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VISUAL 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 ascertain 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.

HAND-WRITING 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 sun 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 cover it with a crust, scarcely visible to the eye. Then place 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 inscription 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 inscription 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.

This experiment may be made with small coins upon a heated poker, a flat iron, or a salamander. The effect will be more perfect 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

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the glasses stuck to it, (Fig. 1.)

Fig. 1.

Fig. 2.

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The end view (Fig. 2.) will show the angle, a, at which the 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 pasteboard 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 3 will better explain the direction in which

Fig. 3.

to look: here, is the eye of the spectator, p, is the prism, h, the hole in the shutter or pasteboard, s, the spectrum. By a little practice, you will soon become 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 analysed and proved to consist of coloured rays, and several of its properties be beautifully illustrated.

OPTICAL AUGMENTATION.

Take a glass rummer that is narrow at bottom and wide at top, 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 GLASS 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, then, 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 tint during the time that the change is going on.

OPTICAL DECEPTION.

Look steadily at a carpet having figures of one colour, green, for example, upon a ground of another colour, suppose red, and you will sometimes see the whole of the green pattern as if the red one were obliterated; and at other times, you will see the whole of the red pattern, 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 before 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 threads agglutinated together, and thus presenting, not a cylindrical, but a furrowed surface.

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