Campanalogia, or, The art of ringing improved

About this Item

Title
Campanalogia, or, The art of ringing improved
Author
Stedman, Fabian, 1631?-1713.
Publication
London :: Printed by W. Godbid, for W.S. and are to be sold by Langley Curtis ...,
1677.
Rights/Permissions

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Subject terms
Change ringing.
Cite this Item
"Campanalogia, or, The art of ringing improved." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A61376.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 14, 2024.

Pages

The Checkquer. 1 and 5.

IN this peal the Treble is whole-hunt, and Tenor the half-hunt for twenty changes; and then Tenor the whole-hunt and treble the half-hunt for the next twenty, and so they hunt by turns throughout the peal. When Treble is the whole-hunt the bells behind always dodg, except it hinders them; and when Tenor is the whole-hunt, the bells before, except that hinders them; when Treble is before and Tenor dodging behind, a sin∣gle made by the Tenor and the bell which dodged with it; when Tenor is behind and Treble dodging before, a sin∣gle made by the Treble and the bell which dodgeth with that.

Page 227

THis peal may be rang by hunting the Treble and Tenor as before, and it dif∣fereth from it only in this; when it is 1-5 behind in the hunting of the Treble, the bells before dodg till Tenor parts them; and when it is 1-5 before, in the hunting of the Tenor the bells behind dodg till Treble parts them: and then when Treble is the whole-hunt and Tenor half, it is plain Cambridg delight in∣verted. It may be rang by hunting the half-hunt, as in Cambridg Delight the other way, in either of those ways of ringing it, but then the single is always made by the hunting bell.

An example in that like Cambridg Delight the other way.

Notes

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      &c.

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