Page:The chess-player's text book.djvu/77
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TEXT BOOK.
65
| WHITE. | BLACK. |
| 1. Q. at K. Kt.'s 4th. Ch. | 1. K. to his R.'s 8th. |
| 2. K. to K. B.'s 3rd. Ch. | 2. K. to his Kt.'s 8th. |
| 3. Q. to K. Kt's 3rd. Ch. | 3. K. to his R.'s 8th.
(And you perceive that if the Pawn is taken the Black K. is Stale-mated.)
|
The result is the same frequently when the Pawn is on a Rook's file, ex. gr.:—
DIAGRAM No. 29 Black. | ||||||||
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| White. | ||||||||
| WHITE. | BLACK. |
| 1. Q. at K. Kt.'s 3rd. Ch. | 1. K. to K. R.'s 8th. |
The game is obviously drawn, for if you keep the Queen on the K. Kt.'s file, Black is Stale-mated, and if you move her away he can always bring out his King, and threaten next time to make a Queen.
Even, however, when the Pawn is on a Bishop's or a Rook's file, you may mostly win with the Queen, provided your King is near the Pawn, ex. gr.: —
