If, however, it be thought that, under the proposed system, the very inferior Players would feel so hopeless of a prize that they would not enter a Tournament, this can easily be remedied by a process of handicapping, as is usual in races, &c. This would give every one a reasonable hope of a prize, and therefore a sufficient motive for entering.

The proposed form of Tournament, though lasting a shorter time than the present one, has a great many more contests going on at once, and consequently furnishes the spectacle-loving public with a great deal more to look at.

THE ALPHABET-CIPHER

EXPLANATION

EACH column of this table forms a dictionary of symbols representing the alphabet: thus, in the A column, the symbol is the same as the letter represented; in the B column, A is represented by B, B by C, and so on.

To use the table, some word or sentence should be agreed on by two correspondents. This may be called the `key-word', or `key-sentence', and should be carried in the memory only.

In sending a message, write the key-word over it, letter for letter, repeating it as often as may be necessary: the letters of the key-word will indicate which column is to be used in translating each letter of the message, the symbols for which should be written underneath: then copy out the symbols only, and destroy the first paper. It will now be impossible for any one, ignorant of the key-word, to decipher the message, even with the help of the table.

For example, let the key-word be vigilance, and the message `meet me on Tuesday evening at seven', the first paper will read as follows --

v i g i l a n c e v i g i l a n c e v i g i l a n c e v i
m e e t m e o n t u e s d a y e v e n i n g a t s e v e n
h m k b x e b p x p m y l l y r x i i q t o l t f g z z v

The second will contain only `h m k b x e b p x p m y l l y r x i i q t o l t f g z z v'.

The receiver of the message can, by the same process, retranslate it into English.

N.B. -- If this table be lost, it can easily be written out from memory, by observing that the first symbol in each column is the same as the letter naming the column, and that they are continued downwards in alphabetical order. Of course it would only be necessary to write out the particular columns required by the key-word: such a paper, however, should not be preserved, as it would afford means for discovering the key-word.

CHRONOLOGICAL LIST OF THE WORKS IN THIS VOLUME

c.1848Crundle Castle. (The Rectory Umbrella, M.S. First published 1953.)
c.1850The Walking Stick of Destiny. (The Rectory Umbrella, M.S. First published 1932.)
c.1850A Hemispherical Problem. (The Rectory Umbrella, M.S. First published 1898.)
c.1850The Two Clocks. (The Rectory Umbrella, M.S. First published 1898.)
c.1850-53Lays of Sorrow. (The Rectory Umbrella, M.S. First published 1898.)
c.1850-53Prologue to `La Guida di Bragia'. (M.S. First published 1931.)
1853The Two Brothers. (Mischmasch, M.S. First published 1899.)
1853Solitude. The Train. March 1856.
1854The Lady of the Ladle. The Whitby Gazette. 31 Aug. 1854.
1854Wilhelm von Schmitz. The Whitby Gazette. 7 Sept. 1854.
1855Stanza of Anglo-Saxon Poetry. (Mischmasch, M.S. First published 1898.)
1855Theme with Variations. The Comic Times, 18 Aug. 1855.
1855`She's all my fancy painted him'. The Comic Times, 8 Sept. 1855.
1855Hints on

  By PanEris using Melati.

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