Gravesande, Willem Jacob 's, An essay on perspective

Page concordance

< >
Scan Original
81
82
83
84
85 37
86 38
87 39
88 40
89 41
90 42
91
92
93
94 43
95 44
96 45
97 46
98
99
100
101 47
102 48
103
104
105
106 49
107 50
108 51
109 52
110
< >
page |< < (39) of 237 > >|
8739on PERSPECTIVE. the Station Point, and A the Point wherein the
Perpendicular meets the Geometrical Plane.
Operation,
Without Compaſſes.
Having firſt found the Perſpective a of 1131. Point A, draw the Line A S cutting the Baſe
Line in E, through which Point E draw the
Line Ea;
then from the Point B draw a Line
B a to the Point a, cutting the Horizontal Line
in F.
Again through F draw a Line to the
Point L, cutting E a in I;
and a I is the Repre-
ſentation ſought.
Demonstration.
To prove this, let G N be a Perpendicular to
the Baſe Line drawn from the Point G, wherein
the ſaid Baſe Line is cut by the Line B F;
alſo
let G D be equal to the Perpendicular whoſe Ap-
pearance is ſought, and a H parallel to the Baſe
Line.
It is plain that the Perſpective of E A is
E a:
But E A paſſes through the Station Point;
and conſequently its Repreſentation is 2241. dicular to the Baſe Line; therefore we are 3356. to prove, that a I is equal to a H.
Now the Triangles B G C and B F M are ſimi-
lar;
and ſo
B C : B M : : B G: B F.
But B M by Conſtruction is the double of B C;
whence B F is alſo the double of B G, which,
conſequently, is equal to G F.
Becauſe the Triangles F G N and F B L are
ſimilar, therefore
F G : F B : : G N : B L.

Text layer

  • Dictionary

Text normalization

  • Original
  • Regularized
  • Normalized

Search


  • Exact
  • All forms
  • Fulltext index
  • Morphological index