Page:Carroll - Euclid and His Modern Rivals.djvu/246

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208
WILSON'S 'SYLLABUS'-MANUAL.
[Act III Sc. II. § 2.

Syllabus itself. Restore the Problems (which are also Theorems) to their proper places; keep to Euclid's numbering (interpolating your new Propositions where you please); and your new book may yet prove a valuable addition to the literature of Elementary Geometry.


[A tremulous movement is seen amid the ghostly throng. They waver fitfully to and fro, and finally drift off in the direction of one corner of the ceiling. When the procession has got well under way, Niemand himself becomes hazy, and floats off to join them. The whole procession gradually melts away into vacancy, Diamond going last, nibbling at the heels of Nero, for which a pair of gorgeous Roman sandals seem to afford but scanty protection.]