What Is It? game 221



It's once again time for our collaboration with the always amusing What Is It? Blog. Can you guess what the pictured item is? Or can you make up something interesting?

Place your guess in the comment section below. One guess per comment, please, though you can enter as many guesses as you'd like in separate comments. Post no URLs or weblinks, as doing so will forfeit your entry. Two winners: the first correct guess and the funniest (albeit ultimately wrong) guess will win T-shirt from the NeatoShop.

Please write your T-shirt selection alongside your guess. If you don't include a selection, you forfeit the prize, okay? May we suggest the Science T-Shirt, Funny T-Shirt and Artist-Designed T-Shirts?

For more clues, check out the What Is It? Blog. Good luck!

Update: the unidentified object is now identified as a billiards pocket (found on eBay). The first correct answer came from Berhard, who wins a t-shirt! Of many funny answers, the funniest was from Lord_Dissident, who said,
It is actually the iron mask that was used to hide the face of the man in the iron mask. The front was opened only at feeding time, food was placed into the bowl, and it was slammed shut again. That is why he never ate soup again after he got out of that mask.

That certainly deserves a t-shirt! Find out the purposes of all this week's mystery items at the What Is It? blog.

this looks suspiciously like a antique mail slot where you would open it deposit the mail in the cup and it would transfer the mail inside

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A folding seat for the barrel organ players's capuchin monkey enabling the monkey to take a rest in case the organ grinder takes a break..

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This is one of a set of handles that were fitted to the mast periscope of the legendary submarine, the Nautilus.

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It is actually the iron mask that was used to hide the face of the man in the iron mask. The front was opened only at feeding time, food was placed into the bowl, and it was slammed shut again. That is why he never ate soup again after he got out of that mask.

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Moe and Curly Howard's coat of arms on their front doors. The bowl was filled with coconur cream.

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A Victorian Tea Party "Alms for the Rich" sterling-silver collection device. If you wnated to stroll on the privatized side-walk in certain neighborhoods, you placed your offering (not a tax) in this device which was affixed to boxes outside the brownstones or you just didn't need to be walking there. The system was enforced by the Pinkerwater Security Agency.
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"Please sir, I want some more." Fancy porridge ladle used by administrators of the workhouse that Oliver Twist was employed at, used to spite the poor orphans.

PB & Jellyfish, L, Serene Green
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Victorian-era gravy-ladling mask. Waiters with there arms full of food would wear this mask, and use it to dispense gravy on their guest food by moving their chin, and levering the hand and bowl of gravy.

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Its little known, but, skee ball was originally a sport of royalty and early skee ball machines could be quite ornate. This is a ball return off a skee ball machine from the court of King Rudolph V of Ruritania.
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This just happens to be a Royal Ball holder. The delicate organs would be held in the cup while the member would peek out through the opening. The holes on the side would have been used with soft leather strips to tie the device around the man's nether regions. Royals and Nobility down on their luck would purchase this "handy" silver device when they had spent all their money on their new castle renovations and could no longer afford their ball holding servant. If a knight was good enough, a noble (or one time the King) would give them their silver ball holder as a sign of trust. A rare piece, and I give my compliments to whoever found it.

Cyborg, Black, 2xl
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Mechanical Spittoon for discriminating ladies & gentlemen-when enough juices had been formed from a wad of tabacker one would spit into this device which would then deposit the juices into a recepticle recessed behind it. Thereby keeping it from the view & smell the prim & proper patrons of an establishment.

PB & Jellyfish, L, Serene Green
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This was an earlier, Victorian-style version of Senor Wences' head-in-a-box gag. The head would say "S'alright" with a British accent, which wasn't nearly as funny as you'd think.

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It's the holy "Extra Tithing Bowl" for getting 'just one more' tithe from congregants before they leave church. Because you can never give too much to the church, right?

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It's a medieval Facepalm device. It was commonly used by knights during jousting tournaments when their opponent forgets to take the rubber-chicken safety device off the end of their lance

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