12 



THE ZOOPRAXISCOPE 



17. Elephant Amblikg. 



** A demonstration that vividly interests all the world." 

 — U' Illustration^ Paris. 



"Many of these pictures have great — indeed, astonish- 

 ing — beauty. The interest which they present from the 

 scientific point of view is three-fold : — (c/) They are im- 

 portant as examples of a very nearly perfect method of 

 investigation by photographic and electrical appliances. 

 iV) They have also a great value on account of the actual 

 facts of natural history and physiology which they record, 

 (c) They have, thirdly, a quite distinct, and perhaps their 

 most definite, interest in their relation to psychology." — 

 Pkof. E. Ray Lankestee, F. R. S., in Nature, 



