To .... a .... of ....s;
A .... may often take a ....
To .... away the ....s.
No. CXXII.—THE TALKING HEAD
This, though quite an old illusion, may be a mystery to some of our readers, so we give it a place among our many curiosities.
The table is placed on the middle of a platform, well away from the background, and the head, which is very much alive, is prepared to answer questions, or to whistle, or to sing, at the will of the audience. “How it is done” will be explained.
105. A QUEER OBSTACLE
Yet no one I stop.
My four horns each day
Horizontally play,
And my head is nailed on at the top.
No. CXXIII.—A GENERAL OF THE LIGHT BRIGADE
With a little ingenuity, and by slightly warming the wax, and shredding the matches for some effects, all sorts of comical figures can be contrived, similar in character to this dignified general on his high-stepping charger.
106. AN OLD ENIGMA
(By a former Fellow of Trinity College, Dublin.)
Put fifty in the middle;
Twice ten times five times ten
Will finish off my riddle,
And bring it to your ken
As fit as any fiddle!
No. CXXIV.—ANOTHER BOOMERANG
Cut out in cardboard a cross similar to that shown in this diagram:—
Place one of its limbs under the thumbnail of the left hand, and give the next projecting limb a sharp flick with the middle finger of the right hand. The little boomerang will fly sharply forward, and invariably return rapidly on its tracks. Try it.
107. PHONETIC GAPS
Can you fill these gaps with words of similar sound?
A ..... will ... before it;
We cannot .... the ...., or find
That earthly powers ..... o’er it.
The gaps in line 1 take words that sound alike; so do those in line 2; and so do the other three in lines 3 and 4.
No. CXXV.—A PICTURE CHARADE
Can you fill in the missing words so as to complete this picture charade?
My second then ..... ..;
My whole in ..... moves .....
....... an oar or ...
108. SOUND SENSE
Reverse us, and we indicate a county.
109. A CRYPTOGRAM
LLSKMTMXTTLLTSTHN!
Can you so deal with this as to form a rhyming couplet?
No. CXXVI.—WALNUTS AND COBS
A good after dinner trick
Place four walnuts and four cobnuts in a row, as indicated on the diagram.
Now, moving always two that stand together, transfer them to some other positions along the line, and in four such moves leave them so that the large and small nuts range alternately. It may, of course, be done with large and small coins, or with other things that are at hand.
110. A BURIED PROVERB
Old memories steal anew;
With a tear, with a sigh, with an old, old cry
They return in ghostly hue!
111. DOUBLETS
Here is another exercise in Doublets, from Lewis Carroll’s book on the subject:—
Turn ELM into OAK by seven links, introducing the name of another tree as one of them.
No. CXXVII.—A PICTURE RIDDLE
Can you read in this picture the question of our riddle?
112. TWO POSERS
1.
We are giving a ball;
First second we third,
Pray give us your all.
2.
Till I became my whole;
And told the tale of my repast,
A sad and greedy soul.
No. CXXVIII.—BUY A BROOM
Here is an excellent example of how a characteristic figure may be contrived by shredding, warming, and uniting a few wax matches:—
Many similar figures can be made by handy fingers.
113. A CHARADE
His daily task to meet;
Behead, transpose, and lo! a sound
Of music soft and sweet;
Behead again, I make my way
With swiftness past belief;
Again, and where the fields are gay
My bounty brings relief.
No. CXXIX.—JEU DE PARQUET
(For the children)
An old book, published more than 100 years ago, gives the following samples of patterns which may be formed with very simple materials:—
All that is needed for this pastime is a set of 128 coloured triangles, 64 of each colour, with which an endless variety of patterns can be arranged by the exercise of taste and ingenuity.
114. LINES BY AN OLD OXBRIDGE DON
Women should try for a B.A.
To College honours forward looking;
They’d best confine themselves to cooking!
How could a Girton girl retort, using the same words?
115. LESS AND MORE
Three syllables contain;
Take one away, and see
Four syllables remain!
116. BURIED BEASTS
Can you dig out nineteen beasts that are buried in these lines?—
Ireland’s lot heals slowly. Troubles came long ago—at times in battalions—to attack and harass her. Ambitious democrats now countermine famous enthusiasts nearly akin to heroes. Anarchy enables cowards to sow hot terror and all amazement.
117. PALINDROMIC VERSE
Can you recast the following sentences so that their words form a verse of four lines, which makes good sense, with lines that rhyme alternately, when read from either end?:—
Fading slowly day dies, mournful winds sigh, Stars are waking brightly; owlet holding high revel flies hooting, breaking nightly silence.
118. AN ANAGRAM IN THE MAKING
“The Observatory at Greenwich, in England,” has been turned into an excellent anagram, which starts—On landing here begin—Can you complete it?
119. AN ENIGMA
And, if you turn me round,
To hear my warning cry
Not any men are found.
120. ASK A SAILOR
When times are harder?
How do they greet with merry jest
An empty larder?
121. AN ENIGMA
Transpose me I am three;
Look in a book, you find me there,
And with me her and he.
122. MISSING WORDS
The circle to a .......;
His friends ....... that a brain so rare
Required attention ........
The missing words are spelt with the same seven letters.
123. A HUMAN PRODIGY
And I’m my mother’s mother;
My daughter and sister are one,
I’m grandam to my brother!
How was this?
124. A CHARADE
Add a simple word;
Then my whole may help a bit
Opportunely heard.
125. A PARADOX
Some little space we were apart.
When we had run a mile or more
We kept our distance, as before;
Shade of Colenso! could this be,
When twice as fast as I ran he?
126. AN ENIGMA
(From Lewis Carroll’s Papers.)
Am I in all sincerity,
Half cat, half hindrance made.
If head and tail removed should be,
Then most of all you strengthen me.
Replace my head, the stand you see
On which my tail is laid.
127. A CHARADE
And my worth by a child may be reckoned;
The least thing in nature is double my first,
And my whole is just half of my second.
128. WHAT IS IT?
Is one and undivided;
My second shows its teeth, is frail,
And as a rule one-sided.
The two to hold my first avail,
My busy toil provided.
129. BURIED TOWNS
In each of these sentences a town is buried:—
His sister played the piano while we sang.
I saw Nell out here last evening.
The general rode a large black mare.
I have ordered a cab at half-past one.
Meet me in the lane at half-past nine.
Can you dig them out?
130. A GOOD ANAGRAM
“The leaning tower of Pisa, in Tuscany, Italy.” The first seven words of its anagram are “A funny spot in a sweet city.” Can you complete the anagram by adding four more appropriate words?
131. MISSING WORDS
Near the ....... at Rome
’Twas the ....... discussion of the season;
But the ....... effect
Of the skeletons select
Deprived the poor Professor of his reason!
132. A CHARADE
My second a dandy;
When fogs are most dense
My whole will be handy.
133. A DECISIVE ANAGRAM
Can you prove by anagram that, whatever may be true of other plays accredited to Shakespeare, Bacon had certainly no hand in “Much Ado About Nothinge,” if we adopt the old spelling of the final word?
134. RATHER OBSCURE
Can any guess it right?
Transposed, and never seen at all,
It still is felt in sight.
Behead, transpose, then let it be,
And you at last a clue may see.
135. SHUFFLE THE LETTERS
Can you recast “Insanitary” and “Sanitary Reform” so as to form two very appropriate anagrams?
136. A CHARADE
When I come to table;
Though I cannot quench your thirst
Eat me—you are able.
137. MISSING LETTERS
whtdyssdrksdysthtwrslrm?
lssknyskthndfr,
llshllcllwrhrssndhrm.
whycllsblldstlkthtghstlyrt
llgllntctsgrndndmntyprt?
Can you supply the missing letters?
138. A CHARADE
The moon fresh brightness brings;
Cut off my tail, I’m blunt, but meet
To sharpen other things.
Soldiers to face the foe;
Headless and tailless, one remains
Though all the rest may go.
139. IS IT BANTING?
Then there’s an end of you.
A vengeful goddess shows at last
What Antifat will do.
140. A CHARADE
To seek some hidden goal,
Over my first my second comes, and then
Quite overcomes my whole.
141. A PRIZE CRYPTOGRAM
The following cryptic lines were sent as a reliable tip before a race in which Petronel was to run:—
“Tell me, Ben, who tore it
Seek a plant for it, see Bob.”
Can you discover their hidden meaning?
142. AN ENIGMA
From me all come, in me all end.
And it is strange but very true
That I am here and nowhere too.
143. FACING BOTH WAYS
Can you fill in this broken sentence, first to describe a curse, and then to proclaim its cure:—
A sed end ought eat ease ain.
using 16, and then 17, extra letters.
144. A CHARADE
My second a city;
The whole you discover
With this if you’re witty.
145. BURIED RIVERS
The deaf and dumb girl began gesticulating with a message, and her delivery was ever neat, with graceful pose in every attitude.
Four rivers are buried here.
146. ANSWER BY ANAGRAM
If the “shingle” on the beach at Brighton could speak, what would be its boast?
147. A SIMPLE RECIPE
Incurable I fear;
She is my guest, I am her host,
How can I make her hear?
148. THE PLAINT OF THE REJECTED
A May-Day Dirge
149. “BETA IN GREEK MEANS LETTER B.”
The clever play-writer who suggested these words as a phonetic excuse for wife-beating might in another fashion invite a man to beat his wife by merely calling him. What would he say?
150. A REBUS
| storm? a th |
an umbrella me who |
with alls |
all mud. |
151. BONES OF A PALINDROME
NRNRMMHDLVLDHMMRNRN.
Can you, keeping these consonants in their order, fill in vowels so as to form a sentence which is a perfect palindrome, and reads alike from either end?
152. A NICE POINT
“Can you tell me,” said an undergraduate to his tutor, who was great at Ecclesiastical Law, “whether the Pope would be allowed to bury the Archbishop of Canterbury?” As some slight stress was laid on the syllables Canterbury, the tutor for a moment suspected some trick, but being assured that it was quite a serious question, promised to consider the point. What should he reply?
153. A BURIED PROVERB
While there are very many as kind as this, they know no task unkind. Can you dig a proverb out from this sentence?
154. IN THE OPEN
Tom, Jane, and Mary, chatter;
He leads the way, and then we see
The other two come at her!
155. A BURIED QUOTATION
(From Shakespeare)
Strange weather! What could equal it? Yesterday sunshine and soft breezes, to-day a summer cyclone raging noisily; then other changes, as floods of fiercest rain eddy beneath the blast.
156. PALINDROME ON A BEETROOT
Fill in the necessary vowels, and form thus with these consonants in their present order a perfect palindrome:—
RDRTPTPTRDR
It must read alike from either end.
157. A CHARADE
My next is heard in rain or hail;
My fourth a sheep of gender male;
My third is one without its tail;
My whole for foreign countries sail.
158. AMBIGUOUS
On the outer wall of a Western college this was written: “Young women should set a good example, for young men .... ...... ....!” What three words will give a most ambiguous sense to the inscription?
159. AN ENIGMA
I have my duties to fulfil;
If off you take
My tail, and make
An alteration in my lot,
Though I seem shorter I am not.
160. DIABOLUS!
Why is it that the devil,
In spite of all his naughty ways,
Can never be uncivil?”
To any mind that’s bright;
Because the ... .’ ........, sir,
Cannot be ... .’ .....!”
Can you supply the missing words?
161. MISSING WORDS
Her bicycle she mounted,
And with a ....., ere she had gone
An hour, ten ..... she counted.
It rained, it snowed, but nought could stop her,
Till in the ..... she came a cropper!
162. AN INSCRIPTION WITH A POINT
On the comparatively new organ at Ober Ammergau, on a brass plate above the keyboard, is the following Latin inscription:—