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formed, till they are done with certainty and assurance,
from different scales, and in every variety.
Sec. 3. As Situations have their Characters by pa-
rallelism with the Planes before described ; these are here
correctly to be remembered.
Sec. 4. The rules, which absolutely govern the Seven
Situations, must be committed to the memory also.
The representations, which follow in this Section, will
illustrate how the Appearance is produced by Real
Situation.
Sec. 5. The Exemplification of the rules will be a
test, whether the whole be perfectly acquired; and an
establishment of the manner by which Position should
be copied on the Artificial Perspective Plane, in the
places found for the Natural Situations; from Appearance
formed by Real Situation, on the Real Perspective Plane.
Being an exhibition of the two parts of the study con-
nected together.
By the same daily practice, proposed for the former
part, and with application, this will be acquired in as
short a time as it was necessary to give to the other.
And though it is impossible to propose the exact period
in general; the principles of the whole science may be
attained in less time than can occasion fatigue to any one
desirous of being made acquainted with it.
formed, till they are done with certainty and assurance,
from different scales, and in every variety.
Sec. 3. As Situations have their Characters by pa-
rallelism with the Planes before described ; these are here
correctly to be remembered.
Sec. 4. The rules, which absolutely govern the Seven
Situations, must be committed to the memory also.
The representations, which follow in this Section, will
illustrate how the Appearance is produced by Real
Situation.
Sec. 5. The Exemplification of the rules will be a
test, whether the whole be perfectly acquired; and an
establishment of the manner by which Position should
be copied on the Artificial Perspective Plane, in the
places found for the Natural Situations; from Appearance
formed by Real Situation, on the Real Perspective Plane.
Being an exhibition of the two parts of the study con-
nected together.
By the same daily practice, proposed for the former
part, and with application, this will be acquired in as
short a time as it was necessary to give to the other.
And though it is impossible to propose the exact period
in general; the principles of the whole science may be
attained in less time than can occasion fatigue to any one
desirous of being made acquainted with it.