In some the lines are too near some of the corners, in some too far off, and in others they touch and even cut into the blocks. Some few show double or partly double lines.
The whole sheet from plate 24, above mentioned, does not contain all the varieties round, nor are they arranged just in the same order that they appear in portions of other sheets examined.
All the varieties possible, considering merely the position of the corners and side lines, would be 246. So that each stamp on a sheet might be different in this respect without showing them all.
In sheet 24 however, only 32 exist. There are therefore, a number of each variety, as follows, by the table previously given:
| hhhh | 1 | hiif | 1 | ifih | 2 | fihh | 5 |
| hhhf | 2 | hifh | 1 | ifif | 13 | fiih | 8 |
| hhih | 16 | hfif | 3 | fhhh | 2 | fiii | 2 |
| hhif | 20 | ihih | 14 | fhhi | 1 | fiif | 9 |
| hihh | 2 | ihif | 32 | fhhf | 2 | fihh | 2 |
| hihi | 2 | iiih | 7 | fhih | 3 | fihi | 3 |
| hiih | 20 | iiii | 12 | fhif | 5 | ffhf | 1 |
| hiii | 5 | iiif | 1 | fhff | 1 | ffif | 2 |
The 11th stamp in the first horizontal row, the 11th and 12th in the second row, the 13th in the 4th row, and the 17th to 20th in the 10th row show an extra line to the left of the left bottom rosette, V1.
In the 18th vertical row the left line actually cuts through the left block in four specimens which are marked as if it merely touched in the foregoing list.
The 14th and 15th stamps in the top row show the dot.
The 13th, 16th, 17th, 18th, 19th and 20th stamps in the upper row show the right vertical line not only too far, g2 g4, as marked, but very far from the corner block.