STRAIGHT OBJECTS SEEN CROOKED.
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 be of a curved form. The velocity of the wheel must not be so 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 number 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, seen through the intervals of the bars, form on the retina of the eye so many different radii.