The reader must remember that these subjects must be drawn as if they were upside down with regard to each other, so that the man who is to ride the horse is drawn as if he were standing on his head, and the mouse which is to enter the trap looks as if it were lying on its back.

The most simple manner of spinning the disc is by means of two threads, each being inserted near the edge of the disc, and exactly opposite each other.

A very ingenious modification of the Thaumatrope is made by inserting at one side of the disc two strings, of which one is elastic. It is evident, then, that by lengthening or shortening the elastic string, the axis can be changed, and the objects on the opposite sides placed in positions relatively different from each other. Thus the jockey may be made to jump on and off his horse, the bird to go in and out of its cage, the mouse to enter the trap, and so on. This simple invention allows of infinite combinations, so that a tree may be made to sprout, a man to move his limbs, and a bird to flap its wings. It was invented, I believe, by Dr. Paris, author of “Philosophy in Sport made Science in Earnest.”

On the right hand of the illustration are seen three figures, each representing a means of obtaining an ocular delusion through the principle of which we are now treating.

The lower figure is called the Zoetrope, or Wheel of Life. As the reader may see, it consists of a hollow cylinder, revolving on a centre, and having within it a series of figures. When the wheel revolves, and the figures are viewed through the slits, each figure seems to be in lifelike motion, whence the name of Zoetrope. In the present case the figures are those of boys jumping over posts.

The mode in which this effect is produced is as follows:—Suppose that a boy were really to jump over a post, he would go through a series of motions, and his body be placed in a certain series of positions, before he cleared the post. Supposing, then, that several points were chosen in his course, and his body drawn as it would appear at these points, and the drawings placed in their proper order in the Zoetrope, it is evident that the figures must appear in movement. Before the retina loses the image of the boy standing in front of the post, it takes in that of the boy stooping, with his hands on the top of the post, and so on until he has reached the ground on the opposite side.

Another mode of producing the same effect, called the Phantasmascope, is seen above the zoetrope. In this case the images are placed on the inside of the disc, which is held opposite a mirror, and the figures viewed through the slits.

The last of these figures is the rather complicated one, like the back of an “engine-turned” watch. This is called the Chromatrope, or Wheel of Colour, and is always a favourite object in a magic lantern. It consists of two circular plates of glass, one upon the other, and painted in variously coloured curved lines, as seen in the illustration. When the image is thrown upon a screen, and the glass plates turned in opposite directions, a most singular and beautiful effect is produced. The lines, unless the eye follows them very closely, disappear, and torrents of coloured spots seem to pour from the centre to the circumference, or vice versâ, according to the direction in which the glass wheels are turned. So perfect is the illusion, that it is almost impossible to believe that the movement is only circular, and not spiral.

Now we will pass from Art to Nature. The figure on the left hand of the same illustration represents part of one of the Wheel Animalcules, so called because they look exactly as if the fore-part of their bodies were furnished with two delicate wheels, running rapidly round, and evidently moving or stopping at the pleasure of the owner.