This English object from 1893, in 30 years
nobody has suggested a plausible use for it.
108 grams. Overall length 8-5/16". Diameter of main tube 1-1/16".
Length without cap 6-1/2".
See pictures WHOLE1 through WHOLE4. Hallmarks on HALL1 through
HALL3 -- London 1893
With cap removed, the main tube would hold water, which could be poured out.
See pictures CAP1 through CAP3.
The cap is decorated with a dome, connected to a flat surface by "teeth"
leaving about 20 triangular holes allowing one to look "through" the cap.
However, these do not make it a sprinkler, like an aspergillum; the cap
closes the main tube completely. The dome is surmounted by a human
figure in the costume of a jester perhaps. At first I thought he looked like
"Mr.Punch" on the cover of the magazine. But not really. A hunchback ?
See pictures FOOT1 through FOOT3.
At the other end of the tube, there is a solid partition 1-1/4" from the
bottom, which terminates the section that would contain water if you filled
it. 5/16" above that partition, two balls about 3/16" in diameter attached to
the outside of the tube, as though it were meant to rest on them in some
way. If you set the tube on a table, resting on these "feet" and the upper
part of the whole thing, the tube is close to parallel to the table, with a
narrow space below it. This is so, whether or not the cap is attached to the
tube; if the cap is not there, the upper end of the tube rests on a narrow
projecting rim.
Centered between the "feet", there is a sloping plane surface that starts
just below the feet and continues to the bottom surface of the whole thing,
cutting off about 5/16" of the circle of the bottom surface. One's first
thought is that the whole thing should somehow rest on this sloping
surface, but there is no way of making it do so.
If the feet and this beveled surface are thought of as being at the back of
the tube, there is a door directly opposite, at the front of the tube. The
door is a section of the cylinder of the tube, as though it were cut out of
the tube. It is hinged at one side, and a knob is attached to the center.
The knob is almost like one of the feet, but a trifle larger, and having a
1/16" circular hole in its center, through which one can see (with a loupe
and a flashlight) that it is hollow.
See pictures FOOT2 and FOOT3.
When the door is open, it reveals a compartment of which the back wall is
the beveled surface that cuts off the lowest part of the main cylinder; the
top and bottom surfaces are circles, except as the bottom is cut off by
the bevel, and the rest is cylindrical. However, a U-shaped piece of flat silver is attached across the door for some reason.
***admin note - WARNING - each of these images is 24 x 18 inches, if your computer does not have a lot of RAM, opening them could cause it freeze. (learned this the hard way) ***
CAP1
http://img521.imageshack.us/img521/9268/cap1by6.jpg
CAP2
http://img521.imageshack.us/img521/3958/cap2nl5.jpg
CAP3
http://img114.imageshack.us/img114/4665/cap3fe9.jpg
FOOT1
http://img114.imageshack.us/img114/6004/foot1qo5.jpg
FOOT2
http://img114.imageshack.us/img114/3672/foot2dx8.jpg
FOOT3
http://img114.imageshack.us/img114/1181/foot3fl4.jpg
FOOT4
http://img114.imageshack.us/img114/6148/foot4fa9.jpg
HALL1
http://img114.imageshack.us/img114/241/hall1ex3.jpg
HALL2
http://img521.imageshack.us/img521/6836/hall2pw0.jpg
HALL3
http://img521.imageshack.us/img521/3474/hall3py8.jpg
WHOLE1
http://img521.imageshack.us/img521/9007/whole1mc4.jpg
WHOLE2
http://img521.imageshack.us/img521/9371/whole2us2.jpg
WHOLE3
http://img521.imageshack.us/img521/7808/whole3sg8.jpg
WHOLE4
http://img521.imageshack.us/img521/8607/whole4fr6.jpg
(admin photo edit - images too large - link only - see Posting Requirements )
.
