The Diving Bell, by Francis C. 
Woodworth 
 
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Title: The Diving Bell Or, Pearls to be Sought for 
Author: Francis C. Woodworth 
Release Date: August 20, 2005 [EBook #16560] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ASCII 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE 
DIVING BELL *** 
 
Produced by Geetu Melwani and the Online Distributed Proofreading 
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the Internet Archive and University of Florida. 
 
[Illustration] 
[Illustration: THE FOX AND THE CRAB.]
UNCLE FRANK'S BOYS' & GIRLS' LIBRARY, 
BY 
FRANCIS C. WOODWORTH, EDITOR OF WOODWORTH'S 
YOUTH'S CABINET. 
[Illustration] 
THE DIVING BELL; 
OR, 
PEARLS TO BE SOUGHT FOR. 
With Tinted Illustrations. 
BY UNCLE FRANK, 
AUTHOR OF "A PEEP AT OUR NEIGHBORS," "WILLOW LANE 
STORIES," "THE DIVING BELL," ETC. ETC. 
BOSTON: PHILLIPS, SAMPSON & CO. PUBLISHERS. 
Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1851, by PHILLIPS, 
SAMPSON & CO., 
In the Clerk's Office of the District Court for the District of 
Massachusetts. 
 
CONTENTS. 
THE NAME OF MY BOOK 7 THINKING AND LAUGHING 16 
THE SCHEMING SPIDER 31 GENIUS IN THE BUD 46 PUTTING 
ON AIRS 64 "TRY THE OTHER END" 80 THE FOX AND THE 
CRAB 97 THE GREEDY FLY 101 CAROLINE AND HER KITTEN 
104 "I DON'T KNOW" 119 THE LEARNED GEESE 125 THE 
WRONG WAY 131 THE RIGHT WAY 135 THE OLD GOAT AND
HIS PUPIL 140 ON BARKING DOGS 147 
ILLUSTRATIONS. 
THE FOX AND THE CRAB (Frontispiece) VIGNETTE 
TITLE-PAGE 1 THE SPIDER'S INVITATION 30 THE SPIDER'S 
TRIUMPH 41 KATE AND HER TUTOR 72 MY PRETTY KITTEN 
109 THE LEARNED GEESE 124 THE OLD GOAT AND HIS PUPIL 
141 
 
I. 
THE NAME OF MY BOOK. 
[Illustration] 
The reader, perhaps, as he turns over the first pages of this volume, is 
puzzled, right at the outset, with the meaning of my title, The Diving 
Bell. It is plain enough to Uncle Frank, and possibly it is to you; but it 
may not be; so I will tell you what a diving bell is, and then, probably, 
you can guess the reason why I have given this name to the following 
pages. 
If you will take a common glass tumbler, and plunge it into water, with 
the mouth downwards, you will find that very little water will rise into 
the tumbler. You can satisfy yourself better about this matter, if, in the 
first place, you lay a cork upon the surface of the water, and then put 
the tumbler over it. 
Did you ever try the experiment? Try it now, if you never have done so, 
and if you have any doubt on the subject. 
You might suppose, that the cork would be carried down far below the 
surface of the water. But it is not so. The upper side of the cork, after 
you have pressed the tumbler down so low that the upper end of it is 
even below the surface of the water--the upper side of the cork is not 
wet at all.
"And what is the reason of this, Uncle Frank?" 
I will tell you. There is air in the tumbler, when you plunge it into the 
water. The air stays in the vessel, so that there is no room for the water. 
"Oh, yes, sir; I see how that is. But I see that a little water finds its way 
into the tumbler, every time I try the experiment. How is that?" 
You can press air, the same as you can press wood, or paper, or cloth, 
so that it will go into a smaller space than it occupied before you 
pressed it. Did you ever make a pop-gun? 
"Oh, yes, sir, a hundred times." 
Well, when you send the wad out of the pop-gun, you do it by pressing 
the air inside the tube. Now if your tumbler was a hundred or a 
thousand times as large, the air would prevent the water from coming 
in, just as it does in this instance. Suppose I had dropped a purse full of 
gold into a very deep river, and it had sunk to the bottom. Suppose I 
could not get it in any other way but by going down to the bottom after 
it. I could go down to that depth, and live there for some time, by 
means of a diving bell made large enough to hold me, precisely in the 
same way that a bird might go down to the bottom of a tub of water, in 
a tumbler, and    
    
		
	
	
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