| 1 | [The aeronaut seesfor himself.] | |
| 2 | [Standing waterlevel.] | |
| 3 | [Surveyors’“allowance.”] | |
| 4 | [Flow ofRivers—the Nile.] | |
| 5 | [Lighthouses—Cape Hatteras.] | |
| 6 | [Thesea-shore.—“Coming up.”] | |
| 7 | [A trip downChesapeake Bay.] | |
| 8 | [The model globeuseless.] | |
| 9 | [Thesailor’s level charts.] | |
| 10 | [Themariners’ compass.] | |
| 11 | [The southerncircumference.] | |
| 12 | [Circumnavigationof the Earth.] | |
| 13 | [Meridians arestraight lines.] | |
| 14 | [Parallels oflatitude—circles.] | |
| 15 | [Sailing down andunderneath.] | |
| 16 | [Distance roundthe South.] | |
| 17 | [Levelnessrequired by man.] | |
| 18 | [The“level” of the astronomers.] | |
| 19 | [Half the globeis cut off, now!] | |
| 20 | [No“up” or “down” in nature?] | |
| 21 | [The“spherical lodestone.”] | |
| 22 | [No falsehoodswanted!] | |
| 23 | [No proof of“rotundity.”] | |
| 24 | [A “mostcomplete” failure.] | |
| 25 | [The firstAtlantic Cable.] | |
| 26 | [Earth’s“curvature.”] | |
| 27 | [Which end goesdown?] | |
| 28 | [A “hill ofwater.”] | |
| 29 | [Characteristicsof a globe.] | |
| 30 | [Horizon—level with the eye.] | |
| 31 | [Much too small aglobe.] | |
| 32 | [Vanishing pointof objects.] | |
| 33 | [We are not“fastened on.”] | |
| 34 | [Our“antipodes.”—a delusion.] | |
| 35 | [Horizon a levelline.] | |
| 36 | [Chesapeake Bayby night.] | |
| 37 | [Six months dayand night.] | |
| 38 | [The“Midnight Sun.”] | |
| 39 | [Sun moves roundthe Earth.] | |
| 40 | [SuezCanal—100 miles—level.] | |
| 41 | [The “truelevel.”—a curve.] | |
| 42 | [Projectiles—firing east or west.] | |
| 43 | [Bodies thrownupwards.] | |
| 44 | [Firing inopposite direction.] | |
| 45 | [Astronomer Royalof England.] | |
| 46 | [An utterlymeaningless theory.] | |
| 47 | [ProfessorProctor’s cylinder.] | |
| 48 | [Proctor’sfalse perspective.] | |
| 49 | [Motion of theclouds.] | |
| 50 | [Scripturalproof—a plane.] | |
| 51 | [The“Standing Order.”] | |
| 52 | [More ice in thesouth.] | |
| 53 | [Sun’saccelerated pace, south.] | |
| 54 | [Balloons notleft behind.] | |
| 55 | [The Moon’sbeams are cold.] | |
| 56 | [The Sun andMoon.] | |
| 57 | [NotEarth’s shadow at all.] | |
| 58 | [Rotating andrevolving.] | |
| 59 | [Proctor’sbig mistake.] | |
| 60 | [Sun’sdistance from Earth.] | |
| 61 | [No true“measuring-rod.”] | |
| 62 | [Sailing“round” a thing.] | |
| 63 | [Telescopes—“hill of water.”] | |
| 64 | [The laws ofoptics—Glaisher.] | |
| 65 | [“Dwelling” upon error.] | |
| 66 | [Ptolemy’spredictions.] | |
| 67 | [Canal inChina—700 miles.] | |
| 68 | [Mr.Lockyer’s false logic.] | |
| 69 | [Beggarlyalternatives.] | |
| 70 | [Mr.Lockyer’s suppositions.] | |
| 71 | [North Star seenfrom S. lat.] | |
| 72 | [“Walls notparallel!”] | |
| 73 | [Pendulumexperiments.] | |
| 74 | [“Delightful uncertainty.”] | |
| 75 | [Outrageouscalculations.] | |
| 76 | [J. R.Young’s Navigation.] | |
| 77 | [“Tumblingover.”] | |
| 78 | [Circumnavigation—south.] | |
| 79 | [A disc—nota sphere.] | |
| 80 | [Earth’s“motion” unproven.] | |
| 81 | [Moon’smotion east to west.] | |
| 82 | [All on the wrongtrack.] | |
| 83 | [No meridianal“degrees.”] | |
| 84 | [Depression ofNorth Star.] | |
| 85 | [Rivers flowingup-hill?] | |
| 86 | [100 miles infive seconds.] | |
| 87 | [Miserablemakeshifts.] | |
| 88 | [What holds thepeople on.] | |
| 89 | [Luminousobjects.] | |
| 90 | [Practice againsttheory.] | |
| 91 | [Unscientificclassification.] | |
| 92 | [G. B.Airy’s “suppositions.”] | |
| 93 | [Astronomers giveup theory.] | |
| 94 | [School-room“proofs” false.] | |
| 95 | [Pictorialproof—Earth a plane.] | |
| 96 | [Laws ofperspective ignored.] | |
| 97 | [“Rationalsuppositions.”] | |
| 98 | [It is the starthat moves.] | |
| 99 | [Hair-splittingcalculation.] | |
| 100 | [How“time” is lost or gained.] | |