[B] 10. P. takes B., Kt. to B's 3d!; 11. Q. takes R. (ch.), obtains three pieces for the Q., but loses the game. Q. to K's sq., here or on the following move, offers the only defence.
[C] Zukertort's analysis, which filled pages and pages of the Neue Berliner Schachzeitung, considered every conceivable move of White's down to P. to Q. R's 3d, but this one, upon which, in conjunction with the following K. move, Steinitz rested his gambit. 11. P. to B's 3d has been refuted in an elaborate analysis by Mr. Walter Penn Shipley, of Philadelphia.
[D] Black wins here by,
| 12. ... | 12. P. to Q. R's 3d. |
| 13. K. to Kt's 3d. | 13. P. takes Kt. |
| 14. P. to B's 3d. | 14. R. takes P.! |
| 15. P. takes R. | 15. Q. to Q's 4th. (ch.) |
| 16. K. to B's 2d. | 16. B. to B's 4th. (ch.) |
| 17. K. to Q's 2d. | 17. B. to Kt's 5th. (ch.) |
| 18. K. to K's 2d. | 18. Kt. to Kt's 5th.! |
as played by Messrs. Honegger and Raubitscheck in a consultation game against Steinitz at the Metropolitan Chess Club, 1897. If, instead of K. to Kt's 3d, 13. Kt. takes P. Black wins by R. takes P.!.
[E] White has brought his K. into safety and will remain a piece ahead. Had Black, instead of his last move, pinned the B., the game would have proceeded as follows:
| 19. ... | 19. R. to Kt's 3d. |
| 20. P. to Q. R's 4th. | 20. P. to Q. R's 3d. |
| 21. B. takes P. | 21. R. takes P. |
| 22. K. to B's 2d. | 22. P. takes B. |
| 23. P. takes P. | 23. Q. takes P. |
| 24. B. takes P. (ch.) and wins. |