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- Newsgroups: rec.puzzles
- Path: sparky!uunet!well!well.sf.ca.us!hudu
- From: hudu@well.sf.ca.us (Scott Marley)
- Subject: Re: Kit Williams' old new book
- Message-ID: <hudu.722415674@well.sf.ca.us>
- Sender: news@well.sf.ca.us
- Organization: Whole Earth 'Lectronic Link
- References: <1992Nov17.224810.22047@Princeton.EDU> <BxwnxD.E9E@cen.ex.ac.uk> <1eddgoINN8o1@clover.csv.warwick.ac.uk> <1992Nov18.145106.15841@Princeton.EDU> <hudu.722323618@well.sf.ca.us>
- Date: Sun, 22 Nov 1992 07:01:14 GMT
- Lines: 45
-
-
- I pulled out "The Bee on the Comb" and refreshed my memory.
-
- In the first picture, there are two "hybrid" animals, one half-mouse,
- half-horse, the other half-cat, half-toad. If you've read "Masquerade", the
- drawings remind you of the circle of animals in one of the pictures in that
- book, and there's even a footnote there explaining the names of the animals
- in that picture. Using the same reasoning, the two animals in "The Bee on
- the Comb" ought to be called a "morse" and a "coad". So the obvious
- conclusion is that this is a clue indicating that Morse code is involved.
-
- Well, it *is* a clue, but if there's Morse code anywhere in "The Bee on the
- Comb", I haven't found it. The real clue is that it sends you back to
- "Masquerade", because the words around that picture read "All animals are
- equal in a tale of tail to tail, end to end to end". The "end to end to
- end" line is particularly apt. I wonder whether Mr. Williams had this
- second book in mind already when he wrote that, or whether he was casting
- about for ideas later and tumbled across that line.
-
- Anyway, each picture in "The Bee on the Comb" contains a hidden animal.
- Ignore all the naturalistic animals: you're looking just for one animal
- hidden in some visually punning way. For example, in the first picture,
- there's a parrot hidden in the young man's vest--turn the page upside down
- and the leaves pictured on his vest become the parrot's feathers.
-
- If you write down all fifteen hidden animals and take their last letters,
- "end to end to end", it spells out "The Bee on the Comb". I recall that we
- found the hidden animal in the picture on the kitchen (the one with the box
- of Oxo cubes on the mantel) particularly difficult to find, though I expect
- that'll vary from person to person. The hidden animals are wonderfully
- cleverly hidden. Oh, and the animal ending in C is rather obscure; I think
- we had to figure out its name only after we'd figured out the title of the
- book and knew it ended in C.
-
- If you count the number of bees in each picture and convert it to letters,
- using A = 1, B = 2, etc., you get "Bees Only Sting". I sort of remember
- there's some clue in the text that this is to be ignored.
-
- Funny thing, I just now noticed for the first time that there is in fact
- Morse code around the frame of the gardening picture. I can't imagine how
- we missed it, and yet I have no recollection of ever seeing it or working it
- out. Hmm.
-
- Scott Marley
- hudu@well.sf.ca.us
-