| Transcriber's note: | A few typographical errors have been corrected. Theyappear in the text like this, and theexplanation will appear when the mouse pointer is moved over the markedpassage. |
The Earl of Pembroke to the Abbess of Wilton.
"Go spin, you jade! go spin!"
BY
With an Illustrated Appendix on the Use of Gyrostats.
LONDON
SOCIETY FOR PROMOTING CHRISTIAN KNOWLEDGE,
Northumberland Avenue, W.C.; 43, Queen Victoria Street, E.C.
Brighton: 129, North Street.
N e w Y o r k: E. S. G O R H A M.
1910
PUBLISHED UNDER THE DIRECTION OF THE GENERALLITERATURE COMMITTEE
[Date of last impression, April 1908]
This is not the lecture as it was delivered. Instead of two pages of letterpress and a woodcut, the reader may imagine that for half a minute the lecturer played with a spinning top or gyrostat, and occasionally ejaculated words of warning, admonition, and explanation towards his audience. A verbatim report would make rather uninteresting reading, and I have taken the liberty of trying, by greater fullness of explanation, to make up to the reader for his not having seen the moving apparatus. It has also been necessary in a treatise intended for general readers to simplify the reasoning, the lecture having been delivered to persons whose life experiences peculiarly fitted them for understanding scientific things. An "argument" has been added at the end to make the steps of the reasoning clearer.
JOHN PERRY.
At a Leeds Board School last week, the master said to his class, "There is to be a meeting of the British Association in Leeds. What is it all about