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INTRODUCTION
PALMING
TRICKS WITH COINS
TRICKS WITH COMMON OBJECTS
TRICKS WITH CUPS & BALLS
TRICKS WITH HANDKERCHIEFS
CHINESE TRICKS
TRICKS AT TABLE
TRICKS WITH CARDS
GENERAL REMARKS
THE TABLE & DRESS
SLEIGHTS & PROPERTIES FOR GENERAL USE
TRICKS WITH CARDS
TRICKS WITH HANDKERCHIEFS & GLOVES
TRICKS WITH COINS
MISCELLANEOUS
THE CORNUCOPIAN HAT
TRICKS WITH WATCHES & LIVE STOCK
SHAM MESMERISM, CLAIRVOYANCE, etc.
FINAL INSTRUCTIONS
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Rings can be made use of
in many tricks, both in the drawing-room and on the stage. The
following will be found very neat and effective: Procure a metal
imitation of a wedding-ring, and have it cut neatly through. Pass
this ring under a single thread of your handkerchief near one of
the corners. Borrow a lady's ring, which palm, under pretence of
putting it in the handkerchief. (The best method for palming a
ring is to hold it between two fingers at the roots.) This you
will appear to have done if you give the false ring (under cover
of the handkerchief) to be held by someone who is not the owner
of the borrowed article. It is immaterial whether
the genuine ring has a fancy head or not, as the back of it will
usually be about the width of a wedding-ring. Take the wand in
the hand, and, unperceived, slip the ring in your palm over it
until it reaches the middle, still covered by the hand. Now ask
two persons to hold the wand, one at either end, and lay the
handkerchief containing the false ring (still held from the
outside by the original holder) over it. If you now remove your
hand, you will leave the ring on the wand still concealed by the
handkerchief (Fig. 22). Take hold of the end of the handkerchief
which hangs down below the wand, and instruct the person holding
the false ring to leave go when you count "three." As soon as you
are obeyed, draw the handkerchief smartly across the wand, This will
cause the ring to spin round, and assist materially in inducing
the audience to believe that it was actually conjured from the
handkerchief on to the wand whilst the latter article was being
held at either end by two people. A slight jerk will detach the
false ring from the handkerchief, which you can send round to be
examined. A hint I can give the learner is, never to ask a lady
to lend you her wedding-ring or keeper. Many ladies are
exceedingly superstitious, and feel embarrassed when asked, from
not liking to refuse, and yet being unwilling to take their rings
from their fingers. Always borrow a ring the back of which
nearly, if not quite, matches your false article in
substance.
Procure a metal ring, similar to the one used
in the last trick, of very soft brass, and, when you have cut it
through, sharpen up the two ends to points with a file, or any
other way you please. Borrow a lady's ring, and exchange it, as
in last trick, putting the false one in a handkerchief, which
have tied with tape or string in such a manner that the ring is
contained in a bag. If the borrowed ring is narrow all round, you
may make use of your nest of boxes (described in trick g, Chapter
II.), if it has not been previously utilised in some other trick;
it being a golden rule among conjurors never to use the same
apparatus twice during the same evening. An apple (a potato,
small loaf, &c., will do as well) can be used instead with
effect, if a goodly slit be made in it, and the ring pushed in
while you are taking it from your bag or from behind the screen.
Show the apple round, boldly saying that everyone can see that
there is no preparation about it, at the same time taking care
that no one has time to decide either one way or the other from
the rapidity with which you pass it about. Place it in a
prominent position, and then take the handkerchief containing the
false ring by the bag, allowing the ends to fall over and conceal
your hands. Quickly unbend the ring, and, working one of the
pointed ends through the handkerchief, draw it out, and rub the
place of exit between your fingers, so as to obliterate all
traces of it. All this you
must do very quickly, and, dropping the handkerchief on the
floor, say, "Without untying the string. I have abstracted the
ring, which I now pass into that apple." Here make a pass. Take a
knife in the hand holding the false ring (unless you have been
clever enough to get rid of that article), and, showing the
audience that the other hand is quite empty, proceed to cut open
the apple slowly. When the knife touches the ring, allow it to
"clink" upon it as much as possible, and call attention to the
fact, as it is a great feature in the trick. Do not cut the apple
completely through, but, taking it forward (on a plate is the
best way), allow the owner of the ring to take it out with her
own hand. Of course, the audience must not be allowed to handle
the apple, and so discover the old slit. This trick should not be
performed with the preceding one, but on another evening. The
principal effect of the trick is the apparent abstraction of the
borrowed ring from its confinement in the handkerchief in an
incomprehensible manner, and you must, therefore, allow the
audience to see that the ring undoubtedly is tied up securely in
the first instance.
Another trick with a ring is
performed by aid of the wand only. Borrow a good stout ring, a
signet for example, and, holding it near the roots of the fingers
of the right hand, pretend to pass it over the wand, but, in
reality, let it slide along on the outside of it, and still keep
it in the hand. The deception is assisted if the ring be first
carelessly placed upon the wand, and taken off again, two or
three times. Say to one of the audience, "Will you be so kind as
to hold one end of the wand with either hand?" and, in stretching
the wand out towards him, allow the left hand momentarily to pass
close under the right, and let the ring fall into it-of course,
unperceived. If you look at your hands whilst doing this, you are
a lost man. You must look the addressee boldly in the face, and
thereby divert attention to him-not that there is the slightest
excuse for exposing the ring during its passage
from one hand to the other. When the
wand is firmly held at both ends, say something about the
futility of strength in certain cases, and eventually show the
ring in the left hand, and remove the right from the wand to show
that it is empty. If relinquished at this stage, the trick is
very incomplete, as the audience usually divine, or affect to
divine, that the ring never was put upon the wand at all, It is a
peculiarity of this trick that this remark is almost invariably
made, so the conjuror must be prepared with something still more
"staggering." Return the ring to its owner, and call attention to
the fact that you have not cut it in any way (not that anyone
will ever think that you would do so, but you must assume that
this idea is prevailing in the minds of the audience), and
secretly take from your pocket, or wherever it may be concealed,
a thick metal (or gold) ring, which keep in the left hand. Borrow
the ring again, and slide it over the wand with precisely the
same movement which you used in the first instance, when you did
not put the ring on. This time you must appear to be very clumsy,
and let the two hands come together so that everyone can see the
action clearly, and snatch the left hand away sharply as if it
contained the ring. You will doubtless see a number of heads lean
towards each other, and hear a good deal of loud whispering, in
which the words "left hand" will be conspicuous. Take no notice
of this beyond looking as confused as possible, and the audience
will think they have bowled you out at last. The strange part of
it is that, in a trick of this kind, a spectator who fancies,
rightly or wrongly, that he has discovered something, never
attributes the fact to your want of skill, but to his own
remarkable powers of perception. The effect of the ruse will be
heightened if you allow a tiny portion of the false ring to catch
the eye of one or more of the audience; or resort to any other
artifice to induce them to believe that you really have the
borrowed ring in the left hand, and have allowed the fact to
transpire through carelessness. Now say that, the ring being
securely on the wand, you mean to take it off as
before, and give the two ends of the wand to be held. You will
then appear to notice the incredulous looks and remarks of the
audience for the first time, and stoutly deny that the ring is in
the left hand, which, however, you decline to open. Allow the
audience to argue the point with you, and, when one has said that
he saw you take the ring in the left hand, and others have made a
similar statement, pretend to give in, and say that you must
admit that you are discovered; but, at the same time, you feel it
incumbent on you to do something to retrieve your character. You
will, therefore, pass the ring, now in the left hand, invisibly
on to the wand. Make a pass with the left hand, and draw the
right smartly away from the wand, causing the ring on it to spin
around. The effect may be imagined. At the instant the right hand
leaves the wand, the left should place the false ring (supposing
one is used) in the pocket, as all manner of questions will be
asked afterwards. The trick can be varied in many ways, by
confusing the spectators. Peripatetic conjurors make a good deal
of money by means of this trick, by betting that the ring is
either on or off the wand. Manner has a great deal to do with the
success of it.
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