The Canterbury Puzzles: And Other Curious ProblemsE.P. Dutton and Company, 1908 - 194 |
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Strona ix
... PUZZLE CLUB THE PROFESSOR'S PUZZLES . MISCELLANEOUS PUZZLES SOLUTIONS PAGE XI 1 33 42 51 58 66 81 89 131 INTRODUCTION READERS of " The Mill on the Floss "
... PUZZLE CLUB THE PROFESSOR'S PUZZLES . MISCELLANEOUS PUZZLES SOLUTIONS PAGE XI 1 33 42 51 58 66 81 89 131 INTRODUCTION READERS of " The Mill on the Floss "
Strona xi
... puzzle , had to admit " there be three things which are too wonderful for me ; yea , four which I know not the way ... puzzles . But there are puzzles and puzzles . Those that are usually devised for recreation and pastime may be roughly ...
... puzzle , had to admit " there be three things which are too wonderful for me ; yea , four which I know not the way ... puzzles . But there are puzzles and puzzles . Those that are usually devised for recreation and pastime may be roughly ...
Strona xii
... puzzles to one another every day of our lives — without always knowing it . A good puzzle should demand the exercise of our best wit and ingenuity , and although a knowledge of mathematics and a certain familiarity with the methods of ...
... puzzles to one another every day of our lives — without always knowing it . A good puzzle should demand the exercise of our best wit and ingenuity , and although a knowledge of mathematics and a certain familiarity with the methods of ...
Strona xiii
... puzzle has for a great many people . We know the thing to be of trivial importance , yet we are impelled to master it , and when we have succeeded there is a pleasure and a sense of satisfaction that are a quite sufficient reward for ...
... puzzle has for a great many people . We know the thing to be of trivial importance , yet we are impelled to master it , and when we have succeeded there is a pleasure and a sense of satisfaction that are a quite sufficient reward for ...
Strona xiv
... puzzle - solving . Regular exercise is supposed to be as necessary for the brain as for the body , and in both cases it is not so much what we do as the doing of it from which we derive benefit . The daily walk recommended by the doctor ...
... puzzle - solving . Regular exercise is supposed to be as necessary for the brain as for the body , and in both cases it is not so much what we do as the doing of it from which we derive benefit . The daily walk recommended by the doctor ...
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Abbot Archery Butt arranged asked bottles castle Chaucer cheeses club column corner correct answer count course cross cubes curious Daily Mail diagonal diagram divided doth dungeon easy eight eleven equal exactly feat feet figures five foot footprints four pieces Friar frogs geese give goose Hawkhurst Hugh de Fortibus illustration inches jester kayle-pins Kayles kissed lady length letters little puzzle magic square Manciple matter merry monks multiplied Mystery never night nine once palindrome pass PAUL HARDY perfect square perplexed pilgrims pint placed play player problem propounded pudding Puzzle Club Ravensdene reader recurring decimal riddle rings round route seen shown side simple Sir Hugh smallest possible number snail solution solve Sompnour stools straight line Tabard tell thereof thing thou twelve walking Wife of Bath wine withal words
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Strona xvi - You gave the wrong answer,' said the sphinx. 'But that was what made everything possible,' said Oedipus. 'No.' she said. 'When I asked, what walks on four legs in the morning, two at noon, and three in the evening, you answered Man. You didn't say anything about Woman.' 'When you say Man,' said Oedipus, 'you include women too. Everyone knows that.
Strona xiv - Qui nescit dissimulare, nescit regnare, " he who knows not how to dissemble, knows not how to reign.
Strona xxi - Brothers and sisters have I none, but that man's father is my father's son.
Strona 189 - Sat up last night till 4 am, over a tempting problem, sent me from New York, " to find 3 equal rationalsided rt.-angled A'S." I found two, whose sides are 20, 21, 29; 12, 35, 37 ; but could not find three.
Strona 11 - THE COOK A cook they had with them, just for the nonce, To boil the chickens with the marrow-bones, And flavour tartly and with galingale, Well could he tell a draught of London ale, And he could roast and seethe and broil and fry, And make a good thick soup, and bake a pie, But very ill it was, it seemed to me, That on his shin a deadly sore had he; For sweet blanc-mange, he made it with the best, THE SAILOR There was a sailor, living far out west...
Strona 90 - ... from the ceiling, as at A, and a fly is on the opposite wall, 1 foot from the floor in the centre, as shown at B. What is the shortest distance that the spider must crawl in order to reach the fly, which remains stationary ? Of course the spider never drops or uses its web, but crawls fairly.
Strona 19 - All full of freshe flowers white and red. Singing he was or fluting all the day : He was as fresh as is the month of have, Short was his gown, with sleeves long and wide; Well could he sit on horse, and faire' He could6 songes well make, and indite, Joust, and eke dance, and well pourtray and write.
Strona 27 - That lookest as thou wouldest find a hare? For ever on the ground I see thee stare.
Strona xvii - CEdipus. who said that man walked on his hands and feet when young, or in the morning of life ; at the noon of life he walked erect : and in the evening of bis days be supported himself upon a Sphinx-moth Spider -t irk.
Strona xix - The maxim that there is always a right way and a wrong way of doing anything applies in a very marked degree to the solving of puzzles.