7. Agt., what was probably intended to represent a German Pickelhaube (Fig. [5]); Per., what the accompanying script called a “Knight’s helmet”; very similar (Fig. [5a]).
8. Agt., a row of five pillars (shown with a rather extraordinary perspective slant), each mainly indicated by three or four vertical parallel lines, an entablature above (Fig. [132]); Per., four pillar-like objects constructed of vertical parallel lines, three to five, the presumed pillars having no entablature but in themselves and additional lines showing the same slant as in the original. The presumed pillars are likewise nearly equally spaced, but are of unequal heights, indicating that the percipient’s impression was a visual one and that she had no clear idea what she was drawing (Fig. [132a]).
9. Agt., presumably a palm tree (Fig. [8]); Per., two objects hard to name, but each in a general way curiously like the original, even to the bend in what is presumably the trunk, though it is not the same bend (Fig. [8a]).
Series of March 16, 1929
There were seven tests on this date.
1. Agt., a burning lamp (Fig. [40]); Per., as in Figure 40a, whether the drawing represents a tube from which flame proceeds, or the wick and that part of the lamp which is within the chimney, at any rate the same lines which conventionally signify light appear as in the original. Accompanying script says “flame and sparks.”
2. Agt., a butterfly net (Fig. [110]); Per., the handle of the net is duplicated, and the general shape of the net is pretty well shown (Fig. [110a]).
3. Agt., a carnation with four near-angles along its upper edge (Fig. [113]); Per., four triangles in a row with a hint of lines below (Fig. [113a]).
4. Agt., a trench mortar (Fig. [42]); Per., a figure considerably like but shorter than the trench mortar, and likewise pointing upward, a stem-like extension like the axle in the original but on the other side, whiffs of smoke emerging (Fig. [42a]). Here the impressions received seem partly visual, partly ideational.
5. Agt., a telegraph pole and four wires proceeding horizontally from it in two directions (Fig. [129]); Per., something like a pole, and five lines proceeding from it in one direction (Fig. [129a]).