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Since the days of Bishop Wilkins the scheme of flying by artificial wings has been much ridiculed, and indeed the idea of attaching wings to the arms of a man is ridiculous enough, as the pectoral muscles of a bird occupy more than two-thirds of its whole muscular strength, whereas in man the muscles that could operate upon the. wings thus attached would probably not exceed one-tenth of the whole mass. There is no proof that, weight for weight, a man is comparatively weaker than a bird; it is therefore probable, if he can be made to exert his whole strength advantageously upon a light surface similarly proportioned to his weight, as that of the wing to the bird, that he would fly like a bird. The flight of a strong man by great muscular exertion, though a curious and interesting circumstance, inasmuch as it will probably be the first means of ascertaining this power and supplying the basis whereon to improve, it would be of little use.