thing in each of the nine squares. In illustration of this experiment, sensible objects will be given, as the association of ideas between them and the places is most striking.
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The ideas of these images must be connected together, and it will then be almost impossible to forget the order in which they are arranged. The first is an apple, the second a monkey; this monkey takes the apple, eats, and offers it to the man who is in the third place; the man is just going to embark on along voyage, and for this purpose a ship will be in the fourth place; but he will smoke his pipe before he leaves his native country;—pipe is in the fifth place;—and when he has finished smoking, he calls for his night-cap, which will be found in the sixth place; before he retires to rest, he wishes for another tankard of ale; tankard occupies the seventh place. In the morning when this man awakes, a boat is ready to convey him to the ship; this boat is in the eighth place; a tree is found in the ninth place—it shall be a