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posted by hornean
THE CASTLE GUARD WITH HIS TRIDENT



How many prongs do you see?
I see two on the bottom—but on the top, three

Solution: Cover the top of the trident and you see two prongs. Cover the bottom and the trident now has three prongs. You can draw this object, but you can’t construct it. (impossible-object illusion)


THE ROYAL MESSENGER ARRIVING WITH A LETTER FOR THE KING



The red tape on the letter is longer than the blue. But is this really true? Remember, now you are in OPT!

Solution: Angles are sometimes tricky! The red and blue tapes on the envelope are the same length. If you remove the outline of the envelope, you can see this. (geometrical-contrast illusion)


THE PRINCESS PICKING A SPECIAL BOUQUET



Flowers fair, flowers bright.
Which flower center is larger—the black or the white?

Solution: The black and white centers are the same size. The white center appears smaller because larger circles surround it. The black center appears larger because smaller circles surround it. (geometrical-contrast illusion)


THE OPT SIGN POINTING THE WAY TO THE ZOO



By the sign the royal family will stop. Which line is longer, the bottom or top?

Solution: Both lines are the same length. When the arrows point outward, the line appears shorter. When the arrows point inward, the line appears longer. (geometrical-contrast illusion)


THE BIRTHDAY PARTY FOR THE PRINCE



This gift, unwrapped, tells the Prince’s age.
This is what the dragon said,
“Six blocks become seven if you stand on your head. HAPPY BIRTHDAY!”

Solution: You don’t have to stand on your head! If you turn the book around, you should see seven blocks with white tops. The number of blocks you see depends on whether you view the boxes as having a white top or a white bottom. (reversible-image illusion)
added by hornean
posted by hornean
With a mournful moan and silken tone,
Itself alone comes ONE TROMBONE.
Gliding, sliding, high notes go low;
ONE TROMBONE is playing SOLO.

Next, a TRUMPET comes along,
And sings and stings its swinging song.
It joins TROMBONE, no more alone,
And ONE and TWO-O, they’re a DUO.

Fine FRENCH HORN, its valves all oiled,
Bright and brassy, loops all coiled,
Golden yellow; joins its fellows.
TWO, now THREE-O, what a TRIO!

Now, a mellow friend, the CELLO,
Neck extended, bows a “hello”;
End pin set upon the floor,
It makes up a QUARTET—that’s FOUR.

And soaring high and moving in,
With ZIN! ZIN! ZIN! a VIOLIN,...
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posted by hornean
Long ago,
before the Civil War,
there was an old sailor called Peg Leg Joe
who did what he could to help free the slaves.


Joe had a plan.
He'd use hammer and nail and saw

and work for the master, the man
who owned slaves
on the cotton plantation.


Joe had a plan.
At night when work was done,
he'd teach the slaves a song
that secretly told the way
to freedom.
Just follow the drinking gourd, it said.


When the song was learned
and sung all day,
Peg Leg Joe would slip away
to work for another master
and teach the song again.


One day
a slave called Molly saw her man James
sold to another master.
James would be taken away,...
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added by hornean
One sunny day, a queen honeybee leaves her hive. Other bees, called drones, follow her. The queen mates with a drone. Now she can lay eggs.


The queen flies back to the hive. Laying many eggs in her job. She puts one egg in each cell.


In three days the eggs hatch. Out come larvae. Worker bees feed the larvae.


After five or six days, workers cover the larvae cells. Inside the cell, the larvae grow into a pupa. In about ten days, a young bee comes out of the cells.


Hives have only one queen. Most other bees are workers. Some bees are drones. Workers are females. Drones are males.


Young worker bees...
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posted by hornean
Mrs. Davis felt peculiar as she took her morning bath.
“I feel like I’m being watched,” she said to herself.
And she was being watched…


…by Shirley Rat, the nosiest person in town.
“I see you’re using lilac bubble bath,” said Shirley. “I personally prefer rose.”
Mrs. Davis pulled down the shade.

“I love to know what’s going on,” said Shirley. “I don’t get paid for it—it’s my hobby.”
And Shirley’s hobby kept her very busy.


Reading other people’s mail took half the morning.
“You learn such interesting things,” said Shirley.

Listening in on private telephone conversations,...
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