[75]. See p. [69].

[76]. See p. [84].

[77]. It is to this latter circumstance that the Panorama is principally indebted for its magical effects.

[78]. Sir David Brewster has enumerated various extraordinary illusions, which may be thus produced, in his Work on Natural Magic.

[79]. Ovid’s Metamorphoses, 10.

[80]. Page [138].

[81]. From the French term courant, signifying running.

[82]. See page [344].

[83]. A scientific critic has offered the following just remark upon this passage. “The rocket ascends by a constantly acting force, not by a momentary impulse, as though it were shot from a gun. Supposing the force arising from combustion to be proportionate to the weight of the rocket, as long as the force continues to be generated, the rocket must move in a straight line; after which, having only its own momentum to oppose its gravitation, it will proceed in a parabolic curve.”