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No. XCVI

The following diagram shows the solution of this new chess puzzle, and fulfils its conditions that no Queen should attack a Queen, no Rook a Rook, no Bishop a Bishop, and no Knight a Knight.

BBBB QRBB
KtRKt Kt Q
KtR KtQ Kt KtB
QKt KtRKt B
B Kt Kt QR
B Q Kt KtRKt
Kt KtRKtQKt
RBQKtBBBKt

[Image]

Mr Dudeney explains that only 8 Queens or 8 Rooks can be thus placed upon the board, while the greatest number of Bishops is fourteen, and of Knights thirty-two. But as all Knights must be placed on squares of the same colour, while the Queens occupy four of each colour, and the bishops seven of each colour, it follows that only twenty-one Knights can be placed, and the arrangement shown above contains the maximum number of these pieces under the conditions.

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No. CII

This diagram shows the order in which the syllables or words of the eight-line verse are to be read on the course of a Knight’s moves at chess—

14
sor
55
to
22
king
37
good
12
say
51
luck
18
loy
35
eth
23
and
38
moth
13
a
54
soon
17
dis
36
our
11
to
50
bad
56
place
15
ry
40
church
21
his
52
force
9
is
34
hat
19
al
39
er
24
queen
53
him
16
wight
33
he
20
to
49
may
10
truth
2
man
57
his
28
and
41
and
8
chess
61
es
32
knight
47
op’s
25
a
42
sneer
1
the
60
and
29
un
48
lawn
7
of
62
tates
58
cas
3
that
44
at
27
less
64
pawn
5
no
46
bish
31
lant
44
eth
26
faith
59
tles
4
hath
45
the
30
gal
63
in
6
love