its light, the left-hand slip of paper will be of a tolerably bright green colour, while the right-hand slip of paper, seen by the left eye, will be of a red colour. If the one image overlaps the other, the colour of the overlapping parts will be white, arising from a mixture of the complementary red and green. When equal candles are held equally near to each eye, each of the images of the slip of paper is white. If, when the paper is seen red and green by holding the candle to the right eye, we quickly take it to the left eye, we shall find that the left image of the slip of paper gradually changes from green to red, and the right one from red to green, both of them having the same tin during the time that the change is going on. W SIGHT AND SOUND. OPTICAL DECEPTICN, Look steadily at a carpet having figures of one colour, green fif | C# for example, upon a ground of another colour, suppose red, and § you will sometimes see the whole of the green patterm, as if the red one were obliterated ; and at other times you will see the whole of the red patterm, as if the green one were obliterated. The former effect takes place when the eye is steadily fixed on the green part, and the latter when it is steadily fixed on the red portion. COLOURED SHADOWS. Provide two lighted candles, and place them upon a table be- fore a whitewashed or light papered wall : hold before one of the candles a piece of coloured glass, taking care to remove to a greater distance the candle before which the coloured glass is not placed, in order to equalize the darkness of the two shadows. If you use a piece of green glass, one of the shadows will be green, and the other a fine red; if you use blue glass, one of the shadows will be blue, and the other a pale yellow. COLOURS OF SCRATCHES. An extremely fine scratch on a well-polished surface may be regarded as having a concave, cylindrical, or, at least, a curved surface, capable of reflecting light in all directions; this is evident, for it is visible in all directions. Hence, a single scratch or furrow in a surface may produce colours by the interference of the rays reflected from its opposite edges. Examine a spider's thread in the sunshine, and it will gleam with vivid colours. These may arise from a similar cause, or from the thread itself, as spun by the animal, consisting of several thrºads agglutinated together, and thus presenting, mot a cylindrical, but a furrowed surface. lº sº 44 SIGHT AND SOUND. - §§2: ~ * - _4_ * v=g - º OCULAR SPECTRA, One of the most curious affections of the eye is that in virtué of which it sees what are called ocular spectra, or accidental colours. If we place a red wafer on a sheet of white paper, and, closing one eye, keep the other directed for some time to the centre of the wafer, then, if we turn the same eye to another part of the paper, we shall see a green wafer, the colour of which will continue to grow fainter and fainter as we continue to look at it. | By using differently coloured wafers, we obtain the following results: warER. SPECIMIEN. Black . . . . . White. White . . . . . Black. Red . . . . . . Bluish green. Orange . . . . Blue. Yellow . . . . Indigo. Green . . . . . Violet, with a little Red. Blue . . . . . . Orange Red. Indigo . . . . . Orange Yellow. Violet . . . . . Bluish Green. BEAUTIFUL COLOURS OF MOTHER-OF-PEARL. This substance, obtained from the shell of the pearl oyster, is much admired for the fine play of its colours. To observe them accurately, select a plate of regularly-formed mother-of-peari, with its surface nearly parallel, and grind this surface upon a home, or upon a plate of glass with the powder of slate, till the image of the candle reflected from the surfaces is of a dull reddish white colour, when it will glow with all the colours of the rainbow. The \ #"> *-ºſ---wr- sº-25 § SIC; HT AND SOUND. 45 colours of lnother-of-pearl may be communicated to soft black wax; and to clean surfaces of lead and tim, by hard pressure or the blow of a hammer. Or dissolve gum arabic or isinglass in water, and allow it to harden upon a surface of mother-of-pearl, when it will take a perfect impression from it, and exhibit all the colours in the finest manmer. Or place the isinglass between two finely- polished surfaces of mother-of-pearl, and you may obtain a film of artificial mother-of-pearl, which, when seen by the light of a candle, or by an aperture in the window, will shime with the brightest hues. WHITE LETTERS SEEN FARTHER THAN BLACK. Paint the same letters of the same size precisely on two boards, the one white on a black ground, and the other a black on a white ground; the white letters will appear larger, and be read at a greater distance than the black. ARTIFICIAL RAINBOW, Observe the various colours which are reflected from the glass drops usually suspended from a lustre or chandelier, and you will witness a mimic rainbow. A rainbow may also be made by a garden engine, if the water be thrown high in the air, and the spectator stand between it and the sum. FRING E ABOUT A CANDLE, Provide two small pieces of plate glass, moisten two of their sides with water, and put them together; then look through them at a candle, and you will perceive the flame surrounded with beautifully coloured fringes: these are the effect of moisture, intermixed with portions of air, and exhibiting an appearance similar to dew. | | $6 SIGHT AND SOUNI). s f ***T -, * t 5 *- T- THE DOUBLE-COLOURED REFLECTION. * Provide a circular piece of coloured glass, and pierce its centre by means of a common awl, well moistened with oil of turpentine: encircle the glass with the fingers and thumb, hold it in the sum- shine or the strong light of a lamp, and the following beautiful effects will be produced. If the glass be red, the luminous spot in the centre will be reflected green; if the glass be green, the spot will be red; if blue, orange; and if yellow, indigo. LUMINOUS CROSS. Place a lighted candle before a looking-glass, and there will appear a luminous cross radiating from the flame of the candle. This is produced by the direction of the friction by which the glass is polished; the scratches placed in a horizontal direction, exhibiting the perpendicular part of the cross, and the vertical scratches the horizontal part. - RINGS OF COLOURS ROUND A CANDLE. Look at a candle through a plate of glass upon which you have gently breathed, or over which are scattered particles of dust, or any fine powder, and you will perceive the flame surrounded with beautiful rings of colours. By using the seed of the lycopodium, or by placing a drop of blood diluted with water between two pieces of glass, the rings of colour will be still more finely exhibited Round the luminous body there will be seen a light area, terminating in a reddish dark margin; this will be succeeded by a ring of bluish-green, and then by a red ring; these two last colours succeeding each other several times when the particles are of uniform diameter, as are the seeds of the lycopodium, each bf which is but the 850th part of an inch in diameter. : ºr ... -->sº * * * Lºº ...—--— ºr º- ºfJº -º- e. r Y . As ºs- Jºº Yº La *…—ºf *—xº~~~& jºr..…” JJ -ºtº-" % § sºr } º SIGHT AND SOUND. SIMPLE AND CHEAP OPERA-GHLASS. In this new instrument mo tubes are necessary, as in the ordi- nary opera-glass; their place being supplied by a slender, elastic, comical spring of wire, into the upper extremity of which is inserted the eye-glass; the object- glass being fixed to the other extremity, as shown in the engraving. The two glasses must, of course, be kept parallel to each other when in. use; which is very easily effected. In using this opera-glass, rest the finger and thumb of one hand on the rim of the object-glass, B, whilst, with the thumb and finger of the other hand you hold the rim of the eye-glass, A. The spring tube may then be drawn out or shut up to | very minute distances. Thus, the ordinary sliding tubes are superseded; nor is any external covering necessary, as the hand in grasping the instrument serves the purpose. If, however, a covering be preferred, a piece of silk may be sewn to the spirals of the spring. - This kind of opera-glass may be made very cheaply. It may be shut into a small space for the pocket, merely by pressing the object-glass and the eye-glass together. MULTIPLYING THEATRES. Place two pieces of looking-glass, one at each end, parallel to one another, and looking over or by the edge of one of them, the images of any objects placed on the bottom of the box will appear continued to a considerable distance. Or, line each of the four sides of the box with looking-glass, and the bottom of the box will be multiplied to an astonishing : Tº. - —g • - ... • - x § º 48 SIGHT AND SOUND. extent, there being no other limitation to the number of images but what is owing to the continued loss of light from reflection. The top of the box may be almost covered with thin canvass, which will admit sufficient light to render the exhibition very distinct. The above experiments may be made very entertaining by placing on the bottom of the box some toy, as sentry soldiers, &c.; and, if these be put in motion, by wires attached to them, or passing through the bottom or side of the box, it will afford a still more entertaining spectacle. Or the bottom of the box may be covered with moss, shining pebbles, flowers, &c.; only, in all cases, the upright figures between the pieces of looking-glass should be slender and not too mumerous, else they will obstruct the reflected light. In a box with six, eight, or more sides, lined with looking- glass, as above, the different objects in it will be multiplied to an almost indefinite extent. - - APPARATUS FOR WRITING IN THE DARK In this ingenious contrivance, A is a #7. frame of wood, into the back and front Wºw". of which are inserted two thin boards, the front one, B, reaching about half the height of the frame, and the back one w being movable, by sliding in grooves, ;\\ º for better fixing the paper to be written --- Hº A on, C, to a roller at top, with a handle and ratchet working into a spring. To use the apparatus, the paper is to be fixed on the roller, and a strip of lead, or other wight, suspended from the bottom of the paper, to keep it smooth: them, by resting the right hand - *-a- \ \\\y W. \ \ \\ \\ t =-r:E- - * * * * * SIGHT AND SOUND. . 49 on the edge of the board B, and turning with the left hand the ratchet, the distance of the lines may be regulated by the number of clicks caused by the spring on the ratchet. D, is a foot to support the apparatus, which, however, should be light enough to be held in the hand as a slate. PORTABLE WIICROSCOPE. This cheap-and useful instrument consists of a handle of hard wood, a, which is screwed into a brass piece, d, having at its top - a ring, with screws on back and front, into i which are to be screwed two cells with lenses of different foci. There is also a projecting piece formed on the side of the brass piece, d, in which is a hole to receive the screwed end of a cylindrical rod of brass, c. Upon this rod a springing slit socket, e, slides backwards and forwards, and is also capable of being turned round. This socket has affixed to it, on one side, a projecting part, with a screwed cavity in it, to receive a short screwed tube, with a small hole in its centre, made to fit the steel stem of the spring forceps; a corresponding hole being made at the bottom of the screwed cavity, where is lodged a piece of perforated cork; which, being pressed upon by the action of the screw, closes upon the steel stem of the forceps, and steadies them and the objects held in them. The stem of the forceps being removed from its place in the short tube; and the rod, c, with the sliding socket upon it, being unscrewed from its place in the handle; they, and the handle and lenses, can all be packed in a black paper case which is only three and a half - inches long, one inch broad, and half an inch thick. rº - zºº.º.º. 50 SIG-FIT AND SOUND. This microscope possesses three different magnifying powers, namely, those of two lenses separately, and the two in combi- nation. Microscopes of a still simpler nature are small globules of glass, formed by smelting the ends of fine threads of glass in the flame of a candle; and small globular microscopes of great mag- nifying power, made of hollow glass about the size of a small walnut, may be purchased very cheaply at the opticians’. THE PHENARISTICOPE, OR STOBoscoPE. This amusing instrument consists of a turning wheel, upon which figures are seen to walk, jump, pump water, &c. The disc or wheel should be of stout card-board, upon which should be painted, towards the edge, figures in eight or ten postures. Thus, if it is wished to represent a man bowing, the first position is a man standing upright; in the second, his body has a slight inclimation; in the third, still more; and so on, to the sixth posi- tion, where the body is most bent: the four following represent the figure recovering its erect posture; so that the fifth and seventh, the fourth and eighth, the third and minth, and second and tenth figures have the same posture. Between each of the figures on the wheel should be a slit, three-fourths of an inch long and one-fourth of an inch wide, in a direction parallel with the radii of the wheel, and extending to an equal distance from the centre. To work this instrument, place the figured side of the wheel before a looking-glass, and cause it to revolve upon its centre; then look through the slits or apertures, and you may observe, in the glass, the figures bowing continually, and with a rapidity proportionate to the rate at which the wheel turns. The illusion iepends on the circumstance that the wheel between each aper- -----z - - * zºº. z-- - sº §sº----> Tºsº.º. .xt:" Jº-gºvº - *~...~. --~~~~~~~ * ... * * & “ *** Fº - **** * - SIGEIT AND SOUND. 51 ture is covered, while the figure goes further. That the decep- tion may be complete, it is necessary that every part of the figures not bowing shall be at an equal distance from the centre of the wheel and from the slits; also that the figures possess equal thickness and colour. TO LOOK AT THE SUN WITHOUT INJURY. Provide a wine-glass filled with plain water, which will keep off the heat so effectually that the brightest sun may be viewed some time through it without any inconvenience. If a little black ink be added to the water, the image of the sum will appear through it as white as snow; and when the ink is still more diluted, the sum will be of a purple hue. BRILLIANT WATER MIRROR. Nearly fill a glass tumbler with water, and hold it, with your back to the window, above the level of the eye, as in the en- graving. Then look obliquely, as in the direc- tion E, a, c, and you will see the whole surface shining like burnished silver, with a strong metallic reflection; and any object, as a spoon, A C B, immersed in the water, will have its immersed part, C B, reflected on the surface, as in a mirror, but with a brilliancy far sur- passing that which can be obtained from quick- silver, or from the most highly-polished metals OPTICAL II, LUSION UNDER WATER. * Procure a large gallipot; place on the bottom, next the side furthest from you, a sixpence, and next to it, but towards the centre, a shilling; move to such a distance as will render the **** f § º' Sº- •xy ºw- **** ~x-E S㺠* *** Ös:=º SIG HT AND SOUND. coins invisible; them let another person pour water gently im, and as it rises in the gallipot, it will cause both the sixpence and shilling to be seen, without your approaching nearer to the galli- pot, or moving it towards you. + THE MAGIC WHEELS, Cut out two card-board cog-wheels of equal size; place them upon a pin, and whirl them round with equal velocity in opposite directions; when, instead of producing a hazy tint, as one wheel would do, or as the two would if revolving in the same direction, there will be an extraordinary appearance of a fixed wheel. If the cogs be cut slantwise on both wheels, the spectral wheel, as it may be called, will exhibit slanting cogs; but if one of the wheels be turned so that the cogs shall point in opposite direc- tions, then the ectral wheel will have straight cogs. If wheels with radii, f arms, be viewed when moving, the deception will be similar and however fast the wheels may move, provided it be with eo -velocity, the magic of a fixed wheel will be presented. Or, cut a card-board wheel with a certain number of teeth or cogs at its edge; a little nearer the centre cut a series of aper- tures resembling the cogs in arrangement, but not to the same number; and still nearer the centre cut another series of aper- tures, different in mumber and varying from the former. Fix . this wheel upon another, with its face held two or three yards from an illuminated mirror; spin it round, the cogs will disap- pear, and a grayish belt, three inches broad, will become visible: but, on looking at the glass through the moving wheel, appear- ances will entirely change; one row of cogs or apertures wil, appear fixed, as if the wheel were not moving, while the other two will appear in motion; and by shifting the eye, other and wew Cffects will appear. *Tºy--->{{# ~...At **.*. SIGHT AND SOUND. 53 - **** These amusing deceptions -were first experimented by Mr. Faraday. The simple apparatus for their exhibition may be purchased, for a trifling sum, of any respectable optician. ACOUSTIC RAINBOW, A sounding-plate, made of brass, nine inches long, and half a line in thickness, covered with a layer of water, may be employed to produce a rainbow in a chamber which admits the sum. On drawing a violin bow strongly across the plate, so as to produce the greatest possible intensity of tone, numerous drops of water fly perpendicularly and laterally upwards. The size of the drops is smaller as the tone is higher. The immer and outer rainbows are very beautifully seen in these ascending and descending drops, when the artificial shower is held opposite to the sum. When the eyes are close to the falling drops, each eye sees its appropriate rainbow; and four rainbows are perceived at the same time, par- ticularly if the floor of the room is of a dark colour. The experi- ment succeeds best, if, when a finger is placed under the middle of the plate, and both of the angular points at one side are sup- ported, the tone is produced at a point of the opposite side, a fourth of its length from one of its angles. An abundant shower of drops is thus obtained. TRANSMISSION OF SOUND. Suspend any somorous body, as a bell, a glass, a silver spoon, or a tuming-fork, from a double thread, and put with the finger the extremities of the thread, one in each ear; if the body be then struck, the apparent loudness and depth of the sound will be surprising. sº Again, if you shut your ears altogether, you will yet feel very ~ *--- Ş. $'. i Sºszºº; º SIGHT AND SOUND. sensible of the impression of any sound conveyed through the mouth, the teeth, or the head; if you put one end of a small stick or rod in the mouth, and touch with the other extremity a watch lying on the table, the beatings will become quite audible, though the ears be actually shut. So, also, if a log of wood be scratched at one end with a pim, a person who applies his ear to the other end will hear the sound distinctly. Fogs and falling rain, but especially smow, powerfully obstruct the free propagation of sound; and the same effect is produced by a coating of fresh-fallen snow on the ground, though when glazed and hardened at the surface by freezing, it has no such influence. Over water, or a surface of ice, sound is propagated with re- markable clearness and strength. Dr. Hutton relates, that on a quiet part of the Thames, near Chelsea, he could hear a person distinctly at 140 feet distance, while on the land the same could only be heard at 76 feet. Lieutenant Forster, in the third polar expedition of Captain Parry, held a conversation with a man across the harbour of Port Bowen, a distance of 6696 feet, or about a mile and a quarter. This, however remarkable, falls short of what is related by Dr. Young, on the authority of the Rev. W. Durham, viz. that, at Gibraltar, the voice has been heard, ten miles perhaps, across the strait. The cammomade of a sea-fight between the English and Dutch, in 1672, was heard across England as far as Shrewsbury, and even in Wales, a distance of upwards of 200 miles from the scene of action. - At Carisbrook Castle, in the Isle of Wight, is a well 210 feet in depth, and twelve feet in diameter, into which if a pin be dropped, it will be distinctly heard to 'strike the water. The Interior is lined with very smooth masonry. SIGHT AND SOUND. 55 PROGRESS OF SOUND. A. A stretched string, as that of a piano-forte, may be made to vibrate not only from end to end, but in aliquot parts, the portions being separated by points of rest which interrupted the progress of the sound. This kind of effect may be shown by shaking a long piece of came in the air, when there will be one, two, or three points of rest, according to the mode of vibrating it. An elastic surface has, likewise, some parts in motion and others at rest; and these parts may be made visibly distinct, by à strewing pieces of bristle over them upon the sounding-board of an instrument. i When a bow is drawn across the strings of a violin, the im- pulses produced may be rendered evident by fixing a small steel bead upon the bow; when looked at by light or im Sunshine, the bead will seem to form a series of dots during the passage of the bow. SOUND TURNING CORNERS. Take a common tuming-fork, strike it, and hold it (when set in vibration) about three or four inches from the ear, with the flat side towards it, when the sound will be distinctly heard; let a strip of card, somewhat longer than the flat of the tuming-fork, be inter- posed at about half an inch from the fork, and the sound will be almost entirely intercepted by it; and if the card be alternately removed and replaced in pretty quick succession, alternations of Sound and silence will be produced; proving that sound is by no means propagated with so much intensity round the edge of the eard as straight forward. Indeed, to be convinced of this fact, ; you have only to listem to the sound of a carriage turning a corner from the street in which you happen to be, into an adjoining one *-*- (JCFS:O : | ºś FI. º. Fº #ºn ºf . - - = ~~~ r - r * wº - r ,- 2-& 56 SIGHT AND SOUND. Even where there is no obstacle in the way, sounds are by mo means equally audible in all directions from the sounding body; as you may ascertain by holding a vibrating tuming-fork or pitch- pipe near your ear, and turning it quickly on its axis. TO TEI, L THE DISTANCE OF THUNDER. Count, by means of a watch, the mumber of seconds that elapse between seeing the flash of lightning and hearing the report of the thunder; allow somewhat more than five seconds for a mile, and the distance may be ascertained. Thus, say the number of seconds is 5)20 4 miles distant; or the distance may be estimated by remarking the number of beats of the pulse in the above interval; provided, of course, that we know the rate at which the pulse beats in a certain time. In a French work, it is stated that if the pulse beat six times, the distance of the thunder will be about 30,000 feet, or five miles and a half; thus reckoning 5000 feet for each pulsation. In a violent thunder-storm, when the sound instantly succeeds tne flash, the persons who witness the circumstance are in some danger: when the interval is a quarter of a minute, they are secure HEARING BY THE TOUCH, If a deaf person merely place the tips of his finger-mails on the window-shutters or door of a room in which instruments are playing, he may enjoy their concert of harmony. CONVERSATION FOR THE DEAF. If two persons stop their ears closely, they may converse with each other by holding a long stick between their feeth, or by --------" " s 2 | fºss = --- Tass==<5. -- .A. A SIG. HT AND SOUND. 57 resting their teeth against them. The person who speaks may rest the stick against his throat or his breast; or he may rest the stick, which he holds in his teeth, against a glass tumbler or chima basin, into which the other speaks. The sound may also be heard when a thread is held between the teeth by both per- sons, so as to be somewhat stretched. GLASS BROKEN BY THE VOICE, On vibrating bodies, which present a large surface, the effects of sounds are very surprising. Persons with a clear and power- ful voice have been known to break a drinking-glass by singing the proper fundamental mote of their voice close to it. Looking- glasses are also said to have been broken by music, the vibrations of the atoms of the glass being so great as to strain them beyond the limits of their cohesion. FIGURES PRODUCED BY SOUND. Stretch a sheet of wet paper over the mouth of a glass tumble, which has a footstalk, and glue or paste the paper at the edges. When the paper is dry, strew dry sand thinly upon its surface. Place the tumbler on a table, and hold immediately above it, and parallel to the paper, a plate of glass, which you also strew with sand, having previously rubbed the edges smooth with emery powder. Draw a violin bow along any part of the edges, and as the sand upon the glass is made to vibrate, it will form various figures, which will be accurately imitated by the sand upon the paper; or if a violin or flute be played within a few inches of the paper, they will cause the samd upon its surface to form regular lines and figures. SIGHT AND SOUND. TRANSMITTED WIBRATION, Provide a ſong, flat glass ruler or rod, as in the engraving, and tement it with mastic to the edge of a drinking-glass fixed into a wooden stand; support the other end of the rod very lightly on a === ==y piece of cork, and strew cº- Hº:== its upper surface with R&s==- ---------- - - - - and ; he glass in vi- ſº-ſº "...”..." ..."." lſ" bration by a bow, at a point opposite where the rod meets it, and the motions will be communicated to the rod without any change in their direction. If the apparatus be inverted, and sand be strewed on the under side of the rod, the figures will be seen to correspond with those produced on the upper surface. DOUBLE WIBRATION, Provide two discs of metal or glass, precisely of the same di- mensions, and a glass or metal rod; cement the two discs at their centres to the two ends of the rod, as in the engraving, and strew their upper sur- } faces with sand. Cause one of the discs, viz. the upper one, to vibrate by a bow, and its vibration will be exactly imitated by the lower disc, and the sand strewed over both will arrange itself in precisely the same forms on both discs. But if, separately, they do not agree in their tones, the figures on them will not correspond. CHAMPAGNE AND SOUND. Pour sparkling champagne into a glass until it is half fill, when the glass will lose its power of ringing by a stroke upon its s", - a 7 WY, § i - - &m C - x º, 2 ". sº $º £ ~e- .* ºf wº §: ** :*- :- 3º Så Sºº - . • lºs, * -ºo a -ºš fe * * *-*.NY ~...~ * *...* Afs * * * *i- - sº º * º º * * , * asºn.asººm. : -x- _r ~t SIGHT AND SOUND. edges, and will emit only a disagreeable and puffy sound. Not will the glass ring while the wine is brisk and filled with air- hubbles; but as the effervescence subsides the sound will be- come clearer and clearer, and when the air bubbles have entirely disappeared, the glass will ring as usual. If a crumb of bread be thrown into the champagne, and effervescence be repro- duced, the glass will again cease to ring. The same experiment will also succeed with soda water, ginger wine, or any other effervescing liquid. MUSIC FROM PALISADES. If a line of broad palisades, set edgewise in a line direct from the ear, and at even distances from each other, be struck at the end nearest the auditor, they will reflect the sound of the blow, and produce a succession of echoes: these, from the equal distance of the palisades, will reach the ear at equal intervals of time, and will, therefore, produce the effect of a number of impulses originating in one point. Thus a musical mote will be heard. THEORY OF THE JEWS-HARP, If you cause the tongue of this little instrument to vibrate, it will produce a very low sound; but if you place it before a cavity (as the mouth) containing a column of air, which vibrates much faster, but in the proportion of any simple multiple, it will then produce other higher sounds, dependent upon the reciprocation of that portion of the air. Now, the bulk of air in the mouth can be altered in its form, size, and other circumstances, so as to produce by reciprocation many different sounds; and these are the sounds belonging to the Jews—harp. $º, - Jr.” Ns y , ºn &r’ x^ Y “ ** , , | 60 SIG BIT AND SOUND. \ |ſ * i A proof of this fact has been given by Mr. Eulenstein, whe lº fitted into a long metallic tube a piston, which, being moved, Å' could be made to lengthen or shorten the efficient column of air l Dºll within at pleasure. A Jews-harp was them so fixed that it could be made to vibrate before the mouth of the tube, and it was found that the column of air produced a series of sounds, accord- ing as it was lengthemed or shortened; a sound being produced whenever the length of the column was such that its vibrations were a multiple of those of the Jews-harp. - IMUSIC OF THE SNAIL. Place a garden-smail upon a pame of glass, and in drawing itself along, it will frequently produce sounds similar to those of musical glasses. TO TUNE A GUITAR WITHOUT THE ASSISTANCE OF THE EAR, Make one string to sound, and its vibrations will, with much force, be transferred to the mext string: this transference may be seen by placing a saddle of paper, like an inverted v, (A,) upon the . string, at first in a state of rest. When this string hears the other, the saddle will be shaken, or ſall off; when both strings are in harmony, the paper will be very little or not at all shaken. MUSIC FROM GLASS OR MIETAL ROIDS, | Provide a straight rod of glass or metal; strike it at the en l in the direction of its length, or rub it lengthwise with a moistened - \ | finger, and it will yield a musical sound, which, unless its length be very great, will be of an extremely acute pitch; much more so • gº ST_*- $º: §º * * - º: :-( †: --- * ; SIGHT AND SOUND. 6 i - than in the case of a column of air of the same length, as in a flute. The reason of this is the greater velocity with which sound is propagated in solids than in the air. If the rod be metal, the friction will be found to succeed best when made with a bit of cloth, sprinkled with powdered resin; or, if of glass, the cloth or the finger may be moistened and touched with some very fine sand or pumice powder. Generally speaking, a fiddle-bow, well resined, is the readiest and most convenient means of setting solid bodies in vibration. To bring out their gravest or fundamental tones, the bow must be pressed hard and drawn slowly; but, for the higher harmo- mies, a short, swift stroke, with light pressure, is most proper. THE TUNING-FORK A FLUTE-PLAYER. Take a common tuming-fork, and on one of its branches fasten with sealing-wax a circular piece of card, of the size of a small wafer, or sufficient nearly to cover the aperture of a pipe, as the sliding of the upper end of a flute with the mouth stopped; it may be tuned in unison with the loaded tuning-fork (a C fork) by means of the movable stopper or card, or the fork may be loaded till the unison is perfect. Then set the fork in vibration by a blow on the unloaded branch, and hold the card closely over the mouth of the pipe, as in the engraving, when a mote of surprising clearness and strength will be heard Indeed, a flute may be made to “speak” perfectly well, by holding close to the opening a vibrating tuning-fork, while the fingering proper to the note of the fork is at the same time performed. §l - - - - §/> - ~. º - -- T. -- * -------- - - - §§§sº XJ’ `-Sº T- à * * • * - *. – 3:2 (T-Sº §- MUSICAL BOTTLES. Provide two glass bottles, and tune them by pouring water into them, so that each corresponds to the sound of a different tuming. fork. Then apply both tuning-forks to the mouth of each bottle alternately, when that sound only will be heard, in each case, which is reciprocated by the umisonant bottle, or, in other words, by that bottle which contains a column of air susceptible of vi- brating in unison with the fork. 62 SIGHT AND SOUND. THEORY OF WHISPERING. Apartments of a circular or elliptical form are best calculated for the exhibition of this phenomenon. If a person stand near the wall, with his face turned to it, and whisper a few words, they may be more distinctly heard at nearly the opposite side of the apartment, than if the listener were situated mearer to the speaker. THEORY OF THE VOICE. " Provide a species of whistle, common as a child’s toy or a sportsman’s call, in the form of a hollow cylinder, about three- fourths of an inch in diameter, closed at both ends by flat circular plates, with holes in their centres. Hold this toy between the teeth and lips; blow through it, and you may produce sounds varying in pitch with the force with which you blow. If the air be cautiously graduated, all the sounds within the compass of a double octave may be produced from it; and, if great precaution be taken in the management of the wind, tones even yet graver the greatest resemblance to the larynx, which is the organ of voice. A speaking-machine has been invented in Germany, with which may be brought out. This simple instrument or toy, has, indeed, STG HT AND SOUND. 63 have been distinctly pronounced the words, mamma, papa, mother, father, summer. This instrument consists of a pair of bellows, to which is adapted a tube terminating in a bell, the aperture of which is regulated by the hand, so as to produce the articulate sounds. SOUND ALONG A WALL. Whisper along the bare wall of an apartment, and you will be heard much further than in the middle of the room; for the trough or angle between the wall and the floor, forms two sides of a square pipe which conveys the sound. SOUNDS MORE AUDIBLE BY NIGHT THAN BY DAY. The experiment with the glass of champagne (page 56) has been employed by Humboldt, in explanation of the greater. audibility of distant sounds by might than by day. This he attri- butes to the uniformity of temperature in the atmosphere by might, when currents of air no longer rise and disturb its equilibrium ; as the air-bubbles in the champagne interfere with the vibration within the glass. Again, the universal and dead silence generally prevalent at night, renders our auditory nerves sensible to sounds which would otherwise escape them, and which are inaudible among the continual hum of noises which is always going on in the day time. - - MUSICAL ECHO. If a noise be made in a marrow passage, or apartment of regular form, the echoes will be repeated at equal very small intervals, and will always impress the ear with a musical mote This is, doubtless, one of the means which blind persons have of judging of the size and shape of any room they happen to be in, == 64 SIGHT AND SOUND. s VENTRILOQUISM. The main secret of this surprising art simply consists in first making a strong and deep inspiration, by which a considerable quantity of air is introduced into the lungs, to be afterwards acted upon by the flexible powers of the larynx, or cavity situated behind the tongue, and the trachea, or windpipe; thus prepared, the expiration should be slow and gradual. Any person, by practice, cam, therefore, obtain more or less expertness in this exercise: in which, though not apparently, the voice is still modified by the mouth and tongue; and it is in the concealment of this aid, that much of the perfection of ventriloquism lies. But the distinctive character of ventriloquism consists in its imitations being performed by the voice seeming to come from the stomach ; hence its name, from venter, the stomach, and loquor, to speak. Although the voice does not actually come from that region, in order to enable the ventriloquist to utter sounds from the larynx without moving the muscles of his face, he strengthens them by a powerful action of the abdominal muscles. Hence, he speaks by means of his stomach; although the throat is the real source from whence the sound proceeds. It should, however, be added, that this speaking distinctly, without any movement of the lips at all, is the highest perfection of ventriloquism, and has but rarely been attained. Thus, MM. St. Gille and Louis Brabant, two celebrated French ventriloquists, appeared to be absolutely mute while exercising their art, and no change in their counte mances could be discovered. - It has lately been shown, that some ventriloquists have acquired \ by practice the power of exercising the veil of the palate in such a manner, that, by raising or depressing it, they dilate or contract J the immer nostrils. If they are closely contracted, the sound pro- | | | S-º. . ss=} *... . . . . §s==<5. ***w- V-----sº re-- * Q==Cºg } |- == §5SE=5 FSS-Pa" *--— SIGHT AND SOUND. 65 duced is weak, dull, and seems to be more or less distant; if, on the contrary, these cavities are widely dilated, the sound will be strengthened, the voice become loud, and apparently close to us. Another of the secrets of ventriloquism is the uncertainty with respect to the direction of sounds. Thus, if we place a man and a child in the same angle of uncertainty, and the man speaks with the accent of a child, without any corresponding motion in his mouth or face, we shall necessarily believe that the voice comes from the child. In this case, the belief is so strengthened by the imagination; for if we were directed to a statue, as the source from which we were to expect sounds to issue, we should still be deceived, and refer the sounds to the lifeless stone or marble. This illusion will be greatly assisted by the voice being totally different in tone and character from that of the man from whom it really comes. Thus, we see how easy is the deception when the sounds are required to proceed from any given object, and are such as they actually yield. The ventriloquists of our time, as M. Alexander and M. Fitz- James, have carried their art still further. They have not only spoken by the muscles of the throat and the abdomen, without moving those of the face, but have so far overcome the uncer. tainty of sound as to become acquainted with modifications of distance, obstruction, and other causes, so as to imitate them with the greatest accuracy. Thus, each of these artists has succeeded in carrying on a dialogue; and each, in his own single person und with his own single voice, has represented a scene appa. rently with several actors. These ventriloquists have likewise possessed such power over their faces and figures, that, aided by rapid changes of dress, their personal identity has scarcely been recognised among the range of personations. 6 2 66 SIGHT AND SOUND. - Vocal imitations are much less striking and ingenious than the feats of ventriloquism. Extraordinary varieties of voice may be produced, by speaking with a more acute or grave pitch than usual, and by different contractions of the mouth. Thus may be imitated the grinding of cutlery on a wheel, the sawing of wood, the frying of a pancake, the uncorking of a bottle, and the gurgling noise in emptying its contents. ſé \| º * [. # - ſ. 2 s #). ſº ºš' É § * --- sº §: Cº- .3: | à sº - 㺠4/. - ~. §i) " *** *-*.* - & āşş ºğSNS sº §:ó - § Fº - ##$º '. º ſº º º i ſº ºr ~$ JT, T G JäIT AJNſ ID jāī Jā; /\, T., ~c31%--~~~~ FLASHES OF LIGHT UPON REVOLVING WHEELs. ameter; divide it into sixteen parts, and paint them alternately red and black. Provide a second circle or disc of the same size, and paint on it, in large characters, the words “At rest,” on a white ground. Connect both discs with the simple apparatus for causing them to turn round, used in the construction of a toy windmill. Next fill a basin with water, and provide a few small pieces of phosphuret of lime: darken the room, hold the discs over the basin, and turn them round; let the phosphuret of lime be put into the water, and bubbles of light will rise to its surface. If they come up slowly both discs will appear stationary during their turning round; but when the bubbles come up quickly, the black and red spaces will exhibit a dancing motion, and sometimes two black spaces will 69 * Sº _*" - —r-—Fºr A. º r— 70 - I,IG HT AND HEAT. eem joined into one, to the exclusion of the intervening red, and vice versä the words on the second disc will also cross each other in various directions, when the flashes of light interfere; and in both cases confusion will be excited by an impression being made on the retina before preceding impressions have departed. ! DECOMPOSITION OF LIGHT . Sir Isaac Newton first divided a white ray of light, and found it to consist of an assemblage of coloured rays, which formed an image upon a wall, and in which were displayed the following colours: red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet. Sir Isaac then showed that these seven colours, when again put together or combined, recomposed white light. This may be proved by painting a card wheel in circles with the above colours, and whirling it rapidly upon a pin, when it will appear white. Light may also be decomposed by the following beautiful ex- periment: Form a tube about ten inches long and one inch in diameter, of paper, one side of which is of a bright blue colour. This may be done by wrapping the paper once round a cylinder of wood, and securing the edges of the paper with paste. The coloured side of the paper must be the interior of the tube. Apply this tube to one eye, the other being closed, and on looking at the ceiling, a circular orange spot will be seen, which is the result of decomposition: the white light from the ceiling enters the tube, the blue is retained, and the red and yellow rays enter the eye, and produce the impression of Orange. SOLAR REFRACTIONS. The theory of solar refraction may be beautifully illustrated as follows: Put a shilling into a basin, and pour some water on it, when the silver will be refracted through the medium ; and if the LIGHT AND HEAT. 71 vessel be filled, you may withdraw to any distance from which the surface of the water will be visible, and, by the refraction from it, you can still observe the shilling. º IN CANTATIONS. Dissolve crystals of nitrate of copper in spirit of wine; light the solution, and it will burn with a beautiful emerald-green flame: pieces of sponge soaked in this spirit, lighted and sus- pended by fine wires, produce the lambent green flames now so common in incantation scenes: strips of flannel saturated with it, and applied round copper swords, tridents, &c., produce, when lighted, the flaming swords and fire-forks brandished by the demons in such scenes: indeed, the chief consumption of mitrate of copper is for these purposes. TO IMITATE THE LIGHT OF THE SEA. It is well known, that on dark, stormy mights, the sea emits a brilliant light, the effect of which may be thus imitated: Scrape off four drachms of the substance of putrefying fish, as whiting, herring, or mackerel, and put it into a white glass bottle, contain- ing two ounces of sea-water, or of pure water with two drachms of common salt dissolved in-it; set the bottle in a dark place, and in three days a ring of light will be seen on the surface of the liquid, and the whole, if shaken, will become luminous, and continue so for some time. If it be set in a warm place, the light will be brighter; if the liquid be frozen, the light will dis. appear, but will reappear on being thawed. lf more salt be added to the solution, the light will disappear, but instantly burst forth from absolute darkmess by dilution with water. Lime-water, common water, beer, acids, even very dilute sº I 72 LIGHT AND HEAT. alkaline leys, as pearl-ash or soda and water, will permanently extinguish this spontaneous light. - INSTANTANEOUS I,IGHTS. *, * > The oxygenated or chlorate matches are first dipped in melted sulphur, and then tipped with a paste made of chlorate of potass, sulphur, and sugar, mixed with gum-water, and coloured with vermilion: frankincense and camphor are sometimes mixed with the composition, and the wood of the match is pencil-cedar, so that a fragrant odour is diffused from the matches in burning. To obtain light, a match is very lightly dipped in a bottle con- taining a little asbestos soaked in oil of vitriol. Lucifers consist of chips of wood tipped with a paste of chlorato of potass mixed with sulphuret of antimony, starch, and gum water: when a match is pinched between the folds of glass paper and suddenly drawn out, a light is instantly obtained. Prometheans consist of small rolls of waxed paper, in one end of which is a minute quantity of vitriol, in a glass bulb, sealed up, and surrounded with chlorate of potass: when the end thus prepared is pressed so as to break the bulb, the vitriol comes in contact with the composition, and produces light instantly. For cigar-smokers, Prometheans are made with touch-paper: this ignites from the composition, and glows without flame, like a slow match; and as the wind will not extinguish it, a dry cigar may be readily lighted at it. - Lucifers and Prometheans must be used with caution, and should never be carelessly left about: by letting them fall upon a sanded floor, and being accidentally trod upon, they may take fire, and thus do great mischief. - ; / 1.- |- T.I.G.EIT AND HEAT, TO COLOUR THE FLAME OF A CANDLE, Take a piece of packthread, or cottom thread; boil it in clean water to free it from Salime particles, and dry it; wet one end, and take upon it a little of either of the salts hereafter named, in fine powder or strong solution. Then dip the wetted end of the thread into the cup of a burning wax candle, and apply it to the exterior of the flame, not quite touching the luminous part, but so as to be immersed in the come of invisible but intensely heated air which envelopes it. Immediately, an irregular sputtering combustion of the wax on the thread will take place, and the invisible come of heat will be rendered luminous, with a pecu- liarly coloured light, according to the salt employed. Thus, common salt will give a bright yellow; muriate of potass will give a beautiful pale violet; muriate of lime will give a brick red; muriate of strontia will give a magnificent crimson; muriate of lithia will give a red; muriate of baryta will give a fine pale apple green; muriate of copper will give a beautiful bluish green; and green copperas will give a white light. TO DIVIDE THE FLAME OF A CANDLE. Provide about a foot square of brass or iron wire gauze, of the fineness of thirty meshes to the square inch: lower the gauze upon the flame of a wax candle, which will mot rise through the meshes, but in its place will be the inflammable smoke of the flame: apply to this a piece of lighted paper, and it will be kin- dled, and the candle will burn with flame above and beneath the gauze. In this case the gauze so cools the flame as to extin- guish it; and upon this principle is constructed the Davy Safety Lamp, in which the light is suijºunded with wire gauze. 74 LIGHT AND HEAT. Q===º To vary this experiment, place a chip of camphor in the centre of a piece of wire gauze about a foot square, and hold it over the flame of a candle or lamp; when the vapour of the camphor will burn brightly upon the lower surface of the gauze, but cannot rise through it in consequence of its cooling power. Thus, the camphor lies upon the gauze in an uninflamed state, though it is sufficiently heated to yield inflammable vapour to feed a flame beneath. CANE WICK LAMP, Cut a piece of came about one inch long; set it upright in spirit of wine, with a small portion just above the surface: the spirit will then rise through the tube of the cane, which being lighted, will burn as a wick. CAMPHOR AND PLATINUM LAMP, Place a small piece of camphor, or a few fragments, upon the bottom of a glass, and lay upon the camphor a piece of coiled or pressed up platinum wire, heated in the flame of a lamp; when the platinum will glow brilliantly as long as any camphor re- mains, and frequently light up into a flame. PLATINUM AND ETHER LAMP. Put into a small hyacinth-glass a teaspoonful of ether, and suspend in it, by wire, a coil of fine pla- timum wire, first heated in the flame of a spirit-lamp; the wire will then glow with a red heat, and some me of it may become white-hot; in the latter case, flame W will be produced by the ether burning. LIGHT AND HEAT. FLOATING LIGHT. Cut a chip of camphor; light it, and set it on a basin of water, when it will continue to burm and float until it is consumed. SUBSTITUTE FOR A WAX TAPER, Steep a loosely twisted cottom skein in a solution of mitre; dry it, and it will readily kindle by the sparks produced from the flint and steel. If, however, the cottom be further prepared by coating portions of it, at regular intervals, alternately with sulphur and white wax, and the sparks be struck upon the sulphur, it will readily kindle, and as readily light the wax; and the flame will endure long enough for sealing a letter. PHOSPHORESCENT FISH. Place a very stale fish in a dark room, and it will give out a strong light, because of the numerous animalculae whose growth the putrefaction has promoted. THE LUMINOUS SPECTRE. Phosphorus in its pure state should be very cautiously handled; as, unless used very moderately, it will burn the skin. By adding to it, however, six parts of olive oil, it may be em- ployed with perfect safety. If every part of the face, except the eyes and mouth, which should be kept shut while applying it, be anointed with this mixture, it will give the party a most frightful appearance in the dark. The eyes and mouth will seem black, and all the other parts of the face will appear lighted with a sickly, pale-bluish flame. : º, . - *. Jºº. - 3.-- *** - - - Sº *...* 76 LIGHT AND HEAT. LIGHT, A PAINTER. Strain a piece of paper or limen upon a wooden frame, and Sponge it over with a solution of nitrate of silver in water; place it behind a painting upon glass, or a stained window-pane, and the light, traversing the painting or figures, will produce a copy of it upon the prepared paper or limen; those parts in which the rays were least intercepted being the shadows of the picture. EFFECT OF LIGHT UPON CRYSTALLIZATION, Place a solution of nitre in a small basin of water, in a room which has the light admitted only through a small hole in the window-shutter; crystals will then form most abundantly upon the side of the basin exposed to the aperture through which the light enters; and often the whole mass of crystals will turn towards it. This peculiar effect may also be seen in the crystals in camphor glasses in druggists’ windows, which are always most copious upon the side exposed to the light. EFFECT OF LIGHT ON PLANTS. Shut a plant up in a room into which light is only admitted through a small hole in the window-shutter, and set the plant out of the direction of this light; it will in a short time turn itself, and even grow downwards, that it may expose its leaves to the light. If plants be kept in darkness, they will soon become bleached; them, if they be exposed to the sum, for three, four, or five hours, the leaves and stalks will become as intensely green as if the plants had been reared in the sum. Again, if a lighted lamp be introduced into a dark room, wherein a plant has been shut up 9:=sº LIGHT AND HEAT. 77 and bleached, it will become green, and direct itself towards the lamp. If such a plant be removed from the room, exposed for some time to the sun, and them returned to darkness, it will no longer support the privation of light, but will fade and perish. INSTANTANEOUS LIGHT UPON ICE. Throw upon ice a small piece of potassium, and it will burst into flame. In one experiment, the operator pressed the potas- sium on the ice with a penknife, when the whole length of the ice became ignited. WHITE LIGHT FROM ZINC. As a substance for light, zinc is far superior to any of the metals. The light which it yields on burning is as bright as that of the sum, and as white, so that the eye can scarcely endure it; and the effect is much increased by the great quantity of silvery smoke which reflects the fire, and thus widely increases the sphere of illumination. Zinc may be used in thin sheets, or in filings. BRILLIANT LIGHT FROM TWO METALS. Wrap a small piece of platinum in a piece of tin-foil of the same size, and expose them upon charcoal to the action of the blow-pipe; when the union of the two metals will be accom- panied by a rapid whirling, and by a remarkably brilliant light. If the globule thus melted be allowed to drop into a basin of water, it will remain for some time red-hot at the bottom of it. BRILLIANT LIGHT FROM STEEL. Pour into a watch-glass a little sulphuret of carbon, and light it; hold in the flame a brush of steel wire, and it will burn beautifully. A watch-spring may also be burnt in it. LIGHT AND HEAT. -yº LIGHTED TIN. Place upon a piece of tinfoil a few powdered crystals of mitrate of copper; moisten it with water; fold up the foil gently, and wrap it in paper so as to keep out the air; lay it upon a plate, and the tim will soon inflame. JLIGHT FROM GILT BUTTONS, Provide a new and highly-polished gilt button, and hold it in a strong light, closely but obliquely, over a sheet of white paper, when it will present radiations exactly like the spokes of a car- riage wheel; the radiations being sixteen in number, and a little contracted in the centre opposite the eye of the button, and pre- senting altogether a beautiful appearance. LIGHT FROM A FLOWER. Hold a lighted candle to the flower of the frazinella, and it will dart forth little flashes of light. This beautiful appearance is caused by the essential and inflammable oil contained in small vessels at the extremities of the flower, which vessels burn at the approach of any inflamed body, setting at liberty the essential oil, as that contained in orange-peel is discharged by pressure. LIGHT FROM SUGAR, Simply break a bit of lump sugar between the fingers in the dark, and light will be produced at the moment of fracture. Or, if powdered loaf sugar be put into a spoon, fused, and kindled in the flame of a lamp, it will exhibit a fine jet of flame, #2-#ESS_ - - % \-ſ: A LIGHT AND HEAT. 79 LIGHT FROM THE POTATO, Place a few potatoes in a dark cellar, and when they become in a state of putrefaction, they will give out a vivid light suffi- cient to read by. A few years since, an officer on guard at Strasbourg thought the barracks were on fire, in consequence of the light thus emitted from a cellar full of putrefying potatoes. LIGHT FROM THE OYSTER, f Open an oyster, retain the liquor in the lower or deep shell, and if viewed through a microscope, it will be found to contain multitudes of small oysters, covered with shells, and swimming nimbly about; one hundred and twenty of which in a row would extend but one inch. Besides these young oysters, the liquor | contains a variety of animalculae, and myriads of three distinct H ; species of worms, which shine in the dark like glow-worms. Sometimes their light resembles a bluish star about the centre of the shell, which will be beautifully luminous in a dark room. LIGHT FROM DERBYSHIRE SPAR, Round, coarsely, some of the dark blue or the fetid variety of Derbyshire spar; heat it in a dark room, in a platinum spoon, over the low flame of a spirit-lamp, and the spar will shine with a beautiful purple tint. Pounded swinestone, calcareous spar, and powdered quartz, will also give out light, if strewn upon a fire-shovel which has been heated red-hot, and has just ceased glowing. A variety of fluor spar, found in granite in Siberia, will shine \ in the dark when warmed, with a remarkably strong phospho- LIGHT AND HEAT. rescent light, increasing as the temperature is raised. The light augments when the spar is plunged into water; and in boiling water, the spar becomes so luminous that the letters of a printed book can be seen in a dark.room near the glass containing it. Another variety of fluor spar, also found in Siberia, is of a pale violet colour, and emits a white light merely by the heat of the hand; and when put into boiling water, it will give out a green light. LIGHT FROM oystER’sHELLs. Put oyster-shells into a common fire; burn them for about hali an hour; then remove them into a dark room, when many of the shells will exhibit beautiful specimens of prismatic colours. RINGS OF LIGHT IN CRYSTAL, This is one of the most striking of optical exhibitions, and may be thus simply produced: Provide a sheet of clear ice, about an inch thick, frozen in still weather; let the light fall through the ice upon a pane of window-glass, or a polished table, and by placing a fragment of plate-glass near the eye as a reflector, the most beautiful rings of light may be observed. TO STRIKE LIGHT WITH CANE. Strike a piece of ratan came with a steel, and it contains so much silex, or flint, that it will exhibit sparks of light in the dark. CAUSE OF TRANSPARENCY. Moisten a piece of paper, and it will appear more transparent than when in its natural state; the cause of which is as follows: a |, ass=º | ~ LIGHT AND HEAT. piece of dry paper has its pores obstructed with finely interwoven threads; these are broken by the liquor, which also fills the pores as so many small tubes, and permits the light to pass through it; whereas the dry threads had hitherto prevented its passage. TRANSPARENCY OF GOLD, All bodies are more or less transparent. Thus, though gold is one of the densest metals, yet, if a piece of the thinnest gold leaf be held up to a candle, the light will pass through it; and, that it passes through the substance of the metal, and not through cracks or holes too small to be detected by the eye, is evident from the colour of the transmitted light, which is green. TINT CHANGED BY THICKNESS. Provide a piece of plaim and polished smalt-blue glass, such as sugar-basins and finger-glasses are made of. It should be of unequal thickness. Look through this glass at a strong light, as that from the crack of a window-shutter, in a darkened room, and, at the thinnest part, the colour will be purely blue. As the thickness increases, a purple tinge will come on, which will be- come more and more ruddy; and, if the glass be very thick, the colour will pass to a deep red. SHADOWS MADE DARKER BY INCREASED LIGHT. IIold a finger between a candle and the wall, and it will cast a shadow of a certain darkness; then place another candle in the same line with the other from the wall, and the shadow will appear doubly dark, although there will be more light in the room than before. Then separate the candles, and place them so p. as to produce two shadows of the finger, one partly overlapping the other, and that part will be of double darkness, as compared with the remainder. LIGHT AND HEAT. |i : Tº INIATURE THUNDER AND LIGHTNING. To imitate thunder, provide a thin sheet of iron; hold it by one corner between the finger and thumb, and allow it to hang freely by its own weight. Then shake the hand horizontally, so as to agitate the corner in a direction at right angles to the surface of the sheet. Thus you may produce a great variety of sounds, from the deep growl of distant thunder to those loud claps which rattle in rapid succession immediately over our heads. The same effect may be produced by sheets of tinned iron or tin-plate, and by thin plates of mica; but the sound is shorter and more acute. Partial flashes of lightning, aurora borealis, &c. may be beauti- fully imitated by taking in a spoon about a dram of the seeds of lycopodium, and throwing them against a lighted candle, all other light being excluded from the room. - A similar effect may be produced, by laying some powdered resin on a piece of paper, and fillipping it with the finger against the flame of a candle. THE BURNING GILASS, If, when the sun shines brightly, a piece of paper be held in the focus of the rays drawn by the burning-glass, it will take fire. This experiment succeeds best with brown or any dark- coloured paper: for, though the glass will collect an equal mum- ber of rays upon white as upon coloured paper, the white paper reflects the rays instead of allowing them to enter it; hence the white is not so soon burnt as the coloured paper, which, absorbing more light than it reflects, soon becomes heated and takes fire. MAGIC OF HEAT. Melt a small quantity of the sulphate of potass and copper in a spoon over a spirit-lamp; it will be fused at a heat just below t S-r- * F- *~. --> 5. ºš:=~5 =-3:2 LIGHT AND HEAT, 83 redness, and produce a liquid of a dark-green colour. Remove !he spoon from the flame, when the liquid will become a solid of a brilliant emerald-green colour, and so remain till its heat sinks nearly to that of boiling water, when suddenly a commotion will take place throughout the mass, beginning from the surface, and each atom, as if animated, will start up and separate itself from the rest, till, in a few moments, the whole will become a heap of powder. REPULSION BY HEAT, Provide two small pieces of glass; sprinkle a minute portion of sulphur upon one piece, lay thin slips of wood around it, and place upon it the other piece of glass. Move them slowly over the flame of a lamp or candle, and the sulphur will become sublimed, and form grey nebulous patches, which are very curious microscopic objects. Each cluster consists of thousands of transparent glo- bules, imitating, in miniature, the nebulae which we see figured in treatises on astronomy. By observing the largest particles, we shall find them to be flattened on one side. Being very transpa- rent, each of them acts the part of a little lens, and forms in its focus the image of a distant light, which can be perceived even in the smaller globules, until it vanishes from minuteness. If they are examined again after a certain number of hours, the smaller globules will generally be found to have retained their transpa- rency, while the larger ones will have become opaque, in conse quence of the sulphur having undergone some internal sponta- neous change. But the most remarkable circumstance attending this experiment is, that the globules are found adhering to the upper glass only; the reason of which is, that the upper glass is somewhat cooler than the lower one ; by which means we see that the vapor of sulphur is very powerfully repelled by heated LIGHT AND HEAT. glass. The flattened form of the particles is owing to the force with which they endeavour to recede from the lower glass, and their consequent pressure against the surface of the upper pne. This experiment is considered by its originator, Mr. H. F. Talbot, F. R. S. to be a satisfactory argument in favour of the repulsive power of heat. HEAT PASSING THROUGH GLASS, The following experiment is also by Mr. Talbot:—Heat a poker bright-red hot, and having opened a window, apply the poker quickly very near to the outside of a pane, and the hand to the inside; a strong heat will be felt at the instant, which will cease as soon as the poker is withdrawn, and may be again re- newed, and made to cease as quickly as before. Now, it is well known, that if a piece of glass is so much warmed as to convey the impression of heat to the hand, it will retain some part of that heat for a minute or more ; but, in this experiment, the heat will vanish in a moment. It will not, therefore, be the heated pane of glass that we shall feel, but heat which has come through the glass, in a free or radiant state. METALS UNEQUALLY INFLUENCED BY HEAT. All metals do not conduct heat at the same rate, as may bo proved by holding in the flame of a candle at the same time, a piece of silver wire, and a piece of platina wire, when the silve) wire will become too hot to hold, much sooner than the platina, Or, cut a cone of each wire, tip it with wax, and place it upon a heated plate, (as a fire shovel,) when the wax will melt at differ- ent periods. º * - º w §º S º º g-º º #º jº,IGHT AND HEAT. SPONTANEOUS COMBUSTION. Mix a little chlorate of potass with spirit of wine in a strong saucer; add a little sulphuric acid, and an orange vapour will arise and burst into “flame. INEQUALITY OF HEAT IN FIRE-IRONS. Place before a brisk fire a set of polished fire-irons, and besides them a rough umpolished poker, such as is used in a kitchen, or instead of a bright poker. The polished irons will remain for a long time without becoming warmer than the temperature of the room, because the heat radiated from the fire is all reflected, or thrown off, by the polished surface of the irons, and mone of it is absorbed. The rough poker will, however, become speedily hot, : so as not to be used without inconvenience. Hence, the polish of fire-irons is not merely ornamental but useful. EXPANSION OF METAL BY HEAT. Provide an iron rod, and fit it exactly into a metal ring ; heat the rod red-hot, and it will no longer enter the ring. Observe an iron gate on a warm day, when it will shut with difficulty; whereas, it will shut loosely and easily on a cold day. EWA.PORATION OF A METAL, Rub a globule of mercury upon a silver spoon, and the two metals will combine with a white appearance; heat the spoon care- fully in the flame of a spirit-lamp, when the mercury will volatilize and disappear, and the spoon may then be polished until it recovers LIGIIT AND LIEAT. its usual lustre: if, however, the mercury be leſt for some time on the spoon, the solid texture of the silver will be destroyed throughout, and then the silver can only be recovered by heating it in a ladle. A FLOATING METAL ON FIRE. Throw a small piece of that marvellous substance potassium into a basin of water, and it will swim upon the surface, and burn with a beautiful light, of a red colour mixed with violet. When moderately heated in the air, potassium takes fire, and burns with a red light. IIEAT AND COLD TROM FLANNEL. Put a piece of ice into a basin, which wrap up in many folds of flannel, and the ice may be preserved for some time by the fireside. ICE MELTED BY AIR, If two pieces of ice be placed in a warm room, one of them may be made to melt much sooner than the other, by blowing on & e & it with a pair of bellows. $. TO HOLD A HOT TEA-ICETTLE ON THE HAND, Be sure that the bottom of the kettle is well covered with soot; when the water in it boils, remove it from the fire, and place it upon the palm of the hand; no inconvenience will be felt, as the soot will prevent the heat being transmitted, from the water within and the heated metal, to the hand. LIGHT AND HEAT. INCOMBUSTIBLE LINEN. Make a strong solution of borax in water, and steep in it linen, muslim, or any article of clothing; when dry, they cannot easily be inflamed. THE BURNING CIRCLE. Light a stick, and whirl it round with a rapid motion, when its burning end will produce a complete circle of light, although that | end can only be in one part of the circle at the same instant. This is caused by the duration of the impression of light upon the retina. Another example is, that during the twinkling of the eye we never lose sight of the object we are viewing. WATER OF DIFFERENT TEMPERATURES IN THE SAME WESSEL. Of heat and cold, as of wit and madness, it may be said that “thin partitions do their bounds divide.” Thus, paint one-half of the surface of a tim-pot with a mixture of lamp-black and size, and leave the other half, or side, bright; fill the vessel with boiling water, and by dipping a thermometer, or even the finger, into it shortly after, it will be found to cool much more rapidly upon the blackened than upon the bright side of the pot. WARMTH OF DIFFERENT COLOURS. Place upon the surface of snow, as upon the window-sill, in bright daylight or sunshine, pieces of cloth of the same size and Tuality, but of different colours, black, blue, green, yellow, and white : the black cloth will soon melt the smow beneath it, and sink downwards; next the blue, and then the green; the yellow but slightly; but the snow beneath the white cloth will be as firm as at first. º *w- --~~~~ - *. a-ºº-º-º: * LIGHT AND HEAT. SUBSTITUTE FOR FIRE. Put into a cup a lump of quick-lime, fresh from the kiln, pour water upon it, and the heat will be very great. A pailful of quick-lime, if dipped in water, and shut closely into a box con- structed for the purpose, will give out sufficient heat to warm a room, even in very cold weather. ===- -— ...——-º-º: 7--> set-s , 3" w - <– - gºš Hil, T.I fºL s. Fºſſºs Fº # ºãº §ſº %22r. Ff ;| | § £S$ % |% ** § $2. • ; : Sºſſº: §gºlſ: º w sº 4. - * -º- *SS & : A º • 22, § } % º:§ºj% # º - G# / A § JA JNſ ID ST'Jä ſº JMI, LAUGHING GAS. ; HE above ſamciful appellation has been given to nitrous oxide, from the very agreeable sensa- tions excited by inhaling it. In its pure state Á it destroys animal life, but loses this noxious Y; 3) quality when inhaled, because it becomes º' blended with the atmospheric air which it meets in the lumgs. This gas is made by putting three or four drachms of nitrate of ammonia, in crystals, into a small glass re- tort, which being held over a spirit-lamp, the crystals will melt, and the gas be evolved. Having thus produced the gas, it is to be passed into a large bladder having a stop-cock; and when you are desirous of exhibit- ing its effects, you cause the person who wishes to experience them, first to exhale the atmospheric air from the lungs, and then Qj 2- - ?" > *-, 5-S 5s==<º • L' +-e-e— . 2 >º.:-Q | 92 GAS AND STEAM. - - - S quickly placing the cock in his mouth, you turn it, and bid him inhale the gas. Immediately, a sense of extraordinary cheerful- mess, fanciful flights of imagination, an uncontrollable propensity to laughter, and a consciousness of being capable of great muscular exertion, supgrwene. It does not operate in exactly the same manner on all persons; but in most cases the sensations are agree- able, and have this important difference from those produced by wine or spirituous liquors, that they are not succeeded by any de- pression of mind. THE LUMINOUS WAND, Cover a long slip of wood, halfway, with sulphur, by immer- sion while in a melted state. Having prepared a jar of nitrous oxide gas, as in preceding experiment, light the sulphur, and plunge the wand into the jar. The gas will extinguish the flame. Withdraw the wand, light it again, and when the flame is very brilliant, immerse it again in the jar. It will this time burn with | great splendour, and of a beautiful red colour. TO MAKE CARBONIC ACID GAS. Put about an ounce of marble in small lumps, into an eight ounce phial, with about an equal quantity of water; pour in a little muriatic acid, and carbonic acid gas will be evolved. CARBONIC ACID GAS IN WINE OR BEER WESSELS. The apparently empty or upper part of vessels in which wino or beer is working, is filled with this deleterious gas; for its great weight prevents its ascent from the fermenting liquid. A variety of striking but simple experiments may be made with the * .* *-ºw == - - — 5-G 2-2 -º- * *. GAS AND STEAM. 93 _* gas in this condition. Lighted paper, or à candle dipped into it, will be immediately extinguished; and the smoke remaining in the carbonic acid gas will render its surface visible, which may be thrown into waves by agitation, like water. In consequence of the great weight of the carbonic acid gas, it may be taken from a vat of fermenting liquor, in a jug or bottle, and in the latter, if well corked, it may be conveyed to great distances; or the gas may be drawn out of a vessel by a cock, like a liquid. TO EXTINGUISH FLAME WITH GAS. The effects produced by pouring carbonic acid gas from one vessel to another, have a very singular appearance: if a lighted candle be placed in a jar, and the gas be poured upon it, the flame will be extinguished in a few seconds, though the eye is imca- pable of distinguishing that any thing is poured out. EFFECT OF HYDROGEN ON THE VOICE. Make a hole through a wine cork of sufficient size to admit a smaller cork; through which make another hole, and fix it into the larger one. Tie the corks thus fixed into the neck of a bullock’s bladder, previously exhausted of air; let a tube from a bottle generating hydrogen pass very tightly through the aperture in the small cork, and the gas will distend and fill the bladder. The instant it is full, withdraw the immer cork, and either prevent the escape of the gas by means of the thumb, or cork it closely, till the operator is ready to breathe the gas; to do which, he should put the open cork into his mouth, and take one inspiration, when, on immediately speaking, his voice will be remarkably shrill. The effect will pass off in a few seconds. 2 84 GAs AND STEAM. MAGIC TAPER. Provide a piece of copper wire, about ten inches long, and fix at one end of it a piece of wax taper: take a pint bottle of hydro- gem, and place the mouth downwards; light the taper, introduce it into the bottle, and the gas will take fire, and burn slowly towards the mouth, where it is in contact with the air. If, how- ever, the taper be passed up into the bottle, it will be extin- guished; but, on gently withdrawing it through the burning hydrogen, the wick will be rekindled. This may be done several times in succession with the same portion of gas. - *-*. ------ “ THE GAS CANT) LEe Provide a strong glass bottle which will contain about eight ounces, or half a pint, into which put a few pieces of zinc.; then mix half an ounce of sulphuric acid with four ounces of water, and pour it into the bottle upon the zinc ; fit the mouth closely with a cork. through which put a metal tube which ends upward in a fine opening: the mixture in the bottle will soon tube. When it has escaped for about a minute, ap- ply a lighted paper to the tube, and the gas will burn like a candle, but with a pale flame. Its brightness may be increased to brilliance, by sifting over it a small quantity of magnesia. *. ^ *~. S--. GAS BUBBLES, Provide a bladder, fill it with hydrogen gas, to be made as for the last experiment, and fit the end of a tobacco-pipe closely into the bladder; dip the bowl of the pipe into soap and water, and, effervesce, and hydrogen gas will rise through the i GAS AND STEAM. by pressing the bladder, soap-bubbles will be formed, filled with hydrogen gas; which bubbles, or balloons, will rise in the air, and keep there for some time. GAS-LIGHT IN THE DAY-TIME, * Light a stream of hydrogen gas, and it will be scarcely visible in the daylight; but place in it a small coil of platinum wire, or project a little oxide of zinc through the flame, and it will become very luminous. MINIATURE BALLOONS, One of the simplest and most beautiful experiments in aérosta- tion, is to take a turkey’s maw, or stomach, properly prepared, and to fill it either with pure hydrogen gas, or the carburetted hy- drogen produced from coal. If the balloon be them allowed to escape in the open air, it will ascend rapidly in the atmosphere: but the best method of showing the experiment, is to let the balloon off a high staircase, and observe it ascend to the cupola or light, where it will remain near the highest point till the escape of the gas allow it to descend. The prepared maw for this balloon may be purchased of any optician. MINIATURE GAS-LIGHTING, Bicarburetted hydrogen is the primcipal constituent of the gas burned in the streets: it is procured from coal, and the process may readily be performed on a small scale. Put about two ounces of pounded coal into an earthen retort, and fix a glass tube into the neck, terminating in an aperture of one-fifth of an inch in diameter; heat the retort red-hot, and apply the flame of a tape, 96 GAS AND STEAM. ſº to the orifice of the tube, when the gas will burn with a bright white light, very different from that afforded by the combustion of hydrogen; a circumstance owing to the presence of particles ! of carbon in the carburet, which being intensely ignited are highly luminous. - - It is no less strange than true, that bicarburetted hydrogen, the substance which we so largely consume to illuminate our towns, is ether when united to water in one proportion, and spirit when combined with it in another; a fluid which constitutes the strength of all wines, beer and fermented liquors. . ...~~ Musical, GAs. ******* * ~ ------ Into a half-pint glass bottle, put some zinc, granulated by being melted in a ladle, and then poured gradually into water Add some sulphuric acid, diluted with eight parts by weight of water. Then pass a glass tube with a capillary bore through a cork, which you have 5 previously made to closely fit the bottle, and cork the bottle well. In a short time the atmospheric air will be expelled, and hydrogen gas will rise through the tube; you then apply a light, and the gas will become ignited. If you now hold another glass tube, about eighteen or twenty inches long and sufficiently wide to enclose the other tube very loosely, over the flame, (see engraving,) the little speck of flame will sport along the larger tube, and musical sounds will be produced, which may be varied by using other tubes of ... different dimensions, and made of different materials; the wide ibes forming the lower, and the marrow tubes the upper notes. | ºf 42. - r w w º: \ § - * ! .ii. 4. y f -- º - - - - -º …~...~ ***** - - 5&=2~5 * Tºss-ed: GAS AND STEAM. 97 MINIATURE WILL-o’-THE-wisp. Put a small piece or two of the phosphuret of lime into a saucer of water, when bubbles of phosphuretted hydrogen gas will rise to the surface, explode into flame, and cause a white smoke; repre- senting, on a small scale, the ignis fatuus, or will-o'-the-wisp, as seen over marshy ground, or stagnant pools of water. PHOSPHORIC II, LUMINATION, A light so brilliant that the eye can scarcely bear to contem- plate it, is produced by the immersion of phosphorus in oxygen gas. To perform this experiment, you place a piece of phosphorus in a copper cup, of the circumference of a sixpence, which is fastened to a thick piece of iron wire, attached to a cork which fits a bottle (as in the foregoing experiment) filled with oxygen gas. Set fire to the phosphorus, and quickly plunge it into the bottle; when the splendour of the combustion will be surpassingly beau- tiful. It is necessary to observe, that the heat is so excessive, that if the piece of phosphorus in this experiment be larger than a small pea, there will be great danger of breaking the bottle. COMBUSTION OF IRON IN OXY GEN CAS. Twist a piece of fine iron wire, such as is used by piano-forte makers, round a cylindrically-shaped piece of wood or metal, which will give it a spiral form; or a broken watch-spring, which may be bought for a trifle of the watchmakers, will answer the same purpose. Fasten round one end of it some waxed cottom thread or twine, and attach the other end to a cork, which fits a glass jar or bottle, that will hold a quart, filled with oxygen gas. Having made the wire red-hot by setting light to the thread, plunge it into K- — -- * *-e-e—g- ! * > . [. ‘... sº *a*sº - || --º-º-º: //| 98 GAS AND STEAMI. * & the bottle. Do not cork the bottle, but let the cork merely lie on the mouth, and to prevent its being burned, a small piece of lead should be fastened to the bottom of it. The iron will instantly begin to burn with great brilliancy, throwing out luminous scin- tillations. tº To prevent the bottle from being broken by the sparks, a small quantity of sand should be previously poured into it. GLOW WORM IN OXY GEN GAS, If a glowworm be placed in a jar of oxygen gas, in a dark room, it will shine with a brilliancy far surpassing that which it ex- hibits in atmospheric air. LUMINOUS CHARCOAL. Attach a small piece of charcoal to the end of a copper wire; make it red-hot, and immerse it in a jar of oxygen gas. The charcoal will burn with great brilliance, throwing out splendid scintillations. The bark of the wood converted into charcoal must be selected, otherwise there will be no scintillations. BRILLIANT COMIBUSTION IN OXY GEN. Place in a bottle of oxygen gas a lighted taper, and it will burn with a flame of increased brilliancy. Extinguish the taper immediately; put it into the same or another bottle of oxygen, and it will be again lighted provided a spark remain on the wick. Bend a piece of iron wire in a spiral form, and tie on to one end some cotton or flax; sprinkle some flour of sulphur on it, set it on fire, dip it into a bottle of oxygen gas, and beautiful corus cations will be thrown off the wire. GAS AND STEAM. FLAME FROM COLD METALS. Provide a bottle of the gas chlorine, which may be purchased of any operative chemist, and with it you may exhibit some brilliant experiments. For example, reduce a small piece of the metal antimony to a very fine powder in a mortar; place some of this on a bent card, them loosen the stopper of the bottle of chlorime, and throw in the antimony, it will take fire spontameously, and burn with much splendour; thus exhibiting a cold metal spontaneously bursting into flame. If, however, a lump of antimony be dropped into the chlorime, there will be no spontaneous combustion, nor immediate change: but, in the course of time, the antimony will become incrusted with a white powder, and no chlorine will be found in the bottle. Or, provide copper in fine leaves, known as “Dutch metal;’ slightly breathe on one end of a glass rod, about ten inches long, and cause one or two leaves of the metal to adhere to the damp end; then open a bottle of chlorine, quickly plunge in the leaves, when they will instantly take fire, and burn with a fine red light, leaving in the bottle a greenish-yellow solid substance. A small lump of copper, or “ Dutch metal,” will not burn as above, but will be slowly acted upon, like the antimony. Immerse gold leaf in a jar of chlorine gas, and combustion with a beautiful green flame will take place. PHOSPHORUS IN CHILORINE, Put into a deflagrating spoon about four grains of phosphorus, and let it down into a bottle of chlorime, when the phosphorus will ignite instantaneously. 100 GAS AND STEAM. dip it into oil of turpentine, drain it an instant, drop it into another bottle of chlorine, when it will burst into flame, and deposit much carbon. Or, fold a slip of blotting-paper into a match five inches long; CAOUTCHOUC BALLOONS. Put a little ether into a bottle of caoutchouc, close it tightly, soak it in hot water, and it will become inflated to a considerable size. These globes may be made so thin as to be transparent. A piece of caoutchouc, the size of a walnut, has thus been extended to a ball fifteen inches in diameter; and a few years since, a caoutchouc balloon, thus made, escaped from Phila delphia, and was found 130 miles from that city. TO INCREASE THE LIGHT OF COAL GAS. Lay a piece of wire-gauze upon the glass chimney of a com- mom argand gas burner, when the flame will be enlarged to twice its former dimensions, and its light fully doubled. If the experi- ment be made with a common argand oil-lamp, the flame will be often enlarged, but so discoloured as to yield less light GAS FROM INDIAN RUBBER, Put caoutchoucine, or the spirit distilled from caoutchouc or Indian rubber, into a phial, little more than sufficient to cover the d bottom, and the remainder of the phial will be filled with a heavy à vapour; pour this off the spirit into another phial, apply to it a i piece of lighted paper, and the vapour will burn with a brilliant flame --~~~~ --~ *~. x-º-º-TS-><\g. GAS AND STEAM. 101 ETHER GAS. Let fall a few drops of ether into a large drinking-glass, and cover it with a plate for a few minutes; during this time the glass will be filled with vapour from the ether, so that, on removing the plate, and applying a piece of lighted paper at the mouth of the glass, the invisible vapour will take fire; thus proving how readily a volatile fluid, such as ether, combines with the air. MAGIC WAPO UR, Provide a glass tube, about three feet long and half an inch in diameter, nearly fill it with water, upon the surface of which pour a little coloured ether; then close the open end of the tube carefully with the palm of the hand, invert it in a basin of water, and rest the tube against the wall: the ether will rise through the water to the upper end of the tube; pour a little hot water over the tube and it will soon cause the ether to boil within, and its vapour may thus be made to drive mearly all the water out of the tube into the basin; if, however, you them cool the tube by pouring cold water over it, the vaporized ether will again become a liquid, and float upon the water as before. . GAS FROM THE UNION OF METALS, Nearly fill a wine glass with diluted sulphuric acid, and place in it a wire of silver and another of zinc, taking care that they do not touch each other; when the zinc will be changed by the acid, but the silver will remain inert. But, cause the upper ends of the wires to touch each other, and a stream of gas will issue from them 102 -- GAS AND STEAM. INVISIBLE GASES MADE VISIBLE, Pour a little sulphuric acid upon some common salt in a saucel, Into another saucer put a mixture of about two parts of quick- lime and one of salammoniac, both in powder, adding to these a very small quantity of boiling water. Each saucer apart will yield an invisible gas: but the moment they are brought closely together, very visible vapours will be the result. LIGHT UNIDER WATER, Put into an eau de Cologne bottle two drachms of chlorate of potass, and upon that salt about a dozen chips of phosphorus, and fill up the bottle with cold water: provide a glass tube which will reach to the potass, through which pour half an ounce, by measure, of strong sulphuric acid, when a gas will instantly rise, give to the liquid a deep yellow colour, and inflame the phospho- rus in a striking mammer GASEOUS EVANESCENCE, Add a tea-spoonful of fuming mitric acid to two tea-spoonfuls of spirit of wine, in a cup, and the liquids will presently disap- pear in the form of vapour. WIOLET-COLOURED GAS. Put three or four grains of iodine into a small clean Florence oil flask, and close it with a cork. Warm the flask gently over a candle, or before the fire, and the iodine will become converted into a beautiful violet-coloured vapour, which condenses again into brilliant metallic crystals, when the flask is suffered to be- come cold. The experiment may be repeated with the same flask for any number of times. ...?" - Riº 2 & sº ---.” *ernºrrº *> wº *Sierº-ºs- GAS AND STEAM. 103 Or, upon a small sheet of any metal, place a few grains of Iodine, and add a chip of dry phosphorus ; when the latter will inflame, and the iodine pass off in a violet vapour. TO COLLECT GASES. Provide a moistened bladder, tie a piece of tobacco-pipe firmly into its neck, twisting it so as to expel the common air. This may be fitted to any vessel by means of the pipe, which may be fixed in the cork of a bottle containing gas, and closely luted with putty or clay, or powdered lime and white of egg. THE DEFLAGRATING SPOON, To introduce substances into gasses, a deflagrating spoon is required. It may be bought for half-a-crown; but an instrument equally useful may be made as follows: cut a piece of sheet cop- per somewhat larger than a sixpence, and bend it into a shallow, cup-like, form ; twist four fine brass wires, each nine inches long, tightly together, leaving an inch at the extremities, which must be spread to hold the copper, as the strings or chains of a balance support the scale-pan. To complete it, take a piece of sheet lead, the size of a penny-piece; make a hole through the centre large enough to admit the twisted wires, but at the same time retaining them firmly in their position: them, if the wires will mot rest in the lead by adhesion, the hole may be enlarged, the wire put in, and secured by a piece of solder. The spoon being then let down through the mouth of a bottle, the circular piece of lead rests upon and stops the mouth. what is STEAM 7 Invert a glass goblet over a cup of hot water, when the vapour or steam will be seen to rise in it, to condense upon the cold glass, | - * Yºs --- --- − º, *** *** º Sºad >E- --- -**tº: f - * e * >~3 tº. *ś --~~~r- Žiš. === ºr GAS AND STEAM. #. and then to run down its inside; thus showing that steam is va { porized water, and will, when the heat is abstracted from it. . become water again. * | THE STEAM-ENGINE SIMPLIFIED. The steam-engine is much more intelligible than its name at first suggests. That part by which the machinery is set in mo- tion, may be compared to a syringe or squirt, the rod of which is driven up and down by steam admitted above and below, one end of the rod being connected with the machimery to be worked. Thus, the piston is made to turn the wheels of a railway carriage, or the paddles of a steam-boat. - The elastic force of the steam, or vapour, by which the rod is driven up and down, may be explaimed by this simple experi- ment. Provide a test tube, put into it a little water, hold the thumb over the mouth, and cause the water to boil by holding it over a spirit-lamp. There will soon be felt a pressure against ‘the thumb; when, if the tube be dipped into cold water, the thumb being still held at the end, a kind of suction will be felt against it. Now, the tube resembles the cylinder of the steam- engine, in which the piston moves up and down ; to imitate which, wrap a little tow about the end of a piece of stick, grease it with tallow, and fit it moderately tight into the tube; when the water is made to boil, the stick will be raised, and when the end is dipped into cold water, the stick will fall as the piston | rises and falls in the cylinder. TO BOIL WATER BY STEAM, Nearly fill a retort with water, and boil it over a lamp ; then immerse the beak into a tumbler of cold water, and the disengaged * - -SS *~~~~ * * - - - - - --- * G AS AND STEAMI. 105 steam will raise the water to the boiling temperature, though it be at a distance from the source of heat. DISTILLATION IN MINIATURE. Fill a kettle with water, and set it on the fire; fix a long metal tube to the spout, and as soon as the water boils, the steam will pass into the tube, and being condensed into water, will drip at | the other end of the tube, which corresponds with the worm in the still; it soon, however, becomes as hot as the water, and f them the condensation will cease: but were the tube passed through cold water, as is the worm of the still in a tub, the whole water in the kettle might be boiled away, but reproduced in the tube, and colle&ted from it without the loss of a drop. This simple process resembles distillation, and the kettle and tube the still. k. | CANDLE OR FIRE CRACICERS. Provide a number of little glass bulbs, put into each a drop of water, and seal it up; if it then be put into the flame of a candle, or the fire, the heat will soon convert the water into steam, and cause the bulb to burst with a loud report. STEAM FROM THE KETTLE. Observe attentively the steam that escapes from the spout of a tea-kettle at the moment the water begins to boil, and you will perceive the steam to be condensed in minute drops on the inte- rior edges of the spout. A few moments afterwards, provided the water continue to boil, the spout of the kettle will become \ perfectly dry; and, at the same time, close to it, there will be \ a certain space, say from one-half to three-fourths of an inch, GAS AND STE.A.M. *. throughout which not a particle of steam will be perceptible. This may be easily explained. When the water in the kettle begins to boil, the spout being cooler than the steam issuing from it, a portion of that steam is condensed. As more steam escapes, the metal soon becomes as hot as the steam, will no longer con- dense it, and the spout becomes dry. By this time the steam will displace the air immediately opposite the orifice of the spout, whence it will issue dry and invisible. As it is cooled by mixing with the surrounding air, it assumes its well-known cloudy appearance. | º º W § §=#| || #º º Š: * s §: º º -* * f E. ;- 7.tſº§ º: #3.”.:- º,:} #º#. º ºÉ: 5---% sº te-- - | --- sº - s-C -2-2:- • * p--- “T –Z | l - º N-- & º º - º: * &º * * &º sº ---> º - * º §IIIſrººts R. * - ----º §ºººº; - §sº º º º º: sº º & IFIRT3, WATT3R, ANTID A.I.R., COLOURED FLAMES, VARIETY of rays of light is exhibited by co- loured flames, which are not to be seen in white light. Thus pure hydrogen gas will burn with a blue flame, in which many of the rays of light are wanting. The flame of an * oil-lamp contains most of the rays which are wanting in sunlight. Alcohol, mixed with water, when heated or burned, affords a flame with no other rays but yellow. The following salts, if finely powdered, and introduced into the exte- rior flame of a candle, or into the wick of a spirit-lamp, will communicate to flame their peculiar colours: - Muriate of soda, (common salt) . . Yellow. Mariate of potash . . . . . . . . . Pale violet. Muriate of lime . . . . . . . . . . Brick red. Muriate of strontia . . . . . . . . . Bright crimson, 109 & jºks ºn sº ... * * w } *** {s. 5s== * i D FIRE, WATER, AND AIR. : | Muriate of lithia . . . . . . . . . Red. Muriate of baryta. . . . . . . . . Pale apple-green. Muriate of copper . . . . . . . . Bluish-greem. Borax. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Green. Or, either of the above salts may be mixed with spirit of wine, as directed for Red Fire. YELLOW FLAME, Burm spirits of wine on common table salt or saltpetre. ORANGE-COLOURED FLAME, Burn spirit of wine on chloride of calcium, a substance ob- tained by evaporating muriate of lime to dryness. EMERALD GREEN FLAME, Burn spirit of wine on a little powdered mitrate of copper INSTANTANEOUS FLAME, Heat together potassium and sulphur, and they will instantly burn very vividly. Heat a little mitre in a fire-shovel, sprinkle on it flour of sul- phur, and it will instantly burn. If iron filings be thrown upon red-hot mitre, they will detonate and burn. Pound, separately, equal parts of chlorate of potash and lump Sugar; mix them, and put upon a plate a small quantity; dip a thread into sulphuric acid, touch the powder with it, and it will burst into a brilliant flame. Sº F Tāsº | ~\ z FIRE, w ATER, AND AIR. I 11 —-zº gº=sº Or, put a few grains of chlorate of potash into a table-spoonful pf spirit of wine; add one or two drops of sulphuric acid, and the whole will burst into a beautiful flame. THE CUP OF FILAME, Put a little newly calcimed magnesia into a tea-cup upon the hearth or hob, and suddenly pour in as much concentrated sul- phuric acid as will cover the magnesia; in an instant, sparks will be thrown out, and the mixture will become completely ig- nited. To prevent accidents, the phial containing the sulphuric acid should be tied to the end of a long stick. TO COOL FLAME BY METAL. Encircle the very small flame of a lamp with a cold iron wire, which will instantly cause its extinction. PROOF THAT FLAME IS HOLLOW. Pour some spirit of wine into a watch-glass, and inflame it; place a straw across this flame, and it will only be ignited and charred at the outer edge; the middle of the straw will be un- injured, for there is no ignited matter in the centre of the flame. Or, introduce into the middle of the flame one end of a glass tube, when the vapour will rise through it, and may be lighted at the other end of the tube. CAMPHOR SUBLIMED BY FLAME, Set a metallic plate over the flame of a spirit-lamp; place upor. it a small portion of camphor under a glass fummel ; and the cam- phor will be beautifully sublimed by the heat of the lamp, in an efflorescent crust on the sides of the funnel. Sºlº, *.*.*.*.*.* FIRE, WATER, AND AIR. GREEN FIRE, A beautiful green fire may be thus made. Take of flour of sulphur, thirteen parts; nitrate of baryta, seventy-seven ; oxy. muriate of potassa, five; metallic arsenic, two; and charcoal, three. Let the nitrate of baryta be well dried and powdered; then add to it the other ingredients, all finely pulverized and exceedingly well mixed and rubbed together. Place a portion of the composition in a small tin pam, having a polished reflector fitted to one side, and set light to it; when a splendid green illumination will be the result. By adding a little calamine, it will burn more slowly. BRILLIANT RED FIRE. Weigh five ounces of dry mitrate of stromtia, one ounce and a half of finely-powdered sulphur, five drachms of chlorate of potash, and four drachms of sulphuret of antimony. Powder the chlorate of potash and the sulphuret of antimony separately in a mortar, and mix them on paper; after which, add them to the other ingredients, previously powdered and mixed. No other kind of mixture than rubbing together on paper is required. For use, mix with a portion of the powder a small quantity of spirit of wine in a tin pan resembling a cheese-toaster, light the mix- ture, and it will shed a rich crimson hue : when the fire burns dim and badly, a very small quantity of finely-powdered charcoal or lampblack will revive it. PURPLE FIRE, Dissolve chloride of lithium in spirit of wine; and when lighted, it will burn with a purplish flame FIRE, WATER, AND AIR. SILVER FIRE, Place upon a piece of burning charcoal a morsel of the dried crystals of mitrate of silver, (not the lunar caustic,) and it will immediately throw out the most beautiful sparks that can be imagined, whilst the surface of the charcoal will be coated with silver. THE FIERY FOUNTAIN. Put into a glass tumbler fifteen grains of finely granulated zinc, and six grains of phosphorus cut into very small pieces, beneath water. Mix in another glass, gradually, a drachm of sul- phuric acid with two drachms of water. Remove both glasses into a dark room, and there pour the diluted acid over the zinc and phosphorus in the glass; in a short time, beautiful jets of bluish flame will dart from all parts of the surface of the mixture; it will become quite luminous, and beautifully luminous smoke will rise in a column from the glass; thus representing a fountain of fire. THE ARTIFICIAL CONFLAGRATION, Put into a small marrow-necked earthen bottle, half an ounce of muriate of ammonia, an ounce of camphor, and two ounces of highly rectified spirit of wine; set fire to it, and the room will seem to be in flames. This experiment should be performed in the dark. INFLAMMABLE POWDER, Heat a small portion of the gray powder of aluminum, and it will ignite, inflame, and burn with great rapidity. Or, blow a little of this powder into the flame of a candle, and it will produce a small shower of sparks, brilliant as those from iron filings. 10 Rºs is . . . . . . º. --- *C*.* - ~& ** Se::::::::-º’-- “… . . . . . , fºr § 3. …". º “ ** S-ºº. --~~~s: * § sº t Jº 14 FIRE, WATER, AND AIR. COMBUSTION WITHOUT FILAME. Light a small green wax taper; in a minute or two blow out the flame, and the wick will continue red-hot for many hours; and, if the taper were regularly and carefully uncoiled, and the room kept free from currents of air, the wick would burn on in this manner until the whole taper were consumed. The same effect is not produced when the colour of the wax is red, on which account red wax-tapers are safer than green; for the latter, if left imper- fectly extinguished, may set fire-to any object with which they are in contact. COMBUSTION OF THIREE METALS. Mix a grain or two of potassium with an equal quantity of sodium; add a globule of quicksilver, and the three metals when shaken, will take fire and burn vividly. TO MAIKE PAPER IN COMBUSTIBLE, Take a smooth cylindrical piece of metal, about one inch and a half in diameter and eight inches long; wrap very closely round it a piece of clean writing paper, then hold the paper in the flame of a spirit-lamp, and it will not take fire; but it may be held there for a considerable time, without being in the least affected by the flame. SINGULAR EXPERIMIENTS WITH GLASS TUBES. A most remarkable phenomenon is produced in glass tubes, under certain circumstances. When these are laid before a fire in a horizontal position, having their extremities properly sup- ported, they acquire a rotatory motion round their axis, and also a FIRE, WATER, AND, AIR. progressive motion towards the fire, even when their supports are declining from the fire, so that the tube will move a little way upwards to the fire. When the progressive motion of the tubes towards the fire is stopped by any obstacle, their rotation still continues. When the tubes are placed in a nearly upright posture, leaning to the right hand, the motion will be from east to west; but if they lean to the left hand, the motion will be from west to east; and the nearer they are placed to the upright posture, the less will the motion be either way. If the tube be placed horizontally on a glass plane, the fragment, for instance, of coach window glass, instead of moving towards the fire, it will move from it, and about its axis in a contrary direction to what it had done before; nay, it will recede from the fire, and move a little upwards, when the plane inclines towards the fire. These experiments succeed best with tubes about twenty or twenty-two inches long, which have in each end a pretty strong pin fixed in cork for their axis. AQUATIC BOMB. Drop about two grains of potassium into a saucer of cold water. It will instantly burst into flame, with a slight explosion, burn vividly.on the surface, and dart about with great violence in the form of a red-hot fireball. HEAT NOT TO BE ESTIMATED BY TOUCH. Hold both hands in water which causes the thermometer to rise to ninety degrees, and when the liquid has become still, you will he insensible of the heat, and that the hand is touching any thing. Then remove one hand to water that causes the thermometer to rise to 200 degrees, and the other in water at thirty-two degrees. I 16 FIRE, WATER, AND AIR. After holding the hands thus for some time, remove them, and again immerse them in the water at ninety degrees; when you will feel warmth in one hand and cold in the other. To the hand which had been immersed in the water at thirty-two degrees, the water at ninety degrees will feel hot; and to the hand which had been immersed in the water at 200 degrees, the water at ninety degrees will feel cold. If, therefore, the touch in this case be trusted, the same water will be judged to be hot and cold at the same time. FLAME UPON WAT'ſ R. Fill a wine-glass with cold water, pour lightly upon its surface a little ether; light it by a slip of paper, and it will burn for some time. ROSE-COLOURED FLAME ON WATER, Drop a globule of potassium, about the size of a large pea, into a small cup nearly full of water, containing a drop or two of strong mitric acid; the moment that the metal touches the liquid, it will float upon its surface, enveloped with a beautiful rose- coloured flame, and entirely dissolve. TO SET A MIXTURE ON FIRE WITH WATER, Pour into a saucer a little sulphuric acid, and place upon it a chip of sodium, which will float and remain uninflamed; but the addition of a drop of water will set it on fire. § 2, WAVES OF FIRE ON WATER." \. On a lump of refined sugar let fall a few drops of phos. phuretted ether, and put the sugar into a glass of warm water. | | FIRE, WATER, AND AIR. 1 1 7 which will instantly appear on fire at the surface, and in waves, if gently blown with the breath. This experiment should be exhibited in the dark. - ** EXPLOSION IN WATER, Throw very small pieces of phosphuret of potassium into a basin of water, and they will produce separate explosions. The same substance will also burn with great brilliancy, when exposed to air. WATER FROM THE FLAME OF A CANDLE. Hold a cold and dry bell-glass over a lighted candle, and watery vapour will be directly condensed on the cold surface; then close the mouth of the glass with a card or plate, and turn the mouth uppermost; remove the card, quickly pour in a little lime-water, a perfectly clear liquid, and it will instantly become turbid and milky, upon meeting with the contents of the glass, iust as lime-water changes when dropped into a glass of water. FORMATION OF WATER BY FIRE. Put into a tea-eup a little spirit of wine, set it on fire, and in- vert a large bell-glass over it. In a short time, a thick watery vapour will be seen upon the inside of the bell, which may be collected by a dry sponge. BOIR.ING UPON COLD WATER, Provide a tall glass jar, filled with cold water, and place in it an air thermometer, which will nearly reach the surface; upon the surface place a small copper basin, into which put a little live charcoal; the surface of the water will soon be made to boil, te. sº - - §ss=º VT-S –-ºº--> ÖSSEE-C *\,. -A 18 FIRE, WATER, AND AIR. -a-rº Tºs-> while the thermometer will show that the water beneath is scarcely warmer than it was at first. CURRENTS IN BOILING WATER. Fill, a large glass tube with water, and throw into it a few particles of bruised amber; then hold the tube by a handle for the purpose, upright in the flame of a lamp, and as the water becomes warm, it will be seen that currents, carrying with them the pieces of amber, will begin to ascend in the centre, and to descend towards the circumference of the tube. These currents will soon become rapid in their motions, and continue till the water boils. HOT WATER LIGHTER THAN COLD. Pour into a glass tube, about ten inches long, and one inch in diameter, a little water coloured with pink or other dye; then fill it up gradually and carefully with colourless water, so as not to mix them ; apply heat at the bottom of the tube, and the coloured water will ascend and be diffused throughout the whole. The circulation of warm water may be very pleasingly shown by heating water in a tube similar to the foregoing; the water having diffused in it some particles of amber, or other light sub- stance not soluble in water. EXPANSION OF WATER BY COLD, All fluids except water diminish in bulk till they freeze. Thus, fill a largethermometer tube with water, say of the temperature of eighty degrees, and then plunge the bulb into pounded ice and salt, or any other freezing mixture: the water will go on shrinking in the tube till it has attained the temperature of about forty degrees; and then, instead of continuing to contract till it freezes, (as is the case ğs=== : :"... :-. “ t §§º:=5& sº -- & *...* º, *: \ | > → • *---~~~~ * • **** • * FIRE, water, AND AIR. 1 19 - ..." r with all other liquids,) it will be seen slowly to expand and con- sequently to rise in the tube until it congeals. In this case, the expansion below forty degrees and above forty degrees, seems to be equal: so that the water will be of the same bulk at thirty- two degrees as at forty-eight degrees, that is, at eight degrees above or below forty degrees. THE CUP OF TANTALUS, This pretty toy may be purchased at any optician’s for two or three shillings. It consists of a cup, in which is placed a standing human figure concealing a syphon, or bent tube with one end longer than the other. This rises in one leg of the figure to reach the chin, and descends through the other leg through the bottom of the cup to a reservoir beneath. If you pour water in the cup it will rise in the shorter leg by its upward pressure, driving out the air before it through the longer leg; and when the cup is filled above the bend of the syphon, (that is, level with the chim of the figure,) the pressure of the water will force it over into the longer leg of the syphon, and the cup will be emptied : the toy thus imitating Tantalus of mythology, who is represented by the poets as punished in Erebus with an insatia- ble thirst, and placed up to the chin in a pool of water, which, thowever, flowed away as soon as he aftempted to taste it. IMITATIVE DIVING BELL. Nearly fill a basin with water, and put upon its surface a float- ing lighted wick or taper; over this place a glass goblet, mouth O downwards, and push it into the water, which will be kept out, whilst the wick will continue to float and burn under the goblet; thus imitating the living inmate of a diving bell, which is merely a larger goblet, with a man instead of a candle within it. –2 ~) sº _ºf_ | \| \ -, 120 FIRE, WATER, AND AIR. * * THE WATERPROOF SIEVE, Fill a very fine wire-gauze sieve with water, and it will not run through the interstices, but be retained among them by ca- pillary attraction. MORE THAN FULL, Fill a glass to the brim with water, and you may add to it spirit of wine without causing the water to overflow, as the spirit will enter into the pores of the water. TO CAUSE WINE AND WATER TO CHANGE PLACES, Fill a small marrow-necked bulb with port wine, or with water and coloured spirit of wine, and put the bulb into a tall, narrow glass jar, which is them to be filled up with cold water; imme- diately the coloured fluid will issue from the bulb, and accumu- late on the surface of the water in the jar, while colourless water will be seen accumulating at the bottom of the bulb. By close inspection, the descending current of the water may also be ob- served, and the coloured and the colourless liquids be seen to pass each other in the marrow neck of the bulb without mixing. The whole of the coloured fluid will shortly have ascended, and the bulb will be entirely filled with clear water. PYRAMID OF ALUM. Put a lump of alum into a tumbler of water, and, as the alum dissolves, it will assume the shape of a pyramid. The cause of the alum decreasing in this peculiar form is briefly as follows: at first, the water dissolves the alum very fast, but as the alum becomes united with the water, the solvent power of the latter diminishes. The water, which combines first with the alum, bes 5s==__ \ \-º ++, W-5, FIRE, WATER, AND . AIR. 121 |º f | ſ N \ eomes heavier by the union, and falls to the bottom of the glass where it ceases to dissolve any more, although the water which it has displaced from the bottom has risen to the top of the glass, fi and is there acting upon the alum. When the solution has nearly | terminated, if you closely examine the lump, you will find it covered with geometrical figures, cut out, as it were, in relief, upon the mass; showing, not only that the cohesion of the atoms of the alum resists the power of solution in the water, but that, in the present instance, it resists it more in some directions than in others. Indeed this experiment beautifully illustrates the opposite action of cohesion and repulsion. º !*- VISIBLE VIBRATION, Provide a glass goblet about two-thirds filled with coloured water, draw a fiddle-bow against its edge, and the surface of the water will exhibit a pleasing figure, composed of fans, four, six, or eight in number, dependant on the dimensions of the vessel, but chiefly on the pitch of the mote produced. Or, nearly fill a glass with water, draw the bow strongly against its edge, the water will be ele- vated and depressed; and, when the vibration has ceased, and the surface of the water has become tranquil, these elevations will be exhibited in the form of a curved line, passing round the interior surface of the glass, and above the surface of the water. If the action of the bow be strong, the ſº water will be sprinkled on the inside of the glass, above the liquid surface, and this sprinkling will show the curved line very per- fectly, as in the engraving. The water should be carefully poured, so that the glass above, he liquid be preserved dry ; the *Q===s. . . \- § ~~~~~~ * - * 2- : *** - i r- | 122 FIRE, WATER, AND AIR. portion of the glass between the edge and the curved line, will then be seen partially sprinkled; but between the level of the water and the curved line, it will have become wholly wetted thereby indicating the height to which the fluid has been thrown CHARCOAL IN SUGAR. The elements of sugar are carbon and water, as may be proved by the following experiment: Put into a glass a table-spoonful of powdered sugar, and mix it into a thin paste with a little water, and rather more than its bulk of sulphuric acid; stir the mixture together, the sugar will soon blacken, froth up, and shoot like a cauliflower out of the glass: and, during the separation of the charcoal, a large quantity of steam will also be evolved. FLOATING NEEDLES. Fill a cup with water, gently lay on its surface small fine meedies, and they will float. WATER IN A SLING, Half fill a mug with water, place it in a sling, and you may whirl it around you without spilling a drop ; for the water tends more away from the centre of motion towards the bottom of the mug, than towards the earth by gravity. ATTRACTION IN A GILASS OF WATER, Pour water into a glass tumbler, perfectly dry, and it may be raised above the edge, in a convex form; because the particles of the water have more attraction for each other than for the dry glass; wet the edge, and they will be instantly attracted and overflow, and the water will sink into a concave form. |VD 85s=<5% § & I at w TO PREVENT CORK FLOATING IN WATER. Place at the bottom of a vessel of water, a piece of cork, so, smoothly cut that no water gets between its lower surface and the surface of the bottom, when it will not rise, but remain fixed there, because it is pressed downward by the water from above, and there is no pressure from below to counterbalance it. INSTANTANEOUS FREEZING. During frosty weather, let a vessel be half filled with water, cover it closely, and place it in the open air, in a situation where it will mot experience any commotion: it will thereby frequently acquire a degree of cold more intense than that of ice, without being frozen. If the vessel, however, be agitated ever so little, or receive even a slight blow, the water will immediately freeze with singular rapidity. The cause of this phenomenon is, that water does not congeal umless its particles unite together, and assume among themselves a new arrangement. The colder the water becomes, the mearer its particles approach each other; and the fluid which keeps it in fusion gradually escapes; but the shaking of the vessel destroys the equilibrium, and the particles fall one upon another, uniting in a mass of ice. Or, provide a glass full of cold water, and let fall on its surface a few drops of sulphuret of carbon, which will instantly become covered with icy metwork: feathery branches will them dart from the sulphuret, the whole contents of the glass will become solidi- fied, and the globules will exhibit all the colours of the rainbow. TO FREEZE WATER WITH ETHER. Fill a very thin glass tube with water. Close it at one end, and wrap muslim round it: then frequently immerse the tube in FIRE, WATER, AND AIR. 123 | Öss=|lº *YY-ºr gº=sg §: … -- SSS .* *=sº l 24 FIRE, WATER, AND AIR. ---ze * strong ether, allowing what the muslin soaks each time to evapo. rate, and in a short time the water will be frozem. PRODUCTION OF NITRE. Dip a piece of paper into a filtered solution of saltpetre: if its colour be changed to brown, a drop or two more of acid must be cautiously applied: if, on the contrary, it reddems litmus paper, a small globule or two of potassium will be required; the object being to obtain a neutral solution: if it them be carefully evapo- rated to about half its bulk, and set aside, beautiful crystals will begin to form, which will be those of the nitrate of potash, com- monly called mitre or saltpetre. CURIOUS TRANSPOSITION, Take a glass of jelly, and place it mouth downward, just under the surface of warm water in a basin: the jelly will soon be dis- solved by the heat, and, being heavier than the water, it will sink. while the glass will be filled with water in its stead. ANIMAL BAROMETER. Keep one or two leeches in a glass bottle nearly filled with water; tie the mouth over with coarse linen, and change the water every two or three days. The leech may them serve for a barometer, as it will invariably ascend or descend in the water as the weather changes from dry to wet; and it will generally come to the surface prior to a thunder-storm. MAGIC SOAP. \ Pour into a phial a small quantity of oil, with the same of water, and, however violently you shake them, they cannot be K ;| | -- zºº ss== tº. ><-tº--t º, J --º->" V-2; (- *. ... --G--º-º: — * zººs Q -- -ºxº-rºº. " gºg) arº -* - ~--. º r)\} - *—-º-º: \- * | FIRE, WATER, AND AIR. 12b mixed, for the water and oil have no affinity for each other; but, j if a little ammonia be added, and the phial be then shaken, the # | whole will be mixed into a liquid soap. # EQUAL PRESSURE OF WATER. Tie up in a bladder of water, an egg and a piece of very soft wax, and place it in a box, so as to touch its sides and bottom; then lay loosely upon the bladder a brass or other metal plate, upon which place a hundred pounds weight, or more; when the - egg and the wax, though pressed by the water with all its weight, : being equally pressed in all directions, will not be in the least either crushed or altered in shape. d TO EMPTY A. GI, ASS UNDER WATER. Fill a wine-glass with water, place over its mouth a card, so as to prevent the water from escaping, and put the glass, mouth - downwards, into a basin of water. Next, remove the card, and : raise the glass partly above the surface, but keep its mouth below the surface, so that the glass still remains completely filled with water. Then insert one end of a quill or reed in the water below the mouth of the glass, and blow gently at the other end, whem air will ascend in bubbles to the highest part of the glass, and expel the water from it; and, if you continue to blow through the quill, all the water will be emptied from the glass, which will be filled with air. - TO EMPTY A GLASS OF WATER WITHOUT TOUCHING IT, Hang over the edge of the glass a thick skeim of cotton, and the water will slowly be decreased till the glass is empty. A ‘owel will empty a basin of water in the same way. wº s:---------- 126 FIRE, WATER, AND AIR. DECOMPOSITION OF WATER, The readiest means of decomposing water is as follows. take a gun-barrel, the breech of which has been removed, and fill it with iron wire, coiled up. Place it across a chafingdish filled with lighted charcoal, and comméct to one end of the barrel a small glass retort, containing some water, and to the other a bent tube, opening under the shelf of a water bath. Heat the barrel red-hot, and apply a lamp under the retort: the stream of water, in pass- ing over the red-hot iron of the barrel, will be decomposed, the oxygen will unite with the iron, and the hydrogen may be col- lected in the form of gas at the end of the tube over the water. WATER HEAVIER THAN WINE. Let a tumbler be half-filled with water, and fit upon its surface a piece of white paper, upon which pour wine; then carefully draw out the paper, say with a knitting-needle, so as to disturb the liquids as little as possible, and the water, being the heavier, will continue at the lower part of the glass; whilst the wine, being the lighter, will keep above it. But, if a glass be first half-filled with wine, and water be poured over it, it will at once sink through the wine, and both liquids will be mixed. TO INFLATE A BLADDER WITHOUT AIR, Put a tea-spoonful of ether into a moistened bladder, the neck of which tie up tightly; pour hot water upon the bladder, and the ether, by expanding, will fill it out. AIR Aſ WD WATER BALUOON. Procure a small hollow glass vessel, the shape of a balloon the lower part of which is open, and place it in water with the wº- xz-vºw --, ---...-: * * ſ v== ſ ... • ~~~~ sºvº. Tjæ º º --→º-º: * * . z . . . . - …--> ‘,-> • 3- ) - - * & * >~~~~~~ * * \. } --~~ \ FIRE, WATER, AND AIR. 127 mouth downwards, so that the air within prevents the water filling it. Then fill a deep glass jar nearly to the top witn water, and place the balloon to float on its surface; tie over the jar with bladder, so as to confine the air between it and the sur- face of the water. Press the hand on the bladder, when more water will enter the balloon, and it will soon sink to the bottom of the jar; but, on removing your hand, the balloon will again ascend slowly to the surface. | | HEATED AIR BALLOON. Make a balloon, by pasting together gores of bank post paper; paste the lower ends round a slender hoop, from which proceed several wires, terminating in a kind of basket, sufficiently strong to support a sponge dipped in spirit of wine. When the spirit is set on fire, its combustion will produce a much greater degree of heat than any ordinary flame: and by thus rarefying the ail within the balloon, will enable it to rise with great rapidity to a considerable height. THE PNEU MATIC TINDER-BOX. Provide a small stout brass tube, about six inches long, and half an inch in diameter, closed at one end, and fitted with a hollow air-tight piston, containing in its cavity a scrap of amadon, or German tinder. Suddenly drive the piston into the tube by a strong jerk of the hands; and the compression of the air in the tube will give out so much heat as to light the tinder; and upon quickly drawing out the piston, the glowing tinder wil. kindle a match. THE BACCHUS EXPERIMENT, This experiment, showing the elasticity of alr, is performed ! with a pleasing toy. It represents a figure of Bacchus sitting * &Sº - { - £º- as- -N Fº A 128 FIRE, w ATER, AND AIR. | C.\ i* across a cask, in which are two separate compartments. Put into one of them a portion of wine or coloured liquid, and place the apparatus under the exhausted receiver of an air-pump, when the elastic force of the confined air will cause the liquid to ascend a transparent glass tube (fitted on purpose) into the mouth of the Bacchanalian figure. To render the experiment more striking, a bladder, with a small quantity of air therein, is fastened around the figure, and covered with a loose silken robe, when the air in the bladder will expand, and produce an apparent increase in the bulk of the figure, as if occasioned by the excess of liquor drunk. THE MYSTERIOUS CIRCLES. Cut from a card two discs or circular pieces, about two inches in diameter: in the centre of one of them make a hole, into which put the tube of a common quill, one end being even with the surface of the card. Make the other piece of card a little convex, and lay its centre over the end of the quill, with the concave side of the card downward; the centre of the upper card being from one-eighth to one-fourth of an inch above the end of the quill. Attempt to blow off the upper card by blowing through the quill, and it will be found impossible. If, however, the edges of the two pieces of card be made to fit each other very accurately, the upper card will be moved, and sometimes it will be thrown off; but when the edges of the card are on two sides sufficiently far apart to permit the air to escape, the loose card will retain its position, even though the current of air sent against it be strong. The experiment will succeed equally well, whether the current of air be made from the mouth or from a pair of bellows. When the quill fits the card rather oosely, a comparatively light puff of air will throw poth cards 3: wrº :-y—º-- - sº - - §§– ----|-º: źs º: * - ºr * * * * $º: -/ *** **::::::- - retrº. * . ** i § A * FIRE, water, AND AIR. 129 three or four feet in height. When, from the humidity of the breath, the upper surface of the perforated card has a little ex- panded, and the two opposite sides are somewhat depressed, these depressed sides may be distinctly seen to rise and approach the upper card, directly in proportion to the force of the current of air. Another fact to be shown with this simple apparatus, appears equally inexplicable with the former. Lay the loose card upon the hand with the concave side up ; blow forcibly through the tube, and, at the same time, bring the two cards towards each other, when, within three-eighths of an inch, if the current of air be strong, the loose card will suddenly rise and adhere to the perforated card. If the card through which the tube passes have several holes made in it, the loose card may be instantly thrown off by a slight puff of air. For the explanation of the above phenomenon, a gold medal and one hundred guineas were offered, some years since, by the Royal Society. Such explanation has been given by Dr. Robert Hare, of Philadelphia, and is as follows: Supposing the diameter of the discs of card to be to that of the hole as 8 to 1, the area of the former to the latter must be as 64 to I. Hence, if the discs were to be separated (their surfaces remaining parallel) with a velocity as great as that of the air blast, a column of air must meanwhile be interposed, sixty-four times greater than that which would escape from the tube during the interim; consequently, if all the air necessary to preserve the balance be supplied from the tube, the discs must be separated with a velocity as much less than that of the blast as the column required between them is greater than that yielded by the tube. and yet the air cannot be supplied from any other source, unless ſ ~ -* **t Ös=aº * t * * : ~5& > ~-sºvº I 30 - FIRE, WATER, AND AIR. a deficit of pressure-be created between the discs, unfavourable to their separation. It follows, them, that, under the circumstances in question, the discs cannot be made to move asunder with a velocity greater than one-sixty-fourth of that of the blast. Of course, all the force of the current of air through the tube will be expended on the movable disc, and the thin ring of air which exists around the orifice between the discs; and, since the movable disc can only move with one-sixty-fourth of the velocity of the blast, the ring of air in the interstice must experience nearly all the force of the jet, and must be driven outwards, the blast following it in various currents, radiating from the common centre of the tube and discs. PRINCE RUPERT's Dixops. Let fall melted glass into cold water, and it will become sud- denly cooled and solidified on the outside before the internal part is changed; them, as this part hardens, it is kept extended by the arch of the outside crust: and, if the finely drawn-out point of the drop be broken off, the cohesion of the atoms of the glass is destroyed, and the whole crumbles to dust with a smart explosion. WEGETABLE HY GROMETER, The dampness of the air, and the consequent approach of rain, is denoted by several simple means, which are termed hygrometers. Thus, if an ear of the wild oat be hung up, its awn or bristly points will be contracted by a rotatory motion in damp air, and relaxed by a contrary motion when the air is dry. Similar eſſects are observable on all cordage, string, and every description of twisted material; as the moisture swells the threads, and increases FIRE, water, AND AIR. 131 Q-sG w their diameter, but reduces their length; hence, catgut is used in the construction of a weather-house, in which the man and woman foretell wet or dry weather, moving as the catgut stretches or contracts, according as the air is moist or dry. To prove the moving power of the awn, separate one from the ear, and, holding the base between the finger and thumb, moistem the awm with the lips, when it will be seen to turn round for some time. THE PNEUMATIC DANCER. º This amusing pneumatic toy consists of a figure made of gla or enamel, and so constructed as to remain suspended in a glas, A jar of water. An air-bubble, communicating with the water, is placed in some part of the figure, shown at m, mear the top of the jar, A, in the engraving. At the bottom of the vessel, B, is a bladder, which can be pressed upwards by applying the finger to the extremity of a lever, e 0, when the pressure will be communicated through the water to the bubble of air, which is thus compressed. The figure will t º then sink to the bottom; but, by removing the pres- sure, the figure will again rise, so that it may be made to dance in the vessel, as if by magic. Fishes made of glass, are sometimes substituted for the hu- 2 experiment, in which case the pressure should | be applied to the upper surface, which should be a piece of bladder, instead of being placed FIRE, w ATER, AND AIR - THE ASCENDING SNA.K.E. To construct this pretty little pmenr voy, take a square piece of stiff card, or sheet coppe: … orass, about two and a half Fig. 2. Fig. 1. or three inches in diameter, and cut it out spirally, so as to resemble a snake, as in the engraving, (fig. 1.) Then paint the body on each side of the card the colours of a snake; take it by the two ends, and draw out the spiral till the distance from head to tail is six or seven inches, as in fig. 2. Next, provide a slender piece of wood on a stand, and fix a sharp needle to its summit; push the rod up through the spiral, and let the end of the spiral rest upon the summit of the needle. Now place the apparatus as nearly as possible to the edge of the mantel-shelf above the fire, and the snake will begin to revolve in the direction of its head; and, if the fire be strong, or the current of heated air which ascends from it is made powerful, by two or three persons coming near it, so as to concentrate the current, the smal:e will revolve very rapidly. The rod, a b, should be painted so as to resemble a tree, which the smake will appear to climb ; or the snake may be suspended by a thread from the ceiling, over the current of air from a lamp. Two snakes may be made to turn round in opposite directions, by merely drawing out the spiral of one from the upper side, and of the other from the under side of the figure, and fixing them, of course, on separate rods. :- ſ Provide a phial one-fourth filled with any coloured water and THE PNEUMATIC PHIAL. \ ggmented into the | §§ -- ~~ - Ikºtº - º | FIRE, WATER, AND AIR. 133 neck of the phial, so as to be air-tight; the tube may reach to within a quarter of an inch of the bottom of the phial, so as to dip below the surface of the liquid. Hold this little instrument before the fire, or plunge it into hot water, when the air that is in the phial will expand, and force up the coloured liquor into the tube. RESIN BU BELIES, Dip the bowl of a tobacco-pipe into melted resin, hold the pipe in a vertical position, and blow through it; when bubbles of d various sizes will be formed, of a brilliant silvery hue, and in a variety of colours. MOISTURE OF THE ATMOSPHERE. Moisture is always present in the air, even when it is driest. To prove this, press a piece of sheet copper into the form of a cup ; place on it a piece of phosphorus, thoroughly dried between blotting-paper; put the cup on a dry plate, and beside it a small piece of quick-lime; turn over it a glass tumbler, and leave it for ten minutes, that the lime may remove all moisture from the included air; take off the tumbler, touch the phosphorus with a hot wire, and instantly replace the glass; when a dry solid will be formed, resembling snow. As soon as the flame is extinct, examine the plate; when the solid will, in a very short time, attract so much water from the air, that it will pass into small drops of liquid. - CLIMATES OF A ROOM, The air in a room may be said to resemble two climates: as it is lighter than the external air, a current of colder or heavier air is continually pouring in from the crevices of the windows and -: *-Jº…?... -** -------, --------->|--|--|--> *S***"... FIRE, WATER, AND AIR. : doors; and the light air must find some vent, to make way fol the heavy air. If the door be set ajar, and a candle held mear the upper part of it, the flame will be blown outwards, showing that there is a current of air flowing out from the upper part of the room; and if the candle be placed on the floor, close by the door the flame will bend inwards, showing that there is also a current of air setting into the lower part of the room. The upper current is the warm, light air, which is driven out to make way for the stream of cold, dense air which enters below. * BUBBLES ON CHAMPAGNE. Pour out a glass of champagne, or bottled ale, and wait till the effervescence has ceased; you may then renew it by throw- ing into the liquor a bit of paper, a crumb of bread, or even by violently shaking the glass. The bubbles of carbonic acid chiefly rise from where the liquor is in contact with the glass, and are in greatest abundance at those parts where there are asperities. The bubbles setting out from the surface of the glass are at first very small; but they enlarge in passing through the liquor. It seems as if they proceeded more abundantly from the bottom of the glass than from its sides; but this is an ocular deception. PROOFS THAT AIR IS A HEAVY FLUID. Expel the air out of a pair of bellows, them close the mozzle and valve-hole beneath, and considerable force will be requisite to separate the boards from each other. This is caused by the pressure or weignt of the atmosphere, which, acting equally upon the upper and lower boards externally, without any air inside, operates like a dead weight in keeping the boards together. In like manner, if you stop the end of a syringe, after its piston rod | A-ºf - Q===s - FIRE, water, AND AIR. 135 has been pressed down to the bottom, and then attempt to draw it up again, considerable force will be requisite to raise it, depend- ing upon the size of the syringe, being about fourteen or fifteen pounds to every square inch of the piston rod. When the rod is drawn up, unless it be held, it will fall to the bottom, from the weight of the air pressing it in. Or, fill a glass tumbler to the brim with water, cover it with a piece of thin wet leather, invert it on a table, and try to pull it straight up, when it will be found to require considerable force. In this manner do snails, periwinkles, limpets, and other shells adhere to rocks, &c. Flies are enabled to walk on the ceiling of Sº a room, up a looking-glass, or window-pane, by the air pressing on the outside of their peculiarly constructed feet, and thus sup- porting them. To the same cause must be attributed the firmness with which the oyster closes itself; for, if you grind off a part of the shell, so as to make a hole in it, though without at all injuring the fish, it may be opened with great ease. TO SUPPORT A PEA ON AIR. This experiment may be dexterously performed by placing a pea upon a quill, or the stem of a tobacco-pipe, and blowing upwards through it. PYROPHORUS, OR AIR-TINDER. Mix three parts of alum with one of wheat flour, and put them into a common phial; set it in a crucible, up to the neck in sand; then surround the crucible with red-hot coals, when first a black smoke, and next a blue sulphureous flame, will issue from FIRE, WATER, AND AIR. the mouth of the phial; when this flame disappears, remove the crucible from the fire, and when cold stop the phial with a good cork. If a portion of this powder be exposed to the air, it will take fire. Or, a very perfect and beautiful pyrophorus may be obtained by heating tartrate of lead in a glass tube, over a lamp. When some of the dark-brown mass thus formed is shaken out in the air, it will immediately inflame, and brilliant globules of lead cover the ignited surface. Or, mix three parts of lamp-black, four of burnt alum, in powder, and eight of pearl-ash, and heat them for an hour, to a bright cherry red, in an iron tube. When well made, and poured out upon a glass plate or tile, this pyrophorus will kindle, with a series of small explosions, somewhat like those produced by throwing potassium upon water; but this effect should be wit- messed from a distance. Put a small piece of grey cast-iron into strong mitric acid, when a porous, spongy substance will be left untouched, and will be of a dark grey colour, resembling plumbago. If some of this be put upon blotting-paper, in the course of a minute it will spontaneously heat and smoke; and, if a considerable quantity be heaped together, it will ignite and scorch the paper; mor will the properties of this pyrophorus be destroyed by its being lef for days and weeks in water. - BEAUTY OF A SOAP BUBBLE, Blow a soap bubble, cover it with a clean glass to protect it from the air, and you may observe, after it has grown thin by standing a little, several rings of different colours within each FIRE, waſ ER, AND AIR. I. 37 other round the top of it. The colour in the centre of the rings ; will vary with the thickness; but, as the bubble grows thinner, the rings will spread, the central spot will become white, then bluish, and them black; after which the bubble will burst, from its extreme tenuity at the black spot, where the thickness has been proved not to exceed the 2,500,000th part of an inch. WHY A GUINEA FALLS MORE QUICKLY THAN A FEATHER THROUGH THE AIR, The resistance of the air to falling bodies is not proportioned to the weight, but depends on the surface which the body opposes Yº: to the air. Now the feather exposes, in propor- tion to its weight, a much greater surface to the air than a piece of gold does, and therefore suffers a much greater resistance to its descent. Were the guinea beaten to the thinness of gold- leaf, it would be as long, or even longer, in falling than the feather; but let both fall in a vacuum, or under the receiver of an air-pump from which the air has been pumped out, and they will both reach the bottom at the same time ; for gravity, acting independently of other forces, causes all bodies to descend with the same velocity. An apparatus for performing this experimeº is shown in the engraving: the coin amé tº feather are to be laid together on the brass flap, A or B: tnis may be let down by turning the wire, C, which passes through a collar of leather, D, placed in §he head of the receiver. º:=s Q i. sº fºr-o-->>. *, * -a”. $: \ ſ 13S FIRE, WATER, AND AIR. | \ SOLIDITY OF AIR. Provide a glass tube, open at each end; close the upper end by the finger, and immerse the lower one in a glass of water, when it will be seen that the air is material, and occupies its own space in the tube, for it will not permit the water to enter it until the finger is removed, when the air will escape, and the water rise to the same level in the inside as on the outside of the tube. t º ! A. & yº BREATHING AND SMELLING. Hold the breath, and place the open neck of a phial containing oil of peppermint, or any other essential oil, in the mouth, and the smell will not be perceived; but after expiration it will be easily recognised. av §|\\S., - . §§ſº XX/, §§s. ~~~~ ſº º N. 22 **śN %) §§ {º § 89.4% º §A. §§§ > - : £$ **. ſº & ¥) **** Nº. Sºº's AND swººs. ~c£133- ance of feats of magic are manual dexterity and self-possession. The former can only be acquired by practice; the latter will be the natural result of a well-grounded confidence. We subjoin a few preliminary hints, of consi- derable importance to the amateur exhibiter. 1. Never acquaint the company beforehand with the particu- lars of the feat you are about to perform, as it will give them time to discover your mode of operation. * *. Endeavour, as much as possible, to acquire various methods ºf performing the same feat, in order that if you should be likely 14l l42 SLEIGHTS AND subtlETIES. to ſail in one, or have reason to believe that your operations are suspected, you may be prepared with another. 3. Never venture on a feat requiring manual dexterity till you have previously practised it so often as to acquire the necessary 2xpertness. - 4. As diverting the attention of the company from too closely Inspecting your manoeuvres is a most important object, you should manage to talk to them during the whole course of your proceedings. It is the plan of vulgar operators to gabble unin- telligible jargon, and attribute their feats to some extraordinary and mysterious influence. There are few persons at the present day credulous enough to believe such trash, even among the rustic and most ignorant; but as the youth of maturer years might inadvertently be tempted to pursue this method while exhibiting his skill before his younger companions, it may not be deemed superfluous to offer a caution against such a proce- dure. He may state, and truly, that every thing he exhibits can be accounted for on rational principles, and is only in obe- dience to the unerring laws of Nature; and although we have just cautioned him against enabling the company themselves to detect his operations, there can be no objection (particularly when the party comprises many younger than himself) to occa- sionally show by what simple means the most apparently mar- wellous feats are accomplished. - Q_x=sſ. SLElGHTS AND SUBTLETIES. 143 * THE RING AND THE HANDRERCHIEF, § This may be justly considered one of the most surprising sleights; and yet it is so easy of performance, that any one may accomplish it after a few minutes' practice. You previously provide youpself with a piece of brass wire, pointed at both ends, and bent round so as to form a ring, about the size of a wedding-ring. This you conceal in your hand. You then commence your performance by borrowing a silk pocket-handkerchief from a gentleman, and a wedding-ring from a lady; and you request one person to hold two of the cormers of the handkerchief, and another to hold the other two, and to keep them at full stretch. You next exhibit the wedding-ring to the company, and ammounce that you will make it appear to pass | through the handkerchief. You then place your hand under the handkerchief, and substituting the false ring, which you had pre- viously concealed, press it against the centre of the handkerchief, and desire a third person to take hold of the ring through the handkerchief, and to close his finger and thumb through the hollow of the ring. The handkerchief is held in this manner for the purpose of showing that the ring has not been placed within a fold. You now desire the persons holding the corners of the handkerchief to let them drop; the person holding the ring (through the handkerchief as already described) still retaining his hold. - Let another person mow grasp the handkerchief as tight as he pleases, three or four inches below the ring, and tell the person holding the ring to let it go, when it will appear to the company that the ring is secure within the centre of the handkerchief. You then tell the person who grasps the handkerchief to hold a hat over it, and passing your hand undermeath, you open the à-T - Şazi-ºj • *- & SPSSº - *) &º * >> *~~~~" \ 144 SLEIGHTS AND SUBTLETIES. 3. * * gº-º-º: false ring, by bending one of its points a little aside, and bringing one point gently through the handkerchief, you easily draw out the remainder; being careful to rub the hole you have made in the handkerchief with your finger and thumb, to conceal the frac- ture. * You then put the wedding-ring you borrowed over the outside of the middle of the handkerchief, and desiring the person who holds the hat to take it away, you exhibit the ring (placed as described) to the company. - THE KNOTTED HANDKERCHIEF. This feat consists in tying a number of hard knots in a pocket- handkerchief borrowed from one of the company, then letting any person hold the knots, and by the operator merely shaking the handkerchief, all the knots become unloosed, and the handkerchief is restored to its original state. To perform this excellent trick, get as soft a handkerchief as possible, and taking the opposite ends, one in each hand, throw the right hand over the left, and draw it through, as if you were going to tie a knot in the usual way. Again throw the right-hand end over the left, and give the left-hand end to some person to pull, you at the same time pulling the right-hand end with your right hand, while your left hand holds the handkerchief just be- hind the knot. Press the thumb of your left hand against the knot to prevent its slipping, always taking care to let the person to whom you gave one end pull first, so that, in fact, he is only pulling against your left hand. You now tie another knot exactly in the same way as the first. taking care always to throw the right-hand end over the left. As you go on tying the knots, you will find the right-hand end of the * ğs=== &. t zº * - -, --- 3. - - ... • - - - * ºr. - 145 lº SLEIGHTS AND STUIETE, ETIES. ' handkerchief decreasing considerably in length, while the left-hand one remains nearly as long, as at first ; because, in fact, you are merely tying the right hand end round the left. To prevent this from being noticed, you should stoop down a little after each knot, and pretend to pull the knots tighter; while, at the same time, you press the thumb of the right hand against the knot, and with the fingers and palm of the same hand, draw the handkerchief, so as to make the left-hand end shorter, keeping it at each knot as nearly the length of the right-hand end as possible. When you have tied as many knots as the handkerchief will admit of, hand them round for the company to feel that they are firm knots; them hold the handkerchief in your right hand, just below the knots, and with the left hand turn the loose part of the centre of the handkerchief over them, desiring some person to hold them. Before they take the handkerchief in hand, you draw out the right-hand end of the handkerchief, which you have in the right hand, and which you may easily do, and the knots being still held together by the loose part of the handkerchief, the person holding the handkerchief will declare he feels them: you then take hold of one of the ends of the handkerchief which hangs down, and desire him to repeat after you, one—two—three, —then tell him to let go, when, by giving the handkerchief a smart shake, the whole of the knots will become unloosed. Should you, by accident, while tying the knots, give the wrong end to be pulled, a hard knot will be the consequence, and you will know when this has happened the instant you try to draw the left-hand enrd of the handkerchief shorter. You must, therefore, turn this mistake to the best advantage, by asking any one of the company to see how long it will take him to untie one knot you counting the seconds. . When he has untied the knot, | 146 SLEIGHTS AND SUBTLETIES. i t your other knots will remain right as they were before. Having finished tying the knots, let the same person hold them, and tell him that as he took two minutes to untie one knot, he ought to allow you fourteen minutes to untie the seven; but as you do not wish to take any advantage, you will be satisfied with fourteen seconds. - You may excite some laughter during the performance of this trick by going to the owner of the handkerchief, and desiring him to assist you in pulling a knot, saying, that if the handker- chief is to be torm, it is only right that he should have a share of it; you may likewise say that he does not pull very hard, which will cause a laugh against him. THE INVISIBLE SPRINGS, Take two pieces of white cottom cord, precisely alike in length; double each of them separately, so that their ends meet; then tie them together very meatly, with a bit of fine cottom thread, at the part where they double, (i. e. the middle.) This must all be dome beforehand. When you are about to exhibit the sleights, hand round two other pieces of cord, exactly similar in length and appearance to those which you have prepared, but not tied, and desire your company to examine them. You then return to your table, placing these cords at the edge, so that they fall (apparently accidentally) to the ground behind the table; stoop to pick them *p, but take up the prepared ones instead, which you have pre- viously placed there, and lay them on the table. Having proceeded thus far, you take round for examination nree ivory rings; those given to children when teething, and which may be bought at any of the toyshops, are the best for you! § }.\ | \ º \ ^ Sºzº. - "V-> SLEIGHTS AND STUIETLETIES. 147 ſº w purpose. When the rings have undergone a sufficient scrutiny, pass the prepared double cords through them, and give the two ends of one cord to one person to hold, and the two ends of the other to another. Do not let them pull hard, or the thread will break, and your trick be discovered. Request the two persons to approach each other, and desire each to give you one end of the cord which he holds, leaving to him the choice. You then say, that, to make all fast, you will tie those two ends together, which you do, bringing the knot down so as to touch the rings; and returning to each person the end of the cord next to him, you state that this trick is performed by the rule of contrary, and that when you desire them to pull hard, they are to slacken, and vice versá, which is likely to create much laughter, as they are certain of making many mistakes at first. During this time, you are holding the rings on the forefinger of each hand, and with the other fingers preventing your as- sistants from separating the cords prematurely, during their mis- takes; you at length desire them, in a loud voice, to slacken, when they will pull hard, which will break the thread, the rings remain- ing in your hands, whilst the strings will remain unbroken: let them be again examined, and desire them to look for the springs in the rings. - THE MIRACULOUS APPLE, To divide an apple into several parts, without breaking the rind –Pass a needle and thread under the rind of the apple, which is easily dome by putting the meedle in again at the same hole it came out of; and so passing on till you have gone round the apple. Then take both ends of the thread in your hands and draw it out; by which means the apple will be divided into two parts. In the same manner, you may divide it into as many Q==sº .* \ * * *...* 4, f § §g 2-> 2+=S > - 148 SLEIGHTS AND STUIBTLETIES parts as you please, and yet the rind will remain entire. Present the apple to any one to peel, and it will immediately fall to pieces. THE SELF-BALANCED PAIL. You lay a stick across the table, letting one-third of it project over the edge; and you undertake to hang a pail of water on it, without either fastening the stick on the table, or letting the pail rest on any support; and this feat the laws of gravitation will enable you literally to accomplish. You take the pail of water, and hang it by the handle upon the projecting end of the stick, in such a mammer that the handle may rest on it in an inclined position, with the mid- dle of the pail within the edge of the table. That it may be fixed in this situation, place another stick with one of its ends resting against the side at the bottom of the pail, and its other end against the first stick, where there should be a notch to re- tain it. By these means, the pail will remain fixed in that situation, without being able to incline to either side; mor can the stick slide along the table, or move along its edge, without raising the centre of gravity of the pail and the water it contains. ſiſſ ſiſ||||ITT.III/6 iſ i gºs ºjit tº reºsº º THE PHANTOM AT COMMAND. This feat is performed by means of confederacy.—Having privately apprized your confederate that when he hears you strike one blow, it signifies the letter A.; when you strike two, it means B; and so on for the rest of the alphabet, you state to the company, that if any one will walk into the adjoining room, and have the i # =: SLEIGHTS AND STUBTLETIES. 149 door locked upon him, perhaps the animal may appear to him which another person may name. In order to deter every one except your confederate from accepting the offer, you announce at the same time, that the person who volunteers to be shut up in the room must be pos- sessed of considerable courage, or he had better mot undertake it. Having thus gained your end, you give your confederate a lamp which burns with a very dismal light; telling him, in the hear- mg of the company, to place it on the middle of the floor, and not to feel alarmed at what he may happen to see. You then usher him into the room, and lock the door. You mext take a piece of black paper, and a bit of chalk, and giving them to one of the party, you tell him to write the mame of any animal he wishes to appear to the person shut up in the room. This being dome, you receive back the paper, and after showing it round to the company, you fold it up, burn it in the candle, or lamp, and throw the ashes into a mortar; casting in at the same time a powder, which you state to be possessed of valuable properties. Having taken care to read what was written, you proceed to pound the ashes in the mortar thus:—Suppose the word written to be CAT, you begin by stirring the pestle round the morta, several times, and them strike three distinct blows, loud enough for the confederate to hear, and by which he knows that the first letter of the word is C. You next make some irregular evolu- tions of the pestle round the mortar, that it may mot appear to the company that you give nothing but blows, and you them strike one blow to denote A. Work the pestle about again, and them strike twenty blows, which he will know to mean T; finishing your manoeuvre by working the pestle about the imortar, the object being to make the blows as little remarkable S- zºº, <-- -º- §2. -- .rº - ; $ | | º º 150 SLEIGHTS AND STUIBTLETIES. as possible. You them call aloud to your confederate, and ask him what he sees. At first he is to make no reply. At length, after being interrogated several times, he asks if it be a CAT. That no mistake may be made, each party should repeat to himself the letters of the alphabet in the order of the blows. THE MIRACULOUS SHILLING, Provide a round box, the size of a large snuff-box, and likewise eight other boxes, which will go easily into each other, letting the least of them be of the size to hold a shilling. Observe that all these boxes must shut so freely that they may all be closed at once, by the covers accurately fitting within each other. Previously to commencing your performance, fit the boxes within each other, and place them in a table drawer at another part of the room. You also fit the covers in the same mammer, and lay them by the side of the boxes; you likewise provide a silk handkerchief, into one corner of which a shilling is sewed. You now commence your operations by borrowing a shilling, desiring the lender to mark it, that it may not be changed. Take this shilling in your right hand, and the handkerchief in your left, pretending to place the shilling in the centre of the hand- kerchief; instead of which, you put the corner of the handker- chief in which a shilling was sewed, as previously described, concealing the borrowed shilling in your right hand. You then desire the derson to feel that the shilling is there, and tell him to hold it tight. You now go to the drawer, and placing the borrowed shilling in the smallest of the boxes, you put on all the covers, by taking them in the centre between the forefinger and thumb, to preven their separation, and fit them on, by carefully sliding them along and then pressing them down. T.RAX - | : * \ -ſ § zº-Tº- }**-K-r- ~f_{_-t !. J -—ttº-> j | SI.EIGHTS AND STUBTLETIES. 151 %22#ss) -- Having thus closed your boxes, you produce what appears to be a single box, and lay it on the table. You now ask the person, who still retains his hold of the shilling in the handkerchief, if he is sure that it is there. He will reply in the affirmative: you then request him to allow you to take the handkerchief; and, having done so, you strike that part of the handkerchief containing the shilling on the box, and immediately shake out the handker- chief, holding it by two corners, and shifting it round so as to get the shilling within your grasp: it will thus appear that the shilling is no longer there. You desire the person to open the box, and hand it round, till the shilling be found; and when the last box is opened, and the shilling taken out, you ask the lender to state whether it is the one which he marked; to which he must, of course, reply in the affirmative. THE LOCOMOTIVE SHILLING, Privately place a shilling, which you previously mark on the head side with a cross, under a candlestick, or in any other out- of-the-way situation, where it is not likely to be discovered. You next borrow a shilling of one of the company, and say, “Now I am going to show you a trick with this shilling, but that you may know it again, I will mark it.” Then take your penknife, and cross it in the same mammer as the one you have concealed; show it to the person who lent it to you, and ask him if he will know it again. He will reply, “Yes; it is marked with a cross.” Knock under the table, and say, “Presto! fly quickly!” at the same time adroitly conveying the shilling into your pocket. You then tell the spectators that it is gone; but you have a strong motion that if they look they will find it under the candlestick, (or what- ever other place you may have concealed it in,) where the first shilling you marked will of course be found, and having the same marks as the genume one, will be mistaken for it. 8, : ;- * ** 7~ —º- == S- ń. 152 SLEIG HTS AND STUIBTLETIES. THE PENETRATIVE SIXPENCE. i You profess that you will make a sixpence appear to pass through the table. To perform this feat, you must have a hand- kerchief, in one cormer of which is sewed a sixpence. Take it out of your pocket, and ask one of the company to lend you a sixpence, which you must seem to carefully wrap up in the middle of the handkerchief, but instead of which, you keep it in the palm of your hand, and in its stead, wrap up the corner in which the other sixpence is sewed in the midst of the handker- chief, and bid the person from whom you borrowed the sixpence feel that it is there. You then lay it under a hat upon the table, take a glass in the hand in which you have concealed the sixpence, and hold it under the table. Give three knocks upon the table, crying, “Presto! come quickly ſ” Then drop the sixpence into the glass; bring the glass from under the table, and exhibit the sixpence to the spectators. You lastly take the handkerchief from under the hat, and shake it, taking care to hold it by the corner in which the sixpence was sewed. * THE WANISHING SIXPENCE, Having previously stuck a small piece of white wax upon the nail of your middle finger, lay a sixpence on the palm of your hand, and addressing the company, state that it will vanish at the word of command. “Many persons,” you observe, “perform this feat by letting the sixpence fall into their sleeve; but to convince you that I shall not have recourse to any such deception, I will turn up my cuffs.” You then close your hand, and bringing the waxed mail in contact with the sixpence, it will firmly adhere to it. You them blow your hand, and cry, “Begome!” and suddenly opening it, and exhibiting the palm, you show that the sixpence has g zºzº F.I.R.Gº ?". * --------- - -- ==~ . g *. ** - --> **-- .-2-2+ * × - **- -: * Q-Fºrsſ sº º SLEIGHTS AND STUBTLETIES. 153 wamished. If you borrow the sixpence of any of the company, take care to rub off the wax before you restore it to the owner. J To MAKE A SIXPENCE BALANCE AND SPIN ON ITS EDGE, ON THE POINT OF A NEEDLE. Procure a common wine bottle, two forks, two corks, a needle, a sixpence, and a penknife. Having corked the bottle, force the eye of the needle into the cork perpendicularly, leaving more than half the needle sticking up. You next cut a small slit with the penknife in the centre of the bottom of the second cork, into which you insert the sixpence edgewise; then stick the forks into the upper cork, and, with a steady hand, place the edge of the sixpence on the point of the meedle, and it will immediately find its balance. You may now take the upper cork between the finger and thumb, and spin it round as fast as you please, as the sixpence will not fall off. When it goes slow, hit one of the forks with your finger as it goes round, to increase its velocity. THE MULTIPLYING COIN. Let a tumbler be half-filled with water; put a sixpence in it, and, holding a plate over the top, turn the glass upside down. The sixpence will fall down on the plate, and appear to be a shilling; while at the same time a sixpence will seem to be swimming in the water. If a shilling is put in the glass, it will have the appearance of a quarter of a dollar and a shilling; and if a quarter of a dollar were put in, it would seem to be half a dollar and a quarter of a dollar. MAGIC RAT TRAP. Prepare a pasteboard circle, upon one side of which draw t a figure of a cage, and on the other side that of a rat. Nea ſ sºlº - sº sº - *~. ~ : Sº S.L.- : -: §§::=-aº → wr * - , - & - - ; , º 2's &_º º * * * • - - ... g.º. ºf . 7 - - 154 SLEIGHTS AND STJ BTLETIES. she outer edge of the circle fasten two strings opposite each other, so that they may be held between the forefinger and thumb in such Imammer that the circle may be made to revolve rapidly. When it is set in motion the transition is so quick, that it presents the appearance of a rat in a cage. TO SHOW THE VELOCITY OF MOTION. Take a long hollow stalk or reed, suspend it horizontally by two loops of single hairs; by striking it with a sharp quick stroke at a point nearly in the centre, between the hairs, it may be cut through without breaking either of them. The hairs in this case would have been ruptured if they had partaken of the force applied to the stalk; but the division of the latter being effected before the impulse could be propagated to the hairs, they must conse- quently remain unbroken. * A smart blow with a slight wand or hollow reed on the edge of a glass tumbler, would break the wand, without injury to the glass. Lay a small piece of money upon a card placed over the mouth of a glass tumbler, and resting upon the rim of the glass. The 'I card may be withdrawn with such speed and dexterity that the | piece of money will not be removed laterally, but will drop into W he glass. º 3r --, ~ºp-ºf----5. p $:º ?? 4 rº-ze t - • 4- - -" < *--sºus-tº-:" -

Sºtº:20 E.; .* -> yv —F- :* -º *Q--> º--~ 2-ºx * * * §3 SLEIGHTS AND STUET LETIES. 1.59 faces of the persons who look in them, or the experiment wil not have so remarkable an effect. THE ENCHANTED BOTTLE, Fill a glass bottle with water to the beginning of the neck; leave the neck empty, and cork it. Suspend this bottle opposite a concave mirror, and beyond its focus, that it may appear reversed. Place yourself still further distant from the bottle; and instead of the water appearing, as it really is, at the bottom of the bottle, the bottom will be empty, and the water seen at the top. If the bottle be suspended with the neck downwards, it will be reflected in its matural position, with the water at the bottom, although in reality it is inverted and fills the neck, leaving the bottom vacant. While the bottle is in this position, uncork it, and let the water rum gradually out: it will appear that while the real bottle is emptying, the reflected one is filling. Care must be taken that the bottle is not more than half or three parts full, and that mo other liquid is used but water; as in either of these cases the illusion ceases. THE ARMED APPARITION, If a person with a drawn sword place himself before a large concave mirror, but further from it than its focus, he will see an inverted image of himself in the air, between him and the mirror. of a less size than himself. If he steadily present the sword towards the centre of the mirror, an image of the sword wil. 20me out from it, point to point, as if to fence with him; and by his pushing the sword nearer, the image will appear to come nearer to him, and almost to touch his breast. If the mirror b6 āşEaj "``'` fist-rº 160 SLEIG HTS AND STUBTLETIES. turned 45 degrees, or one-eighth round, the reflected image wil go out perpendicular to the direction of the sword presented, and apparently come to another person placed in the direction of the motion of the image, who, if he be unacquainted with the expe- riment, and does not see the original sword, will be much surprised and alarmed. To EXTRACT THE SILVER OUT OF A RING THAT IS THICKLY GILDED, SO THAT THE GOLD MAY REMAIN ENTIRE, Take a silver ring that is thickly gilded. Make a little hole through the gold into the silver; then put the ring into aqua- fortis, in a warm place: it will dissolve the silver, and the gold will remain whole. | & # CURIOUS EXPERIMENT WITH A GLASS OF WATER, Saturate a certain quantity of water, in a moderate heat, with three ounces of sugar; and when it will no longer receive that, there is still room in it for two ounces of salt of tartar, and after that for an ounce and a drachm of green vitriol, nearly six drachms of mitre, the same of salammoniac, two drachms and a scruple of alum, and a drachm and a half of borax. A LUMINOUS Bottle, which will show THE Hour on A WATCH IN THE DARE. Throw a bit of phosphorus, of the size of a pea, into a long glass phial, and pour boiling oil carefully over it, till the phial is one-third filled. The phial must be carefully corked, and when used should be unstopped, to admit the external air, and closed again. The empty space of the phial will them appear luminous, } and give as much light as an ordinary lamp. Each time that zºr N. QºEs * - *—Sº- SLEIGHTS AND SUBTLETIES. 1 6 1 the light disappears, on removing the stoppe: it will instantly reappear. In cold weather the bottle should be warmed in the hands before the stopper is removed. A phial thus prepared may be used every nigh for six months. + R U S E S. THE WONDERFUL HAT, | Place three pieces of bread, or other eatable, at a little distance from each other on a table, and cover each with a hat; you then take up the first hat, and removing the bread, put it into your mouth, and let your company see that you swallow it; them raise the second hat, and eat the bread which was under that, and do the same with the third. Having eaten the three pieces, give any person in company liberty to choose under which hat he would wish those three pieces of bread to be; when he has made choice of one of the hats, put it on your head, and ask him if he does not think that they are under it. TO BRING A PERSON DOWN UPON A FEATHER. i4. This is a practical pun:—You desire any one to stand on a chair or table, and you tell him that, notwithstanding his weight, you will bring him down upon a feather. You then leave the room, and procuring a feather from a feather-bed, you give it to him, and tell him you have performed your promise, that you engaged to bring him down upon a feather, which you have done for there is the feather, and, if he looks, he’ll find down upon it. 14 rºs -- ~~ C f ~ * | 164 SLEIGHTS AND STUETLETIES. \ ; to any part of the room he pleases. This trick is accomplished | #A by placing the candle on the party’s head; but it cannot be per \\ formed if a looking-glass is in the room, as that will enable hiº) || -ºff" to turn the laugh against you. THE DOUBLE IMEANING- Place a glass of any liquid upon the table, put a hat over it, and say: “I will engage to drink the liquid under that hat, and yet I’ll not touch the hat.” You then get under the table, and after giving three knocks, you make a moise with your mouth as if you were swallowing the liquid. Then getting from under the table, you say: “Now, gentlemen, be pleased to look.” Some one, eager to see if you have drunk the liquid, will raise up the hat, when you instantly take the glass, and drink the contents, saying: “Gentlemen, I have fulfilled my promise. You are all witnesses that I did not touch the hat.” l QUITE TIRED OUT. You undertake to make a person so tired, by attempting to carry a small stick out of the room, as to be unable to accomplish it, although you will add nothing to his burthen, nor lay any re- straint upon his personal liberty. To perform this manoeuvre, you take up the stick, and cutting off a very small sliver, you direct him to carry it out of the room, and return for more; con- cluding by telling him, that you mean him to perform as many similar journeys as you can cut pieces off the stick. As this may be made to amount to many thousands, he will of course gladly give up the undertaking. - SOMETHING OUT OF THE COMMON. ſ Having picked a stick or stome off a common, you tell a person !hat you are about to show him something which will surprise him, \ { --tº § # %. + SLEIGHTS AND STUBTT, ETIES. —something, in fact, quite out of the common. Having thus excited his curiosity, you produce the stick or stone, or whatever else you may have picked up, which of course he will examine very intently, and at length observe, that he sees nothing extra- ordinary in it. “That may be,” you reply, “and yet, I assure you, that it is really something out of the common.” This will, no doubt, set him upon a fresh examination, which will maturally end in his asking for an explanation. This you give, by telling him that “though not uncommon, it is out of the common, for it is out of Common;” and no doubt, the company present will indulge in a hearty laugh at the querist’s expense. To RUB on E SIXPENCE INTo Two. Previously wet a sixpence slightly, and stick it to the under edge of a table, (without a cover,) at the place where you are sitting. You then borrow a sixpence from one of the company, and tucking up your sleeves very high, and opening your fingers, to show that you have not another concealed, rub it quickly backwards and forwards on the table with your right hand, qolding your left under the edge of the table to catch it. After two or three feigned unsuccessful attempts to accomplish your object, you loosen the concealed sixpence with the tips of the fingers of the left hand, at the same time that you are sweeping the borrowed sixpence into it; and rubbing them a little while together in your hands, you throw them both on the table. MAGIC CIRCLE, dº You tell a person you will place him in the centre of a room, and draw a circle of chalk round him, which shall not exceed three feet in diameter, yet out of which he shall not be able to SLEIGHTS AND SUBTLETIES. eap, though his legs shall be perfectly free. When the party has exhausted his ingenuity in trying to discover by what means you can prevent his accomplishing so seemingly easy a task, you ask him if he will try ; and on his assenting, you bring him into the middle of the room, and having requested him to button his coat tightly, you draw, with a piece of chalk, a circle round his waist, outside his coat, and tell him to jump out of it. It will greatly improve this trick if the person be blindfolded, as he will not be aware of the mode of performing it till the ban- dage is removed, provided his attention be diverted while you are §rawing the line round him. KYVT. *= 2S \ -º-º-º- | {T>}^* § ſº \ º -—i S. erºtºs * N º t * | lſº º * :* e. "..., - - ãº. sº º sº Rººs-3 53%. šz §); < º - Sº\\ ū /ſº ſ &)4 f ſº (- 'n' ºwtº..." … ºº & -ºš º ºs. º ; : T : º º ºr T3 * --~ ~ < šº -* * \º ſº sº Yº ILLUSIONS OF TOUCH. º ãº". the º of a pair of compasses, distant jºb from each other one or two lines, to the cheek, \ sº%3 just before the ear; then move them succes- # \ $º. ; sively to several other parts of the cheek, and &º § § #. you will find, on approaching the mouth, that 2/\ºls §§*9 the points will appear to recede from each other; this effect being produced by the great difference of the sense of touch in these parts. It is a general law, that in the more sensitive portions of the skim, any two points appear to be further asunder from each other than points of equal distance º appear to be to a less sensitive portion. The same experiments may be made by holding together the extremities of the forefinger and thumb, and them passing the tips of both in a line from the ear to either the upper or the under lip; as they approach the latter, they will feel to the cheek as if they were becoming more and more distant from each other. If the skin be touched with the points of a pair of compasses, one inch asunder, the person so touched, while he shuts his eyes, g º :* Sº º 170 IMELANGE, will instantly be aware that his skin is touched in two places but by continually drawing the two points closer, a degree of nearness may be reached at which the person will imagine his skin to be touched by only one body; he will, however, describe this body, or the compasses, to be a little longer in one direction than another; and it appears that this difference of length corres- ponds with the distance between the two points of the compasses. When these points are brought still nearer together, the inequa- lity will no longer be felt, and the person will fancy he is being touched by one body only. Handle a pea: it is one—place it between the first and second fingers of the right hand, in their natural position, and you will still feel the pea but as one. Then cross the two fingers, bringing the second over the first, and place the pea in the fork between them, so as to feel the left side of the pea with the right side of the second finger, and the right with the left of the first. The impression will then be that you have two peas touching the fingers, especially if the eyes be shut, and the fingers be placed by another person. The illusion will be equally strong if the two forefingers of both hands be crossed, and the pea placed between them. ILLUSION OF THE TASTE. If the nose be held tightly while you are eating cinnamom, you will perceive scarcely any difference between its flavour and that of a deal shaving. * THE GENERAL, BLEACHER, Provide some strong chloride of lime: soak in it strips of printed cottom; take them out, dry them, and you will find them **** §:- j * * ~...~-e * * - • * *, - *** - - - - • *. ** -n, ºvº--- F-'º.2 §§ - ..If... . * Sºo-> i :* *Nº . — º - ... • - … tº: +r- MELANGE. very white, but very rotten, slitting and dropping into holes upon the slightest touch. - - The dazzling whiteness of paper is caused by bleaching it with chloride of lime. Thus, if you write on printing paper with common ink, it will fade, because the chloride will destroy the colouring matter of writing ink. It will not, however, change printing ink, as that owes its blackness to charcoal, which is a singularly permanent substance. Blot over a printed page with common writing ink, wash it with chloride of lime, when the blots will disappear, and leave the printing unchanged. INFLUENCE of COLOURED GLASS ON BULBoUs Roots. Put a bulb, as a hyacinth, marcissus, &c., into a white glass, and another into a purple glass: the latter will grow faster than the former; and if a pinch of salt, or a piece of mitre, be put into the water whenever it is changed, the brightness of the colour of the flower will be considerably heightened. THE SPINNING-Top “ASLEEP.” Spin a top, and it will for some time stand “asleep,” as it is called in the parlance of the play-ground. The cause is thus explained by Dr. Arnot, in his valuable Elements of Physics: “While the top is perfectly upright, its point being directly under its centre, supports it steadily, and although turning so } rapidly, has no tendency to move from the place; but if the - top incline at all, the side of the peg, instead of the very point, comes in contact with the floor, and the peg them becomes a little wheel or roller, advancing quickly, and, with its touching —” -* * 172 MELANGE. : edge, describing a curve somewhat as a skaiter does, until i becomes directly under the body of the top, as before. It thus appears that the very fact of the top inclining causes the point to shift its place, so that it cannot rest until it come again directly under the centre of the top.” TO JUDGE OF WEIGHTS. Persons accustomed to estimate weights by poising them in their hands, will distinguish perfectly between two, only differ- ing by a thirtieth part. In comparing two weights, poise one and then instantly the other in the same hand; the few seconds of time that pass between the poising of the two weights will not prevent their accurate comparison. The interval may amount to twenty seconds, yet a just estimate may still be made; but when it amounts to forty seconds, all accuracy will be lost. QUICKSILVER AND OIL UNITED. Let fall a very small drop of oil upon a large drop of mercury, and the latter will become enlarged. This phenomenon is attri- buted to a combination of the oil with the mercury, which pro- duces a compound, the attraction of which is less strong than that of pure mercury. To Dissolve THE soda IN GLAss. Glass consists of sand, corbonate of soda, and red lead, heated together. If water be poured into a glass vessel, neither of the ingredients will be affected by it; but if the glass be reduced to a fine powder, and water be poured on it, the soda will instantly be dissolved. | (C \ \ s: * Stºr:- * * ... * * * 'g'." MELANGE. Or, moisten with water a piece of tumeric, or test-paper, drop on it a little powdered glass, and the soda in it will change the yellow paper to brown. WATER PROOF PAPER. Make a solution of caoutchouc in caoutchoucine, plunge into it, once or twice, unsized paper, and dry it by a gentle heat. It may then be used as writing paper, and will resist all humidity; and small vessels made of it will even contain water. TO DISSOLVE GOLD OR PLATINUM, Mix a little mitric acid with half the quantity of muriatic acid, into which put the metal for solution. Or, pour a little aqueous solution of chlorime into a small glass, and put in a bit of pure gold leaf; stir it with a glass rod, and the gold will dissolve. Thus gold, which cannot be dissolved in mitric, sulphuric, or other strong acids, will quickly disappear in water with a little chlorine in solution. COLDER THAN ICE, Mix common salt with pounded ice or snow, and they will run into brine, which will be much colder than the ice or snow. contRA-CRYSTALLIZATION. Dissolve two ounces of mitre and three of Glauber salts in five ounces of warm water; fill two bottles with the solution, into one of which put a crystal of mitre, and into the other a crystal of Glauber salts; place both bottles in ice-cold water, when mitre only will crystallize in the one and Glauber salts in the other. - --~~ ...--dº -º-º---- 6. §§2: y-sºº, -3 Qafis r— -*== 174 MELANGE. ) ONE AND ONE DO NOT MAIKE TWO, Mix a wine-glass full of sulphuric acid with a wine-glass ful of water, cautiously; and on remeasuring the mixture it will not be found sufficient to refill both glasses. + TO COPY WRITING INSTANTLY. Add a little sugar to ink, with which write the letter to be copied; them lay a sheet of thin unsized paper, damped with a sponge, on the writing; pass lightly over it a flat-iron, very moderately heated, and a reverse impression of the writing will be accurately taken off. THE RIVAL DIALS, Fix two pendulum clocks to the same wall, or lay two watches upon the same table, and they will take the same rate of going, though they would vary in that rate if they were placed in sepa- rate apartments. Indeed, it has been observed that the pendulum of one clock will even stop that of the other, and that the stopped pendulum will, after a certain time, go again, and in its turn stop the other pendulum. - TO SPIN INDIAN RUBBER, ! Dissolve a small piece of Indian rubber in a little caoutchou- cine, and put a drop or two of the solution upon a looking-glass or window-pame; touch it lightly with a dry piece of Indian rubber, quickly draw out a fine thread, which attach to a card, and wind off as silk. .* --- * . ºr-º- ---> .*- e ^ --º-º- - * *tº MELANGE. 175 INDELIBLE WRITING, As the art of man can unmake whatever his ingenuity can make, we have no right to expect an indelible ink; however, an approximation to it may be made as follows: Make a saturated solution of indigo and madder in boiling water, in such propor- tions as to give a purple tint; add to it from one-sixth to one- eighth of its weight of sulphuric acid, according to the thickness and strength of the paper to be used. Write with this ink, and expose the paper to a gradual heat from the fire, when the cha- racters will be completely black, the letters being burnt in and charred by the sulphuric acid. If the acid has not been used in sufficient quantity to destroy the texture of the paper, and reduce it to the state of tinder, the colour may be discharged by washing it with a strong solution of oxalic acid in water. When the full proportion of acid has been employed, crumple and rub the paper, and the charred letters will fall out; them, by placing a black ground behind the letters, they may be preserved, and thus a species of indelible writing may be procured, the letters being, as it were, stamped out of the paper. VEGETABLE ANATOMY . Soak any part of a plant in mitric acid for a short space of time, and all power of cohesion will be lost by the vessels, which will become transparent, and be easily separable from each other by gentle dissection. So complete will be the effect, that even the most delicate cells of the cellular tissue will become disengaged from each other, and may be examined singly with perfect ease. This discovery will enable persons who have not compound microscopes and delicate dissecting instruments, to amatomize plants with facility. J 5s: - — `- - gº 176 MELANGE. To TELL WHAT o’cLock IT IS BY THE Moon. This may be calculated by the shadow which the moon casts upon a sun-dial, it being only necessary to know the moon’s age, which may be found in an almanac. If the new moon happens in the morning, this day is taken into the account; but if it hap- pens after moon, the following day is counted the first. The moon’s age is to be multiplied by four and divided by five. The quotient must either be added to the hour which the shadow indi- cates on the sum-dial, and the sum will give the time sought; or subtract from the quotient the hour shown by the moon upon the dial, and the remainder will give the hour sought. The first is to be done when the shadow falls upon an hour of the afternoon, and the latter when it falls upon an hour of the forenoom. The following are examples: 1st. Suppose the moon to be ten days old, and the shade cast by the moon upon the sun-dial to be at half-past two; or, that the shadow cast by the moon falls on the place at which the shadow cast by the sun stands at half-past two;-what o'clock was it then The answer is calculated as follows:—The moon’s age, 10 days x 4 = 40 * = 8. Eight, therefore, is the time when the moon was in the meridian, and 8 + 2} = 10}, or half-past tem, the hour sought. 2d. Suppose the moon to have been 18 days old, and the shadow cast by it on the sun-dial to have marked eleven. This time is subtracted from the hour when the moon was in the meridian on that day, and from which the hour marked by the shadow must be deducted. The shadow shows here 11 o’clock in the foremoon, or one hour before noon, which, deducted from 2h. 24m. gives 1h. 24m.; 2% — 1 = 1;, or 24 minutes past one o'clock. ~~~~22XI Ea. rk - #5-a-i-º-º: MELANGE. 17: | : ºº- ºC. : | E.. ; º E º É skin. the strictest accuracy. THE PHYSIOGNOTYPE. This is a newly invented instrument, by the aid of which a person may have a plaster cast of his face taken without submit- ting to the usual unpleasant process. It consists of an assemblage of very fine movable wires, com- fined closely together within a broad hoop or band, after the manner of the bristles in a telescope hearth-brush, but not closed at the back, in order to allow to the wires a free passage. The wires slide in a metal plate, perforated all over with holes, very fine and close together. The appara- tus is surrounded by an outer case which is filled with warm water, in order to prevent any unpleasant sensation on the contact of the instrument with the When it is desired to take a likeness, the instrument is applied to the face with a gentle and gradual pressure, the wires easily yield and slide back, conformably to the prominences of the countenance; they are then fixed tightly in their position, and thus form a mould which will yield a perfect and faithful cast of the face, in which even the most minute line will appear with INFINITE DIVISIBILITY OF MATTER, Dissolve a single grain of copper in about ome drachm of nitric acid, and dilute the solution with about one ounce of water, when MELANGE. - - * r - r • -- - T-E-F-----. ----------------------------~ * it will be evident that a single drop of the mixture must contain an almost immeasurably small portion of copper. Yet, if the blade of a knife be dipped into it, it will become covered with a coat of copper; thus showing that the copper can be infinitely divided without any alteration in its properties. HOLDING THE BREATH, If a person inspire deeply, he will be able, immediately after, to hold breath for a time, varying with his health, state of exer- tion, or repose. A man, during an active walk, may not be able to cease breathing for more than half a minute; but after resting on a chair or bed, he may refrain from breathing for a minute and a half, or even two minutes. But if he will prepare himself by breathing deeply, hardly, and quickly, (as he would maturally do after running,) and ceasing that operation with his lungs full of air, them hold his breath as long as he is able, he will find that the time during which he can remain without breathing will be double, or even more than double the former. This effect may be rendered exceedingly serviceable, as on many occasions a man who can hold breath for a minute, or two minutes, may save the life of another; such as in entering a chamber on fire, rescuing from drowning, &c. SAND IN THE HOUR-GLASS. It is a remarkable fact, that the flow of sand in the hour-glass is perfectly equable, whatever may be the quantity in the glass : that is, the sand runs no faster when the upper half of the glass 's quite full than when it is nearly empty. It would, however, be matural enough to conclude that, when full of sand, it would * . , ºr : ...', ºr ‘i: ;-Sºº -- sº * • . \; -. F.C.#">'s c. - S. _ -4-T... ... . . . . . * * * * * > : & .: -., -.' 2-12 . r ( jº.:s:- V./; MELANGE. 179 be more swiftly urged through the aperture than when the glass was only a quarter full, and near the close of the hour. The fact of the even flow of sand may be proved by a very simple experiment. Provide some silver sand, dry it over or before the fire, and pass it through a tolerably fine sieve. Then take a tube, of any length or diameter, closed at one end, in which make a small hole, say the eighth of an inch ; stop this with a peg, and fill up the tube with the sifted sand. Hold the tube steadily, or fix it to a wall or frame, at any height from a table; remove the peg, and permit the samd to flow in any measure for any given time, and note the quantity. Then let the tube be emptied, and only half or a quarter filled with sand; measure again, for a like time, and the same quantity of sand will flow : even if you press the sand in the tube with a ruler or stick, the flow of the sand through the hole will not be increased. - The above is explained by the fact, that when the sand is poured into the tube, it fills it with a succession of conical heaps, and that all the weight which the bottom of the tube sustains, is only that of the heap which first falls upon it; as the succeeding heaps do not press downward, but only against the sides or walls of the tube. RESISTANCE OF SAND. From the above experiment it may be concluded, that it is extremely difficult to thrust sand out of a tube by means of a ſitting plug or piston; and this, upon trial, is found to be the case. Fit a piston to a tube, (exactly like a boy’s pop-gun,) pour some sand im, and try with the utmost strength of the arm to push out the sand. It will be found impossible to do this _-_º_> - Tº sº…T. - -: --~ *. º: * - **śa —X-3: ... * * * * * * ..º.º. .’ \ *. jº ) Č jº-ºº::-0 MELANGE. rather than the sand should be shot out, the tube will burst at the sides. GLASS BROKEN BY SAND. If bullets be let fall on glass which has been cooled in the open air, they will not break it; but if a few grains of sand be let fall on the same kind of glass, it will be broken into a thousand pieces! This is explaimed by the lead mot scratching the surface of the glass; whereas the sand, being sharp and angular, scratches sufficiently to break it. TO BLEACH IWORY. Place any piece of discoloured ivory beneath a glass, expose it to the sum, and it will soon be restored to pure whiteness; whereas, if the ivory be exposed to the sum without the glass covering, it will become more discoloured. WANISHING SHELLS, Put into a little diluted muriatic acid a common whelk shell, when it will be completely dissolved, and not a sensible trace of it left behind. If an oyster shell or land-snail shell be put into the acid, their substances will disappear, but the form or skeleton of the shells will remain. THE MAGIC EGG, Fill a basin with diluted muriatic acid, and put into it an egg, which will sink; but, in a few seconds, the whole of the egg-shell being covered with bubbles of carbonic acid gas. will rise to the surface, a portion of the egg will be lifted above the surface, and IMEI, ANGIE. 1 Sl the whole egg will slowly rotate. This rotation is formed by the bubbles of gas forming at the under part of the egg, and over all the submersed portions, which render them lighter than the por- tions above the liquid level, till the under portion ascends and the other descends. THE MAGIC WHIRLPOOL. Fill a glass tumbler with water, throw upon its surface a few fragments or thin shavings of camphor, and they will instantly begin to move and acquire a motion both progressive and rotatory, which will continue for a considerable time. During these ro- tations, if the water be touched by any substance which is at all greasy, the floating particles will quickly dart back, and, as if by a stroke of magic, be instantly deprived of their motion and vivacity. In like manner, if thin slices of cork be steeped in sulphuric ether in a closed bottle, for two or three days, and then placed upon the water, they will rotate for several minutes, like the camphor; until the slices of cork having discharged all their ether, and become soaked with water, they will keep at rest. If the water be made hot, the motion of the camphor will be more rapid than in cold water, but it will cease in proportionately less time. Thus, provide two glasses, one containing water at 58 degrees, and the other at 210 degrees; place raspings of cam- phor upon each at the same time; the camphor in the first glass will rotate for about five hours, until all but a very minute portion has evaporated, while the rotation of the camphor in the hot water will last only nineteen minutes; about half the camphor will pass off, and the remaining pieces, instead of being dull, white, and ºrcs:- $º w * ** # A82 MIELANGE. opaque, will be vitreous and transparent, and evidently soaked with water. The gyrations, too, which at first will be very rapid, will gradually decline in velocity, until they become quite sluggish. The stilling influence of oil upon waves has become proverbial: the extraordinary manner in which a small quantity of oil instantly spreads over a very large surface of troubled water, and the stealthy manner in which even a rough wind glides over it, must have ex cited the admiration of all who have witnessed it. By the same principle, a drop of oil may be made to stop the motion of the camphor, as follows: throw some camphor, both in slices and in small particles, upon the surface of water, and while they are rotating dip a glass rod into oil of turpentime, and allow a single drop thereof to trickle down the immer side of the glass to the surface of the water; the camphor will instantly dart to the oppo- site point of the liquid surface, and cease to rotate. If a piece of hard tallow or lard be employed, the motion of the camphor will be more slowly stopped than by oil or fluid grease, as the latter spreads over the surface of the water with greater rapidity. If a few drops of sulphuric or muriatic acid be let fall into the water, they will gradually stop the motion of the camphor; but, if camphor be dropped into mitric acid diluted with its own bulk of water, it will rotate rapidly for a few seconds and them stop. If a piece of the rotating camphor be attentively examined with a lens, the currents of the water can be well distinguished, jetting out chiefly from the corners of the camphor, and bearing 't round with irregular force. The currents, as given out by the camphor, may also be seen by theans of the microscope; a drop or two of pure water being placed --~~~~ -- . - * ~ * --- º: 3rº. Jºãº$º ( * ::::::s MELANG F. 183 upon a slip of glass, with a particle of camphor floating upon it. By this means the currents may be detected, and it will be seen that they cause the rotations. Or, a flat watch glass, called a lunar, may be employed, raised a few inches, and supported on a wire ring, kept steady by I thrusting one end into an upright piece of wood, like a retort stand. Then put the camphor and water in the watch-glass, and { place under the frame a sheet of white paper, so that it may receive the shadow of the glass, camphor, &c., to be cast by a z' steady light placed above, and somewhat on one side of the watch-glass. On observing the shadow, which may be considered a magnified representation of the object itself, the rotations and currents can be distinguished.* º MAGIC PorcFLAIN. A peculiar kind of porcelain was formerly manufactured in China, which exhibited its colour and devices only when filled with water. Though the art of manufacturing this porcelain has been lost, and the mode cannot now be described with accuracy, the following has been conjectured as not very remote from the truth. The first requisite was that the vessel be extremely ~. thin, so that the figures to be formed might be sufficiently clear and perceptible. After the vessel has been baked, the figures, which were mostly fish, (as those were most appropriate with the water,) were formed on the inside; and, after the colour had dried, a second extremely thin coat, of the same substance as that of which the vessel was constructed, was laid on the inside and warmished. The fish, or other device would them, it is evident, * Abridged from the Magazine of Popular Science, vol. iii. —f MELANGE be enclosed between the two coats of the ware of which the vesseſ was made. All that remained to be dome was to grind the outside of the vessel as close to the figures as possible, to vamish it again, and bake it a second time; and though, after this opera. tion, the figures and embellishments would not be at all percepti- ble, yet, so soon as the vessel was filled with water, they would at once be rendered clear and distinct to a degree scarcely credi- ble. Attempts have been made to revive this beautiful art, but hitherto without success. : A. GALVANIC TONGUE. Coat the point of the tongue with tin-foil, and its middle part with gold or silver leaf; when a sourish taste will be produced, and the tongue will be galvanised. DRINKING PORTER OUT OF PEWTER. If porter be drunk out of a pewter pot, it will produce a more h brisk sensation than when it is taken out of a glass vessel, which - is ascribed to a galvanic effect. In this instance, there is a com- bination of one metal and two dissimilar fluids, which combination constitutes a galvanic circle. In the act of drinking, one side of the pewter pot is exposed to the action of the saliva, which moistems the lip, while the other metallic side is in contact with the porter; the circuit being thus completed, an agreeable relish is communicated to the beverage when it comes in contact with # the tongue. - ELECTRIC OR GALVANIC PRESERVATION. Immerse a slip of copper in diluted mitric acid, and it will be soon corroded and dissolved; but if a slip of zinc be immers ** "Tºss-ºr MIELANGE. with the copper, the zinc will be dissolved, and the copper remain unaltered and uninjured. LIGHT FROM THE DIAMOND. Expose a fine diamond to the sunbeams, and carry it into a § dark room, when it will exhibit phosphorescence: and it has been W stated that such diamonds as do not display this peculiarity, may be made to do so by dipping them into melted borax. The diamond becomes phosphorescent also when fixed to the prime conductor of an electrical machine, and a few sparks may be taken from it. It likewise becomes electric by friction; and the Hon. Mr. Boyle obtained electric gleams by rubbing two diamonds together in the dark. TO BREAK A. STONE WITH A BLOW OF THE FIST. Select two stomes from three to six inchés long, and about half as thick; lay one flat on the ground, on which place one end of the other, raising the reverse end to an angle of forty-five degrees, and just over the centre of the stone, (with which it must form a T,) supporting it in that position by a piece of thin twig or stick, one or ome and a half inch long; if the raised stone be now smartly struck about the centre with the little finger side of the fist, the stick will give way, and the stone will be broken to pieces: the stones must be laid so as not to slip, otherwise the experiment will fail. MIMIC FROST-WORK. Fastem a sprig of fresh rosemary, or any similar shrub, to the inside of a small bandbox, near the top; heat a thick tile, and sprinkle it with gum benzoin, º immediately place the bandbox IU) MELANGE. Over it, when the acid will be sublimed by the heat, and will condense in a white vapour upon the green plant, giving it the appearance of being covered with hoarfrost. TO MELT LEAD IN A PIECE OF PAPER. Wrap up a very smooth ball of lead in a piece of paper, taking care that there be no wrinkles in it, and that it be everywhere in contact with the ball ; if it be held in this state over the flame of a taper, the lead will be melted without the paper being burnt The lead, indeed, when once fused, will not fail in a short time to pierce the paper and run through. # º HYDROSTATIC BALANCE. M Provide a pair of scales, in one of which place a tumbler filled with water, and poise it by placing weights in the opposite scale; then hold in the tumbler a block of wood, or any substance nearly the size of the tumbler, but so that it shall not touch the sides or bottom ; when, although nearly the whole of the water will have to run over the sides, and only a spoonful may remain, the scales will continue balanced; and all this without regard to the weight of the body you plunge into the water, taking care to hold it entirely clear of the tumbler, so that it touch it nowhere ; for the effect will be the same if what you plunge in be scooped hollow and made water-tight. A bladder blown up, tied fast, and held down in the water, so as to leave only a spoonful of water sur- rounding it, will keep the scales balanced just as well as a block of lead of the same size. - - --~~ ,” rº- - 5-sº-K 2- - zºs–S. Ös==<5 * v A - * \ MELANGE. METALLIC REDUCTION. Mix a little red lead with some powdered charcoal, and with The mixture fill the bowl of a tobacco-pipe; set it over a common fire, and in about twenty minutes the lead will be found reduced to its metallic state. SIMPLE ELECTRICITY. ELECTRICAL ATTRACTION AND REPULSION. Rub a piece of amber, a stick of red sealingwax, or a smooth glass tube smartly upon the sleeve of a coat, or any other dry woollen substance, and it will attract to itself bits of straw, paper, fragments of gold leaf, or any small and light bodies. The am- ber, wax, or glass is then said to be excited, and the attractive power thus developed is called electrical attraction. Select a clean and dry downy feather, and suspend it from a beam by a long thread of white silk, to be used in the following experiments:— Provide a glass tube about three feet long and three-quarters of an inch in diameter; wipe it dry, and rub it gently with a warm silk handkerchief; then apply the tube to the feather, and it will attract it; withdraw the tube gently, apply it again, and the … ? - *. *** *- * zºº y 188 MIELANGE. feather will be repelled for a time, but then attracted, and then again repelled. In this case, the feather having received elec tricity from the glass, is repelled by it; for bodies similarly electrified repel each other. Fold a silk handkerchief, warm it, and with it rub the tube; apply it to the feather, and it will first attract and then repel it; when the feather has just been repelled by the silk, apply the tube, and the feather will be attracted. The handkerchief must be folded so thickly as to keep the hand as far as possible from the glass tube. Roll up flammel thickly, rub it with sealingwax, and the roll will by turns attract and repel the feather; when thus repelled, apply the excited wax, and it will instantly attract the feather. When the atmosphere is dry, take in one hand a rod of glass and in the other a stick of sealingwax, and rub them against silk or worsted; with one of them approach a bit of gold leaf, floating in the air; it will first attract and them repel it. . When the gold has just been repelled, approach it with the other rod, and it will be immediately attracted ; and this alternate attraction and repulsion may be strikingly displayed by placing the two excited rods at a small distance asunder, with the gold leaf between them. ALCHEMICAL ELECTRICITY, Nearly fill a wine-glass with a weak solution of blue vitriol in water, and place in it the blade of a knife and a small silver spoon; the knife will soon acquire a copper coating, but the spoon will remain bright until it is touched with the blade of the knife, when it will also become plated with copper. MELANGE, THE ELECTRIC BALLS. Provide two small balls of equal size, both made of gum lac, and cover one with gold leaf. Suspend these balls from a beam by fine white silk threads, at a little distance from each other, so as to allow a comparison of their motions. Then rub a stick of red sealingwax upon any woollen substance, or warm it at the fire, and present it to the balls; when it will be at once seen that the gilt ball, which readily admits of the transfer of electricity from one side to the other, will be sooner and more powerfully attracted than the other ball, which allows of no motion in its electricity. The latter ball will, however, by slow degrees be feebly attracted, and may at length be made to adhere for a con- il siderable time to the sealingwax. THE EIECTRIC DANCE, Lay on a table small pieces of paper or cottom, feathers, or gold leaf; then rub with a silk handkerchief a glass tube, hold it parallel to the table, and the several pieces will be alternately | attracted, and repelled, and a kind of electrical dance will be kept up. - If to the further end of the tube you hang a brass ball by a thread of linen, hemp, or metallic wire, the ball will participate in the magic power of the rubbed tube; but if the ball be sus- pended by a cord of silk, worsted, or hair, or be attached by wax or pitch, the attractive and repulsive properties of the rod will not pass into the ball. ELECTRIC LIGHT". Shake a barometer in a dark room, and light will be produced in the empty part of it by the friction of the quicksilver electrifying —w - § 㺠s: - - --> sº - º §§ºs. ..., , -----. §e - jºº ºśs. 3: . . . tº . . §: 4 * * * - - ** * . > * * .. - - 190 MELANGIE. the glass tube. Even the friction of air upon glass is attended by electricity, as has been found by blowing upon a dry plate of glass with a pair of bellows. ELECTRIC LIGHT FROM BROWN PAPER. Provide a piece of thick brown paper, thoroughly dry and warm; rub the paper briskly in a dark room, and there will dart forth flashes of electric light to the fingers, to a key, or to any other conductor that may be presented to it. Heat a small portion of sulphate of quinine in a spoon over the flame of a lamp, and it will become luminous and highly electrical. SUDDEN PRODUCTION OF LIGHT. Take a piece of dry and warm wood into a dark room, suddenly rend it asunder, and a flash of light will be perceived. The same effect may likewise be produced by suddenly smapping asunder a stick of sealingwax in the dark. Or, break a Prince Rupert's drop, and electrical light will pervade the whole, so that its form will be distinctly visible in the dark. The light will appear even if the experiment be made under water. ELECTRICITY OF THE CAT. Place your left hand upon the throat of the cat, and, with the middle finger and the thumb, press slightly the bones of the animal’s shoulders: then, if the right hand be gently passed along the back, perceptible shocks of electricity will be felt in the left hand. Shocks may also be obtained by touching the tips of the ears after rubbing the back. If the colour of the cat be black, Fr— MELANGIE. * and the experiment be made in a dark room, the electric sparks may be very plainly seen. Very distinct discharges of electricity may also be obtained by touching the tips of the ears, after applying friction to the back; and the same may be obtained from the foot. Placing the cat on your knees, apply your right hand to the back; the left forepaw resting on the palm of your left hand, apply the thumb to the upper side of the paw, so as to extend the claws, and, by this means, bring your forefinger into contact with one of the bones of the leg, where it joins the paw; when, from the knob or end of this bone, the finger slightly pressing on it, you may feel dis- tinctly successive shocks, similar to those obtained from the ears. It is, perhaps, unnecessary to add, that, in order to this expe- riment being conveniently performed, the experimenter must be on good terms with the cat. A-º-º-º: Q_x=Q P A U L P R. E S T O N 'S B O O K OF G Y MIN A STICS: OR SPOR T S FOR Y O U T. H. 2: 39, t , aſ tº, TO PROMOTE THE HEALTH AND LONG LIFE OF HIS YOUTHEUL FRIENDS. BOSTON : M U N R O E A N D F R A N C I S. •s-zz 3& : - - - - * +, ** * e. umºrºzºmºrºs Preface g Preliminary Exercises Exercises on the Parallel Bars Exercises On the Horizontal Pole . HOFSC EXETEiSC Leaping . tº Itaping with the Polt Climbing Apparatus Pulling the Rope Throwing the Lance Or Spear Climbing the Plank . . Giant Stride . . . . . . Climbing the Masi . . RIIllming . . . . . . . . RECapitulation . . . . . . G (Ö N T E N T S a * YPAGE **** ، Traeae,Tae, * …?** --~rº-e^***^-.* *ºr s * .** rº, ; § ºx.- A-g * § \-X à PREF ACE. A FEW words to the Guardians of Youth—whether Patents or Governors of Schools, or of any institutions where numbers of children are congregated together—may not here be amiss. And first, let me address myself to those parents, who, while they wish to see their sons and daughters healthy and strong, too often suffer their fears to overcome their desires, and fancy they see danger in any sport or exercise that goes beyond a walk or a gentle trot. Now let me earnestly intreat such to lay aside all this, and encourage the practice of such evolu- tions as are contained in this book. They will have the hap- piness of seeing those they love so dearly become robust, har- dy, and full of spirits, instead of being nervous, headachy, and spiritless beings; for there is not a single exercise in the book that can really be called dangerous. To Masters of Schools - Ši ; - gºº, —e-s-s-- - *~. • *. - 3. * - ~~~~ ~~~ : . S P. R. E. F. A. C. E . | let me say, that although cricket in the fields is an admirable 3| thing, and running about the play-ground another admirable thing, still boys, like men, are fond of variety. Many enlight- ened instructers of youth have often wished for some Manual of Gymnastics to direct them ; and for want of it have chosen rather not to attempt them at all, than not do them well. Here then is one to their hands, and though written express- ly for boys, the exercises in each section have been all so phi- losophically laid down as to progress from the easiest to the most difficult; thus forming a complete code by which the teacher may be guided. Where there is a covered play-ground for the winter, these Exercises are the best amusement imag- inable, and will render the pupils hardy, healthy and cheerful, without unnecessarily exposing them to the inclemency of the weather. The Author would suggest that one or more Cap- tains or Leaders be chosen from among the boys of a school by the boys themselves, who, with the Manual for their guide shall carry them through the various exercises. He would re- commend too that the Preliminaries should be well practised for a month, dividing the children into classes, according to size, and make it a point of honor to stand first in the class, * - *::... < - * Öğ - \- P. R. E. F. A. C. E . which honor shall be the result of superior care and attention to the Captain's directions ; and the Captains should have an extra drill, the better to enable them to give their lessons prop- erly to their classes. After the month's practice, by the end of which we may suppose the Parallel Bars and Horizontal Poles are ready, they may then be taken to these, after half an hour's practice of the Preliminary Exercises, trying only a few of the first exercises on each ; they can then finish with a run one morning, and a pull at the rope on another ; afterwards, when the other apparatus is erected, a regular routine for a week may be laid down, so that every day may have at least one exercise different from the others. To prevent them from ex- ercising on the Horizontal Poles at improper times, these poles may be made to fit tightly into grooves, and when not wanted, an upward blow with the hand will disengage them. If these rules are steadily adhered to, there is nothing in the whole range of Exercises which may not in time be ac- complished by a healthy boy ; and if the weaker are gradu- ally and kindly brought on, they will in their turn perform equally well with their companions. Öss= *A rººt: * - _■ * * * * |º | |PAUL PRESTON'S BOOK OF GYMNASTICS. OH ! here's Paul Preston the entertaining traveller, he'll tel. us all about it. He explaims things so pleasantly, that we can- not help understanding him. Well, my little friends, what do you want to know 2 I am always ready to impart what little I know, because I love to see young folks good and wise, and consequently happy. O, we only want to ask you one question; we are sure you can answer us. What do they mean by Gymnastics What are they good for ? Why do they call them so 2 Can we perform them : Will you show us 2 And— §Q=sº * D 12 & PAUL PR Eston’s | Stop, stop ! you said you wanted to ask me one question, || and you are running through a whole catechism ; but to set your minds at rest, I will tell you at once I know all about the matter, and in due time, if you will have patience, will en- deavor to put you in posession of my knowledge upon the sub- ject, being an old Gymnast; and reckon it not the least among the blessings I enjoy, that I had the opportunity of going through a regular course of these exercises, which, together with temperate habits and early rising, have enabled me to be so active, both in body and mind, as I am up to the present moment. s Now then to answer the first question in your catalogue. Gymnastics is a term of very extended signification. Among the ancient Greeks it meant that part of physics which relates to exercises for the health. It was that branch of education which, after certain prescri- bed rules, tended to develop the bodily powers of man, ren- dered his frame robust and agile, and fortified it against the common accidents of life ; and so long as man possesses a body, and requires for his earthly existence a bodily life, so long ought Gymnastics to form a principal object of man's cul- tivation. You know I told you about Greece. Well, public games were instituted by Hercules, in honor of Jupiter Olympius, at B O O K OF G Y MIN A S T I C S. the town of Olympia, and were celebrated or exercised in the first month of every fiſth year, and lasted five days. These games were called Olympic Games ; you have no doubt read about them. r O yes, we remember that. Well, the place where the Greeks performed these exerci- ses, which consisted of leaping, running, throwing, boxing, wrestling, horse and chariot-racing, and contests in poetry, ora- tory, music, philosophy, and the arts of all descriptions, was called a Gymnasium. You all recollect how astonished Xerxes the Persian was at the bravery of Leonidas and his little band of three hundred men, so that he declared it was impossible to conquer the Greeks, and ran away as fast as he could to his own country again. No doubt all these Greeks had been trained in the Gym- nasium, for they well understood what an intimate connexion there is between body and mind; how "invariably the healthy or sickly temperament of the one influences that of the other; so that when the body is strong, healthy and active, the mind is cheerful and elastic, and capable of noble deeds; but when the former is sickly and diseased, the latter is languid and depressed. But after a great many years, when education came into the hands, and was at the sole disposal, of the monks, Gym. --->g :*-ºſ. 2 º' - S -*. S. º.º. 22-º:R #º-º-º: 14 P A UL PREST on ’s mastic exercises disappeared altogether. The great men had their tilts and tournaments, while the people were mere slaves, used only to lead their horses and carry their masters' arms. Even these have passed away, and are known only to us mod- erns by the accounts we read in books; but, after all, they ap- pear to have been very silly amusements. The Germans were the first to revive “this relic of an age gone by.” To Professors Gustmuth and Jahn the merit of the discovery is particularly due. When they had made a careful examination of the structure of the human body, they set about devising numerous exercises, arranging them in a well adapted series ; and thus restored Gymnastics to some- thing like their former rank and imporance. Many towns in Germany and Switzerland soon had their Gymnasiums, and the youth, and even grown men, derived more pleasure in ex- ercises which fortified, than in amusements which paralyzed the powers of their bodies. To finish this long story, I shall only add that these ex- ercises are used in the British Naval and Military Schools, where the boys are very clever, climbing like monkeys, with- out any fear or danger of falling ; they run and jump like antelopes, so that they not only lay up a large stock of health and strength for future years, but are rendered more active, * % tº. arº ºf tº sº *: Sºzz Af * º * - s *º-starºse B O O K OF G Y MIN A S T I C S. 15 and consequently more useful, members of the professions for which they are intended. - Now, my lads, it happens luckily that Paul Preston has by him a regular series of all the various exercises they used to perform at the Gymnasium under Professor Voelker ; and if you will promise to attend to my directions, and persevere in the practice of them, I promise in return that all of you, whe- ther sickly or weakly, shall become strong active and healthy. O yes, do let us begin ; we promise to pay particular atten- tion to all you tell us ; and— Only practise it heartily, and I shall be satisfied. We will begin now, if you like. Well them, do as I do. Pull off your caps and coats, take off your stocks and neckerchiefs, and unbutton your shirt- collars; don’t be afraid of catching cold, I'll make you warm enough before I’ve done, only when you leave off, clothe your- selves, the sooner the better. Stand in a line—head easy— heels close—toes turned out—body upright—stomach kept in —arms hanging straight by the sides—hands closed, with the thumbs inside. Now then, move to the right and left, and stretch out your #| arms, so as each can barely touch his neighbor's fingers' ends thus—- P A UL PR E S T on 's Remember, boys, every thing must be done with spirit, and when I have shown you how to move your legs and arms, and you are not tired of the sport, I’ll have some parallel bars, a horizontal pole or two, a couple of wooden horses, some leaping poles, and other things, which I will tell you about by and by. So we'll have a Gymnasium of our own. 1. Attention!—Bring your arms quickly up in front as high as the shoulders, nails upwards—now swing them forcibly back, so, turning the mails outwards—body upright as a dart— again and again—half a dozen times. B O OFK OF G Y M N A STICS. I7. 2. Mind when I say Attention, which I shall do at every new exercise, you are to stand as I told you at first. Place hands on hips—thumbs behind—fingers in front—feet close. Now rise as high as possible on your toes, and stand for one minute by the clock. Once more—try again—elbows back. That will do, boys. 3. Look! bring your elbows sharply back thus, so that the fists be close to the sides (a)—send them sharply forward (5) (a) (b) so, back again—don't be afraid of hitting the wind—do it three times more. 4. Attention Hands on hips—feet close—rise slowly on your toes—now jump, but keep your knees quite stiff. 2 B -*| * sº $ Åss== e= §º :ºA.*e 4.º P A UIL. P. R. E S T ON S 5. You see I give one exercise for your arms and another for your legs, alternately. Here's another for your arms. Bring your fists quickly up, so, against your shoulders in front, elbows close to your sides—throw them up sharply, so as to be at the full stretch—again, to your shoulders forcibly—up again —down—up—down—well done. 6 Now for the legs. Hands on hips—feet close—up with he right leg in front as high as you can—knees straight-- ass==º B O O K OF G Y M N A. ST I C S. ho stooping forward—now the left leg—right—left—right- .eft. -- 7. Fists smartly up to the shoulders, nails turned inwards, elbows close to sides-—throw your fists downwards with all your might. Again to your shoulders—quickly—all together —down—up—attention : 8. Feet close—hands on hips—throw out your right leg sideways, as I do—body upright—no leaning on one side—stea. dy—left leg—right—left. 9. Well, boys, let us now combine two exercises into ona, the 5th and the 7th ; but remark, you are to stand firmly ºn ar PAUL PREST on s º- | gerS. your feet, don't rise on your toes, or the exercise will be of no service. See—bring your fists strongly up to your shoul- ders—throw them up as high as you can—-down again to your shoulders—now sharply towards the ground—once more —four or five times. 10. Here's another leg exercise, good for your knees. Hands on hips—feet close—keep steadily in your places, and kick your thighs with your heels, first with your right, then with your left. - 11. Raise your eloows as high as your shoulders, like this(a) —rest your fists on them, nails turned down—throw you arms forcibly back in a straight line, (b) keep them quite hori zontal, and don't forget to keep the thumbs inside of the fin. Book of GYMNAs T.I.C.S. (6) (3) 12. Do the same as before, with this difference only, that - you must throw your arms behind, keeping them level with the shoulders. 13. Another kick, boys. Hands firmly on your hips— place your feet close, rise on your toes, and kick your thighs with both heels at once—just so—back as stiff as a soldier. ºmmer- 14. Now, lads, I have made you a little pliable, you may try this, which will bring your muscles into excellent action, and is at the same time, if done well, a very graceful exercise, rºß :Kºš º º & P A UL PR E S T ON’s because a perfectly scientific one. Heads up—bring your arms, with fists closed and thumbs inside, slowly up in front, and turn them completely round, so as to form a circle sev- eral times. 15. This next exercise will be rather difficult at first, but a little practice will soon enable you to master it. Observe— Feet close—hands on hips, and touch your breast with your knees alternately as I do—toes pointing to the ground—and keep your body perfectly upright—right knee—left knee. 16. Now for an arm exercise like the 14th, except that you are to turn your arms from back to front, instead of from front to back. B O O R. O. F. G Y M N A STICS. 17. Who can do this well ? Not one at first, except myself. I shall set you all laughing, and you will laugh at each othel too. Try—hands on hips—feet close—stand on toes—bend your knees very slowly, and lower your body so, till your thighs touch your heels, like an indian chief, Mind—keep your knees quite close, and your body quite upright—now rise |- very gradually. Ah! there you are, all swimming on dry land. Never mind, try again. 18. This next will exercise the muscles of your chest. Bring the left fist to the front of the right shoulder, and at the same time extending the right arm with a quick motion, thus, in a line with the shoulder—now throw the left arm sharply out, and bring your right fist to the left shoulder. Do it with spirit, boys—again and again. PAUL PREST on’s 19. Another comical kick. Stand with your feet close, hands on your hips—now raise your left leg behind—stand on your right toe, and kick your right thigh with your right heel six times—now do the same with your left heel, stand- ing first on your left toe. Jº 20. Open your hands while by your sides—now raise them sideways and touch the backs of your hands sharply over your head—look at me. 21. Attention Again open your hands—extend them in front, palms touching—now swing them back heartily the height of your shoulders, and make the backs of your hands meet behind. You must not turn the hands round, any one can make the backs meet then, but few can at the first trials the other way. A famous exercise for the chest. 22. Are you tired ? If not, put your hands on your hips— keep your feet close—now hold out your right hand in front, **... zºº.” * . - |{{T, --- ‘. . - ** ------------------------------ Yº, º - **** -a - Book of gy MNAs T1cs. evel with the shoulder, and try and kick the palm of it with and left foot—don't stoop, and keep your knees quite straight .* º 23. Again. Open your hands, extend them in front, the backs touching, and swing them back in a line with the shoul- ders, till the palms touch behind. 24. Now, my young Gymnasts, try this. Hands on hips —rise on your toes—steady—bend your knees, and go grad- ually down, till your thighs touch your heels—extend your arms, and fall forwards on your hands, (take care of your noses ) so that your body forms a straight line from the head to the heel—like mine—rest on your hands and toes. ~T 2 25. A chinese bow. Stand—feet close—hands open—hold your arms straight up like the 5th exercise, palms in front— the right foot six times—knees stiff—now the left hand 26 PAUL PR Es Do N’s bend your body forward, and touch the ground with the tips of the fingers several times—keep the knees quite straight—- just so. 26. Try the 24th exercise again.-Now, while you are down, spring up a little from your toes, and clap your hands before coming to the ground again—rather hard to do, isn’t it 3 At it again, once more. 27. A trial of strength. Each stand facing his neighbor --every one put his left hand on his hip, his right foot for- ward, and right arm in front—now grasp each other's hands— put elbow to elbow—and try who can bring down his oppo- ment's arm, either to the right or left. 28. What say you to a rest a la Turcº Well then—feet close—hands on hips—cross your legs—bend your knees grad- ually and sit down thus—now rise perpenpicularly, without taking hands off hips. B O OE OF G Y M N As T ICs. 27 29. Once more. Try the 27th exercise with the right hand on hip, left foot forward, and left arm in front. 30. Can you do this 2 Feet close—extend arms in front —raise left leg in front—bend right knee gradually, and sit down on the ground, so—then get up again in the same posi- - º, 31. Another trial of strength. Now, boys, each stand op- posite your neighbor, left hand on hip, right foot in front, and hook the middle finger of each other's right hand, and pull back. Never fear, you can do no harm. 32. To your ranks again, and try to perform the 30th ex- ercise, only bending down with the left knee, and the righ leg extended in front. - *- - A-…-e: * º - * - r 3. i- tº. —w *- § $. T- w -* º A - ====<5 ŞS-ºº: ſº gºas. 28 PAUL PR Eston’s. 33. Face each other again, right hand on hip, left foot for- ward, and hook the middle finger of each other's left hand, and pull away. 34. Open compasses. What's that? Why, feet close— hands on hips—and jump as high as you can. At the same time spread out your legs like this. 35. Let the palms of your hands touch behind your backs, with the fingers pointing downwards—keep your hands quite close, and turn the fingers inward, and bring the hands as high as possible up the back, in this manner. i 36. Now for a jump. Feet close—hands on hips—spring Book of G YMN As TIC's. 29 up as high as you can, at the same time opening your legs, then cross them when coming down, So. 37. Sit by twos, facing each other, with the soles of the feet touching—now each pair take a stick, and grasp it thus, and pull against each other, not by jerks, but steadily—keep your knees straight—now do it with knees bent. Once more with legs spread. 38. To your ranks. Attention hands on hips, right foot forward, toe pointing downwards, as in marching—spring for- ward and come on the right toe—back again on the left toe— several times—now bring the left foot forward, and practise the same step with that, only bear in mind that the body is to be kept gracefully not stiffly upright. 2. | *** S-2+2= §:º ==º 30 PAUL PREST on’s -*- 39. Face eacn other—hook one another by the fingers of both hands, toes meeting—lean back and go round quick- ly. We used to call this the roasting jack. * 40. Take your places. Again hands on hips—feet close —rise on toes, and jump forward with straight knees—jump backward to your places. 41. Let each grasp his left hand with his right, or, what is better, bend the fingers of the left hand and hook them with the right—bring your arms over your head and behind the neck—pull your right arm with a jerk, as far as you can, so —now the left arm—the right again—several times. | •e B O O K OF G Y M N A STICS, 42. Put your right arm behind your neck, bring your hand in front of your chin, and try to pull the right ear with the right hand. - 43. Feet close—run with hands on hips, and try to kick your thighs alternately. 44. Try the 42d exercise with the left arm on the left ear—don't be afraid of pulling your ear too hard. 45. See if you can improve upon the 43d exercise, by try- ing to kick both thighs at once, as you jump forward. My lit- tle friends, the object in these different exercises is to give a great elasticity to the muscles of the legs, the necessity for which you will see by and by. 46. You remember the exercise I showed you, No. 17? Well, let your thighs touch your heels—extend your arms in front—throw yourself down on your hands—arms straight : § 3. ſº as: 32 P A UL PR E S To N’s and stiff—let your body form a straight line from head to heel, | as you did in the 24th exercise—remain so for a short time —now bring your feet, with a spring, between your hands— IIS6. 47. Hands on hips—left foot in front, toe pointing towards the ground—jump forward on the right toe—back àgain to your places. 48. Perform the 46th exercise as before; but, previous to ri- sing, spring the hands from the ground and clap them—rise, 49. Go through the 47th exercise, but with the right foot forward. 50. I think, boys, you may now venture on this exercise, though I must tell you it requires some care, and should not - Zºr * ºr-º-w º 3 ÖS=~5 B O O K OF G Y M N A STICS. be tried without having performed what I have already shown you. With diligence then there is no danger. Attention Hands on hips—feet close—spread out your legs gradually as far as you can—try and place the palms of your hands flat on the ground between the legs—draw up your legs slowly and evenly. 51. You may think I repeat the exercises on the toes too often ; but believe me, they are the best initiation to the exer- cises on leaping you can possibly have. So have patience, and only practise these and two or three more which I shall give you, and you will have as much elasticity in your feet as any deer in Vermont. Practise then the 47th and 49th exercises, only with the leg stretched out behind in all these cases, keep- ing your body perfectly upright. 52. Once more. Place hands on hips and run forward on your toes, while the knees are kept perfectly straight. 53. This next is a sort of Chinese ko-tow or knock-head, which, by the by, I hope no freeman will ever submit to.— C ºf S \ s= ſº § - fº —dº fºr- | i \ º 34 P A UL PR E S To N’s Fold your hands behind you, bring the right foot forward as far as you can, bend the right knee, and try to touch the floor with your forehead, like this. _^b What is Ko-tow 2 Why it is a ceremony exacted from all tributary princes and embassadors, on approaching the presence of the emperor of China; and consists in kneeling, placing the hands as you see above, and then knocking the head thrice against the floor. The visiter now stands upright, and by word of command kneels and knocks again, and afterwards a third time, ma- king in all three prostrations and nine thumps, on which the music strikes up the tune of ‘Subjugation manifested a glo- rious subjugation l’ A man much about court in China would require a skull as thick as a buffalo’s. This ceremony is required not merely in the imperial pres- ence, but on receiving any message or donation of broken vict- uals from the emperor; and the Dutch embassy (whom the Chinese lodged in a stable, and treated with every indignity) actually performed the Ko-tow for some half-gnawed bones ºvº **, *... • £ s—º- - - - - - = ** {: = a – " ? r * t -** ** *:::...:5 -*s -" - . Tº - * * 3 : - *-*... - - ... • ~) B O O R OF G Y M N A S T I C S. in 1795, without gaining one single point by their abject humility. º 54. Feet close—hands on hips—now rise on your toes, and jump completely round, first to the right, then to the left. 55. Again try the Chinese Ko-tow, only stretch forward the left leg. 56. Lift up the left leg, and stretch it out behind—stand steady, boys—bend your right knee, and lower yourself slow- ly, touch the ground with your left knee, and rise very gradu- ally. 57. Here's an old friend with a new face ; what we used to call French and English when I was a school-boy, but nevertheless it is a good exercise, if performed with good hu- 36 PAUL PREST ON’s mour. Each one take his man—fold your arms— elbows close to body—hop on right leg—try to bring your opponent' out of his position by a blow of your right shoulder against his right shoulder. 58. Suppose we try the 56th exercise; only we'll stretch out the right leg as far as we can behind, and touch the ground with the right knee. 59. Let us have another hop. Fold arms as before, and let each try to break his opponent's position, by hopping on the left leg, and hitting him with the left shoulder. 60. Hands on hips—bend gradually forward, at the same time stretching out the left leg behind till the head, body, and leg form a horizontal line. Now stand on the left leg, and perform the same with the right. Exo -T- ) B O O K OF G Y MIN A ST I C S. Well, I have given you sixty preliminary exercises. I could have given you many more ; but as my object is not to make posture-masters nor tumblers of you, I am sure, from my own experience, they are quite enough for all practical purposes. Some of them are no doubt ludicrous ; so much the better, you will enjoy them the more. Ridiculous they can only appear in the eyes of a vulgar mind, which cannot perceive that health is more surely obtained, and easily pre- served, when the mind is agreeably enlisted in the pursuit, than by all the rules that have been written and published for the guidance of dyspeptic patients or hypochondriacal subjects. Good bye for the present ; the next time I see you, I shal; have the parallel bars quite ready. {{/~ * * - / ~xc, Y - §§ss=º 38 PA UI, PREs to N’s UHAPTER II. EXERCISES ON THE PARALLEL BARS. As some of you, my young friends, may perhaps like to erect parallel bars of your own, a few hints may not be un- acceptable ; as upon the good or bad construction of these de- pends the pleasurable performance of the exercises upon them, or otherwise. The bars or top rails should be six feet long, and about four inches deep ; so wide, that when the hands are laid on the top, the fingers and thumb may come easily on the sides, and afford a firm purchase; the tops should be a lit- tle rounded, and made very smooth, the posts must be strong and fixed firmly in the ground, the rails projecting about four inches from the ends, and rounded off to prevent hurting the legs. They should be wide enough apart so as to allow. the body to swing easily—say about twenty inches—the dis- tance being regulated according to the age and size of the par- ties using them, and so high that the gymnast must make a Af Ş *s & Book of G Y M N A STICS. 39 slight spring, in order to suspend himself on his hands, as in the 61st exercise, where the posts, however, are not exhibited the full length. 61. What do you say to making your first appearance at the bar 3 Let's take a walk over it. O, any one can do that. Well then, follow me. Begin at this end and walk on your hands to the other end, and back again; you will find it try your arms more than you imagined. Walking backwards, a la crevisse, is much harder than walking forward, espec- ially as you must do it with the arms quite straight. Do that three times forwards, then three times backwards. .62. Keep your arms straight and body quite upright, as in the last exercise;—now try and raise the legs level with the bars, three times, in the form of letter L. Mind, your knees are not to be bent in the least. I shall assist you in some of the first exercises, by grasping you with one hand round the elbow, so as to stiffen your arm a little, and keep you from dropping down between the bars. t 3 º'º. º . -º-º: - & *r .º . Sed -**** P A U L PREST on ’s | 63. Now, boys, you must learn to look at both sides of a question; therefore, seize the left bar quickly with the right hand in front of you, keeping your arms stiff—just so—that you may not come to the ground; while in this position, put your left hand behind you and seize the right bar—bring round the right hand immediately to support you, thus—form. ing a complete circle—do this several times. This, and many other exercises, will render both hands and arms equally facile. It would be well if boys and girls were accustomed to do various things with either hand, a faculty that would be very serviceable to them in after life. 64. I will now show you another very meat exercise—that is, when it is done well. Suspend your body between the bars—arms straight—now clap your hands in front—and again seize the bars without coming to the ground. Do the same behind. t B O O E OF G Y M N A S T I C S. 65. 66. Turn your hands inside of the bars, and walk from one end to the other. First try to do this forward, and then at-tempt it backward. Grasp the left bar firmly, and touch it with the right hand, and bring it back directly—hold the right bar tightly, and touch it with the left hand. Remember, each action must be done with great rapidity, or you will be sure to come to the ground. - 67. Here is an exercise that will try your loins. First position—raise the back slowly, as high as you possibly can, keeping the arms straight—then gradually sink to the orig- inal position. No fear of lumbago after this. PAUL PR EST ON's 68. Do you think you can now jump forward on the hands along the bars ? Try and do it first with bended knees, then try with the knees kept straight—afterwards endeavor to jump backward, first with bent, then with straight knees. 69. Perhaps you will be able to touch first the right bar, then the left, with the hands turned inside the bars, as in the 65th exercise. 70. Jump again along the bars, hands turned inside, first forward, then backward—knees bent, the easiest way—knees straight, rather difficult; but never mind, only try it ; you will succeed by-and-by. . 71. Make yourself at home by resting the fore-arm and el- pows on the bars—and try to raise first one arm straight, and then the other. When you are up with arms straight, you may come gently down on the arms again—first on the right arm, then on the left. Do this three times. 4– - -* -m-, F | | | | } ! } 72. You must now endeavor to acquire the power of º swinging freely and fearlessly between the bars, for this will öss=º B O O K OF G Y M N A S T I C S • enable you to perform the exercises which I mean to show presently, with ease, grace, and freedom from danger. Swing with arms straight, slowly, and not very high at first, and at length as high as possible. i-- —I. T ||| 73. Rest on your fore-arms in my arm-chair, then walk along the bars in that position ; but take care to keep your feet from the ground. =\;= 74. This exercise will bring the muscles of your back, and especially your loins, as well as your arms, into full play. It is only just to jump along the bars in the form of the let- ter L, backward and forward. PAUL PREST ON’s 75. Now, my boys, for a swinging exercise; and as I will stand by to assist, do not be afraid to swing boldly, keep- ing the legs close together, and throw them gracefully over the left bar in the front of the body, like this—taking care tº ') catch hold of the left bar with the right hand on coming down on the feet. In all the swinging exercises, be careful not to swing too long, and keep the legs close together, un- less otherwise directed. 76. Each one again swing, and throw his legs over the right bar in front, catching the right bar with the left hand on coming down as before. Mark, boys, do not swing long, or you will either over-balance or tire yourselves before the ex- ercise is completed. B O O K OF G Y M N A S T I C S. 45 77. Another elegant exercise, when well done. Swing as high as you can, and throw the feet over the left bar be- hind the body, as you see me—precautions as before. You will find, as I go on, that I make you bring both sides of your body into action, in order to strengthen every muscle. 78. Swing once more, and throw the feet over the right bar behind the body—precautions as before. You see I am rather careful; for this simple reason, a little care often pre- vents a great deal of mischief. 79. Here's a key that will unlock any chest, although it be as tight as one fastened by Chubb's patent. Bend down as low as you can, and rise up. Do this slowly, that the pec- toral muscles may be gradually accustomed to the strain, which is felt at first, but which, after a little practice, is not perceived. P A U L PR E S To N’s 80. Take another swing or two, and throw the legs over the right bar in front, so as to sit on it so. Now bring the legs again between the bars with a spring—again swing, and do the same over the left bar. 81. Arms straight, as in 61st exercise. Turn quickly round between the bars, so as to change the position of the body, first from the right side, then from the left, without coming to the ground—just the same as ‘right about face' of the drill-serjeant. 82. Swing and throw the legs over the right bar behind, so as to sit on it. Throw them with a spring between the bars, and without stopping, bring them over the left bar be- hind. Do this alternately several times. * - --- *A* -AY ~f * === t Y. B O O K OF G Y M N A S T I C S. 47 83. This next, you will see, is a combination of the others, ſ Swing and bring the legs over the right bar in front, as in ac- % tion 73—then swing and bring them over the left bar be- *-s hind. Swing and bring the legs over left bar in front—then throw them over the right bar behind. 84. I’ll show you how to make an angle of 45 degrees, without rule or dividers. Raise your legs in front of you above the bars, and spread them open without touching bars —after this fashion. Do the same behind the arms. 85. Throw the legs with a meat swing over the right bar in front, partially sitting on it, as in exercise 80,—then with a spring throw them completely over the left bar, so as to clear it, and come to the ground on the feet. Observe precaution as in exercise 75. 86. Rest on the fore-arms, and swing in that position ; gently at first, to get confidence, then increase the height, both back and front. PAUL PREST on ’s 87. Swing the legs over the left bar in front, afterwards throw them completely over the right bar in front, and come down to the ground on the feet. SS. Swing the right leg, bring it sharply from behind over the right bar, quickly lifting up the right hand to let the leg pass. Remember to hold fast, so as not to drop down. Do the same with the left. This is best tried at first, at the end of the bars. S9. The one I am about to show you was jocularly called the Barber's Curl. Hang on the end of the bars, so as to form the letter L, so (a)—then turn gently over, thus, (b) with- out letting the feet touch the ground, like this, (c). Now re- turn gradually to the first position. How do you feel 90. Hang between the bars, suspended by your hands at one end, and the feet near the instep at the other. Let B O O K OF G Y M N A STICS, - 49 | your back fall into an easy curve. That was called German Sausage at our Gymnasium. - *. ſº el -- | | 91. Rest on the fore-arms and swing, and rise up as the legs come forward-then go down again on the fore-arms as the legs go backward. 92. Swing on hands, and bend down as the legs go back- ward (a)—then rise as the legs come forward, (b). Do this several times. P A UL PR EST on's AºA 3 93. Suspend yourself between the bars, then stoop down as in action 79, and kiss the right thumb-rise—stoop down again to kiss the left thumb–and so on alternately. If your elbows meet behind, don't be alarmed. 94. Swing on the hands, and bend down as the legs go backward, grasshopper fashion. ſ | 95. Swing as before, and come down on the fore-arms as the legs go forward, just so. - 96. Swing on the fore-arms, and throw the legs over the bar in front, thus—first on the right, then on the left side. Do the same behind. B O O K. O. F. G Y M N A S T I C S. 51 97. Raise the body slowly, and bring the legs completely over the left bar without sitting—remain a short time, and bring them slowly within the bars again. Do this alternately over each bar. T 98. Swing, and throw the legs over behind, so as to sit— bring them with a swing inside the bar, and without stop- ping throw them over the same side in front—first on the right—then on the left bar. 99. Swing at one end of the bars—and with one spring jump between the bars to the other end, with straight arms || -—first forward and then backward. PAUL PREST on ’s | 100. Rest on the fore-arms—swing and throw the feet over, so as to take a complete somerset. Do this in the mid- dle of the bars—afterwards from the end—first forward, then backward. ">me -*.ſi | W # = |\\ 101. Swing at the end, and throw both legs backward over the end of the bars, as before, with one leg. See ac- tion 88. 102. Swing with bent arms, and take a somerset back wards. ...“ * --- * ****, *-* --- B O O E. O. F. G Y MIN A S T I C S. 53 103. Position as in the 61st exercise. Now bend down and kiss the bars right and left. { 104. Swing on hands—while in full swing stoop down and kiss the bars alternately. 105. Swing on the fore-arms, then throw the legs grace- fully over the right bar behind, like this, and come to the ground on your feet, unless you like to come on your head better. V N 106. Swing on the fore-arms, and then throw your legs over the left bar, commg to the ground in a similar manner. Mind you catch hold of the bar. ºl. **- ~ 54 PAUL PR Es To N’s 107. Turn on fore-arms, and take a somerset backward slowly. This is different from the 100th exercise, for it is in fact merely a rolling over on the bars. 108. Swing in the middle of the bars, and throw both legs backward over the bars, and bring them in front. See ac- tion 101. This requires not only more energy, but a tact, which confidence, the result of practice, alone can give. 109. Swing on hands, arms stiff, and throw a somerset, keeping the feet close, so as to come between the bars, catch- ing the arms between the bars on coming down. Don't be afraid, I shall stand by you ; only keep your legs close. ſº | B O O K OF G Y M N ASTICS. 110. Suppose we take a serpentine walk. You have ||...} only to sustain the body on the bar outside ; throw the legs § underneath one bar, and over the other, as (a). Seize this other bar with the hands on each side of the legs, draw up the body so as to sit on the bar, the legs being outside ; grad- ually slide down, catch the bars with the arms, as (b)—at the same time throwing the legs so as to catch the opposite bar behind by the instep, release the arms separately, and bring them underneath—hold on bar, hands over, slide the legs backward, and with a spring come to the first position. 111. Swing between the bars, and throw the legs over the right bar, so as to sit thereon with the back to the other bar; gradually slide down, holding by the hands inside, and 56 PAUL PR Es To N’s throw the legs underneath, so as to catch the left bar by the instep, suspending yourself at the same time by the hands. This was termed the Bird's Nest. 112. Walk along the bars with bent arms, grasshopper fashion—first forward then backward. 113. Swing while in grasshopper position. 114. Swing and jump along the bars with bent arms, first forward, then backward. 115. Walk from one end of the bars to the other, with legs spread in front, afterwards with legs spread behind the alſTV1S. 116. Swing at one end with bent arms, and spring to the other end. This is called the Grasshopper Spring. B O O K OF G Y M-N A S T I C S. 117. Swing at one end of the bar, and take a somerset backward, coming down like this, * > –" 118. Swing and spread the legs while above the bars, both before and behind. 119. Take a short run towards the bars on the outside, catch the nearest with the right hand, and spring over the bar, immediately let go the right hand, and catch the same bar with the left, passing the right hand to the other bar, and without coming to the ground swing the legs gracefully over that other bar behind. - 120 Take a run as before, catch the nearest bar with the loft hand, spring over, immediately letting go the left hand, and catching the bar with the right ; at the same time pass the left hand to the other bar, and, without touching the ground, swing both legs with ease over the other bar in front. I think, my little friends, I have pretty well explained to you all the useful practices at the bar—sufficient to make you expert barristers, even if you have never studied Tidd's Practice. I think I hear you say, This is good fun; we feel ourselves stronger than we were, and should like to ac- company Paul Preston to the Pole. With all my heart : come to me tomorrow morning at six o'clock precisely, and we'll take an excursion thither; nothing like rising early, my lads; you all know the old proverb, Darly to bed, and early, to rise, Will make a man healthy and wealthy and wise. In truth, I tell you once for all, that these exercises should be performed before breakfast ; it is wrong to use much exertion immediately after a hearty meal, or at least till di- gestion is fully accomplished. So, good bye till I see you again. Good bye. Good bye. B O O R OF G Y MIN A S T H C S. CHAPTER III. EXERCISES ON THE HORIZONTAL POLE. I AM now going to show you a set of exercises which was much admired at the Gymnasium, because they exhibited the strength, agility, and elasticity of the gymnast in a very novel way ; but, independently of this, there was a little dar- ing in some of them, which they who had patiently and systematically persevered in the preliminary exercises and those on the parallel bars, could perform with a degree of skill that often excited the admiration of many of their compeers, who were too impatient to submit to these training processes, for such they really are. - You see this horizontal pole is rather more than two in- ches in diameter, and six feet long ; it is made of southern pine without a knot, smoothed but not polished, for fear your hands should slip ; and it is strongly mortised into these two ſ 60 PAUL PREs To N’s upright posts, which are firmly fixed into the ground, so as not to shake about, and it is so high, that you are obliged to make a slight spring to reach it. Of course, when there are a great number of you, there should be three or four poles in a line, at various heights to accommodate different classes. Although it appears small, it will bear my weight, and there- fore, boys, I am sure it will bear yours, that is, if there is only one or two on it at a time. I dare say you are anxious to begin, and tired of my pre- face ; but I have not quite finished it. However, I have only to request, when you and your companions are exercising on the pole, in my absence, that one of the cleverest and strongest be chosen as a leader, whose duty it must be carefully to watch the progress of every action, and be ready, in an in- stant, to catch the gymnast, should he make a slip. The knowledge, that some one is upon the alert to assist in- stantly in case of accident, is of infinite service in all cases, especially in gymnastics, as it creates a confidence of mind that enables the tyro to put out all his energies, and direct them in the most efficient manner. 121. The first thing you have to do, is to learn to suspend your body by both hands on the pole. Observe me atteil- tively, and you will perceive that my thumbs are on the same side of the pole as my fingers, not grasping it as you B O O K OF G Y M N ASTICS. 61 would a roll of paper—your arms straight in a line with the body, so that the power may be more effectually applied to move the weight—keep your knees quite straight and stiff, and your feet close, unless you are told otherwise—just like this. *º-º- 122. Now to try the muscles of your arms. Hang from the pole only by the right hand. Hold on if you can for half a minute, then change to the left hand—six times alternately. Two of you may perform this exercise at the same time, on- ly keeping towards each end. - = -º-º: Q =G 62 PAUL PR Es.To N’s 123. Hang from the pole at one end, as explained to you just now — hands over the top—and see if you can walk with them from one end to the other, and back again—take moderate strides, and slow—mind, knees straight. | 124. Try this exercise again, only bring your hands un- der, and grasp the pole, so that the fingers may point to- wards your face—keep your thumbs too on the same side. This mode is generally found easier than the other; but you must practise both, for the power of grasping firmly is of in- finite importance. 125. Ready, boys. Let one of you hang on the pole with your back to the post, and one hand on each side of the pole—now walk along it on your hands to the other end— then backwards. Perform this at first with the knees a little bent, afterwards with the knees straight. You will find it best to draw yourself up a little with both hands, before you attempt to advance each step. B O O K OF G Y MIN A S T I C S. 126. See if you can discover any thing beyond the pole. Hands over the pole, as in the 121st exercise—draw yourself up gradually, till the head and chest are above the pole, as you see me—then slowly descend thus—three times run- ning—and you will find it quite enough. Two may perform this together. -j- 127. This is easier. Hands under the pole, as I directed you in 123d exercise, and draw yourself up like this—bring your chest close to the pole—descend slowly—do this thrice. You will find, at first, that each time you rise you will find it more difficult; but after having gone through the whole of PAUL PREs T on ’s \ these exercises, and practised them well, you will be able to do this exercise a dozen times running. | || 128. Shoulder pole ! What's that ? Why only just to hang on the pole, as I told you in 125. Gradually draw your- self up till your right shoulder touches the pole in real ear- nest, like a rabbit or wild-duck merchant—now descend slow ly, and rising again, let your leſs shoulder touch the pole— do this three times each way. 129. The idea of jumping along the pole on the hands has puzzled a great many who would not undergo the prelim- inary training. They have felt that their hands were held as B O O K OF G Y M N A S T I C S. 65 fast to the pole as if they had seized the electro-magnetic ap- paratus at the exhibition gallery. You, my lads, who have gone through all this, have only to hang on one end, as in the walking exercise, 123, and by drawing yourself and your legs up a little way, make a spring along the pole—do this till you reach the other end, then go back whence you came. But I must tell you, that after a while you ought to manage this exercise with knees quite straight—the arms are to be benefit- ed, not the legs, in this case. 130. Now try another jump or two, with the hands under the pole, and you will find it comparatively easy. I dare say, at first you will find it blister your hands, at least it did mine, and many others besides me—but never mind, gym- masts 6Ught not to care for trifles. 131. Hang once more, and try to bring your legs into a horizontal position, as you did on the parallel bars, forming the letter L. Few can succeed who have not attempted on the bars, after this manner. - —t- PAUL PREST on's #3: $º 132. Again suspend yourself on the pole, and bring yout legs slowly up till the instep touches the pole, as you see here. Whenever I say slowly, I do it, because young gym. nasts are apt to spring violently, in order to attain their object, and after all cannot. But this is not all; they run the risk of straining the muscles by such violent exertion, and, what is worse, rather lose than gain strength by such means. If you cannot accomplish any particular exercise after a trial or two let it alone, and try another; you will be sure to accomplish i. by and by ; I know that by experience. 133. Hang once more on one end of the pole, with your face towards the opposite post, and with a slight spring throw your right leg over the pole, suspending yourself firmly by the hands on each side—now release the right leg, at the same time throwing the left leg over the left side of the pole. Do this alternately six times. - º § i § * * & § # \ IB O O K OF G Y M N A S T I C S. 134. See now if you can turn yourself inside out. Bring your insteps up to the pole, as you did in No. 132—keep them firm against the pole, and let your body turn easily un- der the pole, and look me in the face, just so—then go back the way you came. TS, 135. Another excellent extension of the back and loins. Fix your hands on each side of the pole, and slowly bring the legs up on the outside of the arms. | E- ſºy 136. More twork for the loins. Hands on one side—arms apart—and slowly bring up the legs between them; see me. - - - Rººs ºs w * It - *: º ºx&A *\}\; *O- - P A U L P R E S To N’s If you have practised the exercises on the Parallel Bars with spirit, you will find these last three on the Pole compara- tively easy. 137. We come now to an exercise which requires a lit- tle care, but only a little, as you will have acquired a toler- ably firm grasp, that is, if you have passed the Bar. Suspend yourself by both hands, on one side of the pole, and swing gently at first, as you will feel your hands inclined to slip ; but you gain a firmer hold by degrees. Increase the height till you can swing freely as I do. 138. If you feel confidence, boys, try, as you swing back, to spring up from the pole and come on the hands again as you are descending. Whoever is leader should stand close by to break the fall, and to prevent coming on the face, should the young gymnast slip. I have however seen many a gym- | mast spring upwards of a foot from the pole, and always come down again upon it with the utmost certainty; such is the effect of confidence when strength increases. f * K 2 e-eº. B O O K OF G Y M N A S T I C S. 69 139. This next really requires more tact than real strength, yet, when both are combined, is easily accomplished. First Č Jhrow your right leg over the pole, as I explained to you in the 133d exercise—them, with a spring, bring up the right . elbow so (a)—lastly, by another spring, bring up the left el- bow, and by degrees, both arms straight, so as to sit across the pole thus (b). 140. You will now be able, I think, to perform this next little exercise ; it requires quickness as well as strength. I should have told you,that the thumbs are always to be on the same side as the fingers, when not otherwise expressed; it is of the utmost consequence, for you will really gain power by so doing. Hands on each side, face towards the upright, and, with a slight spring, change the position of the hands— that is, if your right hand is next your face, bring the left . next it—five or six times. Bending the knees at the time facilitates the spring ; but the real gymnast will not be satis- fied till he can do it with the knees stiff and straight. P A U L P R E S T o N’s 141. Here's a test of the strength of your arm. Pu yourself up as in 127; hands under the pole—let go the left hand, and see how long you can suspend your body by the right arm, so—now try it with the left. 142. Rise as high as you can, so as to see your friends clearly on the other side of the pole—throw your arms over the pole, and hold firmly by them as you would in looking over an orchard wall, like this. 143. Try to erect a perpendicular according to Paul Preston's Geometry. Hands on each side of the pole—draw yourself upgradually—open "our compasses, and let the legs thereof come up one on each side, so as to be perpendicular to the pole. B O O K OF G Y MIN A S T I C S. 144. Now, boys, try your powers at this. Hands on each side, face towards the post—draw yourselves up a lit- tle, feet close, and with a swing throw both legs at once over one side of the pole, then over the other. Do this several times. 145. You may perhaps be strong enough now to hang with hands over the pole, and to curl yourself up like this, and go slowly over the pole ; but do not strain too much. As I said before, the strength will come by and by. P A U L PR E S T on ’s 146. Get up on the pole, as I did in No. 139, and sit across with hands on each side, and your face towards the post. Now swing yourself completely round, so as to come up to the sitting posture—hold tight—do it several times. TT 147. Now, again hands on each side, and swing the left leg over the right side of the pole—at the same time let go with the right hand, and catch the pole so that the legs may be between the hands, and bring your face to the front thus— now swing the right leg well, so as to give you an impetus, and go completely round again and again. Remember, both hands to be on the same side. º 148. I will now show you an exercise, which appears dan- gerous to many, and would be so to any one unaccustomed ſ3 O O K OF G Y M N ASTICS. to these exercises; to the experienced gymnast there is no danger, I have often performed it myself, and seen it done by others, without the slightest evil effect arising from it. It on- ly proves how pliable and at the same time how strong the muscular system may become by systematic training. You will observe that I bring my legs between my arms, begin- ning in every respect as in No. 136. Let them pass completely through, and hang down thus—twisted so. I then draw my- self gradually back between the arms, and hang perpendicu- lar as before. y 149. Hang on one end of the pole, hands on each side, face towards the post—swing backwards and catch the pole with the toes—let your back fall in—and suspend yourself thus. ****, * sº-->" *_*-ºf- - P A UL PREs Ton’s 150. Now throw the right leg over the pole—then with a spring bring up the right elbow in this position—at the same time throw the left arm over the pole, and hang thus for a short time. -> 151. Now, boys, draw up your body as high as possible, hands over the pole, and with a spring elevate, if you can, both elbows at once—if not, one at a time—and rise up gradually till the body is quite straight—now change the po- sition of your hands, so that the fingers may be on the same side as the body, and underneath the pole—then bend for- ward, and turn yourself gradually over till your feet touch the ground.—Well done ! -- & \ | § B O O E O F G Y M N A S T I C S. 75 Q==S. 152. Bramah's patent Detector. Do just as before, except changing the position of the hands, which must remain as they were—sink gradually down, and bestow a “kiss on that fair Pole’—then rise (there is no occasion to say slowly) to the first position. If this does not discover the riches of your chest, I know not what will. –SS22– 153. The meatest way of mounting the pole is to throw either the right or left leg across, as we did in No. 133, and with a swing or two bring yourself up, and when on it, sit astride, and with a firm grasp, thumbs across, raise your bo- dy off the pole, till it is horizontal, or as near that mathemat- ical line as possible. 154. The Roasting Jack. Hang at one end of the pole —hands over on oneside—let go your right hand—the body -- §ºsº, *. - §ºjº. §sº *-m- & -2 - - ...” 76 P A U L PR Es To N’s - | side with the right hand—let go the left hand—let the body || swing round, and bring the left hand on the same side as the right—so on to the end of the pole—hanging first on one side of the pole, then on the other. Here you will require a firm grasp, as the very act of turning tends to disengage you from the pole ; but your wrist must be the pivot on which you principally rotate—the hand must keep you suspended. 155. Now try and throw your right leg over the pole thus —and immediately throw both arms over the pole, holding by them only, like this. º - 156. If you can do the last exercise, which I dare say you can by this time; throw the right leg over from the left side, the right arm being underneath, and let the left arm down so. *- * ... • * * * * † - --E 2 - - * - -- - - *. a-> i - -- a- - $s lº \ - wº tº- - --~~~~~...*** -- ~~~~~------ *** - **.****.e.- ...---- > * - - - - - - * * ... tºº ** * - - * **, * '...} will swing from right to left—clasp the pole on the other sº - º ** - - * Book of G Y M N As T.I.C.S. 77. 157. Here's muscle, hard as iron as major Longbow says. Hang on the pole—hands on one side—spring at once on to the pole, and balance yourself on the arms, like this. This certainly is rather difficult at first, but it is astonishing what practice will enable you to do. You see I feel quite at my ease, and do not stir from my position, 158. Looking towards the antipodes. Merely hang on the pole as before, bring your legs between your arms—gradu- ally draw them and your body up, till both are quite per- pendicular on the same side as the hands, as I am now. 78 PAUL PR Es Ton’s 159. Again mount the pole, and bring both legs over, so as to sit on it, as I do, see—gradually lower the body, till you look something like a grasshopper, and swing with arms behind—bring yourself gradually up again. Once is enough. How do you like it 2 --- 160. Now, young gymnasts, just hook yourselves up by the right hand on the pole—grasp the wrist with the left hand, and endeavor to pull yourselves up. Try to perform the same, by hanging on the left hand. Remember to grasp the pole firmly, as not only is the weight of your body suspended by the arm, but it becomes the purchase, or fulcrum, by which you lift your body up. 161. Sit on the pole, and slide gradually down till you are in the same position as you saw me in No. 159. Now catch the pole with bent arms, like this, seize hold of the trousers by the pockets, grasp them tight, and swing back- wards completely round. - a ** ****, _ºf fº B O OFC OF G Y M N A S T I C S. y 162. Draw yourself up, as I told you in No. 151—grasp the pole firmly, and then kneel on it—hands on one side— steady—don't be afraid—now swing yourself over the pole, and come down on your feet. This is perhaps the most dif- ficult of all, to kneel on a round substance, and that too so small, is a feat to which habit alone can inure you. But by this time you will have acquired such a mastery over your limbs, and so much self-possession, that while others perhaps may tremble, you alone will be the least concerned about the matter. All you have to do is to hold tight by the hands, the rest will easily follow after a few trials. Kºç |- 80 PAUL PR Esto N’s 163. Seat yourself quite comfortably on the pole, as I particularly requested, in No. 159. Vacate your seat by Sud- denly dropping off it, and hanging, not by the neck, but by the hams, as you may see me. 164. Once more hang with the hands on each side at one end of the pole—then elevate the legs, one on each side, so, try to walk in that position to the other end. My YoUNG FRIENDs, For such I am confident you will permit me to call you, I have often been asked by the unthinking, what use there is in all this which I have been teaching you. I have general- ly replied to these wiseacres in something after this strain : A Book of G Y MNAs T I Cs. 81 In the first place, the muscular system becomes so powerful- ly strengthened and developed, that there is hardly any spe- cies of fatigue, within the power of human endurance, which the well-taught and well-practised gymnast cannot under- go. The animal spirits become so exhilarated and so buoyant, that they are not easily depressed by the common occurren- ces of life. The health of course is considerably increased, and all the digestive processes go on well. So much for one's self. But a nobler employment of the new powers has been created ; the presence of mind which is engendered by these, and other equally interesting exercises, to which I shall call your attention, is of the highest im- portance, when called upon to render assistance to others in the hour of danger. The power of grasping, almost equal to a blacksmith's vice, will enable you to sustain not only your own weight, but a body equal in weight to yourselves along with it. Should that terrific element, a fire, overtake you in the dead of night, and no way of escape be left you but by a window. it may be, three or four stories high—the fire has approached your room, you can no longer stay, or you will be suffocated by the smoke—no ladder has yet arrived by which you can descend—your only alternative between life and death, is to jump from the window, or hang from the window-sill, or bal- F 1 ſº fºss gº=sgº | | | S2 P A U L PR E S To N’s cony if there be one. The former is fraught with danger of breaking your limbs, and becoming maimed for the rest of your days—or what is too often the case, with lingering death ; the latter will enable you to remain for a long time to hang suspended, till relief comes in some shape or other. The gymnast, knowing his powers, will prefer the latter ; and should he see a fellow-creature in danger, but yet too timid and frightened to venture on either, he will ascend a lad- der, and bring down his burden safe under his powerful hold. Should shipwreck be his lot, he will cling with unflinch- ing tenacity to the rigging, and almost defy the attacks of | waves, appalling even to the stoutest hearts of oak. Should an unfortunate being fall into the water, the gymnast, if he can swim—and every boy and girl ought to learn to swim— will be able to hold up both himself and his helpless charge, till some friendly rope or boat come to his assistance. Is he inclined to take a pedestrian tour amidst mountain scenery, whether he be a botanist, mineralogist, or geologist, he will find his gymnastic exercises have been the best preparatives, to fit him for undergoing the fatigues of such an excursion. In short, such a being will be enabled to go on his way rejoicing, because he has health of body and mind, and is en- | abled by his powers to render a thousand services to his ſel- 'ow creatures, which the feeble, the timid, and consequent- \y irresolute, will never be able to accomplish. # **ar. *_*. ſº –4–tº––e. " .* - * -- **—-a-r e-- º *s rºy Kºº º *: :2:3: t - J. *...*:* ... ºf - * * sº- --~~ 33 -º B O O K OF G Y M N ASTICS, CHAPTER IV. HORSE EXERCISES. O, PAUL PRESTON we are glad to see you again. What have you for us now 2 Something new, no doubt. We have been practising the other exercises you were so kind as to show us, and feel our legs and arms so strong, that we fancy we may venture upon something else. That's right; come along then and see my stud. Like the horse-dealers, but with more faith, I can warrant my mags perfectly safe and quiet, and fit for any timid lady or gentle- man to ride ; they never shy nor kick—no danger of their jibbing or rearing with you, nor of your throwing them down and breaking their knees ; in fact they are sound in body and limb. Here they are, from a Shetland pony up to a tol- erably sized galloway. What do you think of them 2–But I must explain. You see I have had them made of differ- ent sizes, to suit the little as well as the big boys and girls. 84 PAUL PR Es Ton’s What! do young ladies practise gymnastics as well as boys 3–Why should they not? I have seen some young ladies practise many of the exercises that you have been per- forming. Of course not all of them—it would be neither requisite nor proper—but there are ladies now alive, who can bear witness to the great benefits they received in going through a course of the parallel bars and horizontal pole exer- cises, under the direction of a medical attendant, superintend- ed by Professor Voelker. Nay, I know some young ladies who practised several of the exercises which I am about to show you on the wooden horse, and acquired thereby such agility and confidence that they ventured with perfect success to repeat them on their live pony, and are now reckoned most expert horsewomen. To ride well has always been accounted a necessary accom- plishment for a gentleman, and as it is a good maxtm ‘that what is worth doing at all is worth doing well,” I will en- deavor to give such a notion of mounting, &c. as will enable you to stride a living steed with at least more confidence, and some little more grace, than if you had never attempted any thing of the kind. You see these horses are made of one solid piece of wood a portion of the trunk of a tree that does not taper is the best, made as you perceive quite smooth, and rounded at the ends, E O O R O F G Y MIN A S T I C S. S5 The middle, on the top, is covered with leather, about the length of an ordinary saddle, but not stuffed ; the pommels are made of wood, curved at the top, screwed down, and covered likewise with leather. The whole is fixed on four stout legs, which go at least two feet into the ground, to keep them quite firm, and prevent them from rocking. The pommels, as you see, are placed rather nearer one end, called the head, than the other, to imitate the saddle on the real horse. I should have told you to remark, that the hind pommel or cantle, as it is sometimes called, is rather higher than the front. - Having called your attention to the most prominent points In my steeds, I will only remark, that when mounted, you are not to sit bolt upright like a tailor, nor head foremost like a sailor, but easy as if you were in an arm-chair. The Cossacks, in one part of the world, and the Arabs in another, are perfect models of ease and grace when on horseback. Before you begin the following exercises, observe the body and head are to be kept upright, and the knees and ankles straight, unless otherwise expressed, or when a change is ab- solutely necessary. In mounting it is customary to get up on the left, or near side as it is called, of the horse ; though for the sake of practice, and bringing the muscles of both legs and arms into full play, you will have to perform many of the exercises on both sides. | PAUL PREST on ’s 165. To horse ! Mark me—place both hands on the middle of the pommels, thumbs inside, so as to grasp them firmly—slightly bend the knees, while the feet are close to- gether, and endeavor to spring up so as to bring the arms quite straight and stiff, as on the parallel bars. Do this sev- eral times in succession, without resting on the horse, at first slowly, afterwards more quickly, and always come down on the toes. 166. You must now learn to extend your legs gracefully and with ease. To see a gentleman get on a horse clumsily, argues that he is either an awkward fellow, or has not been properly taught.—Well, spring up as I told you just now, at the same time throwing up the right leg horizontally, that it may be above the back of the horse. Observe me—I keep my body perfectly upright, yet without appearing stiff, and the leg that hangs down is quite straight. Let this be done at least a dozen times. See next exercise. º º 22 rº : si }: g B O O K OF G Y M N A S T I C S. 87 167 Now just try the same experiment with your left leg. To be sure, you will not want to throw your left leg |{/, over the horse's head in mounting ; but it may so happen, from some cause or other, that you cannot get up on the pro- per side, then the faculty of using both legs with equal fa- cility will quickly appear. I know a gentleman who has lost ** his left leg, and has only a cork one attached to his thigh, but who is in the habit of riding a great deal. He is obliged in consequence to mount on the right or off side of the horse, which he does with great ease. This has only been acquired by practice. - V’ 168. Let us endeavor to put these last two exercises into practice alternately ; for the free motion of your legs is highly necessary to enable you to accomplish the exercises that are to come, with ease and dexterity. Spring up, boys, | as before—throw up your right leg—come down to the ground #| on your toes—up again, and throw up your left leg—again with the right—down—up—now the left—six times each leg. P A UL PR E ST on's 169. If you noticed carefully, you saw that in the last three exercises my foot did not touch the horse, but was brought up perpendicularly—the other leg hung perfectly straight. You must now endeavor, in springing up, at the same time to spread the legs so as to touch the sides of the horse with the toes—no fear of his prancing. Let this be done often, till you can do it easily. Don't forget, that in all these exercises, the arms are to be quite straight and stiff. *. sº-) ſº-A’ 170. In order to give a little pliability to your knees, let me see you spring up neatly, as I showed you in the very first exercise—then, as you come to the ground, form a sort of ace of diamonds, by crossing your legs and bending your knees—so. B O O K O E' G Y M N A ST I C S. 89 171. To strengthen the arms still more, and create a variety of action, suppose you spring up as before—arms straight, and resting your thighs against the sides of the horse —now spring away from it, and come back again several times, without touching the ground.— This is a useful exercise, as it will prepare you for the living horse, that should he start while you are mounting, and before you are well in the saddle, you may have such command over your body and arms, as will prevent you from being thrown to the ground. 172. Having now acquired a facility of raising the leg with ease and grace, and springing up to the saddle, let us try, boys, how you can place yourselves in it. You are not to scramble up as if you were getting over a fence full of spikes; but you are to place your hands on the pommels, thumbs inside, spring up, and remain for a moment with thighs against the side of the horse, as you see me. $ Now throw the right leg over the back pommel, lifting of course the right hand to let the leg pass, and seat yourself in the saddle. sº To dismount gracefully requires as much care and atten- tion as to mount ; but, with a little practice is easily accom- plished—thus. Place your left hand on the front pommel, thumb inside—put your right hand on the saddle in front of you, and spring off easily, and come on the toes. ; /T : }º f : 173. I told you when I began, that I should sometimes re- º quire some of the exercises to be performed on both sides As ** A-4 *:::-- *gw- zºrw ~xº~~~zrº- 5. i - . . tº w º & - - **º- §cy: Sº W —F. •s .* Rººg º * ſ B O O K OF G Y M N A S T I C S, 91 of the horse, and gave you my reasons—so therefore, without farther preface, be so kind as to go through the 172d exer- cise, on the off or right side of the horse. Remember, you are now to spring up as before—remain a moment suspend- ed, with arms straight—throw the left leg over the back pom- mel, and seat yourself as before. In dismounting you are to place the right hand on the pommel, the left on the saddle, and throw the left leg off the saddle, and come down on the toes. 174. Now, my young horsemen, though I don't wish to see one of you exhibit in the amphitheatre, still I should like to see you masters of the Horse; therefore the more agile you are, and capable of vaulting into and over the saddle, the more command you will possess over the animal you ride. Now, “by way of a preliminary exercise, again place your hands on the pommels and spring up so as to touch the saddle with the toes, the knees bent, as you perceive. Do this half a dozen times. P A UL PR E ST ON’s º 175. Again mount ; but in all your mounting be partic. ular as to the manner—do nothing slovenly—remember my former maxim. Now place your hands close together OY] the front pommel, thumbs outside, and with arms stiff, bent a little forward, and raise the body as high as possible from the saddle. Repeat this again and again. 176. The power of sustaining yourself on one hand and arm, if only for a moment, is essentially necessary to be ac- quired. Suppose, while in the act of mounting the real horse, he should start forward and throw your foot out of the stirup, while your left hand may happen to be on the front pommel—a second of time, if you are strong enough in this arm, will suffice to place you in your saddle, instead of seating you under it, in no very comfortable position. Again then, hands on pommels—spring up—rest awhile— throw the right leg over the horse—lifting the right hand to let the leg pass over the back pommel into the saddle—bring- *T.H. B O O K OF G Y M N A S T I C S. 93 ing down the hand quickly on the pommel—keep the leg perfectly horizontal over the saddle for a time—now throw the leg back again, observing the same precautions. Do this several times without coming to the ground. | - º =—s ºf //\\ | 177. Do as I told you in the 175th Exercise, and when | you have lifted yourself high enough from the saddle, keep firm hold of the pommel, and swing the body backward and forward. You will find a little difficulty perhaps at first, but you will soon accomplish it. You must not forget to keep the knees perfectly straight. 178. What do you think of this exercise ? Nothing like precision ; so therefore mount according to rule, and when fairly seated in the saddle place both hands on the front pommel, thumbs outside, arms straight—stoop a little forward, and bring the feet on to the saddle behind the arms, and, as you see me now, with my back towards you. 179. Before showing you another exercise, let me re- mark, that in sitting on the horse, the thighs should press the sides of it so as to leave a small space between the body and the saddle, just sufficient for the open hand to pass be- tween them. I will now only request you to perform No. 176 on the other side of the horse with the left leg. 180. Here is an exercise we used to call the Lady's Leap, and one which I think is easily performed. With hands on pommels, spring up at the same time, turning the right side to the horse, and throw the right leg over in front of the body, lifting up the left hand to let the leg pass, but keeping firm hold of the back pommel with the right hand. Re- member to dismount properly, as I clearly explained to you in No. 172. C. /\ \ /\\ º Tº O OE OF G Y M N A S T I C S. 95 181. You see I have not quite exhausted my stock, but have lots of exercises in store for you, that is, if you are in- clined to practise them. Shall I go on ? Yes. Well then, again spring up, with hands on pommels; but instead of coming against the side of the horse, throw both legs over the horse behind, taking especial care to come down on your toes, with your face towards the saddle. You see I am quite at home at it. D /\ |\ 182. In all these exercises which I have given you, you must understand that they are to be commenced on the near or left side of the horse, unless I show you otherwise, as in this case ; for I wish you now to perform the Lady's Leap on the off side, throwing of course the left leg over the saddle instead of the right. - 183. Now for a specimen of your agility. Let's see if you can clear the saddle. Hands on pommels as before— spring, and instead of one leg as in the Lady's Leap, throw - z--> PAUL PREST on’s a pºº $º both horizontally over in front—like this, so as to come to the ground on the toes, with face towards the head of the horse. & º-ſº 184. The left arm will now be brought into action, to strengthen which, I particularly wish. Therefore, go through No. 181 again, only begin on the off side, and come down on the near side. 185. As you have now become tolerably pliable in all your limbs, I think you will now find but little difficulty in accomplishing an exercise I am about to show you, and which we used to term the Scissors, from the appearance of the legs when crossed. . When mounted, swing the body as I directed you in No. 177, and while swinging backward cross the legs, at the same time turning the body so as to sit in the sad- dle, face towards the tail of the horse. Remark—when in crossing, the right leg goes over the left, you must turn your body to the right side, and when in crossing, the left leg goes over the right, turn the body to the left side. B O OR OF G Y M N ASTICS. Y- 2– 1S6. Let us vary the exercises a little, and have a sort of leap-frog. Take a run of about half a dozen yards." wards the horse from behind, and jump on the end of it- spread out your legs so as to keep them clear of the sides of the horse, as you did in No. 175—and take the trouble to walk to the other end on your hands, and then spring off. ºr 187. Try No. 183 with the left arm, and from the off side —and do not think I give you too many exercises with the left hand and arm ; as I have already said, that to be able to use the left hand and arm as readily as the right is a great acquisition. I have heard more than one medical man wish he could use the lancet with both hands with equal facility. 9 G & ! • # *Sº , -º 3׺ Tººwº, ºr : E.Tºº S.I. ººº-ºº: :- ºg º PAUL PREST on's 188. This exercise Voelker used to call Der Mill ; it tri. ed our arms a little. Spring, if you can, on the horse be- hind the saddle,without placing the hands on the back, by tak- ing a short run from behind—then put the left hand on the front, and right hand on the back pommel. Now raise the body a little, and swing yourself round so as to come on the neck of the horse, and face the front pommel. Now put the right hand on the front, and the left hand on the back pommel, and swing yourself round on the back of the horse, thus making a complete circle. 189. You know when I threw both legs over the horse, in No. 181, I kept my feet close together; now see if, while going over, you can spread your legs open. First spring up as you stand by the side, then try it with a run towards the horse. 190. Now for a grasshopper exercise. When you have sprung up, arms Sraight, throw your legs back, and quickly B O O K OF G Y M N A S T I C S. 99 draw up your knees close to your chest, and throwing the legs between your arms over the saddle, remaining suspend- ed on your hands, as we did on the horizontal pole ; the backs of your thighs leaning against the opposite side of the horse, but without the feet touching the ground. Now draw up your legs again with a spring, and bring them back to the first position. 191. Here's a flying leap—don't be afraid, I shall stand ready to catch you, should your toes catch the saddle, and take care no harm shall befal you, as every good leader ought to do. Therefore run boldly, and jump clean over, as I do. Come to the ground on your toes. 100 PAUL PR E S To N’s 192. Threading the Needle. How do you manage that || Why just spring up, as you know how, resting on the pom- mels, with the arms straight and throw the right leg between them over the saddle. Bring it back again, and instantly pass the left leg through, resting all the while on the hands. At- tempt this several times. ºr- 193. Diamond cut Diamond. Mount. Now place your hands on the front pommel—raise yourself slowly, and bring your feet in front of the pommel, outside the arms—rest a moment, then swing—then on to the saddle behind—alter- nately a dozen times. º \ B O O K OF G Y M N A S T I C S. 101 : 194. Who can do this 2 Step back half a dozen yards | from the near side, nearly in a line with the horse's tail, if he nas any—run and place the right hand on the back pommel, and throw yourself completely over in front—like this. \ |\ 195. Here's another tickler—look and see how I manage it. I just spring up, rest on the pommels with arms stiff, and throw both legs between them at once, keeping them straight out, in the form of the letter L, and without touching the saddle too. See if you can do that. $za-2 \ 196. You had better try No. 193 on the off side, remem boring to place the left hand on the back pommel, and keep the body and legs in such a position as to form a right angle -—nothing like attitude J --> -: §§§:=3 102 PAUL PREST on ’s 197. I’ll now give you an excellent antidote to the lumba go. When you have placed your hands on the pommels, only spring up and throw the legs on each side of the arms outside, and raise them so as to keep entirely clear of the horse. Don't you feel it 2 º Z/ 198. Jumping off the horse, when in a kneeling posture on the saddle, has seemed to many a perilous sort of affair, but it is only in the seeming ; for when they have placed their hands on the pommels, and sprung up so as to kneel on the saddle, and brought the knees gradually forward so as to overhang the saddle, and sustain themselves as it were by the instep, they felt as if there were no way of escape, but that of the Scotchman's, through the gap in the hedge ‘bock agen’ —but being assured by their leader, who stood close by, that he would catch them instantly if they tripped, without any ceremony they made a spring forward, cleared the saddle, came to the ground quite safe, and then laughed at their own incredulity ; may, so confident were they of their powers, that Yº O O K OF G Y M N A S T I C S. 103 they tried the exercise again and again—and so, boys, may you. So go on. 199. More Leap-Frog 1 Jump on the back of the horse from behind—place your hands on the back pommel, like this, and swing off backward, just as I do now. -( º 200. Another run, boys, from the near side behind, and throw your right leg over the back of the horse, behind the saddle, without placing your hands on. Do the same from the off side, throwing the left leg over. 201. Once more take a good run, place your right hand on the back of the horse, and with a spring throw both legs ever in front, as I showed you in No. 194. 104 PAUL PR Es To N’s : 202. Now for a game of Follow-my-Leader. See me, boys, run and jump from behind, clean into the saddle, leap- frog fashion. Now then I swing myself off from the front pommel over the horse's head ; or, if you think you can't manage it so, place your hands on his neck, and clear it in that manner. 203. I’m giving you two or three hard ones now to try your mettle ; but I know you will not flinch ; so, without more ado, follow me, and spring up, and with arms straight throw your whole body through, over the saddle, and come down to the ground—now try and bring the legs back again vo the other side, first slowly, afterwards with a spring. wº- r— Öss=~5 - - Tº. ***, - ſ * R O O K OF G Y M N ASTICS. 105 204. Another hard one. Run from behind and jump on the end of the horse, by placing hands on the back of it, and springing up so as to bring the feet on it, and stand upright —open your legs gradually, and slide gently down, body up- right, till you sit on the saddle, taking care to press the sides with the thighs on going down. % = A. 205. Now take a little run from behind, then placing your right hand on the back of the horse, spring into the saddle Now try it on the off side with your left hand. TN 206. Run from behind, touch the back with your hands, 106 PAUL PR E S T on ’s t º :* ;:--> Q-assº and with the agility of an antelope, ‘vault with your armor on,” so as to bring your feet into the saddle—stand up—then slide gently down into your seat, observing the directions in No. 204. 207. Here are two more, as a sort of finale to my horse- manship—something to astonish the natives—that is, if you will do it—I have, many a time and oft. Run, and place your hands on the pommels, take a somerset over the saddle —it is really quite pleasant. /N 208. Balancez, as the dancing master says ; but I very much question whether any dancing master, in town or coun- try, could do this so well as many of you will, my lads, after all this jumping and leaping. Jump on the back of your horse from behind, and kneel—place the left hand on the front pommel, thumb inside—right hand on back pommel, thumb inside—now turn your right elbow im, so as to come against the hip bone, forming as it were a pivot—then bend Çg ºr Lºº. ºl, A.Y.F *...* * * *- : B O O R. O. F. G Y MIN A S T I C S. 107 the head a little forward and downward, stretching out the body horizontally, as you see—continue in this position as long as you can. /\ W It now remains for you, boys, to practise these exercises with spirit, but at the same time with care. Whoever are the leaders in the various exercises should always be on the alert; ‘prevention is better than cure.” Carelessness is the source of many evils ; and those very persons, who have suffered from their own waut of ordinary care are always the first to decry that by which they have deservedly suffered. The ob- stimacy of many young persons who came to the Pentonville Gymnasium was truly surprising. Though warned of the folly of attempting exercises they were totally unfitted for, from not having gone through a proper training, they yet per- sisted, when unobserved, in trying them, and generally paid the penalty of their rashness. This, I hope, will not be the case with any of you. Let ‘patience and perseverance' be your motto and your guide, and success will be your reward. i | ' PAUL PRESTON's CHAPTER v. LEAPING. GooD morning to you all. I see every one seems ready for action ; to use the words of our much loved Shakespeare, these exercises do lend a noble lustre to your eye,’ and while thus you ‘doff your caps and bid good morrow to the sun,” be sure that health will attend your steps, and strew with roses not only your paths, but your cheeks also. Most people prefer looking at a butcher's or a baker's bill in preference to a doctor's ; let alone ‘the beggarly account of empty boxes,’ that make up anything but a goodly show ; and yet there are thousands “at this hour asleep,' whom it would be charity to turn out of their nests, and whip round the Park or Common, by way of waking them up into life. asº Oh here's something for us. Two posts with littie holes all the way up to the top, and a rope upon two pegs. Ha 1 ha that's for us to jump over. Here goes. Stop ! stop ! order if you please, gents, in Paul Preston's Gymnasium. ‘Merry and wise ’ is an old proverb—but not the less true for all that. Hear what I have to say first, then go to work as fast as you like. These two posts, you see, are not fixed in the ground, but only placed in wooden sockets, in order that they may be ta- ken up when not wanted, and wooden blocks put in their stead. The holes are for the pegs used to raise the rope, and should not be more than three inches apart ; and these bags are filled with sand, to keep the rope stretched out in a straight line. You see I have had some of the earth taken up, where I guess you will, or ought to come down on your feet, and some clay put down instead, so that by watering it now and then, it may be kept a little moist, in order that you may not feel that jarring of the body which would naturally ensue by / gº. * - º! . - +. - º º & --~3. sº §º º - - rººt &. ſºr § 110 PAUL PREST on ’s jumping so often in succession on a hard spot, rendered still harder by continued jumping, equal to the use of a pavior's Taſſ) Iſher. Now then, follow Paul Preston over the lowest line, and don’t despise it because it is low. * Begin with geutle toils, and as your nerves Grow firm, to hardier, by just steps, aspire.” I shall soon get you into a line as difficult as any you ever found in the classics, whether in parsing or scanning. I must not have a single foot out of place ; no skipping over it, but all according to rule. 209. Now stand within a foot of the line, and with elbows near the sides, just bend the knees slightly, having both feet close together, and spring over as I do, and come down on the toes. If you noticed properly, you saw that I did not throw my arms straight forward, but rather upward, when I came over, so that I might better preserve my balance, or equilibrium, as it is called. To come down on the heels is a bad practice ; because, independently of the jar it gives the whole body, it throws the body backward. Suppose, boys, you had to jump over a brook, tolerably deep, as some brooks are, and it were so wide that you could just clear it by a powerful spring, if you came upon your heels at the edge of the opposite bank, ten chances to one but you would be thrown B O O K OF G Y M N A S T I C S. 111 *** - º: packward into the water, have a comfortable float back again, and perhaps come with your head against the nettles, just to remind you of your folly. 210. We will now have a hop over this same line. Stand about half-a-dozen paces from the line, now hop on your right leg over it. Don't put down the left foot immediately you have cleared the line, but hop a few yards forward before so doing. 211. Now endeavour to accomplish the same with the left leg. While hopping, keep the elbows near, not close to the sides, and the mouth gently closed. 212. I shall now move the line one hole higher, and pro- ceed in the same manner, till you have reached a height equal to your present powers. I shall on no account let you at- tempt a single hole higher than I perceive you can accom- plish without violent exertion, all which tends to weaken rather than to strengthem. By practising exercises of hopping alternately with jump- ing, you will strengthen the muscles of the foot and leg, which will fit you for attempting to leap with the pole, to which I shall introduce you in due time. Those who prac- tise these exercises well, will excel all their companions in Fly the Garter,’ and “Hop, Step, and Jump.’ And in your §: =<5 -- ºg --- PAU L PR E STON's rambles through the fields, it must not only be a very wide ditch or brook, but a sloping fence, bristling very fiercely with tenter hooks, and looking vastly like a line of bayonets ready to receive a charge of cavalry, that will bring you to a stand- still. He that jumps well, will often escape sudden danger ; because, knowing his own powers, which are always at hand, he the more readily avails himself of them. Some have recommended the practice of jumping down flights of steps, a thing Paul Preston cannot approve. There are other and better ways of learning to jump downward and forward at the same time, whether in gravel or chalk pits, sand banks and walls, or from a bank over a brook ; in fact, many places will be found where the gymnast may test his powers in this respect. He will already have acquired some accuracy of eye to enable him to scan in an instant the dis- tance to be cleared, and the requisite force to be used in ef. fecting his object. So, boys, I shall say no more on that point, but will presently learn you how to handle the leap- ing pole properly, and then you will learn how to leap with it. I shall however first give you a lesson in leaping to a dis- tance ; so come along to the farther end of the ground, and look at my triangular ditch. You will perceive it is not more than two feet deep, just sufficient to give the idea of a ditch, and made in the form you see, in order to increase the B O O K OF G Y M N A S T I C S. 113 distance by degrees. Now begin at this corner, and jump over, one after the other, following immediately after me. Well, I perceive that is as far as you can jump at present, so we will adjourn to the leaping apparatus T.E.APING WITH THE POLE. 4° So all are armed, quite ready for the fray, and now let me tell you, that I wish particular attention to be paid to my instruction as to holding the pole in leaping. I say this be- |S Jex- P A UL PR E S T ON’s º : #. f § : i % cause, in the several excellent books which treat a little about gymnastic exercises, whenever leaping with the pole has been introduced, and attempted to be illustrated by an engraving, the artist and engraver, from not having studied or practised gymnastic exercises, have greatly erred in depicting the man- mer in which it should be performed. The mode however is very simple, and its propriety will be apparent in the very first attempt. Your left hand and arm, from having been well exercised, will now have become not only equal in strength to the right, but equally capable of the varied motions of which the right is susceptible, consequently there will be as much dependence on the one as on the other. Extend both your hands towards me with the palms up- wards. I now place the pole on them—grasp it—now the mails of both hands are upwards. The top of the pole is about a yard from the right hand, that is, when the leaps about to be taken are neither high nor wide ; but as the dis- tance increases, so the space between the right hand and the top must diminish. The consequence of all this is, that the pole becomes a complete pivot, on which the body freely re- volves, and the two hands thus encircling the pole act in unison, thereby assisting to move and sustain the weight, namely the body, with the utmost facility. ;- z-rº-z-YT- -k3. ** sº *~~ w -- * . -:rº-, Š. § ~. ~-t:§: - —r. * ~~~~~~ \ 128 PAUL PREST on ’s Keep it elevated thus, at the full stretch of the arms, but with the feet firm on the ground; and then, without changing the position of the hands, as regards the grasp, bring it down sharply behind, as you see me do. Return to the first position, by again bringing it up sharply above the head, and finally down to the front. 2. The same exercise may be begun with the pole behind you. In this case, the pole is to lie, as it were, in your hands, in the same manner as I directed you to take the leaping pole in hand. 3. Again: hold the pole before you stoop, and bring the legs over it, between the arms, and stand upright. Now stoop, and bring the poles under the feet, in this man- Iſler. ÖSs==<5 B O O K OF G Y M N A S T I C S. 4. Place one end of the stick on the ground ; put the right hand near the top, the left near the bottom, the feet about four feet from the stick—then bend the body backward, head hang- ing down—bring the head and body under the left arm, and rise on the other side by pulling yourself up. =# = 2^ A variety of motions may be performed with these poles; I have given these as a specimen ; your own ingenuity will supply the rest. We will now make use of these poles as lances or spears, and do that practically which Collins sings poetically : • Brown Exercise rejoiced to hear, And Sport leapt up and seized his beechen spear.” • *---... 2::=ss Q =Qº ~ P A U L PREST on ’s In throwing the spear, it has been customary with some merely to poise it between the finger and thumb, and then || project it to the mark. This may do very well with a light arrow-like weapon ; but even then, the force with which it is thrown will be of little avail, compared with that obtained by grasping it with the whole hand, and hurling it with all the muscular strength of the upper and fore-arm, concentrated as it were into one focus, I shall therefore give you the two principal positions, most necessary to be observed to give the aim its full effect. Grasp the spear in the middle, like this— .*~. ! 3 0 with the light end uppermost—let the left arm hang down at ease by the side—look steadily for a moment at the object— & aw • zº. - * * ~ º: '. ** * * º & jº B O OF O F G Y MIN A S T I C S. 131 | § raise the spear so high as the ear, at the same time drawing the arm back, so as to give it all the impetus you can—send it quickly on its errand; but take care not to go after it, as I have seen some, in consequence of not standing firmly on the feet. É i. l Å. i #: g- s sº -§ * A.*º PAUL PREST ON’s CHAPTER VIII. CLIMIBING THE PLANK. . Here's a pretty position for a stout alderman to be placed in—how far up he would get in an hour it would not be diffi- cult to prognosticate; but it would be still easier to guess how Boo K OF G Y M N A ST I C S. 133 soon he’ed come down. Let us hope he will never be placed In such a predicament. It is, however, a capital exercise for you boys—the ability to climb or crawl in any position, will enable you to see many sights, explore mines, caverns, ravines, and a host of other places, into which other people dare not venture from the consciousness of their bodily inability. The plank should be at first laid at a small slope or angle, and gradually elevated till it is nearly perpendicular. It should be two feet wide, and about two inches thick, and firmly fixed at the top and bottom. As the last steps become generally more difficult, if possible, some one should be near the top to assist; and in the first attempts you must not go more than half way. Mind, as you go up, hold tight on each side, and place your feet flat in the middle. As you come down, make small steps, both with feet and hands—and as quickly as possible. GIANT STRIDE. Look, boys, here is a practical illustration of the seven- leagued boots, in that most wonderful “History of Tom 'Thumb.” Half-a-dozen at a time may go at a railroad pace, without steam, in a sort of merry-go-round, Never ending, Still beginning, Striding still, and still deploying. 134 PAUL PR E S To N’s Seize the cross-bars attached to the ropes, hold tight, and start all together, left foot first, leaning the weight of your body on the bars. Take good long strides, and let them rather be directed outwards than otherwise. When at full speed, I know not anything on earth that approaches so much to fly- ing. Now start—increase your speed by degrees—that’s well. Keep your mouth closed—hold tight—and do not stop suddenly. CLIMIBING THE MAST. In the Naval and, I believe, in the Military School, there is a kind of mast, with steps, or stout wooden pegs, at inter- vals, to initiate the scholars in the art of climbing. These steps may, however, be attached to the Giant Stride, as they will enable the gymnast to ascend and unhook the ropes when they are not wanted, as they should not be left in the damp. The hands and feet in this exercise acquire a facility in pla, cing themselves on projecting points, and the eye is accustom- ed by it, to measure distance more accurately. 1. The first and easiest exercise is to ascend in a sloping or spiral direction. Put your left foot on the lowest step, the left hand over on the next, and the right on the third—each B O O E O F. G Y M N A S T I C S. 135 step slanting to the right hand. So keep moving on to the top—when you come down, which must be backwards, let the right foot and hand make the first moves. 2. There is another method of climbing, which certainly expands and strengthens the muscles of the chest, and which I should like you boys to try. Now, look when you begin, place your right foot on the first step, and your left hand on the second—now move your left foot between your right leg and the mast—place it on the next in the spiral direction, with the heel turned backwards, and catch hold of the step above with the right hand. You will now perceive, my whole weight is suspended between my right hand and left foot. Now I pass my head under my right arm, and keep on per- forming this movement to the top. But mind, as I descend, when I pass under the right arm, I seize the step with my right hand under it, in order to obtain a firmer grasp. 3. To pass under the left arm, you must cross the left hand over the right and grasp the second step of the second row, with the mails turned upwards. Now pass your left leg be- tween the mast and your right leg, and plant it firmly on the first step of the second row, with the heel outside, as in the last exercise—let go your right hand, and slide your head un- der your left arm, then place your right hand and foot on the PAUL PREST on ’s next two steps, and so on to the top. Don't forget, that whe ther you ascend or descend, when passing under the left arm, the right hand and foot, or the left hand and foot, should be placed on the same perpendicular row of steps. Do not go up very far at first, but to ensure not letting go, try 4. To ascend the mast by the hands alone, hand over hand, as I showed with the rope. - RTUNNING, This is an exercise, my young Racers, which, if properly conducted and attended to, will be productive of infinite bene- fit to the whole system. It tends to dilate the lungs and ex- pand the chest, more surely fortifying both against the attacks of many fatal diseases. It will not only make you more healthy and strong, but enable you more readily to rescue oth- ers from danger ; and though I would not urge upon you the same reason for excelling in it, that was given by an author some years ago, in the following words: ‘How many unhap- py soldiers would have escaped a hard captivity, and even a cruel death, if they had been accustomed in their youth to run fast and long ;’ which means, I suppose, He that fights and runs away, May live to fight another day B O O K OF G Y M N A S T I C S. He that hath no stomach to this fight, Let him depart as fast as his legs can carry him. Now, though Paul Preston, with many others, hopes that war, with all its attendant horrors, both moral and physical, may soon be unknown in the world, he has too much patriot- , ism to wish that any of his fellow-countrymen should excel in running away from their enemies. Nay, he would rather see deeply engraven on the hearts and minds of every American, the ever memorable words of the Spartan mother, when she presented her son with his shield, ‘Return with it or on it,” A} than counsel any one basely to turn his back upon his coun- try’s foes. But there will arise in the course of your lives many instances where the power of running fast and long will be found of great utility. In the case of accidents during travelling, with no house near, the animal disabled by being thrown down, the bones of one individual fractured, or per- haps he has been thrown on his head, causing a concussion of the brain, while his companion, if he has any, has escaped unhurt, and prompt assistance the only chance of saving life, who would not them wish to fly on the wings of the wind, and bring back relief with equal speed. The letter-carriers in some parts of the East are capable of extraordinary exer- 12 º | | 3 ºf ººl T ºr- * - , * §s ( *X)" \-43 º PAUL PREST on's tion, and are said to be able to tire out a horse—so long can they keep up continuous running. It has been truly asserted, that if we see but very few per- sons run with grace and agility, we see still fewer run fast, and continue it for a long time. This is partly because they do it improperly, and partly from want of practice—they eith- er swing their arms about—bend their knees too much—or lift their legs up so high, that they lose much time, and tire themselves very quickly. I shall give you two or three plain directions, and then take you a run round the ground for a few minutes, and slow- ly increase the time and rapidity every day, up to a certain point. Stand in a line, place your hands on hips, fingers in front, arms thrown back, but do not press on your hips. My object in requesting you to do this, is to accustom you to a un steadily, but afterwards you may discontinue this, only keep your hands shut, with your arms close to your sides—the right foot forward ready for the start—mouth closed—this will prevent you from breathing too rapidly. When you run, try to accustom yourselves to take a long breath, as you boys call it: in other words a long inspiration. When you run with your mouth wide open, you take in more air than the lungs can employ to advantage ; hence that palpitation and short breathing, which so frequently occur even after a short g- TUIIl. rwº---ar----. 2-w:T-wr-->r- =sº ºf Öſs=º Tº O O K OF G Y M N A S T I C S. 139 When you commence running, let the left foot make the A Wº first step, bringing it down on the toe first, not the whole foot *"| flat at once, but press lightly on the ground; let every move- ment bear the impress of elasticity. Right face—each cap- tain at the head of his class must keep his eye fixed upon me, that he may be ready to turn sharply or circuitously at the very point that I do. Upon this precision, which must be strictly maintained, depends a great part of the good resulting from this exercise. To be able to stop in an instant, even at full speed, as Caesar says the ancient Britons stopped their horses, is no mean advantage, as it will enable you to avoid sudden and unlooked-for danger, and dart aside with the rap- idity of thought. To vary the inclination of your body, I shall turn sometimes to the right, sometimes to the left—one time making a large circle, at another time a small one—and sometimes forming angular figures. Now and then I shall go between the parallel bars, to teach you to run in marrow and confined places. In short, every way and any way that will create variety. So now, my boys, off! P A UL PR E S T on ’s CHAPTER IX. | RECAPITULATION. THE notion that a boy has of his own body is a very vague one. If you ask him of what it consists, he will tell you of | flesh and blood and bone ; and should you tell him that it re- quires a considerable combination of machinery to move his hand or his foot, he will be very likely to laugh; therefore he cannot see the necessity there exists for exercise, but still he will take it. He likes running about, driving a hoop, spinning a top, or leaping over a ditch, because he has an instinct within him for exercise, which propels him to take it he knows not why, and but for this instinct he would be weak in body and in mind. If the boy who reads this will pay attention to what we have to impart, we will give him some reasons why exercise is good for him, and what kind it should be, and how It should be undertaken with a view to the benefit of his | health, and towards the perſection of those powers which have been bestowed upon him by the Author of all things. | | - §s —2–~~ A s—K --~. \ a - B O O K OF G Y M N A S T V C S. 141 Man is made up of the passive organs of locomotion, that is the bones ; and of what are called the active organs of loco- motion, which are the muscular and nervous apparatus. The bones are an assemblage of compact organs united together by ligaments, and give the body, whose frame-work they form, shape and solidity. They serve therefore to support the bo- dy, to render it capable of motion, and partly to protect the more material parts. The back bone illustrates the first of these positions, the arms and legs the second. Such bones as have motion are held together by strong in- elastic substances; and in some instances, as in the wrist and instep, they bind down the tendons and muscles to increase their strength of action. The bones being destitute of the power of motion, some machinery has been provided by which they may be moved at pleasure ; these are the muscles, which, by contracting, per- form the required motions in the body; they are composed of bundles of fibres like little red threads. The extremities of the muscles are called tendons, and are the same fibres more closely connected that they may possess less space in a limb, and be inserted into a bone; all muscles end in tendons. The ends of the bones are covered, when intended to move in each other, with a compact, elastic substance called gristle, this having a fine polished surface renders it insensible to friction PAUL PREST ON’s or rather prevents it, and by its elasticity defends the joints from injury by their motion on each other. The largest and most curious bone, or series of bones, in the body is the spine or back-bone, being a chain of joints of very wonderful construction ; it possesses at once the greatest strength and the greatest flexibility, bearing the weight of the whole body, and sometimes six times its weight, and yet allow- ing of the bending of the trunk in all directions, at the same time that it is a safeguard and covering for the spinal marrow, which, having its root or origin in the brain, is connected with the nerves, and by some wonderful process assists in convey- ing sensations from all parts of the surface of the body up to the brain. So delicate is this substance that the least wound of it instantly produces paralysis or death ; it also furnishes a fulcrum, stay, or basis for the insertion of the muscles that are spread over the trunk of the body, and likewise a support for the ends of the ribs to rest upon. The ribs are articulated, that is, joined into the back-bone; but the young reader will remark, that in their natural posi- tion, they bend or slope downwards from the place of articula. tion, and the basis at which they rest at this end being fixed, the consequence of the obliquity is, that when they come to move, whatever pulls them upwards, at the same time draws them out, and, that whilst the ribs are brought to a right angle with the spine behind, the sternum, or part of the chest to Jr. Žſ. * * 2-º-º-º: *E* * * B O O K OF G Y MIN A S T I C S. 143 which they are attached in front, is thrust forward. The sim- | ple action therefore of the elevating muscles opens the chest ; iſ whereas if the ribs had been joined with the back-bone at right angles, the cavity or hollow of the breast would never have been farther enlarged by a change of the position. If each rib had been a fixed bone, the whole chest had been im- moveable, but by this arrangement, at every breath we draw, the chest is considerably increased in size, and this enlarge- ment may be so increased by effort as that the lungs may be distended with seventy or a hundred cubic inches of air. Connected with the bones, or rather connecting the bones, are the Joints. Every joint is strictly a mechanical curiosity. In the knee we have what we call the Hinge-Joint, and at the * hip and shoulder the Ball-and-Socket Joint. The former is sufficient at the knee, as only one kind of motion, backwards and forwards, was to be provided for ; the other is necessary at the hip, as not only was the progressive step to be provided for, but also the power of stretching out or widening the legs. Had the hinge joint been used at the hip, the thighs must have been kept constantly together, and the legs loose and strag- gling. In a common hinge-joint used by artificers, a bolt is observed to pass through the two parts of the hinge, which connects and keeps them in their places. In the hinge-joint at || the knee the same thing is done, but by a different expedient; \ a strong, tough, parchment-like membrane rising from the re- PAUL PR E STON's ceiving bones and inserted all around them a little below their heads, encloses the joint on every side ; this membrane ties, confines, and holds the ends of the bones together, keeping the corresponding parts of the joint in close connexion. Con- nected, or rather added, as a supplement to the knee, is a cu- rious little bone, in its form and office unlike any other bone in the body, called the Patella or Knee-Pan. It is circular, the size of a dollar, rather thick, a little convex on the sides, and covered with smooth cartilage. It lies upon the front of the knee, and the powerful tendons by which the leg is brought forward, pass through it ; it protects both the tendons and the joint from any injury which either might suffer by the rubb ng of one against the other, or by the pressure of un- equal surfaces. It also gives the tendons a very considerable mechanical advantage by altering the line of their direction, and by advancing it farther out from the centre of motion. These are the uses of this little bone, and the young gymnast will be cautious how he gives himself a blow on the knee, or that he do not kneel on any pointed substance, as, in early years, this little bone is liable to injury, and when badly in- idred is often attended with very painful and dangerous re. sults. In the Ball-and-Sock Joint we find a membrane similar to that of the hinge-joint surrounding and inclosing the joint. In other important joints, such as the head of the thigh bone, i ! ! - {\ º -\} f - * * - -------- - - - - - - - - - - J. :: *- : * - - - •ºr - *3. - - : . SS-K---------- • * > > Jºº-ºº: a-ºf- ** 2-C - - - - ( j `--. assº -> B O O E OF G Y M N A S T I C S . ; is an additional security ; a short, strong, string-like ligament is inserted by one end into the head of the ball, by the other into the bottom of the cup, which ligament keeps the two parts of the joint so firmly in their place, that none of the motions which this limb naturally performs, mone of the jerks and twists to which it is originally liable, nothing less indeed than the most unnatural violence can pull them asunder. If the young anatomist wishes to be convinced of this by experiment let him try the ball-and-socket joint of a shoulder of mutton, and endeavour to separate them without the aid of a knife. A comparison of the ball-and-socket joint at the shoulder of the human frame with the joint at the hip, exhibits a differ- ence in their form and proportions well suited to the different offices which the limbs have to execute ; the cup or socket at the shoulder is much shallower and flatter than it is at the hip, and it is also in part formed of cartilage set round the rim of the cup, which contributes more to a free motion and wide range, both of which the arm wants ; whereas in the lower limb, forming a part of the base of the body, having to support the body as well as to move it, firmness was to be consulted as well as action ;-hence the deeper excavation of the socket and a less proportion of cartilage. In all the joints, the ends of the bones which work against each other are covered with gristle to prevent friction ; in the jº §§ º & S. 13 K § - *:A, . º §::=º P A U L PREST on ’s ball-and-socket joint the cup is lined, and the ball is capped with it. In some joints, such as the knee, there are loose car- tilages or gristle between the bones and within the joints, so that the ends of the bones, instead of working upon each oth- er, work upon the intermediate cartilages, to take off the effects of sudden shocks in running, jumping, and other gymnastic exercises. But another more important provision, manifestly adapted to their use, is the regular supply of a mucilaginous matter called sinovia, more emollient and slippery than oil it- self, which is continually softening and lubricating the parts that rub against each other, and thereby diminishing the great friction in machinery of such constant use. For the continual supply of this important liniment there are glands near the joint, and, for feeding the joints with it, excretory ducts hang- ing like fringes in the cavity of the parts through which the sinovia passes. Thus we see every provision made—first, for the wear and tear by the polish of the cartilages;–secondly, by the healing lubrications of the mucilage ;-thirdly, by that astonishing property of animal constitution which restores all the waste as it occurs. And there is nothing perhaps that so ought to move our gratitude as the reflection, how well they wear !—A limb shall swing upon its hinges, or play upon its socket many hundred times in an hour for sixty or seventy years together, with scarcely any diminution of its agility. We said that muscles were distinct portions of flesh, which B O O K OF G Y M N A S T I C S. 147 ===sq =g by contracting perform the motions of the body ; they, with their tendons, are in fact to the human machine what the rig- ging is to a ship, used both to steady and put in motion the various machinery. The head maintains its erect posture by the assistance of muscles, and a finger is not bent or straight- ened without the contraction of two muscles taking place. There is an exact relation between the joint and the muscle that moves it ; whatever motion the joint by its mechanical contraction is capable of performing, that motion the annexed muscles by their position are capable of producing. All mus- cles act by contraction ; their force is exerted in no other way; when the exertion ceases, it relaxes itself, that is, it returns to its former state. Every muscle is provided with an adver- sary; they act like two sawyers in a pit, by an opposite pull, and what is most remarkable is, that they are almost univer- sally so disposed as mot to obstruct or to interfere with each other's action. Now, when we reflect upon the number of muscles, little short of five hundred known and mamed,—how near they lie to each other, in layers as it were, one over ano- ther, crossing each other, sometimes embedded in each other, sometimes perforating each other, yet all having their perfect liberty and full play, we are struck with astomishment at the wisdom of the arrangement. Sometimes the action of mus- cles is wanted where their action is inconvenient. The mus- cles that move the fingers, to be near the point of action, D 148 PAUL PREST ON's * à\| s : ---> º § should have been placed in the wrist, which would have swel- led the part to a clumsy thickness ; but they are wisely dispo- sed at the arm towards the elbow, and act by long tendons, which, like wires, pass from there to the fingers ; in the same manner the muscles that move the toes are placed in the calf of the leg. A contrivance strictly mechanical and beautiful is found in the tendons which proceed from the muscles of the leg and arm to the toes and fingers. The long tendon, as it is called, in the foot, which bends the second joint, being a slit in one tendon to let another pass through it. This course al- lows to the limb more liberty and a more commodious action than it could otherwise have been capable of exerting. We have made use of these observations, that our young friends may understand that the motions they are called upon to perform in gymnastic exercises, are for the purpose of exer- cising the muscles, and by their exercise to develope their power and increase their size and strength ; in doing this the body itself is kept in a proper condition, the circulation is pro- moted, and vigorous bodily health is the result. We shall make a few further observations relative to the positions which are common to the body, and which it may sustain without Injury. Position is that function, passive or active, by which the diſ. ferent parts of the body are maintained in a fixed attitude. The position is passive when the body is stretched its length .*** "T3:STL. 2: wfº= _* | \ B O O K. O. F. G Y MIN A S T I C S. 149 | t | || | on the earth ; it is active when the trunk is supported by col- | umns, i. e. the limbs. Biped Position. Man does not form a sole lever from head to foot, he presents a great number of joints which incessantly tend to afford each other mutual assistance. The head fixed on the vertebral column, the top of the back bone, presents a lever of the first order, the main arm of which being directed forward, the head has a tendency to bend in that direction, but the numerous muscles at the back part of the neck maintain their equilibrium. Spine. The superior limbs, the enormous weight of the organs contained within the chest and the abdomen, finally, the head itself, weigh upon the vertebral column, and would unavoidably draw it forward if it did not, to the solidity of its organization, unite numerous and powerful muscles, extended along its back part, to counterbalance the weight under which it would otherwise sink. We have had occasion to mention levers of the first, second, and third orders ; to prevent being misunderstood, we subjoin a definition of these powers. A proper lever is a bar of iron or wood, supported by and moved on a round centre called the fulcrum, having the thing to be raised at its short arm, and the power capable of raising it at the long end or arm. PAUL PR E S T on ’s | There are three kinds of levers, according to the situation of the fulcrum. A lever of the first kind has its fulcrum be. tween the weight and the power that is to move the weight; a poker in stirring the fire is a lever of this kind—the bar of the grate is the fulcrum, the coal is the weight to be moved, and the hand is the moving power. | The second kind of lever has the weight between the ful- | crum at one end, and the power at the other. This kind of | lever is found in bellows, doors turning on hinges, nut crack- ers, &c. Levers of the third kind have the power between the prop at one end and the weight at the other. The common tongs, shears for shearing sheep, and above all, the limbs of animals, are of this kind. A human arm affords one of the most stri- king illustrations ; here the prop or fulcrum being the socket at the elbow. / # SWITMMING. We ought to treat of this subject as a necessary art. It is not so natural to man as the preceding motions. His phy- sical organization has been calculated upon no hydrostatic law. His specific gravity, however, does not exceed that of | water. Thus, in swimming, the whole art consists in mul- § tiplying the surface of the body, by extensive motions, so as t| || to displace a greater volume of liquid. rºº ~.* g 3. Tº O O K OF G Y M N A ST ICS. 151 The body, extended on its anterior part, advances on the surface of the water in the following manner : The hands brought together in front of the chest, form a point. The thighs and legs, previously flexed or bent, abruptly extend, striking the water backwards, and impart a slight progressive motion to the body; at the same time, the superior extrem- ities extend, striking the water in the form of paddles, and the legs are brought together. Next, while progression takes place, the limbs flex again, to be returned to their primitive position, when the superior limbs describe a circle, which propel the ele- ment under the trunk, and thus it is raised more or less above the water. The spinal muscles are in a continual state of con- traction, to fix the back and raise the head. Swimming on the back hardly requires any exertion, with this exception, that the antericr muscles of the trunk are slightly contracted. 152 P A U L PR E S To N’S | GYMINASIUM. Having shown that gymnastic exercises are requisite for " health and the developement of the bodily powers, we may proceed to point out the kind of exercises necessary for this desirable end. For this purpose a piece of ground should be laid out in every school ground, and there should be erected a couple of posts, about twenty feet apart, and sixteen feet high, which should support a plank, about a foot wide, and six in- ches thick ; on the underside of this might be affixed a hook from which a triangle might be swung, this of itself would be capable of being used in a variety of ways. Two more hooks, about a foot apart, might be used for two ropes, so that the more advanced pupils could climb to the top by means of gras- ping a rope in each hand, and without the assistance of the feet. A pole may rise from the ground to the cross piece about midway, the pupils will be able to climb up without the assistance of the feet. A wood ladder, and rope ladder, may occasionally be fastened to the beam, but may, when necessa- ry, be taken down. A board about a foot broad may also be set up against the beam inclining four feet from the perpen- dicular ; the climber will grasp the sides with his hands, and placing his feet almost flat against the board, will proceed to the top ; this is an advanced exercise. Another board may B O O K OF G Y M N A S T I C S. 153 6e set up which should be three feet broad, at least, and should slant more than the other ; the pupil will run up this to the top of the beam easily, and down again ; the middle of this, up to the top, should be perforated with holes, about four in- ches apart, in which a peg may be placed ; this may be in the first hole to begin with. The pupil will run up and bring this down, and then run up and put it in the second, and so on till he has arrived at the top ; them two or more pegs may be used, and it may be varied in many ways. A pole twenty-five or thirty feet high should be erected, rather thin towards the top ; at distant intervals of this, three or four pegs as resting places should be fastened ; another pole thicker, from about sixteen to twenty feet high, should be erected, on the top of which should be placed four projecting hooks turning on a pivot ; to these hooks four ropes should be attached, reaching to within two feet of the ground. This is called the flying course, from an individual taking hold of the peg at the end of each rope. - One person may cross a rope under the one in possession of another, and by pulling round hard, make the other fly over his head. Care should be taken to make the hooks at the top quite secure, for otherwise many dangerous accidents might ensue. A cross pole might also be set up, but most of the ex- || ercises for which this is used, may be performed by the trian- gle. On the parallel bars several beneficial exercises may be * -s ºr 7-- :* Öss= ſº | 4. 154 PAUL PR E STON's \ done, and also on the bridge. This is a pole thick at one end | and thin at the other, and supported at three or four feet from the groui.d by a post at ome end and another in the middle, so that the end vibrates with the least touch. This, it will be evident, is an exercise for the organ of equilibrium, and exer- cises the muscles of the calf, of the neck, and the anterior part of the neck, and those of the back, very gently. On this bridge a sort of sportive combat may be instituted, two boys meeting each other, giving and parrying strokes with the open hands. The string for leaping is also another very pleasing exercise, it is supported by a couple of pegs on two posts ſas- tened in the ground ; the string may be heightened or lower- ed at pleasure ; it may be raised as high as the leaper's head when a leaping pole is used. Besides these arrangements, a trench about a foot and a half should be dug, and widening gradually from one foot to seven, for the purpose of exercising the long leap either with or without the aid of the pole. Such are the general arrangements of a gymnasium, but before the youth enters upon regular exercises, he may commence with a few preliminary ones. B O O K OF G Y M N A S T I C S , FIRST COURSE. ExERCISE 1. Hold out your hand at arm's length till you can hold it out no longer ; repeat this till you have power in the muscles to continue it, without fatigue, for a considerable length of time. 2. Stand on one foot till you are tired—repeat this for a similar period. 3. Hold out both arms parallel with the chin, letting the thumbs and fingers touch each other. 4. Hold the hands behind the back in a similar manner, the arms being stretched as far backward as possible, and hold the hands high. 5. Hold up the right foot by the right hand, extending the leg and arm by degrees. 6. Hold up the left foot in the same manner. 7. Stand with the knees bent, and exercise them towards the ground till you can kneel on both knees at once without supporting yourself as you drop. 8. Raise yourself from this position without the aid of your hands, by springing back on your toes. 9. Endeavor to touch both your toes, with the back straight, the legs close together, and the head down. ‘dº a - º * *jº - *I tºº † : :* §. 35%-f * § § ºv- 156 PAUL PR Es To N’s 10. Take a piece of wood three inches broad and twenty ong, that will not bend, and hold it across the back, the three first fingers touching the wood. 11. Endeavor to sit, but do not touch the ground, nor let any part of your body touch your heels, with your arms stretch- ed out in a line with your chin. 12. Stand with your legs and arms extended, so as to form the letter X. SECOND COURSE. 13. Lay down on your back, and raise your body from a horizontal to a vertical position, without any assistance from the hands and elbows. - 14. Draw up the legs close to the back part of the thighs, and rise without other assistance. 15. Extend yourself on your back again, and walk back Wards with the palms of your hands and your feet. 16. Sustain the weight of the whole body upon the palms and the toes, the face being towards the ground. 17. Lay on the back, and take hold of each foot in your hands, and throw yourself on your face by rolling over —t * * - * *g -- *** *ºtº • *, _* > § * , , ... ...: 2. > * > * -- . * , * * * - * jº-ji...º.º.º…T. B O O K OF G Y M N A S T I C S. 157 A... f* * 18. Lay with your face down, and take hold of your toes while in that position. * | D 19. With your chest downwards, drag your body along by walking only with your hands. 20. Place yourself on your back, and endeavor to advance by means of the propulsion of the feet. 21. Place your body on your hands and feet, with the breast upwards, and endeavor to bring the lips to the ground. 22. Lean on the breast and palms of the hands, and throw the legs over towards the back of the head. 23. Extend yourself on the back, and throwing the hands up above the head, at the utmost stretch, touch the ground, and if possible bring up a piece of money, previously to be placed there. 24. In the same manner endeavour to seize a ball by the toes at full length. These preliminary exercises having been practised, the young pupil will commense a course of more advanced exer- cises, such as walking, running, leaping, balancing, vaulting, and climbing. Walking is common to all, but few have a good walk, and mothing exhibits the person to so much disad- vantage as a slovenly walk. It is true that the walk of a person will indicate much of his character ; nervous people | 158 PAUL PREST on ’s walk hurriedly, sometimes quick, sometimes slow, with a trip- ping and sometimes a running step ; phlegmatic people have a heavy, solid, and loitering step ; the sanguine man walks rapidly, treads somewhat briskly and firmly ; while the melan- cholic wanders, and seems almost unconscious of touching the ground which he seems to slide over. But the qualities of the mind itself manifest themselves in the gait; the man of high moral principle and virtuous integrity walks with a very different step to the low sensualist, or the cunning knave ;- therefore the young pupil will be sure that even the Art of Walking, which seems to be an exertion purely physical, will not be acquired properly if his mind has taken a vicious and unprincipled bias; it will either indicate his pride or his das- tardly humility, haughty self-sufficiency or mean truckling to the opinion of others, his honest independence or his cringing servility. But he who has been blessed with the full use of muscular powers, in proportion as he is virtuous, will, with a very little attention, indicate by his bearing, step, and carriage, the mobility and modesty of his mind. Bodily exercise by hands or feet, or when even the little gymnasts Knit hands, and beat the ground, In a light fantastic round, } | as Milton says, all aid in strengthening muscular power. Book of G Y MN As T ics. 159 1n walking, the arms should move freely by the side ; they act like the fly-wheel of an engine to equalize the motion of the body, and to balance it. One hand in the breeches pocket, or both, indicates the sot, and has a very bad appearance. The head should be upright, without however any particular call being made upon the muscles of the neck to support it in that position, so that it may move freely in all directions. The body should be upright, the shoulders thrown moderately backward, displaying a graceful fall. When the foot reaches the ground, it should support the body, not on the toe or heel, but on the ball of the foot. This manner of walking should be practised daily, sometimes in a slow, sometimes in a mod- erate walk, and sometimes in a quick pace, until each is per- formed with elegance and ease. In running, as the swiftness of the motion steadies the bo- dy in its course, without the aid of the motions of the arms, they are maturally drawn up towards the sides, and bent at the elbows form a right angle ; their motion is almost suspended in very swift running. In moderate running a gentle oscilla- tion is observed, increasing in proportion as the body approa- ches to the walking pace. The knees are now more bent, the same part of the foot does not touch the ground, the body be- ing carried forward more by the toes; the degree of velocity is acquired in proportion to the length and quickness of the steps ; the person should therefore endeavor to ascertain it P A U L PR E S To N’s Mong or short steps suit his muscular powers best ; generally speaking, a moderately short step, quickly repeated, acceler- ates motion most. In learning to run, the pupil should first endeavor to improve his breath by degrees ; he must try his speed first in short distances, to be gradually increased ; the distance will vary according to the age and strength of the TUIY) \ne T. The first exercises in running should commence at a gentle trot over a distance of 150 yards, at the rate of about six feet to a second ; this should be varied up to eight feet in a sec- ond, for the first three or four days, and the distance increased from 150 to 250 yards. On following days the distance may be increased to 500 yards, and afterwards gradually, until a mile can be performed in ten minutes, which is tolerable good running: afterwards six miles may be tried in an hour, which will be easily accomplished. As regards rapid running, from 100 feet to 100 yards may be attempted at full speed, and when the constitution is good, the body not too fat, the muscular developements fine, and the lungs sound, a quarter of a mile in a minute may be accom- plished, and a mile in five minutes, which is seldom done even in very good running. Ten miles an hour, which is the average speed of the mail, may however be easily performed with judicious and proper training. LEAPING. In leaping, that with the run is the most common and the most useful. The object of the run is to impart to the nerves of the body a certain quantity of motion which may carry it onwards after the propelling power has ceased to act when the body leaves the ground ; the run need not exceed twelve or fifteen paces; in this the steps are small and rapid. When the body leaves the ground, the legs are drawn up, one foot generally a little more than the other, and the great thing to be avoided, is coming to the ground on your heels. When springing, the height of the leap must be calculated, the breath held, the body pressed forward, and the fall should be upon the toes and the ball of the foot, although in an extended leap - L P A U L PR E S To N’s this is impossible. Leaping must, like running, be practised gradually ; in the high leap, a person may easily accomplish the height of his own body, and should practise with a bar, represented in the plate, which may be made of two upright posts bored, through which ropes should be placed according to the height required for the leap ; on these should be hung a string with weights attached to each end to keep-it straight. Should the leaper touch it with his feet as he takes his leap, it will be thrown off the pegs, thus showing that he did not make a clean leap. The deep leap may be acquired from the top of a bank into a hollow, or from the top of a house or wall, in a moment of danger. It may be practised from a flight of steps, ascending a step at a time to increase the height, till the limbs can bear the shocks, to break which the body must be kept in a bent position, so that its gravity has to pass through many angles. The leaper should always take advantage of any rivulet that has one bank higher than the other, to practise himself. In the long leap, a person ought to be able to clear with a run, three times the length of his body. The high leap, the deep leap, and the long leap, may be all practised with the pole. For the high leap, the pole should be taken with the right hand, about the height of the head, and with the left hand about the height of the hips; when pu. to the ground, the leaper should spring with the right foot and Boo K of G Y M N A ST I Cs. 163 pass by the left of the pole and swing round as he alights, so as to face the place he leaped from. In the deep leap, the pole being placed the depth you have to leap, the body should be lowered forward, and then the feet being cast off, swing round the pole in your descent. The long leap with the pole is performed in the same manner. WAULTING. This exercise may be practised on that part of the balanc- ing bar between the posts. It may be performed with or with- out running ; it should however be commenced with a short run. The height should be, to commence, about the pit of the stomach, which should be increased to your whole height. CLIMIBING. In climbing the rope, the hands are to be moved one above the other alternately ; the feet should be crossed, and the rope held firm by their pressure ; sometimes the rope may be made to pass along the right thigh just above the knee, and wind round the thigh under the knee. In climbing the upright pole, the feet, legs, knees, and hands, touch the pole. Taking a high grasp of the pole the climber raises himself by bending his body, drawing up and holding fast by the legs, and so on alternately. PAUL PREST on ’s THE SLANT BOARD. This rhould be seized with both hands, the feet being placed in the middle. The board should be considerably aslant when first attempted, and gradually brought towards the per- pendicular. THE ROPE I, ADDER. The climber must keep the body stretched out, and upright, so as to prevent the steps which are loose from being bent forward. * The oblique rope must be climbed with the back turned to- wards the ground, the legs crossed and thrown over so that the rope passes under the calf, and thus he must work himself up by raising his hands one above the other alternately. Book of G Y MNAs Tics. 165 ; The Exercises on the ladder are, 1. to ascend and de- scend rapidly;-2, to ascend and descend' with one hand ;-- 3. without using the hand;—4. passing another person on the ladder, or swinging to the back to let another pass. , BALANCING. THERE are two kinds of balancing to which we shall al- lude ; the balancing of other bodies, and the balancing of our OWI). All feats of balancing depend on the centre of gravity be- ing uniformly preserved in one position. The centre of grav- ity is that point about which all the other parts exactly balance P A U L P R E S To N’s each other; if a body be freely suspended upon this point, it will rest with security, and as long as this point is supported, it will never fall, while in every other position it will endea- vor to descend to the lowest place at which it can arrive. If a perpendicular line were drawn from the centre of gravity of a body to the centre of the earth, such a line would be termed the line of direction, along which every supported body endeavors to fall. If this line falls within the base of a body, such a body will be sure to stand. When the line of direction is thrown beyond its centre, un- less the base be enlarged to counterbalance it, the person or body will fall. A person in stooping to look over a deep hole will bend his trunk forward ; the line of direction being alter- ed he must extend his base to compensate for it, which he does by putting his foot a step forward. A porter stoops for- ward to prevent his burthen from throwing the line of direc- tion out of the base behind, and a girl does the same thing in carrying a pail of water, by stretching out her opposite arm, for the weight of the pail throws the centre of gravity on one side, and the stretching out of the opposite arm brings it back again, and thus the two are balanced. - The art of balancing therefore simply consists in dexter- ously altering the centre of gravity upon every new position of the body, so as constantly to preserve the line of direction B O O K OF G Y M N A S T I C S. within the base. Rope-dancers effect this by means of a long pole held across the rope, and when you mount the balancing rail, you will find it necessary to hold out both your arms for the same purpose ; nay, even when we slip or stumble with one foot, we in a moment extend the opposite arm, making the same use of it as the dancer does of his pole. A balancer finds that a body to be balanced is the best for his purpose if it has a loaded head, and a slender and pointed base ; for although the higher the weight is placed above the point of support, the more ready will the line of direction be thrown beyond the base, yet he can more easily restore it by the motion of his hand, narrowly watching with his eyes its deviations. Now the same watchfulness must be displayed by the gymnastic balancer. He first uses the balancing pole, and then mounts the balancing bar without it. On mounting the bar the body should be held erect, the hands must be extended ; he must then learn to walk firmly and steadily along the bar, to be able to turn round ; then he should practise going backwards. - Two balancers should then endeavor to pass each other on the bar ; afterwards to carry each other, and bodies of various weights, in various positions. - Walking on stilts is connected with balancing. A person can walk with greater security upon high than on low stilts. § sº ºf Sºs=2& P A U L P R. E S T O N . In some parts of France the peasantry, in looking after their sheep, generally walk on stilts, and it only requires practice to make this as easy as common walking. Some few years ago several of these stilt-walkers were to be seen in London, and they could run, jump, stoop, and walk with ease and se- curity, their legs seeming quite as natural to them as those of the Stork. ºrr PICTURE BOOKS PUBLISHED BY MUNROE & FRANCIS. HINTS FOR HAPPY HOURS, or Amuse- ments for all Ages. ; ; This book is just what its title im- ports, a choice Collection of unique and genteel Amusements for evening after evening, and for old and young, through the winter. The Author, in her Preface, remarks: When a large party of people of various ages are domesticated together, especially in the country, it is sometimes a rather difficult task to devise evening entertainments, in which the Juniors may join with as much ease and satisfaction as their seniors. To supply this want is the aim of the present vol- ume, and to show in a familiar style how easily and success- fully a large circle may be happily employed and amused. —O- The Nursery Souvenir, Being a volume of 500 Pages, comprising Rhymes for the Nursery, Marmaduke Multiply, Mrs Goose's Melodies, Hieroglyphic Bible and the Picture Riddler. -Q- Story without an End, from the German of Carove, by Sarah Austin. With a Preface, and Key to the Emblems, by A. Bronson Alcott. -O- Barbauld's Lessons for Children, diversified with Pictures, and printed on large type. -º- Leading Strings to Knowledge, By. Mrs. TRIMMER. A beautiful Nursery Book, and pretty copper- plates to every story. 2 ––PR :Tºº-º-º-º-º- - sa. * S----->;--> * PICTURE BOOKS publishED BY MUNROE & FRANCIS. ~~~~ he American Girl's B00k ; Or, Occupation for Play Hours. By ELIZA. LESLIE. “The sports of children satisfy the child.” Golds, This Book contains a fund of entertainment for Girls, when in quest of recreation. Here are sixty-two different Sports and Pastimes ; eight Plays with Toys ; sixteen little Games with Cards ; Four hundred Riddles, Charades, Enigmas, Re- busses and Conundrums. How to make sevenueen different kinds of Pincushions ; seven different Needlebooks ; twelve different Reticules. Dolls, Lampstands, Penwipers, Book- marks, Matchboxes, &c. All illustrated with wood cuts, de- signed and drawn by the author. - —()— te * ... } () y *: Berquin's Children's Friend, 2 volumes, M. & F. have published, in two neat thick vols. the dramatic stories of the celebrated Berquin, each with an engraving, and revised throughout, making a most interesting little collection of dramas for juvenile reading and schools. The contents are— The Little Brother: A good heart compensates for many In- discretions : The Three Calves : The Deserter : Blind Man's Buff: The conjuring Bird :- The little Fiddler : Vanity pun- ished : The School for Stepmothers : The Affectionate Moth- .er : The Sword : The little Gleaner : Fathers reconciled by their Children: The Hobgoblin : The Young Gamblers: The Fire by Night: The Good Son : Fashionable Education: The Christmas Box : The Greyhound and the Ring : The Page, &c. &c. In all, thirty stories. Original Poems for Infant Minds. By JANE TAylon and her sisters. In one volume, with numer- ous engravings. - The Boy's Story B00k ; or, the History of Edward and his Friends, and their remarkable doings, during One WaCatlon. - SALE No. 82—THURSDAY, APRIL 20th, 1944, AT 2 P. M. 9 94, (COOPER, JAMES FENIMORE). The Deerslayer; or, The First War- Path. A Tale. By the Author of “The Last of the Mohicans,” etc. 2 volumes. 12mo, contemporary sheep, backs gilt, cracked at hinges. In protective cloth folder, in half brown morocco slipcase. Philadelphia, 1841. FIRST EDITION. A clean, sound copy. 95. COOPER, JAMES FENIMORE. Correspondence. Edited by his Grand- son. Illustrated. 2 volumes. Thick tall 8vo, black cloth gilt, top edge gilt, other edges uncut and unopened. New Haven, 1922. LIMITED EDITION, ON RAG PAPER, WITH ILLUSTRATIONS NOT IN THE TRADE EDITION. ONE OF 250 COPIES SIGNED BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE YALE UNIVERSITY PRESS. 96. COSTELLO, LOUISA STUART. The Rose Garden of Persia. Colored page borders, illuminated full-page decorations in Persian style. 8vo, full po- lished calf BY WALLIS, double gilt fillet borders on sides, back extra gilt with raised bands, gilt inner borders, all edges gilt. Bookplates. London, 1845. FIRST EDITION. Fine binding in brilliant state. 97., COX, PALMER. The Brownies: Their Book, Illustrated. Large 8vo, orig- inal decorated boards, worn, back repaired, slightly shaken. - - - - - New York, Century Company, (1887). FIRST EDITION OF A RARE AMERICAN J U V FNILE. The De \ inne im; Fijit is near ºf. -Gapyright page. In spite of the defects noted, a fair copy of a book-seldon found in even passable condition. 98. CRAN BROOK PRESS. The Dictes and Sayings of the Philosophers. Fine woodcut illustrations. Small 4to, vellum back and corners, entirely uncut. Detroit, Mich., 1901. LIMITED TO ONLY 244 COPIES BEAUTIFULLY PRINTED AT THE CRANBROOK PRESS. Mint copy. 99. CRANE, WALTER. Renascence, A Book of Verse. Illustrated by the author. PRINTED THROUGHOUT ON JAPAN VELLUM. 8vo, sheets un- bound as issued, laid in cloth portfolio, vellum back with original ties. London, 1891. ONE OF ONLY 15 VELLUM COPIES PRINTED FOR AMERICA. Fine copy. 100. CRUIKSHANK, GEORGE. Table Book. Edited by A'Beckett. 4to, pic- torial cloth, shaken. New York, 1870; Seymour's Humorous Sketches. Text by Alfred Crowguill. Tall 8vo, pictorial cloth. London, 1872; The Universal Song- ster, or, Museum of Mirth. Illustrated by Cruikshank. 3 volumes. 8vo, decora- tive cloth, shaken. London, n.d. Together, 5 volumes. Vp., Vd “TWO YEARS BEFORE THE MAST" —#94--(PANA, RICHARD HENRY), Two Years before the Mast. A Personal *.*.*.*.* sº - Narrative of Life at Sea. Thick Tomo, original black cloth, rebacked with orig--- inal backstrip pasted on; some foxing. New York, 1840. FIRST EDITION. EARLIEST STATE, witH THE “I” OF_*IN”. DOTTED ON COPY- RIGHT PAGE, AND PERFECT TYPE IN RUNNING: HEAD OF PAGE 9. Backstrip lettered; The Family Library. No. 106. Life before the Mast. Early owners’ names on flyleaves. 102. DANA, RICHARD HENRY. To Cuba and Back. A Vacation Voyage. 8vo, original red cloth, faded. Boston, 1859. FIRST EDITION. Publisher's advertisements at end mentioning price of this book. 103. DANCE, THE. Genthe, Arnold. The Book of the Dance. 6 mounted co- lor plates; many other photographic plates. 4to, white boards gilt, top edge gilt. New York, (1916). ONE OF 100 COPIES PRINTED THROUGHOUT ON JAPAN VELLUM, AND SIGNED BY THE AUTHOR. FINE. 104. DANIEL PRESS. Bourdillon, F. W. Ailes d’Alovette. Square 12mo, full levant morocco, gilt tooled, panelled back and inner dentelle borders, top gilt, uncut; original wrappers bound in, BY BLACKWELL, Oxford, 1890. §: OF ONLY 100 COPIES. Printed on hand-made paper. Number 19 in Madan's Biblio- graphy. * **** -s----- ------------ 10 Swann AUCTION GALLERIES - 146 E. 56th St., N. Y. C. 105. DEMONOLOGY AND DEVIL-LORE: by Moncure D. Conway. 3d Edition, revised and enlarged. Numerous illustrations. 2 volumes. Thick tall, 8vo, cloth. FINE. New York, 1889. 106. DERRYDALE PRESS. Harris, Charles Townsend. Memories of Man- hattan in the Sixties and Seventies. Reproductions from old prints, etc. Tall 8vo, * cloth, paper label. New York, 1928. 107. DIBDIN, THOMAS FROGNALL. The Bibliomania or Book-Madness. Frontispieces etched by Bicknell after original oil-paintings by Howard Pyle; marginal illustrations. 4 volumes. Thick tall 8vo, mottled boards; ENTIRELY UNCUT AND UNOPENED. Boston, 1903. THE BIBLIOPHILE SOCIETY ISSUE, LIMITED TO 483 SETS FOR MEMBERS ONLY. THE MOST NOTABLE MODERN EDITION OF THIS CLASSIC OF BIBLIOPHILY. 108. DICKENS, CHARLES. The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club. Illustrated. Thick 8vo, #4, calf, worn. First Edition. London, 1837; WITH: Set of the 5 Christmas Books, chiefly late editions. Red cloth, worn. Boxed. Lon- don, 1844–48. Together, 6 volumes: London, 1837–48. 109. (DICKENS, CHARLES). Prime Pickwicks in Parts. Census with Com- plete Collation . . . by John C. Eckel. Foreword by A. EDWARD NEWTON. Facsimiles. Tall 8vo, pictorial cloth reproducing the cover of Part 1 of Pick- ******"...º.º.º.º. * . . . --~~x-yv-R- - isiºn, 1525. * Ye, tºº & ONE OF 440 COPIES SIGNED BY BOTH ECKELA AND NEWTON. FINE. 110. , DICTIONARY of the English Language . . . by James Stormonth. Pro- nunciation carefully revised by P. H. Phelp. Very thick 4to, (over 1,200 pages), original cloth. New York, 1885. BEAUTIFUL BINDING BY DE SAUTY 111. DOBSON, AUSTIN. At the Sign of the Lyre. Frontispiece. 12mo, full green crushed levant morocco, gilt fillet bands on both sides, large center design of intertwining petals against a background of gilt dots, with small bunches of berries inlaid with dark red morocco, outline of center design in bands of darker green merecco; -panelied back, gilt top, uncut, BOUND BY DE SAUTY. * London, 1885. FIRST EDITION. Very handsome binding in perfect condition. 112. DRINKING. Peeke, Hewson L. Americana Ebrietatis; the Favorite Tipple of our Forefathers and the Laws and Customs Relating Thereto. 8vo, % parchment. - New York, 1917. ONE OF 100 COPIES PRIVATELY PRINTED. MINT COPY, IN, ORIGINAL CLOTH DUST JACKET. - • , . - FIRST OF THE “Dooley” Books - - ii.5. (D UNINE, FINLEY PETER). Mr. Dooley in Peace and in War. 12mo, green cloth. FIRST EDITION. - Boston, 1898. On Merle Johnson’s list of High Spots of American Literature. • - SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY TREATISE ON WOOL-DYEING 114. DYEING. Instruction Generale pour la Teinture des Laines et Manu- factures de Laine de Toutes Couleurs, & pour la Culture des Drogues ou In- grediens qu'on y Employe. 16mo, contemporary vellum. FIRST EDITION. FINE COPY. Paris, F. Muguet, 1671. 115. EGGLESTON, EDWARD. The Hoosier School-Master. A Novel. 29 illustrations. 12mo, brown cloth, back gilt. New York, (1871): FIRST EDITION. FIRST ISSUE, with “was out,” line 3, page 71, and full-page plates listed as “(Tinted).” Trifle shaken, with extreme ends of backstrip a little frayed. GOOD COPY OF SCARCE JOHNSON “HIGH SPOT.” - . . 116. ELM TREE PRESS. Hazlitt, William. The Fight, an Essay. Introduc- tion by Robert H. Davis. Colored frontispiece. Thin 12mo, boards, paper label. . - t Woodstock, Vt., 1929. LIMITED EDITION, PRINTED At the ELM TREE PRESS FOR MARjokić BAR- LOW, WHO HAS SIGNED THIS COPY. * • *... >. .." ºv **. - 3.A.Ş '.…” *-*.*.*.* --~~ → . f - 6, , 7.5- *~~~~~~ -----&- HISTORICAL Boy’s own book. Clarke, W HISTORICAL Juv. Coll. GW l2Ol . C 62 (~~~~ º ' • HISTORICAL ==-|--|- T : - d - T - º fºr sº Rºß § rºº º § Žº º: r tº-º-º-º-º-º- º F- - §:##### - º - º -º-º: º pººrºº: : º §: - º: º: - - E.Aº. gº º : º ę-º-º-º: .* 3:##### §§ --> § § §§§ E- - §§ §§ § Sºº-ºº: #########. §:# º º: º: º 㺠******* º § ºxº-Fºx7~~~ § - #########3:3: º § º º *g º: º gº x- º: sº §t º: Fººt: ºw: º º - sº wº Nº § - : §:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: - § §§ ś .*Mºyº grº: *ºs tºº - º-ºº: :::::::::::::::::::::$ºś - º º: Sºś º §: ºx; 5: - : gº C ś É; #. ###########3 ſº #: §§ * ... • - § - ſººn § É. Sºś º É sº §º:#; º º § - sº º º §: * - - *:::::: : % º º º §; ſº § - - § º § § £º ### ;:. gº §: º - §: :::::::::::: §: y **** - §: - # § §: $: : ɺś - gº sº ###:# º § ############### §:#############################. ğ###### -- É ** É ######## § º º ºš ºº:: §: º: §: 3 gº § # 3. º: ########### §§ :::::::: fººt-sº tº º--" : -: ####### ######### ::::::::::::::::::: º :::::::::::#######. §::::::: **.* **** º: *. - º sº - 3.E. - #&## § *::::A; : º º §§ § § É *::::::: ** ############## # §§ § # Hºº : t; ##### ########### :::::::::: º § : Sºś - § ########; §§º: t §: º § # - ***: Žº § * ſº º #: f łº - É - sº º Bºš #### ; § º É; ##### # § ##### # §: º 35. #% *ºr ### ####### §:::::::::::::::::::::: ####### ####### ######. *: ɧ :ºº ń ##### # § # § ::::::::::::::::::::::::: ºf: º - § - ºś §:# - tº: *…*. ºrgº ########### # ; $º ºfºº É § #############; §§§ - Q: s