London :: Printed by W. Godbid, for W.S. and are to be sold by Langley Curtis ...,
1677.
Rights/Permissions
This keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the Early English Books Online Text Creation Partnership. Searching, reading, printing, or downloading EEBO-TCP texts is reserved for the authorized users of these project partner institutions. Permission must be granted for subsequent distribution, in print or electronically, of this text, in whole or in part. Please contact project staff at eebotcp-info@umich.edu for further information or permissions.
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 13, 2024.
Pages
descriptionPage 196
Oxford Single Bob. Triples, Doubles, and Singles. 1. 2. and 3.
THE Treble hath a direct hun∣ting course;
and when it leaves the two hind bells they dodg until it comes there again. Every bell leads twice, and then hunts directly up, unless the afore∣said dodging hindreth them. When the Treble leads, the double is on the four hind bells. By this method it will go sixty changes, and by making of singles it will go 120, 240, 360, or 720. The sin∣gles in the 120, 240, and 720, must be made by the same method with those in Old Triples and Doubles, page 109. And to ring 360, every time the 1.2 lie together before, the single must be made behind; and when 1.2.3 lie together there, then the single in the fourth and fifth places.