The economy of the eyes |
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Pagina ii
... Persons - may easily understand . To which will be added , An Ap- pendix from the Writings of SIR ISAAC NEWton , Sir WILLIAM HERSCHEL , & c . and Original Communications from Eminent Practical Opticians of the present time , on the ...
... Persons - may easily understand . To which will be added , An Ap- pendix from the Writings of SIR ISAAC NEWton , Sir WILLIAM HERSCHEL , & c . and Original Communications from Eminent Practical Opticians of the present time , on the ...
Pagina iii
... PERSONS WHO COULD NOT READ IN SPECTACLES 12 18 20 and 34 IV . HAND SPECTACLES 15 and 21 V. SYMPTOMS OF THE EYES ... PERSONS CHOOSING SPEC- TACLES .. Divided Spectacle Glasses .. CHAP . XI . HINTS TO PERSONS BEGINNING TO WEAR.
... PERSONS WHO COULD NOT READ IN SPECTACLES 12 18 20 and 34 IV . HAND SPECTACLES 15 and 21 V. SYMPTOMS OF THE EYES ... PERSONS CHOOSING SPEC- TACLES .. Divided Spectacle Glasses .. CHAP . XI . HINTS TO PERSONS BEGINNING TO WEAR.
Pagina iv
William Kitchiner. CHAP . XI . HINTS TO PERSONS BEGINNING TO WEAR SPECTACLES ; AND OF READING- LAMPS AND CANDLESTICKS .... Case of Dimness of Sight from Over- exercise of the Eye Of the Pole Star Of the Double Ring of Saturn Contents of ...
William Kitchiner. CHAP . XI . HINTS TO PERSONS BEGINNING TO WEAR SPECTACLES ; AND OF READING- LAMPS AND CANDLESTICKS .... Case of Dimness of Sight from Over- exercise of the Eye Of the Pole Star Of the Double Ring of Saturn Contents of ...
Pagina vi
... Person to see as distinctly as if they were within 15 feet of the Stage ·· The Bell Opera with one sliding Tube .... 178 178 the best . Of Operas which have many Tubes ... 178 Operas for the extremely Short - sighted . 180 Operas that ...
... Person to see as distinctly as if they were within 15 feet of the Stage ·· The Bell Opera with one sliding Tube .... 178 178 the best . Of Operas which have many Tubes ... 178 Operas for the extremely Short - sighted . 180 Operas that ...
Pagina viii
... Persons 235 IX . Appendix to Mr. WARE's Paper , by Sir CHARLES BLAGDEN ..... X. Sir WILLIAM HERSCHEL On the Aper ... Persons . See Chapter XIII . page 94 . FIG . VIII . No. 12 Concave , or the 12th Sight for Short Sighted Persons . The ...
... Persons 235 IX . Appendix to Mr. WARE's Paper , by Sir CHARLES BLAGDEN ..... X. Sir WILLIAM HERSCHEL On the Aper ... Persons . See Chapter XIII . page 94 . FIG . VIII . No. 12 Concave , or the 12th Sight for Short Sighted Persons . The ...
Alte ediții - Afișează-le pe toate
The Economy of the Eyes: Precepts for the Improvement and ..., Partea 1 William Kitchiner Vizualizare completă - 1824 |
Termeni și expresii frecvente
30 inches focus Achromatic Telescope ADAMS on Vision adjust aperture appear Artists assistance become bright Candlelight centre CHAPTER CHARLES BLAGDEN Colour Common Eye concave glass Convex Glasses COOK'S ORACLE degree distance distant objects distinct vision distinctly Dollond Double Stars DRURY LANE THEATRE Ears enable Engraving exactly extremely Eye Glasses Eye-glass Eye-lids fatigued feet field of view focal length give HERSCHEL inch in diameter inches aperture increased injurious Instrument JESSE RAMSDEN Lamp larger less Light look Magnifying power naked Eye Near-sighted Newtonian nifying power Night observed Opera Glass Optician pair of Spectacles Pancratic Eye-tube pencil of rays perfectly Peter Dollond Phil Plate proper proportion Pupil Reader require retina save the King seen seldom Senses sensibility shew Short-sighted Persons Sight Single Object-glass sliding tubes soon Spec Specta Spectacle frame Spectacle Glasses tacles Tele Theatre tion Trans WILLIAM KITCHINER
Pasaje populare
Pagina 21 - Why has not man a microscopic eye ? For this plain reason, man is not a fly.
Pagina 205 - Prescrib'd her heights, and prun'd her tender wing, (Her guide now lost) no more attempts to rise, But in low numbers short excursions tries: Content, if hence, th...
Pagina 199 - And speak, though sure, with seeming diffidence; Some positive persisting fops we know, Who if once wrong will needs be always so; But you with pleasure own your errors past, And make each day a critique on the last.
Pagina 107 - A man of sense sees, hears and retains everything that passes where he is. I desire I may never hear you talk of not minding, nor complain, as most fools do, of a treacherous memory. Mind not only what people say, but how they say it; and if you have any sagacity you may discover more truth by your eyes than by your ears. People can say what they will, but they cannot look just as they will; and their looks frequently discover what their words are calculated to conceal.
Pagina 28 - ... eye than you have been accustomed to do, and desire the aid of plenty of light ; and on looking at a near object, it becomes confused, and appears to have a kind of mist before it, and the letters of a book run one into another, or appear double, &c. ; and BY CANDLELIGHT you catch yourself holding a book &c. close behind the candle.
Pagina 100 - The fact is this, that he does not know a shortsighted person, who has had occasion to increase the depth of his glasses, if he began to use them in the form of spectacles ; whereas he can recollect several instances, where those have been obliged to change their concave glasses repeatedly, for others of higher powers, who had been accustomed to apply them to one eye only.
Pagina 16 - When persons who have long patronized One Eye, and slighted the Other, take to Spectacles, they will (generally) require Glasses of a different focus for each Eye. When You go to an Optician's to choose Spectacles, the first thing to attend to, is to look at a Book with each eye alternately, — and carefully ascertain, if You see equally well, with both Eyes, with the same Glass, at exactly the same distance.
Pagina 130 - Tis but to know how little can be known, To see all others...